Publications & Testimony
Items: 5251 — 5260
Jan 26, 2006
NEW VOICES: Former Ambassador to France Addresses Impact of Death Penalty on Foreign Relations
In a recent op-ed in The New York Times, Felix G. Rohatyn (pictured), the U.S. Ambassador to France from 1997 to 2001, noted that during his tenure “no single issue was viewed with as much hostility as our support for the death penalty.” Rohatyn urged the U.S. to consider the impact of maintaining capital punishment on our relations with our allies, and he stated that consideration of international trends is appropriate when cases are reviewed by the Supreme Court. Rohatyn…
Read MoreJan 25, 2006
U.S. Supreme Court Stays Florida Lethal Injection
The U.S. Supreme Court granted a stay of execution to Clarence Hill in Florida just minutes before his execution was to take place on January 24. The next day, the Court made the stay permanent until they could hear Hill’s challenge to the lethal injection procedures in Florida. Hill raised a civil rights claim (section 1983) stating that the chemicals used in lethal injection could inflict severe and unnecessary pain. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit rejected his use of…
Read MoreJan 25, 2006
NEW VOICES: Victim’s Family Urges Life For Florida Man
After more than two decades of working to spare the life of Florida death row inmate James Floyd, the family of the woman he murdered has succeeded in getting prosecutors to reduce Floyd’s sentence to life in prison for the murder of Annie Bar Anderson. “I did not want him to die, and I didn’t want his family to suffer the murder of their father or their brother or their son. What good is anger and hatred,” said Elizabeth Blair, who took up the family’s effort to spare Floyd’s life after…
Read MoreJan 24, 2006
BOOKS: “Truth Be Told: Life Lessons from Death Row”
Truth Be Told: Life Lessons From Death Row features correspondence between Agnes Vadas and Richard Nields, who is on death row in Ohio. The book contains letters exchanged between the two over six years. They discuss a wide range of topics, including life on death row, how they have coped with challenges in life, and the lessons they have learned from hardship. Agnes Vadas is a musician and human rights activist from Washington. (AuthorHouse, 2005). See…
Read MoreJan 23, 2006
NEW SOURCE: Scientific American Looks at Flaws in the Death Penalty
Philip Yam is the News Editor of Scientific American Magazine. He recently posted an item on the magazine’s Web site about the death penalty. Some excerpts from the posting, entitled “Science versus the Death Penalty,” are…
Read MoreJan 19, 2006
NEW VOICES: Texas Paper Calls for Halt to Executions
The San Antonio Express-News, which supports the death penalty, recently called for a halt to executions in Texas because of concerns about the ongoing problems at the Houston Crime Lab. The Express-News stated:This month, New Jersey lawmakers voted to halt executions while a task force reviews the fairness and costs of imposing the death penalty.Texas should consider doing the same but for slightly different reasons.The disturbing facts coming out of an independent investigation into cases…
Read MoreJan 19, 2006
NEW SOURCE: National Georgraphic Connects Death Penalty and the town of “To Kill A Mockingbird”
The January 2006 edition of the National Geographic features the town of Monroeville, Alabama, home of freed death row inmate Walter McMillian (pictured) and Harper Lee, author of To Kill a Mockingbird. In the article, which highlights the town’s annual theatrical tribute to Lee’s book, McMillian’s case is noted as “an eerie echo” of the book’s storyline. In a resemblance to Lee’s black fictional character Tom Robinson, McMillian was convicted in 1987 of murdering a white woman in Monroeville…
Read MoreJan 18, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: Report Examines Three Decades of Georgia Death Penalty Cases
The Georgia Public Defender Standards Council has published an analysis of death penalty cases in the state during the past 30 years. The report was written by Michael Mears, Director of the Council. The review examines the modern history of Georgia’s death penalty, and provides data sorted in a number of ways, including by county, circuit, and defendant. It also provides the following summary of the dispositions of Georgia’s death penalty cases: DISPOSITION OF GEORGIA DEATH PENALTY CASES…
Read MoreJan 17, 2006
NEW VOICES: Virginia Legislators And Victims Speak Against Death Penalty
Two Virginia lawmakers who have had a family member murdered recently spoke in opposition to the death penalty. During a senate committee hearing on a bill to impose a moratorium on executions, Senators Henry L. Marsh III and Janet D. Howell noted that their opposition to the death penalty was based in their experience of losing a loved one to murder. Howell’s father-in-law was murdered in his home eight years ago. She noted, “Up until then, I was in favor of the death penalty. But…
Read MoreJan 16, 2006
NEW VOICES: NAACP President Signals Greater Organizational Involvement in the Death Penalty
In a recent interview with The Washington Post, NAACP president Bruce C. Gordon (pictured) spoke about capital punishment and called for a halt to executions in every state until questions of accuracy and fairness can be addressed. Gordon, who challenged California Governor Arnold Schwarzennegger for refusing to commute the death sentence of Stanley Tookie Williams, noted that the death penalty will be a key issue for the NAACP: African Americans represent 10 percent of the population and 42…
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