Publications & Testimony

Items: 5391 — 5400


Aug 12, 2005

NEW RESOURCE: The Death Penalty’s Impact on U.S. Foreign Relations

A new law review arti­cle by inter­na­tion­al death penal­ty expert Mark Warren con­cludes that the reten­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the United States dis­tances the nation from its clos­est allies in ways both sym­bol­ic and tan­gi­ble, and the costs of that iso­la­tion are ris­ing steadi­ly.” Warren’s arti­cle, Death, Dissent, and Diplomacy: The U.S. Death Penalty as an Obstacle to Foreign Relations, exam­ines a broad range of con­cerns, includ­ing treaty com­pli­ance and glob­al secu­ri­ty. Warren notes…

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Aug 11, 2005

Size of Death Row Continues to Decline

According to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s quar­ter­ly report, Death Row U.S.A., the num­ber of peo­ple on death rows around the coun­try declined again as of July 1, 2005. The lat­est count of inmates is 3,415, down from 3,452 as of April 1 and down con­sid­er­ably from the 3,692 inmates record­ed on October 1, 2002. About 54.5% of those on death row are mem­bers of racial minori­ties. Pennsylvania (70%) and Texas (69%) had the largest per­cent­age of minor­i­ty defen­dants on death row. Among the…

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Aug 10, 2005

NEW RESOURCE: A Study of Exonerations in the U.S.

Newly pub­lished research exam­in­ing 340 exon­er­a­tions in the United States between 1989 and 2003 found that a sig­nif­i­cant num­ber of those who were wrong­ly con­vict­ed had been sen­tenced to death. Researchers note that this find­ing appears to reflect two pat­terns: cap­i­tal defen­dants are more like­ly to be con­vict­ed in error, and false con­vic­tions are more like­ly to be detect­ed when defen­dants are on death row. The paper, authored by Professor Samuel Gross of the University of Michigan Law School…

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Aug 08, 2005

National Conference of Chief Justices Criticizes Bill to Cut Death Penalty Appeals

The Conference of Chief Justices over­whelm­ing­ly passed a res­o­lu­tion urg­ing Congress to not pass the pro­posed Streamlined Procedures Act, which is aimed at cur­tail­ing death penal­ty appeals. The res­o­lu­tion was passed by the Chief Justices from state courts around the coun­try at their annu­al meet­ing in Charlestown, South Carolina. Only the chief jus­tice of Texas’ Supreme Court vot­ed against the res­o­lu­tion, stat­ing that he did not have enough time to review the document.Critics of the…

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Aug 08, 2005

Murders in New York City Reach Historic Lows Without Use of the Death Penalty

Homicide fig­ures for New York City show that the num­ber of mur­ders in 2005 may fall below 500, a fig­ure that would be the fewest since 1961 and would bring the city’s mur­der rate below the rate for the nation as a whole. So far this year, ran­dom mur­ders and mur­ders com­mit­ted dur­ing rob­beries and bur­glar­ies have also declined. Experts note that both declines appear to be large­ly attrib­ut­able to a greater police pres­ence, few­er guns, and the decrease in ran­dom vio­lence in the city that came…

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Aug 07, 2005

NEW VOICES: Justice Stevens Harshly Critical of the Death Penalty

Speaking at the American Bar Association’s Thurgood Marshall Awards Dinner in Illinois, Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens said that the death penal­ty has seri­ous flaws.” He recalled the late Justice Marshall in remark­ing how much the coun­try has learned about the risks in death cas­es: Since his retire­ment, with the ben­e­fit of DNA evi­dence, we have learned that a sub­stan­tial num­ber of death sen­tences have been imposed erro­neous­ly,” Stevens said dur­ing the cer­e­mo­ny. He added that…

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Aug 03, 2005

DNA Testing Leads to the Exoneration of Another Prisoner In Case Involving Mistaken Eyewitness Testimony

In a case that sharply illus­trates the fal­li­bil­i­ty of eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny, Miami-Dade pros­e­cu­tors plan to ask a state judge to vacate the con­vic­tions of Luis Diaz based on DNA evi­dence that was not avail­able dur­ing his 1980 tri­al. Though he was short­er and lighter than the man that most wit­ness­es described to police, Diaz was charged with rape 25 years ago after eight women iden­ti­fied him as their attack­er. Following his tri­al, the judge said, I’ve nev­er seen a case where I was more…

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Aug 03, 2005

Expert Testimony Faults Death Penalty Deterrence Findings

In tes­ti­mo­ny before the Massachusetts Joint Committee on the Judiciary regard­ing pro­posed leg­is­la­tion to ini­ti­ate a fool­proof” death penal­ty, Columbia Law School Professor Jeffrey Fagan (pic­tured) ana­lyzed recent stud­ies that claimed that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment deters mur­ders. He stat­ed that the stud­ies fall apart under close scruti­ny.” Fagan not­ed that the stud­ies are fraught with tech­ni­cal and con­cep­tu­al errors, includ­ing inap­pro­pri­ate meth­ods of sta­tis­ti­cal analy­sis, failures…

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Aug 02, 2005

Convictions Overturned In Pennsylvania and New Jersery through DNA Testing

Thomas Doswell of Pennsylvania and Larry Peterson of New Jersey recent­ly had their con­vic­tions over­turned as a direct result of DNA test­ing. Each defen­dant had serverd 18 years in prison. In Peterson’s case, the pros­e­cu­tion had sought the death penal­ty but the jury could not agree and he was sen­tenced to life. His case marked the first time a New Jersey court has over­turned a con­vic­tion because of DNA evi­dence. Both rever­sals stemmed from the work of attor­neys at the Innocence…

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