Publications & Testimony
Items: 4621 — 4630
Jan 29, 2008
OP-ED: Georgia is Denying a Constitutional Defense by Withholding Funds
In a recent op-ed, Stephen Bright, president of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, wrote that Georgia is failing to provide defense for poor people accused of crimes in a constitutionally responsible manner. According to Bright (pictured), today there is no money to pay for the defense in capital cases, while district attorneys continue to have a virtual blank check to prosecute them Georgia’s failure to pay defense lawyers has caused many of them to withdraw from representing…
Read MoreJan 25, 2008
Truth Finally Emerges for Man Imprisoned for Murder
Alton Logan was sentenced to life in prison for the 1982 murder of a security guard in a McDonald’s restaurant in Illinois. The state had originally sought the death penalty. New information in the form of a confession has now come forward from an attorney in another case indicating that Logan may not be guilty of the crime. Soon after the restaurant murder, two Chicago police officers were shot to death, and a man named Andrew Wilson was charged with their murder. Wilson was asked by his…
Read MoreJan 25, 2008
DOJ Fails to Grant Funds Allocated for DNA Testing
At recent Congressional hearings, members of the Senate Judiciary Committee questioned the Department of Justice as to why it has not approved any grants under the Kirk Bloodsworth DNA Post-Conviction Testing Program. Part of the Innocence Protection Act of 2004, the purpose of the program was to help defray DNA testing costs through grants to individual states. It has had congressional funding of almost $14 million over the past three years, but has failed to dole out any of the funds. Kirk…
Read MoreJan 24, 2008
BOOKS: “Crime and Justice: Abolishing the Death Penalty”
The Inter Press Service, with the assistance of the European Commission, has recently published “Crime and Justice: Abolishing the Death Penalty,” collecting more than 100 reports from dozens of countries and every continent. IPS used the voices of those who work directly with the death penalty issue to present a world-wide picture of the status of capital punishment. The stories told in the report are from activists, academics, lawyers and death row inmates. They range from dispatches from…
Read MoreJan 22, 2008
EDITORIALS: Key Virginia Paper Shifts Position on Death Penalty
The Richmond Times-Dispatch, a key paper in the Virginia state capital, has long supported the death penalty. But their recent editorial takes the position that capital punishment “achieves no legitimate goals that cannot be achieved by a life sentence with no possibility of parole.” The paper equates the death penalty with the state “playing God.” The full text of the editorial follows: Del. Frank Hargrove, one of the General Assembly’s Don Quixotes, hopes the umpteenth time will be the…
Read MoreJan 22, 2008
Missouri’s Execution Doctor Was Deceptive and Publicly Reprimanded
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch recently uncovered hospital files indicating that Dr. Alan R. Doerhoff, a Missouri physician who assisted with the state’s executions and who developed the state’s lethal injection protocol, gave misleading answers during a 1999 malpractice suit about having his hospital privileges revoked. In 1998, Doerhoff’s medical privileges were revoked from the Lake of the Ozarks General Hospital. Doerhoff was also denied privileges at St. Mary’s Health Center in Jefferson…
Read MoreJan 21, 2008
NEW VOICES: Police Chief Says “The death penalty isn’t anywhere on my list”
In an op-ed in the Fort-Worth Star-Telegram, police chief James Abbott stated that the death penalty is broken beyond repair and that the extra money spent pursuing executions could be better spent on crime prevention and the needs of victims. Abbott is the Police Chief of West Orange, New Jersey, and he served on the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission. He was a longtime supporter of the death penalty but eventually concluded that abolition was “just plain common sense.” Chief Abbott…
Read MoreJan 18, 2008
Prosecutorial Misconduct Leads to Life Sentence for Daryl Atkins
Daryl Atkins, the defendant in the 2002 Supreme Court case (Atkins v. Virginia) that banned the execution of the mentally retarded, had his death sentence reduced to life without parole after a Virginia judge heard that evidence had been withheld from his trial attorneys. Sentenced to death for the 1996 robbery and murder of Eric Nesbitt, Atkins received much attention because of his mental limitations and the question of whether it was constitutional to execute those with mental retardation.
Read MoreJan 16, 2008
California Plans New Death Row Costing $356 Million
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has earmarked $136 million in additional funds to build a new death row at San Quentin State Prison. In 2003, the California State Legislature had authorized $220 million for the same project, but the plans were put aside when cost estimates increased. The current estimate is $356 million to complete the construction of the 768 new cells needed to reduce San Quentin’s significant overcrowding. California already has the largest death row in…
Read MoreJan 14, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Austrian Cultural Forum in New York Explores Death Penalty Through Art
“Under Pain of Death,” a new exhibition at the Austrian Cultural Forum in New York City, explores the death penalty through various forms of art, focusing particularly on the human emotions involved. Beginning January 21, 2008, the exhibition offers art installations, film screenings, and lectures on a variety of aspects of the death penalty. The Austrian Cultural Forum New York is located at: 11 E. 52nd Street New York, NY 10022. (Press release, Austrian Cultural Forum, Jan. 2008;…
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