Bio
Brian Stull has worked for the ºìÐÓÊÓÆµ Capital Punishment Project since 2006, and currently serves as the Project’s Deputy Director. He has represented clients facing death in trial, appellate, post-conviction, federal habeas and other cases in Alabama, Florida, California, Georgia, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Carolina and Texas, and has long participated in the ºìÐÓÊÓÆµâ€™s amicus work. Brian’s work has increasingly focused on litigating and exposing the pernicious role of racism in the administration of the death penalty.
Brian previously worked as a social worker in community mental health. He is an alumnus of New York’s Office of the Appellate Defender, the University of Michigan (B.A. and M.S.W.) and New York University School of Law. Brian takes inspiration from his resilient clients, talented colleagues, and from his N.Y.U. professors Anthony Amsterdam and Bryan Stevenson.
Featured work
Oct 1, 2010
Medication Shortage Reveals Some States' Shamefully Wrong Priorities
Aug 3, 2010
Act Now to Save a Virginia Woman on Death Row
Jun 28, 2010
Saluting Justice Stevens' Principled Decisions in Capital Cases

May 19, 2010
Jerry Guerinot: Most Dangerous Defense Attorney Ever?
May 6, 2010
Horseshoes, Hand Grenades, and Habeas
Mar 10, 2010
Good and Bad Lawyers Determine Who Lives and Who Dies
Mar 9, 2010
Executing on a Technicality
Oct 22, 2009
Race and Death Penalty Links Run Deep and Wide
Aug 11, 2009
North Carolina Moves Against Executions Based on Race
May 7, 2009
The Empty Promise of Appointed Clemency Counsel in Texas