... chamber in California's San Quentin Prison. Death-row inmates are increasingly foregoing the appeal process to hasten the ... to be executed? Criminal defense lawyers, psychiatrists and death-row inmates themselves offer a variety of reasons. Some volunteers are ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 23:18 - 0 comments
... serial killer son, Ted Bundy , before he made a series of death-row confessions, has died. She was 88. She died last month in her ...
admin - 01/09/2013 - 20:41 - 0 comments
... at different venues. Jeff told me that supporters of death-row inmate Kevin Cooper – whom I had not heard of -- would be attending ... allowed states to resume executions, one-hundred-thirty-six death-row inmates have been exonerated. In the majority of those cases, the ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 21:55 - 1 comment
... "Free Mumia" movement into the cause celebre of all 3,600 death-row cases in the United States. The Philadelphia Fraternal Order of ...
admin - 01/06/2016 - 12:44 - 0 comments
... a needle. The cases in Oklahoma and Arizona where two death-row inmates were each painfully suspended between life and death for many ...
Eponymous Rox - 03/11/2015 - 14:40 - 0 comments
... in Trenton State Prison in 1971, becoming the most famous death-row prisoner of his time. Fourteen and-a-half years earlier, Smith -- at ... The Death House At that time, New Jersey's death-row inmates were kept in a separate building in the yard of Trenton State ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 22:53 - 1 comment
... News Mumia Abu-Jamal—the most famous death-row inmate in the United States—was sentenced to death in 1982 for ...
admin - 03/21/2010 - 13:07 - 0 comments
... Coincidentally that’s the same community where infamous death-row murderer Scott Peterson lived in 2002 when the notorious ...
Eponymous Rox - 07/25/2015 - 07:36
... for an enlightened assessment of the most controversial death-row case in recent memory will not find it here. The book is a polemic ...
admin - 10/17/2012 - 12:48 - 0 comments
... still intact, the 49-year-old Lucas was finally sent to his death-row digs in Huntsville. Mattox's report noted that, with the ...
admin - 10/13/2012 - 12:24 - 0 comments
On the night of November 29, 1988, near the impoverished Marlborough neighborhood in south Kansas City, an explosion at a construction site killed six of the city’s firefighters. It was a clear case of arson, and five people from Marlborough were duly convicted of the crime. But for veteran crime writer and crusading editor J. Patrick O’Connor, the facts—or a lack of them—didn’t add up. Justice on Fire is OConnor’s detailed account of the terrible explosion that led to the firefighters’ deaths and the terrible injustice that followed. Also available from Amazon
With the purpose of writing about true crime in an authoritative, fact-based manner, veteran journalists J. J. Maloney and J. Patrick O’Connor launched Crime Magazine in November of 1998. Their goal was to cover all aspects of true crime: Read More
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