“Every power plant in Iran will be out of business, burning, exploding and never to be used again.” War crimes are always a good negotiation ploy.
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Monday, April 6, 2026
Tennessee law eases former offenders' right to vote
A new Tennessee law has eased up on two longstanding financial hurdles for people with felony sentences who want their voting rights back, including a unique requirement among states that they must have fully paid their child support costs, reported The Associated Press.
The
Republican-supermajority Legislature approved the Democratic-sponsored change,
which now lets people prove they have complied for the last year with child
support orders, such as payment plans. The legislation also unties the payment
of all court costs from voting rights restoration.
Advocates
for years have sought various changes to Tennessee’s voting rights restoration
system at the statehouse and in court. They say loosening these two rules marks
the biggest rollback of restrictions to voting rights restoration in decades.
“This is
huge and this is history,” said Keeda Haynes, senior attorney for the advocacy
group Free Hearts led by formerly incarcerated women like her.
To read more CLICK HERE
Sunday, April 5, 2026
FOX News: Man who put up $100K to find Nancy Guthrie says tipsters should skip the sheriff and call Crime Stoppers
As multiple agencies collect tips in the Nancy Guthrie case, the man funding a $100,000 reward says Crime Stoppers — not the sheriff — offers the safest path for witnesses to come forward and an enticing one for people who want to get paid for credible information without giving their name, reported Fox News.
"I
believe that people will come forward if they’re anonymous and if they get a
reward," said Wisconsin attorney Michael Hupy, who is the president of
Crime Stoppers Milwaukee.
In Pima
County, Arizona, the local Crime Stoppers affiliate is known as 88-CRIME, and the
number is 520-882-7463.
Hupy has
paid out $75,000 in rewards and posted another $200,000 in an effort to solve
crimes in his hometown. But he told Fox News Digital this week he put up six
figures in the Guthrie case due to the alarming circumstances of her
disappearance.
To read more CLICK HERE
Saturday, April 4, 2026
Ted Bundy executed 27 years ago claims another victim
The late Ted Bundy, one of the most famous and prolific serial killers in U.S. history, has claimed another victim, reported The Associated Press.
New DNA
testing confirmed Bundy was responsible for the 1974 killing of a 17-year-old
Utah girl who disappeared after leaving a party alone on Halloween night, the
local sheriff’s office said Wednesday.
Laura Ann
Aime was found dead on the side of a highway in American Fork Canyon about a
month after her abduction. She was bound, beaten and without clothing.
Investigators
long suspected that Bundy killed her — police said he confessed without
providing any details before his
execution in Florida in 1989 — but the case remained open until they
could be certain.
“It’s
really quite amazing that people are even still interested in Laura’s case,”
her sister, Michelle Impala, said at a news conference Wednesday. “Know I speak
for my family when I thank you, and thank you media, too, for even caring.”
Bundy was
linked to the deaths
of at least 30 women and girls across several states in the 1970s. His
murders — which occurred in sorority houses, parks and elsewhere — set the
nation on edge. Bundy’s arrest drew widespread fascination, in part because
many considered him to be charming and handsome.
Investigators
had carefully preserved the evidence from Aime’s case, and forensic analysts
were able to identify portions that seemed most likely to have usable DNA
samples, Utah Department of Public Safety Commissioner Beau Mason said.
The state
crime lab got new technology in 2023 that allows investigators to extract DNA
from samples even if they are small, degraded from age or contain DNA from
multiple people, he said. That technology allowed them to identify a single
male DNA profile, which they submitted to a national law enforcement database.
Bundy’s
DNA was a match, Mason said.
That
profile can now be used by other law enforcement agencies who have long
suspected Bundy of additional unsolved killings, he said, adding that more
families could get similar closure.
“Laura
Aime is the quintessential daughter of Utah County,” Sgt. Mike Reynolds said.
“We felt the pain the family feels when she was taken. We felt the pain that
you felt this whole entire time, and we’ve had the desire to deliver to you
some type of healing.”
Impala was
only 12 when her older sister died. Even with a five-year age gap, she said
they were very close and did everything together. They shared a bedroom on the
family’s farm in Fairview, Utah, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southeast of
Provo.
Impala
reminisced Wednesday about riding horses with her sister and watching Aime feed
her horse red licorice nibs.
“When she
died, he would not eat those anymore,” she said.
It’s not
known when Bundy first began his attacks, but by 1974, young women — many of
them college students — began disappearing in Washington state. Authorities
were still investigating those cases when Bundy moved to Salt Lake City and
began killing in Utah, Idaho and Colorado.
At the
time of Aime’s killing, Bundy was studying law at the University of Utah.
In August
1975, he was arrested for the first time in connection with the attacks. Police
pulled him over and found incriminating items in his vehicle including rope,
handcuffs and a ski mask.
He was
found guilty the following year of kidnapping and assaulting a teen in Utah who
had managed to get away. Bundy was sentenced to 15 years in prison for that
crime, and while imprisoned he was charged in connection with the earlier death
of a nursing student.
He was
brought to Aspen, Colorado, for a hearing in that case in 1977, and he escaped
custody by climbing out a second-story courthouse window when he was left alone
for a time. He was caught after about a week, but escaped again six months
later by breaking through the ceiling of a jail.
Bundy fled
across the country, eventually making his way to Tallahassee, Florida. On Jan.
15, 1978, he entered the Chi Omega sorority house at Florida State University,
bludgeoning two women to death with a large branch and leaving two more badly
injured. He then went to another house nearby, badly injuring another woman.
Less than
a month later, he abducted, sexually assaulted and killed a 12-year-old girl in
Lake City, Florida. Kimberly Leach was believed to be his last victim before he
was arrested again and executed by electric chair years later.
To read more CLICK HERE
Friday, April 3, 2026
Ohio AG wants to end eight year moratorium on executions
The state’s outgoing Attorney General is again urging Ohio to resume executions, even though it is highly unlikely before the end of his term or Gov. Mike DeWine’s, reported Statehouse News Bureau.
Ohio’s
death row wait time now stretches longer than 22 years, with more and more
inmates dying from natural causes—or by suicide—than from a sentence, according
to Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost’s mandatory 2025 capital punishment report.
The state ranks 12th of 28 states for its wait time.
“During my
years as attorney general, not a single sentence has been carried out—a mockery
of the justice system and of the dead and their families,” Yost writes in the
report, released Wednesday. “Yet other states, which get their life-ending
drugs from the same companies Ohio could, have found the will and a way to
carry out these sentences since 2019.”
The de
facto execution moratorium is closing in on eight years and extending the
entirety of Gov. Mike DeWine’s tenure. DeWine has delayed every scheduled one
since January 2019, some more than once, blaming pharmaceutical companies’
opposition to use of their products in the drug concoction that creates a
lethal injection.
But with
his time in office closing, DeWine has for months hinted at coming out against
capital punishment altogether. That announcement hasn’t come yet.
The
American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, which opposes capital punishment, has
asked DeWine to grant some death row inmates clemency.
“There is
a real opportunity to address Ohio’s broken capital punishment system by
reviewing individual cases and commuting sentences before it’s too late,” ACLU
of Ohio Chief Policy and Advocacy Officer Jocelyn Rosnick wrote in an email
statement.
More than
100 men and one woman are incarcerated on death row in Ohio, according to
Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections data.
To read more CLICK HERE
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Rejection Board: South Carolina granted parole to 4% of applicants in 2024
“Have a seat please, and tell us what we can do for you today.”
This is
the kind of greeting parole seekers receive in South Carolina when they sit
down to discuss their chance at freedom. But the warm welcome belies a cold,
harsh statistic.
In 2024,
South Carolina granted parole to 4% of applicants, or 25 out of 3,000 people.
Prison Policy Initiative rates South Carolina as the lowest of the 35 states
that grant discretionary parole, which allows people to leave prison before
their sentence is complete. It’s so low that one lawyer who works on parole
cases nicknamed the parole board the “rejection board," reported the Prison Journalism Project.
Even as
parole rates have plummeted across the country in recent years, South Carolina
remains an extreme outlier. Nearby Southern states grant
parole at much
higher rates, including Georgia (28%), Alabama (20%) and Mississippi
(49%).
Shifting
criteria
What does
it take to win freedom via parole in South Carolina?
James T.
had what he thought was a promising application. He was officially deemed
“minimal risk” to reoffend and had no disciplinary record, and that wasn’t all.
“I had five character witnesses, a home plan, job plan, no write-ups and I
still got turned down,” he said.
Most
prisoners I spoke to said they received a standard form letter that stipulated
the primary reason for denial as “the nature and severity of the crime.”
“Tell me
just how I’m supposed to change the nature of my crime?” asked James T., who
was convicted of aggravated assault. “They can use that so-called reason ’til
doomsday. No matter what programs I take or how perfect my conduct is, it won’t
change what I did.”
In fact,
27 of the 35 state parole boards use “nature or severity of crime” as a primary
reason to deny parole, according to Prison Policy Initiative, a nonprofit and
nonpartisan organization that researches the U.S. prison system. It is only
superseded by one’s “criminal history” — which includes one’s history of
incarceration, supervision and arrests.
No one I
spoke to argues that it’s unreasonable for the parole board to ask applicants
to demonstrate that they have “reformed” and will lead a productive life if
paroled. The problem, they said, is the vague and subjective criteria used by
the parole board to make their decision.
“We’ve
found that in practically every state, parole boards cite a denial based not
just on the nature of the crime but [on the idea] that to grant parole would
diminish the severity [of the crime] and promote a disrespect for law and
order,” said Brian Scott, director of Our Journey, a North Carolina-based
transition service for people released from prison. “It’s all just rhetoric.”
‘They
answer to nobody but themselves’
South
Carolina’s parole board considers at least 15 criteria when granting parole, according
to a memo from the state Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services.
Good conduct while in prison, participation in programs, education and
treatment (such as for substance abuse and addiction) are touted as central to
parole decisions.
Billy D.
checked all of those boxes.
“I plum
ran out of programs to take years ago,” he said with a chuckle. “I took every
class, got a college degree in business that’s not worth the paper it’s printed
on, and have been in recovery for over 20 years.”
Billy D.
is an accredited HVAC technician and has a commercial driver’s license and
carpentry certificate, along with a record of serving as a peer support
specialist to others in recovery.
“It really
don’t make any difference to the parole board of South Carolina,” said Billy
D., who was convicted of possession of a controlled substance, breaking and
entering, larceny and driving under the influence. “They do what they want.
They answer to nobody but themselves.”
While South Carolina does give you the standard form citing the reason for their parole denial, they do not explain the reasoning.
Each
member of the state parole board is appointed by the governor for a six-year
term. There are no term limits. The board has more independence than most
parole boards as they control not only parole, but all pardons in the state —
South Carolina is one of only a few states where the governor cannot grant pardons.
When
denied parole, your lawyer can request a parole reconsideration, but it must be
filed within 15 days of the denial, according to a manual from the South Carolina Board of Pardons and
Paroles. Reconsideration is far from guaranteed. Your lawyer must prove to the
board that they can provide additional pertinent information that the board did
not have during the hearing, or that the board based their decision on
“erroneous information.” I have not heard of a case in which someone has had
their denial reversed.
Some
reformers have argued for replacing discretionary parole with presumptive
parole. Presumptive parole means that a prisoner would automatically be granted
parole if they met certain criteria, usually involving good behavior, completed
programming and a certain amount of time served. These advocates have argued
that greater use of presumptive parole, as has been adopted in states such
as New Jersey and Vermont, would free up parole boards to devote more time to
complex parole hearings.
Still, as
long as public officials fear being painted as soft on crime, the prospect of
parole reform remains unlikely.
To read more CLICK HERE
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
CREATORS: No More Mandatory Life for Felony Murder in Pennsylvania
CREATORS
March 31, 2026
A 2021
report by the Philadelphia Lawyers for Social Equity found that there were
8,242 people serving life without parole (LWOP), or virtual life sentences of
50 or more years in Pennsylvania, the second-highest number not only in the
country, but around the world.
Over 1,100
of those sentenced to life without parole were the result of the state's
second-degree murder — "felony murder" — statute. That number may
begin to decline.
Last week,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled it is unconstitutional to require
mandatory life sentences without parole for people convicted of felony murder.
The key to that ruling is "mandatory."
Under the
law, anyone convicted of participating in a felony that results in death — such
as a robbery — receives an automatic life sentence, even if the person didn't
commit the killing or intend for anyone to die.
Life
sentences will still be allowed for second-degree murder on a case-by-case
basis, but the state high court said mandatory life violates the state
constitution's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
The Eighth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits cruel and unusual punishment, but
Pennsylvania has its own constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual
punishments — Article I, Section 13.
Across the
country few states still impose mandatory life without parole. According to the
Death Penalty Information Center, in light of the ruling in Pennsylvania, only
Louisiana has mandatory LWOP for a felony murder conviction
The
Pennsylvania Supreme Court reasoned that "a mandatory life without parole
sentence for all felony murder convictions, absent an assessment of
culpability, is inconsistent with the protections bestowed upon our
citizens" under Article I, Section 13.
Recognizing
the gravity of a life without parole sentence, the court wrote, "Life
without parole imposes the harshest imprisonment sanction permitted under the
law — imprisonment until death without the opportunity for consideration of
release — regardless of culpability."
The
decision will have a significant impact, and as a result, the court stayed the
imposition of the ruling for 120 days to allow the Pennsylvania legislature to
remedy the unconstitutional sentencing scheme through legislation.
The most
pressing question is, will the decision be retroactive? If so, how does
retroactivity affect the sentences of people already behind bars? How lawmakers
approach that process — and what remedies they might settle on — could be the
subject of intense debate.
According
to the Philadelphia Inquirer, options could include seeking resentencing
hearings for every person already convicted under the law, to more narrow
approaches that might invite additional questions — and litigation — about how
to apply the new finding to cases that were decided decades ago.
In
addition, what will be the sentencing scheme for felony murder in future cases?
As the court made clear, LWOP is still an option. But what are the options
short of LWOP? The legislature will have to set the parameters and have only
120 days to do it.
Marsha
Levick, the Phyllis Beck chair at Temple University's Beasley School of Law,
and former chief legal officer of the Philadelphia-based Juvenile Law Center,
coauthored briefs in a series of cases that struck down mandatory life
sentences for juvenile offenders, and said Pennsylvania's high court in this
case appeared to be positioning its ruling for retroactive application — even
if it stopped short of saying so.
Levick
told the Philadelphia Inquirer that the opinion echoes the reasoning the U.S.
Supreme Court used to make similar decisions retroactive in juvenile cases,
though she cautioned that "we're going to have to wait for action."
According
to the Pennsylvania Capital-Star, if no legislation is passed, or a bill is
approved that doesn't address existing life sentences, that will likely kick
the issue back to the courts. And that could result in further delay for those
subject to unconstitutional sentences.
Matthew T.
Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His
book, "The Executioner's Toll," 2010, was released by McFarland
Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter
@MatthewTMangino
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