Publications & Testimony
Items: 5231 — 5240
Feb 20, 2006
Death Sentences Decline in California
The number of people sentenced to death each year in California has declined by nearly 40% since the 1990s. According to the California Department of Corrections, on average, the state sent 35 people to death row each year during the 1990s. Since 2000, that number has declined to an average of 21 annually. California has the largest death row in the country. California Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald M. George attributed some of the decline to more selective charging by district attorneys…
Read MoreFeb 20, 2006
PUBLIC OPINION: Gallup Review Compares Support for Capital Punishment Among Countries
An examination of recent Gallup surveys in the United States, Great Britain, and Canada found that Americans are more supportive of the death penalty than are either Britons or Canadians. An October 2005 poll of Americans measured support for the death penalty at 64%, a figure that was significantly higher than the 44% support measured in Canada and the 49% support found in Great Britain during December 2005 polls. Support for the death penalty recently declined in both Great Britain and…
Read MoreFeb 20, 2006
RESOURCES: Death Row USA Winter 2006 Report Available
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row USA shows an 8% decline in the country’s death row population during the past 5 years, down from 3,652 in 2000 to 3,373 at the end of 2005. According to the report, California continues to have the nation’s largest death row population (649), followed by Texas (409), Florida (388), Pennsylvania (231), and Ohio…
Read MoreFeb 18, 2006
NEW VOICES: Kenneth Starr Says Death Penalty System Not Working Properly
Former special prosecutor Kenneth Starr recently voiced concerns about the way the death penalty is being applied. Starr, who now serves as Dean of the Pepperdine Law School, is assisting in the representation of death row inmate Michael Morales. Morales is scheduled for execution on February 21 in California. Starr said, “Society is not equipped to handle death penalty cases because of resources. Large law firms are not willing at this stage to take these cases on, at a cost of many…
Read MoreFeb 17, 2006
Texas Editorial Backs Death Penalty Reforms
An editorial in the Austin-American Statesman praised the recommendations of the governor’s advisory council on criminal justice, especially in regard to changes needed in the death penalty system. Excerpts from the editorial appear…
Read MoreFeb 15, 2006
Federal Judge Orders Changes to California’s Lethal Injection Process
Ruling that the current mix of drugs used to carry out California’s lethal injections may constitute cruel and unusual punishment, U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel has ordered California to alter its lethal injection procedures before it carries out the scheduled execution of Michael Morales on February 21. Fogel, who said he is troubled by the prospect that inmates may be conscious and undergoing extreme pain once a paralyzing agent and then a heart-stopping drug are administered during…
Read MoreFeb 14, 2006
Art Exhibit Features Faces of The Innocents
An exhibit featuring artist Taryn Simon’s 45 photographic portraits of individuals freed by DNA evidence is on display at Provisions Library in Washington, DC, from February 11 to April 15, 2006. During the D.C. exhibit, which is part of a traveling exhibition curated by Umbrage Editions to mark the 10th anniversary of the New York City-based Innocence Project, a series of related events will also be offered to more closely examine the issue of wrongful convictions. Among the special…
Read MoreFeb 13, 2006
NEW VOICES: Former Prosecutor Says Death Penalty Not Worth The Costs
Steven P. Grossman, a former New York City prosecutor and a professor at the University of Baltimore School of Law, recently wrote in The Baltimore Sun that the death penalty is “not worth the societal effort it requires and the wounds it causes.” The case of Maryland death row inmate Vernon Evans,who received a stay jsut prior to his scheduled execution this month, prompted Grossman to examine capital punishment as it relates to victims’ families and whether executions deter future violent…
Read MoreFeb 11, 2006
Lethal Injection
All states and the federal government use lethal injection as their primary method of execution. States use a variety of protocols using one, two, or three drugs. The three-drug protocol uses an anesthetic or sedative, typically followed by pancuronium bromide to paralyze the inmate and potassium chloride to stop the inmate’s heart. The one or two-drug protocols typically use a lethal dose of an anesthetic or…
Read MoreFeb 10, 2006
ABA Report Calls for Georgia Death Penalty Moratorium
ABA REPORT CALLS FOR GEORGIA DEATH PENALTY…
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