Publications & Testimony
Items: 5711 — 5720
Sep 28, 2004
NEW VOICES: Author of Arizona’s Death Penalty Law Has Second Thoughts
When Justice Sandra Day O’Connor was a senator in Arizona, one of the people she asked to draft the state’s death penalty law was Rudolph Gerber. She requested that he “write a law we can live with.” Mr. Gerber went on to become a prosecutor, an Arizona trial judge, and eventually a judge on the Arizona Court of Appeals for 13 years. He recently expressed his changing views on capital punishment as he experienced how the law was put into practice: “My experience, not atypical by any means,…
Read MoreSep 27, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: Law Review Adresses “Who Deserves Death?”
Articles from a symposium entitled “Rethinking the Death Penalty: Can We Define Who Deserves Death?” can be found in the Fall 2003 edition of the Pace Law Review. The symposium, hosted by the Association of the Bar of the City of New York in May 2002, featured speakers Robert Blecker, Jeffrey Kirchmeier, the Honorable William Erlbaum, David Von Drehle, and Jeffrey Fagan. The speakers addressed the question of whether it is possible to limit the death penalty to the “worst of the worst”…
Read MoreSep 27, 2004
Highlights from DPIC’s New Innocence Report
HIGHLIGHTS FROM DPIC’s NEW INNOCENCE REPORT DPIC recently released its latest report entitled “Innocence and the Crisis in the American Death Penalty.” The report is available from this Web site , or printed copies may be purchased by emailing DPIC . Some highlights from the report include: 116 inmates have been exonerated and freed from death row in 25 states since 1973. These defendants together spent over 1,000 years incarcerated between their…
Read MoreSep 27, 2004
Death penalty for minors: Cruel and unusual
American Medical NewsSeptember 27, 2004 Death penalty for minors: Cruel and unusual As the Supreme Court hears arguments on using the death penalty against minors, the AMA joins the voices of science and international leaders against…
Read MoreSep 27, 2004
Death penalty for minors: Cruel and unusual
American Medical…
Read MoreSep 23, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: Address to the American Correctional Association on the Death Penalty
The American Correctional Association has recently published the proceedings of their 2003 Annual Conference in Nashville containing a presentation by DPIC Executive Director Richard Dieter on the death penalty. The text of the speech is available on DPIC’s site, click here. The full publication is available from the ACA, and also contains remarks on the death penalty by Prof. John McAdams of Marquette. (The State of Corrections: 2003 Proceedings, ACA Annual Conferences, American…
Read MoreSep 23, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: More Blacks Deprived of Vote Because of Felony Convictions
A new report by The Sentencing Project, “The Vanishing Black Electorate: Felony Disenfranchisement in Atlanta, Georgia,” examines the racial effects of depriving citizens of voting rights because of criminal convictions. The report reveals sharp disparities in voting eligibility by race and neighborhood. Among the report’s key findings are the…
Read MoreSep 22, 2004
Innocence Protection Act Advances in U.S. House and Senate
Just one day after the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee passed the “Advancing Justice Through DNA Technology Act,” a measure that includes the Innocence Protection Act and that ensures access to post-conviction DNA testing for those in prison with claims of innocence, the bill has been incorporated into legislation introduced in the House Judiciary Committee. As part of the “Justice for All Act of 2004,” the DNA bill is anticipated to quickly advance to the House floor for a…
Read MoreSep 21, 2004
Op Ed, Newsday: Avoid Death Sentences: Give Cop Killers Life Without Parole
September 21, 2004: NewsdayAVOID DEATH SENTENCESGive cop killers life without paroleThe recent slaying of two detectives does not warrant restoration of capital punishment in New York StateOp-Ed By Kathy Dillon [Kathy Dillon, a former social worker from Syracuse, is a member of New Yorkers Against the Death Penalty.] The recent tragic murder of two police detectives in Brooklyn left many people reeling, including me. When I was 14 years old,…
Read MoreSep 17, 2004
Autopsies of Executed Inmates by State Medical Examiners Reveal Probability of Botched Procedures
An autopsy of the last man executed in Kentucky, Edward L. Harper, found only 3 to 6.5 milligrams per liter of barbiturate in Harper’s blood – a level leaving a high chance that Harper was conscious throughout the execution and that he felt pain when he was injected with subsequent drugs that paralyzed and suffocated him, and then stopped his heart. Dr. Mark Dershwitz, the prosecution expert who developed the standards that Kentucky relies upon, said the low level of barbiturate found in Mr.
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