With the sweep of a pen late last month, Gov. Ralph Northam signed new legislation that abolished the death penalty in Virginia.
“There is no place for the death penalty in this state, in the South or in this country,” Northam proclaimed after touring the former execution chamber at the Greenville Correctional Center.
From his office at the University of Virginia School of Law, professor Richard Bonnie added a “good riddance.” Not long after he graduated from UVA Law in 1969, Bonnie was at the vanguard of a movement of young attorneys who spent decades building the case against the death penalty in the Old Dominion.
Bonnie represented, pro bono, four of the first five prisoners to sit on Virginia’s “new” death row after the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.
“I was practically just out of law school,” he said. “It was an opportunity to be helpful and put my ideas to work, but it was also kind of intimidating.”
Virginia historically led the nation in executions. But after Furman v. Georgia raised doubts about the constitutionality of the practice in 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court declared a moratorium throughout the country, inviting states to revise their laws to avoid a capricious or discriminatory outcome.
Professor Richard Bonnie became a death row appellate advocate after capital punishment was reinstated in 1976. (UVA Law Archives)
In response to the state revisions, including in Virginia, a new subspecialty of criminal law took shape focusing on death penalty litigation. Bonnie, currently the Harrison Foundation Professor of Medicine and Law and director of the Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy at UVA, suddenly became recognized as a leading expert, which is why he took on death row cases after the trial attorneys completed their direct appeals.
He hadn’t aspired to be a capital defense advocate. His only prior litigation experience was supervising an appellate litigation clinic at the Law School, from 1969 to 1970, before briefly serving in the military in Washington. His scholarship in capital post-conviction litigation developed after he returned to the Law School in 1973. It was then that he began a collaboration with professors Peter Low and John C. Jeffries Jr. on the casebook “Criminal Law,” which has been in publication for 45 years.
“There are two types of professors who teach criminal law,” Low told him. “Those who are really interested in the insanity defense and the death penalty, and others who aren’t so interested.”
Bonnie added, “He wasn’t that interested in it, but of course I was.”
Bonnie’s scholarship would provide casebook material on the developing death penalty jurisprudence. His research also helped establish a pathbreaking law and psychiatry program in the schools of Law and Medicine. This early effort included the Forensic Psychiatry Clinic, which conducted forensic evaluations of the early wave of capital defendants under Virginia’s new capital sentencing statute. The law took effect in July 1977, a year after the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty. Professor and 1977 Law School alumna Elizabeth Scott directed the clinic.
The new capital sentencing statute embraced a form of guided judicial discretion. In its effort to reconcile the Supreme Court’s insistence that a constitutional statute had to narrow discretion while allowing individualized consideration of the “frailties of humankind,” the General Assembly “more or less invited psychiatric testimony,” Bonnie noted.

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