Publications & Testimony
Items: 5711 — 5720
Sep 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.
Read MoreSep 16, 2004
Report Analyzes Washington Death Penalty System
A new report from the Washington Death Penalty Assistance Center reviews the efficiency of Washington State’s death penalty system. The report includes an overview of Washington’s statute and an explanation of the differences between capital and non-capital cases, demonstrating why capital cases require significantly greater resources. The authors report that: o Of death penalty cases that completed the appeals process, 81% were overturned after errors were found. When those cases were tried…
Read MoreSep 16, 2004
RESOURCES: BJS Report Finds Murder Rate Unchanged
In the latest National Crime Victimization Survey, the Bureau of Justice Statistics reported that the U.S. murder rate for 2003 was about 5.6 per 100,000 persons, unchanged from 2001 and 2002. Of the victims of murder, approximately 49% were white and 49% were black. (DPIC note: While the report found that the race of victims is evenly split nationally, victims in death penalty cases are mostly white (about 81%)). In murder cases, 76% of the offenders were known to the victim, and 24% of…
Read MoreSep 16, 2004
NEW VOICES: Many Call For A More Thorough Review of the Death Penalty in NY
New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a long time supporter of capital punishment, called for New York’s legislature to step back and more thoroughly review the state’s death penalty system, which has not resulted in any executions and has cost the state more than $170 million in the last decade. Speaker Silver said that his chamber would not follow the lead of the state Senate, which passed an amendment to fix the state’s death penalty law without hearings. “After 10 years of…
Read MoreSep 15, 2004
DPIC RELEASING NEW REPORT ON INNOCENCE
The Death Penatly Information Center has issued a new report, Innocence and the Crisis in the American Death Penalty, cataloging 116 cases of former death row inmates who have been exonerated in 25 states since 1973. The report also notes that as the number of innocent people freed from death row has risen and become more public in recent years, there has been a dramatic drop in death sentences around the country. The number of death sentences, which have been steadily dropping since…
Read MoreSep 14, 2004
RESOURCES: Bloodsworth – The True Story of the First Death Row Inmate Exonerated by DNA
A new biography by Tim Junkin entitled Bloodsworth: The True Story of the First Death Row Inmate Exonerated by DNA recounts the events that led first to the conviction and death sentence, and then to the freeing of Kirk Bloodsworth for the murder of a nine-year-old girl in Maryland. Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking describes the book as “Chilling, heartbreaking, and ultimately inspiring.” Scott Turow says: “Bloodsworth is a tale of courage and determination in the face…
Read MoreSep 13, 2004
NEW VOICES: Lead Prosecutor Questions Value of Death Penalty
Thomas F. Kelaher, the new president of the County Prosecutors Association of New Jersey, said that it is time to start rethinking the use of the death penalty in the state. Although Kelaher is a supporter of the death penalty, he noted: “If the death penalty hasn’t been used in 20 years, society should ask if it should be continued. It was supposed to act as a deterrent. If it hasn’t been used in 20 years, you really can’t say it’s a deterrent.” Kelaher expressed concern…
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