Publications & Testimony
Items: 3761 — 3770
Apr 08, 2011
STUDIES: Victims’ Families React Negatively to Serving as Basis for Death Penalty
A recent study by Professors Thomas Mowen and Ryan Schroeder of the University of Louisville found that public support for the death penalty has shifted away from traditional justifications (such as its purported deterrent effect, its imagined cost-saving value, and its safeguard of innocent lives), and has been replaced by rationales of retribution and closure on behalf of victims’ families. According to the study, which was published in Western Criminology Review,…
Read MoreApr 07, 2011
LETHAL INJECTION: Latest Foreign Supplier of Drugs for U.S. Executions Refuses to Continue
When the sole U.S. supplier of a drug used by all death penalty states announced it was halting production earlier this year, many states turned to sources overseas. In particular, Nebraska obtained a large quantity of the drug – sodium thiopental – from a company in Mumbai, India. Now that company has announced it will no longer supply the drug for use in lethal injections. In a statement released to the media, Kayem Pharmaceutical Pvt. Ltd. said, “In view of…
Read MoreApr 06, 2011
U.S. Supreme Court Restores Death Sentence Despite Questionable Representation
On April 4, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the opinions of two lower federal courts that had granted a new sentencing hearing to Scott Pinholster, who is on death row in California. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit had held that Pinholster’s attorneys provided inadequate representation in not investigating evidence of severe brain damage. The attorneys should have pursued medical evidence that Pinholster was an epileptic who…
Read MoreApr 05, 2011
Supreme Court Erases Award for Exonerated Death Row Inmate
On March 29, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed (5 – 4) a judgment of $14 million against the District Attorney’s Office of New Orleans for withholding evidence in the case of John Thompson. Thompson had been convicted and sentenced to death but was later exonerated after the withheld evidence, casting serious doubt about his guilt, was revealed through the work of a private investigator. Thompson spent 18 years in prison including 14 years on death row, and faced…
Read MoreApr 04, 2011
STUDIES: New Report – Animals Put to Death with Greater Care Than Humans in Texas
As Texas prepares to execute Cleve Foster on April 5, a new report released by the ACLU of Texas and Northwestern University’s Center for International Human Rights reveals that procedures for euthanizing animals in the state are more carefully regulated than the protocol for executing death row inmates. In March, Texas announced that it will continue to use a risky three-drug protocol for executions, and will replace the critical first drug, which is in…
Read MoreApr 01, 2011
STUDIES: North Carolina’s Death Penalty is Error-Prone and Rarely Applied
A new study from North Carolina shows that the state’s death penalty is error-prone and rarely implemented. A study of the death penalty from 1977 to 2009 found that two out of three death sentences were overturned on appeal, an error rate of 67%. The study also found that only 20% of death sentences resulted in an execution. The review of the state’s death penalty was made by Matthew Robinson, a professor of Government & Justice Studies at Appalachian State University.
Read MoreMar 31, 2011
NEW VOICES: Former Prison Director Urges Clemency for Condemned Ohio Inmate
The former Director of Ohio Prisons, Terry Collins, recently urged Gov. John Kasich to spare the life of Clarence Carter, who is scheduled to be executed on April 12 for the murder of another inmate. Carter killed the inmate during a jailhouse fight in 1988. Collins, who had 30 years of experience working with prisoners, discussed whether this crime merited the death penalty, “It is much more likely that this was an inmate fight that got tragically out of…
Read MoreMar 31, 2011
The History of the Death Penalty: A Timeline
Eighteenth Century B.C. — first established death penalty…
Read MoreMar 30, 2011
NEW VOICES: Prominent Texans Support Death Penalty Moratorium Legislation
The Texas Criminal Jurisprudence Committee of the House of Representatives heard testimony on March 29 regarding HB 1641, a bill that would put a hold on executions while the death penalty was being studied. Charles Terrell, former Chairman of the state’s Department of Criminal Justice, supported the moratorium in a statement to the committee, expressing concerns about: “fairness to those convicted on the limited testimony of witnesses, racial fairness in…
Read MoreMar 29, 2011
INTERNATIONAL: Amnesty International Report Finds Global Trend Away from Death Penalty
A new report issued by Amnesty International, Death Sentences and Executions 2010, shows a global trend away from the use of the death penalty. According to the report, only four countries in the G20 (representing the world’s major economies) carried out executions in 2010 (China, Japan, Saudi Arabia and the U.S.), 36 of the 53 African Union member states are abolitionist in law or in practice, and only 21 of the 192 UN member states carried out…
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