Publications & Testimony
Items: 4171 — 4180
Oct 09, 2009
BOOKS: That Bird Has My Wings: The Autobiography of an Innocent Man on Death Row
“That Bird Has My Wings” is a new book by Jarvis Jay Masters, an inmate on San Quentin’s death row in California. In this memoir, Masters tells his story from an early life with his heron-addicted mother to an abusive foster home. He describes his escape to the illusory freedom of the streets and through lonely nights spent in bus stations and juvenile homes, and finally to life inside the walls of San Quentin Prison. Using the nub and filler from a…
Read MoreOct 07, 2009
OPINION: Florida’s Death Penalty System Still ‘Fraught with Problems’
A recent op-ed in the Florida Times-Union pointed to continuing problems in Florida’s death penalty system despite prior recommendations for change in an American Bar Association report three years ago. The article was written by Raoul Cantero III, a former Florida Supreme Court justice appointed by Gov. Jeb Bush, and Mark Schlakman, a senior program director for Florida State University’s Center for the Advancement of Human Rights. The authors state…
Read MoreOct 06, 2009
Two More Exonerations From Death Row: 137th and 138th Persons Freed in Oklahoma
Two former death row inmates who were charged with murder in a 1993 drive-by shooting were released on October 2 after spending nearly 14 years in prison, including years on Oklahoma’s death row. District Attorney David Prater dropped charges against Yancy Douglas (left),35, and Paris Powell (right), 36, after deciding the state’s key witness was unreliable. “Ethically, and on my duty, I could not proceed in this case and had to dismiss it,”…
Read MoreOct 06, 2009
Michael Toney, Recently Exonerated from Death Row in Texas, Dies in Car Crash
Michael Toney, who recently became the 136th person exonerated and freed from death row since 1973, died in a car crash on October 3 in East Texas. He had been released from jail one month ago on September 2 after the state dropped all charges against him for a 1985 bombing that killed three people. Toney’s conviction was overturned on December 17, 2008 by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals because the prosecution suppressed evidence relating to the…
Read MoreOct 05, 2009
Ohio Executions Put on Hold; Governor Concurs
Lawrence Reynolds, who was scheduled to be executed on October 8 in Ohio, received a stay today (Oct. 5) from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The court’s stay was based on unresolved issues in Ohio’s lethal injection protocol that were brought to the surface by the unsuccessful execution of Romell Broom on September 15. The majority wrote: “These disturbing issues give rise to at least two questions: first, whether Ohio is…
Read MoreOct 02, 2009
STUDIES: Errors by Texas Medical Examiners Led to Wrongful Convictions
A recent investigaton by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram uncovered a series of mistakes by medical examiners in Texas. “Medical examiners have goofed up eye color and gender. They’ve made mistakes on the locations of scars or tattoos, described gallbladders and appendixes that had long since been removed – even confused one body for another,” noted the story. Webb County Chief Medical Examiner Corinne Stern was criticized for an autopsy she performed on an infant while…
Read MoreOct 01, 2009
Texas Governor Replaces Members of Commission Examining Possible Wrongful Execution
On September 30, Texas Governor Rick Perry replaced the chairman and two members of a state commission that is investigating whether inaccurate evidence of arson was presented at the trial of Cameron Todd Willingham, who was executed in 2004. The state’s Forensic Science Commission was scheduled to conduct a public hearing in two days and receive testimony from Craig Beyler, a nationally known expert who called the Willingham investigation “slipshod,” and…
Read MoreSep 30, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: Death Row Database Now Available
A new database of death row prisoners in the U.S. is now available on DPIC’s Web site. The database contains current sortable and searchable information on death row inmates in each state, including their name, race, county, and date of birth. The information in the database is also editable, meaning that individuals with knowledge of death row inmates may change or add new information. This new database may be a useful tool in exploring how the death penalty is applied.
Read MoreSep 29, 2009
NEW VOICES: ‘Zachary’s Law’ Case Settles with a Life Sentence; Victim’s Family Given Finality
Todd Snider, the father of Zachary Snider, who was killed at age 10 by Christopher Stevens in Indiana, accepted final resolution of the case against Stevens when a settlement was reached for a sentence of life without parole. “Our family has suffered enough and would like for this to be resolved once and for all,” Mr. Snider said about the life sentence. “This will give our family finality. Chris Stevens will die in prison and will never have the…
Read MoreSep 28, 2009
EDITORIALS: “High Cost of Death Row”
In an editorial on September 28 in the New York Times, the paper called the death penalty “an economic drain on governments with already badly depleted budgets.” Citing figures from the Death Penalty Information Center, the Times noted that “States waste millions of dollars on winning death penalty verdicts, which require an expensive second trial, new witnesses and long jury selections. Death rows require extra security and maintenance…
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