Based on Procedural Requirements, U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence of Mentally Impaired Alabama Prisoner
January 20, 2010The United States Supreme Court today denied relief in Wood v. Allen, an Alabama case which asked the Court to address whether trial lawyers performed adequately when they failed to investigate and present evidence of mental retardation. The decision focused on the procedural rules that limit federal habeas corpus review and did not reach the merits of Mr. Woods's claim.
EJI Asks Iowa Supreme Court to Reverse Life-Without-Parole Sentence for Young Teen
January 19, 2010Bryan Stevenson argued at the Iowa Supreme Court today in Veal v. State that sentencing a 14-year-old child to life imprisonment without possibility of parole violates state and federal constitutional guarantees against cruel and unusual punishment.
EJI Encourages Supporting Relief Efforts in Haiti Through Partners in Health
January 14, 2010EJI urges our supporters to contact our sister organization Partners in Health (PIH) which is coordinating emergency services for the victims of the hugely destructive earthquake that hit Haiti on January 12, 2010. PIH is on the ground in Haiti and is one of the most effective health care providers in impoverished settings in the world. PIH is already in Haiti leveraging the skills of more than 120 doctors and nearly 500 nurses and nursing assistants who work at its health clinic sites in Haiti. To help PIH respond to the crisis in Haiti, click here.
Federal Appeals Court Rules That Ban on Voting Rights For Formerly Incarcerated is Racially Biased and Illegal
January 7, 2010The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held on January 5, 2010, that Washington State's felon disenfranchisement law violates the Voting Rights Act because it results in minorities being denied access to the polls on account of their race.
Prominent Legal Organization Abandons Death Penalty System
January 5, 2010The American Law Institute, comprised of 4000 judges, lawyers, and law professors who shape and help promote consistency in the law throughout the United States, recently disavowed the intellectual framework for the modern death penalty system.
EJI Wins New Trial for Alabama Death Row Prisoner David Riley
December 21, 2009On December 18, 2009, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reversed David Riley's capital murder conviction and remanded his case for a new trial because the trial court allowed his jury to consider highly prejudicial evidence in an illegal manner.
Alabama Supreme Court Reverses Death Penalty Case After Finding Evidence of Racial Discrimination in Jury Selection
December 7, 2009On December 4, 2009, the Alabama Supreme Court reversed the case of Jason Sharp, who was sentenced to death following a trial tainted by the State's discrimination against African Americans during jury selection.
United States Supreme Court Reaffirms That Defense Counsel Must Investigate for Mitigating Evidence in Death Penalty Cases
December 1, 2009The United States Supreme Court reaffirmed this week in a case from Florida, Porter v. McCollum, that a defense lawyer must conduct a reasonable investigation to uncover mitigating evidence in preparation for a capital trial.
Former Alabama Death Row Inmate Herbert Williams Sentenced to Life Without Parole
November 24, 2009On November 12, 2009, Herbert Williams was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Mr. Williams’s death sentence last year after finding that his trial lawyer failed to provide effective representation because he did not investigate or present powerful evidence of abuse and psychological trauma at trial.
EJI Challenges Homelessness and Permanent Punishment Caused by Alabama's Community Notification Act
November 18, 2009EJI is working to assist people who have been forced into homelessness, denied critical medical care, and subjected to permanent imprisonment as a result of Alabama's Community Notification Act.

