Publications & Testimony

Items: 5731 — 5740


Aug 24, 2004

Prosecutors Offer a Variety of Reasons for Foregoing Death Penalty

The San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office reflect­ed on a num­ber of fac­tors in decid­ing to forego seek­ing a death sen­tence for Seti Christopher Scanlan, whose first tri­al end­ed in a mis­tri­al after he took the stand and begged jurors to sen­tence him to death. Prosecutors are now seek­ing a sen­tence of life in prison for Scanlan after con­clud­ing that​“it was not rea­son­ably like­ly that we would get a jury that would deliv­er the death penal­ty.” The case has already cost…

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Aug 23, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: Scientific American Looks at Crime Rates

In his Scientific American mag­a­zine arti­cle enti­tled,​“The Case of the Unsolved Crime Decline,” crim­i­nol­o­gist Richard Rosenfeld exam­ines why U.S. crime rates dropped more than 40% in the 1990’s and what lessons cur­rent pol­i­­cy-mak­ers can learn from this decline. Rosenfeld pro­vides an overview and eval­u­a­tion of pre­vi­ous research show­ing a link in the crime rate decline and fac­tors such as changes in demo­graph­ics, law-enforce­­ment prac­tices, economic…

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Aug 20, 2004

Broad Spectrum of Citizens Seeks Clemency in Upcoming Texas Execution

A broad spec­trum of the pub­lic is seek­ing clemen­cy for Texas death row inmate James Allridge, who is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on Thursday, August 26th. Among those point­ing to Allridge’s reha­bil­i­ta­tion as the basis for mer­cy are four of the orig­i­nal jurors in his tri­al, two for­mer death row prison guards, a retired prison sys­tem admin­is­tra­tor, a Fort Worth city coun­cil­man, one of Allridge’s for­mer employ­ers, and mur­der vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers. The…

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Aug 19, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: Law Review Examines Race and the Death Penalty

The Summer 2004 DePaul Law Review con­tains pre­sen­ta­tions and arti­cles from the University’s two-day​“Race to Execution” Symposium, an event that fea­tured remarks and pre­sen­ta­tions from some of the nation’s most renowned death penal­ty experts. This law review exam­ines the role that race has his­tor­i­cal­ly had and con­tin­ues to play in our nation’s death penal­ty debate. Among the arti­cles are pre­sen­ta­tions exam­in­ing the racial bias in cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing, how…

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Aug 18, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: Law, Psychology, and Death Penalty Litigation

Professor James R. Eisenberg’s new book, ​“Law, Psychology, and Death Penalty Litigation,” pro­vides a thor­ough intro­duc­tion to the role that foren­sic psy­chol­o­gy plays in cap­i­tal tri­als. Using a step-by-step approach that cov­ers the his­tor­i­cal and cur­rent legal con­text of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, Eisenberg describes the var­i­ous tasks that might con­front the foren­sic psy­chol­o­gist in a death penal­ty tri­al, includ­ing issues of com­pe­ten­cy to be executed,…

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Aug 17, 2004

Editorial Urges New York Legislators to Abandon Death Penalty

A recent Albany Times Union edi­to­r­i­al called on state leg­is­la­tors to aban­don attempts to rein­state New York’s death penal­ty, which the state’s high­est court found uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because the statute’s jury instruc­tions could be coer­cive. The June 24th New York Court of Appeals rul­ing in People v. Stephen LaValle spurred pro­posed leg­is­la­tion to rem­e­dy the statute. Some legal crit­ics who have exam­ined the new bill say that it may also be uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. The…

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Aug 13, 2004

Ryan Matthews is Latest Exonoree

RYAN MATTHEWS IS LATEST INMATE FREED FROM DEATH ROW On Monday, August 9, 2004, Ryan Matthews became the lat­est death row inmate to be freed, and the 14th exon­er­at­ed with the help of DNA evi­dence. Matthews was sen­tenced to die in 1999 and spent near­ly five years on death row before being cleared of a mur­der that occurred just two weeks after his 17th birth­day. Matthews’ appel­late attor­neys had physical…

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Aug 12, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: Jurors’ Stories of Death

In his new book ​“Jurors’ Stories of Death: How America’s Death Penalty Invests in Inequality,” author Benjamin Fleury-Steiner draws on real-life accounts of white and black jurors in cap­i­tal tri­als to dis­cuss the effect of race on the sen­tenc­ing process. Through his sur­vey of the jurors’ expe­ri­ences, he reveals that race is often a fac­tor in sen­tenc­ing and that the U.S. jus­tice sys­tem can fos­ter an​“us ver­sus them” men­tal­i­ty among jurors serv­ing in capital…

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Aug 11, 2004

EXPERTS QUESTION QUICK FIXTO NEW YORK’S DEATH PENALTY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASECONTACT: Brenda BowserAugust 11, 2004Office: 202.293.6970 — Cell: 301.906.4460Additional Contacts Listed BelowEXPERTS QUESTION​QUICK FIXTO NEW YORK’S DEATH PENALTYLegislators May Address​“Deadlock Instructions” With Equally Flawed MeasureWASHINGTON, DC – Constitutional experts, law enforce­ment offi­cials, and lead­ing civic orga­ni­za­tions have raised seri­ous con­cerns about a pro­posed​“quick…

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Aug 10, 2004

NEW VOICES: Maryland Families Urge Prosecutor to End Death Penalty Bid

Expressing their desire to end emo­tion­al­ly strain­ing court pro­ceed­ings, the fam­i­lies of Maryland mur­der vic­tims Betina​“Kristi” Gentry and Cynthia V. Allen recent­ly urged Anne Arundel County’s top pros­e­cu­tor to end his 3rd attempt to get a death sen­tence for the man accused of killing the two women 10 years ago.​“They’ve been through so much. I can’t look them in the eye and say,​‘Nah, you have to relive it again.’ I can’t do that,” said State’s Attorney Frank R. Weathersbee…

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