What was the issue in the case of Baze and Bowling v. Rees?
Does the 4 drug cocktail for the Kentucky lethal injection protocol violate the 8th amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishment?
What is the most referenced statistic for the amount of mistakes that lead to truly innocent people being placed on death rows awaiting (or actually facing) executions?
What is 5% (for example, 20 of the 349 DNA exonerations from the Innocence Project were off of Death Rows = ~5%)
In Kansas v. Marsh, the court was determining if a sentence of death was constitutionally appropriate, given aggravating and mitigating circumstances that were determined to be 'in equipoise'. What does that mean, and what did the court ultimately decide?
equipoise means equivalent or equal to each other. So, if the jury finds the aggs and mits to be equal in weight, is it ok for their determination to be a death sentence even though the aggs didn't OUTWEIGH the mits? The court decided that it is ok, the DP can be applied when both sides are considered to be equal.
True or False: Borchard's first study examining wrongful convictions focused solely on people who were released from death rows.
What is false - this was the first work on the possibility of miscarriages of justice, and focused on the term broadly. It did discover a few cases that were removed from death rows, but that was not the intent nor focus of the research.
Which method of execution has the majority (70%) of the executions completed in the US utilized?
What are our 3 different definitions of innocence that can be used (and which is most common)?
What is 1) cases where the government officially admits error, 2) cases that have been officially exonerated because of evidence that the defendant was not involved (Actually innocent - most common), or 3) cases that were dismissed or found not guilty at retrial (legally/factually innocent).
Explain the difference between Harmless and Prejudicial errors, as determined by the appeals court.
What is both situations involve admitted mistakes or errors that occurred during the original trial, but a harmless error is determined by the appeals court to NOT have influenced the ultimate outcome/decision in the trial (for example, the confession was elicited under duress and should not have been allowed into court, but the jurors would have convicted the guy anyways b/c of other evidence). A prejudicial error means the mistake likely did (according to the appeals court guess) impact the trial outcome and thus justifies redoing the trial or sentencing phase again.
How might the method of hanging serve 2 purposes in early (public) executions?
What is 1) the punishment of the actual offender and 2) a warning of what's to come for repeat offenders who had to sit in the gallows with the noose around their neck as part of the punishment for their 2nd offense
What was the name of the case brief discussed multiple times in class which demonstrated the high level of proof needed to consider claims of innocence made on appeal (after being convicted of the crime)?
What is Herrera v. Collins
What are the 3 reasons discussed in class that might explain the brutalizing effect?
What is 1) the suicide-murder syndrome, 2) the executioner syndrome, and 3) notoriety.