As is being reported in the Miami Herald, my client Richard Wolfferts does have a past. Twenty years ago, back in 1989, a bomb was placed in a car driven by Miami divorce lawyer Gino Negretti – and Dick Wolfferts admitted to planting that bomb. He served five years in prison, and he offered
Terry Lenamon / Reba Kennedy
The Need for Uniform Standards in Death Penalty Cases 1 – Tinkering with the Machinery of Death
Currently, not only the federal government but a majority of states provide for capital punishment (the death penalty) in certain crimes. There are those that argue that true fairness in this country would be an all-or-nothing approach: either every state in the union should impose capital punishment or no state should. Otherwise, two individuals convicted…
As We Enter Into Christmas 2009, Let Us Pause to Consider Those Killed by the State in 2009
With thanks to the Death Penalty Information Center’s excellent recordkeeping, here is a list of those who were executed so far this year, in alphabetical order by state. While it is a blessing that capital punishment appears to be on the decline in this country, it will be truly a joyous occasion when this…
House Bill 3986 – The Proposed Death Penalty Appeals Act and the Need to Include Adequate Funding for Indigent Defense Counsel
Recently, Representative Henry Johnson (D- Ga.) introduced House Bill 3986, the Effective Death Penalty Appeals Act. This proposed law would make sure that defendants who have been sentenced to death at trial have the chance to have those death sentences reviewed as federal habeas corpus relief when they are able to provide evidence that they are not guilty of the crime — especially when that evidence was not presented at their trial. The summary written by the Congressional Research Service (a nonpartisan part of the Library of Congress) provides:
Many may assume that this type of federal judicial review already exists for those individuals facing a sentence of death. After all, isn’t the cost of appellate review one of the big chunks of Capital Punishment expense that is being used as an monetary argument to abolish the death penalty? Right now, federal courts are limited in their ability to review state court decisions in Death Cases — Troy Davis is one big example While death penalty appeals are expensive in both time and money, the fact is that the innocent men and women on Death Row — and they’re there, don’t think they’re not — may not have as easy of a time taking evidence proving their innocence before a tribunal in order to gain their freedom as the public might assume.
Continue Reading House Bill 3986 – The Proposed Death Penalty Appeals Act and the Need to Include Adequate Funding for Indigent Defense Counsel
Life v. Property: Do We Value the Taking of Property More Than Human Life In This Country?
Earlier this month, the United States Supreme Court heard argument in the case of Beach Renourishment v. Florida (08-1141), a controversy surrounding the application of the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition that “…private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation,” otherwise known as the “takings clause.” It’s an interesting situation because the real…
DPIC Releases Its Annual Report — Fewer Executions This Year than Any Year Since 1976
The Death Penalty Information Center has tallied its numbers and released its annual report on the state of Capital Punishment in America this week. Its eight (8) page report can be downloaded and printed in a pdf format from the DPIC site at no charge.
There’s some good news here.
When you’re against the death…
This New York Times Editorial – “There is No Humane Execution” Should Be Required Reading For Everyone. Yes, Everyone.
This past Sunday, the New York Times responded to the horrific execution of Ken Biros by the State of Ohio last week. Yes, where Biros was killed in the same way that your vet euthanizes dogs and cats. Yes, where Ohio ran ahead and used a new method of execution that hasn’t been vetted, allowing…
Revisiting the Past: Capital Representation Pre-Gideon
Most Florida criminal defense attorneys who undertake the tremendous responsibility of representing defendants facing the death penalty probably cannot remember what life was like in this country in 1963. Few were practicing law back then. Many were yet to be born.
Nevertheless, the year 1963 is a critical milestone for the Florida capital defense bar…
Ohio’s Second Execution of Romell Broom Stayed for 30 Days by Federal Judge – How Do You Think He’ll Rule?
Death Row inmate Romell Broom was setting in the courtroom this week as his attorneys stood ready for an evidentiary hearing that would take a couple of days in front of Federal District Judge Gregory Frost. Romell Broom sat there, ready to testify. Think of it — Broom left his small Death Row cell to set in that public…
As These Words Are Being Typed, Ohio Is Killing Ken Biros in an Unvetted Execution Method, Unless You Count Euthanasia of Dogs as Vetting
All this morning, there have been almost minute by minute updates on the web regarding whether or not the appellate attorneys feverishly fighting to stop this morning’s execution of Kenneth Biros by the State of Ohio will be successful. Biros’ attorneys are literally banging on the doors of the United States Supreme Court, asking that…