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Article • April 12, 2019 • from CLN May, 2019
California Governor Announces Moratorium on Capital Punishment by Bill Barton by Bill Barton  Governor Gavin Newsom granted a temporary reprieve for the 737 prisoners on California death row as of March 13, 2019.  “I think this would be a bold step,” said Michael D. Rushford, president of the Criminal Justice …
Article • March 16, 2019 • from CLN April, 2019
Death Penalty Usage Trending Downward, Report Reveals by Betty Nelander by Betty Nelander A look back at 2018 reveals death-penalty usage in the United States trending downward for the fourth consecutive year, according to a year-end report by the Death Penalty Information Center (“DPIC”). Executions numbered fewer than 30, and …
Article • January 19, 2019 • from CLN February, 2019
‘Innocent Man Almost Executed’ Freed After Decade on Death Row by Betty Nelander by Betty Nelander Clemente Aguirre-Jarquin of Altamante Springs, Florida, was recently exonerated and freed after spending 14 years in prison, including 10 on death row, for double murder. “An innocent man was almost executed for a crime …
Article • January 17, 2019 • from CLN February, 2019
Capital Punishment in the United States: Explained by Jessica Brand, Callie Heller by Jessica Brand and Callie Heller, The Appeal This explainer was produced by The Appeal, a nonprofit criminal justice news site. In August 2018, the state of Tennessee executed Billy Ray Irick, the first man executed in the …
Article • December 5, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
Federal Death Penalty Prosecutors Accuse One Another of Destroying Evidence and Other Misconduct in Discrimination Lawsuit by Shawn Musgrave, Brooke Williams by Shawn Musgrave and Brooke Williams, Published by Criminal Legal News with permission from The Intercept, July 18, 2018 A team of federal prosecutors charged with promoting “consistency and …
Article • December 5, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
Washington Supreme Court Announces State’s Death Penalty Is Unconstitutional by Richard Resch by Richard Resch On October 11, 2018, the Supreme Court of Washington issued an opinion in which the Court struck down the state’s death penalty, announcing: “we hold that Washington’s death penalty is unconstitutional, as administered, because it …
Article • November 28, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
Kentucky Supreme Court Declares Law Defining Intellectual Disability Unconstitutional, Overturns Death Sentence by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell The Supreme Court of Kentucky held that the state statute determining intellectual disability for disallowing imposition of the death penalty was unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment after recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions, …
Article • November 28, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
Filed under: Death Penalty, Juveniles
Should the Minimum Age for the Death Penalty be Bumped Up to 21? by The American Bar Association (“ABA”) overwhelmingly adopted a resolution earlier this year for an end to the death penalty for offenders who were younger than 21 when they committed their crime. The ABA cited a growing …
Article • November 6, 2018 • from CLN November, 2018
Ohio Governor Commutes Another Death Sentence by Ohio Governor John Kasich commuted another death sentence, his seventh, amid concerns from one of the jurors in the case that prosecutors hid crucial details about the defendant’s horrific upbringing and drug problems that would have swayed that juror to vote against the …
Article • October 31, 2018 • from CLN November, 2018
Filed under: Death Penalty
Tennessee’s Death Penalty Laws Cruel and Arbitrary by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss The Tennessee Journal of Law and Policy (summer 2018) published a review of the state’s arbitrary application of capital punishment. The review focused on all of the first-degree murder cases prosecuted in the last 40 years and …
Article • September 24, 2018 • from CLN October, 2018
Filed under: Death Penalty, Death Row
Federal Judge Extends Stay of Executions in Louisiana by Betty Nelander by Betty Nelander Louisiana’s 71 death-row prisoners are in limbo after a federal judge in that state ordered that a stay of executions be extended at least until July 18, 2019. The order by U.S. District Judge Shelly Dick …
Article • September 20, 2018 • from CLN October, 2018
Eight Death Row Prisoners Opt for Untested Nitrogen Gas Over Inhumane Lethal Injection by Betty Nelander by Betty Nelander A decision by Alabama lawmakers means that death row prisoners in the state could face execution by nitrogen hypoxia instead of barbaric lethal injection. The decision renders moot a lawsuit by …
Article • August 20, 2018 • from CLN September, 2018
Filed under: Juries, Death Penalty
SCOTUS’ Unanimous Death-Penalty Jury Verdict Decision Affecting Florida Cases by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna The effects of the January 2016 United States Supreme Court decision in Hurst v. Florida, 136 S. Ct. 6161 (2016), which overturned Florida’s prior law permitting non-unanimous jury verdicts in death penalty cases, continues to …
Article • August 20, 2018 • from CLN September, 2018
Texas Courts Rubber Stamp Post-Conviction Fact Findings in Death Penalty Cases, Study Says by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke A study by researchers from the University of Texas School of Law Capital Punishment Center published in the Houston Law Review found that in 96 percent of post-conviction proceedings in cases …
Article • July 21, 2018 • from CLN August, 2018
Pennsylvania Supreme Court Vacates Intellectually Disabled Prisoner’s Death Sentence by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania vacated a convicted murderer’s death sentence after concluding that the prisoner suffered from an intellectual disability, rendering him ineligible for the death penalty. The February 5, 2018, order replaced the …
Article • June 18, 2018 • from CLN July, 2018
California Supreme Court Vacates Conviction and Death Sentence After Experts Recant Testimony by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell The Supreme Court of California granted a writ of habeas corpus and vacated a first-degree murder conviction and death sentence after several of the experts who testified at trial recanted their testimony …
Article • June 17, 2018 • from CLN July, 2018
No Increase in Murder Rate for Civilians or Police Following Abolition of Death Penalty by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke The transcript of a panel discussion titled “Life After the Death Penalty: Implications for Retentionist States,” presented by the Committees on Capital Punishment of the American Bar Association Section of …
Article • June 17, 2018 • from CLN July, 2018
Execution Numbers Down in 2017 by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis The number of death row sentences handed out across the country is in decline. Despite this trend, death rows remain crowded. This is the result of a similar, but somewhat unrelated shift: Executions are also in a state of …
Article • May 22, 2018 • from CLN June, 2018
Arizona Supreme Court: Trial Court Must Tell Jury Defendant Ineligible for Parole in Death Penalty Phase by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell The trial court erred by failing to tell the jury that a defendant was ineligible for parole before its decision to impose the death penalty, the Supreme Court …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
California Supreme Court Grants Habeas Petition and Vacates Capital Murder Conviction Due to False Expert Testimony at Trial by Richard Resch by Richard Resch The Supreme Court of California granted a death row prisoner’s petition for writ of habeas corpus based upon the introduction of false evidence at trial and …
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