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
Aug 13, 2015
Connecticut Supreme Court Declares Death Penalty Is Unconstitutional
Oct 8, 2014
After 9 Years, Manuel Velez, an Innocent Man, is Free at Last
Nov 15, 2013
Death Row is Not a "Constitution-Free Zone"
May 31, 2013
Will the Supreme Court Stop Georgia from Executing an Intellectually Disabled Man?
May 24, 2013
"Without continuing affirmative action in higher education, I worry that Kabir will not have the same enriching college experience that I enjoyed."
Apr 5, 2013
Court Rejects Attempts to Devalue Life of the Accused in South Texas Capital Case
Mar 20, 2013
March Madness Takes on New Meaning When a Person's Skin Color is Cause For His Execution
Feb 14, 2013
How Do I Explain to my Six Year-Old Son What Kind of a Society Plans to Execute an Intellectually Disabled Man? [UPDATED]
Dec 18, 2012
Velez Hearing Wraps Up With Summations, Offers Lessons on Role of Counsel