Publications & Testimony

Items: 4871 — 4880


Apr 25, 2007

After Spending $700,000, California Halts Construction of New Death Chamber

After spend­ing near­ly $700,000 on the con­struc­tion of a new death cham­ber at San Quentin prison, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has halt­ed the project due to con­cerns raised by leg­is­la­tors that they were not con­sult­ed about the plan. It was recent­ly revealed that state offi­cials had secret­ly begun build­ing the new death cham­ber and that cor­rec­tions offi­cials claimed they did not have to con­sult the leg­is­la­ture because the cost of the project would be $399,000, below…

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Apr 25, 2007

200th Prisoner Cleared Through DNA Testing

Jerry Miller, a for­mer army cook who spent near­ly 25 years behind bars for a crime he did not com­mit, became the nation’s 200th per­son freed from prison or death row through DNA test­ing. The first DNA exon­er­a­tion in the U.S. took place in 1989. Thirteen years lat­er, the num­ber of freed inmates reached 100, and just five years after that, it dou­bled.​“Five years ago, peo­ple said that the num­ber (of exon­er­a­tions) was going to dry up because there just weren’t many…

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Apr 25, 2007

ABA Study Calls on Tennessee to Extend Moratorium on Executions

Members of an American Bar Association Assessment Team have urged Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen to extend the state’s cur­rent mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions so that a more thor­ough review of the state’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment laws can be con­duct­ed. The sev­en-mem­ber team also offered 14 rec­om­men­da­tions to address prob­lems iden­ti­fied dur­ing their review of Tennessee’s death penal­ty. Racial and geo­graph­ic dis­par­i­ties in cap­i­tal cas­es, poorly trained…

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Apr 24, 2007

New Study Casts Doubt on Reliability of Lethal Injection Drugs

A new sci­en­tif­ic study of 41 lethal injec­tions that took place in California and North Carolina dur­ing the past two decades revealed that two of the three drugs used to car­ry out these exe­cu­tions are not admin­is­tered in a way that reli­ably pro­duces death in the way intend­ed. The study, pub­lished in the Public Library of Science Journal, PLoS Medicine, found that inmates were giv­en a uni­form amount of anes­the­sia (sodi­um thiopen­tal) regard­less of their…

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Apr 23, 2007

ARBITRARINESS: Study Finds 6th Circuit Political Appointments Result In Partisan Death Penalty Rulings

A Cincinnati Enquirer exam­i­na­tion of death penal­ty deci­sions issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit revealed that judges appear to con­sis­tent­ly vote along par­ty lines, there­by inject­ing arbi­trari­ness into death penal­ty rul­ings. The judges do most of their work as mem­bers of ran­dom­ly select­ed three-judge pan­els. Sixteen judges are eli­gi­ble to sit on those pan­els, includ­ing nine Republican appointees and sev­en Democratic appointees. This…

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Apr 20, 2007

NEW VOICES: Victims Organizations Issue Joint Statement for National Victims’ Rights Week

Three orga­ni­za­tions whose mem­ber­ships include fam­i­ly mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims recent­ly issued a joint state­ment in con­junc­tion with National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, which takes place April 22 — 28, 2007. The state­ment, issued by the lead­ers of Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights, Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation, and Journey of Hope, called for gov­ern­men­tal poli­cies that serve the true needs of fam­i­ly mem­bers. The groups called for an end…

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Apr 19, 2007

Unanimous California Ruling Allows Broad Interpretation of Mental Retardation

The California Supreme Court has unan­i­mous­ly ruled that a defen­dant may be spared the death penal­ty because he is men­tal­ly defi­cient in one area, even if his IQ score falls in the nor­mal range. The deci­sion gives judges broad­er dis­cre­tion to spare defen­dants from exe­cu­tion for rea­sons of men­tal impair­ment and clar­i­fies a 2005 rul­ing that allowed those on death row to chal­lenge their sen­tences on the grounds of men­tal retar­da­tion. The court ruled that…

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Apr 19, 2007

Victims Organizations Issue Joint Statement for National Victims’ Rights Week

Three orga­ni­za­tions whose mem­ber­ships include fam­i­ly mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims recent­ly issued a joint state­ment in con­junc­tion with National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, which takes place April 22 — 28, 2007. The state­ment, issued by the lead­ers of Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights, Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation, and Journey of Hope, called for gov­ern­men­tal poli­cies that serve the true needs of fam­i­ly mem­bers. The groups…

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Apr 18, 2007

Freed Death Row Inmates and Former Prosecutor Join Call for Halt to Pennsylvania Executions

(Pictured left to right, Harold Wilson, Barry Scheck, and Sam Millsap) During a press con­fer­ence near the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, 16 for­mer death row inmates whose con­vic­tions were over­turned joined not­ed attor­ney Barry Scheck (pic­tured) and for­mer Texas pros­e­cu­tor Sam Millsap (pic­tured) in call­ing for a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions in Pennsylvania. Harold C. Wilson (pic­tured), the most recent of six death row exonerees in the state, not­ed that he spent 16 years on…

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Apr 17, 2007

Inadequate Capital Defense Underscored in Ohio Study

A Cincinnati Enquirer inves­ti­ga­tion of Ohio cap­i­tal cas­es found that more death sen­tences are over­turned in the state because of mis­takes by defense lawyers than for any oth­er rea­son. Reporters with the Enquirer found that 15 peo­ple on Ohio’s death row won fed­er­al appeals dur­ing the past sev­en years based entire­ly or in part on the poor per­for­mance of their lawyers.​“It’s a big, big prob­lem. The lawyers don’t have the where­with­al to put on a first-class defense,”…

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