What is the impact of Miller v. Alabama on juvenile punishment?
Why do states continue to enact laws that apply the death penalty to non-death cases i.e. child rape?
* Criminal Defense Attorney * Former Prosecutor * Former Parole Board Member * 724-658-8535
What is the impact of Miller v. Alabama on juvenile punishment?
Why do states continue to enact laws that apply the death penalty to non-death cases i.e. child rape?
In at least six statehouses this year, lawmakers are revisiting a long-running debate over whether guns should be allowed on college campuses, reported Stateline.
Republican
lawmakers in Florida, Louisiana, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming
have introduced bills that would allow students, staff or visitors with
concealed carry permits — and in some cases, without permits — to bring
firearms onto public college campuses.
Supporters
say the proposals would allow people to defend themselves during emergencies.
Opponents argue they could make campuses less safe and increase the risk of
accidental or impulsive violence.
The push
comes amid another year of intense debate over gun policy in state
legislatures, where lawmakers are advancing sharply different measures.
And it
comes as college campuses continue to grapple with the threat of gun violence.
On March
12, a gunman opened fire inside a classroom at Old Dominion
University in Norfolk, Virginia, killing one person and injuring two others
before ROTC students fought back. One of the students stabbed the gunman,
killing him, according to law enforcement officials.
Virginia law currently prohibits firearms on public college and
university campuses. The FBI is investigating the attack as a possible act of
terrorism.
The Old
Dominion University attack was the most recent of 17 deadly shootings on
college campuses nationwide since 1966, according to Stateline research.
More than
half of the states prohibit firearms on public colleges and universities. In
some states, individual institutions may decide whether to allow guns on
campus.
At least
14 states currently allow firearms on public college campuses, though some
restrict them to people who have a valid carry license.
Legal debates
The U.S.
Supreme Court has long suggested that governments can bar guns in certain
locations — including schools and government buildings — but it has offered
little guidance on how far those gun-free zones can stretch across today’s
sprawling college campuses.
“It’s fair
to say that states and universities still have broad authority to make
decisions about guns on campus, to regulate them or to deregulate them,”
Blocher said.
The
Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
v. Bruen said that modern gun laws must align with the country’s historical
tradition of firearm regulation.
Bruen also
limited the extent to which states can restrict who may carry guns in public,
which has shifted some legal debates to focus on where guns can be carried.
Courts
generally accept that schools fall within the category of “sensitive places,”
Blocher said, but the doctrine is still underdeveloped: Judges have said far
less about how to treat off-campus housing, remote research sites or other
university properties.
“It is the
category that we kind of have the least guidance on — what locations are OK to
restrict guns in, and why,” he said.
To read more CLICK HERE
The 7th Execution of 2026
A Florida man, Michael Lee King was executed on March 17, 2026 for killing a young mother who frantically called 911 from her attacker’s cellphone while tied up in his car, reported The Associated Press.
King, 54, was pronounced dead at 6:13 p.m. following a three-drug injection at Florida State Prison near Starke. He had been convicted of first-degree murder, sexual battery and kidnapping in the 2008 killing of Denise Amber Lee, 21.
The
curtain to the death chamber went up at 6 p.m., the scheduled execution time,
and King gave a nearly inaudible statement, its text relayed by Gov. Ron
DeSantis office.
“Since
finding Jesus in prison, I have tried to live as His disciple obeying the Two
Great Commandments: To love God with all my heart, my mind and all my being,
and to love my neighbor to include everyone — my family, Denise Lee’s family,
everyone in the gallery,” as well as Catholic volunteers who visit the prison
and “those on the team to end my life,” he said.
King did
not apologize or seek forgiveness. Meanwhile, a clergy member was at the foot
of the gurney beside him.
As the
drugs started flowing, King began breathing heavily, his body twitching. All
movement ceased minutes later, and the warden shook King and yelled his name,
but he did not respond. A medic subsequently pronounced him dead.
Court
records show the victim was outside her North Port home on Jan. 17, 2008, with
her two sons — a toddler and an infant — when King drove by, spotted her, and
later abducted her while leaving the children home alone.
King took
Lee to his home where he bound and raped her, investigators said. Later that
day, King drove to his cousin’s house to borrow a flashlight, shovel and gas
can, according to prosecutors. While Lee was bound in King’s car, she managed
to get his cellphone and called 911. She can be heard on a recording of the
call begging for her life so that she could see her husband and children again.
King
eventually drove Lee to a remote area of North Port, a southwest Florida
community, where he shot her in the face and buried her, authorities said. A
state trooper pulled King over a short time later because his 1994 green
Chevrolet Camaro matched the description give by another 911 caller. A woman
had heard screams coming from the vehicle while stopped at a traffic light and
had called police to report a possible child abduction.
Investigators
later recovered Lee’s hair and belongings from King’s home and vehicle,
authorities said.
Months
later, the Florida Legislature unanimously passed the Denise Amber Lee Act,
which provides better training for 911 operators. The Denise Amber Lee
Foundation, created by her husband Nathan Lee, continues to promote training
and raise public awareness nationwide.
The
foundation said that besides Lee’s 911 call, at least four other 911 calls were
made by others that day, including from her husband and people who saw parts of
the crime unfolding — but that communication failures and other issues
prevented help from being sent.
Nathan
Lee, as well as the victim’s father and one of Lee’s two sons were among
relatives who witnessed the execution. All wore shirts in pink, her favorite
color.
Afterward,
the husband said he was relieved to close out this chapter and continue to
focus on improvements to the nation’s 911 system.
”I’m just
super blessed that I got to know Denise, let alone marry her and have two
amazing kids with her,” he said.
Richard
Goff, the woman’s father, pointed out that King didn’t even apologize.
”If you
can’t say something from your heart, don’t say it,” Goff said. He added his
daughter was a hero after purposely hiding hair and other DNA in King’s car and
making sure to leave fingerprints for investigators to find.
Noah Lee
was 2 years old when his mother was killed and said he still feels her loss.
“I
unfortunately didn’t get the opportunity to know her and be raised by her,” the
young man said.
King’s
execution was the fourth this year in Florida and the seventh overall in the
U.S. in 2026, including two executions in Texas and one in Oklahoma. Two more
Florida executions are scheduled this year on March 31 and April 21.
A total
of 47
people were executed in the U.S. in 2025, including a record
19 executions last year in Florida.
All
Florida executions are carried out by injecting a sedative, a paralytic and a
drug that stops the heart, according to the Department of Corrections.
The U.S.
Supreme Court rejected King’s final appeals without comment Monday.
To read more CLICK HERE
Last June, a federal judge in Texas blocked a two-decade-old law offering
undocumented residents the same discounted tuition as other in-state college
students, after the Trump administration sued Texas over the law.
That is
not surprising. Making it difficult for undocumented residents has become the
cornerstone of this administration. However, what is surprising is that the
state's Republican lawmakers tried unsuccessfully to change the law only days
before the lawsuit was filed.
Most
surprisingly, the day the federal lawsuit was filed, the state of Texas
settled. According to The New York Times, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a
close ally of President Donald Trump, simply agreed that the state law should
be invalidated.
The
legislature, which was unable or unwilling to amend or strike the law, was
sidestepped. What is wrong with smart lawyers at the Department of Justice and
the Texas Attorney General's Office finding a clever way to get done what the
181 members of the Texas legislature could not?
The
problem is that sham lawsuits violate the U.S. Constitution and this is not the
only time the Trump Justice Department has colluded with states to violate the
Constitution, circumventing the legislative process.
Article
III, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution limits federal court jurisdiction to
actual, ongoing disputes between adverse parties, prohibiting courts from
issuing advisory opinions or ruling on hypothetical scenarios.
Pursuant
to the "Cases and Controversy Clause," parties to a lawsuit must
truly be adverse to each other, the dispute must be concrete and the dispute
must be capable of being resolved through an award of specific relief. That was
not the case in Texas. The outcome was known before the suit was filed.
In
Florida, according to The New York Times, the Trump administration reached a
legal settlement in February, with the Republican-led state requiring the
Department of Homeland Security to forgo its authority to admit immigrants for
15 years. Though reached with a state government, the settlement could affect
immigration policy for the whole nation.
In
Kentucky, the federal Department of Transportation proposed a settlement in a
case with a pair of industrial companies challenging decades-old racial and
gender-based preferences, acceding to the businesses and agreeing to end use of
the preferences in its contracting nationwide.
More than
a half a century ago, Chief Justice Earl Warren suggested that cases and
controversies "limit the business of federal courts to questions presented
in an adversary context and in a form historically viewed as capable of
resolution through the judicial process ... a tripartite allocation of power to
assure that the federal courts will not intrude into areas committed to the
other branches of government." As a result, suits that are collusive or
feigned by two friendly parties to resolve a question of interest to them are
unconstitutional.
If the
blatant legal schemes in Texas, Florida and Kentucky — defying the Constitution
—are not enough, consider this major Trumpian hustle. Trump is suing himself
and demanding a settlement. The IRS falls under the executive branch of the
U.S. government. It operates as a bureau within the Department of the Treasury,
which is one of the 15 executive departments. The Secretary of the Treasury is
appointed by the president and serves at his pleasure.
At the
heart of the case is Trump's contention that the federal government should be
held liable for the leak of his federal tax returns during his first term as
president.
Trump
wants the Treasury Department and IRS to pay damages to him in the amount of
$10 billion. Could Trump demand that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent settle
the case and pay out?
You probably think something like that is far-fetched. Well, Democrats in the United States Senate don't think so; they introduced the "Stop Presidential Embezzlement Act," which would block any financial benefit to Trump resulting from the $10 billion lawsuit.
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
To visit Creators CLICK HERE
The director of the Idaho prison system has exclusive authority to set and revise the state’s protocols for carrying out the death penalty, and a lawmaker wants to ensure those decisions are not subject to judicial review, reported the Idaho Statesman.
In January, Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa,
proposed the change in law and described it as a “cleanup bill” for technical
updates to statute. Facing pushback from fellow representatives at a committee
hearing, Skaug agreed to retool the bill so it did not go beyond his stated
intent.
The issue
for which Skaug takes aim is at the heart of a death row prisoner’s lawsuit on
appeal with the Idaho Supreme Court. Gerald Pizzuto’s attorneys argue that
former Idaho Department of Correction Director Josh Tewalt abused his power
when he arbitrarily changed lethal injection procedures in late 2024. That
decision violates a law that grants oversight of state agencies and their
actions to the legislative and judicial branches of government, attorneys with
the Federal Defender Services of Idaho said. “The director of the Idaho
Department of Correction believes the Legislature gave him a license to kill
condemned prisoners any way he wants,” Pizzuto’s attorneys with the legal
nonprofit wrote in a recent court filing. “The director is wrong. The Legislature
has not given him unlimited power, cannot give him that power, and has not
stripped the courts of jurisdiction.”
Tewalt’s changes to the state’s lethal
injection protocols came about eight months after the prison system failed to
execute a different death row prisoner in early 2024 when its execution team
could not find a vein in his body suitable for an IV to deliver the chemicals.
The change added a room where prisoners are to be examined and prepped for
either a standard peripheral IV, or a central line — a more invasive procedure
that inserts into the internal jugular in the neck, a femoral vein in the upper
thigh or a subclavian vein in the chest. The next year, Skaug, who chairs the
House judiciary committee, sponsored a bill that makes a firing squad the
state’s lead execution method.
The
Republican-controlled Idaho Legislature approved the bill that kept lethal
injection as a backup option, and Gov. Brad Little signed it into law.
Executions are on hold in Idaho as the prison system completes renovations to
its execution chamber as part of the transition to a firing squad. The cost of
that construction is roughly $1 million. Idaho is one of 27 states with the
death penalty, but has not executed a prisoner in what will soon be 14 years.
The state
counts eight prisoners on its death row, including Pizzuto. ‘A second bite of
the apple’ The Idaho Attorney General’s Office represents IDOC in the legal
appeal. It asserts that the agency’s director and their execution procedure
decisions are excluded from Administrative Procedure Act review, including by
the courts.
With
limited exceptions, the governor-appointed Board of Correction, which oversees
the state agency and selects its director, is exempt under that law. A district
court judge in Ada County sided with IDOC and dismissed the case brought by
Pizzuto, who was convicted in 1986 of killing two people in a robbery north of
McCall and sentenced to death.
The
Supreme Court in 2022 already ruled against Pizzuto in a similar lawsuit based
on the same overarching law, leading the Attorney General’s Office to argue
this new appeal “seeks a second bite of the apple,” which should be denied.
Pizzuto, 70, is Idaho’s second-longest death row prisoner after nearly 40
years, and has overcome five scheduled execution dates during that time. In
2021, the state parole board voted to drop Pizzuto’s sentence to life in
prison, but Little rejected it.
To read more CLICK HERE
Oh how the mighty have fallen. According to Slate, Trump DOJ crony Ed Martin is in trouble again.
It seems
fair to assume that Donald Trump’s second presidency hasn’t turned out quite
the way Martin had hoped. The former interim U.S. attorney for the District
of Columbia has faced a series of embarrassing setbacks over the past 14
months, tumbling down the Justice Department’s ladder, rung by rung, as fellow
Republicans turned sharply against him. But the biggest blow so far arrived on
Tuesday, when disciplinary counsel for the D.C. bar announced a formal
complaint against Martin for professional misconduct. The charges
accuse him of violating his oath to the Constitution, then interfering
with the investigation into his alleged malfeasance. If found culpable, he
could be suspended from the practice of law or disbarred in D.C.
A year
ago, Martin fired off a letter to Georgetown University Law Center (GULC) Dean William Treanor demanding that the school
immediately cease all DEI initiatives and proactively informing the school that
none of its graduates would be considered for positions at the DOJ.
Treanor spanked him for being a bad lawyer and a bad Catholic
and a bad American — check, check, and check! — and Martin wandered off to piss
into the wind somewhere else.
According to Above the Law, that
wasn’t the end of the story, because retired California judge Phillip Argento
(GULC ’75) was so incensed that he fired off a complaint to the DC Board of
Professional Responsibility. At which point Martin LOST HIS DAMN MIND.
From
the Specification of Charges:
Instead of
responding to Disciplinary Counsel’s letter, on March 31, 2025, Mr. Martin
sent, ex parte, a letter to the Chief Judge and the Senior Judges of the
District of Columbia Court of Appeals. In that letter, he stated that he would
not be responding to Disciplinary Counsel’s inquiry, complained about
Disciplinary Counsel’s “uneven behavior,” and requested a “face-to-face meeting
with all of you to discuss this matter and find a way forward.” He copied the
White House Counsel “for informational purposes because of the importance of
getting this issue addressed.”
And
although the judges told him immediately that ex parte communications were
inappropriate and he should continue with the process, he kept on firing off
notes to the court two more times, all the while ignoring letters from the
Disciplinary Counsel. Notably, Martin cc’d the White House Counsel on the first
nastygram, which raises some interesting questions about the ethical advice
David Warrington is giving the administration.
So now Martin has two charges, one for violating the First Amendment and
punishing GULC for its protected speech, and one for communicating ex parte
with a judge during a proceeding. Perhaps this is why Attorney General Pam
Bondi has been desperately trying to take over state bar complaints!
To read more CLICK HERE
The 6th Execution of 2026
Cedric Ricks, a Texas
man, was put to death on March 11, 2026 for fatally stabbing his girlfriend and her 8-year-old son in 2013,
apologizing profusely to her older son who survived with multiple stab wounds
and witnessed the execution, reported The Associated Press
Ricks,
51, was pronounced dead at 6:55 p.m. CDT following a lethal dose of the
sedative pentobarbital at the state penitentiary in Huntsville.
He was
condemned for the May 2013 killings of 30-year-old Roxann Sanchez and her son
Anthony Figueroa at their apartment in the greater Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of
Bedford. Sanchez’s 12-year-old son, Marcus Figueroa, was stabbed 25 times and
feigned death in order to survive.
Ricks
apologized repeatedly to seven relatives of his victims who looked on,
particularly Marcus Figueroa. The attack survivor showed no emotion, watching
through a glass window just steps from where Ricks was strapped to a gurney. On
the back of Marcus Figueroa’s neck, visible above his shirt collar and below
his hair, were several scars apparently from the attack.
“I want to
say that I’m sorry for taking Roxann and Anthony from y’all,” Ricks said when
asked by the warden if he had a final statement. “I’m glad to be able to speak
to tell y’all that face to face.”
He said he
hoped one day that his victims’ relatives would be able to find it in their
hearts to forgive him. He also addressed Marcus Figueroa, saying he hated that
he took his mother and brother away.
“I always
thought about you and I’m sorry that I took your mom and your brother away. I
hate that you had to experience that, I just can’t imagine, but I’m truly sorry
for what I’ve done, and I wish y’all peace and joy as much as you can but I’m
sorry, that’s all I can say,” Ricks said. His voice cracking and tear forming
in his eye, he added that he hoped to find the woman and her son in heaven and
“tell them I’m sorry face to face.”
“I hope
y’all go in peace. I really do. I’m sorry,” he concluded before the injection
began.
As the
drug took effect, he took 19 quick breaths, then made 10 snoring sounds,
followed seconds later by some intermittent gurgles. Then all movement and
sounds stopped, and he was pronounced dead 30 minutes after the injection had
begun.
Among the
other witnesses were Roxann Sanchez’s stepfather and brother, and Anthony
Figueroa’s father, brother and grandmother. None of them showed any emotion in
the death chamber witness area and declined to speak with reporters afterward.
The night
of the killings, prosecutors said, Ricks and Sanchez had been arguing in their
apartment when the woman’s two sons from a previous marriage tried to break up
the fight. Ricks grabbed a knife from the kitchen and began to stab Sanchez
multiple times, court records showed.
Marcus
Figueroa ran to his bedroom closet and tried to call police. After killing
Anthony Figueroa, Ricks began stabbing Marcus Figueroa, who played dead until
his attacker left the apartment, authorities said. Ricks did not harm his own
then-9-month-old son Isaiah, according to court records. Ricks fled and was
later arrested in Oklahoma.
At his
ensuing capital murder trial, Ricks testified that he had anger issues and had
been defending himself against the two boys after they had come to their
mother’s defense.
“Explaining
my rage, I was upset. Things happen. I don’t know. I don’t know. I don’t know.
I wish I could bring them back, like, right now,” said Ricks, who also
apologized at the time for the killings.
A day
before the stabbings, Ricks had appeared in court after having been charged
with assaulting Sanchez during a previous incident.
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected Ricks’ final appeal without comment.
His attorneys had argued that prosecutors violated Ricks’ constitutional rights
by eliminating potential jurors on the basis of race while selecting the trial
panel.
The Texas
Attorney General’s Office said court records show the prosecution’s jury
selection decisions were “race neutral” and lower courts have already concluded
that prosecutors’ actions were not discriminatory.
And
earlier this week, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles denied Ricks’ request
to commute his death sentence or grant a 90-day reprieve.
Ricks was
the second person put to death this year in Texas and the sixth in the country.
Texas has historically held more executions than any other state.
To read more CLICK HERE