Taylor v. Trump
Case Overview
President Biden commuted the death sentences of 37 people to life without the possibility of parole, and on day one, Donald Trump signed an executive order directing his attorney general to ensure they were imprisoned in conditions 'consistent with the monstrosity of their crimes,' meaning supermax. We generally do not allow the executive branch to single out specific, named individuals for harsher punishment after courts have already set their sentences, and that principle is what the plaintiffs are pressing here. Even if you think these are bad people, any erosion of that protection cascades.
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The Application
Trump's executive order directing supermax imprisonment of 37 specifically-named individuals whose death sentences Biden commuted to life without parole effectively increases the harshness of their confinement and targets them for executive punishment despite courts having already finalized their sentences, raising constitutional concerns about executive overreach.
The Conclusion
The case is active before Judge Timothy J. Kelly in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, presenting a core separation-of-powers question about whether the President can use executive authority to increase punishment for specific individuals whose sentences the judiciary has already set.
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