Publications & Testimony

Items: 5921 — 5930


Mar 03, 2004

NEW RESOURCES: Arbitrariness and Racial Disparities in Death Sentencing

In a recent study exam­in­ing death sen­tenc­ing trends around the coun­try, researchers report­ed sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ences between the rates at which black defen­dants who kill white vic­tims are sen­tenced to death, as com­pared to the rate at which black defen­dants who kill black vic­tims are sen­tenced to death. In every one of the sev­en states for which data was avail­able, blacks who kill whites were far more like­ly to receive a death sen­tence than blacks who…

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Mar 02, 2004

NEW VOICES: North Carolina Attorney General Urges Open-File Policy, Calls Gell Case a Travesty”

North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper is call­ing on pros­e­cu­tors to open their files to defense attor­neys in first-degree mur­der cas­es to avoid wrong­ful con­vic­tions like that of for­mer death row inmate Alan Gell, who was exon­er­at­ed and freed in February. Cooper called Gell’s first tri­al a​“trav­es­ty” and stat­ed that the pros­e­cu­tors com­mit­ted​“inex­cus­able neglect” in their han­dling of the trial. ​“The orig­i­nal pros­e­cu­tors in this case owe everyone an…

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Mar 01, 2004

Condemned Prisoner Treated and Executed

Psychiatric TimesMarch 2004 Vol. XXI Issue 3 Condemned Prisoner Treated and ExecutedCommentary by Alan A. Stone, M.D. On Jan. 6, the state of Arkansas exe­cut­ed Charles Singleton by lethal injec­tion. His death went unno­ticed by the nation­al media, but it will be remem­bered and dis­cussed in the years ahead by med­ical ethi­cists and every­one else inter­est­ed in the inter­sec­tions of human rights, psy­chi­a­try and law.Singleton by all…

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Feb 27, 2004

NEW RESOURCES: Experts Debate the Death Penalty

Debating the Death Penalty: Should America Have Capital Punishment?,” a new book edit­ed by Hugo Bedau and Paul Cassell, brings togeth­er judges, lawyers, pros­e­cu­tors and philoso­phers to debate the death penal­ty in a spir­it of open inquiry and exchange. The book dis­cuss­es issues such as deter­rence, inno­cence, life in prison with­out parole, and race. In addi­tion to the edi­tors, those who have…

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Feb 27, 2004

Wyoming Legislators Vote to Ban Juvenile Death Penalty

Wyoming leg­is­la­tors in both the House and Senate have passed a mea­sure to ban the death penal­ty for those who are under 18 at the time of their crime, mark­ing the sec­ond time in one week that a leg­isla­tive body in the United States has passed a ban on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment for juve­nile offend­ers. The bill now goes to Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal for his sig­na­ture to become law. (Feb. 27, 2004). Earlier in the week, South Dakota’s leg­is­la­ture vot­ed to outlaw the…

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Feb 27, 2004

Oklahoma Adds to A Series of Execution Stays

Shortly before the sched­uled 6 p.m. exe­cu­tion of Hung Thanh Le, a Vietnamese for­eign nation­al on Oklahoma’s death row, Governor Brad Henry grant­ed a stay of exe­cu­tion in def­er­ence to Vietnamese offi­cials who request­ed more time to review Le’s file. Le, who suf­fers from post-trau­­mat­ic stress dis­or­der result­ing from flee­ing Vietnam, was sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed despite a unan­i­mous rec­om­men­da­tion for clemen­cy from the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board. More than 1,700

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