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Arkansas Supreme Court Decision Allows New DNA Testing in Case of the ​“West Memphis Three,” Convicted of Killing Three Children in 1993

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On April 18, 2024, the Arkansas Supreme Court decided 4-3 to reverse a 2022 lower court decision and allow genetic testing of crime scene evidence from the 1993 killing of three eight-year-old boys in West Memphis. The three men convicted in 1994 for the killings were released in 2011 after taking an Alford plea, in which they maintained their innocence but plead guilty to the crime, in exchange for 18 years’ time served and 10 years of a suspended sentence. 

USA | President Biden should commute federal death sentences: Opinion

President Biden is the first publicly anti-death-penalty candidate to be elected president. But the closest this administration has come to reflecting the president’s values are half-measures from the Justice Department, including a moratorium on executions and Attorney General Merrick Garland’s decision to deauthorize some, but not all, death penalty cases authorized by the Trump-era Justice Department and, thus far, to not authorize any new federal capital cases. 

The Justice Department is moving ahead, however, with some previously authorized capital cases and has not issued a blanket policy against new capital cases.

The Feb. 12 front-page article “Two mass killers, but only one faces death” highlighted these inconsistencies. 

The White House could allay much of this confusion and send a clear signal about this administration’s priorities if Mr. Biden commuted the death sentences of the 44 people currently on federal death row to prison sentences. 

The Constitution grants the president the power to single-handedly commute federal sentences. 

A blanket commutation would realize Mr. Biden’s anti-death-penalty stance and move the United States further along the path to abolition. 

It would also prevent another federal execution spree such as that carried out in the Trump administration. 

The commutation of federal death row sentences could be a defining feature of Mr. Biden’s legacy of, as he describes it, restoring “the soul of the nation.”

Source: The Washington Post, Russ Feingold, February 20, 2023. The writer, a former Democratic senator from Wisconsin, is president of the American Constitution Society.

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


— Oscar Wilde

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