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…
Read MoreApr 29, 2004
Juvenile Executions — At least raise Florida’s minimum age to 18
Daytona Beach…
Read MoreApr 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.ncmoratorium.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,…
Read MoreApr 28, 2004
Draw the line — The Florida Senate voted Tuesday to end the death penalty for juveniles. The House should now do the same.
St. Petersburg…
Read MoreApr 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…
Read MoreApr 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…
Read MoreApr 26, 2004
Stop executing minors
National Law…
Read MoreApr 25, 2004
Keep your promise — It’s time for the Florida Legislature to pass the bill that exempts juveniles from the death penalty.
St. Petersburg…
Read MoreApr 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…
Read MoreApr 23, 2004
Executing youthful offenders not a worthy battle for King
Decatur…
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