Publications & Testimony
Items: 4781 — 4790
Sep 18, 2007
Alabama Prosecutor Punished for Testifying That a Death Sentence Was Unfair
Alabama Attorney General Troy King (pictured) recently stripped a capital murder case from veteran Shelby County District Attorney Robby Owens because Owens expressed concerns in a court hearing about the fairness of an inmate’s death sentence. Owens testified that it would be disproportionate to execute LaSamuel Gamble for killing two people more than a decade ago in light of the fact that his co-defendant, and the crime’s triggerman, Marcus Presley, had his death…
Read MoreSep 14, 2007
Expensive Death Penalty Prosecutions in Florida May Mean Others Don’t Go to Trial
Florida State Attorney Harry Shorstein recently said that cuts to his budget could force his staff to make tough decisions with regard to criminal prosecutions. Shorstein said a predicted budget cut for the 20 state attorney offices in Florida would be“catastrophic,” projecting that his staff alone would lose 16 members and may have to abandon expensive death penalty cases.“There will be cases that can’t be tried. Will it mean we can’t get to the…
Read MoreSep 13, 2007
EDITORIALS: “At Some Point, A Death Penalty Stops Making Sense”
The Witchita Eagle recently called on Kansas lawmakers to reconsider the death penalty, stating:“At some point, given the legal problems and the lack of executions, a death penalty stops making sense for Kansas.” The paper said the law has cost taxpayers millions of dollars without the benefit of deterring crime. Moreover, the state has not had a single execution since capital punishment was reinstated in 1994, and the“care and caution”…
Read MoreSep 13, 2007
Supreme Court Asked to Review Unusual Death Sentence
Attorneys for Patrick Kennedy, the only person on death row in the U.S. for a non-homicide offense, have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review whether a death sentence for a crime where the victim was not murdered is constitutional. Kennedy was convicted of raping his 8‑year-old step-daughter in Louisiana in 1998. Only a handful of states have laws that would allow a death sentence for such a crime. No one has been executed for a non-homicide offense since the death…
Read MoreSep 13, 2007
HISTORY: The Death Penalty Through the Life of Anthony Amsterdam
Critical developments in the modern history of capital punishment in the United States are examined through a biographical sketch of Anthony Amsterdam (pictured), one of the nation’s most respected death penalty attorneys and legal scholars, in the latest edition of New York University’s Law School Magazine. Prof. Amsterdam argued Furman v. Georgia before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972, resulting in the overturning of all death penalty laws and the sparing of over 600…
Read MoreSep 10, 2007
Judge Blocks Texas From Destroying Evidence in Case of Possible Wrongful Execution
A Texas judge blocked the destruction of DNA evidence that could prove the innocence of a man who was executed in 2000. A joint motion filed by a coalition of concerned groups sought DNA testing on a hair taken from the crime scene in the case of Claude Jones. In addition, the groups asked the court to impose a restraining order to prevent Texas from destroying the evidence while the court considers their request for DNA testing. Judge Elizabeth Coker granted the…
Read MoreSep 07, 2007
Georgia’s Death Penalty System in Crisis Over Funding
Just two years after the creation of the Georgia Office of the Capital Defender, which successfully defended 30 death penalty cases in 2006 without a single client being sentenced to death, state budget cuts have left the attorneys with less than half the resources needed to carry out their current case load. The office has been asked to oversee the defense of 80 clients this year, including Brian Nichols, who faces the death penalty for a highly publicized 2005 Fulton…
Read MoreSep 05, 2007
PBS Program to Highlight Deficiencies in Death Penalty Defense
PBS Broadcasting will explore the problem of inadequate represenation in death penalty cases in“Death Is Different” on September 7th as part of the investigative program EXPOSÉ. The show focuses on Stephen Henderson’s (pictured) examination of the quality of representation in 80 death penalty cases in 4 states. Henderson, a McClatchy News reporter and author of an award-winning series entitled“No Defense: Shortcut to Death Row,” found that poorly-funded…
Read MoreSep 05, 2007
China Reports Fewest Death Sentences in a Decade
China reported that the number of people sentenced to death in 2006 was the lowest in nearly a decade, and officials project that this trend will continue in 2007. According to a state media report, during the first five months of 2007, the number of death sentences handed out in cases of first instance dropped approximately 10% from the same time in 2006. The decline stems from a key legal reform requiring that all death sentences be approved by the Supreme People’s Court,…
Read MoreSep 04, 2007
LAW REVIEWS: The Right to Confront Witnesses in Capital Sentencing Proceedings
University of Tennessee law professor Penny White examines how two recent Supreme Court rulings should impact a capital defendant’s right to confront witnesses during the sentencing phase of his death penalty trial. Prof. White argues that a defendant’s constitutional right to confront actual witnesses testifying against him during the guilt phase of his trial (rather than having such evidence admitted through hearsay or other non-first person evidence),…
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