Publications & Testimony
Items: 5361 — 5370
Sep 21, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Foreign Nationals on U.S. Death Rows
The latest edition of the Consular Rights in America newsletter is now available. The newsletter discusses legal and political developments concerning citizens of other countries who are in prison or on death row in the U.S. Issue 29 contains excerpts from the Texas Lawyer of recent arguments before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in the case of Jose Medellin, a Mexican citizen on death row in Texas. This case has already been the subject of arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court, the…
Read MoreSep 21, 2005
INNOCENCE: It Happens in China, Too
Qin Yanhong was convicted of rape and murder in China in 1999. A panel of judges sentenced him to death. His conviction was the result of a confession that followed days of torture and interrorgation by police, despite the fact that such tactics are forbidden under Chinese law. The senior detective on the case expressed absolute confidence in the conviction and even offered to accept the punishment if it was proven wrong. In 2001, another man walked into a nearby police station and confessed…
Read MoreSep 19, 2005
Teachers and Students: DPIC’s Educational Curriculum is Again Available
As students return to the classroom this fall, the Death Penalty Information Center is offering educators an updated version of its award-winning Educational Curriculum on the Death Penalty to assist teachers who wish to include this topic in their classrooms. DPIC’s balanced and dynamic online curriculum was designed in conjunction with the Michigan State Communications Technology Laboratory. This free classroom tool offers separate teacher and student sites, flexible lesson plans, teacher…
Read MoreSep 19, 2005
Death Penalty Curriculum, Teaching Resources Available
As students return to the classroom this month, the Death Penalty Information Center is offering teachers an updated version of its free online educational curriculum on the death penalty and other resources to assist educators who wish to incorporate this topic into their classroom lesson plans. DPIC’s award-winning online curriculum was designed by the Michigan State Communications Technology Laboratory in conjunction with the Death Penalty Information Center. It offers separate teacher and…
Read MoreSep 16, 2005
RACE AND JURY SELECTION: Federal Judge Attempts to Seat a More Diverse Jury in Death Penalty Case
A federal judge in Boston presiding over the death penalty case of two black defendants has ordered a change in the process of summoning jurors in order to ensure a more diverse jury. U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner wrote a 95-page opinion and noted that it would be “profoundly troubling” if the defendants, Darryl Green and Branden Morris, were to face an all-white jury in a trial for their lives. Gertner cited studies that showed that wealthier geographic areas keep more accurate jury…
Read MoreSep 15, 2005
Postal Inspector Voices Doubts About Ohio Defendant’s Guilt
U.S. Postal Inspector Gregory Duerr of Cleveland has called for a delay in an upcoming Ohio execution because he said official testimony given in the case of John Spirko was unreliable. Spirko’s November 15 execution date should be “delayed until the serious issues indicating innocence (are) truly resolved,” Duerr noted. In an open letter to Chief Inspector Leroy Heath, Duerr questioned the character of a key state’s witness, retired postal inspector Paul Hartman. Hartman had…
Read MoreSep 13, 2005
Taiwan President Promises to Abolish the Death Penalty
Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian has vowed to abolish the death penalty so that his country can become a nation founded on the basis of human rights. In making his announcement, Chen noted, “Abolishing the death penalty has become a world trend. Almost every year there is one country abolishing the death penalty.… Since I became president in 2000, Taiwan launched the campaign to abolish the death penalty by reducing the handing down and execution of capital punishment, and by making it…
Read MoreSep 12, 2005
Texas Woman Facing Execution Had One of the Worst of Texas’ Lawyers
As Texas prepares to execute Frances Newton on September 14, the Austin American-Statesman editorialized about the poor quality of representation she received at trial and the doubts that this raises about her conviction. The paper…
Read MoreSep 09, 2005
New Resource: A Review of Deterrence Studies and other Social Science Research
Robert Weisberg, a professor at Stanford University’s School of Law, examines recent studies on deterrence and the death penalty, as well as other social science research ragarding capital punishment in the U.S. In The Death Penalty Meets Social Science: Deterrence and Jury Behavior Under New Scrutiny, Weisberg notes that many of the new studies claiming to find that the death penalty deters murder have been legitimately criticized for omitting key variables and for not addressing the…
Read MoreSep 08, 2005
New Resource: Amnesty International Magazine Examines Execution of the Mentally Ill
An article in the Fall 2005 edition of the magazine Amnesty International examines whether mentally ill defendants should be exempted from the death penalty, especially in light of the Supreme Court’s rulings exempting juvenile and mentally retarded offenders. The article quotes Ohio Northern University law professor Victor Streib: “The general public too often assumes that only the seriousness of the crime is relevant to the punishment, but the (Supreme) Court has repeatedly held that both…
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