Publications & Testimony

Items: 5681 — 5690


Oct 14, 2004

117th Innocent Person Freed From Death Row

117th INNOCENT PERSON FREED FROM DEATH ROW Ernest Willis became the eighth per­son exon­er­at­ed from Texas’s death row on October 6, 2004, and the 117th per­son freed nation­wide since 1973. Willis was sen­tenced to death 17 years ago for alleged­ly set­ting a house fire that killed two peo­ple. U. S. District Judge Royal Ferguson held that the state had admin­is­tered med­ical­ly inap­pro­pri­ate antipsy­chot­ic drugs with­out Willis’ con­sent; that the state supressed evi­dence favor­able to Willis;…

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Oct 12, 2004

NEW VOICES: Major Texas Newspapers Call for a Halt to Executions in Cases from Houston

Following a call from the Houston Police Chief and from state leg­is­la­tors to halt exe­cu­tions in cas­es from Harris County, four of the state’s largest news­pa­pers pub­lished edi­to­ri­als in sup­port of a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions. The Houston police crime lab has been plagued with errors in DNA test­ing and preser­va­tion of evi­dence. There have been far more exe­cu­tions from Harris County (Houston) than from any oth­er coun­ty in the coun­try. AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN (N)othing can jus­ti­fy an execution…

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Oct 12, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: An Account of Life on Death Row

In Waiting to Die: Life on Death Row,” Richard M. Rossi pro­vides a first-hand account of his dai­ly life on Arizona’s death row. Rossi was sen­tenced to death in 1983 and has tak­en respon­si­bil­i­ty for the mur­der he com­mit­ted. He was orig­i­nal­ly offered a plea bar­gain with a life sen­tence, but he decid­ed to go to tri­al. He has been on death row for 20 years. In his book, Rossi details how pris­on­ers sur­vive on death row, the con­di­tions under which they live, and the psy­cho­log­i­cal toll that…

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Oct 10, 2004

LEGISLATION: Senate and House Pass Versions of Innocence Protection Act

On October 9, the U.S. Senate passed by voice vote a bill called the Justice for All Act of 2004” that con­tains impor­tant ele­ments of the Innocence Protection Act, orig­i­nal­ly intro­duced in 2000. A sim­i­lar bill recent­ly over­whelm­ing­ly passed the House of Representatives (HR 5107), and it is expect­ed that the final leg­is­la­tion will now be signed into law. The bill pro­vides for expand­ed access to DNA test­ing for prison inmates and assis­tance to states for both defense and prosecution in…

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Oct 08, 2004

ARBITRARINESS: Execution May Go Forward Despite Nearly Even Split on Innocence

A deeply divid­ed U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ruled 8 – 7 that the exe­cu­tion of Tennessee death row inmate Paul Gregory House may move for­ward despite the fact that near­ly half of the judges believe he is not guilty and should be freed imme­di­ate­ly. We are faced with a real-life mur­der mys­tery, an authen­tic who-done-it’ where the wrong man may be exe­cut­ed,” wrote dis­sent­ing judge Ronald Lee Gilman. A N.Y. Times arti­cle not­ed that although courts are often close­ly divided on…

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