Publications & Testimony
Items: 6151 — 6160
Aug 01, 2003
United States Supreme Court Decisions: 2002 — 2003 Term
In a 7 – 2 decision, the United States Supreme Court reversed and remanded the sentence of Maryland death row inmate Kevin Wiggins on the basis of inadequate representation by his original trial attorneys. Standard procedure in Maryland at the time of the trial included preparation of a “social history” report that would contain mitigation investigations regarding the case. As no such report was prepared or even requested, Justice O’Connor, writing for the Court, remarked that “[a]ny reasonably…
Read MoreJul 31, 2003
NEW RESOURCE: The Angolite features Victims, Filmmakers
In addition to articles about juvenile justice and murder victims’ family members, the latest edition of The Angolite — a prison news magazine published by Angola Prison in Louisiana — features a section on filmmaking within prison walls. Angola Prison has hosted dozens of film crews over the years, and has been the shooting site for award-winning films such as “Dead Man Walking,” “Monster’s Ball,” and “The Farm.” (The Angolite, November/December 2002) See…
Read MoreJul 29, 2003
NEW VOICES: Bali Bombing Victim McCartney Calls for Life Sentence
Jason McCartney, a survivor of the 2002 terrorist bombing of a Bali nightclub and a former Australian football player, said a lifetime sentence in an Indonesian jail would be a harsh enough punishment for the men who plotted the attack. “At first, I probably thought with my initial anger that (the death penalty) is the way to go,” said McCartney. “It’s varied a bit. Sometimes I wonder if that’s an easy way out for them, the death penalty…It’s a hard one.” McCartney, who sustained serious…
Read MoreJul 28, 2003
EXONERATIONS IN MISSOURI, PENNSYLVANIA
Attorneys in Missouri and Pennsylvania will reveal two separate exonerations from their death rows. In Pennsylvania, attorneys for Nicholas James Yarris will announce in a press conference today (July 28, 2003) that three separate DNA tests exclude Yarris from the rape and murder for which he was convicted. Yarris, 41, has spent 21 years on Pennsylvania’s death row, and has always maintained his…
Read MoreJul 28, 2003
Georgia to Create Office of the Capital Defender
The Georgia General Assembly has passed legislation (HB 777) to create a state-wide public defender system, including an Office of the Georgia Capital Defender to focus solely on death penalty cases. The new office will assume responsibility for the defense of all death penalty trial and direct appeal cases in Georgia. Additional attorneys and investigators will be added to the public defender system to assume responsibility for the additional…
Read MoreJul 25, 2003
NEW VOICES: Prosecutor, Juror Call for DNA Testing in Case of Man They Sent to Death Row
Doubts about the appropriateness of a death sentence have prompted former prosecutor Thomas Vanes to call for new DNA testing in the case of Darnell Williams, a man he sent to death row as a Lake County, Indiana state’s attorney. Williams is scheduled to be executed on Friday, August 1. Vanes and John Gnajek, a member of the jury that sent Williams to death row, have filed a suit in federal court asking for a stay of Williams’ execution until new DNA testing is completed on blood evidence…
Read MoreJul 24, 2003
U.S. Will Not Seek Death Penalty Against Two British Nationals
Pentagon general counsel William J. Haynes II has assured British Prime Minister Tony Blair that the U.S. will not seek the death penalty against two British citizens facing trial on terrorism charges before military tribunals. The two men, Feroz Abbasi and Moazzam Begg, are among the 680 prisoners from 42 countries being held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in connection with the campaign against terrorism. Prior to Blair’s recent visit to Washington, during which he raised the issue with President…
Read MoreJul 23, 2003
Judge Overturns Conviction, Criticizes Decision to Seek Federal Death Penalty
Stating that “this Court is unwilling to contort the law of federal kidnapping,” and that federal prosecutors failed to present sufficient evidence to support that charge during the recent capital murder trial of Jay Lentz, a federal judge in Virginia has overturned the jury’s guilty verdict in the case. In the ruling, U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee criticized the government for trying what he deemed a local homicide case in federal court. Earlier, the jury had rejected the government’s…
Read MoreJul 23, 2003
NEW VOICES: Former San Francisco Prosecutor Denounces Death Penalty
After years of supporting capital punishment, former San Francisco prosecutor Bill Fazio recently changed his position on the death penalty. Fazio, who now serves as a defense attorney, stated, “Life without parole is a viable alternative.” He noted that he began to reconsider his stance on capital punishment after the U.S. Court of Appeals reversed his sole death penalty conviction. Fazio noted, “It was an error by the trial judge, and it made me realize that after 21 years there was still…
Read MoreJul 22, 2003
Illinois Is First State to Require Taped Interrogations
Governor Rod Blagojevich has signed a measure requiring police to record their interrogations of homicide suspects. The governor’s signature makes Illinois the first state to officially implement such a policy. Blagojevich, a former prosecutor, noted that his previously-voiced concerns that video taped interrogations would impede police from doing their job had been overridden by the knowledge that the tapes will yield “clearer, more reliable” evidence for the state’s justice system. The law…
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