Bio
Brian Stull is a senior staff attorney with the ACLU Capital Punishment Project. He has served as trial and appellate counsel in capital cases in North Carolina and Texas. Before joining the ACLU, Stull worked for five years at the Office of the Appellate Defender (OAD) in New York City, where he represented indigent criminal defendants convicted of serious felonies on direct appeal and in post-conviction and federal habeas corpus proceedings. Stull holds a B.A. and a M.S.W. from the University of Michigan and graduated cum laude from New York University School of Law.
Featured work
Dec 17, 2012
Velez Hearing Day 4: Plight of Victim’s Family Shows That Death Penalty is the Wrong Priority
Dec 14, 2012
Velez Hearing Day 3: A Portrait of Constitutionally Inadequate Counsel
Dec 13, 2012
Day 2 of Velez Hearing: State’s Witness Dismantles State’s Timeline Theory
Dec 12, 2012
Day 1 of Velez Innocence Hearing: A Family Comes to Court for Justice
Dec 10, 2012
Could Manuel Velez be the 13th Prisoner Exonerated from Texas’s Death Row?
Oct 4, 2012
Texas Court Upholds Death Sentence of Innocent Man Although "There is Something Very Wrong" with Case Against Him
Jul 21, 2012
Update: Intellectually Disabled Georgia Man Faces Monday Execution if Supreme Court Does Not Step In
Jul 17, 2012
A Tale of Three States: Executing the Mentally Disabled
May 15, 2012
Rhode Island's Rightful Stand Against the Federal Government