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…
Read MoreAug 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…
Read MoreAug 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…
Read MoreAug 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…
Read MoreAug 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,…
Read MoreAug 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…
Read MoreAug 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…
Read MoreAug 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…
Read MoreAug 11, 2004
EXPERTS QUESTION “QUICK FIX” TO NEW YORK’S DEATH PENALTY
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASECONTACT: Brenda BowserAugust 11, 2004Office: 202.293.6970 — Cell: 301.906.4460Additional Contacts Listed BelowEXPERTS QUESTION“QUICK FIX” TO 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…
Read MoreAug 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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