Federal Court Reverses Conviction and Death-In-Prison Sentence Imposed on 14-Year-Old Missouri Child

On Monday, March 24, 2008, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri reversed the conviction and sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of parole imposed on Phillip Shaw for a crime that occurred when he was 14 years old.

Executive Director Discusses Need to End Sentencing of Young Children to Die in Prison

Today on Pacifica Radio, Executive Director Bryan Stevenson talked about EJI's work to challenge the sentencing of 13- and 14-year-old children to life imprisonment without the possiblity of parole. EJI has identified dozens of young children sentenced to die in prison in 19 states across the country. The United States is the only country in the world to sentence children as young as 13 to imprisonment until death. Click to listen to the interview.

EJI Challenges Eleventh Circuit Denial of Meritorious Claim Because Unrepresented Inmate Did Not Use Correct Language in Brief

On March 17, 2008, EJI asked the United States Supreme Court to review the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals' decision denying relief to Eli Crawford, an Alabama inmate serving a life sentence for attempted murder. At his Birmingham trial, Mr. Crawford's court-appointed trial lawyer did not object when the judge forced Mr. Crawford to wear jail-issued clothing instead of the clothes his family brought for him, even though the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that a defendant's right to be presumed innocent is violated when he is forced to attend trial in a jail uniform.

EJI Appeals Conviction of Mother Sentenced to Life Without Parole After She Delivered Stillborn Baby

EJI is appealing the conviction of Marsha Colby, a Baldwin County woman convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole for the death of her newborn son, despite strong evidence that the baby was stillborn.

Eleventh Circuit Decision in Lawhorn Case Affirms Need for Effective Counsel at Penalty Phase

On March 11, 2008, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s judgment granting Alabama death row prisoner James Charles Lawhorn a new sentencing trial because his trial lawyer was ineffective.

More than 80 People Sentenced to Death in Alabama as a Result of ‘Judge Override’

Alabama is the only state in the country that allows standardless judicial override: Alabama judges can, and frequently do, reject jury verdicts for life without parole and impose the death penalty. New research from EJI shows that more than 80 people have been sentenced to death by judges even though their juries decided that death was not the appropriate punishment. Fueled by "tough on crime" rhetoric in partisan judicial elections, judicial override in Alabama is on the rise.

Alabama Has Highest Rate of Death Sentencing in the Country

Based on new data from the Bureau of Justice, Alabama leads the nation in the rate of new death sentences for the fifth straight year. Last year, Alabama sentenced more people to death than Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, Arkansas, Virginia and Ohio combined. With a population of only 4.5 million people, Alabama’s 13 new death sentences was greater than the 11 new death sentences imposed in Texas, which has a population of 23.5 million people.

Eleventh Circuit Reinstates Thursday Execution Date for Jimmy Callahan

Today the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the stay of execution granted by a federal district court to Alabama death row inmate Jimmy Callahan and reinstated his January 31, 2008, execution date.

U.S. Supreme Court Stays Florida Execution

Today the United States Supreme Court stayed the execution of Florida inmate Mark Schwab, further indicating that it will not permit executions to proceed until it addresses the constitutionality of lethal injection in the case of Baze v. Rees.

Alabama Sets Two New Execution Dates Despite Nationwide Execution Halt

The Alabama Supreme Court on October 30, 2007, set two new execution dates despite what appears to be a nationwide halt on executions pending the United States Supreme Court's decision on whether lethal injection is unconstitutional. The state supreme court re-scheduled the execution of Tommy Arthur for December 6, 2007, and scheduled James Callahan's execution for January 31, 2008.

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