faces a second-degree murder charge.
“When federal, state, local or tribal officials wilfully use excessive force that violates the US Constitution or federal law, we have authority to prosecute them,” Cadogan stressed, pointing to criminal charges brought against more than 400 law enforcement officials over the past six years.
During Monday’s review, many of the 117 country representatives who took the floor also criticised the continued use of the death penalty in the United States.
Sweden’s representative Anna Jakenberg Brinck was among many to demand a “national moratorium on the death penalty aiming at complete abolition”.
Others, including France, also called for “full transparency” in the types of drugs being used to carry out executions, following several recent botched executions.
The United States has seen its execution numbers drop in recent years to 35 in 2014, but still ranks fifth in the world after China, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iraq, according to Amnesty International.
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