06/17/2026
A federal judge compared the use of nitrogen hypoxia with barbaric ex*****on methods that haunted the imagination of the framers of the constitution. Alabama wants to use it to execute Jeff Lee.
Read more at:
Alabama wants to execute a man by nitrogen hypoxia. That is cruel | Austin Sarat
To put it plainly, nitrogen hypoxia kills by starving someone of the oxygen needed to sustain life
06/15/2026
Update on Roberson's innocence case: His attys have filed written arguments & a motion requesting a hearing in the district court; his case was remanded in Oct 2025 to consider whether he deserved relief under Ex parte Roark. Here's the motion:
150 - Motion for In-Person Hearing.pdf
06/15/2026
When the juror later learned a judge had overturned the recommendation and sentenced Lee to death, it felt devastating, the juror said. “That was my first time realizing that I had wasted my time serving on a jury."
Read more at:
A jury voted for Jeffery Lee to receive a life sentence. Alabama plans to execute him anyway | CNN
Jeffery Lee faces ex*****on Thursday because a judge overturned a jury’s vote for a life sentence under a since-abolished procedure called judicial override.
06/12/2026
Since 1976, clemency has been granted for humanitarian reasons to 369 people sentenced to death, while 1,669 people have been executed.
Learn more about clemency here:
What to Know: Clemency and the Death Penalty | Death Penalty Information Center
DPI’s “What to Know” series examines capital punishment from multiple angles, one topic at a time. Each installment provides essential facts...
06/09/2026
Check out Cory Session's important new op-ed in The Barbed Wire about TDS's report on Tarrant County and its extreme use of the death penalty.
Texas County Pursues Death Penalty ‘Almost Exclusively’ Against People of Color, Report Shows. We Have an Opportunity to Change That.
A new report concludes Tarrant County is an “extreme outlier” in its unfair targeting of racial and ethnic minorities for the death penalty.
06/08/2026
'This “troubling case history…by the same district attorney in the same judicial district” was well known when Mr. Pitchford’s case reached the Mississippi Supreme Court.'
Read more of Equal Justice Initiative's article here:
Supreme Court Rules for Man on Mississippi Death Row in Racial Bias Case
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Terry Pitchford.
06/03/2026
The men wrongfully convicted in the Yogurt Shop Murders have finally received financial compensation from the Austin City Council, which unanimously approved the settlement.
Austin leaders approve $35M settlement to men wrongly accused in Yogurt Shop Murders
The Austin City Council unanimously approved $35 million settlement for the four men wrongly accused in the infamous Yogurt Shop Murders.
05/28/2026
"Police hypnotized a witness. Now a Texas man faces death.
My honest error once put a man in prison. Now I’m fighting for another innocent."
Read the full article here:
Opinion | Police hypnotized a witness. Now a Texas man faces death.
My honest error once sent a man to prison. Now I’m fighting to save another innocent man.
05/21/2026
"...it is an eye-opening report, and it is right here in my own backyard."
Incredible op-ed by Cory Session covering our Tarrant County report.
Read more:
Texas County Pursues Death Penalty ‘Almost Exclusively’ Against People of Color, Report Shows. We Have an Opportunity to Change That.
A new report concludes Tarrant County is an “extreme outlier” in its unfair targeting of racial and ethnic minorities for the death penalty.
05/19/2026
Texas banned hypnosis in criminal cases but a man on death row says it helped convict him.
https://www.nbcnews.com/video/testimony-from-witness-that-had-been-hypnotized-helped-send-man-to-death-row-263546949868
Charles Flores sits on death row in Texas, convicted with the help of testimony from a witness that had been hypnotized in the days after her murder. Since then, Texas banned hypnosis in criminal investigations. Flores tells NBC News’ Dan Slepian he’s innocent.
Texas banned hypnosis in criminal cases but a man on death row says it helped convict him
Charles Flores sits on death row in Texas, convicted with the help of testimony from a witness that had been hypnotized in the days after her murder. Since then, Texas banned hypnosis in criminal investigations. Flores tells NBC News’ Dan Slepian he’s innocent.