Publications & Testimony
Items: 5441 — 5450
Jun 07, 2005
Murders in the U.S. Decline Even as Number of Executions Drop
Preliminary data from the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report for 2004 found that murders in the U. S. dropped last year by 3.6%. The number of executions also declined in 2004. In 2003, the South had the highest murder rate in the country, and that appeared to continue in 2004 even as the South carried out 85% of the nation’s executions. The Northeast, which had no executions in 2004, had the lowest murder rate in 2003 and that position appeared to remain the same in 2004. The…
Read MoreJun 06, 2005
Arbitrariness: Prevalence of Plea Bargains in Death Penalty Cases
In its recent study of Ohio’s death penalty, the Associated Press found that of the 1,936 capital indictments filed statewide from 1981 – 2002, about 50% ended in plea bargains. Of those cases, 131 people who pleaded guilty in exchange for escaping the death penalty were charged with killing multiple victims. By contrast, 196 of the 274 people who were sentenced to death row during the same 21-year time span were convicted of killing a single victim. The AP’s Ohio…
Read MoreJun 02, 2005
Death Row Inmates Present Scholarship to Future Police Officer
Death row inmates from around the country will present a $5,000 college scholarship to Zach Osborne, the brother of a 4‑year-old murder victim, who plans to attend East Carolina University to pursue a career in law enforcement. The scholarship is an annual award given by those on death row who participate in the publication of“Compassion,” a newsletter that provides a forum for communication between convicted offenders and murder victims’ families. Each year,…
Read MoreJun 02, 2005
Independent Investigation Reports Houston Crime Lab Faked Test Results
A recent investigation led by a former Justice Department official reported that analysts at the Houston Crime Lab fabricated findings in at least four drug cases, including one in which a scientist failed to conduct testing before issuing conclusions to support police suspicions — an illegal practice known as“drylabbing.” The report contains some of the most serious allegations made yet against the Houston Crime Lab and is the first to criticize the lab’s…
Read MoreJun 01, 2005
India Moves Closer to Abandoning the Death Penalty
In a proposed amendment to its penal code, Indian leaders are seeking to implement a change that would end the nation’s death penalty even“in the rarest of rare” cases. The amended Indian Penal Code would abolish the death penalty and replace it with a strict life without the possibility of parole measure. Currently, the nation’s life sentence statute only requires imprisonment for 14 years. The decision to seek an official end to capital punishment fulfills…
Read MoreMay 31, 2005
Supreme Court Agrees To Review Constitutionality of Kansas Death Penalty Law
On May 31, 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to consider the constitutionality of Kansas’ death penalty law. The current statute requires that a death sentence be imposed when a jury finds that the aggravating and mitigating circumstances surrounding the crime have equal weight (i.e., a tie results in death). When reviewing Michael Marsh’s death sentence in 2004, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that the state’s statute was unconstitutional, holding that the…
Read MoreMay 27, 2005
North Carolina House Nears Vote on Moratorium Legislation
The North Carolina House of Representatives will soon vote on a two-year moratorium on executions in the state while the death penalty is studied. A moratorium bill passed the full Senate in 2003, but had been previously blocked from coming to a vote in the House. The House Judiciary Committee will likely consider the moratorium measure on Tuesday, May 31. The committee’s approval could mean a full House vote on the legislation as early as that same day. The full…
Read MoreMay 26, 2005
NEW MULTIMEDIA RESOURCE: “The Empty Chair: Death Penalty Yes or No”
The Empty Chair: Death Penalty Yes or No is a documentary film produced and directed by Jacqui Lofaro and Victor Teich that tells the stories of four families confronting the loss of loved ones and voicing different perspectives on the death penalty. The movie also features Sister Helen Prejean, an author and spiritual advisor to those condemned to die, and Donald Cabana (pictured), a former death row warden…
Read MoreMay 25, 2005
Texas Legislators Near Historic Passage of Life-Without-Parole Bill
By a vote of 104 – 37, members of the Texas House of Representatives tentatively approved the sentencing option of life-without-parole in death penalty cases, an historic action that puts the state closer to including a sentencing alternative offered in nearly every death penalty state. The House is expected to give final passage to the measure on May 25 and the Texas Senate, which passed similar legislation earlier this year, is expected to approve an amended…
Read MoreMay 25, 2005
Amnesty International’s Human Rights Report Notes Decline in Countries with Death Penalty
In its annual report on human rights around the world, Amnesty International noted the abolition of the death penalty in five nations in 2004. Last year, Bhutan, Greece, Samoa, Senegal and Turkey joined a growing list of countries that have abandoned capital punishment for all crimes. The report stated that such changes are positive signs, noting:“Global activism is a dynamic and growing force. It is also the best hope of achieving freedom and justice for all…
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