Publications & Testimony
Items: 6001 — 6010
Dec 31, 2003
Innocence News and Developments: 2003
Former Death Row Inmate Awarded $2.2 Million Wrongful Conviction…
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The Death Penalty in Puerto Rico
Capital punishment was used during the Spanish regime. The first verified executions took place in 1514, when four slaves were hanged for uprising. The first Inquisition court in the western hemisphere was established in San Juan in…
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Victims News and Developments: 1998 – 2003
Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation Releases Juvenile…
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Clemency News and Developments: 2003
Four Executions in Texas and Georgia Stayed, Clemency Recommended for Foreign National in Oklahoma Four stays were granted for executions that were scheduled to take place this week in Texas and Georgia, and Oklahoma’s Pardon and Parole Board unanimously recommended clemency for a foreign national facing execution in January 2004. In Texas, courts ordered three stays of execution. Two of the cases involved challenges to the use of pancuronium bromide as part of the…
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Facts: Sentencing (2001 – 2003)
“Capital Punishment 2001” — The Bureau of Justice Statistics released its annual report on the death penalty with statistics from the previous year. The report contained a number of interesting…
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Don’t Kill in Our Names: Families of Murder Victims Speak Out Against the Death Penalty
In “Don’t Kill in Our Names: Families of Murder Victims Speak Out Against the Death Penalty,” author Rachel King presents the stories of 10 Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation members. Throughout the book, King examines the reasons why these survivors choose reconciliation over retribution and why they actively oppose capital punishment. Using first-hand accounts and third-person narrative, King presents the stories in the context of the nation’s on-going death penalty debate. King is…
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Victims and the Death Penalty: Inside and Outside the Courtroom
Symposium: Pamela Blume Leonard, Michael Mears, John H. Blume, Stephen P. Garvey, Samuel R. Gross, Richard Burr, et al.: “Victims and the Death Penalty: Inside and Outside the Courtroom,” 88 Cornell Law Review 257 (2003). This is a series of articles in the Cornell Law Review stemming from a symposium focusing on the role that victims play in capital cases. The journal provides a close legal examination of victim impact statements and related research, expert analysis of…
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Life Without Parole News and Developments: 2003
For the First Time, No Death Sentences in Chicago in…
Read MoreDec 30, 2003
NEW VOICES: Federal Judge Criticizes Ashcroft’s Override of Local Prosecutors
Judge John Gleeson, a prominent federal judge in New York, recently criticized U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft for regularly overruling local prosecutors by directing them to seek the death penalty though they have recommended against it. In an article appearing in the November 2003 issue of the Virginia Law Review, Gleeson noted that the policy “undermines the investigation and prosecution of violent crimes.” He stated, “For the sake of the death penalty in a few more federal cases,…
Read MoreDec 30, 2003
Georgia Jurors, Prosecutors Favor Life Without Parole
A decade after Georgia legislators established the sentencing option of life in prison without parole, the number of Georgia defendants sentenced to death has dropped from an annual average of 10 to 4 or fewer each year. The decline is the result of jurors opting to sentence defendants to life without parole and plea bargains in capital cases. District Attorney J. Tom Morgan noted that life without parole is in effect a death sentence: “It takes a little bit longer, but it is more certain…
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