Brian Dorsey (pic­tured), a Missouri death row pris­on­er sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on April 9, 2024, has gar­nered wide­spread sup­port for clemen­cy from more than 70 cor­rec­tions offi­cials, a for­mer Missouri Supreme Court Judge, mul­ti­ple jurors, Democratic and Republican state leg­is­la­tors, faith lead­ers, and his fam­i­ly mem­bers — sev­er­al of whom are relat­ed to the vic­tims, Sarah and Ben Bonnie — all of whom have called on Governor Mike Parson to com­mute his sen­tence to life in prison with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole. Noteworthy among these sup­port­ers is a group of 72 cur­rent and for­mer Missouri cor­rec­tion­al offi­cers, who sub­mit­ted and signed a let­ter ask­ing Gov. Parson to grant Mr. Dorsey clemen­cy and com­mute his death sen­tence. Generally, we believe in the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment,” these offi­cers wrote. But we are in agree­ment that the death penal­ty is not the appro­pri­ate pun­ish­ment for Brian Dorsey.” All these offi­cers know Mr. Dorsey per­son­al­ly from their time spent work­ing at Potosi Correctional Center, where Mr. Dorsey has lived in an hon­or dorm” and worked for over a decade as the staff bar­ber, a posi­tion of excep­tion­al trust and respect.” The offi­cers added that “[e]very one of us believe that Brian is a good guy, some­one who has stayed out of trou­ble, nev­er got­ten him­self into any sit­u­a­tions, and been respect­ful of us and of his fel­low inmates.” Multiple cor­rec­tions offi­cers sub­mit­ted indi­vid­ual let­ters of sup­port, with one writ­ing that Mr. Dorsey has accept­ed what he did and tak­en account­abil­i­ty for his crime. It is my impres­sion that he has spent his time since then try­ing to do his best by being a role mod­el to oth­er inmates and pro­vid­ing a valu­able ser­vice to staff.” 

During his 17 years in prison, Mr. Dorsey has com­mit­ted to improv­ing him­self and has remained infrac­tion-free through­out his incar­cer­a­tion. In an indi­vid­ual let­ter to Gov. Parson, one cor­rec­tions offi­cial says when you spend time around Brian like I have, you can just tell that he has changed. Some inmates nev­er change, no mat­ter how many years they are in. But that’s not Brian… The Brian I have known for years could not hurt any­one. The Brian I know does not deserve to be exe­cut­ed.” Former Missouri Supreme Court Judge Michael Wolff also wrote to Gov. Parson urg­ing him to grant clemen­cy to Mr. Dorsey. Judge Wolff explained to Gov. Parson that the Court erred in uphold­ing Mr. Dorsey’s death sen­tence, with his case being one of the rare cas­es where those of us who sit in judg­ment of a man con­vict­ed of cap­i­tal mur­der got it wrong.” Five of the jurors who sen­tenced Mr. Dorsey to death have also urged Gov. Parson to grant clemen­cy, with one juror plead­ing that by the grace of God, I hope you will find your way to give him a life sen­tence instead of death.” Both Republican and Democratic state leg­is­la­tors have also asked Gov. Parson to com­mute Mr. Dorsey’s sentence.

On April 1, 2024, attor­neys for Mr. Dorsey filed a peti­tion for cer­tio­rari with the United States Supreme Court, ask­ing them to deter­mine whether the flat fee paid to his appoint­ed pub­lic defend­ers cre­at­ed an actu­al con­flict of inter­est that vio­lates his Sixth Amendment right to effec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel. Mr. Dorsey’s tri­al attor­neys were each paid $12,000 to defend him — regard­less of the amount of work they did. According to a 2010 report com­mis­sioned by fed­er­al courts, the aver­age time spent by defense attor­neys in cap­i­tal cas­es is 3,557 hours, which means that each of Mr. Dorsey’s attor­neys would have been paid $3.37 per hour spent on his case, if they spent the aver­age time prepar­ing a defense. Flat fee pay­ments were a com­mon prac­tice across the United States, but the Missouri Public Defender System no longer uses them in death penal­ty cas­es because of the inher­ent con­flict of inter­est that results. In 2003, the American Bar Association explic­it­ly warned against the use of flat fees in death penal­ty cas­es, stat­ing that coun­sel in death penal­ty cas­es should be ful­ly com­pen­sat­ed at a rate that is com­men­su­rate with the pro­vi­sion of high-qual­i­ty legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion and reflects the extra­or­di­nary respon­si­bil­i­ties inher­ent in death penal­ty rep­re­sen­ta­tion.” The use of flat fees ulti­mate­ly dis­cour­ages lawyers from doing more work than what is minimally necessary.”

Prior to his arrest in 2006, Mr. Dorsey did not have a his­to­ry of vio­lence but had suf­fered from depres­sion for many years and had sought both inpa­tient and out­pa­tient treat­ment. In efforts to alle­vi­ate the symp­toms of his depres­sion, Mr. Dorsey began drink­ing heav­i­ly and using crack cocaine. At the time of the crime, Mr. Dorsey was expe­ri­enc­ing drug-induced psy­chosis, but Mr. Dorsey’s tri­al attor­neys failed to inves­ti­gate or present any men­tal health his­to­ry. Had they hired an expert to eval­u­ate Mr. Dorsey, they could have explained to the jury that he was inca­pable of form­ing the nec­es­sary intent to com­mit first-degree mur­der. Instead, his attor­neys told him to plead guilty with­out any deal with the pros­e­cu­tion to remove the death penal­ty. The jury that sen­tenced Mr. Dorsey to death did not hear evi­dence of his sub­stance abuse dis­or­der and pre­vi­ous men­tal health history. 

In his let­ter to Gov. Parson, Judge Wolff also ref­er­ences Missouri’s for­mer flat fee sys­tem, say­ing it undoubt­ed­ly influ­enced every­thing” in Mr. Dorsey’s tri­al. Sean O’Brien, a University of Missouri-Kansas City law pro­fes­sor told The Marshall Project that for lawyers paid in flat fees, it can be a boost to your cash flow at the begin­ning, but it’s a drain on your cash flow if you actu­al­ly do the work.” Mary Fox, the direc­tor of the Missouri State Public Defender System also wrote a let­ter to Gov. Parson telling him that her office stopped using flat fees after Mr. Dorsey’s tri­al and rec­og­nizes that such fees remove the incen­tive to do an effective job.” 

Megan Crane, an attor­ney for Mr. Dorsey told The Marshall Project that her client says he wants to find a way to make people’s lives bet­ter to atone for what he’s done.” Mr. Dorsey has been placed in soli­tary con­fine­ment since the state announced his exe­cu­tion date and has been unable to con­tin­ue his work as a bar­ber. As Mr. Dorsey’s exe­cu­tion date approach­es, Ms. Crane said that he has tried to man­age his expec­ta­tions” about the pos­si­bil­i­ty of clemen­cy or court inter­ven­tion. Mr. Dorsey has tak­en full account­abil­i­ty since Day 1,” Ms. Crane said. And the hor­ror of the fact that he could have done this — I think that is still his focus in this final week.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Mitch Smith and Ernesto Lodoño, He’s on Death Row for Murders. Prison Workers Say He Should Be Spared, New York Times, April 3, 2024; Edward Helmore, More than 150 peo­ple call on Missouri gov­er­nor to for­give Brian Dorsey’s death penal­ty, The Guardian, April 3, 2024; Maurice Chammah and Keri Blakinger, He Faces Execution. His Lawyers May Have Earned Less Than $4 per Hour., The Marshall Project, April 32024

See Mr. Dorsey’s clemen­cy peti­tion, here

See Mr. Dorsey’s peti­tion for cer­tio­rari, here