Capital punishment practice in recent years has diverged from emphasis on guilt-innocence to dedicate virtually all resources to punishment issues. This Article attempts to avoid this myopic approach by taking stock of the current state of substantive capital law at its very foundation. After a brief history of modern death penalty jurisprudence and a restatement of the current rendition of Texas’s capital murder statute, this Article will focus first on two troubling themes in capital representation. First, how mens rea issues can address the lack of “diminished capacity” in Texas capital punishment law while suggesting a seldom used or understood legal strategy. A second reoccurring problem in the application of the Texas capital statutes...
Capital punishment causes the death of someone because that person killed someone else, yet only mur...
Symposium: Toward A Model Death Penalty Code: The Massachusetts Governor\u27s Council Report
Authored by the Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, this powerful articl...
Capital punishment practice in recent years has diverged from emphasis on guilt-innocence to dedicat...
Professor Metze dissects the American Bar Association report, September 2013, entitled Evaluating Fa...
The ongoing debate about capital punishment in the United States juggles several contentious questio...
In Statewide Capital Punishment: The Case for Eliminating Counties’ Role in the Death Penalty, Profe...
While scholars seem united on the sentiment that abolition is the ultimate resting place for capital...
The State of Texas is known as the capital of capital punishment.\u27 But is that reputation deserve...
Capital punishment has always remained a controversial topic in society, and lately has proved to be...
Since Gregg v. Georgia, the Supreme Court has developed what could be described as a subparadigm for...
During the last decade, judges, politicians, scholars, and the general public have become troubled a...
The constitutional law of capital sentencing currently is torn between its past and its future, its ...
The punishment of death is supposed to be reserved for those defendants who commit the most grievous...
In recent Eight Amendment decisions applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause to substantive ...
Capital punishment causes the death of someone because that person killed someone else, yet only mur...
Symposium: Toward A Model Death Penalty Code: The Massachusetts Governor\u27s Council Report
Authored by the Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, this powerful articl...
Capital punishment practice in recent years has diverged from emphasis on guilt-innocence to dedicat...
Professor Metze dissects the American Bar Association report, September 2013, entitled Evaluating Fa...
The ongoing debate about capital punishment in the United States juggles several contentious questio...
In Statewide Capital Punishment: The Case for Eliminating Counties’ Role in the Death Penalty, Profe...
While scholars seem united on the sentiment that abolition is the ultimate resting place for capital...
The State of Texas is known as the capital of capital punishment.\u27 But is that reputation deserve...
Capital punishment has always remained a controversial topic in society, and lately has proved to be...
Since Gregg v. Georgia, the Supreme Court has developed what could be described as a subparadigm for...
During the last decade, judges, politicians, scholars, and the general public have become troubled a...
The constitutional law of capital sentencing currently is torn between its past and its future, its ...
The punishment of death is supposed to be reserved for those defendants who commit the most grievous...
In recent Eight Amendment decisions applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause to substantive ...
Capital punishment causes the death of someone because that person killed someone else, yet only mur...
Symposium: Toward A Model Death Penalty Code: The Massachusetts Governor\u27s Council Report
Authored by the Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, this powerful articl...