Watch my interview with Matt Johnson on Court TV discussing the trial of Dr. Ebony Parker.
To watch the interview CLICK HERE
* Criminal Defense Attorney * Former Prosecutor * Former Parole Board Member * 724-658-8535
Watch my interview with Matt Johnson on Court TV discussing the trial of Dr. Ebony Parker.
To watch the interview CLICK HERE
The 14th Execution of 2026
Richard Knight from Florida was convicted of fatally stabbing his cousin’s girlfriend and the couple’s
4-year-old daughter was put to death on May 21, 2026, the seventh person
executed by the state this year, reported The Associated Press.
Knight, 47, was pronounced dead at 6:13 p.m. following a three-drug injection
at Florida State Prison near Starke. Knight was convicted of first-degree
murder in the June 2002 killings of Odessia Stephens and the couple’s daughter,
Hanessia Mullings.
When the
death chamber curtain went up at the scheduled 6 p.m. execution time, Knight
was already strapped down with arms extended and an IV line in place. Asked by
the warden if he had a final statement, Knight said, “I want to give thanks to
Yahweh, who is the most high.”
The
execution began immediately afterward. Knight closed his eyes and barely moved
as the drugs began flowing. After about 10 minutes, a medic was called in and
Knight was declared dead.
Florida’s
seventh execution of
the year followed a record
19 executions in the state in 2025. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis
oversaw more executions in a single year in 2025 than any other Florida
governor since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. The previous record
was eight in 2014. And all told, a total of 47 people were
executed in the U.S. in 2025.
According
to court records, Knight had been living in Coral Springs, near Fort
Lauderdale, with his cousin, his cousin’s girlfriend and their daughter in
2000. Knight and Stephens frequently argued about Knight living there. One
evening while Knight’s cousin was at work, Stephens told Knight he would have
to move out the next morning. Knight became angry and stabbed Stephens multiple
times and then attacked the young girl, the records show.
Hans
Mullings, who was Stephen’s boyfriend and the father of the 4-year-old, told
reporters after witnessing Thursday’s execution that his family still grieves
the loss.
“The pain
never leaves,” Mullings said. “We love them still, and we can’t stop loving
them. We miss them a lot.”
Stephen’s
sisters and mother didn’t attend the execution, but provided a statement exprssing
closure.
“Words
cannot express the profound sense of peace and finality we feel today,” it
said. “While this does not fill the empty space in our hearts, the closing of
this long, painful chapter allows us to fully focus on honoring the beautiful
lives of Odessia and Hanessia.”
“Richard,
may our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ grant you the mercy you failed to give our
loved ones whom you so brutally took from us that night,” the statement added.
On
Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected Knight’s final appeal without
comment.
That came
shortly after the planned execution of
a Tennessee inmate, Tony
Carruthers, was called off. Tennessee officials said a team quickly
established Carruthers’ main IV line for a lethal injection but couldn’t find a
suitable vein for a backup line required under the state’s execution protocol.
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee later announced the state would not try again for at
least a year to execute Carruthers, who was convicted of killing three people.
Also this
week, an Arizona prisoner convicted of killing another man by throwing
gasoline at him and lighting a match was put
to death Wednesday. Leroy Dean McGill, 63, received a lethal injection
at the Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence for the death of Charles Perez,
who was attacked at a north Phoenix apartment in 2002.
Florida,
meanwhile, is preparing to conduct another execution on June 2. Andrew Richard
Lukehart, 53, was convicted of fatally beating of his girlfriend’s infant
daughter in 1996. All Florida executions are by lethal injection of a sedative,
a paralytic and a drug that stops the heart, officials say.
To read more CLICK HERE
The 13th Execution of 2026
An Arizona
prisoner convicted of killing another man by throwing
gasoline at him and lighting a match was put to death on May 20, 2026, the
first of three executions planned this week around the U.S., reported The Associated Press.
Leroy Dean
McGill, 63, was pronounced dead at 10:26 a.m. PDT following a lethal injection
at the Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence. McGill was convicted of murder
in the death of Charles Perez, who was attacked with his girlfriend in a north
Phoenix apartment on July 13, 2002.
It was the
first lethal injection carried out this year in Arizona, and McGill didn’t
appear to be resisting at any point during the procedure. After a lethal dose
of pentobarbital began flowing, he began breathing heavily and made a snoring
sound. And, about 21 minutes after the IV insertion process began, he was
pronounced dead.
While the
state was criticized for having difficulty in inserting IV lines during
executions in 2022, it took just one attempt on each of McGill’s arms to
successfully insert IVs.
“Today’s
process went according to plan,” said John Barcello, deputy director of the
Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry. Barcello quoted
McGill’s last words as: “I just want to thank everyone for being so
accommodating and nice.”
Before the
injection began, McGill looked at the witnesses, smiled and nodded. Media
witness Josh Kelety from The Associated Press said he heard McGill at one point
say: “I’m going home soon.”
Arizona
Attorney General Kris Mayes, whose office pressed for the execution to be
carried out, said her thoughts were with the victims.
Media
witness Sean Rice from Phoenix television station KPN said the execution was
carried out smoothly.
“I didn’t
see any issue at all finding a vein on either arm,” he said. Rice said he also
observed a slight twitching on the right side of McGill’s head about four
minutes before the inmate was pronounced dead.
Authorities
said that in 2002 McGill threw gasoline at Perez and Perez’s girlfriend, Nova
Banta, as they sat on a sofa in the apartment, setting them on fire. Perez and
Banta had accused McGill of stealing a gun from the apartment before the
attack. At the time, McGill was using methamphetamine and hadn’t slept in
several days.
Banta
survived, but Perez died.
Thirteen
people have been executed so far this year in the United States.
At the
Arizona trial, Banta testified that McGill had told her and Perez not to talk
behind people’s backs. Before they could respond, McGill lit them on fire,
authorities said.
Perez and
Banta ran out of the apartment. Another man who lived in the apartment used a
blanket to put out the flames on Banta, who suffered third-degree burns over
three-quarters of her body. Perez died later at a hospital in extreme pain,
prosecutors said.
Banta
identified McGill as the attacker at trial.
Jurors
deliberated for less than an hour before convicting McGill of murder in Perez’s
death in October 2004. He also was convicted of attempted murder for attacking
Banta, arson and endangerment of people who escaped without injuries when the
fire forced them to flee the apartment and a nearby unit where flames spread.
McGill’s
lawyers had argued for leniency by presenting evidence about abuse he suffered
as a child as well as mental impairment and psychological immaturity. The jury
ultimately returned the death sentence.
This
spring, McGill’s lawyers made a last-ditch bid to get him resentenced, but a
lower-court judge rejected it. The Arizona Supreme Court also declined a
request from McGill’s lawyers to postpone the execution.
McGill,
who declined an interview request from The Associated Press, waived his right
to seek clemency.
Arizona
last applied the death penalty in 2025, executing Richard
Kenneth Djerf for the 1993 killings of four members of a Phoenix
family and Aaron
Gunches for the 2002 fatal shooting of his girlfriend’s ex-husband.
The state
carried out three
executions in 2022 following a nearly eight-year hiatus brought on by
difficulties obtaining execution drugs and by criticism that a 2014 execution
was botched. In that 2014 execution, Joseph Wood was injected with 15
doses of a two-drug combination over two hours, leading him to snort
repeatedly and gasp hundreds of times before he died.
The
state’s current execution protocol calls for administering two syringes of
pentobarbital, a powerful sedative.
With
McGill’s death, Arizona now has 108 prisoners on death row.
To read more CLICK HERE
Has there ever been an episode of presidential corruption so blatant and threatening to constitutional order? Certainly not in modern times, suggests The New York Times Editorial Board. President Trump’s Justice Department is using taxpayer money to create a $1.8 billion political slush fund. Ostensibly set up to compensate those who the department claims have “suffered weaponization and lawfare,” it will in fact reward loyalists willing to defy the law and commit violence on behalf of the president.
The fund
manages to combine three of Mr. Trump’s most alarming behaviors. One, it is an
obvious form of corruption, coming from a president who has used his
office to
enrich himself, his family and his allies. Two, the fund continues his
pattern of using the Justice Department as
an enforcer to punish his perceived opponents and protect his friends
and allies. Three, the fund is his latest attempt to
rewrite history about the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, attack
on Congress.
It is
worth pausing to put the fund into the larger context of Mr. Trump’s political
project: He is destroying pillars of American democracy to empower himself. He
claims elections are legitimate only if he wins. He uses federal law
enforcement to investigate and prosecute his perceived enemies. He purges his
party of officials who defy him. He describes members of the other party and
civil society as traitors and enemies. He incentivizes his supporters to break
the law on his behalf and rewards them when they do. He directs his allies
to change
election rules to keep his party in power.
Mr.
Trump’s project has not yet succeeded, at
least not fully. Many Americans — in the judicial system, in Congress,
in state governments and elsewhere — continue to stand up for democracy and
oppose his autocratic ambitions. By now, though, nobody should have illusions
about
The fund’s
existence is a story of political self-dealing. It is nominally the
product of a flimsy personal lawsuit that Mr. Trump filed this year against the
Internal Revenue Service, which he oversees, over the leaking of his tax
returns during his first term. That lawsuit led to an absurd negotiation, in
which the lawyers on one side worked for Mr. Trump the citizen and those on the
other side worked for Mr. Trump the president.
Adding to absurdity, the government lawyers reported to Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, who previously worked as Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer. A federal judge in Miami helping to oversee the case, Kathleen Williams, pointed out that the two sides were not adversaries, which called into question the process. Even Mr. Trump acknowledged the situation shortly after filing the suit by saying, “I am supposed to work out a settlement with myself.”
Yet the
talks proceeded because Mr. Trump’s Justice Department was in charge.
Unsurprisingly, they led to a deal that was extremely favorable to him.
In
exchange for the president’s dropping the suit against the I.R.S., both he and
his supporters will receive government handouts. For Mr. Trump, the handout
comes in the form of permission to have cheated on his taxes. The
government has
granted him and his family immunity from ongoing audits of his tax
payments. He has a long history of using
questionable accounting maneuvers, and the audits could have cost him more
than $100 million, experts have said. Now they will cost him nothing.
For his
supporters, the handouts will come from the slush fund. The Justice Department
will tap a permanent stream of revenue that Congress created in 1956, known as
the Judgment Fund, to settle lawsuits against the federal government. As Paul
Figley, a former Justice Department official, noted, the new fund appears to be
both legal and at odds with Congress’s intent. “It’s horrible policy,” Mr.
Figley told The Times.
The
department has
allocated $1.8 billion for what it calls, in an Orwellian flourish, an
Anti-Weaponization Fund and invited applications from people who have been
targeted for “political, personal or ideological reasons.” Mr. Blanche — who
holds his position as acting attorney general largely because of his
willingness to use federal power in service of Mr. Trump’s personal whims —
will appoint a five-member board, with congressional leaders given input on one
of the five. Mr. Trump can fire any of the members at any time.
To
understand who is likely to receive payments, look at who has previously
received settlements from the Justice Department. Michael Flynn, who was
briefly Mr. Trump’s national security adviser in 2017, received
$1.25 million, even though he pleaded guilty to lying to F.B.I.
agents. The family of Ashli Babbitt, who participated in the Jan. 6 riot, and
whom federal agents shot as she and others approached the House floor, received
nearly $5 million, even though investigators cleared the shooters of
wrongdoing. The Trump administration is paying off people who committed
violence and crimes, as long as they are Trump allies.
The fund’s
timeline is the giveaway of how Mr. Trump plans to use it. The Justice
Department said the fund would stop processing claims on Dec. 15, 2028, weeks
before the president is to leave office, ensuring the money is distributed
while he still holds the power to fire anyone who objects. The window is
precisely the window of Mr. Trump’s authority.
Even some
of Mr. Trump’s usual defenders are unhappy. Senator John Thune, Republican of
South Dakota and the majority leader, meekly said that he was “not a big fan”
of the fund. Brian Morrissey, the Treasury Department’s general counsel, resigned
within hours of the announcement, seven months after the Senate had
confirmed him.
Providing
payoffs is only part of the point. Another, according to Mr. Blanche, is
“ensuring this never happens again.” What, exactly, is “this”? The evenhanded
enforcement of the law.
The Trump
administration has already fired federal agents who did their duties by
investigating the president’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Mr.
Trump has
issued blanket clemency to more than 1,500 Jan. 6 rioters, some of
whom may soon
receive payments. His Justice Department secured an indictment of
James Comey, the former F.B.I. director, on dubious charges as retribution for
his role in the investigation of the 2016 Trump campaign’s Russia ties. The
fund continues the effort to turn law enforcement into a tool of raw political
power.
The fund
also encourages future lawlessness on Mr. Trump’s behalf. It sends the message
that he will use his power not only to shield people who break the law from
accountability but also to shower benefits on them. Just as punishment is a
deterrent, rewards are an incentive.
After
President Richard Nixon’s abuses in the Watergate scandal, Congress and the
executive branch built rules and traditions to ensure that federal agencies,
especially the Justice Department, operated in the public interest, rather than
that of the president. Mr. Trump has tried
to break this system. Once he is gone, it will need to be rebuilt, and
better than before. He has exposed and exploited its flaws and gaps. Unless
they are filled, Mr. Trump’s corruption and perversion of justice risk becoming
the norm.
In the
meantime, Americans should be cleareyed about what the president is doing. He
is taking their money and showering it on criminals.
To read more CLICK HERE
A Philadelphia Inquirer and ProPublica investigation found case after case in criminal post-conviction actions where court-appointed attorneys did minimal work to examine their clients’ claims and rejected what later turned out to be legitimate legal issues. The findings reveal that Philadelphia’s post-conviction system repeatedly delayed or denied justice for wrongfully convicted people who then spent years or decades behind bars.
The news
organizations reviewed 250 of Philadelphia’s reversed convictions and sentences
since 2018 in violent felony cases. Wagner was one of at least 50 people whose
lawyers said there was no basis to challenge their cases, only for judges to
later decide they deserved new trials or sentences.
While in
some cases the exonerating evidence did not emerge until years after the
no-merit letter was filed, a majority were tossed out based on issues the PCRA
lawyers overlooked or rejected.
Three
years of invoices appointed attorneys submitted to the court, covering 83
homicide PCRA cases in which the lawyers filed no-merit letters, show the
extent of lawyers’ efforts.
Those
attorneys did not arrange a single phone call with the client, contact the
trial lawyer or obtain the police or prosecution case files about
three-quarters of the time. Those case files have been a key source of evidence
in overturned convictions since Philadelphia’s district attorney began making
them available to lawyers six years ago.
Lawyers
Did Little Before Declaring Cases Meritless
Homicide
cases are the most serious ones a lawyer can handle. But many lawyers handling
homicide Post Conviction Relief Act cases never spoke with their clients before
rejecting their claims. Here’s how often they took basic steps in 83 cases.
Data is
drawn from all invoices submitted in 2023, ’24 and ’25 for no-merit letters
filed in a total of 83 homicide cases.
In some
cases, records show the attorneys rejected their clients’ claims just days or
weeks after being appointed and submitted filings with factual errors,
including the wrong defendant’s name. They filed no-merit letters despite red
flags, such as a client’s co-defendant having already been exonerated or a
detective who locked the client up having been arrested for assaulting
witnesses or tampering with evidence.
Daniel
Anders, the administrative judge who oversees Philadelphia’s court-appointed
counsel system, did not respond to requests for comment.
Judge
Barbara McDermott, who oversaw many PCRA cases before recently retiring from
Philadelphia’s Court of Common Pleas, defended the system and said it is
working as intended.
“We’re
never going to be a perfect system, but within the system we’ve had we’ve done
the best we can,” she said, adding that no-merit letters play an important role
in shutting down pointless challenges. “At some point, there has to be finality
to cases.”
In
Pennsylvania, a person looking to challenge their conviction starts by filing a
PCRA petition, often handwritten on a state-issued form. If it’s a person’s
first PCRA, a judge will assign a lawyer to amend it.
To read more CLICK HERE
Why would
material evidence in the possession of a murder suspect be inadmissible at
trial?
Simple —
the exclusionary rule. The recent decision by Judge Gregory Carro of the New
York Supreme Court in the Luigi Mangione prosecution has spurred interest in
what the exclusionary rule does and if it is still needed.
The rule
was first established in federal court in 1914. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled
that federal law enforcement officers could not use evidence obtained in
violation of a suspect's Fourth Amendment rights in federal criminal trials.
Prior to 1914, law enforcement officers, although compelled by the U.S.
Constitution not to violate an accused's rights, could nonetheless violate
those rights with impunity.
The state
version of the rule didn't come about for another 47 years. I wrote about the
exclusionary rule for Creators in 2025, and it is worth reexamining. In 1957,
Cleveland, Ohio, police officers went to the home of Dollree Mapp looking for a
suspect in a criminal investigation. She refused to let the police in without a
warrant.
The police
left, and when they returned, they were armed with a "fake" warrant.
Chicanery took the place of real police work. Instead of going to a judge to
get a warrant, the police drew up their own. After entering Mapp's home, police
conducted a search and confiscated obscene material, resulting in Mapp's
arrest.
As a
result of the police misconduct, the U.S. Supreme Court provided a remedy — the
exclusion of illegally obtained evidence from admission in a criminal
prosecution — resulting in a dismissal of the charges.
Many
Supreme Court observers suggested that the Mapp decision would be detrimental
to law enforcement. The courts would be inundated with challenges and the
guilty would go free in droves. That never happened.
What the
exclusionary rule accomplished was a higher standard of police training and, in
turn, police work. Ironically, the late Justice Antonin Scalia cited
"increasing professionalism of police" as a reason for the
exclusionary rule's obsolescence.
Scalia's
argument didn't make sense then and doesn't make sense today. Without the
exclusionary rule, an individual's constitutional rights would be ignored. Law
enforcement training would turn on a dime.
For now,
the exclusionary rule is still around. Mangione's case is illustrative of why
it is still needed. There was a nationwide manhunt for Mangione after the
brazen assassination of insurance executive Brian Thompson on a New York City
sidewalk. Mangione was recognized by a McDonald's Restaurant employee in
Altoona, Pa.
The police
were called and Mangione was detained after they arrived. Mangione had a
backpack that was moved to a table approximately nine feet away. He was patted
down for officer safety, both of which are appropriate under the Fourth
Amendment.
However,
the police went further and searched his backpack without obtaining a search
warrant. They said they needed to make sure there was not a bomb in the bag.
Prosecutors argued that the circumstances created an exception to the rule
requiring a warrant. The court didn't buy it. Judge Carro ruled that the search
of Mangione's bag at McDonald's violated his constitutional rights.
As a
result, by way of the exclusionary rule, evidence including a gun magazine, a
cellphone, a passport, a wallet and a computer chip, all found in the backpack,
is not admissible at trial.
However, a
second search of the bag at the police station revealed a gun linked to the
crime and Mangione's manifesto attacking the insurance industry. The second
search of the same bag without a search warrant is constitutionally
permissible. The police may conduct a warrantless inventory search to record
the suspect's belongings. As a result, the gun and manifesto are admissible at
trial.
The
exclusionary rule promotes integrity in the criminal justice system — even
strong evidence of guilt, in a high-profile killing, cannot be used if police
violate the Constitution to get that evidence.
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 12th Execution of 2026
A man who
experts for both prosecutors and defense attorneys had said was intellectually
disabled became the 600th person executed in Texas since 1982, put to death
on May 14, 2026 for the killing of a 77-year-old retired college professor, according to The Associated Press.
Edward
Busby Jr. was pronounced dead at 8:11 p.m. following a lethal
injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville, hours after the U.S. Supreme
Court lifted a stay over his disabilities claims. The execution capped a series
of last-minute legal efforts by Busby’s attorneys seeking to spare his life.
Busby was
condemned for the suffocation death of Laura Lee Crane, a retired professor
from Texas Christian University. Prosecutors said she was abducted from a
grocery store parking lot in January 2004 and left to suffocate in the trunk of
her car with duct tape wrapped heavily around her face, covering her mouth and
nose.
The
execution was the 600th in Texas since it resumed carrying out the death
penalty in 1982. Busby also was the fourth person executed this year in Texas
and the 12th nationwide. Earlier Thursday, Oklahoma executed Raymond
Johnson for killing his ex-girlfriend and her 7-month-old daughter
nearly 20 years ago.
When asked
by the warden if he had a final statement, Busby repeatedly apologized and
asked for forgiveness.
“I am so
sorry for what happened,” he said while strapped to the death chamber gurney.
“Miss Crane was a lovely woman. I never meant anything bad to happen to her.”
He said he wished he could “take it all back” and added he had “no right to get
in that car.”
“I’ll take
the blame if that helps.”
He said he
had surrendered his life to God and urged a sister, who was praying and
watching through a window a short distance away, to find a church and “pick up
your cross.”
“I’m here
because this is the will of God,” he said before the injection got underway.
As the
lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital began flowing, he took a sharp
breath, closed his eyes and gasped. Then he made snoring sounds that got
progressively quieter. Within 40 seconds, all movement and sounds ceased. He
was pronounced dead 38 minutes afterward.
Busby’s
execution had been in doubt after the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last
week issued a stay of execution to further review his claims of intellectual
disability. But the Supreme Court overturned the stay Thursday at the request
of the Texas Attorney General’s Office. The attorney general’s office had
argued that similar appeals were previously rejected and were “meritless” and
based on “conflicting evidence.”
Busby’s
lawyers quickly sought another stay but it was denied by a lower court.
The
Supreme Court in 2002 had barred the execution of intellectually disabled
people. But it has given states some discretion to decide how to determine such
disabilities.
Busby’s
attorneys had argued against putting him to death because a defense expert as
well as one hired by the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office, which
prosecuted the case, both found he was intellectually disabled.
The
district attorney’s office had previously recommended Busby’s sentence be
reduced to life in prison. But the trial judge in Busby’s case disagreed with
the findings of intellectual disability and in 2023 upheld the death sentence.
In a
statement Wednesday, the district attorney’s office said it requested
Thursday’s execution date because it believed that under current law Busy was
not intellectually disabled.
Two other
prior execution
dates for Busby had been
delayed by courts.
Prosecutors
have said Busby and his co-defendant, Kathleen Latimer, abducted Crane in her
car from a Fort Worth grocery store parking lot and later put in her vehicle’s
trunk as they drove around. Prosecutors said she died in the trunk after
suffocating from having 23 feet (7 meters) of duct tape wrapped over her entire
face.
Busby was
subsequently arrested in Oklahoma City driving Crane’s car and led authorities
to her body in Oklahoma just north of the state line with Texas.
Latimer is
in prison serving a life sentence for murder.
Bryan Mark
Rigg, an author and historian who represented the Crane family as a witness to
the execution, said they “neither support or oppose the death penalty. However,
they are united in their respect for the rule of law.”
Rigg said
as a child he was a student of Crane, who for decades helped children overcome
learning disabilities and “was discarded in a field like a piece of trash.” He
said the execution was not about vengeance but “accountability under the law
and about remembering the life of an extraordinary educator.”
To read more CLICK HERE