Watch my interview with Sierra Gillespie on Law and Crime's Scandal discussing a Texas Couple Sex Trafficked to Cops Out of Suburban Home.
To watch the interview CLICK HERE
* Criminal Defense Attorney * Former Prosecutor * Former Parole Board Member * 724-658-8535
Watch my interview with Sierra Gillespie on Law and Crime's Scandal discussing a Texas Couple Sex Trafficked to Cops Out of Suburban Home.
To watch the interview CLICK HERE
The U.S.
Supreme Court's favorable rating is at its lowest point since regular polling
of the court began in the early 1970s. Last year, the court's favorable rating
fell to 42 percent.
The modern
highwater mark for the court was 1999, when, according to Gallup, the court was
viewed favorably by 80% of Americans. Then the 2000 presidential election
rolled around and the high court ruled along partisan lines to award the
presidential election to George W. Bush over Al Gore.
The
Supreme Court has never rebounded. The high court has come under scrutiny,
while some of its members have become blatantly political. Justice Samuel Alito
flew an upside-down flag over his home and an "Appeal to Heaven" flag
over his vacation home — both with political implications. Justice Clarence
Thomas' wife has become an outspoken right-wing political operative.
Adam
Liptak and Jodi Kantor of The New York Times recently did an expose on the high
court's secret decisions — rulings with no explanation or reasoning — an
emergency docket rendering decisions in the shadow of the courtroom of the
Supreme Court's building.
According
to Liptak and Kantor, in 2016, several justices, including Chief Justice John
Roberts, were eager to block a major initiative of former President Barack
Obama. By a 5-to-4 vote along partisan lines, the Supreme Court halted the
Clean Power Plan, Obama's signature environmental policy. The decision
consisted of only legal boilerplate, without a word of reasoning — thus was
born the "Shadow Docket."
Could the
shadow docket be the product of conflicting personalities at the highest level
of government? Liptak and Kantor point out that Obama, as a United States
Senator, was one of just 22 senators to vote against Chief Justice Roberts's
confirmation. Obama said at the time, the nominee had "far more often used
his formidable skills on behalf of the strong in opposition to the weak."
As Liptak
and Kantor pointed out, traditionally the Supreme Court had "handled major
cases at a stately pace that encouraged care and deliberation, relying on
written briefs, oral arguments and in-person discussions. The justices composed
detailed opinions that explained their thinking to the public and rendered
judgment only after other courts had weighed in."
In the
1960s, when the court was held in high esteem, decisions were made precisely
that way. Chief Justice Earl Warren oversaw a deliberative body whose decisions
are synonymous with individual rights, often taken for granted today.
The
"liberal" Warren Court gave us Brown v. Board of Education and,
within the five-year period between 1961 and 1966, gave America Miranda v.
Arizona, Gideon v. Wainwright and Mapp v. Ohio.
In Mapp v.
Ohio, the high court ruled that evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth
Amendment prohibition against illegal searches and seizures cannot be used in
court. This decision did more to improve police work and protect the public
from overzealous police officers than any decision in modern history.
Gideon v.
Wainwright ensured that all defendants charged with serious felonies have the
right to counsel, even if they could not afford to hire their own. This
decision created the era of public defense and ensured that anyone accused of a
crime would not be forced to defend themselves against the resources of the
state.
Miranda v.
Arizona established "Miranda Rights." A decision so ingrained in the
consciousness of viewers of American crime dramas that just about everyone can
recite the warning, "You have the right to remain silent, you have the
right to an attorney if you can't afford one, one will be appointed for
you."
These
decisions, though controversial, were not delivered in secret. They were
briefed by learned lawyers, argued before the court and the decisions were
thoughtful and deliberate. There were powerful dissents — and each of those
decisions, some 60 years later, is still the law of the land.
That is
how a court builds trust with the public.
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 8th Execution of 2026
Chadwick Scott Willacy, a Florida man who set his neighbor on fire after she returned from work to find
him burglarizing her home was executed on April 21, 2026, reported The Associated Press.
Willacy, 58, received a three-drug injection and was pronounced dead at
6:15 p.m. at Florida State Prison near Starke for the 1990 killing of Marlys
Sather. It was Florida’s fifth execution this year.
The
curtain to the death chamber went up promptly at the scheduled 6 p.m. execution
time, and the lethal injection began 2 minutes later after Willacy made a brief
statement.
He
apologized to his family and friends and urged his ”brothers on the row” to
stay strong. He maintained his innocence, saying he would never kill his
friend.
“To the
victim’s family, I hope this brings you peace. If it does, that’s good, ”
Willacy said. “But this is not right.”
Shortly after the lethal injection got underway, a warden shook Willacy and shouted his name, but there was no response. His skin began to turn gray, and a medic eventually entered the chamber to examine Willacy, declaring him dead.
Court
records indicate Sather, 56, had returned to her Palm Bay home on a lunch break
from work on Sept. 5, 1990, and discovered Willacy burglarizing her home. He
struck her in the head with a blunt object, fracturing her skull, and then
bound her hands and ankles with wire and tape, according to investigators.
Willacy attempted to strangle Sather with a phone cord, and when that didn’t work, he doused her in gasoline and set her on fire, the records show. An autopsy determined that Sather had died from smoke inhalation, indicating she was still alive when she was set on fire.
Willacy
also stole Sather’s car and other items from her home, and used the woman’s ATM
card to steal cash, authorities said. When Sather failed to return from her
break, her employer caller her family. Her son-in-law went to check on her and
found her body.
Willacy
was sentenced to death a year later upon a 9-3 jury recommendation after being
convicted of first-degree murder, burglary, robbery and arson.
Then in
1994 the Florida Supreme Court ordered a new sentencing because the trial judge
failed to allow defense attorneys a chance to rehabilitate a potential juror
who indicated she could not recommend the death penalty. Willacy again drew the
death penalty in 1995, following the 11-1 recommendation of a new jury.
Florida’s
fifth execution of 2026 followed a record
19 executions in the state last year. 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 set in 2014 with eight executions.
On
Tuesday, Willacy woke up at 5 a.m. and remained compliant as the execution hour
approached, Department of Corrections spokesman Jordan Kirkland said earlier.
The inmate received visits during the day from his mother, two sisters and a
cousin, but did not meet with a spiritual adviser.
The U.S.
Supreme Court denied Willacy’s final appeal without
comment. Last week the Florida Supreme Court also denied his appeals. He had
made claims based on the state’s refusal to grant public records requests about
executions and lethal injection.
None of
Sather’s relatives spoke at a news briefing after the execution, but the family
released a statement thanking DeSantis and others.
“We have
waited 36.5 years for justice for our mom. Our mother, Marlys Mae Sather should
be remembered as a beautiful and loving daughter, wife, mother of 3,
grandmother of 5, great grandmother of 5, aunt, cousin and friend,” it said in
part. It noted the victim had lost her husband to cancer in July 1990, “just
weeks before she was murdered.”
“She was a
new widow trying to take one day at a time,” it said. “We miss her so much
every day.”
A total
of 47
people were executed in the U.S. in 2025. Florida led the way with a
long line of death warrants signed by DeSantis. Alabama, South Carolina and
Texas tied for second with five executions each.
Another
execution is planned in Florida on April 30. James Ernest Hitchcock, 70, is
scheduled to received a lethal injection for his conviction in the fatal
beating and choking of his 13-year-old niece.
All
Florida executions are carried out by injecting a sedative, a paralytic and a
drug that stops the heart, according to the Department of Corrections.
To read more CLICK HERE
Since his return to office last year, President Donald Trump has pardoned dozens of white-collar criminals. He’s also forgiven their fines, penalties, and restitution, to the tune of billions. Some of that revenue was supposed to go to a fund to help victims of violent crime — and the organizations that serve them are feeling the pinch, reported The Trace.
The Crime
Victims Fund, established in 1984 by the Victims of Crime Act, or VOCA, is
sustained by criminal fines and penalties from convictions in federal cases,
typically white-collar prosecutions.
All of
that money is required by law to be deposited into the fund. The money is
distributed to state and local programs including domestic violence shelters,
rape crisis centers, and child abuse treatment programs. Gun violence survivors
and the families of victims who died rely routinely on
VOCA funding to reimburse medical expenses, funeral costs, and lost wages.
To read more CLICK HERE
Their backgrounds stand out. And not in a good way.
Two
bankruptcies and six law enforcement jobs in three years. An allegation of
lying in a police report to justify a felony charge against an innocent woman —
an incident that led to a $75,000 settlement and criticism of his integrity. A
third job candidate once failed to graduate from a police academy, then lasted
only three weeks in his only job as a police officer, reported The Associated Press.
Their
common bond: All were hired recently by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement during an unprecedented hiring spree — 12,000 new officers and
special agents to double its force — after the agency received a $75 billion
windfall from Congress to enact President Donald Trump’s mass deportation
campaign.
The
president put a premium on swift action, and for ICE that meant rapid-fire
recruitment and hiring, which in turn led to new employees with questionable
qualifications. Their backgrounds and training have come under scrutiny
after numerous
high-profile incidents in which ICE agents used excessive force.
“If
vetting is not done well and it’s done too quickly, you have higher risk of
increased liability to the agency because of bad actions, abuse of power and
the lack of ability to properly carry out the mission because people don’t know
what they are doing,” said Claire Trickler-McNulty, who served as an ICE
official during the Obama, first Trump and Biden administrations.
To read more CLICK HERE
Michael J. Zoosman writes at JuristNews:
Israel’s
new death penalty law is one of the most discriminatory pieces of execution
legislation that the world has witnessed since Hitler’s Third Reich. This
incontrovertible truth is yet another reason why the Israeli Knesset’s recent
passage of its heinous “Death Penalty for Terrorists” law on March 30 has
effectively defiled this year’s observance of Yom Hashoah, the
consummate Holocaust commemoration for Israel and Jews worldwide that is taking
place as I write these very words.
Let there
be no doubt: the thousands of members of “L’chaim! Jews Against the Death Penalty” in Israel and
abroad are against the death penalty in all cases. As the co-founder of this
group, I am keenly aware that this has been the case since our founding in
2020, from the perpetrator of the Pittsburgh Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting in
2018 to the Washington, D.C., Israeli Embassy murders in
2025, and countless other Jewish and non-Jewish men and women condemned to death across the
world. We carry the torch of Holocaust survivor, Nobel laureate, and passionate
death penalty abolitionist Elie Wiesel (1928-2016), who, when asked about
capital punishment, responded without equivocation that “death should
never be the answer in a civilized society.”
L’chaim
members adhere to Wiesel’s reflections on the death penalty in the wake of the
Holocaust, firmly stating: “With every cell of my being and with every fiber
of my memory, I oppose the death penalty in all forms. I do not believe any
civilized society should be at the service of death. I don’t think it’s human
to be an agent of the Angel of Death.” Countless other Jewish and rabbinic abolitionists since the Holocaust
have shared Wiesel’s position. Many of them recognized the direct Nazi legacies
of various execution methods in the United States and elsewhere, from lethal injection and gassing to the firing squad.
Nazi execution laws and protocols were arguably the
most racist and vile of the modern era. They functioned not
as a system of justice, but rather as a tool for racial persecution, social
engineering, and the systematic elimination of the entire Jewish people and
other perceived enemies. The laws targeted specific groups — primarily Jews,
Roma, people with disabilities, and political opponents — based on the Nazi
ideology of biological racism and the concept of “racial purity.”
Israel’s
new death penalty law is far from the same as the above Nazi legislation. Yet,
by calling for death specifically for Palestinians convicted of killing
Israelis, while effectively excluding Israeli citizens and residents, it
achieves something that few other societies have done since the time of the
Nazis by entrenching an openly two-tiered system of capital “justice.” There
can be no doubt that the Nazis’ targets of their dehumanization campaign were
wholly innocent of any crimes. They selected their victims for who they were,
not what they may or may not have done. This unequivocally contrasts with the
would-be victims of Israel’s death penalty law, each of whom is ostensibly
convicted of murderous terrorist actions. Still, a similar campaign of dehumanization
of those ultimately condemned to death links both systems. The underlying
narrative identifying perpetrators of any terrorist act as “monsters” is
precisely the kind of thinking that allows an otherwise reasonable person—or
“civilized society,” per Wiesel—to deem state-sponsored killing digestible. It
is an insidious process that essentially removes the “human” from human
rights.
To read more CLICK HERE
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard asked the Justice Department to investigate two former government officials who played a central role in President Trump's first impeachment inquiry, reported CBS News..
A
spokesperson for Gabbard's office confirmed that she drafted criminal referrals
for a whistleblower and a former intelligence community watchdog, but did not
detail what specific crimes are alleged. Whether to pursue a criminal
investigation following a referral is up to prosecutors at the Justice
Department.
The
referrals came after Gabbard criticized how former Intelligence Community
Inspector General Michael Atkinson handled the 2019 whistleblower complaint
earlier this week, releasing a trove of documents linked to Atkinson.
The
whistleblower — whose identity has not been formally disclosed — reported an
"urgent concern" about President Trump's request for Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden.
The complaint also expressed concerns about how records of a Trump-Zelenskyy
phone call were handled, and about the role of Mr. Trump's then-personal
attorney, Rudy Giuliani, in the U.S.'s relationship with Ukraine.
"I
have received information from multiple U.S. Government officials that the
President of the United States is using the power of his office to solicit
interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election," the
whistleblower wrote. "This interference includes, among other things,
pressuring a foreign country to investigate one of the President's main
domestic political rivals."
Mr. Trump
was impeached in the House of Representatives in late 2019, but was acquitted
in a Senate vote mostly along party lines in early 2020. He has long denied any
wrongdoing, referring to his phone call with Zelenskyy as "perfect."
Gabbard
alleged in a post on X Monday that "deep state actors" in the
intelligence community "concocted a false narrative that Congress used to
usurp the will of the American people and impeach duly-elected President
@realDonaldTrump in 2019." She argued that the inspector general relied on
"second-hand evidence" in looking into the whistleblower complaint.
To read more CLICK HERE