Publications & Testimony
Items: 4251 — 4260
Jul 13, 2009
NEW VOICES: Experts Find Little Benefit to Justify California’s Expensive Death Penalty
Two experts in criminology challenged the rationale for California’s high spending on the death penalty in a recent op-ed in the Contra Costa Times. Michael Radelet, chair of the Sociology Department at the University of Colorado-Boulder, and Werner Einstadter, professor emeritus of criminology and sociology at Eastern Michigan University, contrasted California’s multi-million dollar spending on capital punishment with the lack of any…
Read MoreJul 12, 2009
STUDIES: Death Penalty for Female Offenders
The latest issue of the report, “Death Penalty for Female Offenders,” has been released by Professor Victor Streib of the Ohio Northern University School of Law. The report includes national trends regarding women and the death penalty and case details about individual female death row inmates from 1973 through June 30, 2009. The report notes that while women account for one in ten murder arrests (10%), only one in forty-nine death sentences imposed at trial are for…
Read MoreJul 11, 2009
LAW REVIEWS: Physician Participation in Lethal Injection Executions
Professor Ty Alper of the Boalt School of Law at Berkeley has written an article for the forthcoming edition of the North Carolina Law Review entitled“The Truth About Physician Participation in Lethal Injection Executions.” Prof. Alper, a noted death penalty expert, reviews the available research and recent litigation on the most widely used method of execution in the U.S., focusing especially on the potential role of doctors in executions. As states…
Read MoreJul 10, 2009
STUDIES: “Double Tragedies”: Mental Illness and the Death Penalty
A new report,“Double Tragedies,” addresses the question of whether people with severe mental illness should face the death penalty. The report was authored by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights (MVFHR) and called for treatment and prevention instead of execution for such offenders. The report, based on extensive interviews with 21 family members in 10 different states, calls the…
Read MoreJul 06, 2009
New Evidence Throws Doubt on Ohio Death Row Inmate’s Conviction
Attorneys for Ohio death row inmate Kevin Keith have presented new evidence casting doubt on his original conviction in briefs filed with the Ohio State Supreme Court. The Ohio Innocence Project has also asked for a new trial for Keith, supporting the claim that suppressed evidence points to another suspect who said he was paid to $15,000 to“cripple” the drug informant who was the victim of the shootings for which Keith was condemned to…
Read MoreJul 02, 2009
NEW VOICES: Prominent Conservative Calls for Death Penalty Moratorium
Richard A. Viguerie, who has been called“one of the creators of the modern conservative movement” by The Nation magazine, recently wrote an op-ed in which he discusses how his conservative ideology led him to oppose the death penalty and calls for a national moratorium on the death penalty. “The fact is, I don’t understand why more conservatives don’t oppose the death penalty,” writes Viguerie. He argues the…
Read MoreJun 30, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: DPIC’s 2008 Article Index is Available
Each year, DPIC collects relevant death penalty articles that have appeared in print and on media Web sites. Our collection certainly does not contain all such articles, nor do we claim that it represents the“best” articles. It is only a representative sample of the extensive coverage given to capital punishment in print in a particular year. For those interested in examining this coverage, we have prepared an index of the articles from…
Read MoreJun 29, 2009
DNA Evidence Leads to Release of Texas Man Who Spent Four Years on Death Row
A man originally sentenced to death for four murders in Texas has been released on his own recognizance after new DNA evidence was discovered. Robert Springsteen and co-defendant Michael Scott were released by State District Judge Mike Lynch after prosecutors said they were not prepared to go to trial as scheduled, leaving Judge Lynch to follow through on his promise to the defendants that another delay would mean freedom for the defendants. Lynch said he not only had…
Read MoreJun 26, 2009
COSTS: North Carolina Spent At Least $36 Million Extra Pursuing Capital Cases over 7 Years
According to a study by the Independent Weekly, North Carolina conservatively spent at least $36 million dollars by seeking the death penalty instead of life in prison without parole over the past 7 years, just on defense costs. The state’s Indigent Defense Services organization said the average cost of a death penalty defense was $63,700, and the state sought the death penalty 733 times between 2001 and 2008. The average cost of the 1,785…
Read MoreJun 25, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: DPIC Offers Podcasts on Costs, Clemency, and Arbitrariness
If you would like to listen to a brief but informative discussion of key death penalty issues, try DPIC’s newest resource–Podcasts. The most recent episode of this educational series explores the issue of the Costs of the death penalty. You can also choose to listen to previous episodes to learn more about the issues of Arbitrariness and Clemency. Podcasts may be downloaded for listening later on a digital…
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