Skip to main content

USA | How Capital Defenders Helped End Virginia’s Death Penalty

Virginia’s capital defenders have “worked themselves out of a job,” according to David Johnson, executive director of the Virginia Indigent Defense Commission. The commonwealth’s four capital defense offices, which opened in 2002, are credited with bringing about a dramatic decline in death sentences. That decline was a major factor in Virginia becoming the first southern state to abolish the death penalty.

“The playing field was leveled, and with a level playing field, the death penalty was going away,” Johnson said. “It just changed everything.” While the effect of high-quality representation in capital trials has long been known anecdotally, recent research has provided the data to support that understanding.

A 2019 article by Duke Law Professor Brandon Garrett found that the provision of capital trial representation was more closely correlated with a decline in death sentences than other factors, including state adoption of life without parole sentencing, changes in homicide rates, or the requirement that sentencing decisions be made by a jury, rather than a judge. “In Virginia, the impact was so clear and dramatic, because prosecutors started to fail to get death sentences when they sought [the death penalty] at trial,” Garrett said.

Institutional capital defense units have had significant impacts on the outcomes of capital trials and appeals. When New York reenacted the death penalty in the mid-1990s, the legislature created a statewide capital defender office to provide representation in those cases. Not one capital defender client was sentenced to death. After the state courts struck down New York’s death-penalty statute in 2004 and applied its decision to the three non-defender clients then on death row, the legislature declined to amend the law, abolishing the death penalty in the state.

More than 200 defendants have been sentenced to death in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which, in 2001, had more African Americans on death row than any other U.S. county. In 1993, the Defender Association of Philadelphia was permitted for the first time to provide representation in murder trials, being assigned 20% of the city’s homicide cases. Since then, 90 capital defendants have been sentenced to death. None of them were Defender Association clients.

Steep declines in death sentences also followed the creation of state or regional capital defense organizations in states including Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas.

When the Virginia legislature created the capital defender offices, the bill was sponsored by a Republican senator, Ken Stolle. “I think it went a little further than I thought it would,” said Stolle, who now serves as sheriff of Virginia Beach, “but I think a lot of people didn’t realize the problems (with the old system).” Although Stolle expressed disagreement with the decision to abolish the death penalty, he said he is glad the defense offices had the impact they did.

Douglas Ramseur, the Chief Capital Defender in the Central Virginia regional office credits stable funding and institutional independence for the success of Virginia’s capital defender offices. Prior to their creation in 2002, he said, indigent capital defendants were represented either by under-resourced local public defenders or by court-appointed attorneys who depended on judges for their appointment and for budgetary approvals in cases. “It affects you when you know that judge controls the purse strings,” Ramseur explained. “If you were putting up a fight that a judge didn’t think was the right fight or you were taking longer than the judge wanted it to, maybe you wouldn’t be appointed in the next case.”

By contrast, Ramseur was able to file a motion to remove a portrait of Robert E. Lee from a courtroom before a Black defendant’s capital trial. “I came in defending my African-American client who said, ‘I don’t think that’s appropriate in this courtroom,’” he said. “That’s something that would have been much harder for a local lawyer serving at the pleasure of the judge to do.”

Even prosecutors agreed that providing capital defendants with robust representation made a difference. Henrico County Commonwealth’s Attorney Shannon Taylor, who supported the death penalty repeal, said, “Their ability to dig deep into individuals being charged, be it underlying mental health issues or other mitigating factors, meant the community — the jurors listening — have more information to consider. When they have more information, it leads to the conclusion the death penalty is not appropriate.”

With the death penalty abolished in Virginia, the capital defender offices are expected to close in the next few months. The $3.9 million budget is expected to shift to a new public defender office opening in Chesterfield, and to provide additional appellate defense resources as the legislature also expanded the jurisdiction of the Virginia Court of Appeals.

Source: deathpenaltyinfo.org, Staff, March 30, 2021


🚩 | Report an error, an omission, a typo; suggest a story or a new angle to an existing story; submit a piece, a comment; recommend a resource; contact the webmaster, contact us: deathpenaltynews@gmail.com.


Opposed to Capital Punishment? Help us keep this blog up and running! DONATE!



"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

Most viewed (Last 7 days)

Florida | Tampa Bay man who killed wife, 3 family members sentenced to die

Shelby Nealy will be executed by the state for bludgeoning his wife’s family to death in 2018, a judge decided Friday. During a two-week sentencing trial in July, jurors heard how Nealy, 32, ended a volatile relationship with his second wife by killing her, then murdered her parents and brother a year later in an effort to never be caught. He pleaded guilty to the crimes in 2023. On July 25, the jury of three men and nine women deliberated for about two hours and voted 11-1 that Nealy should be sentenced to death. He stared straight ahead as the verdict was read.

Texas | Death Sentence Overturned After 48 Years

The Court of Criminal Appeals ruled Thursday that Clarence Jordan’s punishment was unconstitutional  A death sentence handed down by a Harris County jury in 1978 was overturned Thursday by the Court of Criminal Appeals.  Clarence Jordan, 70, has been on Texas Death Row for almost 50 years, serving out one of the longest death sentences in the nation while suffering from intellectual disabilities and schizophrenia, his attorney told the Houston Press. 

US AG Authorizes Federal Prosecutors to Seek Death Penalty for Three LA Gangsters Charged with Murder

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche has directed federal prosecutors in Los Angeles to seek the death penalty against three members of a transnational street gang charged with murdering a former gang member who was cooperating with law enforcement on a racketeering and methamphetamine trafficking case, officials announced Thursday. In a letter to First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli on Wednesday, Blanche told prosecutors in the Central District of California they are “authorized and directed” to seek the death penalty against Dennis Anaya Urias, 27, Grevil Zelaya Santiago, 26, and Roberto Carlos Aguilar, 31. All are from South Los Angeles.

Florida Schedules Two Executions for Late April

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Governor Ron DeSantis has directed the Florida Department of Corrections to move forward with two executions scheduled for late April 2026, marking a significant ramp-up in the state's use of capital punishment. The scheduled deaths of Chadwick Willacy and James Ernest Hitchcock follow a series of landmark judicial rulings that have kept both men on death row for decades.

Texas appeals court says another man's confession not enough to reconsider Broadnax execution

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals said Tuesday it won't consider another man's confession as a reason to pause a scheduled lethal injection in three weeks. James Broadnax was convicted of murdering two Christian music producers in Garland, but his cousin, Demarius Cummings, recently confessed that he was the shooter. University of Texas School of Law Capital Punishment Clinic professor Jim Marcus said the appeals court acts as a gatekeeper for cases meeting criteria to get back in court.

Saudi Arabia | Seven executed for drug trafficking

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.

20 Minutes to Death: Witness to the Last Execution in France

The following document is a firsthand account of the final moments of Hamida Djandoubi, a convicted murderer executed by guillotine at Marseille’s Baumettes Prison on September 10, 1977. The record—dated September 9—was written by Monique Mabelly, a judge appointed by the state to witness the proceedings. Djandoubi’s execution would ultimately be the last carried out in France before capital punishment was abolished in 1981. At the time, President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing—who had publicly voiced his "deep aversion to the death penalty" prior to his election—rejected Djandoubi’s appeal for clemency. Choosing to let "justice take its course," the President allowed the execution to proceed, just as he had in two previous cases during his term:   Christian Ranucci , executed on July 28, 1976 and Jérôme Carrein , executed on June 23, 1977. Hamida Djandoubi , a Tunisian national, was sentenced to death for killing his former lover, Elisabeth Bousquet. He was execu...

Singapore executes man for trafficking 1kg of cannabis

SINGAPORE — Singaporean authorities executed Omar bin Yacob Bamadhaj at Changi Prison on Thursday, April 16, 2026, following his 2019 conviction for importing 1,009.1 grams of cannabis. Bamadhaj, 41, though some reports have cited his age as 46, was arrested on July 12, 2018, during a routine search at the Woodlands Checkpoint. Officers discovered the narcotics wrapped in plastic and hidden within his vehicle as he attempted to enter Singapore from Malaysia.  Under the Misuse of Drugs Act, the threshold for the mandatory death penalty involving cannabis is 500 grams, a limit this shipment exceeded by more than double.

Former FedEx driver pleads guilty to killing 7-year-old girl after making delivery at her Texas home

FORT WORTH, Texas — Tanner Lynn Horner, a former contract delivery driver for FedEx, pleaded guilty Tuesday to the 2022 capital murder and aggravated kidnapping of 7-year-old Athena Strand, a move that abruptly shifted the proceedings into a high-stakes punishment phase where jurors will decide between life imprisonment and the death penalty. Horner, 34, entered the plea in a Tarrant County courtroom as his trial was set to begin. The case was moved to Fort Worth from neighboring Wise County last year after defense attorneys argued that pretrial publicity would prevent a fair trial in the community where the girl disappeared.

North Carolina | “Incapable to proceed”: man who killed Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska ruled incompetent

DeCarlos Brown, accused of stabbing Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a Charlotte train, has been found mentally unfit for trial, stalling death penalty proceedings. DeCarlos Brown Jr., accused of fatally stabbing 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a Charlotte light rail train in August 2025, has been found mentally incapable of standing trial, according to a court motion filed 7 April in Mecklenburg Superior Court. A 29 December 2025 report from Central Regional Hospital, a state psychiatric facility in Granville County, concluded that Brown was "incapable to proceed to trial," according to the motion filed by his attorney, Daniel Roberts. The evaluation was ordered after Brown's defense raised concerns about his mental state.