I don’t have live access to current news in this moment, but I can summarize the general trajectory of U.S. federal executions up to recent history and point you to reliable sources to verify the latest updates.
Direct answer:
- The federal government resumed executions in 2020 after a long hiatus, carried out at the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, and continued in various years with periods of pauses and policy reviews. Source coverage and timelines have varied by year, with major outlets tracking scheduled executions and related legal rulings.[3][4][5]
Key background and context:
- 2020: The Supreme Court allowed the first federal executions in about 17 years, clearing several scheduled executions to proceed after prior court challenges over the method of execution.[4][3]
- 2021–2022: Federal policy and execution practices faced scrutiny and pauses, including a moratorium announced by the Justice Department and later reevaluations of lethal injection protocols.[9]
- 2024–2025: Media outlets reported clusters of executions and continued federal-state coordination on capital punishment, with coverage emphasizing legal debates, victim impact statements, and ongoing policy discussions.[2][5][7]
Where to check the latest:
- Major outlets with dedicated capital punishment sections (ABC, CBS News, CNN) for the freshest schedules, court rulings, and policy updates.[5][7][2]
- National and international coverage that tracks counts of executions by year and notable cases (e.g., the 2020 resumption and subsequent years).[2][3]
If you’d like, I can pull the latest headlines and compile a brief update with dates, defendants, and outcomes, and provide direct citations after each item.