Publications & Testimony

Items: 3771 — 3780


Dec 06, 2010

Lack of Qualified Attorneys in California Delays Death Penalty Cases

A short­age of qual­i­fied crim­i­nal defense lawyers in California has caused major delays in the state’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sys­tem. Nearly half of those sen­tenced to death in California are wait­ing for the state to appoint them a post-con­vic­tion attor­ney. Death row inmates wait an aver­age of 10 – 12 years. The long delay is attrib­uted to the lack of expe­ri­enced lawyers to take on this part of the appeals process. The California Supreme Court requires that lawyers…

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Dec 03, 2010

OP-ED: Capital Punishment and Human Fallibility”

A recent op-ed in the Wall Street Journal by Barry Scheck, co-direc­tor of the Innocence Project, high­lighs flaws in Texas’s death penal­ty sys­tem that led to the exe­cu­tion of Claude Jones (pic­tured). Then-gov­er­nor George Bush reject­ed Jones’s appli­ca­tion for a reprieve. Bush was not informed that the reprieve would allow time for DNA tests to be per­formed on a strand of hair that was found at the crime scene. This hair had been…

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Dec 02, 2010

Conditions on Death Row in Texas

In an arti­cle enti­tled Solitary Men” in The Texas Observer, Dave Mann describes the con­di­tions for inmates on Texass death row. Inmates in the Polunsky Unit near Livingston, Texas, spend almost their entire time alone in a 60-square-foot cell. He writes, The cells have a small win­dow at one end. The steel door has a nar­row win­dow and, at the bot­tom, a slit through which guards slide trays of food.…Little pen­e­trates these cement box­es except…

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Dec 01, 2010

OP-ED: America’s Death Penalty Broken Beyond Repair”

An op-ed by Bob Herbert of the New York Times high­lights issues raised by for­mer Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens that changed his mind on the death penal­ty in the U.S. Herbert cites infor­ma­tion col­lect­ed by the Death Penalty Information Center and points to shod­dy defense and state mis­con­duct in the delib­er­ate with­hold­ing of evi­dence as promi­nent abus­es in the sys­tem. Executions have been upheld in cas­es in which defense…

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Dec 01, 2010

New Hampshire Death Penalty Study Commission — Final Report: Individual Statement of Commissioner Renny Cushing

There were a num­ber of fam­i­ly mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims who appeared before the Commission to share their per­son­al expe­ri­ences with homi­cide and the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. They expressed their oppo­si­tion, as vic­tims, to the death penal­ty. As I lis­tened to their tes­ti­mo­ny, and as I do when I lis­ten to the expe­ri­ences of any fam­i­ly mem­ber of a mur­der vic­tim, whether they sup­port, oppose, or have no opin­ion on the death penal­ty, I felt a sense of shared expe­ri­ence, empa­thy, and sol­i­dar­i­ty. My…

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Nov 29, 2010

Revision to List of Exonerated Individuals

Thanks to addi­tion­al research by Prof. Samuel Gross of the University of Michigan, DPIC has learned that one of the indi­vid­u­als on its list of exon­er­at­ed death row inmates had con­ced­ed his guilt to a less­er offense in con­nec­tion with the crime that orig­i­nal­ly sent him to death row. He was, how­ev­er, acquit­ted on the mur­der charge. James Bo Cochran was orig­i­nal­ly found guilty of a 1976 mur­der in Alabama in con­nec­tion with a rob­bery at a gro­cery store. His first…

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Nov 28, 2010

NEW RESOURCES: Congressional Quarterly Publishes Death Penalty Review

Kenneth Jost of Congressional Quarterly has pre­pared a com­pre­hen­sive review of the death penal­ty in the U.S. for the recent edi­tion of the CQ Researcher. The overview looks at death penal­ty trends in the past 10 years, pub­lic opin­ion, and argu­ments for and against repeal­ing the death penal­ty. Jost quotes many experts, includ­ing DPIC’s Executive Director con­cern­ing the recent direc­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the U.S. “ The decline in the use of the death…

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Nov 24, 2010

Tennessee Judge Declares State’s Execution Process Unconstitutional; Other States Confront Same Issue

On Nov.19, a Davidson County judge ruled that Tennessees lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dure was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, pos­si­bly delay­ing the exe­cu­tion of Stephen Michael West and oth­ers on death row. Chancellor Claudia Bonnyman, who issued the rul­ing, said that the state’s lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dure allows for death by suf­fo­ca­tion while con­scious,” because it did not spec­i­fy a suf­fi­cient dosage for sodi­um thiopen­tal, the first of three drugs used in lethal injec­tions. In Baze v.

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Nov 23, 2010

NEW VOICES: Former Florida Justice and Texas Governor Urge Supreme Court to Examine Faulty Representation

Gerald Kogan, a for­mer Florida Supreme Court Justice, and Mark White, for­mer gov­er­nor of Texas (pic­tured), recent­ly urged the U.S. Supreme Court to con­sid­er the death penal­ty appeal of Boyd v. Allen because of inad­e­quate defense rep­re­sen­ta­tion. According to the authors of an op-ed appear­ing in the National Law Journal, William Boyd’s defense lawyers in Alabama were bare­ly paid and did very lit­tle to try to save his life.

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