Studies
Items: 391 — 400
Feb 18, 2008
DPIC Releases Interim Death Row Numbers
The Death Penalty Information Center has conducted a survey of death row populations as reported by the various state departments of correction in January/February 2008. From that survey, the current death row population across the country is 3,263. California continues to have the highest death row population with 669 inmates. Florida follows with 388, and Texas has 370 inmates. A state-by-state breakdown appears below. Except for Illinois and the federal government, these numbers are the…
Read MoreJan 04, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Bureau of Justice Statistics Data on Capital Punishment in 2006
The Bureau of Justice Statistics typically releases an annual report entitled “Capital Punishment” containing tables and information on the death penalty for the previous year. Although BJS, which is part of the Department of Justice, did not publish a separate report for 2006, it did release information in tabular form that quantifies death penalty practice in the U.S. Information drawn from BJS’s recent tables…
Read MoreDec 28, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: Connecticut Study Reveals Arbitrariness in Death Cases
Professor John Donohue of Yale University’s School of Law recently conducted a study of death sentences in Connecticut and found that seeking the death penalty often correlated with the race of the victim and the defendant, and not necessarily with the severity of the crimes, as the law requires. “There was basically no rational system to explain who got the death penalty,” Donohue said. “It really is about as random a process as you can possibly construct.” After reviewing 207 murder cases…
Read MoreDec 27, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: Native Americans and the Death Penalty
David Baker has written a thorough and insightful analysis of how the death penalty in the U.S. has been used against Native Americans. In “American Indian Executions in Historical Context,” Baker places the execution of Native Americans within the history of colonialism, slavery and the conquering of indigenous tribes in early America. The article traces these developments to the current era, about which the author…
Read MoreDec 26, 2007
2007: DPIC’s Year End Report
U.S. Supreme Court stayed the Alabama execution scheduled for night of Jan. 31.Watch the Independent Film Channel’s piece on the U.S. Supreme Court case regarding lethal injection, Baze v. Rees. The video also includes a discussion of death penalty trends with DPIC’s Richard Dieter and an interview with former Texas death row chaplain Carroll Pickett. 2007: DPIC’s Year End ReportHIGHLIGHTS FROM THE 2007 REPORT Executions for the year: 42 — lowest in 13 years %…
Read MoreDec 19, 2007
DPIC Releases 2007 Year End Report Noting Decline In Death Penalty
The Death Penalty Information Center has released its 13th annual Year End Report, noting that executions have dropped to a 13-year low as a de facto moratorium took hold in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s examination of lethal injection procedures. Death sentences have also dropped considerably in recent years. DPIC projected 110 new death sentences in 2007 — the lowest number since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, and a 60% drop since 1999. According to the…
Read MoreDec 14, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: Recommendations for Avoiding Wrongful Convictions
The Justice Project recently released two policy reviews that provide suggestions for preventing wrongful convictions in criminal trials. Using research and data from past exonerations, the new reports, Expanded Discovery in Criminal Cases and Jailhouse Snitch Testimony, point to the places and situations in the criminal justice system where a wrongful conviction can be easily prevented. Expanded Discovery in Criminal Cases stresses the importance of full evidentiary discovery in…
Read MoreDec 13, 2007
NEW RESOURCE: Handbook on Sentencing in Capital Cases Around the World
The Death Penalty Project, an international organization that provides free legal representation for individuals facing the death penalty in the Caribbean and Africa, recently published A Guide to Sentencing in Capital Cases. The guide provides judges, prosecutors, and defense attorneys with information and sample appeals to help them navigate the sentencing phase in cases where a mandatory death sentence for a specific crime was abolished, leaving the former death row inmate to be…
Read MoreNov 26, 2007
New York City Homicide Rate Drops to Lowest Point in 40 Years
If current trends continue, New York City will likely have fewer than 500 homicides this year, the lowest number in a 12-month period since reliable NYC Police Department statistics became available in 1963. As of November 18, 2007, the police department logged 428 killings, the majority of which were committed by friends or acquaintances or were drug or gang-related. In fact, only 35 homicides this year were committed by strangers to the victims, a number described as “microscopic” in a city…
Read MoreNov 26, 2007
INNOCENCE: Study Looks at Life After Exoneration for Those Freed Through DNA
The New York Times investigated the post-exoneration lives of the 206 former inmates who were wrongfully convicted and released through DNA evidence. Fifty-three of the cases involved murder convictions, and more than 25% of those wrongfully convicted had given a false confession or incriminating statement. Working from a list provided by the Innocence Project, the Times gathered information on 137 of the 206 exonerees and were able to interview 115 of those. They found that most…
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