Publications & Testimony
Items: 4391 — 4400
Dec 16, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Death Qualification and Prejudice
Research on death qualification – the selection of jurors who are qualified to serve on a capital case because they are willing to sentence someone to death – has revealed additional characteristics among such jurors. Professor Brooke Butler of the University of South Florida in Sarasota has studied such jurors and published her results in the journal of Behavioral Sciences and the Law. Her study, “Death qualification and prejudice: the effect of implicit racism, sexism, and homophobia on…
Read MoreDec 15, 2008
Expensive Death Penalty Prosecution of Infamous Murderer Results in Life-Without-Parole Sentence in Georgia
Brian Nichols was sentenced to life in prison without parole in Georgia on December 13 after the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict of death. Nichols had been found guilty of killing a judge, a court reporter, a police deputy, and a U.S. Customs agent during his escape from a courthouse hearing on other charges. The jury remained deadlocked in a 9 – 3 vote after four days of deliberations. A unanimous vote is required for a death sentence, just as it is…
Read MoreDec 12, 2008
Maryland Commission Recommends Abolition of Death Penalty in Final Report
The legislative commission established to examine the death penalty in Maryland has recommended abolition of the punishment by a vote of 13 – 9. The Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment released its final report on December 12, detailing the reasons for its recommendation. “There is no good and sufficient reason to have the death penalty,” Chairman Benjamin R. Civiletti said at a news conference. Regarding the commission’s recommendation of repeal rather…
Read MoreDec 11, 2008
RESOURCES: New Website and Database Launched
The Death Penalty Project launched a new Web site on December 10 that includes a legal resource database with a comprehensive list of international legal authorities and case law, some dating back to the 19th century, and detailed head notes for those seeking jurisprudence on criminal, constitutional, and international points of law. Users can search for case references by subject matter and a sophisticated case index. The site is located at www.deathpenaltyproject.org. The…
Read MoreDec 10, 2008
Federal Appeals Court Considers Sufficiency of Evidence in Troy Davis Case
A three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta heard arguments in the Troy Davis case on December 9. The judges weighed whether Davis’ new evidence was sufficient to merit a more extensive hearing and perhaps a new trial. One of the judges, Rosemary Barkett, said she would like to see the innocence claims fleshed out in a further…
Read MoreDec 09, 2008
Tennessee Death Penalty Committee Recommends Changes in Representation Standards
A legislative committee created to study the death penalty in Tennessee has recommended ways to ensure capital cases are handled fairly and effectively. The committee approved a resolution that asks lawmakers to create a statewide authority whose duties would include identifying lawyers experienced in capital cases, raising the standard pay for such attorneys, and monitoring their caseloads. Thomas Lee, a Tennessee attorney on the committee, said such an authority would help…
Read MoreDec 09, 2008
Military death sentence case may head back for Supreme Court certiorari decision
Dec. 9, 2008US MILTARY:Military death sentence case may head back for Supreme Court certiorari decisionFor the 1st time in half a century, the President approved a military death sentence this summer. Army Private Ronald Gray was sentenced to death by a military court-martial panel in 1988 after convicting him of two murders, three rapes, an attempted murder, and a host of other crimes. A military death sentence triggers automatic appeals. In Gray’s case, his conviction went before the Army…
Read MoreDec 08, 2008
NEW VOICES: Law Enforcement Officer Changed Views Because of Death Penalty’s Risks
Michael May served as a Baltimore City police officer and as a military police officer. He formerly supported capital punishment, but changed his stance upon learning of innocent people who had been sentenced to death. Mr. May testified earlier this yar before the Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment. He recently published an op-ed in the Baltimore Examiner explaining how his views changed and why he supports for repeal of Maryland’s death penalty. The full…
Read MoreDec 05, 2008
STUDIES: Higher Murder Rates Related to Gun Laws
States with softer gun laws have higher rates of handgun killings, fatal shootings of police officers, and sales of weapons that were used in crimes in other states, according to a study due out in January 2009. The study’s 38-page report, underwritten by a group of over 300 mayors and obtained by the Washington Post, focused on tracking guns used in crimes back to the retailers that first sold…
Read MoreDec 05, 2008
Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty Releases Report on Death Penalty Developments in 2008
Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty Releases Report on Death Penalty Developments in 2008 “Average” Number of Executions Carried Out in Record Time as New DeathSentences Reach Lowest Level in Texas in 30 Years(Austin, Texas) — Today the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty(TCADP) released its annual report on death penalty developments statewide, inadvance of the December 7 anniversary of the resumption of executions in Texasin 1982. According to the report,…
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