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He’s on Death Row for Murders. Prison Workers Say He Should Be Spared.

Brian Dorsey, who pleaded guilty to murder in the 2006 killings of Sarah and Ben Bonnie, is scheduled to be executed on Tuesday unless Missouri’s governor or the courts step in.

The New York Times

He faces execution. His lawyers may have earned less than $4 an hour

“He says he wants to find a way to make people’s lives better to atone for what he’s done."– Megan Crane

Los Angeles Times

Supreme Court denies case involving prolonged confinement without exercise

Over the objections of its three liberal justices, the Supreme Court on Monday denied a petition from a prisoner confined for years without the chance to exercise outside his cell.

The Washington Post

Liberal justices object as Supreme Court rejects prisoner’s exercise claim

"We are saddened to live in an era where imposing such cruelty — let alone on a person known to suffer from mental illness — is acceptable to any federal judge." — Daniel M. Greenfield

NBC News

How Long Without Outdoor Exercise Is Too Long for a Prisoner in Solitary?

“Exercise is a basic human need, and its long-term denial may constitute cruel and unusual punishment,” said prison officials, who also asserted three years was tolerable. The case could reach the Supreme Court.

The New York Times

The Supreme Court Should Have Heeded Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Wisdom

Punishment that causes durable impairments of the punished person’s brain surely violates the Constitution’s Eighth Amendment proscription of “cruel and unusual punishments.”

The Washington Post

Sadik Baxter

Sadik, miles away in handcuffs, knew nothing of the fatal crash.

The Felony Murder Reporting Project

Sentenced to Life for an Accident Miles Away

A draconian legal doctrine called felony murder has put thousands of Americans—disproportionately young and Black—in prison.

The New Yorker

The Supreme Court should have heeded Ketanji Brown Jackson’s wisdom

Florida prisons lock people in dirty showers for hours, report finds

Prisoners say the stalls are often filthy, with feces, urine, black mold and mice; one man, MJC client Lynne Hamlet, said he got a near fatal infection while detained in a stall.

Tampa Bay Times