Publications & Testimony
Items: 5461 — 5470
May 13, 2005
The Michael Ross Case and “Death Row Syndrome”
Michael Ross was executed in Connecticut on May 13, 2005. He was found competent and waived his…
Read MoreMay 11, 2005
Ohio AP Study
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH: Comprehensive Ohio Study Concludes That Who Lives and Who Dies Depends On Race, Geography and Plea…
Read MoreMay 11, 2005
NEW VOICES: Connecticut Justice Questions Capital Punishment
May 09, 2005
Independent Audit of Virginia’s DNA Lab Prompts Review of 150 Cases
An independent audit of Virginia’s central crime laboratory initiated by the present governor found that the lab had botched DNA tests in the death penalty case of Earl Washington (pictured). The finding prompted Gov. Mark Warner to order a review of 150 other criminal cases and the development of procedures to insulate the lab from outside political pressures. The audit was conducted by the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors. It found that the Virginia lab’s internal review…
Read MoreMay 09, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Index of Death Penalty Articles for 2004
In the course of its research, DPIC collects relevant death penalty articles that have appeared in print and on media Web sites. Our collection certainly does not contain all such articles, nor do we claim that it represents the “best” articles. It is only a representative sample of the extensive coverage given to capital punishment in print in a particular year. For those interested in examining this coverage, we have prepared an index of the articles from 2004 in PDF format. For more…
Read MoreMay 06, 2005
Support for the Death Penalty Drops Sharply in Leading Execution City
Public support for the death penalty has dropped sharply in Houston, Texas according to the 2005 Houston Area Survey conducted by Rice University. For many years Texas has led the country in executions, and Harris County (Houston) has led all Texas counties in sending inmates to death row and in executions. But most Houston residents would prefer the sentence of life without parole rather than the death penalty for those who commit…
Read MoreMay 05, 2005
MAJOR STUDY Finds Arbitrary Application of the Death Penalty
In a comprehensive study covering 20 years and thousands of capital cases in Ohio, the Associated Press found that the death penalty has been applied in an uneven and often arbitrary fashion. Among the conclusions of the study that analyzed 1,936 indictments reported to the Ohio Supreme Court by counties with capital cases from October 1981 through 2002…
Read MoreMay 04, 2005
NEW VOICES: Louisiana Chief Justice Demands Fair Trials for the Poor
Chief Justice Pascal Calogero of the Louisiana Supreme Court called upon the state legislature to provide adequate funding for indigent defendants in his State of the Judiciary address. The court had earlier ruled that judges may halt prosecutions in cases where funds have not been made available for an adequate defense. The Justice concluded: As a Supreme Court Justice, I must be an advocate of compliance with the mandates of our state and federal constitutions, and therefore, I admonish…
Read MoreMay 03, 2005
PUBLIC OPINION: Little Change For U.S. Death Penalty Views
Many Americans are in favour of capital punishment, according to a poll by TNS released by the Washington Post and ABC News. 65 % of respondents support the death penalty for persons convicted of murder. Since 1976, 961 people have been put to death in the United States, including 17 during 2005. More than a third of all executions have taken place in the state of Texas. 12 states and the District of Columbia do not engage in capital punishment, and moratoriums on executions have been issued…
Read MoreMay 03, 2005
Death Row Inmate’s Mental Health Crumbles Even As Relief May Be Near
During 25 years on Texas’ death row, Cesar Fierro’s mental health has deteriorated to the extent that his attorney hardly recognizes him. Since being sentenced to death in 1980, his mother has died, his brother has died, his wife divorced him and his daughter stopped visiting him. Gradually, he refused to even speak with his lawyers. “He wouldn’t come out of his cell for months at a time unless he was forcibly extracted,” says David Dow, a constitutional law professor at the University of…
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