Publications & Testimony
Items: 5191 — 5200
Apr 12, 2006
NEW VOICES: Senior Counsel to 9/11 Commission Questions Death Penalty for Moussaoui
In a recent New York Times op-ed, John Farmer, senior counsel to the 9/11 commission and a former New Jersery attorney general, states that seeking the death penalty for Zacarias Moussaoui detracts from U.S. efforts to seek justice against senior Al Qaeda officials who plotted and carried out the 9/11 attacks. Farmer claims Moussauoi, who was in jail as terrorists plotted and carried out the events of 9/11, was not the “20th hijacker” and is a “poor stand in” for more senior level Al Qaeda…
Read MoreApr 11, 2006
Law Enforcement Officials, Defense Experts, and Researchers Explore Wrongful Convictions at California Conference
The recent “Faces of Wrongful Conviction” conference at UCLA featured a wide variety of speakers, including California’s Senate Majority Leader Gloria Romero, former special prosecutor and federal judge Kenneth Starr, and former Bexar County (TX) District Attorney Sam Milsap. The conference was organized to examine mistakes in the criminal justice system and to explore reforms, particularly in California. A state Senate commission is preparing a study of California’s death penalty…
Read MoreApr 11, 2006
Federal Judge Requires Medically Trained Personnel for North Carolina Lethal Injection
U.S. District Court Judge Malcolm Howard has ordered North Carolina prison officials to provide medically trained personnel to ensure that death row inmate Willie Brown, Jr. is unconscious during his execution, currently scheduled for April 21. Prison officials have until noon on April 12 to present their plan for complying with the order. “Serious questions have been raised by the evidence concerning the effect of the current execution protocol. If the alleged deficiencies do, in fact,…
Read MoreApr 10, 2006
NEW VOICES: Mother of September 11 Victim Opposes Death Penalty for Moussaoui
Alice Hoagland’s son, Mark Bingham (pictured), was killed on September 11 as he joined with fellow United Airlines passengers to ground a plane that may have been headed toward the White House. Hoagland is urging a life sentence for Zacarias Moussaoui, who faces the death penalty for his role in the terrorist events of that day. In an interview with The Advocate, Hoagland noted that sparing Moussaoui’s life would honor “a reverence for all life” and that it would prevent some from viewing him…
Read MoreApr 06, 2006
Conference to Feature Experts on Forensic Science and Criminal Justice
The upcoming sixth annual Forensic Science and Law Conference, Justice for All, will feature more than 40 national experts discussing causes of and solutions to wrongful convictions. Former FBI Director William Sessions, Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Michael J. Sullivan, U.S. Senator Arlen Specter, acclaimed forensic scientist Henry Lee, and DNA exonerees Kirk Bloodsworth and Thomas Doswell are among those who will offer presentations during the April 20 – 22 event at Duquesne University in…
Read MoreApr 06, 2006
South Carolina Bill To Expand Death Penalty Draws Criticism
A bill to expand South Carolina’s capital punishment statute so that those who are convicted a second time of raping children under 11 are eligible for the death penalty has drawn criticism from those who worry the bill may result in unintended consequences. Fears that the legislation will lead to family members refusing to come forward regarding intra-family offenses and that it may also result in more rape victims being killed are among the chief concerns regarding the proposed legislation.
Read MoreApr 04, 2006
Mandatory Justice: The Death Penalty Revisited
LETHAL INJECTIONS: News & Developments Mandatory Justice: The Death Penalty Revisited Constitution Project Issues Updated Capital Punishment Reform Recommendations The Constitution Project’s blue-ribbon Death Penalty Initiative has released an updated set of guiding principles for death penalty reform. “Mandatory Justice: The Death Penalty Revisited” identifies specific improvements to address problems such as arbitrariness, race, ineffectiveness of counsel, wrongful…
Read MoreApr 03, 2006
Alabama’s Death Sentences Concentrated in One County
Although death sentences have declined around the country, they have dramatically increased in Jefferson County, Alabama, since 1993 when state legislators expanded the death penalty to include drive-by shootings. Jefferson County, which includes Birmingham, accounted for nearly 50% of the state’s death sentences in 2005 and 2006. According to federal data, Alabama is 23rd in population nationally but has the country’s sixth largest death row and is one of the leading states in the nation in…
Read MoreApr 03, 2006
Washington Supreme Court Closely Divided on Rationality of State’s Death Penalty
The Washington State Supreme Court recently came within one vote of effectively abolishing the state’s death penalty when it ruled in the case of death row inmate Dayva Cross. Cross is on death row for the murder of his wife and her two teenage daughters. Attorneys for Cross had argued that their client should not be executed because killers who had committed worse crimes had been spared the death penalty. The 2003 case of Green River Killer Gary Ridgway, who received a life sentence in…
Read MoreApr 03, 2006
Former North Carolina Prosecutor Accused of Withholding Evidence in Second Capital Case
Former Union County prosecutor Scott Brewer, who is already under investigation for allegedly obstructing justice in the 1996 death penalty trial of John Gregory Hoffman, has been accused of withholding important evidence in a second capital trial. Attorneys representing Darrell Strickland have asked the North Carolina State Bar to discipline Brewer for improperly withholding three statements made by the victims’ wife, Gail Brown, the only eyewitness to the crime for which their client was…
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