Entries tagged with “Miscellaneous”
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Lethal Injection
,May 07, 2019
John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight” Takes a Satirical Look at Lethal Injection
Sometimes you need a joke about a cute but very angry desert rain frog to prepare an unsuspecting audience for a serious discussion of lethal-injection executions in the United States. That was the approach undertaken by Last Week Tonight, the satirical weekly HBO comedy-news show hosted by John Oliver, as Oliver addressed the deadly serious issue of lethal injection in the show’s May 5, 2019 episode. Oliver called the death penalty “a wrong, bad…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Feb 07, 2019
THE ARTS: Death-Penalty Film, ‘Clemency,’ Wins Sundance Festival Best Drama Award
Clemency, a film exploring the psychological toll of the death penalty, has been awarded the U.S. Grand Jury Prize for Drama at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival on February 2, 2019. The movie, written and directed by Nigerian-American filmmaker Chinonye Chukwu, tells the story of prison warden Bernadine Williams (portrayed by Alfre Woodard) as she prepares to oversee her 12th execution in the aftermath of a botched execution.
Policy Issues
Victims' Families
,New Voices
,Jan 30, 2019
NEW VOICES: Basketball Star Stephen Curry — “I Don’t Believe in the Death Penalty”
Stephen Curry (pictured, right, during a 2015 visit to the White House), star of the NBA’s Golden State Warriors and executive producer of the upcoming documentary Emanuel, has publicly voiced his opposition to the death penalty. Emanuel tells the story of the murder of nine Black members of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina by white supremacist Dylann Roof. It is…
Facts & Research
Clemency
,New Voices
,Lethal Injection
,Oct 09, 2018
Governor Rejects Jurors’ Plea for Clemency for Edmund Zagorski as Tennessee Court Allows Lethal Injections to Proceed
Ignoring declarations by six jurors in Edmund Zagorski’s 1984 trial that they would have spared Zagorski (pictured) if they could have sentenced him to life without parole, Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam rejected Zagorski’s petition for clemency on October 5, 2018. In conjunction with the Tennessee Supreme Court’s October 8 ruling upholding the constitutionality of the state’s lethal-injection protocol, Haslam’s decision moved the state closer to executing…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Jul 03, 2018
Death-Penalty Juror Describes “Anguish” of Imposing a Death Sentence
Lindy Isonhood (click to enlarge picture) served on the Mississippi jury that sentenced Bobby Wilcher to death in 1994. In a commentary published on Medium, she writes that the decision to condemn Wilcher “continue[s] to haunt me today.” Isonhood — whose experience as a death-penalty juror is the subject of a new documentary film, Lindy Lou, Juror Number 2—explains how little she and her fellow jurors knew about the…
Policy Issues
Innocence
,Race
,New Voices
,Apr 25, 2018
Powerful New Documentaries Explore Death-Penalty Issues
Three powerful new documentaries that explore the modern death penalty in the United States are set to premiere this…
Policy Issues
Mental Illness
,Recent Legislative Activity
,New Voices
,Jan 05, 2018
Retired Lt. General: Exclude Mentally Ill Vets from the Death Penalty
Saying that the death penalty should “be reserved for the ‘worst of the worst in our society,’” retired Marine Corps Lieutenant General John Castellaw (pictured) has urged the Tennessee state legislature to adopt pending legislation that would bar the death penalty for people with severe mental illnesses. In an op-ed in the Memphis newspaper, The Commercial Appeal, General Castellaw writes that the death penalty “should not be prescribed for those…
Policy Issues
Innocence
,Race
,New Voices
,Aug 17, 2017
Merck CEO Ken Frazier: Application of Death Penalty Not “Fair and Consistent”
Merck Chief Executive Officer Kenneth C. Frazier (pictured) resigned from the president’s American Manufacturing Council on August 14, saying “[a]s CEO of Merck and as a matter of personal conscience, I feel a responsibility to take a stand against intolerance and extremism.” In a statement posted on Merck’s Twitter account, Frazier said: “Our country’s strength stems from its diversity and the contributions made by men and women of different faiths, races,…
Policy Issues
Mental Illness
,New Voices
,Jun 15, 2017
NEW VOICES: A Psychologist — a War Veteran with Schizophrenia — Urges Adoption of a Death Penalty Exemption for Severe Mental Illness
In a recent commentary article in Medium, psychologist Dr. Frederick J. Frese, III (pictured) — a Marine Corps veteran who has himself been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia — argues that Congress and state legislatures should pass laws exempting people with severe mental illness from the death penalty. “Supporters and opponents of the death penalty agree that it should only be reserved for the most culpable and deliberate of criminals who commit heinous crimes,” Frese writes. He…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,May 18, 2017
NEW VOICES: Cosmetics Company Launches Death Penalty Documentary, Abolition Campaign
Lush Cosmetics announced on May 15 it has launched a commercial effort to raise awareness about capital punishment and support the abolition of the death penalty. The company’s “Death ≠ Justice” campaign includes the release of a short documentary, “Exonerated,” which tells the story of Ohio death-row exoneree Kwame Ajamu. Ajamu (then 17 years old), his brother Ronnie Bridgman, and Ricky Jackson were wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death in 1975. They were exonerated 39…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Mar 01, 2017
Ohio Jurors Report Emotional Toll of Serving on Capital Case
The costs of the death penalty are more than financial, they are emotional; and these effects are felt not just by the parties to the trial and the families of victims and defendants, but by the jurors as well. A recent report in the Akron Beacon Journal describes the traumatic psychological impact serving in the Summit County, Ohio death penalty trial of Eric Hendon had on the jurors in that case. After a three-month trial and capital-sentencing…
Policy Issues
Race
,New Voices
,Dec 15, 2016
NEW VOICES: Latinos Increasingly Vocal in Opposition to Death Penalty
Juan Cartagena (pictured), President and General Counsel of LatinoJustice PRLDEF (formerly the Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund), says there is “a growing understanding” among Latinos in Florida and across the country “that the death penalty is broken and it can’t be fixed.” In an op-ed for the Orlando Sentinel, Cartagena explains the reasons for Latino opposition to the death penalty, especially in Florida, which has a large Latino population and is home to…
Policy Issues
Race
,New Voices
,Dec 02, 2016
OUTLIER COUNTIES: Dallas County, Texas Imposing Fewer Death Sentences After Years of Discrimination
With 55 executions since the 1970s, Dallas County, Texas, ranks second among all U.S. counties — behind only Harris County (Houston), Texas — in the number of prisoners it has put to death. It is also among the 2% of counties that account for more than half of all prisoners on death row across the country, and produced seven new death sentences and one resentence between 2010 and 2015, more than 99.5% of all U.S. counties during that…
Policy Issues
Intellectual Disability
,United States Supreme Court
,New Voices
,Nov 23, 2016
NEW VOICES: Special Olympics Chair Urges Supreme Court to Strike Down Texas’ ‘Horrific’ Criteria for Determining Intellectual Disability
Timothy Shriver (pictured), the Chairman of the Special Olympics, has called on the U.S. Supreme Court to end Texas’ “use of stigmatizing stereotypes” in determining whether a defendant has Intellectual Disability and is therefore ineligible for execution. On November 29, the Court will hear argument in Moore v. Texas, a case challenging Texas’ use of the “Briseño factors” — a set of unscientific criteria based in part…
Policy Issues
Innocence
,New Voices
,Nov 15, 2016
OUTLIER COUNTIES: Alabama’s Leading Death Sentencing County Elects Prosecutors Who Oppose Capital Punishment
Jefferson County, Alabama is among both the 2% of counties that account for more than half of all executions in the U.S. and are responsible for more than half of all prisoners on death row across the country. It led the state in new death sentences from 2010 – 2015, putting more people on death row than 99.5% of U.S. counties. All five of the defendants sentenced to death in those cases were…
Policy Issues
Innocence
,New Voices
,Sep 26, 2016
Death Row Exonerees Speak Out on State Death Penalty Ballot Questions
As voters get set to cast ballots on death penalty questions in California, Nebraska, and Oklahoma, U.S. death row exonerees from across the country have been scouring those states in an effort to inform the public of the risks of wrongful executions. On September 19, 17 of the nation’s 156 death-row exonerees appeared at a California press conference advocating approval of Proposition 62, which would replace the death…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Lethal Injection
,May 16, 2016
Pfizer Announces Restrictions to Keep States From Using Its Medicines in Executions
On May 13, the pharmaceutical company Pfizer announced that it would impose strict distribution controls to block states from obtaining and using its medicines in executions. In a statement, the company said, “Pfizer makes its products to enhance and save the lives of the patients we serve. Consistent with these values, Pfizer strongly objects to the use of its products as lethal injections for capital punishment.” With Pfizer’s announcement, every major pharmaceutical company that produces…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Mar 28, 2016
Texas Capital Juror Regrets Vote to Sentence Defendant to Death
In an interview with The Marshall Project, Texas death penalty juror Sven Berger says he would not have voted to sentence capital defendant Paul Storey to death in 2008 had he known about Storey’s “borderline intellectual functioning,” history of depression, and other evidence that Storey’s lawyer failed to present at trial. Berger and 11 other Texas jurors unanimously voted to sentence Storey to death, but Berger says that at the…
Facts & Research
Recent Legislative Activity
,Sentencing Data
,New Voices
,Executions Overview
,Jan 27, 2016
Missouri Likely to See Change After Historic High in Executions
A decline in executions is likely in Missouri after two years of unusually high numbers. In 2014, Missouri tied with Texas for the most executions in the U.S., and it was second to Texas in 2015. However, changing attitudes about the death penalty – similar to national shifts – are evident in Missouri’s sentencing trends: no one was sentenced to death in Missouri in 2014 or 2015, and less than one person per year has been sentenced to death in the past seven years. Moreover, a…
Policy Issues
Sentencing Alternatives
,New Voices
,Jun 16, 2008
NEW VOICES: Another Texas Death Penalty Official Has Second Thoughts
Larry Fitzgerald served as the official spokesman for Texas executions for eight years. He represented the state through 219 lethal injections. Retired in August 2003, Fitzgerald left with what he refers to as a, “PhD in prison life.” Due to his expertise with the Texas prison system, defense attorneys have been utilizing his testimony in death penalty cases to describe to the jury why the prison system offers a suitable alternative to a death sentence. He…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Federal Death Penalty
,Mar 10, 2008
New Yorkers Showing Resistance to Federal Death Penalty
Since the federal death penalty was reinstated in 1988, the state of New York has been more reluctant to impose death sentences than other states, according to the Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel Project. New York federal prosecutors have asked juries to impose death sentences 19 times, but in only one of those cases did they vote for the death penalty. Nationally, federal prosecutors win death penalties in about 33% of cases. In some cases, federal judges in New York…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Jun 06, 2007
NEW VOICES: Florida League of Women Voters Calls for Halt to Executions
The League of Women Voters of Florida is urging Governor Charlie Crist to continue the moratorium on executions and to consider alternative sentences. In a letter from Florida League President Dianne Wheatley-Giliotti to Governor Crist, the organization noted that concerns about fairness, innocence, costs, and public safety have led them to question the value of capital punishment. In their call for a moratorium, the League…
Policy Issues
Innocence
,New Voices
,May 14, 2007
NEW VOICES: John Grisham on Capital Punishment
Acclaimed author John Grisham recently told The Kansas City Star that the death penalty should be “abolished forever” in the United States. “I think the system is so badly flawed that all executions should be stopped.… Let’s start with the basic concept of a fair trial. We are so far away from that in every state in this country,” said Grisham, an attorney whose views on capital punishment started to shift when he wrote “The Chamber,” a novel that deals with an…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Feb 23, 2007
BOOKS: “Just Call Me Mike: A Journey to Actor and Activist”
In his new autobiography, “Just Call Me Mike: A Journey to Actor and Activist,” Mike Farrell provides intimate accounts of his life as a television sitcom star and as a human rights activist. Farrell explains how his work on the television program M*A*S*H inspired him to become more involved in politics and human rights issues. Over the years, he has been considered one of Hollywood’s most prominent activists, especially on issues related to capital…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Jun 20, 2006
New Voices: League of Women Voters Supports Abolition of the Death Penalty
The League of Women Voters of the United States has adopted an official national policy calling for abolition of the death penalty. During the organization’s 47th biennial national convention in Minneapolis, delegates adopted policy language stating, “The League of Women Voters of the United States supports the abolition of the death penalty.” The League of Women Voters has more than 130,000 members and supporters. It is a non-partisan political organization that encourages the informed and…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Mar 30, 2006
The Impact of the Death Penalty on Jurors
During a recent presentation at Valparaiso University, Sister Helen Prejean (pictured) engaged in a discussion with the school’s pastor, Rev. Joseph Cunningham. Responding to a remark that Prejean had made about defense attorneys only needing to convince one juror to vote against the death penalty, Cunningham told Prejean that he had been foreman of a jury that sentenced a man to death in 1995. He remarked that he is still dealing with the emotional toll of that experience, stating, “I ache…
Facts & Research
New Voices
,Feb 03, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: Constitution Project Releases Updated Death Penalty Reform Recommendations
The Constitution Project’s blue-ribbon Death Penalty Initiative released a new report, “Mandatory Justice: The Death Penalty Revisited,” an updated set of guiding principles for reform of death penalty systems. The group is comprised of current and former FBI officials, state attorneys general, religious leaders, victims of crime, academics, legal experts, and community leaders. They identified specific improvements to address problems such as arbitrariness,…
Policy Issues
Race
,New Voices
,Jan 16, 2006
NEW VOICES: NAACP President Signals Greater Organizational Involvement in the Death Penalty
In a recent interview with The Washington Post, NAACP president Bruce C. Gordon (pictured) spoke about capital punishment and called for a halt to executions in every state until questions of accuracy and fairness can be addressed. Gordon, who challenged California Governor Arnold Schwarzennegger for refusing to commute the death sentence of Stanley Tookie Williams, noted that the death penalty will be a key issue for the NAACP: African Americans represent 10 percent of the population and 42…
Oct 21, 2004
NEW VOICES: California Bar Association Urges Death Penalty Moratorium
A group of 450 attorneys participating in the Conference of Delegates of the California Bar Association has urged a moratorium on the death penalty in California until the state reviews whether capital punishment laws are enforced fairly and uniformly. “If you make a mistake, it’s not like you can go back and correct a mistake because the person is dead,” said Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Danette Meyers, supporter of the measure and a member of the Bar…
Apr 12, 2004
NEW VOICES: Rosalynn Carter Calls for End to Juvenile Death Penalty
In a recent opinion piece published in The Miami Herald, former First Lady Rosalynn Carter called on Florida and other states that continue to sentence juvenile offenders to death to abandon the practice, noting that it “violates current principles of American justice.” Carter stated that America could soon be the last nation on Earth to execute juvenile offenders, and that the U.S. is one of only two nations that have not ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights…
Feb 26, 2004
NEW VOICES: Urban League President Says Death Penalty is “Cruel and Inhuman”
In a recent column, Marc H. Morial, the current President of the National Urban League and former President of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, praised recent efforts to halt executions while questions about innocence and fairness are addressed by legislators. Morial…
Feb 09, 2004
NEW VOICES: Charlize Theron Criticizes Death Penalty After Her Movie Role
Charlize Theron, who recently won a Golden Globe Award for her portrayal of executed Florida death row inmate Aileen Wuornos in the movie “Monster,” has stated that making the movie made her more aware of how “ineffective” capital punishment is. Theron, who is opposed to the death penalty, was only 15 when her own mother shot and killed her drunken father after he threatened to kill his wife and daughter. “I don’t think condemning people who murder and then killing them…