Publications & Testimony
Items: 5921 — 5930
Mar 04, 2004
NEW VOICES: Police Chief Says Death Penalty Is Unwise Use of Limited Resources
West Hartford Police Chief James Strillacci, president of the Connecticut Police Chiefs Association, has told state lawmakers that resources devoted to the death penalty would be better spent elsewhere. He noted, “It is a practical issue. We have a death penalty law on the books, but we haven’t executed anyone since 1960, and it doesn’t look like anyone will be executed. The process is long, labor intensive and expensive. Now, any money we’ve put into death penalty cases has really…
Read MoreMar 04, 2004
TWO MORE STATES BAN DEATH PENALTY FOR JUVENILES
Governors Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Dave Freudenthal of Wyoming have signed into state law bipartisan legislation banning the execution of those who were under the age of 18 at the time of their crimes. Of the 38 death penalty states, 19 forbid the death penalty for juveniles. The federal government also forbids the practice. Twelve additional states do not allow the death penalty at all. The U.S. Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death…
Read MoreMar 03, 2004
Dallas Morning News Calls for Death Penalty Moratorium in Texas
In response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent reversal of Delma Banks’ death sentence in Texas because of prosecutorial misconduct, the Dallas Morning News has called for a halt to executions while state officials review serious problems in the…
Read MoreMar 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 killed blacks.
Read MoreMar 03, 2004
The case against teen executions
Kentucky Courier-…
Read MoreMar 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 apology: the defendant, the victim’s…
Read MoreMar 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 accounts had…
Read MoreFeb 28, 2004
No Juveniles for the Chair — The Supreme Court Should Rule That Lengthy Prison Sentences Are More Appropriate for Young Killers
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 chapters in the book inlcude: Judge Alex Kozinski, Stephen Bright, Joshua Marquis, Bryan…
Read MoreFeb 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 practice (read more). The…
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