
Pennsylvania’s Broken Death Penalty
A state commission appointed to study Pennsylvania’s death penalty system released its report late last month, almost five years after its original deadline. The 280-page

A state commission appointed to study Pennsylvania’s death penalty system released its report late last month, almost five years after its original deadline. The 280-page
Two-and-a-half years ago, Kevin Cooper’s lawyer, Norman Hile, submitted to Governor Jerry Brown a 235-page clemency petition, pleading for advanced DNA testing of evidence from

In terms of the criminal justice system, it can be argued that the most important locally elected official is the district attorney. So, in last

Next Tuesday, 34-year-old Christopher Young is scheduled to be executed in Texas for the 2004 murder of a 55-year-old convenience store owner. Exactly three months
Last Friday, Japan executed doomsday cult leader Shoko Asahara and his six followers, who had been sentenced to death for the sarin gas attack on
Scott Dozier In Alabama, AL.com reports that eight death row prisoners are dropping their lawsuit challenging the state’s three-drug lethal injection method because they have decided
In a New York Times op-ed, “What Happens When Prosecutors Break the Law?” defense attorney Nina Morrison focuses on the case of Suffolk County, New

An American pharmaceutical company filed a lawsuit blocking Nevada’s scheduled execution of Scott Dozier on Wednesday. New Jersey-based Alvogen said the state had “illegitimately acquired”

The son of the man whose life Christopher Young took 14 years ago has released a powerful video asking the State of Texas not to

Death Penalty Focus is mourning the loss of our Board Member, Father Chris Ponnet, who died on October 7 in Los Angeles. He was 68. Ordained a priest in 1983, Father Chris was the pastor at the St. Camillus Center for Spiritual Care in Los Angeles for the last 30 years. He also served as the director of the Department of Spiritual Care at the Los Angeles County + USC

The State of Florida killed 63-year-old David Pittman today, its 12th execution this year, the highest number since the state reinstated the death penalty in 1976, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Gregg v. Georgia that the death penalty was constitutional, the Death Penalty Information Center reported. And Florida isn’t done yet. Gov. Ron DeSantis has signed two more death warrants for this year. Victor Tony Jones is scheduled to

The State of Tennessee executed Byron Black yesterday, a 69-year-old man who had a documented intellectual disability, end-stage kidney disease, congestive heart failure, and cardiomyopathy that required a pacemaker. His lawyer, public defender Kelley Henry, had tried to get a court order to, at a minimum, force the Tennessee Department of Corrections to deactivate his pacemaker before they killed him to prevent the device from being triggered when they injected

Today, Texas District Court Judge Austin Reeve Jackson granted Attorney General Ken Paxton’s request to schedule Robert Roberson’s execution for October 16, even though the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is currently considering new evidence further proving his innocence. Roberson, who has Autism Spectrum Disorder, was granted custody of his two-year-old daughter, Nikki, who was chronically ill, in November 2001. In 2002, Nikki was sick with a high fever and

The State of Florida killed 54-year-old Anthony Wainwright on Tuesday, the state’s sixth execution this year. State killing is never justified, and each one is a stain on this country’s soul, but Wainwright’s is particularly repugnant because the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit denied a stay of execution for him in part because of the actions of his lead lawyer. As Criminal Law Specialist and DPF Board

Stephen Stanko, scheduled to be killed by the State of South Carolina later this month, is opting for lethal injection over the firing squad because he is “troubled by what appeared to be a lingering death of the last person in the state who was killed by firing squad,” his lawyers said in court filings, the Washington Post reported. Stanko is set to be killed on June 13 and was

Texas, Indiana, and Tennessee will each execute a person this week: two men will be killed on Tuesday and one man on Thursday. Texas, which has already executed three people this year, plans to kill Matthew Johnson on Tuesday by lethal injection. Johnson was convicted of killing Nancy Harris, a convenience store clerk, during a robbery in 2012. According to the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, Johnson was

The State of South Carolina killed Brad Sigmon earlier this month. The 67-year-old Sigmon was seated in a chair with a hood over his head and a target pinned over his heart as a firing squad of three people aimed at him and fired their rifles. His death “was horrifying and violent,” Gerald “Bo” King, one of Sigmon’s attorneys, told CNN after witnessing the execution. Sigmon’s firing squad execution is

If things go as planned, South Carolina will kill Brad Sigmon on Friday by firing squad. It will be the state’s first execution by shooting in its history. The 67-year-old Sigmon chose a firing squad over the state’s two alternative options: electrocution (the default method) or lethal injection. Sigmon’s lawyer told NBC News that just the fact that Sigmon had to choose how to be killed “is horrifying.” Sigmon was