Publications & Testimony
Items: 21 — 30
Feb 03, 2025
Fired Federal Judge Raises Serious Concerns About Arizona’s Lethal Injection Protocol
Retired federal magistrate Judge David Duncan, who was hired and then abruptly fired by Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs to review the state’s execution protocol, continues to raise significant concerns about the state’s lethal injection protocol. In an interview with ABC15, Judge Duncan highlighted issues with the chain of command for lethal injection drugs, transparency, and the state documentation process.“It’s shocking irony that one of my tasks was…
Read MoreJan 30, 2025
Arizona’s Hourly Compensation for Post-Conviction Capital Counsel Found Inadequate for Certification by Outgoing Attorney General Merrick Garland
In one of his final acts before leaving office, outgoing Attorney General Merrick Garland denied a longstanding request by Arizona state officials for the state to be“certified” so it could take advantage of certain procedural benefits in federal habeas review of capital cases. These changes are available only when a state satisfies certain requirements, and benefit state actors by imposing greater restrictions on a prisoner’s ability to raise claims and by…
Read MoreJan 29, 2025
12:01: The Death Penalty in Context — The Death Penalty in 2024
In this month’s episode of 12:01: The Death Penalty in Context, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with DPI Communications Associate Hayley Bedard, about The Death Penalty in 2024, which highlights trends and events related to the death penalty. 2024 marked the tenth consecutive year during which fewer than 30 people were executed (25) and fewer than 50 people were sentenced to death (26), while high profile cases of death-sentenced people attracted…
Read MoreJan 28, 2025
Death Penalty Documentary Nominated for Academy Award
I am Ready, Warden, a documentary about Texas death row prisoner John Henry Ramirez, was announced as a nominee for Best Documentary Short at the 2025 Academy Awards. The film tells the story of the days leading up to Mr. Ramirez’s 2022 execution. It features interviews with Mr. Ramirez and his son, Israel, as well as Nueces County District Attorney Mark Gonzalez, who opposes the death penalty and sought to halt Mr. Ramirez’s execution. It also centers the experience of Aaron Castro, the son…
Read MoreJan 27, 2025
Federal Appeals Court Allows Arizona to Limit Victim Contact
On January 23, 2025, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals lifted an injunction enjoining the enforcement of an Arizona statute, Victim Contact Limits, which prohibits criminal defense teams from contacting crime victims and their family members directly. The restrictions are found in Arizona’s Victim Rights Implementation Act (Rev. Stat. Ann. § 13- 4433(B)) and also apply to death penalty cases. The decision means that prisoners and their lawyers may no longer engage directly…
Read MoreJan 24, 2025
State Spotlight: Texas Death Penalty Declining in Use — 2024 in Review
According to the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty’s annual Year in Review, Texas’ death row continued to shrink in 2024, reflecting prosecutors’ increasing reluctance to bring new capital cases and juries’ growing reluctance to sentence individuals to death. Texas juries imposed just six new death sentences in 2024, marking the tenth consecutive year of single-digit death sentences. Five of those six involved defendants of color, following…
Read MoreJan 23, 2025
Arizona’s Handling of Lethal Injection Drugs Raises Transparency and Viability Concerns
According to investigative reporting from the AZ Mirror, the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation, & Reentry (ADCRR) is storing the state’s supply of pentobarbital salt, the active ingredient used in a compounded form in lethal injection executions, in eight unmarked glass containers in a prison refrigerator, raising doubts about the drugs’ authenticity and efficacy. ADCRR has refused to reveal how long it has been in possession of these…
Read MoreJan 22, 2025
Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Only Woman on Oklahoma Death Row, Confirming Admission of Prejudicial, Gendered Evidence Can Violate Due Process Rights
At Brenda Andrew’s 2004 trial in Oklahoma for the murder of her husband, the prosecutor called witnesses to testify about her“provocative” clothing and her previous sexual relationships, and questioned“whether a good mother would dress or behave” the way she had. Jurors heard Ms. Andrew called a“hoochie” and a“slut puppy.” In his closing argument, the prosecutor opened a suitcase and showed the jury Ms. Andrew’s underwear, asking,“The grieving widow…
Read MoreJan 21, 2025
Among Flurry of First-Day Executive Orders, President Trump Issues Order on the Death Penalty
On January 20, 2025, President Donald Trump signed more than two dozen Executive Orders, including a call to“restore” the federal death penalty. The Order, while lacking many important details, instructs the Department of Justice’s Attorney General to“pursue the death penalty for all crimes of a severity demanding its use,” including the killing of a law enforcement officer or“a capital crime committed by an illegal alien present in this country” and to encourage…
Read MoreJan 17, 2025
DOJ Report Shines a Harsh Light on the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, Illuminating a History of Racial Violence in Oklahoma
On January 9, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice released its Review and Evaluation of the Tulsa Race Massacre of May 31-June 1, 1921. The department characterized the report as“the federal government’s first thorough reckoning” designed to acknowledge, illuminate, and preserve for history the“horrible ordeals of the massacre’s victims” even if they found no legal avenue for prosecution of the crimes committed over…
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