Today Christopher Calmer, the murderer of Monroe County, Georgia Deputies Michael Norris and Jeff Wilson, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. This was after he was found guilty, of course, but it was in declination of imposing the death penalty. On today’s joint episode of the Dorer Daily and Talking Law …
Continue reading How the Death Penalty Works in Georgia | Dorer Daily, Talking Lawdeath penalty
On this episode of Dorer Daily, I talk about how on May 23, 1934, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, known colloquially as “Bonnie and Clyde” shuffled off this mortal coil in a hail of gunfire on a deserted road in rural Louisiana. They were glorified in the media as a vicious criminal duo, were responsible for …
Continue reading Bonnie and Clyde – The Death Penalty then and NowWelcome back to the David Dorer Show. You can listen to the show via Spreaker by playing the media player below.This week’s episode is the “Tale of Two Trials” Edition. My panelists and I will discuss the ongoing trial of James Holmes for the Aurora Colorado Theater Shooting, and the recent sentence to death for the Boston Marathon Bomber Dzhokhar …
Continue reading David Dorer Show – A Tale of Two TrialsWelcome back to the David Dorer Show! We’re sponsoring Bragg Jam again this year. RSVP to our stage here. This week is the “Feckless Despot and Other Oxymorons” Edition where we will talk about proposed solutions for dealing with the escalating crisis between the Ukraine/Russia given the shooting down of Malaysian Airlines of Flight 17, how all …
Continue reading David Dorer Show – the “Feckless Despot and other Oxymorons” EditionA District Federal Court Judge in California ruled today that California’s death penalty is unconstitutional, stating that it is “arbitrary and plagued with delay.” The 29-page decision, which is linked in its entirety below, outlines how the death penalty is used in California. Essentially, people are sentenced to death for heinous crimes, and then …
Continue reading California Death Penalty is Unconstitutional, Federal Court Says