Publications & Testimony

Items: 3841 — 3850


Jan 14, 2011

U.S. Supreme Court Halts Execution After Texas Inmate’s Last Meal

On January 11, Desert Storm vet­er­an Cleve Foster of Texas received a stay of exe­cu­tion just moments before his lethal injec­tion. Foster had already fin­ished his last meal when the United States Supreme Court halt­ed the exe­cu­tion. Foster was sen­tenced to death for a 2002 shoot­ing, but has always main­tained that his friend was respon­si­ble for the mur­der. The friend also received the death penal­ty for the crime but died of…

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Jan 13, 2011

NEW VOICES: Police Officials Argue Death Penalty Doesn’t Make Us Safer”

Four law enforce­ment offi­cials from var­i­ous coun­tries who came togeth­er in Washington, D.C., in 2010 for a ground­break­ing inter­na­tion­al dia­logue on the death penal­ty recent­ly pub­lished an op-ed in the San Jose Mercury News regard­ing their dis­cus­sion. From their expe­ri­ence, they dis­count­ed the argu­ment that the death penal­ty deters potential…

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Jan 12, 2011

CLEMENCY: Governors in Missouri and Tennessee Grant Clemency to Inmates Facing Imminent Execution

On con­sec­u­tive days, Governor Jay Nixon of Missouri and Governor Phil Bredesen of Tennessee grant­ed clemen­cies to death row inmates fac­ing immi­nent exe­cu­tion in their respec­tive states. In Missouri, Gov. Nixon com­mut­ed the death sen­tence of Richard Clay, who was sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on January 12. In Tennessee, Gov. Bredesen grant­ed clemen­cy to Edward Jerome Harbison,…

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Jan 11, 2011

ILLINOIS LEGISLATURE VOTES TO REPEAL THE DEATH PENALTY

On January 11, the Illinois Senate, by a vote of 32 – 25, joined the House in vot­ing to repeal the state’s death penal­ty and re-allo­­cate funds in the Capital Litigation Trust Fund to a fund for mur­der vic­tims’ ser­vices and law enforce­ment. If signed into law, Illinois would become the 16th state to stop cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and would mark the fewest states with the death penal­ty since 1978. Since 1976, Illinois has car­ried out 12

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Jan 10, 2011

Colorado Governor Grants Unconditional Pardon Based on Innocence to Inmate Who Was Executed

On January 7, 2011, Colorado Governor Bill Ritter grant­ed a full and uncon­di­tion­al posthu­mous par­don to Joe Arridy, who had been con­vict­ed and exe­cut­ed as an accom­plice to a mur­der that occurred in 1936. The par­don came 72 years after Arridy’s exe­cu­tion and is the first such par­don in Colorado his­to­ry. A press release from the gov­er­nor’s office stat­ed, “[A]n over­whelm­ing body of evi­dence indi­cates the 23-year-old Arridy was innocent,…

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Jan 07, 2011

States Scrambled to Find Lethal Injection Drugs Overseas

Recent rev­e­la­tions about the source of drugs used in lethal injec­tions in the U.S. reveal the extent to which some states have gone in their pur­suit of the dead­ly chem­i­cals. According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, Arizona obtained its three lethal injec­tion drugs from Dream Pharma, Ltd., a small phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­ny in west London locat­ed in the back of a dri­ving school. Clive Stafford Smith, direc­tor of Reprieve,…

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Jan 07, 2011

Illinois House Votes to Repeal Death Penalty

By a vote of 60 – 54 on January 6, the Illinois House approved SB3539, a bill to repeal the death penal­ty and use the mon­ey saved to assist vic­tims’ fam­i­lies and improve law enforce­ment. The action came eleven years after a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions was put in place by then Governor George Ryan. The repeal bill will now move to the Senate for a vote as ear­ly as next week. In January 2000, Ryan ordered the mora­to­ri­um fol­low­ing rev­e­la­tions that more than…

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Jan 05, 2011

Jurisdictions with no recent executions

Although the United States is con­sid­ered a death penal­ty coun­try, exe­cu­tions are rare or non-exis­­tent in most of the nation: the major­i­ty of states31 out of 50—have either abol­ished the death penal­ty or have not car­ried out an exe­cu­tion in at least 10 years. An addi­tion­al 6 states have not had an exe­cu­tion in at least 5 years, for a total of 37 states with no exe­cu­tions in that time. Three additional jurisdictions…

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Jan 04, 2011

NEW VOICES: Murder Victims’ Families Need Services More Than the Death Penalty

In a recent arti­cle in the Peoria Journal Star, Jennifer Bishop Jenkins and Kathleen Bishop Becker, both of whom had fam­i­ly mem­bers mur­dered, called on Illinois​’s state leg­is­la­ture to end the death penal­ty as a bet­ter way of help­ing vic­tims. Becker and Jenkins wrote,​“When our fam­i­ly mem­bers were mur­dered, issues like crime pre­ven­tion, vic­tims’ rights, and the death penal­ty stopped being mere­ly hypo­thet­i­cal… it’s because we prioritize…

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