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Supreme Court doesn’t take many death penalty cases. It took this one.

In debates about the death penalty, one figure looms large: Richard Glossip.

Since being placed on Oklahoma’s death row in 1998, Mr. Glossip has been tried twice. He has had nine execution dates. He has eaten three last meals. He has been reprieved from execution three times.

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A majority of U.S. states no longer conduct executions, and a majority of Americans now say the death penalty is not fairly applied. The Supreme Court has been reluctant to take many death penalty cases. Richard Glossip’s is different.

In addition to celebrities like Susan Sarandon and Kim Kardashian, Mr. Glossip found an unlikely ally advocating for clemency: Oklahoma’s Republican attorney general. Gentner Drummond submitted a brief to the U.S. Supreme Court arguing that Mr. Glossip did not receive a fair trial.

On Monday, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Mr. Glossip’s case. 

That likely doesn’t signal a shift in the court. But it implies that the uncertainties of Mr. Glossip’s case are too extraordinary to ignore. And it comes at a time when, for the first time, a majority of Americans say they no longer trust the death penalty. Only 47% of Americans say that capital punishment is applied fairly, according to Gallup.

“It sounds as if the court is willing to review this case carefully,” says Robin Maher, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center. “It sends a really strong statement about how important innocence is in death penalty cases.” 

In debates about the death penalty, one figure looms large on the national stage: Richard Glossip.

Since being placed on Oklahoma’s death row in 1998, Mr. Glossip has been tried twice. He has had nine execution dates. The prisoner has eaten three last meals. He’s been reprieved from execution three times.

The former hotel worker was found guilty of allegedly masterminding the murder of his boss. Mr. Glossip has claimed that he’s innocent. A TV docuseries portrayed his trial as unfair. He’s become a cause célèbre for death penalty skeptics such as Susan Sarandon, Richard Branson, and Kim Kardashian. Mr. Glossip also found an unlikely ally advocating for clemency: Oklahoma’s Republican attorney general. Gentner Drummond submitted a brief to the U.S. Supreme Court arguing that Mr. Glossip did not receive a fair trial.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

A majority of U.S. states no longer conduct executions, and a majority of Americans now say the death penalty is not fairly applied. The Supreme Court has been reluctant to take many death penalty cases. Richard Glossip’s is different.

On Monday, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Mr. Glossip’s case. After a long deliberation, its decision to take up the case took observers by surprise. The conservative court has been reluctant to intervene in death penalty cases. 

Mr. Glossip’s case likely doesn’t signal a shift in the court. But it implies that the justices believe that the uncertainties of Mr. Glossip’s case are too extraordinary to ignore. And it comes at a time when, for the first time since the death penalty’s reinstatement in 1976, a majority of Americans say they no longer trust it. Only 47% of Americans say the capital punishment is applied fairly, according to Gallup.

“It sounds as if the court is willing to review this case carefully,” says Robin Maher, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, a Washington nonprofit that does not argue for or against the death penalty. “It sends a really strong statement about how important innocence is in death penalty cases.”  

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