Publications & Testimony
Items: 4351 — 4360
Feb 26, 2009
Death Penalty Reform Bills Introduced in Tennessee
A Tennessee legislative study committee has ended its 16-month analysis of the state’s capital punishment process and has made recommendations for achieving a more fair and accurate system: . Require defense attorneys in capital cases to be highly qualified; . Mandate that defense attorneys have uniform access to evidence against their clients; . Require police officers to record all interrogations related to a homicide…
Read MoreFeb 25, 2009
EDITORIALS: Death Row Futility
The Los Angeles Times recently editorialized about the futility of keeping the death penalty in California.“Let’s end this brutal, anachronistic practice,” of the death penalty, the paper wrote.“Inefficiency and costliness are obviously only a small part of what’s wrong with the death penalty.” The editorial continued, “[C]apital punishment strikes disproportionately at disadvantaged groups, and capriciously…
Read MoreFeb 20, 2009
BOOKS: No Winners Here Tonight
A new book, No Winners Here Tonight: Race, Politics, and Geography in One of the Country’s Busiest Death Penalty States, by Ohio journalist Andrew Welsh-Huggins, explores the history of Ohio’s death penalty and raises questions of fairness by examining the state’s experience with capital punishment. Citing historical examples, the author argues that the death penalty has been carried out in an arbitrary fashion from its earliest days and has fallen…
Read MoreFeb 20, 2009
SUPREME COURT: Is There a Constitutional Right to DNA Testing? Forum at Georgetown Law
On March 2, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in District Attorney’s Office v. Osborne concerning a defendant’s right to post-conviction DNA testing. In this non-capital rape case, Alaska has repeatedly refused William Osborne’s request for DNA testing of evidence from the crime scene despite the fact that it would be at no cost to the State, and the fact the evidence could demonstrate Osborne’s innocence of the 1993 rape and attempted murder for…
Read MoreFeb 20, 2009
Texas Commission Charges Misconduct By Chief Judge in Death Penalty Appeal
The Texas Commission on Judicial Conduct filed seven charges of misconduct against Chief Justice Sharon Keller (pictured) of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) stemming from her actions in a death penalty appeal in 2007. Judge Keller is charged with not following court procedure and improperly closing the court to the appeal of Michael Richard shortly before he was to be executed. Among other charges, the Commission…
Read MoreFeb 18, 2009
NEW VOICES: Maryland’s Former Speaker of the House Says “End Capital Punishment”
Casper Taylor, Jr., a long-time Maryland House of Delegates member and former supporter of the death penalty, has written an op-ed calling for the end of capital punishment in Maryland.“In 28 years in the Maryland House of Delegates, nine as speaker, I cast thousands of votes,” wrote Taylor.“I have few regrets. But there is one vote I wish I could take back — my 1978 vote to reinstate the death penalty in Maryland.” Taylor…
Read MoreFeb 17, 2009
Developments in Montana and New Mexico May Lead to Abolition of Death Penalty
Recent developments in Montana and New Mexico may affect the outcome of legislative efforts to abolish the death penalty. In Montana, the Senate voted 27 – 23 to end the death penalty in favor of life in prison without parole. It is the second session in a row that such a proposal has cleared the Senate. New Mexico’s House passed a bill replacing capital punishment with life in prison without parole and the bill is pending in a Senate…
Read MoreFeb 16, 2009
Virginia Scheduled to Execute Man Whose Lawyers Failed Him
Edward Bell, a Jamaican immigrant convicted of killing a police officer, is scheduled to be executed in Virginia on February 19 despite a conclusion by a federal District Court that his lawyers failed to present any mitigating evidence at his trial. Judge James Jones of the Eastern District of Virginia held that the representation Bell received violated constitutional standards. However, a new sentencing hearing to explore the…
Read MoreFeb 13, 2009
Ohio Governor Grants Death Row Inmate Clemency
Governor Ted Strickland of Ohio has granted clemency to death row inmate Jeffrey Hill (pictured), who was scheduled to be executed on March 3.“After the review of extensive material associated with this case, I concur with the unanimous rationale and recommendation of the Ohio Parole Board,“ Strickland said in a statement. The Board had voted unanimously for Hill’s commutation in part because of the victim’s…
Read MoreFeb 12, 2009
New Mexico House Votes to Repeal Death Penalty
The New Mexico House of Representatives voted February 11 to repeal the death penalty. After a more than two-hour debate, the House voted 40 to 28 in favor of replacing the death penalty with life in prison without parole. This is the third time in recent years New Mexico’s House of Representatives has voted to ban capital punishment. House Bill 285 will now move…
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