Wednesday round-up

Ariane de Vogue reports at CNN that Monday’s decision in Bucklew v. Precythe, in which the court voted 5-4 to reject a death-row inmate’s argument that, because he suffers from a rare medical condition, executing him by lethal injection would be so painful that it would violate the constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment, reveal that “[t]he justices are still bitterly divided over the execution of Domineque Ray, who claimed his religious rights were violated because he could not have an imam with him in the execution chamber, in February.” Stephen Vladeck writes at Politico Magazine that “if Bucklew is a harbinger of how the new court is going to resolve such ideologically charged cases going forward, it’s going to get a lot more divisive from here.” At The Economist’s Democracy in America blog, Steven Mazie finds “the hard-hearted tone of the majority opinion” in Bucklew “shocking.” At Ikuta Matata, Sean Smith wonders whether Bucklew signal[s] a newly invigorated role for originalism in Eighth Amendment interpretation.” [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is counsel on an amicus brief in support of the petitioner in this case.]

At Slate, Daniel Harawa urges the court to review the case of Charles Rhines, a gay death-row inmate who claims that a biased jury deprived him of a fair trial, “because, like racial bias, anti-gay bias should not have a place in the jury box.” Additional commentary on Rhines’ cert petition comes from Adam Romero and Ilan Meyer at Jurist.

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