Publications & Testimony
Items: 5171 — 5180
May 03, 2006
Federal Jury Gives Moussaoui Life in Prison Without Parole
A federal jury voted today that Zacarias Moussaoui should serve a sentence of life in prison without parole despite the government’s assertion that his lies to FBI officials contributed to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Earlier the jury had found that Moussaoui was responsible for some of the deaths that took place on September 11, and that he was eligible for the death penalty. After weeks of testimony during the sentencing phase of the trial, the jury took 7 days to recommend…
Read MoreMay 03, 2006
Arson Experts Dismiss Evidence that Led to Texas Execution
A report compiled by five of the nation’s top arson experts has concluded that Texas executed a man based on faulty science and unreliable evidence. Cameron Todd Willingham was executed in Texas in 2004 for a crime of arson in which his 3 children died. Based on independent reviews of the evidence used to convict Willingham, the experts called for a re-investigation of the case after finding that it was based on interpretations by fire investigators that have been scientifically dispoved. The…
Read MoreMay 03, 2006
NEW VOICES: California Chief Justice Calls Death Penalty “Dysfunctional”
Ronald George (pictured), Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, recently called the state’s death penalty “dysfunctional” and criticized state lawmakers for their unwillingness to adequately fund the state’s capital punishment system. The Justice noted that this refusal has been “a disservice to the administration of justice.” George added, “I think that there are many, many things in the eyes of legislators that have greater priority. That’s the problem. People want to have the…
Read MoreMay 02, 2006
Supreme Court Unanimously Rules Death Row Inmate Deprived of a Fair Trial
The U.S. Supreme Court, with Justice Samuel Alito writing his first opinion, unanimously ruled on May 1 that South Carolina had deprived Bobbie Lee Holmes of a fair trial when it prevented him from putting on evidence contradictory to the state’s case and that pointed to another possible suspect. South Carolina’s rule was that if the state had put on strong forensic evidence of the defendant’s guilt, the defendant could be prohibited from raising an alternative theory of a…
Read MoreApr 28, 2006
BOOKS: Stories about Executions
“A Meal to Die For” is a short story by Professor Robert Johnson examining capital punishment through the eyes of a man approaching his execution. The story is part of The Crying Wall and Other Prison Stories, a larger collection of short stories by a variety of authors. In “A Meal to Die For,” Johnson weaves the death row prisoner’s last meal with the gradual process of lethal injection, resulting in a painful death. Robert Johnson is a Professor of Justice,…
Read MoreApr 28, 2006
New Research Examines Racial Stereotypes and the Death Penalty
“Looking Deathworthy: Perceived Stereotypicality of Black Defendants Predicts Capital-Sentencing Outcomes” contains new research on race conducted by professors from Stanford, UCLA, Yale and Cornell, led by Prof. Jennifer Eberhardt. The article, to be published in the May 2006 edition of Psychological Science, examines whether the likelihood of being sentenced to death is influenced by the degree to which a black defendant is perceived to have a stereotypically black appearance. Using…
Read MoreApr 28, 2006
LETHAL INJECTIONS: Hearings in California and Missouri Delayed by Federal Courts
Two of the leading cases challenging the lethal injection process as a civil rights violation were significantly delayed to allow the parties more time to gather information. In California, the federal District Court overseeing the case of Michael Morales postponed the scheduled May 2 hearing until September 19, 2006. In Missouri, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit granted a 60-day extension for discovery and a hearing in the case of Michael Taylor. Both inmates had come within…
Read MoreApr 27, 2006
Texas Death Row Inmate To Be Forcibly Medicated For Execution
On April 11, Texas Judge Wayne Salvant ruled that death row inmate Steven Kenneth Staley could be physically forced to take anti-psychotic medication that could render him competent enough to be executed. The decision came nearly two months after the judge stopped Staley’s scheduled execution following testimony from two doctors who stated that Staley suffers from paranoid schizophrenia and is too mentally ill to be executed. The law requires that Staley be mentally competent before he is…
Read MoreApr 27, 2006
Human Rights Watch Report on Lethal Injection
A new report issued by Human Rights Watch notes that most U.S. states use execution methods that needlessly risk excruciating pain for inmates subjected to lethal injections. The report examines the history of lethal injections and the widespread use of protocols that were created three decades ago with no scientific research.Excerpts from the report: Although supporters of lethal injection believe the prisoner dies painlessly, there is mounting evidence that prisoners may have…
Read MoreApr 27, 2006
DETERRENCE: Nevada Executions – 11 out 12 Preferred Execution over Appeals
Daryl Mack, who repeatedly noted that he would rather be executed than spend the next 20 years of his life on death row pursuing legal appeals, was executed Wednesday for a 1988 murder in Reno. Mack was convicted in 2002. He was the 12th person executed in Nevada since capital punishment was reinstated in 1977, and the 11th to waive remaining appeals at the time of execution. He was the first black man to be executed in the Nevada since executions resumed in the state. On the same day…
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