Publications & Testimony

Items: 4841 — 4850


Jun 11, 2007

Tennessee Legislature Overwhelmingly Approves Death Penalty Study

By a vote of 79 – 14, the Tennessee House of Representatives passed bipar­ti­san leg­is­la­tion cre­at­ing a study com­mis­sion to exam­ine the state’s death penal­ty sys­tem. A sim­i­lar mea­sure unan­i­mous­ly passed the state’s Senate in May, just one month after the American Bar Association issued a report find­ing that the state was not in full com­pli­ance with most of the bench­marks estab­lished to guar­an­tee a fair death penal­ty sys­tem. The new com­mis­sion will con­sist of rep­re­sen­ta­tives from the…

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Jun 11, 2007

Rwanda Votes to Abolish the Death Penalty

Rwandas par­lia­ment has vot­ed to abol­ish the death penal­ty and replace it with life with­out parole, a move that offi­cials hope will clear the way for sus­pects in the nation’s 1994 geno­cide to be extra­dit­ed back to Rwanda for tri­al. Many of the sus­pects are believed to be at large in Europe, North America, and West Africa, regions where many coun­tries refuse to extra­dite crim­i­nal sus­pects to nations that con­tin­ue to prac­tice cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment or tor­ture. Rwandan genocide…

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Jun 11, 2007

A Crisis of Confidence

Read the Newsweek Feature About DPIC’s Poll & ReportThe Trials of Darryl Hunt pre­mieres around the USA DPIC’s New Poll and Report Shows America Becoming More Distant from the Death Penalty Because of mis­takes and a lack of effi­ca­cy, the death penal­ty is los­ing the con­fi­dence of the American pub­lic, accord­ing to a new poll and report issued by the Death Penalty Information Center. Nearly 40% of the American pub­lic believes they would be dis­qual­i­fied from serv­ing on death penalty…

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Jun 08, 2007

Executions Declining in China

A new require­ment that every death sen­tence be reviewed and approved by China’s high­est court has result­ed in a sharp decline in exe­cu­tions there. A spokesman for the Supreme People’s Court in China said that low­er courts are report­ing a 10% drop in exe­cu­tions dur­ing the first five months of 2007. Human rights experts esti­mate that China exe­cutes 10,000 — 15,000 peo­ple each year, more than the rest of the world com­bined, but offi­cials do not release spe­cif­ic num­bers to the pub­lic. In recent…

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Jun 08, 2007

NEW DPIC REPORT and POLL: A Crisis of Confidence”

According to a new report and opin­ion poll issued today by the Death Penalty Information Center, the American pub­lic is los­ing con­fi­dence in the death penal­ty as doubts about inno­cence and the pur­pose of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment increase. The report, A Crisis of Confidence: Americans’ Doubts About the Death Penalty, is based on a recent nation­al opin­ion poll con­duct­ed by RT Strategies and com­mis­sioned by DPIC. Public con­fi­dence in the death penal­ty has clear­ly erod­ed over the past 10 years,…

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Jun 07, 2007

EDITORIALS: Death Penalty for Rape Would Compound the Error”

In a recent edi­to­r­i­al, the Los Angeles Times voiced con­cerns about a Louisiana Supreme Court deci­sion uphold­ing the death sen­tence of Patrick Kennedy for the rape of his 8‑year-old step­daugh­ter. The paper said the Louisiana court’s deci­sion to allow the death penal­ty in such cas­es could lead states to seek the death penal­ty for oth­er non-mur­der crimes, a devel­op­ment that would wors­en an already dys­func­tion­al death penal­ty sys­tem. The edi­to­r­i­al not­ed: The United States is virtually alone…

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Jun 06, 2007

Jury Strikes and Racial Bias

Although the Supreme Court struck down race-based strikes of poten­tial jurors more than two decades ago in Batson v. Kentucky, the deci­sion has fall­en short of its goal. For exam­ple, in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, a recent study has revealed that poten­tial black jurors are struck three times as often as white jurors in the parish. This does not include the jurors struck for being unable to fol­low death penal­ty law by the judge. A Louisiana Crisis Assistance Center review of 390 felony…

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Jun 06, 2007

NEW VOICES: Florida League of Women Voters Calls for Halt to Executions

The League of Women Voters of Florida is urg­ing Governor Charlie Crist to con­tin­ue the mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions and to con­sid­er alter­na­tive sen­tences. In a let­ter from Florida League President Dianne Wheatley-Giliotti to Governor Crist, the orga­ni­za­tion not­ed that con­cerns about fair­ness, inno­cence, costs, and pub­lic safe­ty have led them to ques­tion the val­ue of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. In their call for a mora­to­ri­um, the League…

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Jun 05, 2007

Lethal Injection Developments Spur Further Controversy in California and Missouri

Just days after a fed­er­al judge in California ruled that exe­cu­tions in that state must remain on hold as the lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dures are care­ful­ly con­sid­ered, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit held that lethal injec­tion exe­cu­tions in Missouri may resume because their pro­ce­dures do not vio­late the 8th Amendment’s ban on cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment. U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel, who is pre­sid­ing over the ongo­ing legal chal­lenges in California, said…

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Jun 05, 2007

Texas Medical Examiner No Longer Stands by Testimony that sent Woman to Death Row

Just weeks before Texas is sched­uled to exe­cute Cathy Henderson (pic­tured) for the mur­der of a child that she was babysit­ting, the med­ical exam­in­er whose tes­ti­mo­ny helped send her to death row has said he no longer stands by his orig­i­nal opin­ion that the child’s death result­ed from an inten­tion­al act on Henderson’s part. In light of new sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence show­ing that Brandon Baugh’s death could have result­ed from an acci­den­tal fall, retired Travis County chief medical examiner…

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