Publications & Testimony
Items: 5481 — 5490
Apr 20, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: “Executed on a Technicality”
Executed on a Technicality: Lethal Injustice on America’s Death Row, by Professor David Dow, is a behind-the-scenes look at the death penalty through the lens of an attorney who formerly supported capital punishment. Dow, who teaches at the University of Houston Law Center and founded the Texas Innocence Network, provides case histories illustrating serious flaws in the death penalty system. He uses these cases to guide readers through a web of coerced confessions, incompetent…
Read MoreApr 20, 2005
Death Penalty Prosecutions May be Halted if Funding is Inadequate
The Louisiana Supreme Court recently ruled that trial judges can halt prosecutions of poor defendants until the state comes up with the money to pay for an adequate defense. Louisiana has in the past failed to adequately fund indigent defense programs. “I think it’s a warning,” said Phyllis Mann, appointed counsel for Benjamin Tonguis and Adrian Citizen, two death penalty defendants whose cases were reviewed by the state supreme court. “The court is saying as plainly as they possibly can not…
Read MoreApr 20, 2005
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: DNA Evidence Could Free Man From Arizona’s Death Row
An Arizona court has overturned the conviction of death row inmate Clarence Hill because of new DNA evidence. The court noted that, “It is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted Mr. Hill in light of the present DNA evidence.” Hill has spent 15 years on death row for the murder of his landlord, but new DNA tests have revealed that the victim was not the source of the blood found on Hill’s clothing and bedsheets during the investigation. The blood was used as…
Read MoreApr 20, 2005
Nebraska Supreme Court to Hear Electric Chair Challenge
The Nebraska Supreme Court has agreed to consider whether the state’s use of the electric chair is cruel and unusual punishment. The case, brought by death row inmate Carey Dean Moore, will be heard on May 5. Every other death penalty state has adopted lethal injection as an alternative method of execution. A bill to offer lethal injection in Nebraska remains stalled in the state’s Senate Judiciary Committee. Three people have been put to death in Nebraska since executions resumed in 1994.
Read MoreApr 19, 2005
Attorneys Seek DNA Testing In Case of Executed Texas Man
Attorney Barry Scheck plans to ask Texas Governor Rick Perry to order DNA testing in the case of Claude Jones, who maintained his innocence until his execution in December 2000. Scheck, co-founder of the Innocence Project, says Jones’ conviction was largely based on dubious evidence. The state’s case against him included testimony from an accomplice linking Jones to the crime and the report of a state forensic scientist who examined a one-inch length of hair found at the crime scene. The…
Read MoreApr 15, 2005
Lethal Injection To Be Examined In Kentucky
A Franklin County, Kentucky, court will hear arguments beginning April 18 to determine whether the state’s lethal injection procedures rise to the level of cruelty that is forbidden by the U.S. and state constitutions. In November 2004, the same court cited questions about the lethal injection process when it issued a stay of execution for Thomas Clyde Bowling, Jr. just days before his scheduled execution. Attorneys for Bowling and death row inmate Ralph Baze, who is also a plaintiff in the…
Read MoreApr 15, 2005
Eric Rudolph Pleads Guilty to Terrorist Bombings in Exchange for Life Without Parole Sentences
In separate plea agreements with the federal government and Georgia prosecutors, Eric Rudolph admitted killing two people and injuring 150 others by carrying out a series bombings at a gay nightclub, abortion clinics, and the 1996 Olympics, and will serve four consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole. Prosecutors spared Rudolph from execution in exchange for his guilty pleas and his revealing the location of about 250 pounds of dynamite he had hidden in the North Carolina…
Read MoreApr 14, 2005
MEDICAL JOURNAL, THE LANCET: Inmates Probably Conscious During Lethal Injections
A team of medical doctors reported in the British medical journal The Lancet that in 43 of 49 executed inmates (88%) studied, the anaesthetic administered during lethal injections was lower than that required for surgery. Toxicology reports from Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina revealed that post-mortem concentrations of thiopental in the blood were below typical surgery levels, and in 21 inmates (43%) the concentrations of thiopental in the blood were consistent with…
Read MoreApr 12, 2005
New York Takes Historic Step Towards Ending the Death Penalty
The Codes Committee of the New York Assembly has voted 11 – 7 against considering legislation to re-instate the death penalty in New York, a decision that likely ends such efforts during this legislative term. Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver has recently voiced concerns about the death penalty and has shifted his stance away from supporting capital punishment. New York’s current death penalty law was passed in 1995 but declared invalid by a ruling from the state’s highest court last year. While…
Read MoreApr 11, 2005
NEW VOICES: Veteran New York Legislator Now Opposes Death Penalty
Veteran New York legislator John R. Dunne voted for the death penalty 12 times during his tenure in the New York Senate. He then went on to serve as an assistant attorney general at the U.S. Department of Justice. But his concerns about the fairness and accuracy of capital punishment have now resulted in his opposition to the death penalty. In an op-ed appearing in the New York Daily News, Dunne wrote:As a member of the New York Senate from 1966 to 1989, I voted 12 times to establish the…
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