Studies
Items: 361 — 370
Nov 25, 2008
STUDIES: Coping with Innocence After Death Row
Professsors Saundra Westervelt and Kimberly Cook of the University of North Carolina recently published a study entitled “Coping with Innocence After Death Row.” The study appeared in “Contexts” published by the American Sociological Association. The authors studied the lives of 18 innocent men and women exonerated from death row. The unique research uncovers the difficulty the exonerees have had in adapting to life outside of prison without the process of “delabeling,” or recognition…
Read MoreNov 24, 2008
STUDIES: Eyewitness Identification Procedure in Texas
A new study concerning criminal justice procedures in Texas has been released by the Justice Project. Their research found that only 12% of Texas law enforcement agencies have any written policies or guidelines for the conduct of photo or live lineup procedures. Furthermore, they discovered that the few existing written procedures are often vague and incomplete. Eighty-two percent of Texas’ 38 wrongful convictions exposed by DNA testing, which includes non-capital cases, were based largely or…
Read MoreOct 13, 2008
NEW VOICES: Former Texas Prosecutor Now Opposes Death Penalty as New Study is Released on Wrongful Convictions
A former Dallas County prosecutor has abandoned his longstanding support of the death penalty and is now opposed to capital punishment based on recent exonerations in Texas and elsewhere. James Fry, who prosecuted Charles Chatman – a man recently exonerated from prison in Dallas County – said he was “shaken to the core” by the high number of exonerations throughout the nation and by evidence of flawed eyewitness testimony. Formerly a staunch supporter of…
Read MoreOct 10, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Representation and Costs in Federal Death Penalty Cases
In June 2008, the Office of Defender Services of the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts published a report analyzing the cost, quality and availability of defense representation in federal death penalty cases. The report determined that federal capital trials in which the death penalty was sought were substantially more expensive than non-death penalty federal trials; however, a death sentence was handed down in only one-quarter of the cases. In addition, defense…
Read MoreSep 16, 2008
Murder Rate Declines in Every Region Except the South, Where Executions Are Most Prevalent
According to the F.B.I.‘s latest crime report released on September 15, the South is the only region in the country that experienced a rise in its murder rate in 2007. The FBI reported that the murder rate in the country declined to 5.6 murders per 100,000 people in 2007 from 5.7 in 2006, and the rate declined in the Northeast, the Midwest, and the West. In the South, however, the murder rate increased from 6.8 in 2006 to 7.0 in 2007, the highest rate among the four regions. The…
Read MoreSep 11, 2008
STUDIES: Race a Factor in Arkansas Death Sentences
A new study of the death penalty in Arkansas showed racial patterns in sentencing. University of Iowa law professor David Baldus’ study examined 124 murder cases filed in one district from 1990 to 2005. Even after adjusting for factors such as the defendant’s criminal history and circumstances of the crime, black people who killed white people were more likely than others to be charged with capital murder and be sentenced to death. “It suggests to us that there’s a real risk that race may…
Read MoreSep 08, 2008
Maryland Commission Continues Hearings on Death Penalty
Maryland’s Commission on Capital Punishment continued with its fourth public hearing on September 5 in Annapolis. Experts testified about the additional costs of capital punishment compared to life-sentence cases, the risk of arbitrariness in death sentencing, the validity of recent deterrence studies, and the national trends away from the use of the death penalty in the U.S. There was also discussion about the number of current cases that do not have any DNA evidence to confirm or…
Read MoreAug 16, 2008
Maryland Commission on Death Penalty Conducts Hearings
The Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment began hearing testimony from a wide variety of witnesses on issues related to the state’s death penalty system. After gathering information regarding matters such as possible racial, geographic and socioeconomic disparities, on costs, and on the risks of executing the innocent, the 23-member Commission will offer recommendations to the General Assembly to ensure that Maryland’s use of the death penalty is “free from bias and error” and achieves…
Read MoreJul 23, 2008
Accuracy of DNA “Matches” to Definitively Identify Suspects Questioned
New research has called into question the reliability of some use of DNA tests to definitively identify suspects in criminal investigations. After recent evidence of chromosomal “matches” based on DNA testing turned out to belong to unrelated individuals, some scientists wonder whether there are flaws in the assumptions that underlie the FBI’s statistical estimates of DNA accuracy. In 2001, Arizona state crime lab analyst Kathryn Troyer was running tests on the state’s database when…
Read MoreJul 22, 2008
STUDIES: DNA Testing and the Use of Forensic Science
The Justice Project has just released two policy reviews related to DNA testing and the criminal justice system. The first, “Improving Access to Post-Conviction DNA Testing,” chronicles the lessons to be learned from the case of Kirk Bloodsworth. Bloodsworth was sentenced to death in Maryland and spent almost nine years in prison for the rape and murder of nine-year-old Dawn Hamilton before DNA testing proved he did not commit the crime. The report contains the Justice Project’s…
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