Publications & Testimony

Items: 5861 — 5870


Apr 29, 2004

Another Federal Death Penalty Case Results in Life Sentence

After less than five hours of delib­er­a­tion, jurors in a fed­er­al death penal­ty case in Maryland returned life sen­tences for two men con­vict­ed ear­li­er of fed­er­al drug con­spir­a­cy charges and firearms vio­la­tions. The fed­er­al case against Michael Taylor and Keon Moses was the first time since 1998 that U.S. pros­e­cu­tors in Baltimore had sought a death sen­tence. The life sen­tences for Taylor and Keon con­tin­ue a nation­al trend iden­ti­fied last year by the Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel…

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Apr 28, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: North Carolina Web Site Contains Valuable Information on Moratorium Issue

North Carolina may become the first state to enact a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions through the leg­isla­tive process. A mora­to­ri­um mea­sure has already passed their Senate and is await­ing action in the House. A new Web site launched by the North Carolina Coalition for a Moratorium, www​.ncmora​to​ri​um​.org, con­tains a vast amount of infor­ma­tion relat­ed to this impor­tant issue. Among the top­ics exam­ined are the qual­i­ty of coun­sel, inno­cence, costs, access to DNA test­ing, deter­rence, race,…

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Apr 27, 2004

State Legislators Advance Bills to Ban Juvenile Death Penalty

Just weeks after leg­is­la­tors in Wyoming and South Dakota passed leg­is­la­tion to ban the exe­cu­tion of juve­nile offend­ers, law­mak­ers in Florida are on a sim­i­lar course that may send a bill that elim­i­nates the death penal­ty for those under the age of 18 to Governor Jeb Bush for sig­na­ture into law. Members of the Florida Senate passed the juve­nile death penal­ty ban by a vote of 26 – 12, and the House is expect­ed to take up the mea­sure lat­er this week. Florida House Speaker Johnnie…

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Apr 26, 2004

POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Texas Man May Soon Be Freed From Death Row

More than two decades after Max Soffar was sen­tenced to die for a Houston-area triple mur­der, an appel­late court has ruled that his court-appoint­ed attor­ney inad­e­quate­ly rep­re­sent­ed him dur­ing his 1980 tri­al and that he deserves to be retried with­in 120 days or freed from Texas’s death row. Although no evi­dence link­ing Soffar to the crime was ever found and his accounts of the mur­ders, con­tained in what are believed to be false con­fes­sions, var­ied vast­ly from sev­er­al eye­wit­ness­es, Soffar’s…

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Apr 23, 2004

NEW RESOURCE: The Problem of False Confessions in a Post-DNA World

The Problem of False Confessions in a Post-DNA World,” a recent study pub­lished in the North Carolina Law Review, found that juve­nile offend­ers were involved in 33% of the cas­es where the defen­dant con­fessed to a crime that he or she did not com­mit. Ninety-two per­cent of the cas­es involved false con­fes­sions from indi­vid­u­als under the age of 40, and more than half were under the age of 25. According to the study’s authors, law pro­fes­sors Richard Leo of the University…

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