
In brief: November 2022
In Texas, Tracy Beatty was killed early last month despite valid questions about whether his crime qualified for the death penalty. Beatty was found guilty

In Texas, Tracy Beatty was killed early last month despite valid questions about whether his crime qualified for the death penalty. Beatty was found guilty

The U.S. Supreme Court shot down an attempt by three California district attorneys to intervene in a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the state’s lethal

When the jury in the death penalty trial of Nikolas Cruz, who pled guilty to killing 17 students and teachers and wounding 17 others at

In California, a new report from the U.S. Department of Justice describes how the Orange County District Attorney’s Office and the Orange County Sheriff’s Department

In his piece, “The Supreme Court Shows No Signs of Slaking Its Thirst for Capital Punishment,” in The New Republic, Matt Ford points out that

“Cole is a man who is so debilitated by paranoid schizophrenia and brain damage that he barely speaks or moves, crawls on his cell floor

South Carolina’s plan to execute men and women by electrocution or firing squad constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the state Constitution, a

Last week, the Oklahoma law firm Reed Smith released a third supplemental report on its investigation into the case of Richard Glossip. He was sentenced

It appears that for the second time in two months, Alabama corrections officials botched an execution with their rushed attempt to kill Alan Miller last

In Texas, the oldest person imprisoned on death row is scheduled to be executed on April 21. Carl Wayne Buntion, who is 77, has been on death row since 1991 when he was convicted of the 1990 killing of Houston police officer James Irby during a traffic stop. Buntion has spent 20 of his 30 years on death row in solitary confinement. The U.S. Supreme Court denied Buntion’s appeal in

“The death penalty in 2021 was defined by two competing forces: the continuing long-term erosion of capital punishment across most of the country, and extreme conduct by a dwindling number of outlier jurisdictions to continue to pursue death sentences and executions,” the Death Penalty Information Center stated in its annual report, released last month. Highlights of the report, considered the definitive assessment of developments in capital punishment in the United

Gerald Pizzuto, Jr. is 65 years old, dependent on a wheelchair, diabetic, and on hospice care because of advanced bladder cancer. He suffers from the effects of repeated brain injuries and endured horrific sexual and physical abuse from the time he was a young child. He is also imprisoned on Idaho’s death row since his conviction in the 1985 murder of 58-year-old Berta Herndon and her 37-year-old nephew, Del Herndon.

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case of Shinn v. Ramirez. It’s a complicated case, involving two respondents, David Ramirez and Barry Jones, who were convicted of separate murders, Ramirez in 1990, and Jones in 1995; a Supreme Court ruling in Martinez v. Ryan (2012), and the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) passed by Congress in 1996. Both Ramirez and Jones were sentenced

On Wednesday, December 8, 2021, we will presented “The Death Penalty Brutalizes Us All,” the fourth in our webinar series. Mike Farrell, DPF board president, moderated an in-depth conversation with three people who know first-hand how the brutality of the death penalty reverberates beyond the men and women who have been sentenced to death to their families and loved ones, to their spiritual advisors, and legal teams.

In his op-ed, “California halted executions, now it should abolish the death penalty,” in the Los Angeles Times, Scott Martelle says the moratorium on executions instituted by Gov. Gavin Newsom “is not a solution” to the state’s many problems with its death penalty system. He maintains it’s time for the governor and legislative leaders to put an abolition initiative on the ballot in 2024, and “Newsom should use his political

In Mississippi, David Cox died by lethal injection late last month in the state’s first execution since 2012. Cox, who had asked the court to dismiss all appeals, was convicted in 2010 of killing his estranged wife. WLOX reported that among his last words were a message to his children that “I love them very much and that I was a good man at one time.” In Idaho, Gerald Ross

Doyle Lee Hamm, who survived a horrifically botched execution in Alabama’s Holman Correctional Facility in 2018, died late last month in prison. The cause was complications from lymphoma and cranial cancer. He was 64. AL.com reported that Hamm was buried last Friday in Cherokee, Alabama. His longtime attorney, Bernard Harcourt, who was at the gravesite, said in a statement that “It was a simple country service with about 35 persons

Pervis Payne, who has been on Tennessee’s death row for 34 years, and has always maintained his innocence, will be resentenced to life in prison because of his intellectual disability. A county criminal court judge vacated Payne’s sentence late last month after the Shelby County district attorney withdrew her request for a hearing on the issue of intellectual disability. She acted after a state expert testified that an examination of