Studies
Items: 171 — 180
Sep 05, 2013
STUDIES: American Bar Association Releases Assessment of Virginia Death Penalty
On September 5, the American Bar Association’s Death Penalty Due Process Review Project released its latest report, focusing on the fairness and accuracy of Virginia’s death penalty system. The assessment recommended changes to the way the state handles defendants with mental retardation and severe mental illness. It also recommended requiring prosecutors to disclose additional information about testifying witnesses and allowing prosecutors to withdraw the…
Read MoreSep 03, 2013
NEW VOICES: Former Florida Justice Calls for Fundamental Change in Death Penalty
Raoul Cantera (pictured), a former Justice of the Florida Supreme Court, said the state should follow the practice of almost every other death penalty state and require juries to be unanimous when recommending a death sentence. Cantera also said that a a comprehensive review of the state’s death penalty is “long overdue” and should begin by considering the recommendations of a 2006 American Bar Association report on the state’s death penalty. Mark…
Read MoreAug 22, 2013
RACE: Former Military Officials and Other Groups Ask North Carolina for Fairness in Jury Selection
A number of prominent groups have filed supportive briefs with the North Carolina Supreme Court asking that the practice of racial bias in selecting jurors for death penalty cases be ended. Former senior military officials, families of murder victims, and potential jurors denied the opportunity to serve because of their race were among those arguing that a ruling under the state’s Racial Justice Act be upheld. In 2012, Judge Gregory Weeks held that Marcus Robinson’s…
Read MoreAug 14, 2013
STUDIES: FBI Preliminary Crime Report for 2012
The Federal Bureau of Investigation recently released the preliminary findings of its annual Uniform Crime Report for 2012. The final report will likely be published in October, but the initial statistics indicate the number of murders in the U.S. increased slightly by 1.5% from 2011. Three regions of the country showed an increase in murders, while one region declined. Murders in the Northeast decreased by 4.4%. The number of murders increased by 3.3% in the Midwest, 2.5% in…
Read MoreAug 12, 2013
STUDIES: Texas To Re-Examine Previous Convictions for Forensic Errors
The Texas Forensic Science Commission announced it will study prior criminal convictions to determine whether mistakes were made using discredited forensic testimony. The Commission will employ DNA testing to review cases in which microscopic hair fibers were used to convict people of rape, murder, robbery, and other crimes. It has recently been established that it is impossible to match a hair under a microscope to a specific person. Forensic experts can make an…
Read MoreAug 06, 2013
INTERNATIONAL: New Report on the Death Penalty in Malaysia
A new report by the London-based Death Penalty Project explores the use of mandatory death sentencing in Malaysia. In the U.S., the Supreme Court barred the use of mandatory death sentences in 1976, holding that judges and juries needed to consider the individual differences among defendants, out of respect for human diginity. (Woodson v. North Carolina, and other opinions). DPP’s report found that the number of executions carried out in Malaysia has…
Read MoreJul 24, 2013
STUDIES: “A Death Before Dying: Solitary Confinement on Death Row”
A new report from the American Civil Liberties Union, “A Death Before Dying: Solitary Confinement on Death Row,” contains a survey of the conditions on death rows across the country and offers a comprehensive review of the serious implications of subjecting inmates to solitary confinement. The report reveals that most death row prisoners are housed in tiny cells, ranging from 36 – 100 square feet, roughly the size of an average bathroom; 93% of states lock up their death row…
Read MoreJul 17, 2013
NEW RESOURCES: Bureau of Justice Statistics Reports Declining Use of Capital Punishment in 2011
The Bureau of Justice Statistics recently released its annual review of the death penalty in the U.S., focusing on 2011. The report noted the continued decline in the use of the death penalty in recent years. In 2011, 80 new inmates were received under sentence of death, the lowest number since 1973, and a 27% decrease from the year before. Executions also declined to 43, compared with 46 in 2010. The average time between sentencing and execution in 2011 was 16.5 years, 20…
Read MoreJul 16, 2013
Ohio Committee Makes Preliminary Recommendations for Death Penalty Reform
A committee empaneled by the Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court made three preliminary recommendations at its June meeting for reforming the state’s death penalty. The panel, which consists of prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges, and academic experts, voted to recommend a reduction in the scope of crimes eligible for the death penalty, the creation of a statewide panel to decide on seeking a death sentence, and the enactment of a Racial Justice Act. The restriction of…
Read MoreJul 10, 2013
EXECUTIONS: As of Mid-Year 2013, Pace of Executions Continues to Decline
In the first half of 2013, six states carried out 18 executions. In the same period last year, there were 23 executions in 8 states. The annual number of executions has declined significantly from its peak in 1999, when 98 people were put to death. There were 43 executions in 2011 and 2012. Sixteen of this year’s executions (89%) have been in the South, with nearly half in Texas (8). Eight of the defendants executed so far this year were black, and ten were white.
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