Publications & Testimony
Items: 4441 — 4450
Sep 30, 2008
Professor Anthony Amsterdam To Receive the Frederick Douglass Human Rights Award
Leading attorney, law professor, and advocate Anthony Amsterdam is being honored by the Southern Center for Human Rights with the Frederick Douglass Human Rights Award in Washington, DC on October 2. Professor Amsterdam conducts the Capital Defender Clinic at New York University Law School and is recognized for his four decades of prominent work in cases ranging from death penalty defense to claims of free speech and the press, privacy, and equality of opportunity for racial minorities…
Read MoreSep 29, 2008
NEW VOICES: Former U.S. Senator and N.J. Police Chief Testify at Maryland Commission
The final Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment hearing was held on September 23 and among those testifying were a former U.S. Senator, a New Jersey Police Chief, and a Chief of the Forensics Division of the Maryland Public Defenders Office. All spoke of how they were not philosophically opposed to the death penalty, but had serious misgivings about its application.Maryland’s former U.S. Senator Joseph Tydings (pictured) said that Maryland has to “be willing to spend the money” if…
Read MoreSep 26, 2008
ARBITRARINESS: Louisiana Serial Killer Sentenced to Life
Prosecutors decided against pursuing a death sentence for a serial killer in Terrebonne Parish in Louisiana. Roland Dominique, who was arrested at a homeless shelter, pled guilty to the murder of eight young men, and he may have killed as many as 23 men. Terrebonne Parish District Attorney Joe Waitz, Jr. decided against seeking the death penalty after consulting with members of the victims’ familes. The family members reached a unanimous agreement to accept a plan of back-to-back life…
Read MoreSep 26, 2008
NEW VOICES: Former U.S. Attorney Cites Improper Pressure in Use of Federal Death Penalty
Former U.S. Attorney Paul Charlton expressed relief that the Justice Department is no longer seeking to execute a defendant in the case that was cause for his termination. Charlton told the Associated Press that he did not think the government had sufficient evidence to pursue the death penalty in the prosecution of Jose Rios Rico. Charlton’s boss, former Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, wanted him to pursue it anyway and testified to a Senate panel that he…
Read MoreSep 25, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: The Espy File on Executions to Become Part of National Archive
The files on executions in America compiled by noted historian M Watt Espy, Jr are to become part of the National Death Penalty Archive located at the State University of New York at Albany. The Espy collection, entitled “Executions in America,” documents more than 15,000 executions in the United states dating back to 1608 and colonial Jamestown. Among the unique materials are handwritten ledgers with an alphabetical listing of executed individuals by state and by date from the 1600’s through…
Read MoreSep 24, 2008
U.S. Supreme Court Stays Georgia Execution in Case With Strong Evidence of Innocence
The U.S. Supreme Court issued a stay of execution for Georgia inmate Troy Davis on September 23 only two hours before his scheduled execution. Evidence of his innocence has garnered national and global attention, with pleas for clemency coming from former President Jimmy Carter, Desmond Tutu, and Pope Benedict XVI. Seven of the nine non-police witnesses who testified against Davis at his original trial have recanted their testimony, including two who have said they felt…
Read MoreSep 19, 2008
Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights and the National Alliance on Mental Illness To Launch National Project
Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights (MVFHR) and the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) are working together to launch a national project concerned with the intersection of the capital punishment system and people with severe mental illness. The groups will host a press conference in San Antonio, Texas on October 3rd. Speakers will include the Director of MVFHR, the NAMI Policy and Legal Director, family members of victims murdered by people with mental illness, and family…
Read MoreSep 18, 2008
Texas DNA Exoneration of Death Row Inmate Michael Blair Brings Innocence Total to 130
The Collin County court in Texas has dismissed capital murder charges against Michael Blair who had been on death row for the 1993 murder of Ashley Estell. After more than a decade of legal appeals and requests for DNA testing, the hair evidence that had been used to convict Blair was shown to be mistaken. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found that no reasonable jury would convict Blair based on the existing evidence.The District Attorney’s office filed a motion to dismiss…
Read MoreSep 17, 2008
NEW VOICES: Dallas D.A. To Re-Examine Death Penalty Convictions and Possibly Halt Executions
Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins announced that he will be reexamining nearly 40 death penalty convictions in his county. No executions will occur in the county until he has reviewed the cases in detail. Watkins said he will start with the oldest cases as they are most likely to be scheduled first. “I’m not saying I’m putting a moratorium on the death penalty,” said Watkins. “It’s saying that maybe we should withdraw those dates and look at those cases from a new perspective to…
Read MoreSep 16, 2008
Murder Rate Declines in Every Region Except the South, Where Executions Are Most Prevalent
According to the F.B.I.‘s latest crime report released on September 15, the South is the only region in the country that experienced a rise in its murder rate in 2007. The FBI reported that the murder rate in the country declined to 5.6 murders per 100,000 people in 2007 from 5.7 in 2006, and the rate declined in the Northeast, the Midwest, and the West. In the South, however, the murder rate increased from 6.8 in 2006 to 7.0 in 2007, the highest rate among the four regions. The…
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