Publications & Testimony
Items: 5651 — 5660
Oct 28, 2004
Justice O’Connor Notes Importance of International Law
During a recent speech at Georgetown Law School, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor emphasized the growing importance of international law in U.S. courts, saying judges would be negligent if they disregarded its importance in a post-September 11th world of heightened tensions. O’Connor said the Supreme Court is taking cases that demand a better understanding of foreign legal systems, noting,“International law is no longer a specialty. … It is vital if…
Read MoreOct 27, 2004
NEW VOICES: Texas Judge Calls for Halt to Executions
Judge Tom Price, a 30-year veteran Republican jurist on Texas’s highest criminal court, recently stated that those on the state’s death row convicted with evidence from the Houston Police Department crime lab should not be executed until questions about its work are resolved. Price called for a limited moratorium on executions, saying,“I think it would be prudent to delay further executions until we have had a chance to have this evidence independently…
Read MoreOct 26, 2004
Teen’s sentence could be fate worse than death
Chicago…
Read MoreOct 21, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: New Book Examines Flawed Texas Death Penalty
In “No Justice: No Victory — The Death Penalty in Texas,” author Susan Lee Campbell Solar examines capital punishment in Texas through a political lens and with a concentration on cases and anecdotes that illustrate the systemic flaws she uncovered during her research. The book, completed by friends and family of the author after she died unexpectedly, features interviews with attorneys, judges and law professors, as well as with those on death row, their…
Read MoreOct 21, 2004
Chicago Tribune Series Examines How Arson Myths May Lead to Wrongful Convictions
As part of its five-part series on forensic science and wrongful convictions, the Chicago Tribune examined how scientific developments in fire investigations have called into question crucial expert testimony in many cases, including some death penalty prosecutions. As a result of untested theories, shoddy analysis and a resistance to rigorous review, long-time arson investigators are now seeing their conclusions contradicted by colleagues who…
Read MoreOct 21, 2004
NEW VOICES: California Bar Association Urges Death Penalty Moratorium
A group of 450 attorneys participating in the Conference of Delegates of the California Bar Association has urged a moratorium on the death penalty in California until the state reviews whether capital punishment laws are enforced fairly and uniformly. “If you make a mistake, it’s not like you can go back and correct a mistake because the person is dead,” said Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Danette Meyers, supporter of the measure and…
Read MoreOct 21, 2004
Many African Nations Abandoning Death Penalty
During the past 15 years, the number of African nations abandoning capital punishment has risen from one to 10, and another 10 nations have abolished the death penalty in practice according to a recent tally by Amnesty International. As this trend toward abolishing the death penalty continues, fewer Africans than ever are being executed by their governments. The anti-capital punishment movement has been especially powerful in West Africa, where the number of…
Read MoreOct 21, 2004
DPIC SUMMARY: Chicago Tribune Series, “Forensics Under the Microscope”
A CHICAGO TRIBUNE INVESTIGATIVE SERIESChicago Tribune veteran project reporters Flynn McRoberts, Steve Mills and Maurice Possley, together with researcher Judith Marriott, scrutinized criminal cases including“scientific” or forensic evidence, conducting hundreds of interviews across the country and examining thousands of court documents. From October 17, 2004 to October 21, 2004 the Tribune published a five-part investigative series which details…
Read MoreOct 20, 2004
Cruel and unusual
Daily Targum…
Read MoreOct 19, 2004
Chicago Tribune Investigates Forensic Science and Wrongful Convictions
A five-part Chicago Tribune investigation of forensics in the courtroom has revealed that flawed testing analysis, questionable science once considered reliable, and shoddy crime lab practices can often lead to wrongful convictions. Developments in DNA technology have helped shed new light on these problems by revealing the shaky scientific foundations of techniques like fingerprinting, firearm identification, arson investigation, and bite-mark…
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