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
Apr 14, 2009
Veteran Federal Judge Says Death Penalty Still Arbitrary and Too Costly
Mar 5, 2009
Executing Failure
Mar 4, 2009
Texas's Failed Clemency Process
Jan 23, 2009
Death Penalty Maintains Racial Inequality
Dec 24, 2008
For Christmas, the Poor Get Death
Sep 17, 2008
The Importance of the Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel in Capital Cases
Jun 18, 2008
Death Row Inmates Must Not Be Denied Habeas Corpus
Jun 9, 2008
Safe and Free Without the Death Penalty: Lessons from Bo Jones and the Capital Punishment Experiment
May 8, 2008
Former Execution Volunteer Joins ºìÐÓÊÓÆµ Lethal Injection Suit