Publications & Testimony
Items: 5121 — 5130
Jul 05, 2006
NEW VOICES: Former Publisher of the Chicago Tribune Calls for End to Executions
In a recent op-ed, Jack Fuller, former editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune, called for an end to capital punishment. Citing a series of mistakes by eyewitnesses, police and forensic experts, he stated that the criminal justice system is too deeply flawed to entrust with carrying out executions. Pointing to the likely innocence of Carlos DeLuna, a Texas man who was executed in 1989, Fuller concluded that the death penalty should be abolished because “no goverment is good enough to…
Read MoreJul 05, 2006
Anesthesiologists Advised to Avoid Lethal Injections
Dr. Orin Guidry, president of the 40,000-member American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), issued a public statement strongly urging members to “steer clear” of any participation in executions by lethal injection. In a four-page “Message from the President,” Guidry noted that anesthesiologists have been “reluctantly thrust into the middle” of the legal controversy over lethal injections. In recent months, the procedures being used around the United States have been challenged because they…
Read MoreJul 02, 2006
Tipping the Scales: Supreme Court Fails to Recognize Danger of Executing the Innocent
The Anniston StarSection: OpinionJuly 2, 2006Author: Richard C. DieterSpecial to The StarIn deciding a narrow issue about an obscure part of Kansas’ death penalty law, the Supreme Court last week revealed a chasm of differing opinions regarding the fundamental reliability of capital punishment in this country. Although the opposing views were widely divergent and sharply expressed, the court did us all a service by identifying the key problem that may decide the future of the death penalty in…
Read MoreJun 30, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: Recent Events in the Death Penalty
The Chicago Tribune Investigates the Execution of a Likely Innocent Man in “Did this man die…for this man’s crime?” In 1989, defendant Carlos DeLuna was executed in Texas for the fatal stabbing of Texas convenience store clerk Wanda Lopez. The three-part series by reporters Maurice Possley and Steve Mills can be found here. A news piece on ABC’s “World News Tonight” also covered this story. Watch it here. (Requires Real Player. For other media versions including Quicktime,…
Read MoreJun 29, 2006
Supreme Court Denies Remedies Under International Treaty
On June 28, 2006, the U.S. Supreme Court decided two consolidated cases involving the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. In both cases, the foreign nationals were arrested but not informed by police officers of their consular rights under the Convention to ask that their respective consulates be notified of their detention. The Court concluded that statements made by foreign nationals do not need to be suppressed, even though the defendants were not informed of their consular…
Read MoreJun 28, 2006
Ohio Changing Lethal Injection Process
Just weeks after Ohio struggled for more than 90 minutes to find a suitable vein in Joseph Clark’s arm to administer lethal injection drugs, the state has decided to implement new regulations aimed at ensuring smoother procedures during executions. In a report prompted by problems encountered during Clark’s execution, Ohio prisons Director Terry Collins told Gov. Bob Taft that execution teams will now make every effort to locate two injection sites prior to an execution…
Read MoreJun 28, 2006
Federal Courts Find Problems with Lethal Injections in Two More States – Executions on Hold
Below are summaries from two U.S. District Court decisions regarding problems with lethal injection procedures in Arkansas and Missouri. The court in Arkansas granted a stay of execution for Don Davis to allow further investigations into the lethal injection procedures. In Missouri, in Michael Taylor’s case, the District judge put all executions in the state on hold until changes are made in the state’s execution protocols.Nooner v. Norris, No. 5:06CV00110 SWW U.S. District…
Read MoreJun 28, 2006
NEW VOICES: Deepak Chopra Writes About the Death Penalty
Dr. Deepak Chopra recently wrote that continuing use of the death penalty in the U.S. is irrational because it does not deter crime, risks innocent lives, and isolates the U.S. among the majority of First World nations that have chosen to abandon capital punishment:The U.S. has isolated itself among First World countries by allowing the death penalty — 123 countries have abolished it completely, or in practice never use it, a few permitting it under extreme circumstances.Of the 50 countries…
Read MoreJun 27, 2006
U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Kansas Death Penalty Law
In a 5 – 4 decision that revealed a deep division among the Justices over the fairness of capital punishment, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Kansas’s death penalty statute on June 26. In Kansas v. Marsh, the Court held that juries may be required to sentence a defendant to die when there is an equal weight of mitigating and aggravating evidence. The ruling overturns a Kansas Supreme Court decision that found the practice unconstitutional because it violated the Eighth Amendment’s protection…
Read MoreJun 27, 2006
DPIC Bestows Thurgood Marshall Journalism Awards at National Press Club Luncheon
The Death Penalty Information Center held its 10th Annual Thurgood Marshall Journalism Awards at the National Press Club on Monday, June 26. This year’s award recipients were Jacqui Lofaro and Victor Teich of Justice Productions for their documentary “The Empty Chair,” and reporter Robert Nelson of the Phoenix New Times for his coverage of death row exoneree Ray Krone. Lofaro and Teich received this year’s Award for excellence in the television broadcast category.
Read More