Publications & Testimony
Items: 511 — 520
Nov 04, 2022
Richard Glossip Execution Halted for a Seventh Time
Oklahoma has once again put off the execution of Richard Glossip, the seventh time his pending execution has been stayed or…
Read MoreNov 03, 2022
Federal Court Holds Competency Hearing for Scott Panetti
A federal district court in Texas has heard evidence on, and now must decide, whether a severely mentally ill man is competent to be executed. On October 24, 2022, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas began presiding over the competency hearing of Scott Panetti (pictured), whose case established the constitutional standard for competency to be executed, to determine whether he has a rational understanding of his death sentence and the…
Read MoreNov 02, 2022
Supreme Court Hears Argument in Death Penalty Case that Could Provide States a “Roadmap for Defying … Criminal Law Decisions”
In 1994, the United States Supreme Court held in Simmons v. South Carolina that when the prosecution makes future dangerousness an issue in a capital case, a defendant has a due process right to inform jurors that he will not be parole eligible if he is not sentenced to death. For more than a decade, Arizona courts refused to apply that precedent. Then, in 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court summarily struck down that practice in Lynch v. Arizona,…
Read MoreNov 01, 2022
Human Rights and the U.S. Death Penalty Webinar Series — Registration
Nov 01, 2022
Human Rights and the U.S. Death Penalty Webinar Series — Agenda
Nov 01, 2022
New DPIC Podcast: DPIC’s New Report on the Racial History of Oklahoma’s Death Penalty
In the October 2022 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Deputy Director Ngozi Ndulue and Data Storyteller Tiana Herring discuss DPIC’s 2022 report Deeply Rooted: How Racial History Informs Oklahoma’s Death Penalty. The report looks at the racial history, present, and future of Oklahoma’s death penalty. Ndulue and Herring explore Oklahoma’s unique history, the key findings of the report, its relationship to DPIC’s earlier work, and lessons from…
Read MoreOct 31, 2022
Florida Trial Court Conditionally Approves DNA Testing for Tommy Ziegler in 46-Year-Old Death Penalty Case
In what the Tampa Bay Times described as “an epic turnaround” in a 46-year-old capital case, a Florida trial judge is poised to order DNA testing of evidence death-row prisoner Tommy Zeigler has long asserted will prove him innocent of the quadruple murder for which he was convicted and sentenced to death in…
Read MoreOct 28, 2022
Florida Study Documents Disproportionate Exclusion of Black Jurors in Jacksonville Death Penalty Cases
Two-thirds of Black women and more than half of Black men have been struck from jury service in Duval County death penalty cases, more than double the rate at which white prospective jurors are excluded, a study of capital jury selection in the Florida county has…
Read MoreOct 27, 2022
With Federal Ruling Awaited, California Prisoner’s Autobiography Selected for Oprah’s Book Club
With a federal court ruling on his innocence claims considered imminent, Oprah Winfrey has designated the autobiography of California death-row prisoner Jarvis Jay Masters, That Bird Has Wings, as the September 2022 selection for the Oprah Winfrey Book Club. Masters, who has converted to Buddhism and become a talented author and podcast host in the years since his controversial conviction and death sentence for the 1985 murder of…
Read MoreOct 26, 2022
10th Circuit Rules That Capital Prisoners Do Not Have a Right to Have Counsel Present Throughout Their Execution
On October 19th, 2022, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit ruled against Oklahoma death-row prisoners who had argued that they should be allowed to have their attorney present throughout their execution so that counsel could intervene and file for emergency relief if a problem arose during the…
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