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  2. Capital punishment in Maryland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Maryland

    Capital punishment was abolished via the legislative process on May 2, 2013, in the U.S. state of Maryland. [1] The Metropolitan Transition Center still houses Maryland's now defunct execution chamber. The death penalty had been in use in the state or, more precisely, its predecessor colony since June 20, 1638, when two men were hanged for ...

  3. Dustin Higgs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dustin_Higgs

    Dustin Higgs. Dustin John Higgs (March 10, 1972 – January 16, 2021) was an American man who was executed by the United States federal government, having been convicted and sentenced to death for the January 1996 murders of three women in Maryland. [1] Tamika Black, Tanji Jackson, and Mishann Chinn were all shot and killed near the Patuxent ...

  4. List of people executed in Maryland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_executed_in...

    1994–2005: 5 executions. Between the United States Supreme Court's Gregg v. Georgia decision upholding the use of the death penalty in the United States in 1976, and Maryland's abolition of the death penalty in 2013, a total of five people convicted of murder have been executed by the state of Maryland. All were executed by lethal injection . No.

  5. Report: Death penalty cases show history of racial disparity

    www.aol.com/news/2020-09-15-report-death-penalty...

    The report is a history lesson in how lynchings and executions have been used in America and how discrimination bleeds into the criminal justice system. Report: Death penalty cases show history of ...

  6. Kirk Bloodsworth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirk_Bloodsworth

    Kirk Bloodsworth. Kirk Noble Bloodsworth (born October 31, 1960) is a former Maryland waterman and the first American sentenced to death to be exonerated post-conviction by DNA testing. [1] [2] He had been wrongfully convicted in 1985 of the 1984 rape and first-degree murder of a nine-year-old girl in Rosedale, Maryland.

  7. D.C. sniper attacks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D.C._sniper_attacks

    The D.C. sniper attacks (also known as the Beltway sniper attacks) were a series of coordinated shootings that occurred during three weeks in October 2002 throughout the Washington metropolitan area, consisting of the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia, and preliminary shootings, that consisted of murders and robberies in several states, and lasted for six months starting in February ...

  8. Why is the death penalty still used? Let's look at the pros ...

    www.aol.com/why-death-penalty-still-used...

    In Maryland, for example, between 1978 and 2008, taxpayers paid more than $37 million per prisoner executed. With most states spending half of their budgets on education and health care alone, the ...

  9. Lee Boyd Malvo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Boyd_Malvo

    Lee Boyd Malvo (born February 18, 1985), also known as John Lee Malvo, is a Jamaican convicted mass murderer who, along with John Allen Muhammad, committed a series of murders dubbed the D.C. sniper attacks over a three-week period in October 2002. Malvo was aged 17 during the span of the shootings. He is serving multiple life sentences at Red ...