Publications & Testimony
Items: 5831 — 5840
May 26, 2004
Texas Juvenile Pardoned After Faulty Lab Work Exposed
Texas Governor Rick Perry has issued a pardon on the basis of innocence to Josiah Sutton, a juvenile offender who had served four years of a 25-year prison term before new DNA tests proved his innocence. The faulty DNA results used to convict Sutton in 1998 were processed by the now thoroughly discredited Houston Police Department crime lab, the same facility that processed DNA and other forensic evidence used in cases that have resulted in death sentences. The lab was shut down in…
Read MoreMay 26, 2004
TRUE MURDERER GETS LIFE 11 YEARS AFTER DEATH ROW INMATE IS FREED
Maryland prosecutors used the same DNA evidence that freed Kirk Bloodsworth (pictured) from Maryland’s death row to secure a life-in-prison sentence for Kimberly Shay Ruffner, the man who has now confessed to the 1984 murder of Dawn Hamilton. Bloodsworth spent years on death row for the rape and murder of Hamilton before DNA evidence conclusively showed that he could not have committed the crime. In 1993, he became the first death row inmate in the country to be freed on the basis of DNA…
Read MoreMay 26, 2004
Psychiatrists Question Death for Teen Killers
In 1993, when 17-year-old Christopher Simmons abducted and murdered his neighbor, little did he know that some of the nation’s top brain researchers and psychiatrists would one day rush to his defense before the Supreme…
Read MoreMay 25, 2004
Insistence on the Death Penalty May Interfere with Trial for Saddam Hussein
Great Britain may refuse to hand over evidence of Saddam Hussein’s crimes to Iraqi prosecutors or permit government staff to testify against the former dictator because of the nation’s opposition to the death penalty. Despite human rights objections from British officials who helped establish the special tribunal that will try Hussein and other senior members of his regime, Iraqis have insisted that capital punishment remain a sentencing option for some crimes. Coalition forces have suspended…
Read MoreMay 24, 2004
Supreme Court Unanimously Allows Lethal Injection Procedure Challenge to Continue
The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that an Alabama death row inmate could pursue his claim that the lethal injection procedures in his case constitute cruel and unusual punishment. David Nelson, who was less than three hours away from his scheduled execution last fall when the Supreme Court gave him a temporary reprieve, had filed a claim under section 1983 of the Civil Rights Law stating that his damaged veins would make it impossible to insert an intravenous line without…
Read MoreMay 21, 2004
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Former Massachusetts Death Row Inmate Released After 30 Years in Prison
Laurence Adams, who was sentenced to death in Massachusetts in 1974 shortly before the state finally abandoned capital punishment, was released on May 20 after spending three decades of his life in prison. In April 2004, a judge overturned Adams’ conviction when new evidence, including conflicting statements from the state’s star witness and a statement from a witness who said two other people committed the murder, cast doubt on his guilt. Superior Court Judge Robert A.
Read MoreMay 20, 2004
PUBLIC OPINION: North Carolinians Support Death Penalty Moratorium
An April 2004 poll of North Carolinians revealed that 63% of respondents support a halt to executions while the state’s death penalty is studied, and many respondents have doubts about the accuracy of the death penalty. “Support for the two-year suspension of executions is widespread and cuts across all demographic groups, regions of the state and political party affiliation. This is clearly an issue that resonates with the people of North Carolina,” stated John Doble, founder of Doble…
Read MoreMay 19, 2004
San Francisco Voters Back DA’s Decision to Not Seek Death Sentence
Both city voters and the Bar Association of San Francisco have voiced support for San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris’ decision to not seek the death penalty in the case against David Hill, who is accused of killing city police officer Isaac Espinoza. A recent poll found that 70% of respondents backed Harris’ decision, while only 22% opposed the choice and 8% remained undecided. The poll also found that 65% of those surveyed gave Harris’ overall performance as District Attorney…
Read MoreMay 19, 2004
Scott Turow’s Reversible Errors Debuts This Weekend
SCOTT TUROW’S REVERSIBLE ERRORS DEBUTED THIS WEEKEND A television mini-series based on the fiction novel Reversible Errors, a best-selling book by award- winning author and capital defense attorney Scott Turow, began on CBS on Sunday May 23, and will conclude Tuesday May 25, 2004. In the film, a corporate lawyer is assigned to draft the final appeal of a potentially innocent inmate whose execution is imminent. While Errors is not based upon an actual…
Read MoreMay 18, 2004
Texas Board Recommends Clemency on Eve of Execution
On the eve of the Kelsey Patterson’s scheduled execution in Texas, the state’s Board of Pardons and Paroles voted 5 – 1 to recommend that Governor Rick Perry commute Patterson’s death sentence to life in prison. In its rare recommendation for clemency, the Board noted that if Governor Perry refuses to grant clemency, Patterson, a mentally ill man who is scheduled to be executed on Tuesday, May 18th, should receive a 120-day reprieve. The Board’s actions mark the first time in more than two…
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