Publications & Testimony

Items: 6191 — 6200


Jun 26, 2003

NEW RESOURCES: Death Row USA” (Spring 2003)

The lat­est edi­tion of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund’s quar­ter­ly pub­li­ca­tion, Death Row USA,” is now avail­able on DPIC’s Web site. As of April 1, 2003, the num­ber of inmates on death rows across the nation is 3,525, a 5% decrease from the 3,701 report­ed April 1, 2002 (See Homepage). Also report­ed in Death Row…

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Jun 26, 2003

Nevada Lawmakers Eliminate Three-Judge Panel

Nevada law­mak­ers have giv­en final approval to a mea­sure that bans the use of three-judge pan­els in decid­ing whether the state should hand down death sen­tences to those con­vict­ed of cap­i­tal mur­der. Sentences have been hand­ed down by a pan­el of three judges when a jury can’t decide on a penal­ty, but that pro­ce­dure was called into ques­tion by the U.S. Supreme Court’s rul­ing in Ring v. Arizona. The new pro­ce­dure requires judges in cas­es involv­ing hung juries to decide whether to impan­el a new…

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Jun 26, 2003

North Carolina Leaders Call on State Legislature, Governor to Impose Moratorium

More than 150 promi­nent res­i­dents of North Carolina have asked the House of Representatives and Governor Michael Easley to sup­port a two-year sus­pen­sion of exe­cu­tions in the state and to con­duct a death penal­ty study. North Carolina’s Senate passed the mea­sure in May, and a vote in the House is expect­ed this month. In a let­ter call­ing for the bil­l’s enact­ment into law, note­wor­thy North Carolinians, includ­ing for­mer judges and cor­po­rate lead­ers, not­ed that legit­i­mate con­cerns about the…

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Jun 26, 2003

NEW RESOURCES: Symposia on Capital Punishment

Two recent law jour­nals fea­ture col­lec­tions of arti­cles on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. The University of Missouri-Kansas City Law Review focus­es on wrong­ful con­vic­tions. The Summer 2002 issue includes arti­cles on DNA evi­dence, Innocence Projects around the coun­try, and the role of jour­nal­ism in help­ing to rec­ti­fy wrong­ful con­vic­tions. (70 University of Missouri-Kansas City Law Review 797 (2002)). The sec­ond new resource is the Summer 2002 edi­tion of the Northwestern University School of Law’s Journal…

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Jun 26, 2003

Bush’s Gubernatorial Clemency Process Probed

A recent Atlantic Monthly arti­cle by Alan Berlow fea­tures a review of nev­er-before-seen sum­maries and relat­ed doc­u­ments used by then-Governor George Bush dur­ing his con­sid­er­a­tion of clemen­cy appeals filed by death row inmates in Texas. The arti­cle notes that Bush’s legal coun­sel, Alberto R. Gonzales, often pro­vid­ed the Governor with case sum­maries and doc­u­ments reflect­ing a clear pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al bias” and that Gonzales’s brief­in­gs failed to raise cru­cial issues in the cas­es at hand:…

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Jun 26, 2003

NEW VOICES: Opposing Viewpoints Find Common Ground

Although New York Law School Professor Robert Blecker and Columbia Law School Professor James Liebman fre­quent­ly take oppos­ing sides in pub­lic debates on the death penal­ty, the two men recent­ly revealed their com­mon ground” through a co-authored opin­ion col­umn in the Houston Chronicle. Calling on leg­is­la­tors in Texas and else­where to enact a series of death penal­ty reforms to ensure accu­ra­cy and improve fair­ness, Blecker and Liebman…

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Jun 26, 2003

PUBLIC OPINION: Fox News Probes Death Penalty Support

A recent Fox News poll found that 69% of Americans favor the death penal­ty for per­sons con­vict­ed of pre­med­i­tat­ed mur­der, a drop of 7 per­cent­age points from the num­ber of respon­dents sup­port­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1997. The poll revealed that 23% of respon­dents opposed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, and 8% were not sure. In pre­vi­ous years, sup­port for the death penal­ty reg­is­tered 76% in 1997, 74% in 1998, 68% in 2000, and…

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Jun 26, 2003

Executed Man’s Conviction Is Overturned by British Court

The British Court of Appeal has over­turned George Kelly’s 1950 mur­der con­vic­tion more than half a cen­tu­ry after Kelly was exe­cut­ed for the mur­der of a Liverpool movie the­ater man­ag­er. In his rul­ing, Judge Bernard Rix called the con­vic­tion a mis­car­riage of jus­tice which must be deeply regret­ted” and not­ed that the case against Kelly was entire­ly cir­cum­stan­tial and lacked any foren­sic evi­dence. The case was reex­am­ined after new evi­dence of Kelly’s inno­cence emerged in 1991. The Criminal Cases…

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Jun 26, 2003

Judge Finds Mississippi’s Death Row Conditions Violate Eighth Amendment

U.S. Magistrate Jerry Davis has found that the way inmates are treat­ed on Mississippi’s death row con­sti­tutes cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment in vio­la­tion of the Eighth Amendment. Noting that the death row at Patchman prison is so harsh and filthy that inmates are being dri­ven insane, Davis stat­ed, No one in a civ­i­lized soci­ety should be forced to live under con­di­tions that force expo­sure to anoth­er per­son­’s bod­i­ly wastes. No mat­ter how heinous the crime com­mit­ted, there is no excuse for such…

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Jun 26, 2003

Virginia Schedules Execution of Mentally Ill Man

On May 28th, Virginia is sched­uled to elec­tro­cute Percy Levar Walton, a Virginia death row inmate who does not know what year it is or that he can­not eat at Burger King once he has been exe­cut­ed. In a pend­ing clemen­cy peti­tion to Virginia Governor Mark Warner and in an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, Walton’s attor­neys pre­sent­ed expert med­ical evi­dence, includ­ing tests by prison doc­tors, show­ing that their client suf­fers from schiz­o­phre­nia and psy­chosis. They note that prison guards call…

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