Publications & Testimony

Items: 5191 — 5200


Apr 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…

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Apr 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…

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Apr 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…

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Apr 26, 2006

Harvard Conference Explores Race and the Death Penalty

A May 2006 con­fer­ence held at the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School exam­ined new research, legal defense, and pub­lic response to the issue of race and the death penal­ty. The conference, ​“From Lynch Mobs to the Killing State: A National Conference on Race and the Death Penalty,” fea­tured a num­ber of nation­al aca­d­e­m­ic and legal…

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Apr 26, 2006

Juries Choosing Death Penalty Less Often in Federal Cases

The per­cent­age of fed­er­al death penal­ty cas­es result­ing in death sen­tences has declined from the 1990s to the present. Since 1991, juries chose a death sen­tence in 51 cas­es com­pared with 93 cas­es that end­ed with a sen­tence of life in prison, accord­ing to Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel, a rate of 35% for death sen­tences. Since 2000, juries have returned 29 death sen­tences and 69 life sen­tences, a rate…

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Apr 25, 2006

United Methodist Church Marks 50th Anniversary of Stance Against Death Penalty

Marking the 50th anniver­sary of the United Methodist Church’s pub­lic call for an end to the death penal­ty, the church’s General Board of Church and Society recent­ly issued a state­ment echo­ing the sen­ti­ments of the church’s orig­i­nal call for abo­li­tion and urg­ing all United Methodists​“to prac­tice trans­for­ma­tive love, to com­fort the vic­tims of crime, to human­ize those con­vict­ed of crime, and to advo­cate for an end to the death penal­ty in our criminal justice…

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Apr 24, 2006

Amnesty International Report Finds Declining Executions and Trend Toward Abolition

Amnesty International’s most recent death penalty report, ​“The Death Penalty Worldwide: Developments in 2005,” revealed a sub­stan­tial drop in record­ed exe­cu­tions around the world, as well as a grow­ing num­ber of nations that have aban­doned the death penal­ty. According to the report, four nations account­ed for 94% of the 2,148 record­ed exe­cu­tions car­ried out around the world in 2005, a total that is sig­nif­i­cant­ly less than the 3,797 exe­cu­tions recorded in…

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Apr 20, 2006

NEW RESOURCE: Human Rights Watch Report Examines Lethal Injection

A new report issued by Human Rights Watch today notes that most U.S. states use exe­cu­tion meth­ods that need­less­ly risk excru­ci­at­ing pain for inmates sub­ject­ed to lethal injec­tions. The report, ​“So Long as They Die: Lethal Injections in the United States,” exam­ines the his­to­ry of lethal injec­tions and the wide­spread use of pro­to­cols that were cre­at­ed three decades ago with no sci­en­tif­ic research.​“The U.S. takes more care killing dogs than peo­ple. Just…

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Apr 18, 2006

California Commission Issues Its First Recommendations for Justice Reform

The California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice, a blue-rib­bon pan­el estab­lished by the state leg­is­la­ture to study and review the death penal­ty and relat­ed mat­ters in California, has pro­posed sig­nif­i­cant changes in the use of eye­wit­ness iden­ti­fi­ca­tion in California courts. The com­mis­sion called on leg­is­la­tors to pass a bill requir­ing the attor­ney gen­er­al’s office to con­vene a task force to devel­op guide­lines for new procedures and…

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Apr 18, 2006

PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT ORDERS COMMUTATIONS OF ALL ON DEATH ROW

Philippine President Gloria Macapagel-Arroyo (pic­tured) ordered the com­mu­ta­tion of all death sen­tences to life in prison, an order that will spare the lives of the 1,205 peo­ple on death row. As her nation marked Easter Sunday, she issued the clemencies: ​“I wish to announce that we are chang­ing our pol­i­cy on those who have been imposed the death penal­ty. We are reduc­ing their penal­ty to life impris­on­ment. Anyone who falls and makes mis­takes has a chance to stand up and…

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