Publications & Testimony
Items: 5211 — 5220
Mar 21, 2006
South Dakota Prepares for First Execution In 59 Years
South Dakota has scheduled the execution of 24-year-old Elijah Page on August 28 for a murder committed in 2000. Page has dropped his remaining appeals. He would be the first person executed in the state since it reinstated capital punishment in 1979. The last execution in the state was in 1947. South Dakota has only four people on its death row. Among church leaders in South Dakota, there is a difference of opinion with regard to capital punishment. Catholic, Methodist, and…
Read MoreMar 20, 2006
Wrongly Convicted Texas Man Freed After 18 Years in Prison
After spending 18 years in prison for a crime he did not commit, Arthur Mumphrey received a full pardon from Texas Governor Rick Perry. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles had unanimously recommended that Perry pardon Mumphrey based on DNA test results that showed he was not responsible for assaulting a 13-year-old girl in 1986, a crime for which Mumphrey was sentenced to serve 35 years in prison. “My action today cannot give back the time he spent in prison, but it does end this…
Read MoreMar 16, 2006
NEW VOICES: New Jersey Attorney General Says Death Penalty Not Necessary, Not Working
New Jersey Attorney General Zulima Farber (pictured) recently voiced her support for extending the state’s moratorium on executions, noting that she does not believe the death penalty is a “necessary tool” for prosecutors and believes capital punishment does not deter crime. “I don’t think it’s a deterrent. And I understand revenge. I think some people deserve it. But I don’t think it’s a necessary tool.… I don’t have a philosophical or religious opposition to the death penalty,…
Read MoreMar 16, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: 2005 Death Penalty Articles Index Available
Each year, DPIC collects relevant death penalty articles that have appeared in print and on media Web sites. Our collection certainly does not contain all such articles, nor do we claim that it represents the “best” articles. It is only a representative sample of the extensive coverage given to capital punishment in print in a particular year. For those interested in examining this coverage, we have prepared an index of the articles from 2005 in PDF format. Note that we are not posting the…
Read MoreMar 15, 2006
Georgia Millionaire Receives Life Without Parole
A jury in Georgia elected to sentence James Sullivan to life without parole after finding him guilty of hiring a hitman to kill his wife in 1987. “We thought that life imprisonment without the possibility of parole was enough. We didn’t want to be the judge about somebody else’s life. We wanted God to be the judge,” said juror Debra Klayman after the sentence was handed down. The jury had the option of the death penalty, life without parole, or life with parole. Klayman said that the…
Read MoreMar 14, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: “Principles of Forensic DNA for Officers of the Court” on CD-ROM
The President’s DNA Initiative has released Principles of Forensic DNA for Officers of the Court, a CD-ROM that addresses the use of DNA in judicial proceedings. This resource is designed for prosecutors, defense attorneys, and judges, and provides a simple overview of DNA technologies and the issues that arise when DNA evidence is presented in court. The topics are covered in short paragraphs accompanied by illustrations, and links to other resources are included. Some of the areas…
Read MoreMar 14, 2006
Execution of the Mentally Ill
A new report issued by Amnesty International examines the issue of mental illness and the death penalty. The report notes that the U.S. Supreme Court’s decisions to halt the executions of juvenile offenders and those with mental retardation left a question mark over another category of offender, the mentally ill. In the report, Amnesty asks: “If the diminished culpability associated with youth and mental retardation render the death penalty an excessive punishment when used against offenders…
Read MoreMar 13, 2006
Death Penalty in California is Very Costly
According to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, housing an inmate in California’s corrections system costs an average of $34,150 per year, though that figure is higher for those on death row or serving a sentence of life-without-parole. In capital cases, a more expensive investigation and prosecution process, as well as long and complicated appeals, raises the costs significantly. Only about 1% of homicides in the state are tried as capital cases, but those cases…
Read MoreMar 10, 2006
INTERNATIONAL: Mandatory Death Penalty Struck Down in Bahamas
The British Privy Council in London unanimously struck down the imposition of mandatory death sentences in the Bahamas. This landmark decision held that the law “should be construed as imposing a discretionary and not a mandatory sentence of death.” The Privy Council ruling said that the mandatory death penalty should have been regarded as inhumane and degrading punishment as early as 1973. “The ramifications and consequences of the Privy Council’s ruling are huge; there are implications for…
Read MoreMar 09, 2006
Patriot Act Likely to Curtail Death Penalty Appeals
Congress recently passed the re-authorization of the Patriot Act and this bill is likely to curtail the appeals of state death row inmates in federal courts. The legislation, which is due to be signed into law this week by President Bush, would allow states to obtain approval of their systems of representation in death penalty cases from the U.S. Attorney General rather than from the federal courts, as required under a previous law. Once approval is granted, habeas corpus petitions…
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