Critical devel­op­ments in the mod­ern his­to­ry of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the United States are exam­ined through a bio­graph­i­cal sketch of Anthony Amsterdam (pic­tured), one of the nation’s most respect­ed death penal­ty attor­neys and legal schol­ars, in the lat­est edi­tion of New York University’s Law School Magazine. Prof. Amsterdam argued Furman v. Georgia before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972, result­ing in the over­turn­ing of all death penal­ty laws and the spar­ing of over 600 inmates on death row. The arti­cle, A Man Against the Machine” by Nadya Labi, recounts Tony Amsterdam’s work with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund lead­ing up to Furman and fol­lows his legal jour­ney through the Court’s Gregg v. Georgia deci­sion rein­stat­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1976, and into to today’s death penal­ty debate. Amsterdam recalled his reac­tion upon hear­ing of the Furman deci­sion: You rep­re­sent peo­ple under sen­tence of death, you’re always walk­ing around with a dozen, 50 lives on your shoul­ders.” What he remem­bered was: The feel­ing of weight being lift­ed, know­ing that these guys…you wor­ry about each and every one sep­a­rate­ly. I felt free for the first time in years. I thought, That job is done. Those guys are gonna live.’ 

Today, Prof. Amsterdam is the Edward Weinfeld Professor of Law at New York University Law School, and he has played a sig­nif­i­cant role in shap­ing more than 30 years of death penal­ty lit­i­ga­tion and in train­ing future cap­i­tal defend­ers. He is known as an acces­si­ble and trust­ed spe­cial resource” for death penal­ty attor­neys, and his stu­dents have worked on a num­ber of high-pro­file appel­late cas­es, includ­ing Atkins v. Virginia and Roper v. Simmons — the Supreme Court cas­es that end­ed the death penal­ty for those with men­tal retar­da­tion and juve­nile offend­ers, respec­tive­ly.

The arti­cle con­cludes with a pre­dic­tion from David Kendall, for­mer coun­selor to President Bill Clinton and Amsterdam’s long-time friend and col­league, When this coun­try repu­di­ates the death penal­ty, as it will, peo­ple will look back at him and say, he devised the cam­paign that led to this.”
(NYU Law School Magazine, Autumn 2007). Read the arti­cle. See Articles, Resources and History of the Death Penalty.


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