Having denied a stay of execution on Tuesday in the case of an Arizona inmate (as Conor noted in yesterday’s round-up), yesterday the Court denied stays in two additional cases: those of Mark Stroman, who was convicted of killing two men of South Asian descent and wounding another in what he claimed was retaliation for the September 11 attacks, and Andrew Grant DeYoung, who was convicted of murdering his sister and parents. The Associated Press (via the Chicago Tribune) reports on Stroman’s case and execution, while ABC News and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution report on DeYoung’s case.
At his Sentencing Law and Policy Blog, Professor Douglas A. Berman notes that the First and Fifth Circuits have recently applied the Court’s recent decision in Tapia v. United States and reached different results in cases involving the revocation of a defendant’s supervised release. The First Circuit applied Tapia to vacate a twenty-two-month sentence intended to allow the defendant to take part in a sex therapy program, while the Fifth Circuit affirmed a thirty-five-month sentence intended to allow a defendant to participate in a drug treatment program.
Briefly:
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