Podcasts about dpic

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Best podcasts about dpic

Latest podcast episodes about dpic

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Earwitness Podcast Creator Beth Shelburne on Toforest Johnson's Case

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 25:53


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Beth Shelburne, a journalist who has reported on the criminal legal system for over 25 years and creator of the podcast Earwitness. Released in 2023 to critical acclaim, Earwitness tells the story of Toforest Johnson, a death-sentenced man who is facing execution in Alabama despite strong evidence of his innocence. On November 14, 2024, Mr. Johnson filed a petition with the Jefferson County Circuit Court requesting a new hearing, the latest in a series of appeals.   “I realized that this is such a protracted injustice with so many twists and turns over a quarter of a century. So many people have been exploited in the process that it really is a case that's emblematic of many terrible issues in our criminal justice system, and I felt like in order to capture all of that in its totality, I wanted to slow down and really unpack this case in a meaningful way,” explains Ms. Shelburne on why she decided to create the Earwitness podcast. She shares the challenges she and her team faced, including the “fading memories of people … [who] just couldn't remember the finite details that we felt were so crucial ... to pin down. Luckily, we were able to get our hands on quite a bit of source material through.”

ms creator alabama released shelburne toforest johnson beth shelburne dpic
Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Professor Steve Vladeck on the Supreme Court's Death Penalty Shift

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 37:59


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Executive Director Robin Maher speaks with Steve Vladeck, a Georgetown law professor and expert on the Supreme Court. Professor Vladeck is the author of The Shadow Docket: How the Supreme Court Uses Stealth Rulings to Amass Power and Undermine the Republic, released in 2023, as well as the weekly newsletter One First, which breaks down the Court's rulings and history. Professor Vladeck explains why the Court's treatment of death penalty cases has recently changed, the role the Court played in creating many of the problems with death penalty cases it now complains about, and how the death penalty shaped the Court's new orientation and approach to other areas of law.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Carine Williams of the Innocence Project Discusses Death Penalty, Innocence, and ‘the Function of Freedom'

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 39:10


Rereleased for September 2024: In the March 2021 edition of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Senior Director of Research and Special Projects Ngozi Ndulue is joined by Carine Williams — the Chief Program Strategy Officer at the Innocence Project — for a conversation about innocence, the death penalty, and “the function of freedom.” Reflecting on the gross miscarriage of justice exhibited in wrongful convictions and exonerations, Williams stresses two critical themes: death is irrevocable and ending the death penalty is simply not enough.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Legal Fellow Leah Roemer on the Politicization of the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2024 30:55


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Leah Roemer, DPIC's Legal Fellow and a primary author of our recent report, Lethal Election: How the U.S. Electoral Process Increases the Arbitrariness of the Death Penalty. Leah graduated from Berkeley Law in 2023, where she participated in the Death Penalty Clinic and earned a certificate in Public Interest and Social Justice. Leah discusses how some judges, prosecutors, and politicians alter their behavior in capital cases while running for office, creating unpredictability and inconsistent outcomes for people facing death sentences. However, she explains that the “accepted political wisdom” about the death penalty—that an official must take a pro-death stance to win an election—no longer appears to be true based on DPIC's research, as many voters now favor candidates willing to criticize or even oppose capital punishment.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Attorney Jessica Sutton on the Unique Challenges of LGBTQ+ Capital Defendants

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2024 29:17


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Jessica Sutton, principal attorney with Phillips Black, a nonprofit public interest law firm focused capital defense. Ms. Sutton has represented clients facing the death penalty in more than a dozen jurisdictions across the U.S. and at all stages of proceedings. In recognition of Pride month, Ms. Sutton discusses the unique challenges LGBTQ+ people face in the capital punishment system and strategies defense teams can use to acknowledge and address these challenges.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Discussions with DPIC: Lamont Hunter on His Wrongful Conviction and Release

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2024 39:57


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Lamont Hunter, a former Ohio death-sentenced prisoner who was wrongfully convicted of causing the death of his three-year-old son. After nearly 18 years of incarceration, Mr. Hunter was released from Ohio's death row on June 15, 2023, after pleading guilty to lesser charges in exchange for his freedom. Since his release, Mr. Hunter has spoken widely about his experience with the criminal legal system and the dangers of wrongful convictions.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Professor Elisabeth Semel on the Implications of Batson v. Kentucky and California's Capital Punishment System

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 54:31


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Elisabeth Semel, Clinical Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley. Professor Semel joined Berkeley Law in 2001 as the first director of the school's death penalty clinic and remains the clinic's co-director, where students have represented individuals facing capital punishment and written amicus briefs in death penalty cases before the United States Supreme Court. In recognition of 38th year anniversary of the landmark US Supreme Court ruling in Batson v. Kentucky (1986), Professor Semel discusses the implications of the Court's ruling and recent efforts in California to eliminate racial discrimination in capital punishment and jury selection.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Retired Judge Elsa Alcala on the Death Penalty in Texas

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2024 57:09


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Judge Elsa Alcala, who served on the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals from 2011 to 2018. In addition to serving as a judge at the appeals and trial level, she worked as a prosecutor, criminal defense attorney, and most recently as a justice-reform lobbyist during her three-decade career in criminal law. She shares how these experiences have informed her perspective on the death penalty and identifies recommendations for criminal legal reforms. 

Talk to me about A&E
Episode 32: What's Your Liability IQ? Part II

Talk to me about A&E

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 31:25


In Part II of this podcast series on What's Your Liability IQ? Dan Buelow continues his discussion with two former DPIC claim managers, Laura Gualiardo, Managing Director of Design Professional Liability Claims for Travelers, and Mark Blankenship, Director of Risk Management for WTW A&E.  Dan, Laura and Mark review a number of questions from the DPIC Liability IQ and discuss current trends on a wide range of issues challenging design professionals including risks specific to stamping drawings, defining and managing scope and client expectations, documentation, contract formation, limiting liability, etc.  A fun listen for all levels of staff.   

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Shedding Light on Underreported Stories of Incarceration and Death Row — conversation with Keri Blakinger

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2024 32:30


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Keri Blakinger, a journalist at the Los Angeles Times and former reporter for the Marshall Project—a nonprofit news organization focused on the U.S. criminal justice system. At the Marshall Project, Ms. Blakinger wrote stories about the human beings in the criminal justice system—a focus that is still a priority in her reporting with Los Angeles Times.Ms. Blakinger's personal experience with prison has given her a unique perspective. In her book, Corrections in Ink: A Memoir (2022), she powerfully tells the story of her personal journey beginning as a young competitive figure skater with an eating disorder, through addiction and incarceration, and ultimately to her transformation into journalist and advocate. 

Talk to me about A&E
Episode 31: What's Your Liability IQ? Part I

Talk to me about A&E

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2024 37:55


For this podcast, Dan Buelow has a lively discussion on the DPIC liability IQ with some former DPIC claim managers, Laura Gualiardo, Managing Director of Design Professional Liability Claims for Travelers and Mark Blankenship, Director of Risk Management for WTW A&E. The DPIC liability IQ test was based on DPIC's Lessons in professional liability written over 25 years ago. Dan's discussion with Laura and Mark offers some keen insights into a wide range of critical risk management issues still facing architects and engineers today.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Life After Death Row with Anthony Graves

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 20:47


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with former death-sentenced prisoner Anthony Graves. Exonerated from Texas' death row in 2010, Mr. Graves has since become an advocate for criminal justice reform, creating the Anthony Graves Foundation, working with the ACLU and Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, and testifying before the U.S. Senate on prison conditions. Mr. Graves has also authored an autobiography titled Infinite Hope: How Wrongful Conviction, Solitary Confinement and 12 Years on Death Row Failed to Kill My Soul.

Aviation News Talk podcast
306 How to Pass a Checkride and Not Fail Before You Start – interview with DPE Jason Blair

Aviation News Talk podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 59:43


Max talks with Jason Blair about the pilot examiner shortage and its impact on checkride delays. We also highlight the importance of proper paperwork and the common reasons for test discontinuation. Next, we delve into the requirements for checkride endorsements and the consequences of missing experience requirements. Jason addresses the misinterpretation of instrument rating requirements and the DPIC requirement for the commercial certificate. Finally, we discuss the qualification process for aircraft and the issues related to un-airworthy aircraft. This conversation covers the importance of documentation and airworthiness, checkride horror stories, maintenance issues and attitude, options for dealing with an unairworthy aircraft, the importance of maintenance logs, and organizing and tabbing logbooks. Support the Show by buying a Lightspeed ANR Headsets Max has been using only Lightspeed headsets for nearly 25 years! I love their tradeup program that let's you trade in an older Lightspeed headset for a newer model. Start with one of the links below, and Lightspeed will pay a referral fee to support Aviation News Talk. Lightspeed Delta Zulu Headset $1199 Lightspeed Zulu 3 Headset $899Lightspeed Sierra Headset $699 My Review on the Lightspeed Delta Zulu Send us your feedback or comments via email If you have a question you'd like answered on the show, let listeners hear you ask the question, by recording your listener question using your phone. Mentioned on the Show N17DT Cirrus SR22T Shelbyville, IN NTSB Preliminary Report Jason Blair's Website Schedule a Checkride with Jason Jason Blair's YouTube Channel Max's Books – Order online or call 800-247-6553 to order. Max Trescott's G3000 and G5000 Glass Cockpit HandbookMax Trescott's G1000 & Perspective Glass Cockpit Handbook If you love the show and want more, visit my Patreon page to see fun videos, breaking news, and other posts in the Posts section. And if you decide to make a small donation each month,  you can get some goodies! Free Index to the first 282 episodes of Aviation New Talk So You Want To Learn to Fly or Buy a Cirrus seminars Online Version of the Seminar Coming Soon – Register for Notification Check out our recommended ADS-B receivers, and order one for yourself. Yes, we'll make a couple of dollars if you do. Get the Free Aviation News Talk app for iOS or Android. Check out Max's Online Courses: G1000 VFR, G1000 IFR, and Flying WAAS & GPS Approaches. Find them all at: https://www.pilotlearning.com/ Social Media Like Aviation News Talk podcast on Facebook Follow Max on Instagram Follow Max on Twitter Listen to all Aviation News Talk podcasts on YouTube or YouTube Premium "Go Around" song used by permission of Ken Dravis; you can buy his music at kendravis.com If you purchase a product through a link on our site, we may receive compensation.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Classifying Capital Punishment as Torture with John Bessler

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 18:54


In this month's episode of Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with John Bessler (pictured), of Professor of Law at the University of Baltimore School of Law. Professor Bessler is the author of several books on the death penalty, including his 2023 book The Death Penalty's Denial of Fundamental Human Rights: International Law, State Practice, and the Emerging Abolitionist Norm. In his most recent book, Professor Bessler argues that the death penalty should be classified as torture, which would prohibit its use under international law and treaties. The reality of capital punishment, he explains, is that it is "really just a series of credible death threats." The capital charge is a death threat, the death sentence is a more credible death threat, and the execution itself is a very imminent death threat. International law already prohibits mock executions as a "classic form of psychological torture," and Professor Bessler argues that the death penalty, with its repeated threats to execute, should be viewed the same way. "[T]here's really no way to eliminate the psychological torment that is associated with scheduling someone's death and then subjecting them to that continuous threat of death during the entire process."

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Gender and the Death Penalty with Sandra Babcock

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 31:07


In this month's Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Sandra Babcock (pictured), Clinical Professor at Cornell Law School, Faculty Director, and founder of the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide. Ms. Babcock's clinic currently represents death sentenced women in the United States, Malawi, and Tanzania and is focused on providing defense teams in retentionist countries with training and consultation in order to provide the best possible legal representation for individuals facing sentences of death. The Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide also produces research highlighting the intersection of gender and the death penalty, as well as international legal issues and capital punishment. Ms. Babcock explains how the Center's research has uncovered widespread, yet overlooked issues that women and other gender minorities face in the criminal legal system.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
How A British Charity Works to Assist US Capital Defenders

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 24:23


In this month's Discussions with DPIC, Managing Director Anne Holsinger speaks with Margot Ravenscroft, the Executive Director of AMICUS UK, a British charity that works to support the capital defense effort in the United States.  Ms. Ravenscroft describes how AMICUS was founded by a British woman who became a pen friend with a Louisiana death row prisoner and returned to the UK after his execution, determined to provide assistance for those still on death row.  Ms. Ravenscroft describes why the organization trains and supports British lawyers and law firms to work with US defense counsel, and how their efforts help ensure that every person on death row has adequate counsel and fair proceedings.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Evangelical Pastor Rich Nathan Discusses How a “Culture of Life” Informs His Opposition to the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 34:24


In the September 2023 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Anne Holsinger, Managing Director of DPIC, speaks with Pastor Rich Nathan, founding pastor of Vineyard Columbus, an evangelical Christian church based in Ohio. Mr. Nathan shares his pro-life perspective and explains how religious teachings inform his position on the death penalty.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Dr. Roya Boroumand discusses capital punishment in Iran

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 48:24


In the August 2023 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Anne Holsinger, Managing Director of DPIC, speaks with Dr. Roya Boroumand, Executive Director of the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran. A specialist in Iran's post-World War 2 history, Dr. Boroumand provides historical context for ongoing events and discusses the current increase in executions. With the one-year anniversary of Mahsa Jina Amini's death approaching, Dr. Boroumand alsohighlights the international community's response to this event and the protests that followed.

Motive and Opportunity
The Death Penalty in Canada and Mark Twitchell

Motive and Opportunity

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2023 53:31


This week Keith kicks us off with a discussion surrounding the history of the death penatly in Canada. Then, Amanda tells us about Mark Twitchell, otherwise known as the Dexter killer. Sources: Copycat Killers, Deadly House of Cards, Vancouver Sun and Province, Edmonton Journal, The Famous People, DPIC, DeathPenaltyInfo.org, The Canadian Encyclopedia, U.S. Department of Justice: Office of Justice Programs, CBC News, HistoryofRights.ca, CanadasHistory.ca, Amnesty International Resources: You can talk to a mental health professional, one on one: Call 1-866-585-0445 or text WELLNESS to 741741 (Adults) or 686868 (Youth) If you or someone you know is thinking about suicide, call Talk Suicide Canada at 1-833-456-4566. Support is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. For residents of Quebec, call 1-866-277-3553 (24/7) or visit suicide.ca Visit Talk Suicide Canada for the distress centres and crisis organizations nearest you, if you're experiencing gender-based violence, you can access a crisis line in your province or territory. Hope for Wellness Help Line:  1-855-242-3310 (toll-free) or connect to the online Hope for Wellness chat. Services are available to all Indigenous peoples across Canada who need immediate emotional support, crisis intervention or referrals to community-based services experienced and culturally sensitive helpline counsellors can help if you want to talk in English and French and, on request, in Cree, Ojibway, and Inuktitut. For Domestic Violence sheltersafe.ca is an online resource to help women and their children seeking safety from violence and abuse. The clickable map will serve as a fast resource to connect women with the nearest shelter that can offer safety, hope, and support. Childhelp National Child Abuse 24/7 Hotline (multilingual service available): 1-800-422-4453 TransLife - 1-877-330-6366

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Kirk Bloodsworth, Thirty Years After His Exoneration

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 23:22


In the July 2023 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Anne Holsinger, Managing Director of DPIC, speaks with Kirk Bloodsworth, the first person exonerated from death row by DNA evidence. Mr. Bloodsworth reflects on the thirty years since his exoneration and discusses the experience of being wrongfully convicted. He also describes the work he and other exonerees have done, and how the issue of innocence has affected legislation on the death penalty.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Legacy of Race in Tennessee's Contemporary Death Penalty with Tiana Herring

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2023 16:35


In the June 2023 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Managing Director Anne Holsinger and Data Storyteller Tiana Herring discuss the latest Racial Justice Storytelling Report, Doomed to Repeat: The Legacy of Race in Tennessee's Contemporary Death Penalty. The report examines the history of Tennessee's capital punishment system, documenting the continued impact of racial discrimination and racial violence on the administration of the death penalty. Ms. Herring, the author, provides an overview of the report, explores key findings, explains its relationship to DPIC's earlier work, and identifies similar and unique trends in Tennessee. 

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
American Enterprise Institute's Dr. Sally Satel Explains Why People with Severe Mental Illness Should Not Be Eligible for the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2023 33:36


In the latest episode of Discussions with DPIC, Anne Holsinger, Managing Director of DPIC, interviews Dr. Sally Satel (pictured), a psychiatrist and senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. She shares her insights on the role of severe mental illness in death penalty cases.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Ron McAndrew, Former Florida Warden Who Presided Over Executions

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 21:57


In the latest episode of “Discussions with DPIC,” Anne Holsinger, Managing Director of DPIC, interviews Ron McAndrew, a former Florida Prison Warden who witnessed executions using electrocution and lethal injection in Florida and Texas. He offers reflections on the negative impact that executions have on the families of both the victim and the condemned, the correctional officers, and on himself.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Protecting Especially Vulnerable Defendants from the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 30:35


In the latest episode of “Discussions with DPIC,” Robert Dunham, former Executive Director of DPIC interviews Karen Steele (pictured), a researcher and defense attorney in Oregon, regarding the special characteristics of late adolescent defendants facing the death penalty. Research by Steele and others points to the incomplete brain development in those aged 18-21 and how that can be exacerbated in those suffering from fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. The research has also found that late-adolescent defendants of color are disproportionately sentenced to death.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Former Prison Superintendent Frank Thompson on How Executions Affect Corrections Officers

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 24:11


In the February 2023 edition of Discussions with DPIC, former Oregon Superintendent of Prisons Frank Thompson speaks with DPIC Managing Director Anne Holsinger about how his experiences as a corrections officer—as well as being a murder victim's family member—have affected his views on capital punishment. Thompson oversaw the only two executions performed in Oregon in the past 50 years and was responsible for developing the execution protocol. He said the process of performing executions created “an additional group of victims” among the prison staff. Seeing the stress it caused him and his colleagues eventually led Thompson to oppose the death penalty.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Georgetown Racial Justice Institute Director Diann Rust-Tierney on Reconceptualizing the U.S. Death Penalty as a Violation of Fundamental Human Rights

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 35:04


Longtime civil and human rights lawyer, Diann Rust-Tierney, the executive director of Georgetown University's Racial Justice Institute, joins DPIC executive director Robert Dunham for a discussion of race, human rights, and the U.S. death penalty. Prof. Rust-Tierney argues that the death penalty has long been misperceived as a normal public safety tool. The reality, she says, is that “from its very beginning in history, [the death penalty] was part of a legal and social system designed to keep various races in their place.” Rust-Tierney says that racial disparities in the application of the death penalty are not “unfortunate byproducts” of the punishment's legacy of slavery, lynching, and Jim Crow segregation. “I've come to understand that the death penalty is actually operating exactly as it was intended,” she says. “It is intended to teach us whose lives are worth valuing and whose lives are not.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
DPIC's New Report on the Racial History of Oklahoma's Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2022 21:04


In the October 2022 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Deputy Director Ngozi Ndulue and Data Storyteller Tiana Herring discuss DPIC's recently released report Deeply Rooted: How Racial History Informs Oklahoma's Death Penalty. The report looks at the racial history, present, and future of Oklahoma's death penalty. Ndulue and Herring explore Oklahoma's unique history, the key findings of the report, its relationship to DPIC's earlier work, and lessons from Oklahoma's experience that are applicable nationwide.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Former Governor Brad Henry and Former U.S. Magistrate Judge Andy Lester, co-Chairs of the Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission, Call for Halt to Executions

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 55:57


Former Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry and former U.S. Magistrate Judge Andy Lester, who co-chaired the bipartisan Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission, join DPIC executive director Robert Dunham in the August 2022 Discussions With DPIC podcast. Governor Henry, a Democrat, and Judge Lester, a Republican, discuss the findings of the commission's review that led them to call for a halt to the state's planned executions of 25 prisoners, at least until significant reforms have been adopted. “The most critical recommendation that we made,” Governor Henry said, “was that unless and until significant reforms occur in the entire death penalty process, we should not be executing people in Oklahoma. … [I]f we're going to have the death penalty in Oklahoma, my goodness, it ought to be done right.” Lester strongly agrees. “The system, if we don't take up the bulk of these recommendations, is broken,” he says. “And we need to fix the system before moving forward.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

In the July 2022 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham and 2021-2022 DPIC Data Fellow Aimee Breaux discuss the making of DPIC's groundbreaking Death Penalty Census database and some of its key findings. The project, the culmination of nearly five years of work, tracks the demographics and status of more than 9,700 death sentences imposed across the U.S. since the Supreme Court struck down existing death penalty statutes in 1972. The data, Dunham says, reveal “a system that is rife with error, filled with discrimination, [and] very, very difficult to fairly administer.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Rep. Renny Cushing on Empowering Crime Survivors and Repealing New Hampshire's Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 33:09


New Hampshire State Representative Renny Cushing passed away earlier this month. In memory of Cushing's life and legacy, DPIC is reissuing the June 2019 podcast in which Cushing spoke with DPIC Executive Director Robert Dunham. Cushing described the life-altering experience of having a close family member murdered and his journey from being a murder-family survivor to spearheading New Hampshire's repeal of the death penalty.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Julius Jones' Long Road On and Off Oklahoma's Death Row, and What Comes Next in His Case

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 31:59


In the February 2022 episode of Discussions with DPIC, federal public defender, Amanda Bass, and Justice for Julius advocate Cece Jones-Davis (pictured) speak with Death Penalty Information Center Managing Director Anne Holsinger about the questionable conviction and near execution of former Oklahoma death-row prisoner, Julius Jones. They discuss how incompetent representation and prosecutorial misconduct sent Jones to death row in Oklahoma County, how advocacy on his innocence and about racial bias in his case led to the commutation of his death sentence four hours before it was to be carried out, and what comes next in the continuing efforts to set Jones free.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Contra Costa County, California District Attorney Diana Becton on Fair and Just Legal Reform and Ending the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 26:08


In the January 2022 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Contra Costa County, California District Attorney Diana Becton, speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about the rise in reform prosecutors across the country, the inherent flaws in capital punishment that leads her to work alongside other reform prosecutors to end the death penalty, and her efforts as district attorney to bring fairness and equity to the criminal legal system. Becton is the first woman and first African American to serve as District Attorney in Contra Costa. Prior to becoming District Attorney in 2017, she served for twenty-two years as a judge in the county, where she was elected as the Contra County court's Presiding Judge. She discusses with Dunham how her lived experiences shape how she sees her role as a District Attorney, the pushback against reform prosecutors who are women of color by those interested in maintaining the status quo, and the larger national movement to change America's approach to criminal justice.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Republican State Representative Jean Schmidt on Her Efforts to Abolish the Death Penalty in Ohio

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 33:11


In the December 2021 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Deputy Director Ngozi Ndulue interviews State Representative Jean Schmidt about her work as the primary sponsor of a bill in the Ohio House of Representatives that would abolish capital punishment in the state. A long-time Republican elected official, Rep. Schmidt also served in the U.S. House of Representatives for ten years. She avidly supported the death penalty early in her career but now is an advocate of criminal justice reform. Ndulue and Schmidt discuss the Republican party's and Schmidt's own evolving views on capital punishment, its myriad economic and emotional costs, mistakes in the criminal legal system, and public safety. According to Schmidt, “the death penalty is creating more victims than the crime itself.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Daniel Chen of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty Discusses Freedom of Religion in the Execution Chamber

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2021 29:17


In the November 2021 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Daniel Chen, counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, speaks with DPIC Executive Director Robert Dunham about the Supreme Court case Ramirez v. Collier and death-row prisoners' rights to religious freedom. John Ramirez has challenged Texas' restrictions on audible prayer and physical touch by his spiritual advisor during his execution. Allowing such pastoral comfort in the execution chamber, Chen says, is about “fundamental human dignity.” Chen describes the Becket Fund's involvement in Ramirez and other cases involving the free exercise of religion in the execution chamber, and traces the history of audible prayer and clergy touch during executions. Texas' policy is out of step with historical practices, including its own pre-2019 regulations, Chen explains. Chen and Dunham conclude their discussion exploring the Becket Fund's belief that the fundamental human right to religious liberty must be protected, even “for people who might be different from us, who might have different life circumstances,” including those on death row.

Mike Busey Show
Drunk People In Costumes 22

Mike Busey Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 150:04


After a three week hiatus the boys return! We've been busy here at the castle getting ready for DPIC 22! Plus we recently worked on the new Joyner Lucas video Duck Duck Goose, We we're featured in the Tiger King 2 trailer and we are getting ready for the 10th annual Free Blow Jobs Veterans Party! Plus we recap the entire DPIC weekend See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Rethinking Public Safety, A Conversation with Executive Director of Fair and Just Prosecution, Miriam Krinsky

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2021 43:13


In the third episode of the Discussions with DPIC podcast's Rethinking Public Safety series, Miriam Krinskyspeaks with DPIC Senior Director of Research and Special Projects Ngozi Ndulue about her experiences as a former federal prosecutor and the Executive Director of Fair and Just Prosecution (FJP), a network of elected prosecutors devoted to promoting fairness, equity, compassion, and fiscal responsibility in the criminal legal system. Krinsky and Ndulue explore a range of issues during the podcast, including the injustice of the death penalty, the power of prosecutors to create change, the evolving relationship between prosecutors and law enforcement, the importance of transparency and public accountability, and myths about public safety. “In my mind,” Krinsky says, “eliminating capital punishment improves public safety.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Capital Defense Lawyer Marc Bookman Discusses His New Book and the Systemic Defects that Have Sent the Death Penalty into 'A Descending Spiral'

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 37:59


The July 2021 episode of Discussions with DPIC features a conversation between DPIC Executive Director Robert Dunham and Marc Bookman, the co-founder and Executive Director of the Atlantic Center for Capital Representation (ACCR), regarding his critically acclaimed new book, A Descending Spiral: Exposing the Death Penalty in 12 Essays. Bookman and Dunham explore a wide range of systemic death-penalty problems addressed in the book, which was released in May 2021. The topics include mental illness, racial injustice, judicial and juror bias, ineffective representation, and prosecutorial misconduct.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Rethinking Public Safety: A Conversation with Former Nevada Prison Doctor, Dr. Karen Gedney

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 44:32


In the second episode of DPIC's Rethinking Public Safety series, DPIC Managing Director Anne Holsinger interviews Dr. Karen Gedney about her 30-year career as a doctor in the Nevada prison system. Dr. Gedney speaks about how prison conditions affect the physical and mental health of prisoners, how prison bureaucracy determines the quality of care that prisoners receive, and how executions take a toll on prison staff. She tells the story of her refusal to write a prescription for execution drugs in 1989, believing that doing so violated her duty to provide medical care to prisoners. Today, Dr. Gedney is an advocate for the abolition of the death penalty, and she explains how her career influenced her views on capital punishment.Content warning: This episode includes a brief mention of sexual assault.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Rethinking Public Safety: A Conversation with Former Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 26:04


The April 2021 episode of Discussions with DPIC features the first episode of DPIC’s new podcast series, Rethinking Public Safety. These episodes will feature interviews with public safety officials, discussing the evolution of their views on capital punishment and how their experiences in various public safety fields influenced their thinking. The first episode is a conversation between former Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro and DPIC Senior Director of Research and Special Projects Ngozi Ndulue. Petro describes how learning about wrongful convictions and the high cost of the death penalty changed his views on capital punishment. As a state legislator, he supported a bill to reinstate Ohio’s death penalty after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the state’s previous capital punishment statute. Later, as Ohio Attorney General, he supervised 19 executions in the state. Since then, his views have changed and he now supports repealing the state’s death penalty.

The Rolled Standard
#28: Knocking on Death's Door Part 8 (Monster of the Week)

The Rolled Standard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2021 66:23


With our favorite boys finally meeting up with their "nude" counterparts, the planning begins in earnest. Can NOODS and the DPIC actually put there heads together long enough to save the world? I guess we'll just have to wait and see. Jon give a mighty hug, Steve gets put in a box, James DOES fire a shot off, and Huey charges in, in this, our penultimate episode of Monster of the Week! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/therolledstandard/support

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Ethical-Design Advocate Raphael Sperry on Why the American Institute of Architects Banned Members From Designing Death Chambers

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2021 26:26


In the March 31, 2021 podcast episode of Discussions with DPIC, managing director of DPIC, Anne Holsinger, and Raphael Sperry, president of Architects/Designers/Planners for Social Responsibility (ADPSR), discuss the American Institute of Architects’ (AIA) new ethics policy prohibiting members from designing execution chambers and death-row solitary confinement cells. “Architects have been complicit in human rights abuse by designing execution chambers in the United States and spaces for solitary confinement,” Sperry explains. “We need to take responsibility and taking responsibility means stopping doing these bad things.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Carine Williams of the Innocence Project Discusses Death Penalty, Innocence, and ‘the Function of Freedom’

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2021 39:10


In the March 2021 edition of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Senior Director of Research and Special Projects Ngozi Ndulue is joined by Carine Williams — the Chief Program Strategy Officer at the Innocence Project — for a conversation about innocence, the death penalty, and “the function of freedom.” Reflecting on the gross miscarriage of justice exhibited in wrongful convictions and exonerations, Williams stresses two critical themes: death is irrevocable and ending the death penalty is simply not enough.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Anesthesiologist Dr. Joel Zivot on What Prisoner Autopsies Tell Us About Lethal Injection

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 40:18


In the December 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, anesthesiologist Dr. Joel Zivot from Emory University Hospital speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about his discoveries from the autopsies of more than 200 executed prisoners that shattered the myth that death by lethal injection was a humane and peaceful process. Dr. Zivot also lectures and writes on issues related to end of life care and physician-assisted death, and he Dunham also discuss ethical issues involving physician participation in executions.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Gretchen Engel on the Racist Roots Report from the Center for Death Penalty Litigation

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2020 48:14


In the November 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Gretchen Engel (pictured), Executive Director of North Carolina’s Center for Death Penalty Litigation (CDPL), joins Ngozi Ndulue, Senior Director of Research and Special Projects at DPIC, for a discussion of their organizations’ recent reports on race and the death penalty. This fall, DPIC released Enduring Injustice: The Persistence of Racial Discrimination in the U.S. Death Penalty. Less than a month later, CDPL released its own report, Racist Roots: Origins of North Carolina’s Death Penalty. Though the styles of the two reports are very different, both address the historical ties between the death penalty and white supremacy, slavery, lynchings, and Jim Crow.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Former Illinois Governor George Ryan on Commuting Death Row and His Journey from Death-Penalty Supporter to Abolitionist

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 24:33


In the October 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, former Illinois Governor George Ryan speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about the events that persuaded him to commute the death sentences of all 167 death-row prisoners in Illinois in 2003. Ryan and Dunham delve into the Governor’s journey from death-penalty supporter as an Illinois state legislator to death-penalty opponent as Illinois governor, and discuss his new book, co-authored with Pulitzer-prize winning journalist Maurice Possley, Until I Could Be Sure: How I Stopped the Death Penalty in Illinois.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
ACLU Prison Project Director David Fathi Discusses Death-Row Conditions and COVID-19 in U.S. Prisons

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 17:48


In the latest episode of Discussions With DPIC, David Fathi, the director of the ACLU’s National Prison Project, speaks with DPIC’s Managing Director Anne Holsinger about death-row conditions across the country. Fathi speaks about the “shattering” effects of long-term death-row solitary confinement, the movement away from automatic solitary confinement for death row prisoners, and the impact of COVID-19 in congregate-living circumstances, such as death-row.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Henderson Hill and the North Carolina Racial Justice Act

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 42:16


In the June 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Henderson Hill (pictured), Senior Counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union Capital Punishment Project, speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act. Hill, who has spent decades as a public defender, capital defense attorney, and civil rights advocate, is currently representing North Carolina death-row prisoners in the Racial Justice Act litigation challenging their death sentences. Hill and Dunham discuss the recent North Carolina Supreme Court rulings in two Racial Justice Act cases that have the potential to change the entire landscape of North Carolina’s death penalty. Hill describes North Carolina’s history of blatant race discrimination in capital cases, how the same types of racial bias that have been found in the North Carolina cases are present in death penalty cases across the country, and the broader meaning the Racial Justice Act cases have at this transformative moment in America’s response to racial injustice.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Capital Defense Lawyer Kelley Henry on Death Penalty Litigation During a Pandemic

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2020 38:55


In the May 2020 edition of Discussions with DPIC, Executive Director Robert Dunham speaks with Kelley Henry, a Supervisory Assistant Federal Public Defender in Nashville, Tennessee who has represented Tennessee death-row prisoners for more than twenty years. They discuss the effects of the coronavirus pandemic on capital litigation, especially the final investigations and clemency efforts that take place in the months leading up to an execution. Henry describes the critical, in-person work that must take place to investigate innocence claims, determine a prisoner’s competency to be executed, and tell a prisoner’s story in a clemency petition, and why it is impossible to adequately perform that work while complying with efforts to protect the public health. She also discusses the danger of performing executions during the pandemic, and the reasons why states should put executions on hold to ensure the health of prisoners, witnesses, and corrections staff.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Denver District Attorney Beth McCann on Colorado’s Death-Penalty Repeal

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 38:43


In the April 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Denver District Attorney Beth McCann (pictured) speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about Colorado’s repeal of capital punishment. McCann was elected DA in 2016, as part of a nationwide wave of reform-oriented prosecutors. Both as prosecutor and in her eight years in the Colorado legislature, McCann has advocated for broad criminal justice reforms, including the abolition of the death penalty. In her discussion with Dunham, she describes the major societal shift away from capital punishment, Colorado’s efforts at abolition, and the role of prosecutors in shaping change.Read the transcript here.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Hannah Cox on Conservative Opposition to the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 27:27


In the March 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Hannah Cox (pictured), National Manager of Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty (CCATDP) speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about the continuing movement by social and political conservatives away from capital punishment, how the death penalty is out of step with core conservative values, and the key role that conservative legislators are playing in abolition efforts across the U.S.Read CCATDP's 2017 report, The Right Way, describing the growth in conservative sponsorship of death-penalty repeal legislation.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
He May Be Innocent and Intellectually Disabled, But Rocky Myers Faces Execution in Alabama

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2020 33:48


In the February 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, members of Myers’ legal team tell the story of how racial bias, poor representation, and judicial override led to the possible wrongful conviction of an intellectually disabled man. Assistant Federal Defender Kacey Keeton and Investigator Sara Romano speak with DPIC Managing Director Anne Holsinger and describe the shoddy evidence used to convict Myers, his abandonment by his original appellate attorney, and the legal hurdles that have blocked his claims of innocence and intellectual disability from being heard in court.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

In the December 2019 edition of the Discussions with DPIC podcast, Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham and Managing Director Anne Holsinger discuss DPIC’s 2019 Year End Report. The podcast explores the major themes presented in the year’s death-penalty news and developments, including innocence, declining use of capital punishment, and systemic problems revealed by the new death sentences and executions in 2019.

year end report dpic
Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Rep. Renny Cushing on Empowering Crime Survivors and Repealing New Hampshire's Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2019 31:58


In the latest episode of Discussions with DPIC, New Hampshire State Representative Renny Cushing talks with DPIC Executive Director Robert Dunham about the life-altering experience of having a close family member murdered and his journey from being a murder-family survivor to spearheading New Hampshire’s recent repeal of the death penalty. Cushing—whose father and brother-in-law were killed in separate incidents—discusses his ongoing efforts to empower crime survivors and his role working to bring together a broad coalition of people from across the political spectrum and with a variety of life experiences to find common ground in their opposition to capital punishment.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Interview with Trial By Fire Director Edward Zwick

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2019 14:54


Emmy- and Oscar-winner Edward Zwick speaks about his latest film, Trial By Fire, in the latest episode of Discussions with DPIC. Zwick produced and directed Trial By Fire, which tells the story of Cameron Todd Willingham, who was convicted and sentence to death in 1992 for the alleged arson homicide of his three children. Arson investigators who testified against him used flawed methods, and a jailhouse informant received undisclosed incentives from prosecutors in exchange for his testimony that Willingham had confessed to him, but Willingham was executed in 2004. Willingham’s case featured what Zwick called a “catalog” of problems: “it had the withholding of exculpatory evidence, it had junk science, it had jailhouse snitches who would testify in exchange for reduced sentences, [and] it had a piss-poor public defender.” In an interview with DPIC’s Anne Holsinger, Zwick describes why he decided to tell Willingham’s story, what he learned from the experience, and how he hopes the film will affect audiences. Trial By Fire opens on May 17, 2019.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
The Effect of Race on Sentencing Decisions in Washington

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2019 20:59


In the latest episode of Discussions with DPIC, Dr. Katherine Beckett (pictured, left) and Dr. Heather Evans (pictured, right), authors of “The Role of Race in Washington State Capital Sentencing: 1981-2014,” discuss their research and its impact on the Washington Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the state’s death penalty. Their study was heavily cited by the court in State v. Gregory, the October 2018 decision that found Washington’s death penalty violated the state constitution because it was “imposed in an arbitrary and racially biased manner.” The researchers described the factors they examined at various stages of capital sentencing, the major results of their study, and the role of social science research in policymaking.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Robin Konrad, former DPIC Director of Research and Special Projects, joins Executive Director Robert Dunham and current Director of Research and Special Projects Ngozi Ndulue to discuss DPIC's November 2018 report, Behind the Curtain: Secrecy and the Death Penalty in the United States. Konrad, the lead author of the report, gives an overview of the recent expansion of secrecy in the use of the death penalty. She explains the ubiquity of secrecy policies, saying "everybody has some type of secrecy provision" related to the sources of execution drugs or the way executions are carried out. The episode also includes a discussion of the consequences of secrecy, including the ways that it undermines democratic principles of open government and hides problematic state practices. "When we're looking at the government...for the people, by the people, that the people should know what is going on and states shouldn't be hiding information about the most serious punishment that they carry out against their citizens," Konrad says. "I don't see how in any principled system of justice, you can sustain a system that basically is grounded in secrecy, grounded in hiding what's going on from the public. You have to be open, you have to be honest, you have to be transparent, you have to be trustworthy," adds Dunham.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Members of the DPIC staff discuss key themes from the 2018 Year End Report in the latest episode of Discussions with DPIC. Robert Dunham, Ngozi Ndulue, and Anne Holsinger delve into the major death-penalty trends and news items of the year, including the "extended trend" of generational lows in death sentencing and executions, election results that indicate the decline will likely continue, and the possible impact of Pope Francis’s change to Catholic teaching on capital punishment. They explore the reasons for reduced death-penalty usage, highlighting the stories of people who were exonerated in 2018, the theme of executing people with characteristics that make them vulnerable to unfair legal proceedings, and the ongoing controversy surrounding execution methods.

catholic pope francis year end report robert dunham dpic
Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Professor Bharat Malkani Explores the Relationship Between Slavery and Slavery-Abolition Strategies and the Modern U.S. Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2018 36:42


Bharat Malkani, senior lecturer in the School of Law and Politics at Cardiff University in the United Kingdom and author of the 2018 book Slavery and the Death Penalty: A Study in Abolition, speaks with DPIC’s executive director Robert Dunham and Ngozi Ndulue, DPIC’s Director of Research and Special Projects, about the historical links between slavery, lynching, Jim Crow and the death penalty and the lessons modern opponents of capital punishment can learn from the strategies employed by slavery abolitionists. Malkani explores the parallels between the institutional approaches of conservative and moderate anti-slavery activists and the arguments of modern conservatives and contrasts them with the broad morality-based arguments of radical slavery abolitionists, who, he says “fought not just for the abolition of slavery, but for the recognition of the dignity of black people and the equal dignity of black people, alongside whites.” While both types of arguments, Malkani says, have a role to play in efforts to end the death penalty, treating the death penalty solely as a standalone social issue risks further entrenching the social values and racial inequities that more broadly afflict America’s criminal legal system today. “The issue here is not just the problems with the death penalty in practice,” Malkani says, “but the underlying values that lend support for the death penalty….. I think in the longer term, the morality-based arguments, based on a recognition of dignity, will have a greater social impact.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Professor Keelah Williams Explains Research Linking “Resource Scarcity” to Support for the Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2018 23:29


Keelah Williams, assistant professor of psychology at Hamilton College in New York, speaks with DPIC executive director Robert Dunham about her research on the death penalty and resource scarcity — a concept from evolutionary psychology that studies how people react to social conditions in an environment with limited resources. Williams and a team of researchers from Arizona State University, where she earned her Ph.D., examined the relationship between the actual and perceived scarcity of resources and support for capital punishment. She describes the team’s findings that countries with greater resource scarcity and income inequality were more likely to have a death penalty, as were U.S. states with lower per capita income and shorter life expectancy. She also discusses two experimental studies the team conducted to assess the effects of resource scarcity on individuals’ views of capital punishment. That research found that study participants who had been shown information and images of economic hardship tended to be more supportive of the death penalty than those of the same political ideology and socioeconomic status who had been given information and images about economic prosperity. She explains the results, saying, “If your resources are limited, then you have to be more choosey in how you invest them. So, in the context of punishment decisions, we think this means you become less willing to risk repeated offending, and more favorable towards punishments that eliminate the threat.”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Authors of Death-Penalty Study Discuss Tennessee’s “Death Penalty Lottery”

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2018 26:45


H.E. Miller, Jr. and Bradley MacLean, authors of a recent study on the application of Tennessee's death penalty (https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/news/study-the-death-penalty-in-tennessee-is-a-cruel-lottery), join DPIC's Anne Holsinger to discuss the findings from their article, Tennessee's Death Penalty Lottery. Miller and MacLean examined whether death sentences and executions in Tennessee are influenced by arbitrary factors like geography, race, and quality of representation. The application of Tennessee's death penalty, they find, is still as unconstitutionally arbitrary as any of the systems that were struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in Furman v. Georgia in 1972.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Professor Carol Steiker, Author of Courting Death, Offers an Inside Look at the Supreme Court and the History and Future of America’s Death Penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2018 45:09


Harvard Law Professor Carol Steiker, co-author of the highly acclaimed book, Courting Death: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment (https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/news/books-courting-death-the-supreme-court-and-capital-punishment), joins DPIC’s Robin Konrad for a provocative discussion of the past and future of America’s death penalty. Professor Steiker, who served as a clerk for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, takes us inside the walls of the court for insights on the justices’ approaches to capital-punishment jurisprudence and the impact of Justice Marshall’s legacy on the Court today. She explains the relationship between lynching and the rise of the modern death penalty in the United States, discusses the plunge in death-penalty usage since the 1990s, and offers thoughts on the future prospects for capital punishment in America.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Alfred Dewayne Brown was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in 2005 in Harris County, Texas, for the murder of a police officer. Brian Stolarz, attorney and author of the recent novel Grace and Justice on Death Row, represented Brown in his post-conviction appeals and, in 2015, won his freedom. In this podcast, Mr. Stolarz speaks with DPIC’s Robin Konrad about the legal issues in Brown’s case, discussing the culture of conviction and the prosecutorial misconduct that led to Brown’s wrongful conviction. Stolarz offers suggestions that he believes can help protect the innocent from wrongful convictions and death sentences.

FADIC Podcast
FADIC 10: - الصيدلة مهنة جميلة - حوار مع الدكتوره أمل النجار - الجزء الأول

FADIC Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2018 38:43


Amal Al-Najjar, Bsc Pharm., MS FTox. Drug & Poison Information Center Supervisor Security Force Hospital Program-Riyadh Amal AL-Najjar, a drug & poison information supervisor at Security Force Hospital Program-Riyadh. She was graduated from College of Pharmacy, King Saud University (KSU) at 1990 with a bachelor's degree of general pharmaceutical science. Immediately, joined King Abdulaziz University Hospital (KAUH) as a staff pharmacist and worked at different sections of the Pharmaceutical Care Division for one year, then promoted to King Khalid University Hospital (KKUH) and enrolled in a two-years clinical toxicology program (1995-1997) under the supervision of very selected experts in collaboration with KSU. After finishing this program, started working as independent drug & poison information pharmacist covering on-call poisoning cases all over the kingdom and gulf area. In 2003, Amal moved to SFHP and was appointed as the in-charge person of DPIC as well as she was appointed as an Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, KSU. In 2014, August, she finished Barnett's Clinical Research Assistance On-Boarding Program. In 2015, August, she got Diploma of Total Quality Management, From American University in Cairo. However, in 2016 she got her master's degree in forensic toxicology from Naïf Arab University for security Sciences. Amal is working currently as the drug information supervisor, as an Institution Review Board Member, and as Pharmacy & Therapeutic Committee Coordinator. She worked as NICU clinical pharmacist for more than 8 years. Amal acts as a clinical preceptor for trainees from different educational programs, including pharmacy internship, residents, and postgraduate master's students. In addition, involves in teaching activity for pharmacy students at KSU, Prince Nora University, and Qassim University. Interested in management of poisoning cases, education, and drug information management. Published number of scientific articles in highly recognized international journals. Presented many presentations at international events inside and outside the Kingdome of Saudi Arabia.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Racial Discrimination in Death-Penalty Jury Selection

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2018 21:12


Stephen B. Bright, the former President of the Southern Center for Human Rights, discusses the ongoing problem of racial discrimination in jury selection in death-penalty cases—an issue he has argued three times in the U.S. Supreme Court. He speaks with DPIC’s Anne Holsinger about the most recent of those cases, Foster v. Chatman, in which the Court granted Mr. Foster a new trial as a result of intentional discrimination by Columbus, Georgia prosecutors. He explains how the prosecutors' notes, a piece of evidence that is rarely available, were critical in proving that prosecutors had targeted African-American jurors because of their race, and describes newly obtained jury selection notes that show Columbus prosecutors systematically struck African-American jurors in at least seven other capital cases. Mr. Bright explains why current law provides an insufficient remedy for this problem and offers suggestions to prevent the pervasive exclusion of people of color from death-penalty juries.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Missouri Attorney Discusses Winning Life Sentence in Federal Prison-Killing Case

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2018 26:44


Lawyer Thomas Carver joins Robin Konrad, DPIC’s Director of Research and Special Projects, to discuss the case of his client, Ulysses Jones, a terminally ill federal prisoner who was charged with capital murder in Springfield, Missouri. Carver, who has been practicing law in Missouri for over forty years, explains what happened in his client’s case, how he and his team avoided a death sentence for their client, and what this case says about broader death-penalty issues in Missouri and the federal court system.

Monsters in the Morning
WHEN YOU NEIGHBOR GETS AT YOU SO YOU TAKE IT TO COOTER CITY

Monsters in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2017 187:43


11.07.2017 Savannah's Ted Talk. Ricardo The Cuban Gator gets 2 new girlfriends. Neighbors beefin. RRR - 1991 Magic. Has the internet been good or bad for humans. Cheesecake and Smoking. Dating and The Dpic. Longwood Politics. Lake Mary Principal calls the show Mickey Reynolds. News with Debra Roberts. To The Top with Carlos. Monster Sports. Brett James Brewmaster? Famous items of clothing.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
The Decline of the Death Penalty over the Past 25 Years, with Brandon Garrett

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2017 25:33


Robin Konrad, DPIC’s Director of Research and Special Projects, interviews University of Virginia law professor Brandon Garrett about his new book End of Its Rope: How Killing the Death Penalty Can Revive Criminal Justice. Professor Garrett researched and analyzed all the death sentences imposed in the U.S. during the past 25 years to determine what factors have led to the precipitous decline in the number of people who are being sentenced to death. In this podcast, Professor Garrett discusses these factors, which include a decrease in murder rates, the creation of state-wide public defender offices, and jurors who are increasingly unwilling to return death sentences.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Discussions With DPIC — Does Capital Punishment Deter Murder? Exploring murder rates, killings of police officers, and the death penalty

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 21:39


Death penalty proponents have long asserted that capital punishment advances public safety by deterring murders, and this, they say, is especially true when it comes to protecting police officers. The Death Penalty Information Center recently conducted an analysis of murder data from 1987-2015 to determine whether the numbers support that claim. DPIC Fellow Seth Rose speaks with Executive Director Robert Dunham about the DPIC study and what it tells us about the relationship between murder rates, killings of police officers, and the death penalty.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
After more than a three-year hiatus, Ohio plans to carry out the first of 27 scheduled executions

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2017 30:21


Ohio has not carried out an execution since the botched execution of Dennis McGuire in January 2014, but is scheduled to resume executions on July 26, 2017. In the past several years, the State has revised its lethal-injection protocol and has created a task force that studied Ohio’s death-penalty system. DPIC’s Executive Director Robert Dunham talks with Michael Benza, Senior Instructor in Law at Case Western Reserve University and veteran capital defense attorney, about the results of the task force’s study, the concerns about going forward with executions, and the status of the lethal-injection litigation.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

In April 2017, Arkansas scheduled a record eight executions in eleven days. Four ultimately were stayed, and four were carried out. DPIC staff members Robin Konrad and Anne Holsinger interview Scott Braden and Julie Vandiver, two of the lawyers who represented the condemned Arkansas prisoners. Scott and Julie discuss the legal issues in the cases, describe the controversial executions, and explain what comes next for the prisoners whose executions were stayed. CONTENT NOTE: This episode contains detailed descriptions of executions, which some listeners may find disturbing.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Arkansas' plan to execute seven prisoners over an 11-day period

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2017 20:01


DPIC staff members Robert Dunham, Robin Konrad, and Anne Holsinger explain Arkansas' plan to execute seven prisoners over an 11-day period beginning April 17. They discuss the state's reasons for the condensed execution schedule, current litigation related to lethal injection drugs, and the risks of this unprecedented rate of executions. Additional background information on the Arkansas' executions is available here.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Discussions With DPIC — Women and the Death Penalty, with Professor Mary Atwell

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2017 41:06


In observance of Women's History Month, DPIC staff members Anne Holsinger and Robin Konrad interview Mary Atwell, Ph.D., one of the nation’s foremost experts on women on death row. Dr. Atwell is Professor Emerita of Criminal Justice at Radford University and author of three books on capital punishment, most recently Wretched Sisters: Examining Gender and Capital Punishment. The podcast discusses Dr. Atwell's research and highlights the themes and patterns present in capital murder cases in which women were the defendants.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Law professor and author John Bessler

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2016 38:25


Law professor and author John Bessler joins DPIC executive director Robert Dunham to discuss "Against the Death Penalty," a book version of Justice Stephen Breyer's historic dissent in *Glossip v. Gross* in which he questions the constitutionality of the death penalty. Professor Bessler edited the book and wrote an extensive introduction explaining the significance of the opinion. In a wide-ranging conversation, Bessler and Dunham discuss the dissent itself, the national context of the decision, and the possible effects of an 8-member Supreme Court.

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series
Jeffrey Wood and the Texas Law of Parties

Death Penalty Information Center On the Issues Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2016 10:34


Today, DPIC launches a new podcast series, "Discussions With DPIC," which will feature monthly, unscripted conversations with death penalty experts on a wide variety of topics. The inaugural episode features a conversation between Texas Defender Services staff attorney Kate Black and DPIC host Anne Holsinger, who discuss the case of Jeffrey Wood and Texas' unusual legal doctrine known as the "law of parties." Wood's case garnered national media attention because he was sentenced to death despite having neither killed anyone nor even intended that a killing take place. His execution, which had been scheduled for August 24, was stayed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to permit him to litigate a challenge to the prosecution's use of scientifically invalid predictions of future dangerousness by a psychiatrist who had been expelled from state and national psychiatric associations for similarly improper testimony in the past. In the podcast, Black explains the law of parties and its application in Wood's case, and discusses how the national dialogue that developed around Wood's case may affect the death penalty in the future.

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Doucheday: A Nurse Takes A Peek & A Pic!

Best of Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2016 3:49


A Nurse takes a picture of a patient that he probably would have texted her if she'd asked, man tries to use his food stamps for luxury goods, and people eat soap! #foodstamps #nurse #dpic #tenting #smock #hospital #selfie #BMW #soap #mouth #pottymouth