Publications & Testimony
Items: 6011 — 6020
Dec 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…
Read MoreDec 24, 2003
Jurors Sentence Lee Malvo to Life Without Parole
Jurors in Virginia sentenced juvenile offender Lee Boyd Malvo to life in prison without parole after finding him guilty of murdering Linda Franklin, who was one of 10 victims killed during a series of shootings in October 2002. Malvo was 17 at the time of the crime. Attorney General John Ashcroft had cited Virginia’s ability to impose “the ultimate sanction” in sending Malvo and his mentor, John Muhammad, to Virginia for prosecution. Virginia is one of only 21 states that allow the execution…
Read MoreDec 24, 2003
DPIC Releases 2003 Year End Report
DPIC RELEASES 2003 YEAR END REPORT “DPIC’s 2003 Year End Report reveals a decline in critical death penalty numbers: fewer death sentences, fewer executions, a smaller death row, and a decline in public support. The report also highlights the high number of exonerations from death row this year and the emergence of new voices challenging the death penalty. Read the report (in PDF…
Read MoreDec 23, 2003
Editorial Questions Maryland’s Commitment to Addressing Racial Disparities
A recent Baltimore Sun editorial criticized state leaders for failing to respond to a series of studies showing that race plays a disturbing role in capital punishment in Maryland. The paper noted that a study conducted by University of Maryland Professor Raymond Paternoster agreed with four other reviews that all revealed similar findings regarding race and the death penalty in Maryland. The paper…
Read MoreDec 23, 2003
NEW VOICES: Prosecutor Now Says Killings by Andrea Yates Were Preventable
Harris County District Attorney Joseph S. Owmby, who helped prosecute Andrea Yates for capital murder, recently told a gathering of 200 Houston area mental health and law enforcement professionals that had Yates received more hospital treatment for her postpartum depression, she probably wouldn’t have murdered her children. Owmby noted that Yates lost her last chance for recovery when she was released from a hospital in League City while she was still dangerously delusional. He said that what…
Read MoreDec 22, 2003
ABC Poll Shows Public Opposed to Death Penalty for Malvo
A new poll conducted by ABC News revealed that only 37% of the public supports the death penalty for Lee Boyd Malvo, who was recently convicted of murder in Virginia. Malvo was 17 at the time of a series of shootings in the Washington, DC area. 52% of respondents preferred a sentence of life without parole for Malvo. Even stronger opposition to the death penalty for juveniles in general was revealed in the same poll: only 21% were in favor of the death penalty for juveniles, versus the 62%…
Read MoreDec 22, 2003
Some murder victims’ kin reject capital punishment; others endorse the sanction
Richmond…
Read MoreDec 18, 2003
Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation Releases Juvenile Report
On December 17, 2003, Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation released a report regarding the perspectives of family members on the juvenile death penalty: “I Don’t Want Another Kid to Die.” The report opens a window into murder victims’ families struggles with the death penalty in general, and more specifically, how the issue changes when the defendant is a juvenile. Read their Press Release. Read the Report (in PDF…
Read MoreDec 18, 2003
Let Saddam Live
Washington…
Read MoreDec 17, 2003
COSTS: Former Death Row Inmate Awarded $2.2 Million Wrongful Conviction Settlement
The Chicago City Council finance committee quickly approved a $2.2 million wrongful conviction settlement for former death row inmate Ronald Jones. “I think it is a good deal for the city,” said Chicago Alderman William Beavers, indicating that he and other aldermen breathed a sigh of relief that the city will get off so cheaply in its settlement with Jones, who was coerced into a confession to a 1985 rape and murder that he did not commit. Jones spent 14 years on Illinois’s death row before…
Read More