Publications & Testimony

Items: 5721 — 5730


Sep 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…

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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…

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Sep 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…

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Sep 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…

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Sep 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…

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Sep 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.

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Sep 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…

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Sep 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.

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Sep 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…

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Sep 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…

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