More than one hundred bills have been introduced this year in 34 states and in Congress to expand and limit use of the death penalty, abolish and reinstate the death penalty, modify execution protocols and secret the information about them, and alter aspects of capital trials. Thus far, nine bills in five states have been enacted, with Florida enacting the most legislation thus far. Of the bills that have been signed into law, three modify execution protocols; two expand the circumstances for death eligibility; one expands aggravating circumstances; one law makes a death sentence mandatory; one modifies the process and lowers the legal standard for intellectual disability claims; and one modifies the process to determine mental competency for execution. The majority of enacted bills have been sponsored by Republican legislators.
Enacted Death Penalty Related Legislation | ||||
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State | Bill Name | Description | Type | Date Effective |
Arkansas | HB 1489 | Adds execution by nitrogen gas as an execution method. The bill also extends the secrecy provisions and immunity protection provisions previously applicable to lethal injection executions to include nitrogen gas executions. | Modifies Execution Protocol | Mid-July 2025 (90 days after the end of the legislative session) |
Florida | HB 693 | Expands death-eligible aggravating circumstances to include circumstances where the victim was “gathered with one or more persons for a school activity, religious activity, or public government meeting.” | Expands Aggravating Circumstances | October 1, 2025 |
Florida | HB 903 | Expands the state’s available method of executions to include any method “not deemed unconstitutional.” | Modifies Execution Protocol | July 1, 2025 |
Florida | SB 4C | Requires a death sentence for a defendant who is an “unauthorized alien” convicted of a capital felony. | Other | February 13, 2025 |
Georgia | HB 123 | Provides for pretrial hearings for capital defendants to raise intellectual disability claims; lowers the standard of proof from “beyond a reasonable doubt” to a “preponderance of evidence,” in line with other states. | Limits Death Eligibility | May 13, 2025 |
Idaho | HB 380 | Expands death-eligible crimes to include lewd conduct with a minor child age 12 or under. | Expands Death Eligiblity | July 1, 2025 |
Idaho | HB 37 | Makes firing squad the primary method of execution. | Modifies Execution Protocol | July 1, 2026 |
Oklahoma | SB 599 | Makes defendants “convicted of forcible anal or oral sodomy, rape, rape by instrumentation, or lewd molestation of a child under fourteen (14) years of age” eligible for a death sentence. | Expands Death Eligiblity | November 1, 2025 |
Oklahoma | HB 1693 | Modifies the process to determine mental competency for execution, including requiring the trial court to render a decision before the scheduled execution date unless the Court of Criminal Appeals issues a stay of execution. | Other | November 1, 2025 |
Legislation to Modify Execution Protocols
States are increasingly proposing changes to execution protocols. Of the nine bills enacted so far this year, three modify execution protocols, including bills to add new, largely untested execution methods and reintroduce previously abandoned ones.
Introduced by Representatives Jeff Wardlaw (R) and Blake Johnson (R), Arkansas enacted HB 1489, which adds suffocation by nitrogen gas as an execution method, on March 18, 2025. The bill passed both chambers of the state legislature by wide margins, with a vote of 67 to 23 in the House and 26 to 9 in the Senate. Joining Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi as the fourth state to adopt this execution method, Arkansas will be able to start using nitrogen gas in mid-July, or 90 days after the session’s end. Both Alabama and Louisiana have used nitrogen gas in executions over the past year, with witnesses reporting anomalies during the executions, including signs of distress from the prisoners.
Introduced by Representative Bruce Skaug (R), Idaho enacted HB 37 on March 12, 2025, making firing squad the state’s primary execution method, replacing lethal injection. The bill, which doesn’t take effect until July 1, 2026, passed by wide margins in both chambers: 58 to 11 in the House and 28 to 7 in the Senate. Although five other states allow executions by firing squad (Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Utah), this bill makes Idaho the only state to authorize it as its primary execution method. On March 7, 2025, the U.S. had its first firing squad execution in fifteen years with South Carolina’s execution of Brad Sigmon. His lawyer reported concerns about use of the new procedure. South Carolina subsequently used a firing squad on April 11 to execute Mikal Mahdi. Mr. Mahdi’s lawyers have also recently expressed concerns that his execution was botched.
Florida’s HB 903 is the latest legislation expanding the methods of execution available to a state. It was signed by Governor Ron DeSantis on May 22, 2025, and is effective July 1, 2025. Unlike the bills passed in Arkansas and Idaho, HB 903 authorizes the state to use any execution method “not deemed unconstitutional.” In explaining his reasoning for sponsoring the bill, Representative Berny Jacques (R) complained that “weak sentencing guidelines and bureaucratic inefficiencies have allowed violent offenders to escape real consequences.”
Sixteen more bills to modify or augment execution methods are still pending in 11 states. Both Nebraska (LB 432) and Ohio (HB 36) have pending bills to authorize nitrogen gas as an execution method; North Carolina’s bill (HB 270) seeks to introduce both electrocution and the firing squad; Tennessee uniquely (SB 0491 /HB 1022) has bills seeking to add pharmaceutical fentanyl as an execution method. Additional efforts to modify execution protocols include authorizing witnesses who may be present at executions, for example members of the legislature (HB 198 /SB 1214 in Tennessee) or the state attorney general (S 0267, S 0308, H 3852 in South Carolina), as well as requiring states to maintain records and report annually on the drugs stocked by the state to use in executions, including expiration dates (SB 1690 in Texas).
Unique bills in both Connecticut and Delaware — both states without the death penalty — have sought to set restrictions on pharmaceutical companies incorporated in their respective states from supplying drugs used in executions. First introduced as SB 430, and now rolled into SB 1355, the Connecticut bill prohibts persons who are licensed, registered or doing business in this state from manufacturing, compounding, selling, testing, distributing, dispensing, or supplying any drug or medical device for the purpose of executing the death penalty. The proposed penalty is revocation of license. HB 61 in Delaware has similar prohibitions but goes farther to create criminal, in addition to civil, liabilities for corporations or other businesses in the state that violate the provisions. For example, HB 61 proposes that the highest-ranking officer of an entity that ”knew or should have known” that the firm’s products would be used “in any capacity” to an execution, the firm’s charter will be revoked, and that officer will be guilty of a class A felony and subject to a civil penalty of up to $50,000.
Legislation to Expand Secrecy Provisions Concerning Executions
In addition to adding execution by nitrogen gas as an execution method, Arkansas’s HB 1489 protects from disclosure information about the individuals involved in nitrogen gas executions or the suppliers of the gas, chemicals and equipment used in the execution. Likewise, pending Ohio bill HB 36, in addition to introducing execution by nitrogen hypoxia, would also prohibit disclosure of “execution identifying information.”
Legislation to Abolish or Limit the Death Penalty
Bills seeking to abolish the death penalty have been introduced in at least 12 states (Arizona, Delaware, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Texas). Efforts to limit use of the death penalty include Georgia’s HB 682, which sought to prohibit the death penalty in cases where the only evidence of guilt was the testimony of a single eyewitness. In Texas, the legislature is taking steps to codify the Supreme Court’s 2002 decision in Atkins v. Virginia, where the Court found that executing individuals with intellectual disabilities violated the 8th Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishments (HB 688 /SB 432). A bill was also introduced in Texas that would exempt a defendant with severe mental illness at the time of the capital crime from death penalty eligibility (HB 2777). A separate Texas bill (HB 2055) would extend the Supreme Court’s 2005 decision in Roper v. Simmons, which held the imposition of the death penalty on juveniles unconstitutional, to those under age 21 at the time the crime occurred.
Georgia Legislation Related to Defendants with Intellectual Disability
Sponsored by five Republicans and one Democrat, HB 123 in Georgia provides pretrial hearings for capital defendants to raise intellectual disability claims and lowers the standard of proof for those claims from “beyond a reasonable doubt” to a “preponderance of evidence,” bringing the state standard in line with the other 26 states that retain the death penalty. Although similar bills have been introduced in the past1, none had ever received a committee vote before the legislative session ended. This time, HB 123 unanimously passed the House (172 in favor and 3 non-voting) and nearly unanimously passed in the Senate (53 to 1) with amendments, which the House then agreed to (150 in favor, 3 against, and 13 non-voting) on March 31, 2024. Republican Governor Brian Kemp signed the bill on May 13, 2025, effective immediately.
Legislation to Reinstate or Expand Use of the Death Penalty, Including to Non-Homicide Crimes
Bills to reinstate the death penalty have been introduced in at least nine states and bills seeking to expand use of the death penalty have been introduced in at least 12 states and the federal government. Two bills, one in Idaho (HB 380) and one in Oklahoma (SB 599), have been enacted, expanding the death penalty to persons convicted of non-lethal sex-related crimes with minors. These two states join Florida, which was the first to enact such legislation in 2023, and Tennessee, which enacted similar legislation in 2024.
In Idaho, Representative Bruce Skaug (R) introduced HB 380, which specifically makes aggravated lewd conduct with a minor child age 12 or under a death eligible offense. The bill passed unanimously in the House (63 in favor, 7 abstentions) and nearly unanimously in the Senate (35 votes in favor, 5 against). Governor Brad Little signed the bill on March 27, 2025, and it goes into effect July 1, 2025.
In Oklahoma, Representative Warren Hamilton (R) introduce SB 599, which specifically makes “any person convicted of forcible anal or oral sodomy, rape, rape by instrumentation, or lewd molestation of a child under fourteen (14) years of age” eligible for a death sentence. The bill passed by wide margins in both chambers, with a vote of 39 to 5 in the Senate and 80 to 8 in the House, then a final vote in the Senate of 36 to 6. Governor Kevin Stitt signed the bill on June 2, 2025, and it goes into effect November 1, 2025.
Bills to make non-lethal sex crimes or human trafficking death-eligible offenses, in violation of the Supreme Court decision in Kennedy v. Louisiana (2008), have been introduced in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and the federal government. In Florida, SB 1804 has passed both chambers. Bills in several states have also introduced legislation to criminalize abortion in certain circumstances as homicide, thus making abortions death-penalty eligible offenses in states which retain the death penalty.
Legislation Mandating Death Sentences for Undocumented Persons Convicted of Capital Felonies
Passed in Florida’s special session, SB 4C provides that the court must sentence to death a defendant who is an “unauthorized alien” and who is convicted of a capital felony. Although Supreme Court precedent established in Woodson v. North Carolina (1976) prohibits mandatory death sentence, SB 4C passed in the Senate 25 to 11 and in the House 85 to 29. Governor Ron DeSantis signed the bill on February 13, 2025, and it became effective immediately. Similar bills have been introduced in both Pennsylvania and Oklahoma. At the federal level, on May 8, 2025, Senator John Cornyn (TX) introduced S 1675, which would add to the list of death-eligibility aggravating factora person who is an “illegal alien” and who “has been convicted of killing, attempting to kill, or conspiring to kill a United States citizen.”