Publications & Testimony
Items: 4371 — 4380
Jan 12, 2009
EDITORIALS: A Penalty of the Past
The News & Record of North Carolina recently featured an editorial encouraging the state’s legislature and governor to abolish the death penalty. The editorial noted the controversies that have surrounded the use of capital punishment in the state, including disagreement about lethal injections and the inconsistent way the penalty has been applied. The declining number of death sentences and the extensive time needed before an execution can take place led the paper to conclude…
Read MoreJan 09, 2009
Death Penalty Misconduct May Force District Attorney’s Office into Bankruptcy
The Orleans Parish District Attorney’s office in Louisiana may file for bankruptcy because of a multi-million dollar law-suit award stemming from the office’s misconduct in a death penalty case. John Thompson, a former death row inmate, was awarded $14 million after he was exonerated due to the withholding of evidence by the former District Attorney. Thompson spent 18 years in prison, including 14 years on death row in Angola. The jury award…
Read MoreJan 09, 2009
Evolving standards of decency? The Death Penalty in the USA in 2008
by Dr. Andrew D. MoranLondon Metropolitan UniversityAmerican Politics Group Annual ConferenceSt. Anne’s College, University of OxfordE-mail:…
Read MoreJan 07, 2009
California to Hold Public Hearings on Lethal Injection Procedures
The legal fight over California’s lethal injection process moved into a new phase as the state has given up its appeals and decided to follow the administrative rules to put the execution plan through public review. The state must hold a series of public hearings, which effectively leaves San Quentin’s newly constructed execution chamber empty for the foreseeable future. This is the latest development in California’s attempt to revise its lethal injection process; executions…
Read MoreJan 06, 2009
NEW VOICES: Oregon Supreme Court Justice Suggests Constitutionality of Capital Punishment is Ripe for Review
Oregon Supreme Court Justice Martha Walters recently suggested that it is time to review the constitutionality of the death penalty. Concurring in Oregon v. Michael Davis, Justice Walters wrote, “When presented with the opportunity to do so, I urge this court to consider our state’s experience in imposing the death penalty and to examine its constitutionality anew.“ Justice Walters acknowledged that the death penalty has been upheld in the past, but…
Read MoreJan 05, 2009
EDITORIALS: Washington Post Calls for an End to Capital Punishment in Maryland
A recent editorial in the Washington Post cited trends and statistics from DPIC’s 2008 Year End Report in calling for an end to the death penalty in Maryland. The paper urged Maryland lawmakers to “heed the march of history” and noted that use of the death penalty is declining around the country: “According to the Death Penalty Information Center, a nonprofit organization that studies capital punishment, executions nationwide reached a 14-year low in 2008, with only…
Read MoreJan 01, 2009
Juveniles News and Developments 2008
Dec 31, 2008
Number of Police Officers Killed by Gunfire is Lowest in 50 Years
The number of police officers killed by gunfire in 2008 dropped by 40% from 2007, down to its lowest level in more than 50 years, according to a report by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. The report attributed the decline to a new emphasis on officer safety training and equipment. In addition to increased training, more officers are wearing body armor and using stun guns to protect themselves. The overall number of officers killed in the…
Read MoreDec 31, 2008
Executions Slowed in 2008, But Numbers May Increase in Coming Year
The Death Penalty Information Center’s Year End Report for 2008 recorded 37 executions for the year that ends today. That is a 12% drop from the 42 executions in 2007. However, based on executions already scheduled for 2009, the coming year may see an increase. There are 23 executions scheduled for the first five months of 2009, and more dates are likely to be added. As was true in 2008, almost all the executions scheduled are in the south and about half (12 of 23) are in…
Read MoreDec 31, 2008
The Daryl Atkins Case: Continuing Challenges to Intellectual Disability Determinations
Daryl Atkins’s constitutional challenge resulted in the U.S. Supreme Court exempting people with intellectual disabilities from the death penalty. Despite this groundbreaking ruling, Virginia courts were unwilling to recognize his intellectual disability. Below is a timeline of events in Atkins. The timeline uses the term used for intellectual disability at the time of the events, “mental…
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