Publications & Testimony
Items: 5951 — 5960
Feb 18, 2004
Alan Gell of North Carolina Is Nation’s 113th Death Row Exoneree
Alan Gell of North Carolina became the nation’s 113th exonerated death row inmate today, February 18, 2004. Gell, who has maintained his innocence since his 1998 conviction, was acquitted of all charges by a jury that deliberated for only two and a half hours at his retrial. In December 2002, a North Carolina judge vacated Gell’s murder conviction and ordered a new trial after ruling that prosecutors withheld important evidence that might have helped exonerate Gell at his first trial.
Read MoreFeb 18, 2004
Pass Death Penalty Bill
Rapid City…
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Playing By Texas Rules
Washington…
Read MoreFeb 16, 2004
NEW RESOURCES: Death Penalty Study Examines Sentencing Rates, Executions, Race Statistics
The authors of a new study published in the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies (J. Blume, T. Eisenberg, & M. Wells, “Explaining Death Row’s Population and Racial Composition,” Vol. I, Issue 1, March 2004, at 165) concluded that Texas’ reputation as the leading death penalty state in the U.S. is attributable more to its high number of executions and the large number of murders in the state, rather than to its sentencing rate. Despite leading the country by far in terms of number of…
Read MoreFeb 16, 2004
Recent Developments in the Federal Death Penalty
Federal prosecutors dropped charges against Darrell Rice shortly before he was to face capital charges for two murders in Shenandoah National Park. New forensic evidence cast doubt on the case against Rice, despite the fact that Attorney General John Ashcroft had made a public announcement of Rice’s indictment employing a new law in 2002. (Washington Post, Feb. 7, 2004). A federal judge threw out a jury’s (July 2003) verdict of guilt in the capital case of Jay Lentz, accused of…
Read MoreFeb 16, 2004
Recent Developments in the Federal Death Penalty
Federal prosecutors dropped charges against Darrell Rice shortly before he was to face capital charges for two murders in Shenandoah National Park. New forensic evidence cast doubt on the case against Rice, despite the fact that Attorney General John Ashcroft had made a public announcement of Rice’s indictment employing a new law in 2002. (Washington Post, Feb. 7, 2004). A federal judge threw out a jury’s (July 2003) verdict of guilt in the capital case of Jay Lentz, accused of…
Read MoreFeb 12, 2004
State Medical Examiner Indicted for Lying; Participated in a Third of Death Row Cases
According to Don Dawson, Tennessee’s chief post-conviction defender, Dr. Smith had completed the autopsies, supervised the autopsies, or testified during trial in 30 to 40 percent of the state’s capital cases. Of the state’s 97 death row inmates, 38 were convicted in Shelby County where Smith…
Read MoreFeb 11, 2004
Despite Upcoming Supreme Court Argument, Texas Schedules Execution Dates for Four Juvenile Offenders
Texas has scheduled the execution of four juvenile offenders between March and June of 2004 despite the fact that the U. S. Supreme Court has agreed to review whether such executions are constitutional. Arguments in Roper v. Simmons, No. 03 – 633, a case from Missouri where the state Supreme Court ruled that the execution of those under the age 18 at the time of their crime would be cruel and unusual punishment, are not expected to take place until this coming fall, months after the…
Read MoreFeb 10, 2004
S.D. Should Get Rid Of Death Penalty For Minors
Yankton Daily…
Read MoreFeb 09, 2004
NEW VOICES: Charlize Theron Criticizes Death Penalty After Her Movie Role
Charlize Theron, who recently won a Golden Globe Award for her portrayal of executed Florida death row inmate Aileen Wuornos in the movie “Monster,” has stated that making the movie made her more aware of how “ineffective” capital punishment is. Theron, who is opposed to the death penalty, was only 15 when her own mother shot and killed her drunken father after he threatened to kill his wife and daughter. “I don’t think condemning people who murder and then killing them…
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