Publications & Testimony

Items: 5761 — 5770


Aug 03, 2004

Experts on Adolescence Call for End to Juvenile Death Penalty

An op-ed appear­ing in the Arizona Republic and authored by Dr. Mark Wellek, past pres­i­dent of the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry, and Carol Kamin, cur­rent pres­i­dent of the Arizona Chapter of the Children’s Action Alliance, echoed grow­ing nation­al con­cerns about the cul­pa­bil­i­ty of juve­nile offend­ers who face cap­i­tal charges despite sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence that they may be less cul­pa­ble than adult offend­ers. Wellek and Kamin not­ed:​“American soci­ety has many…

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Jul 30, 2004

Prosecutor Forgoes Costly Death Penalty Trial

In Alameda County, California, pros­e­cu­tors announced that they will not seek the death penal­ty against Richard Dean Wilson because it is unlike­ly that a jury would return a death sen­tence. State authories say the deci­sion to seek a life sen­tence for Wilson avoids a cost­ly death penal­ty case and saves tax­pay­er dol­lars from financ­ing a lengthy tri­al with an uncer­tain out­come. Wilson plead­ed no con­test to the mur­der of Angela Marie Bledsoe. Prosecutor Jim Anderson noted,…

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Jul 30, 2004

Judge Accused of Assisting Prosecution in Capital Cases

The California Supreme Court is ask­ing the state’s attor­ney gen­er­al’s office to explain why Fred Freeman’s death sen­tence should not be reversed on alle­ga­tions that a now-deceased Superior Court Judge col­lud­ed with pros­e­cu­tors to ensure a cap­i­tal con­vic­tion by elim­i­nat­ing poten­tial Jewish jurors. The Supreme Court issued the show cause order after Freeman’s attor­neys filed a claim stat­ing that Freeman was denied a fair tri­al because Judge Stanley Golde allegedly…

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Jul 30, 2004

Crime, Culpability and the Adolescent Brain

By Mary Beckmanwww​.sci​encemag​.orgCrime, Culpability and the Adolescent BrainThis fall, the U.S. Supreme Court will con­sid­er whether cap­i­tal crimes by teenagers under 18 should get the death sen­tence; the case for lenien­cy is based in part on brain stud­ies.When he was 17 years old, Christopher Simmons per­suad­ed a younger friend to help him rob a woman, tie her up with elec­tri­cal cable and duct tape, and throw her over a bridge.

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Jul 29, 2004

NEW VOICES: Texas DA Sees Beginning of the End of the Death Penalty”

In Texas, Jefferson County District Attorney Tom Maness recent­ly not­ed that the time-con­­sum­ing and cost­ly nature of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment may lead to its demise.​“I think this is the begin­ning of the end of the death penal­ty,” said Maness after a Criminal District Court Judge rec­om­mend­ed that the Court of Criminal Appeals com­mute the death sen­tence of Walter Bell to life in prison. On three occas­sions, Jefferson County spent count­less hours of work and hun­dreds of thousands…

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