Publications & Testimony
Items: 4231 — 4240
Aug 06, 2009
Racial Justice Act passes in North Carolina
On August 5, the North Carolina senate passed a bill allowing pre-trial defendants and death-row inmates to challenge the death penalty process through the use of statistical studies. The Racial Justice Act allows a defendant facing a capital trial or an inmate sentenced to death to use evidence showing a pattern of racial disparity as a way of challenging racial injustice in the death penalty. Prosecutors would then have the…
Read MoreAug 05, 2009
DPIC RESOURCES
DPIC has a number of resources that you…
Read MoreAug 05, 2009
Murders Drop in New Jersey Following Moratorium and Abolition of Death Penalty
The number of murders in New Jersey declined 24% in the first six months of 2009 compared to the same period last year. Murders declined in 2008, the year after the state abolished the death penalty, marking the first time since 1999 that New Jersey has seen a drop in murders for two consecutive years. Murders dropped 11% in 2007, the year following a state-imposed moratorium on executions, which was instituted in 2006. Governor Jon…
Read MoreAug 03, 2009
INTERNATIONAL-CLEMENCY: Kenya Commutes 4,000 Death Sentences
The President of Kenya, Mwai Kibaki, announced on August 3 that he is commuting the death sentences of everyone on the country’s death row to life imprisonment. The President cited the wait to face execution of the more than 4,000 death row inmates as“undue mental anguish and suffering.” No one has been executed in Kenya for 22 years. The President said he was following the advice of a constitutional committee. Mr. Kibaki has…
Read MoreAug 01, 2009
United States Supreme Court Decisions: 2008 – 2009 Term
Cert. granted on Jan. 16, 2009Oral argument: April 27, 2009Decision: June…
Read MoreJul 31, 2009
RACE: Research Experts Say Racial Bias Still Exists in Death Penalty
Renowned researchers David Baldus, Professor of Law at the University of Iowa, and George Woodworth, a fellow of the American Statistical Association, recently wrote about the ongoing problem of racial disparities in capital cases. Professors Baldus and Woodworth were responsible for the acclaimed study on race and the death penalty in Georgia that was brought before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1987 in McCleskey v. Kemp. In response to…
Read MoreJul 31, 2009
DPIC Summary of Sentencing Project’s New Study
In July 2009 the Sentencing Project (a national non-profit organization engaged in research and advocacy on criminal justice policy issues) released the study, NO EXIT: THE EXPANDING USE OF LIFE SENTENCES IN AMERICA, authored by Ashley Nellis and Ryan S. King. This report measures the increase in the imposition of life sentences as they relate to incapacitation and public safety, fiscal costs, goals of punishment, and the appropriateness of life sentences…
Read MoreJul 30, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: Documentary tells story of innocent man who spent 18 years on death row
In 1984, Juan Melendez was sent to Florida’s death row for the murder of Delbert Baker even though no physical evidence linked him to the crime. In 2002, he was released with all charges vacated after it was found that prosecutors had withheld critical evidence in the case. He became the 99th person exonerated in the United States since 1976, and the 20th from Florida. As of today, 135 people have been exonerated. Juan…
Read MoreJul 29, 2009
INNOCENCE: Illinois Defendant Pleads Guilty to Crime That Sent Two Innocent Men to Death Row
On July 28, Brian Dugan pleaded guilty to the rape and murder of 10-year-old Jeanine Nicarico in Illinois 25 years ago. Two other men, Rolando Cruz, (pictured) and Alejandro Hernandez, were originally charged with the murder and were sentenced to death. They were eventually exonerated in 1995 after numerous trials. At the pleading, DuPage County State’s Attorney Joseph Birkett acknowledged that there had never been any physical evidence…
Read MoreJul 28, 2009
Study: 88% of criminologists do not believe the death penalty is an effective deterrent
A recent study by Professor Michael Radelet and Traci Lacock of the University of Colorado found that 88% of the nation’s leading criminologists do not believe the death penalty is an effective deterrent to crime. The study, Do Executions Lower Homicide Rates? The Views of Leading Criminologists, published in the Journal of Criminal Law and Crimonology, concluded,“There is overwhelming consensus among America’s top criminologists that the empirical…
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