Publications & Testimony
Items: 4881 — 4890
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 called for an end to the…
Read MoreApr 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 death row for a murder he…
Read MoreApr 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,” observed Judge Gilbert…
Read MoreApr 16, 2007
EDITORIALS: Dallas Morning News Issues Historic Call to End Death Penalty
Noting that they “cannot reconcile the fact that [the death penalty] is both imperfect and irreversible,” the Dallas Morning News has called on Texas to abandon capital punishment. The paper, which has long supported the death penalty, changed its position after careful consideration of mounting evidence that the state has wrongly convicted a number of defendants in capital trials and has likely executed at least one man who was innocent. The editorial…
Read MoreApr 13, 2007
Supreme Court to Hear Arguments on Whether Texas Man is Mentally Competent to be Executed
On Wednesday, April 18, at 1 PM, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Panetti v. Quarterman. This case focuses on the question of whether an inmate must have a rational understanding of his crime and why he is being punished prior to execution, or whether mere awareness of his situation is sufficient for mental competency. For a fuller description of the case, see Supreme Court (Pending 2007 cases). This page includes links to some of the legal briefs filed…
Read MoreApr 12, 2007
Virginia Man Pleads Guilty to Crime that Sent an Innocent Man to Death Row
Kenneth Tinsley pleaded guilty on April 11 to the 1982 rape and capital murder of a Culpeper woman — a crime for which another man, Earl Washington Jr., spent nearly a decade on death row and was nearly executed. Tinsley admitted to the rape of Rebecca Lynn Williams, a 19-year-old mother of 3, and conceded that DNA and other evidence could have proved his guilt of her…
Read MoreApr 11, 2007
North Carolina Death Penalty to Remain in Limbo for Foreseeable Future
Challenges to the constitutionality of North Carolina’s lethal injection procedures have put executions on hold, and it appears they will remain that way for the foreseeable future. Though some lawmakers are pushing for a legislative “fix” to questions raised about the procedures, Governor Mike Easley and Democratic lawmakers — who control the legislature — have no plans to end the execution standstill prior to clear court action. “The legislature isn’t going to be able to move in any…
Read MoreApr 09, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: “Trials Under the Military Commissions Act”
Amnesty International has released a new report entitled “Justice Delayed and Justice Denied? Trials under the Military Commissions Act.” This report examines whether proceedings under the revised U.S. Military Commissions Act will comply with international standards, especially when the death penalty is sought. In particular, it explores the rights of detainees under international human rights law, the Geneva Conventions and the U.S. Constitution. (Amnesty International,…
Read MoreApr 09, 2007
Was an innocent man executed in Texas?
Anderson Cooper 360 Blog — Monday, April 09,…
Read MoreApr 06, 2007
EDITORIAL: Pennsylvania Paper Declares State’s Death Penalty “Useless”
The Sentinel newspaper of Pennsylvania is the latest paper to editorially conclude that the death penalty should be abolished. Shortly after it published an investigative piece outlining the ineffectiveness of Pennsylvania’s death penalty, the newspaper editorialized that the state’s capital punishment laws are “useless” and that the “pendulum is swinging away from Pennsylvania’s position on a law it cannot even execute.” The Central Pennsylvania-based newspaper noted that capital…
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