Publications & Testimony
Items: 4711 — 4720
Dec 01, 2007
Delaware Legislation Prior to 2007
Passed a bill in July 2002, exempting the mentally retarded from the death penalty in which retardation, described as“significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning,” will be determined before the trial. For more information regarding this legislation, Click Here. On January 24, 2001, (SJR…
Read MoreDec 01, 2007
Connecticut Legislation Prior to 2007
Connecticut Lags Behind in Death Penalty Reforms The Chair of Connecticut’s Judiciary Committee has called for enactment of death penalty reforms to protect against wrongful convictions. Of the six reforms recommended after a 13-month special commission on Connecticut’s death penalty, only one has been enacted. Members of the commission noted,…
Read MoreDec 01, 2007
Colorado Legislation Prior to 2007
Colorado House Committee Advances Bill to Abolish Capital Punishment The House Judiciary Committee recently voted to abolish the state’s death penalty, replacing it with a sentence of life-without-parole, and use the money currently spent on capital punishment to help solve 1,200 cold-case homicides in the state. The 7 – 4 vote followed four hours of testimony from…
Read MoreDec 01, 2007
California Legislation Prior to 2007
Court Rules California’s New Lethal Injection Procedures are Invalid Superior Court Judge Lynn O’Malley Taylor held that the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation failed to follow proper procedure for instituting new regulations when it issued new lethal injection protocols in May. Under state law, an agency that adopts new regulations must first publish the text,…
Read MoreDec 01, 2007
Arkansas Legislation Prior to 2007
In April 2001, Governor Huckabee signed a law providing for Defense Counsel Standards…
Read MoreDec 01, 2007
Arizona Legislation Prior to 2007
The ban on executing the mentally retarded was signed into law earlier this year, and Napolitano said she backed most of the other recommendations, saying,“If the state wants to continue to have the death penalty, they better fund some of these things.” Read the report. (Associated Press,…
Read MoreDec 01, 2007
Alabama Legislation Prior to 2007
On May 20, 2001, Governor Siegelman signed a law creating the Committee on Compensation for Wrongful Incarceration allowing reparations to be made in the event that an innocent person is convicted and imprisoned…
Read MoreNov 29, 2007
U.S. Supreme Court to Address Discriminatory Jury Selection in Death Penalty Case
On Tuesday, Dec. 4, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in Snyder v. Louisiana, a case involving a black defendant sentenced to death by an all-white jury after the prosecution used its peremptory strikes to exclude all of the qualified black jurors. During Allen Snyder’s 1996 trial for the murder of a man his estranged wife was dating, prosecutor James Williams of Jefferson Parish urged the all-white jury to sentence the defendant to death so that Snyder would not…
Read MoreNov 28, 2007
NEW VOICES: Father of Murder Victim Urges New Jersey Legislature to Abandon the Death Penalty
In a recent op-ed in the New Jersey Daily Record, Jim O’Brien detailed his experiences with the legal system as the father of a murder victim. His daughter Deidre was murdered in 1982, and the capital trials and appeals for the man convicted of the crime lasted another 8 years. O’Brien stated,“I’ve lived through the state’s process of trying to kill [a murderer], and I can say without hesitation that it is not worth the anguish that it puts survivors through….”…
Read MoreNov 28, 2007
Religious leaders plead to end death penalty in N.J.
By BOB MAKINSTAFF WRITERNovember 28, 2007 Home…
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