For weeks, Isaiah Mosley shuffled into the morning chaos of the Miami criminal courthouse. He would head upstairs and find his place in the jury box of courtroom 4-1, sitting feet away from the man convicted of leaving a 5-year-old girl to be eaten by alligators in the dark, mucky waters of the Everglades. Mosley, alongside 11 other jurors, faced a daunting task: Whether Harrel Franklin Braddy, who kidnapped the girl and her mother nearly three decades ago, should get life or death for his heinous crime.
Saudi authorities executed seven people who had been convicted of drug trafficking in a single day, state media says. The Saudi Press Agency says five Saudis and two Jordanians were found guilty of trafficking amphetamine pills into the kingdom. “The death penalty was carried out as a discretionary punishment against the perpetrators,” the agency reports, adding that the executions took place on Sunday in the Riyadh region. Since the beginning of 2026, Riyadh has executed 38 people in drug-related cases, the majority of the 61 executions carried out, according to an AFP tally based on official data.