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USA - What’s Behind the Execution Surge of 2025?

September 13, 2025:

September 13, 2025 - USA. What’s Behind the Execution Surge of 2025?

States have executed 30 people this year — already the highest annual total in more than a decade.

In Joe Biden’s final days as president, he landed a quiet political blow against Donald Trump by commuting the sentences of dozens of men on federal death row. Trump had said he wanted to carry out as many executions as possible; Biden deprived him of the chance.

So it is all the more surprising that Trump’s first year in office is seeing a noticeable surge in executions nationwide. Ten states have executed 30 people since January, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. That’s already the highest annual total in more than a decade, with 13 more executions planned through December.

What explains the rise? Probably not public support. Recent polls show around 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. Across the country, juries have sent 10 people to death row this year, compared with a high of 315 in all of 1996.

It’s prisoners like those, from a generation ago, who are now facing execution. Calls to experts on the death penalty led me to four interconnected theories to explain the rise in executions this year.

  1. The Trump Effect

Trump wants to refill federal death row: Last month, the president vowed to execute everyone who commits murder in Washington, D.C. His attorney general, Pam Bondi, has pledged to seek the punishment more often in federal cases nationwide, including for famous defendants like Luigi Mangione.

It’s too soon to tell if his administration will deliver on these promises. But legal experts say some state attorneys general and governors might be revving up their execution chambers to align themselves with the president’s priorities, in a bid for his and his supporters’ favor.

“It only takes one Trump-aligned leader in a state to restart executions of people who have been on death row for years,” said Laura Porter, executive director of the 8th Amendment Project, which seeks to repeal the punishment.

In the last few years, attorneys general Todd Rokita of Indiana, Liz Murrill of Louisiana, and Derek Brown of Utah have all been key figures in pushing a return to executions in their states after long pauses. None of them responded to a request for comment.

But one state leader is in a category all his own.

  1. The DeSantis Effect

In Florida, the governor signs death warrants, and this year Gov. Ron DeSantis has overseen 11 executions — more than a third of the national total, and more than any year in Florida since 1936. In the last few years, DeSantis also promoted new laws seeking to expand the death penalty, to allow it in cases of people who sexually assault children, for instance.

DeSantis began focusing on the death penalty more when he first started running for president in 2023, at a moment of escalating rhetoric on the subject from other candidates. He is widely expected to run again in 2028, and has been aligning himself with Trump by making Florida a center of immigration detention.

DeSantis’s office did not respond to a request for comment. If he is trying to curry favor with voters for higher office, his actions would fit a long, bipartisan history. In 1992, then-Gov. Bill Clinton flew home to Arkansas from the presidential campaign trail to oversee an execution.

But in the past, such efforts by governors have often run into a barrier, which has recently evaporated.

  1. The Supreme Court Effect

The vast majority of death row prisoners ask the Supreme Court to stop their executions. They usually fail. This was true even before Trump appointed three justices in his first term, all of whom have, unsurprisingly, shown little sympathy towards death row prisoners.

But when the first Trump administration pursued 13 executions in its final months, a new dynamic emerged: Lower courts halted some executions — only for the Supreme Court to step in and let them proceed.

These decisions were a signal to state leaders, suggesting that if they pursued more executions, the court would not stand in their way, according to Ngozi Ndulue, a law professor at the University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law. “The Trump execution spree paved the way for what we’re seeing now,” she said.

The Supreme Court has also, in recent years, cleared away one more barrier to executions.

  1. The Methods

A decade ago, the Supreme Court made it more difficult for death row prisoners to challenge methods of execution, in the case of Glossip v. Gross. This paved the way for states to develop nitrogen gas chambers (Louisiana, Alabama and Arkansas) and firing squads (South Carolina, Utah and Idaho).

The president himself has reportedly talked in the past about his support for firing squads, hangings and the guillotine. Such comments help explain what state leaders and Trump himself may be going for with these methods. “We’re in an age of spectacle, and the death penalty has always been a spectacle,” said Alexis Hoag-Fordjour, a professor at Brooklyn Law School.

At the same time, lethal injection remains the dominant method across the country. Prison officials once struggled to secure drugs, because large pharmaceutical companies refused to sell them. State lawmakers solved this problem by passing bills to make the purchasing process more secretive, hoping to entice smaller pharmacies to get involved.

Success has not come cheap. Indiana carried out two executions since last December, ending a 15-year pause. The Indiana Capital Chronicle recently sued the Department of Correction for public records, learning the state paid more than a million dollars to purchase enough drugs for four lethal injections. Two doses expired before they could be used. Another execution is planned for October, even as Gov. Mike Braun has said he’d consider arguments for ending the death penalty.

https://www.themarshallproject.org/2025/09/13/trump-death-penalty-florida-louisiana

(Source: themarshallproject.org, 13/09/2025)

IRAN - Ali Mozaffari executed in Yasuj on September 14
IRAN - Seyed Javad Mortazavi executed in Ahvaz on September 14
IRAN - Qavam Najafi and Amirhossein Pouramini executed in Shiraz on September 14
IRAN - Peyman Ajami and Rasoul Paydar executed in Hamedan on September 14
IRAN - Amir Parki executed in Zahedan on September 14
IRAN - Reza Sarani executed in Kashmar on September 14
IRAN - Ahmad Haqi and Majid Soleimani executed in Ilam on September 14
IRAN - Maziar Karami and Peyman Ajami executed in Hamedan on September 14
IRAN - Rasoul Paydari executed in Qom on September 14
IRAN - Kazem Mousavi executed in Rasht on September 14
IRAN - Elyas Shiroozehi executed in Zahedan on September 14
IRAN - 4 men executed in Shiraz on September 14
IRAN - Parviz Dolati and Farhad Sepehvand executed in Khorramabad on September 14, 2025
IRAN - Reza Sarani executed in Kashmar on September 14
IRAN - Rouhollah Rostami executed in Hamedan on September 13
IRAN - Hafez Ghavidast executed in Rasht on September 13
IRAN - Political prisoner Naser Bekrzadeh sentenced to death
IRAN - Update on the condition of the Foremans
SOMALIA EXECUTES TWO SOLDIERS CONVICTED OF AIDING AL-SHABAAB IN COMMANDER’S KILLING
IRAN - Hadigheh Abadi and Younes Mazarshams executed in Qazvin on September 11
INDIA: HC REDUCES DEATH SENTENCE TO LIFE, JUNKS RAPE CHARGE
SAUDI ARABIA: MAN EXECUTED FOR ‘JOINING A TERRORIST ORGANIZATION’
IRAN - Behzad Parsa and Abdollah Mohseni executed in Gorgan on September 10
INDIA: 3 GET DEATH FOR KILLING RICKSHAW PULLER OVER WIFE’S ILLICIT AFFAIR; 2 GET LIFE, WOMAN ACQUITTED
IRAN - Rasoul Khanmohammadi executed in Gorgan on September 10
IRAN - Youssef Asadi Kahbad and Ahmad Bani Asad executed in Ahvaz on September 10
SOMALIA EXECUTES THREE AL-SHABAAB MILITANTS CONVICTED OF DEADLY ATTACKS IN MOGADISHU AND LOWER SHABELLE
INDONESIA: MAN SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR TRAFFICKING ECSTASY PILLS
AFGHANISTAN: TALIBAN HANG MAN IN PUBLIC IN HERAT AFTER EXECUTION-STYLE SHOOTING
IRAN - Saman Abdoli executed in Dezful on September 9

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