DEATH PENALTY

Photo courtesy of Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty

The Promise of Justice Initiative fights for the abolition of the death penalty.

The modern death penalty is a legal racist relic of the lynching that terrorized Black people in the south throughout the 19th and 20th century. Louisiana law allows for people to be killed by the State using electric chair, gassing, and secret poison chemicals. Our state’s death penalty system exploits marginalized people and has shockingly little reliability in its convictions – evidence shows significant racial disparities, widespread evidence of intellectual disability, and misconduct by prosecutors that has resulted in innocent people being sentenced to death.

PJI is committed to fighting the execution of human beings and to abolishing the death penalty in Louisiana.

We use multipronged tactics to advocate for repeal and take legal action to stop executions that are likely to be scheduled. PJI also supports people harmed by this system, including the families of people on death row, families of those harmed by violence, and our communities.

PJI fights for Justice, Dignity, Freedom, Autonomy, and Mercy.

“Southern trees bear strange fruit
Blood on the leaves and blood at the root
Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze
Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees”

Strange Fruit, song by Abel Meeropol, sung by Billie Holiday and Nina Simone

DEATH PENALTY

HISTORY OF HARM

BY THE NUMBERS

Louisiana leads the nation in death row exonerations.

In recent decades, innocent people have been sentenced to death at an alarming rate in Louisiana. Read about some of these exonerees below.

A SYSTEM TO BE ASHAMED OF

Since 1976, over 80% of death sentences in Louisiana have been reversed on appeal.

Read about this and other profound systemic flaws in the application of the death penalty in Louisiana. Use the down arrows on the right to expand each statement below.

2023 CLEMENCY
CAMPAIGN

In June 2023, 56 of 57 of the people on Louisiana’s death row filed clemency petitions asking then-Governor John Bel Edwards and the Board of Pardons to commute their death sentences to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. PJI led a coalition that supported these efforts.

At a critical moment in history, PJI took a transformative approach that was community-led, restorative, and racially just. It was led by a diverse coalition with the shared goal of abolishing the death penalty in Louisiana. Unfortunately, the efforts to achieve clemency for people on death row were ultimately defeated by an alliance of state officials and powerful outside lobbying forces.

While this effort did not reach the goal, the project forced a wide-reaching conversation on the death penalty in Louisiana. We engaged death penalty advocates from across the country and a diverse collection of Louisianans from across the state, including victims, survivors, and families; faith leaders and clergy; and death row exonerees.

DEATH PENALTY

TODAY’S REALITY

There has not been an execution in Louisiana since 2010.

Executions have not occurred in Louisiana recently because of several key factors.

Drug companies said no.

Companies that manufacture pharmaceuticals have refused to provide substances for the purpose of execution. So, the Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety (DOC) has been unable to procure the lethal injection chemicals needed to carry out executions.

Federal courts said no.

A man on death row challenged the State’s procedures for carrying out executions in federal court. For more than a decade, PJI attorneys and co-counsel partners have led this court fight which prevented the State from executing people from 2012 until it was dismissed in 2022. However, we petitioned the court, and a federal judge reopened the case, Hoffman v. Jindal, in February 2025.

The people said no.

Like the rest of the country, new death sentences in Louisiana are at historic lows. Public opinion is shifting, too, with polls showing Louisiana public support for the death penalty declining dramatically. An Acadiana poll in 2023 showed strong support for commuting Louisiana’s death sentences to life without parole.

Louisiana elected officials said…yes?

In the special legislative session on crime in early 2024, legislators added another method of execution—nitrogen gassing. The special session bill encountered strong resistance from religious leaders and advocacy groups, including a coalition called Jews Against Gassing. But it passed, and the Governor quickly signed it into law. The state may now execute people by lethal injection, nitrogen gassing, and the electric chair.

 

The first use of nitrogen gassing was the 2024 execution of Kenneth Smith in Alabama. The resulting scene was described by the spiritual advisor as “22 minutes of horror.” Experienced media witnesses described it as being unlike any executions they had seen before, with Mr. Smith gagging, struggling to breathe, and having a seizure.


 

The political power in Louisiana has shifted, and this fight has suddenly become much more urgent.

DEATH PENALTY

JUST SAY NO TO KILLING PEOPLE

PJI Strongly Condemns the Governor’s Plan to Start Executions by Gassing

In early February, just after Louisiana showcased its culture and hospitality on the world’s stage for the Super Bowl, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill took the perverse step of seeking to restart executions. After over two decades without a contested execution, Governor Landry’s plan is a reckless political action ushering in gassing as a new form of execution under the guise of retribution. Read our full statement. 

Take Action Now

What you can do to stand up against these killings:

  1. Call the Governor’s office directly to share your opposition — (225)342-0991. Please consider saying, “My name is ___ and I live in ___ Louisiana. I do not approve of the Governor’s plan to resume executions.”

  2. Create and share your own video on social media letting your friends and community know that you oppose the death penalty and are against the scheduled executions. Be sure to introduce yourself and focus on justice, safety, and healing—not attacks. On Instagram, invite PJI (@justicespromise) to be a collaborator. Otherwise, tag PJI as you’re able.

  3. Send a letter to the Governor and Attorney General to Just Say No to Killing People! Use this easy form to send your letter.

  4. Follow PJI on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter/X, and/or BlueSky and help share the videos, graphics, and news stories.

  5. Tell your loved ones and colleagues. Let folks know what is happening, and tell them how they can get involved to stand up against these killings.

  6. Help fund the effort. PJI is a small but mighty organization that has taken on this fight to stop the executions of people. We did not budget for this. We need to raise $50k to support mobilization and public outreach efforts. If you or your organization could contribute to this goal, we would be very grateful. Donate here or email our development team for more information.

Graphics to share on social media

SHARE this editorial from Nola.com/The Times Picayune: “Call it brutality. Call it torture. Whatever you call it, and even if it is in the act of lawfully putting a human being to death, this is not how civilized peoples and states should operate.”

The Governor’s actions are evidence of what we’ve known for a long time: the government and politics have no place in deciding who lives and who dies. To put communities who have suffered great loss through a stunt motivated by politics, is cruel, disturbing, and another injustice in the long chain of injustices. Louisiana can, should, and will demand better of our leaders.
— Samantha Kennedy, Executive Director of the Promise of Justice Initiative