Publications & Testimony
Items: 5281 — 5290
Dec 31, 2005
Hidden Victims
“Hidden Victims,” a new book by sociologist Susan F. Sharp of the University of Oklahoma, examines the impact of capital punishment on the families of those facing execution. Through a series of in-depth interviews with families of the accused, Sharp illustrates from a sociological standpoint how family members and friends of those on death row are, in effect, indirect victims of the initial crime. The book emphasizes their responses to sentencing, as well as how they grieve and face an…
Read MoreDec 29, 2005
NEW VOICES: Victims’ Rights Advocate Calls for an End to the Death Penalty
Richard Pompelio (pictured) established the New Jersey Crime Victims Law Center (VLC) in 1992 after his 17-year-old son Tony was murdered. VLC provides pro bono legal assistance to victims of violent crime. He recently wrote in the New Jersey Lawyer’s The Law & More column about the disservice that the death penalty represents to victims and their…
Read MoreDec 29, 2005
NEW BOOKS: “The Dead Alive” Explores Wrongful Convictions
Rob Warden, Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law, has written a book about one of the first accounts of a death penalty exoneration in the U.S. Wilkie Collins, a British author, had written a novel entitled “The Dead Alive” about the convictions and death sentences of Jesse and Stephen Boorn for a murder committed in 1819. They were later exonerated. Warden’s book is entitled “Wilkie Collins’s The Dead Alive: The Novel, the Case,…
Read MoreDec 28, 2005
Maryland Race Study Author Finds Death Penalty Practices “Disturbing”
Professor Ray Paternoster of the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland was the senior author of a 2003 state-commissioned review of the role that race and geography play in Maryland’s death penalty practice. He recently wrote about the study’s findings in the Baltimore…
Read MoreDec 22, 2005
DPIC Releases Year End Report
The Death Penalty Information Center has released its annual report on the status of capital punishment in the U.S. at the end of 2005. The report notes a dramatic drop in death sentences to the lowest level in 30 years. The year showed an increasing reliance on the sentence of life-without-parole as an alternative to the death penalty. New York’s legislature refused to restore the death penalty after its statute was declared unconstitutional, leaving life without parole as the punishment…
Read MoreDec 20, 2005
New Resources: New Book Focuses on Clemency in Capital Cases
A new book by Professor Austin Sarat (pictured) focuses on clemency’s role in the U.S. criminal justice system: “Mercy on Trial: What It Means to Stop an Execution.” According to U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy, “This thoughtful book should be read by every citizen who cares about the issue, and by every governor and president entrusted with the power to punish or pardon.” In “Mercy on Trial,” Sarat reviews the complexities of clemency and examines issues such as rehabilitation. (Princeton…
Read MoreDec 20, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: ACLU Expands Capital Punishment Project
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is expanding its Capital Punishment Project to include litigation in addition to its already established public education efforts. The expanded program will be led by John Holdridge, who has been named the Capital Punishment Project’s new director. “John Holdridge is one of the nation’s premier death penalty litigators. He has fought the death penalty in courtrooms around the country for more than a decade and now brings that expertise and…
Read MoreDec 19, 2005
Missed Court Deadline Could Cost Mentally Retarded Man His Life
Though the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit assumes that Texas death row inmate Marvin Lee Wilson is mentally retarded, it ruled that he cannot raise the issue in federal court because his defense attorney missed a filing deadline. The U.S. Supreme Court has banned the execution of those with mental retardation, but the Fifth Circuit stated that “however harsh the result may be” their hands are tied by deadlines established in the 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act.
Read MoreDec 19, 2005
New Voices: Former Maryland Governor Criticizes State’s Racial Disparities
In a recent op-ed, former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening criticized the “troubling” racial and geographic disparities that plague the state’s death penalty. Glendening, who served as Governor from 1995 to 2003, commissioned a study of Maryland’s death penalty during his time in office and implemented a moratorium on executions during his second term to allow time for action to be taken to prevent these on-going problems. He…
Read MoreDec 15, 2005
New Jersey Senate Passes Moratorium Legislation
Members of the New Jersey Senate have overwhelmingly passed a bill that would suspend executions in the state and create a new death penalty study commission to examine New Jersey’s death penalty. The bill, S‑709, passed by a vote of 30 – 6 and now moves to the New Jersey Assembly for consideration in January. Should the bill become law, New Jersey would become the first state in the country to legislatively impose a moratorium on the death penalty. The bill would require the formation of a…
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