Publications & Testimony
Items: 4551 — 4560
Apr 30, 2008
Death Penalty Dropped for Lack of Resources
The state of New Mexico agreed to drop its pursuit of the death penalty against two defendants because the state legislature did not provide the money necessary for adequate representation of the defendants, who were accused of killing a prison guard. The trial of Reis Lopez and Robert Young will proceed as a non-capital murder prosecution. The prosecution’s decision was spurred by the trial court’s ruling barring the seeking of the death penalty because the legislature had adjourned…
Read MoreApr 30, 2008
Death and the Chaplain
By Kiko Martinez San Antonio Current April 30,…
Read MoreApr 29, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Study Finds Evidence of Race-of-Defendant Bias in Texas Death Penalty
A new study by Professor Scott Phillips of the Univeristy of Denver found that black defendants in Houston, Texas, are more likely to be sentenced to death than white defendants, even when other variables are accounted for. The research, to be published in a forthcoming edition of the Houston Law Review, looked at cases eligible for the death penalty in the county that is the source of the highest number of executions in Texas, which itself is responsible for more executions…
Read MoreApr 28, 2008
EDITORIALS: Proposed Law Would Harm Younger Victims
The governor of Missouri, Matt Blunt, has proposed that his state expand the death penalty to include cases of sexual assault against children where the victim is not killed. However, according to an editorial in the Springfield News-Leader, such a law would not protect children. Instead, it could make it less likely that these offenses would be reported, would put the child in danger of even worse crimes, and would involve the child and the family in years…
Read MoreApr 25, 2008
NEW VOICES: Author of Arizona’s Death Penalty Law Says Time is Ripe for a Re-Examination
Rudolph J. Gerber served as a prosecutor and as a judge on Arizona’s Court of Appeals for 13 years. Earlier in his career, then-state senator Sandra Day O’Connor asked Mr. Gerber to draft the statute that eventually became Arizona’s death penalty law. In a recent op-ed in the Sacramento Bee, he expressed his concerns about the practice of capital punishment and said that states should use the present period in which no executions are occurring as an…
Read MoreApr 17, 2008
Supreme Court Issues Fractious Opinion Upholding Kentucky’s Lethal Injection Process
On April 16, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Kentucky’s three-drug protocol for carrying out lethal injections does not amount to cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment. The case, Baze v. Rees, had resulted in executions being put on hold around the country from the day after the Court agreed to review the issue. Thirty-five of the 36 states with the death penalty and the federal government use lethal injection as their primary method of execution.
Read MoreApr 16, 2008
Excerpts from the Supreme Court Opinion in Baze v. Rees
April 16,…
Read MoreApr 15, 2008
INTERNATIONAL: Amnesty International Reports Worldwide Drop in Executions
Amnesty International recently reported that at least 1,252 people were executed in 24 countries and at least 3,347 people were sentenced to death in over 50 countries in 2007. Amnesty estimates that there are up to 27,500 people on death row worldwide. Their figures represent a drop in executions from 1,591 in 2006, particularly in China which went from over 1,000 executions in 2006 to 470 last year. However, execution figures are considered a state secret in China and the…
Read MoreApr 15, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Pierce Law Review Releases Special Death Penalty Issue
The March 2008 issue of the Pierce Law Review explores many aspects of the death penalty through articles written by renowned death penalty scholars and attorneys. With a forward by Christopher M. Johnson, the Review examines the death penalty at individual, societal, and international levels. To coincide with the publication of this issue, the Franklin Pierce Law Center in New Hampshire held a panel discussion on the death penalty on April 15,…
Read MoreApr 14, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Study Finds Homicide Rates Unrelated to Execution Rates
The Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice (CJCJ) recently completed a study of the effect of executions on homicide rates and found that both states that execute many people and states that execute no one show the biggest decline in homicides (34% and 36% declines, respectively). States that execute few people have the least decline (24%) in homicides. According to the study, “This peculiar result suggests the death penalty is irrelevant to homicide.” The study looked at the effect…
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