Publications & Testimony
Items: 21 — 30
Feb 20, 2025
Article of Interest: New Equal Justice Initiative Report Shines a Spotlight on Historic Patterns of Jury Discrimination and the Role of Non-Diverse Juries in Wrongful Convictions
A new report from the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), Unreliable Verdicts: Racial Bias and Wrongful Convictions, explores the history of racial bias in jury selection in the United States, including the last 40 years of racially-discriminatory preemptory jury strikes, and highlights the growing body of research showing that jury bias is reduced and the deliberative process enhanced when juries are more diverse. Looking at the pool of documented death penalty…
Read MoreFeb 19, 2025
Alabama House Joins Florida and Tennessee to Advance Unconstitutional Expansion of Death Penalty that Advocates Say Would Harm Children
Alabama State…
Read MoreFeb 18, 2025
After a 15-Year Pause, Louisiana Governor Intends to Restart Executions Using New Nitrogen Gas Protocol; Courts Set Execution Dates for Two Prisoners
On February 10, 2025, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry announced his decision to end a 15-year pause on executions, saying the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections is ready to carry out executions under a new nitrogen gas execution protocol. In a press release following his announcement, Gov. Landry said,“For too long, Louisiana has failed to uphold the promises made to victims of our State’s most violent crimes; but that failure of leadership by…
Read MoreFeb 13, 2025
Montana House Legislators Defeat Bill that Would Have Broadened Lethal Injection Methods
Montana State…
Read MoreFeb 12, 2025
Georgia House Considers Bill to Provide Pretrial Hearings to Identify Capital Defendants with Intellectual Disability
For the third consecutive session, the Georgia House of Representatives is reviewing a bill seeking to provide better protections to capital defendants with intellectual disabilities. Currently, the state requires a defendant to prove“beyond a reasonable doubt” that they have an intellectual disability – the only death penalty state to have this unusually high standard. Introduced by a bipartisan group of legislators on January 27, 2025, HB 123 would…
Read MoreFeb 11, 2025
State Spotlight: California Death Row Shrinks Sharply in 2024, Driven by the Resentencing of At Least 45 People to Life Sentences or Less
When California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a moratorium on executions in 2019, he said that the state’s“death penalty system has been, by all measures, a failure.” He explained that the death penalty“has discriminated against defendants who are mentally ill, Black and brown, or can’t afford expensive legal representation…[while providing] no public safety benefit or value as a deterrent.” In 2024, California courts agreed that execution was not the…
Read MoreFeb 10, 2025
Focus on Race: Henderson Hill’s Legacy in the Death Penalty Movement
Henderson Hill has dedicated his career to placing race and the death penalty on trial. This month, the Death Penalty Information Center celebrates Black History Month by recognizing Mr. Hill’s ongoing contributions to the modern death…
Read MoreFeb 07, 2025
Judge Finds Race Plays a “Significant Role” in Death Sentences in Three North Carolina Counties
Brandonrush, CC0, via Wikimedia…
Read MoreFeb 06, 2025
Worldwide Monthly Roundup: Taiwan Carries Out First Execution in Five Years; Singapore Cracks Down on Abolition Group; Iranian Prisoners Continue Peaceful Abolition Protest as at Least 87 Executed in January
On January 16, 2025, Taiwan carried out its first execution since April 2020. Huang Linkai, who was sentenced to death in 2017 for the 2013 murders of his ex-girlfriend and her mother, was executed at the Taipei Detention Center. Although Mr. Huang’s attorney filed a last-minute appeal, the execution…
Read MoreFeb 05, 2025
Focus on Race: Alameda County Resentencings Illustrate Long History of Excluding Jurors of Color from the Jury Box
When Ernest Dykes was brought to trial on death penalty charges in Alameda County, California in the mid-1990s, it was reasonably expected that prosecutors and defense attorneys alike would work hard to shape the jury to their benefit. What Mr. Dykes (who is Black) didn’t know until recently, however, was just how far the prosecution would go to curate…
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