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Article • August 19, 2016
Eighth Circuit Denies Stay of Execution Pending Appeal Over Execution Drug by On October 30, 2015, the Eighth Circuit court of appeals denied Missouri death row prisoner Ernest Johnson a stay pending appeal of his challenge to the type of drug being used to execute prisoners in Missouri. Johnson underwent …
Article • August 10, 2016
Missouri Uses Execution Drug despite DOC Director's Denials Of Plans to Use by Christopher Zoukis Missouri's nine most recent executions have been carried out by killing prisoners with Midazolam, a drug that the state's Director of the Department of Corrections has stated in a sworn deposition that it had no …
Article • August 10, 2016
Filed under: Death Penalty
Federal Judge Voids California Death Penalty Law that “Serves No Penological Purpose” by Derek Gilna The State of California’s criminal justice system, which in recent years has received increasing scrutiny from the federal courts for what it termed numerous constitutional violations, received yet another setback in a recent federal judge’s …
Article • August 10, 2016
Use of Death Penalty Trending Downwards by In its year-end report, the Washington, D.C., based Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC) reported that there were 43 executions and 78 new death sentences in 2012, continuing a generally downward trend that began in the mid-1990s. As of April 1, 2012, there were …
Publication • August 10, 2016
Complicity or Abolition? The Death Penalty and International Support for Drug Enforcement, IHRA, 2010 Complicity or Abolition? The Death Penalty and International Support for Drug Enforcement Rick Lines, Damon Barrett and Patrick Gallahue © 2010 International Harm Reduction Association ISBN 978-0-9566116-0-4 This report was produced by the Human Rights Programme …
Publication • August 3, 2016
Judges and the Politics of Death, Bright & Keenan, 1995 JUDGES AND THE POLITICS OF DEATH: DECIDING BETWEEN THE BILL OF RIGHTS AND THE NEXT ELECTION IN CAPITAL CASES Stephen B. Bright1 Patrick J. Keenan2 Volume 73 Boston University Law Review Page 759 (May 1995) Copyright (c) 1995 Trustees of …
Publication • August 3, 2016
Elected Judges and the Death Penalty in Texas, Bright, 2000 Elected Judges and the Death Penalty in Texas: Why Full Habeas Corpus Review by Independent Federal Judges Is Indispensable to Protecting Constitutional Rights Stephen B. Bright* Texas Law Review, Volume 78, page 1806 (2000) Copyright c 2000 Texas Law Review …
Article • August 2, 2016 • from PLN August, 2016
Ninth Circuit Reverses Habeas Relief in California Death Penalty Case by Derek Gilna On November 12, 2015, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals delivered a setback to death penalty abolitionists by reversing a grant of habeas corpus relief to a California prisoner who argued that the state’s post-conviction process in …
Publication • August 1, 2016
Minority Practice, Majority’s Burden - The Death Penalty Today, Liebman and Clarke, 2012 DRAFT: Please do not cite or distribute without express permission. Minority Practice, Majority’s Burden: The Death Penalty Today James S. Liebman Simon H. Rifkin Professor of Law, Columbia Law School and Peter Clarke J.D. expected 2012, Columbia …
Publication • August 1, 2016
Evaluating Fairness and Accuracy in State Death Penalty Systems – AZ Death Penalty Assessment Report, ABA, 2006 Defending Liberty Pursuing Justice EVALUATING FAIRNESS AND ACCURACY IN STATE DEATH PENALTY SYSTEMS: The Arizona Death Penalty Assessment Report An Analysis of Arizona’s Death Penalty Laws, Procedures, and Practices “A system that takes …
Publication • August 1, 2016
The Execution of Mentally Ill Offenders, Amnesty International, 2003 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA The execution of mentally ill offenders I cannot believe that capital punishment is a solution – to abolish murder by murdering, an endless chain of murdering. When I heard that my daughter’s murderer was not to be …
Publication • August 1, 2016
Mandatory Justice - The Death Penalty Revisited, The Constitution Project, 2005 MANDATORY JUSTICE: The DEATH PENALTY REVISITED An Initiative of The Constitution Project Copyright © by the Constitution Project. All rights reserved. No part may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by means, …
Brief • July 19, 2016
State of Alabama v. Eugene et al, AL, Order, judge misconduct death penalty, 2016 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JEFFERSON COUNTY, ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM DIVISION STATE OF ALABAMA V. BIILUPS KENNETH EUGENE Defendant. CHATMAN, STANLEY Defendant. MCMULLIN, TERRELL Defendant. ) ) ) Case Nos.: ) CC-2005-001755.00 CC-2012-001194.00 CC-2012-001195.00 CC-2014-003011.00 CC-2014-003012.00 CC-2014-003015.00 …
Publication • July 12, 2016
Rethinking Death Row - Variations in the Housing of Individuals, Yale Law School, 2016 Rethinking Death Row: Variations in the Housing of Individuals Sentenced to Death The Arthur Liman Public Interest Program Yale Law School July 2016 Rethinking “Death Row”: Rethinking “Death Row”: Variations in the Housing of Individuals Sentenced …
Supreme Court Sets Aside Death Penalty Conviction on Batson Grounds by Derek Gilna The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 7-1 decision, left no doubt that it did not believe prosecutors’ assertions that race was not a factor during jury selection in a death penalty case. Chief Justice John Roberts, writing …
Pfizer Deals Blow to Lethal Injections by Christopher Zoukis Pfizer, Inc., the world’s second-largest pharmaceutical manufacturer, recently announced new restrictions on the distribution of drugs used to execute prisoners. The May 13, 2016 announcement detailed “distribution restrictions” that the company is placing on certain drugs used in lethal injection protocols, …
Medical Statistical Model Used to Estimate Wrongful Conviction Rate in Death Penalty Cases by Matthew Clarke An interesting collaboration between medical and law professionals, under the leadership of University of Michigan Law School professor Samuel R. Gross, led to the application of medical statistical analysis to exonerations of death-sentenced prisoners, …
In California Death Row’s “Adjustment Center,” Condemned Men Wait in Solitary Confinement by by Alyssa Stryker, Solitary Watch “When we were sentenced to death,” wrote Carlos M. Argueta from death row in California, “we weren’t sentenced to be mistreated, humiliated, discriminated against, psychologically tortured and kept in solitary dungeons until the day …
Saudi executions: beyond the numbers by By Halim Shebaya, openDemocracy This article was originally published by openDemocracy on January 8, 2016. Copyright, openDemocracy. Reprinted with permission. https://www.opendemocracy.net/arab-awakening/halim-shebaya/saudi-executions-beyond-numbers  The inability to recognise an affront to the rule of law, regardless of the identity of the perpetrator, reveals the region’s dire state of affairs, politically, morally, …
California’s Broken Death Penalty System by Christopher Zoukis While California taxpayers have spent over $4 billion on capital punishment since it was reinstated in 1978, more than 900 prisoners have been sentenced to death but only 13 have been executed – an average cost of around $308 million per execution. …
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