FROM THE ARCHIVE
Supreme Court limits death penalty
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TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2002 The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that the death penalty can only be imposed by juries and not judges. In a 7-2 decision, the Court said state laws which bypassed the jury violated the U.S. Constitution. The ruling affects Arizona and at least four states where hundreds of inmates sit on death row. The majority opinion was written by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Three others filed concurring decisions. Justice Sandra O'Connor authored the dissent and was joined by Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Get the Story:
Court: Judges Can't Impose Death Penalty (The Washington Post 6/25)
High court ruling leaves state sentences in doubt (The Lincoln Journal Star 6/25)
Does Ruling Signal Shift In Thinking? (The Washington Post 6/25)
Justices Say Death Penalty Is Up to Juries, Not Judges (The New York Times 6/25)
Fewer Death Sentences Likely if Juries Make Ultimate Decision, Experts Say (The New York Times 6/25)
Username: indianz.com, Password: indianz.com Get the Case Ring v. Arizona, No. 01-488:
Syllabus | Opinion | Concurrence [Scalia] | Concurrence [Kennedy] | Concurrence [Breyer] | Dissent [O'Connor] Related Stories:
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Report: More Indians on state death row (12/12)
N.M. executes first in 41 years (11/7)
N.M. judge rejects execution appeal (11/2)
The Death Penalty: Race may matter (9/27)
Supreme Court to consider execution (9/26)
Executions down nationwide (9/6)
Supreme Court urged to keep execution case (8/22)
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Supreme Court won't stop execution (8/14)
Justice Thomas wanted off death penalty case (8/13)
State wants death penalty case dismissed (8/8)
Supreme Court halts execution (6/22)
Ashcroft left out death penalty facts (6/19)
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DOJ to study racial bias in death penalty (6/14)
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Supreme Court overturns execution (6/5)
Group seeks moratorium on executions (6/4)
Supreme Court halts execution (4/17)
Supremes to take on execution case (3/27)
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You are enjoying stories from the Indianz.Com Archive, a collection dating back to 2000. Some outgoing links may no longer work due to age.
All stories are available for publishing via Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)