Table of Contents

The Death Penalty in 2024

Supreme Court

The United States Supreme Court has largely abandoned the critical role it has historically played in regulating and limiting use of the death penalty. 

Supreme Court

The Court now con­sis­tent­ly lim­its oppor­tu­ni­ties for pris­on­ers to access the courts; crit­i­cizes appeals as ser­i­al relit­i­ga­tion of final con­vic­tions”; and instructs courts to police care­ful­ly against attempts to use [stays of exe­cu­tion] as tools to inter­pose unjus­ti­fied delay,” warn­ing that “[l]ast-minute stays should be the extreme excep­tion, not the norm.” 

Unsurprisingly, the Court’s new approach has result­ed in an over­all decline in death penal­ty cert grants and opin­ions. In 2024, the Court issued just one opin­ion in a death penal­ty case on its reg­u­lar dock­et. Other than in 2021, when COVID-19 may have influ­enced the Court’s dock­et, this year’s sin­gle opin­ion rep­re­sents a six-year low. In six of the last sev­en years, the Court has issued as many or more shad­ow dock­et” opin­ions — decid­ed with­out oral argu­ment and in some instances, without explanation. 

In 2024, death-sen­­tenced pris­on­ers asked the Court to review con­sti­tu­tion­al claims in their cas­es or grant a stay of exe­cu­tion 148 times. The Court agreed just three times, twice in the same case. On only two occa­sions did state actors ask the Court to hear an appeal — and the Court said yes both times. This year’s sta­tis­tics are sim­i­lar to 2023, when the Court grant­ed only four of 158 pris­on­er requests (2.5%), and two of five state requests (40%). These num­bers also illus­trate the fact that most pris­on­ers lose their appeals in state courts. Since the begin­ning of the 2018 term, the Court has grant­ed just five of 155 pris­on­er requests for a stay of exe­cu­tion (3%) but grant­ed 20 of 22 (91%) state requests to vacate a stay and allow the exe­cu­tion to proceed.

The Court’s recent direc­tives also reveal a pre­oc­cu­pa­tion with obtaining final­i­ty” in cap­i­tal cas­es and a gen­er­al dis­trust of defense lawyers and their clients when they chal­lenge exe­cu­tion war­rants. Paired with its shrink­ing cap­i­tal dock­et, the Court’s new lim­its on fed­er­al review dis­play a strong def­er­ence to state actors and a retreat from the Court’s tra­di­tion­al role as the last resort” for those sen­tenced to death.

B&W gavels appearing on a black and purple background

Overturning Relief in Ineffective Counsel Cases

The Court took action in two cas­es that involved claims of inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel, both times at the request of state actors, and both times over­turned grants of relief. 

In Thornell v. Jones, Danny Lee Jones, who was sen­tenced to death in Arizona in 1993, alleged inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel because his attor­ney failed to present crit­i­cal mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence, secure a defense men­tal health expert, or pur­sue rec­om­mend­ed neu­ro­log­i­cal test­ing of his client. This meant the jury nev­er learned that Mr. Jones had received treat­ment for mood dis­or­ders, had attempt­ed sui­cide, spent time in a men­tal insti­tu­tion, and suf­fered mul­ti­ple neurochemical deficiencies. 

On May 30, the Supreme Court reversed a grant of relief for Mr. Jones at the Ninth Circuit and issued a 6 – 3 opin­ion in favor of Arizona, hold­ing that Mr. Jones did not receive inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel. In a nar­row fact-spe­­cif­ic rul­ing, Justice Samuel Alito wrote for the major­i­ty that the Ninth Circuit down­played the seri­ous aggra­vat­ing fac­tors present here and over­stat­ed the strength of mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence that dif­fered very lit­tle from the evi­dence pre­sent­ed at sentencing.” 

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, an elderly Latina woman with black hair wearing black robes

Justice Sonia Sotomayor

Joined by Justice Elena Kagan, Justice Sonia Sotomayor dis­sent­ed. She wrote that the record in this case is com­plex, con­test­ed, and thou­sands of pages long,” and it is not the Court’s usu­al prac­tice to adju­di­cate either legal or pred­i­cate fac­tu­al ques­tions in the first instance.” Justice Sotomayor said she would have vacat­ed the rul­ing below and allowed the Ninth Circuit to recon­sid­er the case. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson also dis­sent­ed, agree­ing that the Supreme Court is not the right tri­bunal to parse the exten­sive fac­tu­al record in this case.” She also wrote that the majority’s argument rings hol­low” because its real cri­tique does not appear to relate to the…methodology.” 

A few weeks after releas­ing its opin­ion in Thornell, the Court grant­ed Alabama’s request for cer­tio­rari in Alabama v. Williams, a case with a long and com­pli­cat­ed pro­ce­dur­al his­to­ry. Mr. Williams had argued that his attor­ney was inef­fec­tive for fail­ing to inves­ti­gate ade­quate­ly and present evi­dence of sex­u­al abuse and trau­ma he suf­fered as a child. After sev­er­al years of pro­ceed­ings, a fed­er­al dis­trict court judge held an evi­den­tiary hear­ing and con­clud­ed that Mr. Williams had been prej­u­diced by his attorney’s fail­ures. A divid­ed pan­el from the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the grant of habeas relief, with the dis­sent argu­ing that the evi­dence would have result­ed in the admis­sion of addi­tion­al aggra­vat­ing evi­dence in sup­port of the death sen­tence. Alabama appealed. 

The cert peti­tion had been close­ly watched and found sup­port from eigh­teen state attor­neys gen­er­al who filed an ami­cus curi­ae brief in sup­port of Alabama. One ques­tion in the case was whether the fed­er­al court could grant relief despite the state courts’ denials of relief. The Eleventh Circuit had held that no def­er­ence was required because the court of appeals’ deci­sion affirm­ing the denial was on juris­dic­tion­al grounds, not on the mer­its.” Amici argued that allow­ing the Eleventh Circuit’s grant of relief to stand would broad­en the scope of the fed­er­al habeas statute by refus­ing def­er­ence to a state appel­late court’s pro­ce­dur­al affir­mance of a tri­al court’s merits opinion.” 

Without issu­ing an opin­ion, the Court sum­mar­i­ly vacat­ed the Eleventh Circuit’s judg­ment for Mr. Williams and remand­ed the case for fur­ther con­sid­er­a­tion in light of its deci­sion in Thornell, which had also involved ques­tions about the effect of the aggra­vat­ing and mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence. But the ulti­mate out­come of the case may also have impor­tant impli­ca­tions for the scope and effect of fed­er­al habeas judg­ments, which Alabama and ami­ci argue improp­er­ly over­ride state court crim­i­­nal-law deter­mi­na­tions and under­mine state sovereignty.

Multistate Amicus Briefs Criticize Federal Habeas Authority

The ami­cus brief that attract­ed 18 state attor­neys gen­er­al in Williams is not an out­lier. Since the begin­ning of 2022, the Court has decid­ed 14 cap­i­tal cas­es, and eight of those cas­es (57%) attract­ed the inter­est of a coor­di­nat­ed group of state attor­neys gen­er­al — includ­ing all three cap­i­tal cas­es decid­ed this year. These briefs uni­form­ly crit­i­cize fed­er­al court review of state court death penal­ty deci­sions and argue for increased recog­ni­tion of state sov­er­eign­ty and auton­o­my. The briefs repeat­ed­ly char­ac­ter­ize fed­er­al court rul­ings in favor of death-sen­­tenced pris­on­ers as ide­o­log­i­cal deci­sions that inap­pro­pri­ate­ly disturb the final­i­ty” of state judg­ments. In Thornell, 21 state attor­neys gen­er­al, led by South Dakota, argued that fed­er­al habeas cor­pus courts are not per­mit­ted to sim­ply sec­ond-guess and usurp state sen­tenc­ing judg­ments and force states to relit­i­gate sen­tences in perpetuity.”

Published Dissents Confirm Court’s Sharp Ideological Divide 

This year again saw sev­er­al jus­tices rou­tine­ly dis­sent from the Court’s denials of cer­tio­rari review. The dis­sent­ing jus­tices focused on seri­ous alle­ga­tions of offi­cial mis­con­duct and expressed frus­tra­tion with the Court’s fail­ure to enforce key precedents. 

At Warren King’s tri­al in Georgia, the pros­e­cu­tor struck 87.5% of Black poten­tial jurors but only 8.8% of white poten­tial jurors. When asked to explain one of the strikes, the pros­e­cu­tor responded that this lady is a black female” — a straight­for­ward vio­la­tion of Batson v. Kentucky (1986) and its prog­e­ny, which bar pros­e­cu­tors from strik­ing jurors based on race or gen­der. The tri­al judge found that the strike was racial­ly moti­vat­ed and placed the woman back on the jury. The prosecutor then erupt­ed into a rant against Batson,” lead­ing the tri­al judge to admon­ish him. Despite this evi­dence of motive and intent, the Georgia Supreme Court found that the prosecutor’s oth­er strikes exclud­ing Black peo­ple were not racial­ly moti­vat­ed, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed, and the Supreme Court denied cert.

Warren King, a young Black man wearing a black double-breasted button-down shirt and a white bowtie with black stripes in front of an illustrated nature backdrop

Warren King

Justices Jackson and Sotomayor dis­sent­ed, writ­ing that the Supreme Court should have grant­ed cer­tio­rari and sum­mar­i­ly reversed under Batson. Justice Jackson argued that the Georgia Supreme Court had ignored high­ly salient facts about the prosecutor’s admit­ted­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry strike behav­ior and antipa­thy toward the legal stan­dards that address such con­duct.” Importantly to Justice Jackson, this was not an iso­lat­ed inci­dent: the Eleventh Circuit’s fail­ure to recognize error reflects a neglect­ful response to the appar­ent trend of dis­turbing­ly lax Batson enforce­ment on the part of Georgia’s high court.” Justice Jackson cit­ed four times to Flowers v. Mississippi (2019), in which the Court ruled in favor of death-sen­­tenced pris­on­er Curtis Flowers based on an egre­gious his­to­ry of Batson vio­la­tions, to empha­size what she viewed as the Court’s incon­sis­tent treat­ment of these claims. 

When the Court declined to review Dillion Compton’s jury race dis­crim­i­na­tion claims in April, Justices Sotomayor and Jackson dis­sent­ed again. Texas pros­e­cu­tors used thir­teen of their fif­teen peremp­to­ry strikes to remove female prospec­tive jurors at Mr. Compton’s tri­al, and their only expla­na­tion was the women’s views on the death penal­ty. Justice Sotomayor wrote that the Court should have sum­mar­i­ly reversed, because the low­er court’s rea­son­ing had clear­ly disregarded precedent.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, a Black woman with glasses wearing black robes

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson

In Kurt Michaels’ case, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that his con­fes­sion was ille­gal­ly obtained and wrong­ly used against him at tri­al. However, the court also held that the error was harm­less and denied Mr. Michaels relief. Justice Jackson dis­sent­ed from the Supreme Court’s refusal to hear Mr. Michael’s appeal, argu­ing that the Ninth Circuit was inat­ten­tive to the unique­ly prej­u­di­cial nature of con­fes­sion evi­dence.” The jury delib­er­at­ed for over three days before return­ing a ver­dict of death — an indi­ca­tion that the jury was strug­gling with its sen­tenc­ing deci­sion and that his con­fes­sion may have tipped the scales. The Fifth Amendment pro­tects every­one, guilty and inno­cent alike,” Justice Jackson argued, and courts must be care­ful to safe­guard the rights that our Constitution pro­tects, even when (and per­haps espe­cial­ly when) eval­u­at­ing errors made in cas­es stem­ming from a terrible crime.” 

A Lack of Reliable Legal Pathways for Innocents

Public aware­ness about the real­i­ty that inno­cent peo­ple are sen­tenced to death has grown steadi­ly in recent years. This year, sev­er­al high-pro­­file cas­es of inno­cence attract­ed unusu­al atten­tion and sup­port­ers, along with intense media cov­er­age. Although the Supreme Court has long main­tained that actu­al inno­cence is not enough on its own to obtain relief from a death sen­tence, the Court’s refusal to inter­vene in sev­er­al promi­nent cas­es this year was still noteworthy. 

On September 24, Missouri exe­cut­ed Marcellus Williams despite a nation­al cam­paign for clemen­cy that attract­ed more than 1.5 mil­lion sup­port­ers on social media. Mr. Williams was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death despite a com­plete absence of phys­i­cal evi­dence con­nect­ing him to the crime. Two wit­ness­es, now deceased, had been giv­en finan­cial incen­tives to tes­ti­fy against him at tri­al. The dis­trict attor­ney sup­port­ed a plea deal that would have removed Mr. Williams from death row, but the deal was blocked by the unex­pect­ed inter­ven­tion of the state attor­ney gen­er­al and the Missouri Supreme Court. When Governor Mike Parson denied clemen­cy, Mr. Williams turned to the U.S. Supreme Court as a last resort. But in an unsigned order with no expla­na­tion, the Court declined to halt his exe­cu­tion. Justices Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson dissented. 

The Supreme Court also declined to inter­vene in the high-pro­­file case of Robert Roberson, a Texas man sen­tenced to death for alleged­ly killing his two-year-old daugh­ter Nikki under a shak­en baby syn­drome” (SBS) the­o­ry. The SBS the­o­ry has been large­ly debunked by experts and has result­ed in dozens of exon­er­a­tions across the coun­try. Experts now say that pneu­mo­nia, an acci­den­tal fall, and inap­pro­pri­ate med­ical treat­ment like­ly caused Nikki’s symp­toms, con­tra­dict­ing pros­e­cu­tors, who argued at tri­al that they could only have result­ed from abuse. 

Justice Sotomayor’s state­ment expressed dis­may that the Court did not review Mr. Roberson’s case and emphasized that mount­ing evi­dence sug­gests that [Mr. Roberson]…committed no crime at all.” She not­ed the lack of reli­able legal path­ways for death-sen­­tenced pris­on­ers to prove their innocence. Few cas­es more urgent­ly call for such a rem­e­dy than one where the accused has made a seri­ous show­ing of actu­al inno­cence, as Roberson has here,” she wrote. But “[c]urrent post­con­vic­tion reme­dies often fail to correct convictions secured by what we now know was faulty sci­ence.’” She urged Texas Governor Abbott to issue an exec­u­tive reprieve of thir­ty days” to pre­vent a mis­car­riage of jus­tice from occur­ring: exe­cut­ing a man who has raised cred­i­ble evi­dence of actu­al inno­cence.” Ultimately, it was a Texas leg­isla­tive committee’s last-minute issuance of a sub­poe­na that stayed Mr. Roberson’s exe­cu­tion, not the Court or Governor Abbott.

Ruben Gutierrez, a young Latino man in a purple filter, collaged with headlines about his case.

The Court grant­ed cer­tio­rari and a stay of exe­cu­tion to Ruben Gutierrez.

The Supreme Court’s two pend­ing death penal­ty cas­es both involve inno­cence claims, but the Court’s deci­sions will like­ly turn on pro­ce­dur­al ques­tions. Richard Glossip was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in Oklahoma based on the tes­ti­mo­ny of his cowork­er Justin Sneed, who admit­ted that he alone had killed their boss in 1997 but alleged that Mr. Glossip had hired him to do it. Evidence lat­er emerged that pros­e­cu­tors had offered lenien­cy to Mr. Sneed if he impli­cat­ed Mr. Glossip and hid­den evi­dence that Mr. Sneed was being treat­ed for bipo­lar dis­or­der. After an inde­pen­dent inves­ti­ga­tion, Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond con­fessed error and sup­port­ed Mr. Glossip’s bid for a new tri­al. When the Oklahoma courts refused to do so and set Mr. Glossip’s exe­cu­tion, Attorney General Drummond filed a peti­tion in sup­port of Mr. Glossip at the Supreme Court. State offi­cials rarely con­cede error in death penal­ty cas­es, and this is the first known Supreme Court case in which a state attor­ney gen­er­al has filed in sup­port of a death-sen­­tenced pris­on­er. Attorney General Drummond’s unprece­dent­ed sup­port for Mr. Glossip was like­ly an impor­tant rea­son the Court decid­ed to take the case. 

The Court heard oral argu­ments on October 9, focus­ing on a juris­dic­tion­al ques­tion the Court itself added when it grant­ed cer­tio­rari and the cen­tral ques­tion regard­ing the impor­tance of the pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct in the case. Justice Neil Gorsuch recused him­self because he had heard an ear­li­er appeal when he was a cir­cuit judge, mean­ing that Mr. Glossip will need at least five votes to pre­vail. A 4 – 4 deci­sion will mean that the deci­sion of the Oklahoma courts deny­ing relief to Mr. Glossip will stand. 

On the last day of its 2023 – 24 term, which con­clud­ed in ear­ly October, the Court grant­ed cer­tio­rari to Ruben Gutierrez, who received a stay from the Court in July just twen­ty min­utes before his sched­uled exe­cu­tion. This was the only stay grant­ed to a death-sen­­tenced pris­on­er in 2024 out of 26 requests. The Court will review a com­plex claim involv­ing Mr. Gutierrez’s stand­ing to sue the state of Texas for access to DNA test­ing on crime scene evi­dence he argues could affect his con­vic­tion and death sen­tence. Texas courts have refused him access to the test­ing despite numer­ous requests, a stance incon­sis­tent with the Supreme Court’s 2023 deci­sion in Reed v. Goertz

Non-Capital Cert Grant Poses Further Risk to Habeas Review 

On December 6, the Supreme Court grant­ed cer­tio­rari in Rivers v. Lumpkin, a Texas case which asks whether a new claim filed while an ini­tial habeas peti­tion is pend­ing on appeal should be treat­ed as an amend­ment to the peti­tion or a suc­ces­sive peti­tion. Under fed­er­al law, suc­ces­sive peti­tions are sub­ject to much stricter require­ments. The Fifth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeal have ruled that such a claim should be con­strued as a suc­ces­sive peti­tion, while the Second Circuit held that such a claim should be treat­ed as an amend­ment, in an opin­ion by Justice Sotomayor before she joined the Supreme Court. 

Court Declines Invitation to Consider New Eighth Amendment Standard — For Now

On November 4, the Court end­ed a year of inde­ci­sion regard­ing Alabama’s request to review a prisoner’s intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty claim by issu­ing a two-page rul­ing and request­ing addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion from the low­er court. Joseph Clifton Smith, sen­tenced to death in 1998, had received five IQ scores rang­ing from 72 to 78, and experts found that his IQ could be as low as 69 based on sta­tis­ti­cal adjust­ments. A score of 70 or below is con­sid­ered by experts to be a strong indi­ca­tor of intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty. A dis­trict court grant­ed relief to Mr. Smith based on his IQ scores and adap­tive deficits, and the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 

The Supreme Court held that the Eleventh Circuit’s approach to eval­u­at­ing mul­ti­ple IQ scores was unclear” and asked it to clar­i­fy whether the low­er end of the esti­mat­ed IQ range was dis­pos­i­tive” in deter­min­ing intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty, or whether courts should use a more holis­tic approach to mul­ti­ple IQ scores that con­sid­ers the rel­e­vant evi­dence.” The Court not­ed that its ulti­mate assess­ment of any peti­tion for cer­tio­rari by the State may depend on the basis for the Eleventh Circuit’s deci­sion.” Justices Thomas and Gorsuch not­ed that they would have grant­ed cer­tio­rari and set the case for oral argument. 

Painting of a statute of Lady Justice, blindfolded and holding a scale and sword

The case, Hamm v. Smith, set a Supreme Court record as the case dis­trib­uted for con­fer­ence the most times before a deci­sion. The jus­tices sched­uled it thir­ty times over four­teen months before issu­ing a per curi­am rul­ing and remand. Few cas­es are ever dis­trib­uted for con­fer­ence more than once. 

One like­ly rea­son for the Court’s lengthy inde­ci­sion was the case’s pos­si­ble threat to a key Eighth Amendment doc­trine: that courts eval­u­ate the meaning of cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ments” by looking to evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy that mark the progress of a matur­ing soci­ety.” The Supreme Court has used this test in almost 70 years of jurispru­dence, includ­ing land­mark rul­ings that restrained use of the death penal­ty against juve­niles, peo­ple with intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty, peo­ple who are not men­tal­ly com­pe­tent at the time of exe­cu­tion, and peo­ple who com­mit non-homi­­cide crimes. A group of 14 state attor­neys gen­er­al filed an ami­cus brief in Hamm v. Smith argu­ing that the Court should aban­don the test and instead ground its Eighth Amendment jurispru­dence in the Constitution’s test, his­to­ry, and struc­ture.” If the Court agreed to this approach, it would no longer con­sid­er cur­rent soci­etal views and atti­tudes as rel­e­vant and would instead look to how pun­ish­ment was viewed at the time the Constitution was rat­i­fied in 1789.1 

Although the Court’s sum­ma­ry rul­ing in Hamm did not mention the evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy” test, sev­er­al jus­tices have sig­naled in the past that they believe an orig­i­nal­ist” inter­pre­ta­tion is the cor­rect approach to Eighth Amendment challenges. 

Ten days after the rul­ing, the Eleventh Circuit respond­ed to the Court with a brief new opin­ion clar­i­fy­ing that it used a holis­tic approach” when eval­u­at­ing Mr. Smith’s IQ scores. We unam­bigu­ous­ly reject any sug­ges­tion that a court may ever con­clude that a cap­i­tal defen­dant suf­fers from sig­nif­i­cant­ly sub­av­er­age intel­lec­tu­al func­tion based sole­ly on the…lower end of the stan­­dard-error range for his low­est of mul­ti­ple IQ scores,” the court wrote.

Footnotes
  1. Mississippi was one of the states ask­ing the Court to strike down the evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy” test. This year, Mississippi also argued in fed­er­al court that pris­on­ers should only get habeas relief if they can prove that they are inno­cent, in addi­tion to prov­ing a con­sti­tu­tion­al vio­la­tion. Factual inno­cence has nev­er been a require­ment under AEDPA or oth­er habeas laws, and indeed, would mean that peo­ple sen­tenced to death who com­mit­ted the crime would have no means to chal­lenge their sen­tence in fed­er­al court based on intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty or oth­er fac­tors that con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly exempt them from exe­cu­tion. A pan­el of Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals judges endorsed Mississippi’s the­o­ry, but the full Fifth Circuit vacat­ed their opin­ion, and on November 22 issued a new en banc opin­ion that made no men­tion of an inno­cence require­ment — effec­tive­ly bury­ing the theory. ↩︎