Publications & Testimony

Items: 5821 — 5830


Jun 21, 2004

NEW VOICES: U.N. Ambassador Nominee Opposed to the Death Penalty

Former Republican Senator John Danforth of Missouri, President Bush’s nom­i­nee to serve as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, is a long-time oppo­nent of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. During his tenure in the Senate, Danforth made his posi­tion on the death penal­ty clear in a 1994 Senate floor state­ment:​“I think we should do away with the death penal­ty. As a mat­ter of per­son­al con­science, I have always opposed the death penal­ty.… We have had up or down votes on capital…

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Jun 17, 2004

EDITORIALS: Dallas Morning News Says Texas’ Statute is Wrong and Should Not Stand”

A recent Dallas Morning News edi­to­r­i­al decried the use of expert wit­ness­es who claim to have the abil­i­ty to pre­dict future dan­ger­ous­ness, a deter­mi­na­tion that jurors in Texas heav­i­ly rely on in sen­tenc­ing peo­ple to death. The edi­to­r­i­al states: In Texas, we exe­cute crim­i­nals not for what they did, but for what they might do. Convicted mur­der­er David Harris has a date with the exe­cu­tion­er June 30 for hav­ing killed a man in a Beaumont gun­fight. But that’s not…

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Jun 17, 2004

Soros Justice Fellowships Available

Applications for Soros Justice Advocacy, Senior and Media Fellowships are now being accept­ed by the Open Society Institute from lawyers, advo­cates, orga­niz­ers, schol­ars, jour­nal­ists and doc­u­men­tar­i­ans seek­ing to make advance­ments in crim­i­nal jus­tice. The dead­line for appli­cants is September 22, 2004. Proposed work should focus on reduc­ing the nation’s over reliance on poli­cies of pun­ish­ment and incar­cer­a­tion, encour­ag­ing the suc­cess­ful reset­tle­ment of people…

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Jun 17, 2004

Snitch Work

By Tom LowensteinPhiladelphia City PaperPART ONEAt the end of July 1988, there were two unsolved mur­ders of lit­tle girls in Northeast Philadelphia. Heather Coffin had been sex­u­al­ly assault­ed and mur­dered in 1987 in Frankford, and Barbara Jean Horn had been mur­dered on July 12, 1988, some­where near her house on Rutland Street, near Cottman Avenue. The police had a sus­pect in the Coffin mur­der, a 22-year-old named Raymond Sheehan,…

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Jun 16, 2004

UPCOMING EVENTS: World Congress Against the Death Penalty to Convene in Montreal

The 2nd World Congress Against the Death Penalty will take place in Montreal, Canada, October 6 – 9, 2004. The con­fer­ence is spon­sored by Penal Reform International, the End to Capital Punishment Movement (ECPM USA), and the ECPM Network (Together Against the Death Penalty). During the four-day event, gov­ern­ment offi­cials, rep­re­sen­ta­tives from death penal­ty and law-relat­ed orga­ni­za­tions, and vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers from around the world will host a series of…

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Jun 16, 2004

New Resource: Study Encourages Police to Record Interviews

A recent study con­duct­ed by for­mer U.S. Attorney Thomas Sullivan and released by the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law con­clud­ed that elec­tron­ic record­ing of inter­ro­ga­tions of crim­i­nal sus­pects is a cost-effec­­tive method that results in more con­vic­tions and speed­i­er jus­tice. The researchers con­tact­ed 238 law enforce­ment agen­cies in 38 states that record inter­ro­ga­tions in felony crimes and found that​“vir­tu­al­ly…

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Jun 16, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: The Angolite Highlights Long Road to Clemency for Man with Mental Retardation

The Angolite, a news mag­a­zine pro­duced by inmates at Louisiana’s Angola State Penitentiary, high­lights the com­mu­ta­tion of Herbert Welcome, a man with men­tal retar­da­tion whose death sen­tence was lift­ed by Governor Mike Foster in 2003. The arti­cle fol­lows Welcome’s decades-long strug­gle to have his sen­tence com­mut­ed, includ­ing a 1988 rec­om­men­da­tion for clemen­cy that was nev­er signed. Years lat­er, Welcome’s clemen­cy effort was reignit­ed by his attor­neys from the…

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Jun 16, 2004

Texas Relies on Junk Science” in Choosing Who Will Be Sentenced to Death

Texas plans to exe­cute David Harris on June 30th on the basis of a pre­dic­tion in 1986 that he would be a future dan­ger even if sen­tenced to life in prison. Dr. Edward Gripon tes­ti­fied that Harris posed a sub­stan­tial risk of com­mit­ting fur­ther vio­lent acts, even though Gripon had nev­er met or exam­ined Harris. During his near­ly two decades on death row, Harris has had only minor infrac­tions, such as hav­ing too many postage stamps or hang­ing a clothesline…

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Jun 15, 2004

Nichols’ Sentencing Demonstrates Heavy Burden on Jurors

After delib­er­at­ing for 20 hours over three days, the jurors who recent­ly found Terry Nichols (pic­tured) guilty of mur­der in the 1995 Oklahoma City bomb­ing expressed some of the anguish that choos­ing between life and death caused them. ​“It was tough. We had found it much eas­i­er to arrive at a guilty ver­dict, but the penal­ty phase was much hard­er,” said juror Terry Zellmer. Cecil Reeder, a Korean War vet­er­an who sup­port­ed the death penal­ty for Nichols, said, ​“This…

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Jun 14, 2004

Another Victims’ Family Provides Perspective on the Death Penalty as Maryland Execution Approaches

As Maryland pre­pares for the exe­cu­tion of Steven Oken this week, two Maryland par­ents whose daugh­ter was mur­dered six years ago pro­vid­ed a vic­tims’ fam­i­ly per­spec­tive on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in The Washington Post:​“Oken com­mit­ted the crimes for which he is sen­tenced to die back in 1987. Anyone who has seen the sur­vivors of vic­tims feels sor­row for the pain they have had to bear as the case has worn on. But the death penal­ty holds lit­tle promise of helping survivors…

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