Publications & Testimony
Items: 381 — 390
May 15, 2023
DPIC Welcomes New Executive Director, Robin M. Maher
The Death Penalty Information Center is pleased to announce that Robin M. Maher has joined the organization as Executive Director, effective May 15, 2023. Most recently, Ms. Maher was Senior Counsel in the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Access to Justice. Ms. Maher previously worked in the federal defender system and at the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, and has more than twenty years’ experience training lawyers and judges in the United States and around the world. She was…
Read MoreMay 12, 2023
INNOCENCE: Another Death-Row Exoneration Added to DPIC’s Innocence List
Occasionally, DPIC discovers an older case involving an exoneration from death row and adds that case to the DPIC Innocence List. Joe Cota Morales was convicted and sentenced to death in Arizona in 1976 and was exonerated in 1981. He has now been added to the Innocence List, bringing the total number of death-row exonerations to…
Read MoreMay 11, 2023
First Hearing Held on Ohio Legislation to Abolish the Death Penalty
On May 9, 2023, the Ohio Senate Judiciary Committee held its first hearing on Senate Bill 101 that would abolish the state’s death penalty. The co-sponsors of the bill, Senate Democratic Leader Nickie Antonio (D‑Lakewood) and Senator Stephen Huffman (R‑Tipp City), argued in favor of the bill’s passage and noted that more than one-third of Ohio’s senators have signed on as…
Read MoreMay 10, 2023
RESOURCES: DPIC’s High School Curriculum on the Death Penalty
DPIC’s High School Curriculum on the Death Penalty, which was originally created in cooperation with Michigan State University’s Communications Technology Laboratory in 2001, has been updated and integrated into DPIC’s main website. This resource covers death penalty history, legal procedures, arguments for and against capital punishment, and narratives of real capital…
Read MoreMay 09, 2023
SCHOLARSHIP: Is the Death Penalty Torture Under International Law?
In an article for the University of Oxford Death Penalty Research Unit, Professor John Bessler discusses whether the use of the death penalty should be classified as torture under the norms of international law. Bessler argues that since psychological torture is prohibited under the most fundamental principles of international law (jus cogens norms) and since death threats are a form of psychological torture, then governmental death threats as part of the death penalty are torturous…
Read MoreMay 08, 2023
Family Sues Alabama Over ‘Longest Known Execution in U.S. History’
On May 3, 2023, the family of Joe Nathan James (pictured) sued the state of Alabama for the pain and suffering it caused during his three-hour-long lethal injection in 2022. It is believed to be the longest known execution in U.S. history. The suit asserts that “the execution team failed to execute Mr. James in a manner that comports with the U.S. Constitution, the Alabama Constitution, and applicable state…
Read MoreMay 05, 2023
Excerpts from the Supreme Court’s Ruling Barring the Death Penalty for Non-Homicide Crimes Against Individuals
On May 1, 2023, the state of Florida adopted legislation allowing the death penalty for sexual abuse of a child where no death occurred. This statute is unconstitutional under the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Kennedy v. Louisiana (2008). Excerpts from that opinion and from an amicus brief cited by the Court…
Read MoreMay 04, 2023
NEW PERSPECTIVES: “The Last Days of Death Row in California”
A recent article in the The Guardian described the reactions of some of the California prisoners who have been moved from San Quentin’s death row and transferred to other facilities around the state. The prisoners are still under a sentence of death, but in 2019 Governor Gavin Newsom declared a moratorium on executions and has dismantled the execution…
Read MoreMay 03, 2023
RESOURCES: Newspaper Series Explores Arizona’s Recent Death Penalty History
In a detailed five-part series titled “Poorly executed: How Arizona has failed at carrying out the death penalty,” the Arizona Mirror explores the last 16 years of Arizona’s use of capital punishment. The series focuses on controversies surrounding the executions themselves, including changes to the drug protocol, the use of inexperienced or unqualified personnel, and the state secrecy surrounding the process. It also looks into other major issues in capital punishment, such as…
Read MoreMay 02, 2023
As Tennessee Legislature Ends, Two Death-Penalty Bills Fail and One Passes
Bills to alter the state’s method of execution and to make the execution process more transparent failed in Tennessee’s legislature this year as its session concluded. In an effort to facilitate executions bogged down by the state’s problems with lethal injection, a bill was proposed to give prisoners the option of the firing squad for their execution. Following an independent investigation into Tennessee’s lethal injection protocols, Governor Bill Lee (R) had suspended executions on January…
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