Law & Crime News
January 5, 2026
Gov. Josh
Shapiro has quietly issued a reprieve to a Pennsylvania inmate on death row.
This was
the first reprieve of Shapiro's tenure and, although inconsistent with the
actions of a number of other state executives, should not come as a surprise.
Soon after he took office, Shapiro called on
the legislature to repeal the death penalty. He said that his time as
attorney general "revealed two undeniable truths about our capital
sentencing system: that it is inherently fallible and that its consequences are
irreversible."
In his
reprieve, he wrote that although those sentenced to death
"have committed the most terrible crimes and deserve to spend the rest of
their lives behind bars," the commonwealth "should not be in the
business of executing people."
Shapiro's
position stands out in comparison to politicians who use the death penalty as a
prop to promote or tout their "tough on crime" bona fides.
There were
47 executions in the United States last year — the most since 2010, the year I
chose to examine all the executions across the country in my book, "The Executioner's Toll, 2010."
Maybe
Donald Trump's executive order on the first day of his current term has
had an impact on state-sponsored death. The order established that "It is
the policy of the United States to ensure that the laws that authorize capital
punishment are respected and faithfully implemented, and to counteract the
politicians and judges who subvert the law by obstructing and preventing the
execution of capital sentences."
At least
one Trump adherent took the machinery of death and ran with it. Florida's
Gov. Ron
DeSantis has presided over a record-breaking surge in capital punishment — 19
executions last year.
Even the
U.S. Supreme Court seems poised to expand the application of the death penalty.
Not to mention, the Court denied every request to stay an execution
in 2025.
In 2002,
the Supreme Court ruled in Atkins v. Virginia that the Eighth Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution bans, as cruel and unusual punishment, the execution
of people who are intellectually disabled. The Court is poised to whittle away
at its prior ruling.
Florida's
Supreme Court recently upheld a 2023 state law allowing nonunanimous
juries to sentence people to death. Florida law permits capital punishment with
a jury recommendation of 8-4 in favor of death, the lowest standard in the
nation.
Methods of
execution were also controversial. Louisiana adopted nitrogen gas as a method of execution and
South Carolina adopted — and used — the firing squad in 2025.
What
explains the increase in executions?
Probably
not public support. Recent
polls show about half of Americans favor executions, but the best
evidence of what people really think is found in courtrooms, where jurors have
increasingly rejected the punishment.
Only 27
states, the federal government and the U.S. military, still allow the death
penalty. This year, prosecutors in just 11 of those states sought the death
penalty against a total of 51 people, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Jurors
chose to send just 23 people to death row. Two-thirds of those death
sentences came from only three states — Alabama, California, and
Florida. To add some perspective, in 1996 alone 315 people were sentenced to
death in the United States.
"The
increase in this year's execution numbers was caused by the outlier state of
Florida, where the governor set a record number of executions," said Robin Maher, Executive Director of the Death Penalty
Information Center. "The data show that the decisions of Gov.
DeSantis and other elected officials are increasingly at odds with the
decisions of American juries and the opinions of the American public."
Matthew T.
Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C., New
Castle, Pennsylvania. He is a frequent contributor to Law & Crime
News. His book "The Executioner's Toll, 2010" was released by
McFarland Publishing. You can follow him on X @MatthewTMangino.
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