Washington D.C. — The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) today announced the immediate revival of the federal death penalty, simultaneously lifting a moratorium on federal executions that had been in place. The directive, outlined in a memorandum issued on February 5, 2025, by the United States Attorney General to all DOJ employees, signals a significant shift in federal law enforcement policy.
The memorandum asserts that the federal government has historically employed the death penalty for the most severe criminal offenses. It critically views the actions of recent Department leadership concerning the pursuit of death sentences and specifically calls out the commutation of sentences for 37 convicted murderers.
Reviewing Capital Case Decisions
A central component of the Attorney General’s directive is the mandate for the Department’s Capital Review Committee to conduct a comprehensive review of past decisions. This review is specifically focused on all “no-seek decisions” – instances where federal prosecutors opted not to pursue a death sentence – in cases that were capital-eligible and charged between January 20, 2021, and January 19, 2025. The memorandum sets a strict deadline for this undertaking, requiring the comprehensive review to be completed within 120 days.
The memo explicitly prioritizes certain categories of cases for this urgent review. Top priority is assigned to cases involving defendants linked to cartels or transnational criminal organizations. Also high on the list are capital crimes allegedly committed by individuals illegally present in the United States, and capital crimes that occurred in Indian Country or within federal special maritime and territorial jurisdictions. This targeted approach underscores the Department’s focus on specific types of offenses deemed particularly heinous or challenging to prosecute effectively under prior policies.
Pursuing Legal Challenges
In addition to reviewing past prosecutorial decisions, the Attorney General’s memorandum directs key divisions within the Department to pursue legal actions aimed at challenging existing limitations on capital punishment. The Department’s Criminal Division, Civil Division, and Office of the Solicitor General have been tasked with pursuing appropriate legal strategies. The stated goal is to “cabinning or obtaining reassessment of Supreme Court precedents” that currently restrict the authority of state and federal governments to impose capital punishment.
This instruction signals a potential legal battleground, as the DOJ prepares to potentially challenge established case law that has shaped the application of the death penalty in the United States for decades. The move suggests a deliberate effort to expand the legal landscape for capital punishment at both the federal and state levels.
Alignment with Executive Policy
The memorandum states that the order is consistent with President Trump’s Executive Order 14164, which is titled “Restoring the Death Penalty and Protecting Public Safety.” This reference ties the Department’s action directly to the stated priorities of the executive branch regarding criminal justice and public safety.
Furthermore, the directive makes reference to a companion memorandum. While the full contents of this companion document were not detailed in the primary memo, it is noted as focusing on the “Total Elimination of Cartels and Transnational Criminal Organizations.” This linkage suggests that the revival of the death penalty is viewed, at least in part, as a tool in the broader strategy to combat such organizations.
Statutory Basis
The memorandum references relevant federal statutes that underpin the authority for capital punishment and sentencing considerations. Specifically cited are 18 U.S.C. § 3591(b)(l), which relates to the imposition of the death penalty for certain offenses, and 18 U.S.C. §§ 3592(c)-{d}, which pertain to mitigating and aggravating factors to be considered by the jury or judge in determining whether a sentence of death is justified.
The revival of the federal death penalty and the accompanying directives mark a definitive policy shift for the Department of Justice, prioritizing the use of capital punishment for certain crimes and initiating efforts to challenge legal precedents that have limited its application.