Publications & Testimony
Items: 4261 — 4270
Jun 24, 2009
Top Prison Doctor’s Resignation Illustrates Ethical Conflict with Lethal Injection Protocol
Washington’s former medical director for the Department of Corrections, Dr. Marc Stern, recently resigned from his post because of an ethichal conflict with his role in supervising those who carried out executions. For example, the prison’s medical director, a nurse, attended at least 8 practice sessions with the four-member lethal-injection team, including some held on the kitchen countertop at a team member’s home. As he left his…
Read MoreJun 23, 2009
BOOKS: Lethal Rejection – Stories on Crime and Punishment
A new book, Lethal Rejection: Stories on Crime and Punishment, edited and written in part by American University criminologist Robert Johnson and student Sonia Tabriz, features an array of fiction and poetry on crime and punishment written by prisoners, academics, and students of criminology. The book includes a number of stories about capital punishment. Jocelyn Pollock, Professor of Criminal Justice at Texas State University, writes in the…
Read MoreJun 22, 2009
ARBITRARINESS: A Death Penalty Prosecution Instead Settles with a Short Sentence After Misconduct is Revealed
A prosecutor’s misconduct related to a Kentucky capital murder case led the state to accept a plea bargain with the defendant in which he now faces a sentence of 10 years with the possibility of immediate parole. Officials say Assistant Commonweath Attorney Ruth Lerner compromised the death penalty prosecution against Cory Gibson by cutting a deal with a witness against Gibson. Lerner had not disclosed a deal made with the witness in a separate…
Read MoreJun 19, 2009
Supreme Court Rejects Due Process Right to DNA Testing After Trial
In a 5 – 4 ruling on June 18, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed a lower federal court ruling holding that the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees a convicted inmate the right to a DNA test on evidence that might prove his innocence. The defendant, William Osborne, had been convicted in 1994 of sexual assault in Alaska and sentenced to 26 years in prison. Alaska is one of only 4 states in the country that does not have…
Read MoreJun 18, 2009
Indiana Prosecutors Say “We’re running out of death row inmates,” Citing High Costs of Death Penalty
Indiana is sentencing fewer people to death and executing at its slowest pace in 15 years. It has gone two years without an execution for the first time since the mid-1990’s. “We’re running out of death row inmates,” said Clark County Prosecutor Steven Stewart, who maintains a pro-death penalty Web site. Prosecutors attribute the decline to time and money issues, part of a national trend that has prompted several states to move towards…
Read MoreJun 17, 2009
Prominent Death Penalty Attorney Bryan Stevenson Wins Gruber Justice Award
Renowned Alabama attorney Bryan Stevenson was awarded the 2009 Gruber Justice Prize for his dedicated work representing death row inmates, indigent defendants and juveniles. Stevenson said the $250,000 prize would be directed to the Equal Justice Initiative, an organization Stevenson founded that is best known for representing death row inmates. The Gruber Foundation noted that Stevenson and his staff had been responsible for“for…
Read MoreJun 16, 2009
STUDIES: Majority of Leading Criminologists Find Death Penalty Does Not Deter Murder
Eighty-eight percent of the country’s top criminologists do not believe the death penalty acts as a deterrent to homicide, according to a new study published on June 16 in the Northwestern University School of Law’s Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. The study was authored by Professor Michael Radelet, Chair of the Department of Sociology at the University of Colorado-Boulder, and graduate student Traci Lacock. Their article, “Do Executions Lower Homicide…
Read MoreJun 15, 2009
Family of Six-Year-Old Murder Victim Doesn’t Want to Seek Death Penalty
The relatives of a six-year-old child who was murdered in Georgia expressed their wishes that the death penalty not be sought against his killer and said they wanted“people to know the true story” of what happened to the child. “Me and the father and the mother, none of us want the death sentence,” said Thomas Murphy, the boy’s uncle.“We want him to live knowing what he [has] done. We want him to live every day of his life knowing what he [has] done…
Read MoreJun 12, 2009
NEW VOICES: Former California Attorney General Cites Costs in Call for End to Capital Punishment
Former California Attorney General and Los Angeles District Attorney John Van de Kamp recently wrote an op-ed calling for an end to the state’s death penalty in light of the economic crisis.“With California facing its most severe fiscal crisis in recent memory — with draconian cuts about to be imposed from Sacramento that will affect every resident of the state — it would be crazy not to consider the fact that it will add…
Read MoreJun 11, 2009
Public Defenders’ Capital Defense Funding Falls Short
The Illinois Cook County Public Defender’s Office has run out of funds to cover the expenses needed to provide adequate death penalty representation. Cook County Public Defender Abishi Cunningham Jr. said the shortfall originated from former-Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s veto of a bill that would have increased the public defender budget from $1.75 million to $2.25 million. Without that $500,000, Cunningham said they have run out of money to pay for expert…
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