Publications & Testimony
Items: 741 — 750
Dec 26, 2021
Oklahoma Federal Court Stays Execution of James Coddington
James Coddington, the last of the seven death-row prisoners scheduled to be put to death in Oklahoma’s five-month execution spree, has received a stay of…
Read MoreDec 22, 2021
Law Review: Most U.S. Death-Row Prisoners Have Been Housed in Prolonged Solitary Confinement that Violates International Human Rights Norms
More than half of all U.S. death-row prisoners are or have recently been incarcerated in prolonged conditions of solitary confinement that are likely unconstitutional and that violate international human rights norms, a DPIC analysis of data in a recent law review article has…
Read MoreDec 21, 2021
House Committee Asks Justice Department Its Plans on Resuming Executions, Purchasing Execution Drugs
The House Committee on Oversight and Reform has sent a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland seeking information on the Department of Justice’s death penalty practices and policies, including whether DOJ plans to resume federal executions and to obtain new supplies of the drug pentobarbital to carry out additional…
Read MoreDec 20, 2021
Rodney Reed Files New Petition Alleging Prosecutors Illegally Withheld Evidence for 23 Years
Prosecutors hid favorable evidence from Texas death-row prisoner Rodney Reed during his 1998 trial for the murder of Stacey Stites and then argued for his execution claiming that the evidence did not exist, Reed’s lawyers allege in a new court pleading filed in his…
Read MoreDec 17, 2021
“Right Too Soon” Study: One in Seven Prisoners Put to Death in U.S. Had Legal Issues that Make Their Executions Unconstitutional
At least one in seven death-row prisoners put to death in the United States since executions resumed in 1977 had legal claims in their cases that would render their executions unconstitutional, a new Cornell University Law School study…
Read MoreDec 16, 2021
DPIC 2021 Year End Report: Virginia’s Historic Abolition Highlights Continuing Decline of Death Penalty
Virginia’s historic abolition of the death penalty highlighted a year in which support for capital punishment continued to erode, according to the 2021 Year End Report from the Death Penalty Information Center. Executions, death sentences, and public support for capital punishment were all at or near historic lows in 2021, the report said, while the executions and new death sentences that did take place exposed deep flaws in the administration of the nation’s capital punishment…
Read MoreDec 15, 2021
Citing Vindictive Prosecution, El Paso Judge Dismisses Capital Murder Case
A Texas trial judge has dismissed all charges against an El Paso murder defendant, saying that the decision to seek the death penalty against him was a product of “prosecutorial…
Read MoreDec 14, 2021
Alabama Judicial Disciplinary Court Suspends Judge Who Declared State’s Death Penalty Unconstitutional, Saying She Disregarded Appellate Decisions and Abandoned Neutrality
The Alabama Court of the Judiciary has suspended for 90 days without pay an African-American trial judge who declared the state’s death penalty statute unconstitutional and criticized appellate review of some death penalty cases as “ceremonial at…
Read MoreDec 13, 2021
After Prolonged Fight With Local Prosecutors, Tennessee Attorney General Will Not Appeal Plea Deal Taking Abu-Ali Abdur’Rahman Off Death Row
More than 34 years after having been sentenced to death in Nashville, Abu-Ali Abdur’Rahman is coming off Tennessee’s death…
Read MoreDec 10, 2021
Bureau of Justice Statistics: Death Row Below 2,500 First Time in 29 Years After 20 Consecutive Years of Decline, Average Time on Death Row Reaches 19.4 Years
The number of people under sentence of death in the United States has fallen below 2,500 for the first time in 29 years following twenty consecutive years of decline, according to the U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics…
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