Publications & Testimony
Items: 5841 — 5850
May 14, 2004
Oklahoma Governor Grants Clemency to Mexican Foreign National
Just days before the scheduled execution of Osvaldo Torres, a Mexican foreign national on Oklahoma’s death row, Governor Brad Henry granted a request for clemency in part because of a recent International Court of Justice decision ordering the United States to review the cases of 51 Mexican foreign nationals on death row because they were denied their right to seek consular assistance following their arrest. Henry’s announcement came just hours after the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals…
Read MoreMay 14, 2004
Oklahoma Governor Grants Clemency to Mexican Citizen
OK. GOVERNOR GRANTS CLEMENCY TO MEXICAN CITIZEN Photo: CuartoscuroOsvaldo Torres was scheduled to be executed by the state of Oklahoma on May 18, 2004, despite a ruling from the International Court of Justice that his rights under the Vienna Convention (and those of 50 other Mexican nationals on American death rows) were violated. On May 13, 2004, citing the decisions of the Parole Board and a stay granted by the Court of Criminal Appeals, Governor Brad Henry commuted Torres’ sentence…
Read MoreMay 13, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: CBS to Air Mini-series Based on Turow Death Penalty Novel
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, will air on CBS on Sunday May 23, and Tuesday May 25, 2004. The story is about a corporate lawyer whose world is turned upside-down when he is assigned to draft the final appeal of a potentially innocent inmate nearing his execution date. Although “Reversible Errors” is not about an actual capital case in the U.S., the novel and the CBS…
Read MoreMay 12, 2004
NEW VOICES: Supreme Court Justice Stevens Says U.S. “Better Off “ Without Capital Punishment
During a “fireside chat” with fellow Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer and hundreds of lawyers and judges who practice in federal courts in Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens stated, “I think this country would be much better off if we did not have capital punishment.” Stevens noted that he believes the death penalty is constitutional, adding, “But I really think it’s a very unfortunate part of our judicial system and I would feel much, much better if…
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NEW VOICES: Scientific Experts Say DNA Evidence Not “Infallible”
Scientists who are skeptical of Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney’s claim that DNA is “infallible” evidence in a death penalty case have voiced concern about the assumption, noting that there is no way to avoid all possible instances of human error and that the evidence does not always prove a person’s guilt or innocence. Theodore D. Kessis is the founder of Applied DNA Resources, based in Columbus, Ohio, and a faculty member at the John Hopkins School of Public Health in Baltimore. He…
Read MoreMay 12, 2004
NEW VOICES: New York Religious Leaders Unite Against Death Penalty, Call for Moratorium
New York religious leaders representing a range of faiths and regions recently united to voice their opposition to the death penalty and to encourage a moratorium on executions so that issues of fairness and accuracy may be addressed. A statement issued by the group noted: “[O]ur nation’s continued reliance on the death penalty is extremely costly, ineffective in fighting crime, unequally applied, and handed out with alarming frequency to defendants who are later proved to be innocent. Even…
Read MoreMay 12, 2004
Abolition of the Death Penalty Gaining Ground in Africa
During the past 10 years, most Commonwealth African countries have moved toward abolishing the death penalty and today almost half of these countries have abandoned the practice according to Amnesty International. Government leaders from around the continent recently met in Entebbe, Uganda, for a two-day summit to discuss capital punishment. Five Southern African Development Countries have abolished capital punishment, and the number of countries ending the death penalty in the Economic…
Read MoreMay 11, 2004
Execution With International Repercussions Approaches
EXECUTION WITH INTERNATIONAL REPERCUSSIONS APPROACHES Photo: CuartoscuroOsvaldo Torres is scheduled to be executed by the state of Oklahoma on May 18, 2004, despite a ruling from the International Court of Justice that his rights under the Vienna Convention (and those of 50 other Mexican nationals on American death rows) were violated. The International Court of Justice is the highest court of the U.N. and the U.S. has used this court in the past to protect the rights of its own…
Read MoreMay 11, 2004
New research shows stark differences in teen brains
By Lee…
Read MoreMay 10, 2004
Finding Justice for mentally ill defendants
May 10, 2004: Austin American-StatesmanFinding justice for mentally ill defendants There is little doubt that Texas will execute Kelsey Patterson on May 18 if left to its own devices. Neither is there doubt that Patterson is guilty of murdering two East Texans. Even so, this case never should have reached this point, given that Patterson is severely mentally ill.In 1992, Patterson was wandering the streets with a hand gun when he happened upon Louis Oates, a Palestine…
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