Publications & Testimony
Items: 3881 — 3890
Dec 21, 2010
2010 YEAR END REPORT MEDIA COVERAGE SUMMARY
For more than a decade, DPIC has served the media with analysis and information on issues concerning capital punishment. The Center’s reports and press releases are widely quoted and consulted by reporters in the United States and around the globe. The following summarizes the media response to DPIC’s“The Death Penalty in 2010: Year End Report,” released December 21, 2010. Coverage appeared in over…
Read MoreDec 20, 2010
NEW RESOURCES: New DPIC Podcast Addresses Readers’ Questions
The latest edition of the Death Penalty Information Center’s series of podcasts, DPIC on the Issues, is now available for listening. This podcast, Readers’ Choice: Part One, is the first of two episodes that addresses questions submitted by readers of DPIC’s weekly e‑newsletter. Generally, this series of podcasts offers brief, informative discussions of key death penalty issues. Other recent episodes include discussions on…
Read MoreDec 17, 2010
New Insights into Recent Texas Exoneration from Death Row
More information has emerged about the wrongful conviction of Anthony Graves (pictured), who was exonerated from Texas’s death row in 2010. Prosecutor Kelly Siegler, who had tried many capital murder cases and sent 19 people to death row as a Harris County assistant district attorney, and Otto Hanak, a state trooper and Texas Ranger for 28 years, were brought into the case after an appeals court found that the original…
Read MoreDec 16, 2010
RELIGIOUS VIEWS: Religious Leaders to Gather in Texas for Unique Dialogue on the Death Penalty
On January 18, 2011, seven religious leaders from Texas will hold a groundbreaking panel discussion in Houston addressing faith-based views on the death penalty. The panel will be moderated by Sister Helen Prejean (pictured), author of Dead Man Walking, and Vicki Schieber of Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights. The free presentation will include leaders from a diversity of faiths and denominations, including: Cardinal…
Read MoreDec 15, 2010
Oklahoma Set to Execute First Inmate Using New Drug
On December 14, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit rejected a claim by Oklahoma death row inmate Jeffrey Matthews that the use of the drug pentobarbital could result in a cruel and unusual punishment. The Court unanimously concluded that the amount of pentobarbital authorities plan to use, as the first in a three-drug procedure, would likely be lethal by itself. The decision also allows…
Read MoreDec 15, 2010
New Hampshire Study Commission Report on the Death Penalty
On Dec. 1, 2010, the New Hampshire Death Penalty Study Commission released its report to the governor. The majority (12 – 10) report recommended neither the abolition nor the expansion of the death penalty. The report did find that there is an added cost for the death penalty as compared to a life without parole sentence:“There is a significant difference in the cost of prosecution and…
Read MoreDec 13, 2010
NEW RESOURCES: ACLU Report Finds Severe Deficiencies in Capital Representation and Appeals
According to a new report by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) entitled, “Slamming the Courthouse Doors: Denial of Access to Justice and Remedy in America,” many states severely restrict access to justice for capital defendants and limit the availability of remedies to correct errors. The problem of inadequate counsel continues to pervade death penalty systems across the country:“Few states provide adequate funds to…
Read MoreDec 10, 2010
EDITORIALS: New Hampshire’s Concord Monitor Says “Abolish the Death Penalty”
Following the release of the report from the New Hampshire Commission to Study the Death Penalty, New Hampshire’s Concord Monitor called for an end to capital punishment in the state. The Commission concluded a year of public hearings and careful study and chose by a 12 – 10 vote to recommend neither expanding nor abolishing the death penalty. However, the Monitor pointed out that the evidence presented to the commission was…
Read MoreDec 09, 2010
Possible Case of Innocence on California’s Death Row
A recent op-ed by Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Nicholas Kristof (pictured) of the New York Times focuses on the possible innocence of Kevin Cooper, a black defendant on California’s death row. Kristof writes,“This case is a travesty. It underscores the central pitfall of capital punishment: no system is fail-safe. How can we be about to execute a man when even some of America’s leading judges believe he has…
Read MoreDec 08, 2010
NEW RESOURCES: Costs of Representation in Federal Death Penalty Cases
A recent report to the Committee on Defender Services of the Judicial Conference of the United States by Jon Gould and Lisa Greenman provided an update on the costs of representation in federal death penalty cases. The report examined all cases in which the federal death penalty was authorized by the U.S. Attorney General between 1998 and 2004. The authors found that“The median cost of a case in which the Attorney General authorized seeking the death…
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