Associate Professor of Law, University of Baltimore School of Law
Bessler has taught at the University of Minnesota Law School and The George Washington University Law School. He clerked for U.S. Magistrate Judge John M. Mason of the District of Minnesota, and practiced law for many years in the area of civil litigation as a partner at the Minneapolis law firm of Kelly & Berens, P.A. He has written five books, four on the subject of capital punishment and one on the craft of writing. His undergraduate degree is in political science, while his master's degree is in international human rights law. His law review articles have appeared in the Indiana Law Journal, the Arkansas Law Review, the Hastings International and Comparative Law Review and elsewhere. John Bessler also teaches a capital punishment seminar as an adjunct professor at the Georgetown University Law Center.
Legal Director & General Counsel, Criminal Justice Legal Foundation
Kent S. Scheidegger has been the Legal Director of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation since December 1986. He also served as Chairman of the Criminal Law Practice Group of the Federalist Society 2003 to 2005. His articles on criminal and constitutional law have been published in law reviews, national legal publications, and congressional reports. Legal arguments authored by Mr. Scheidegger have been cited and incorporated in several precedent-setting United States Supreme Court decisions.
After receiving a degree in physics with honors from New Mexico State University in 1976, Mr. Scheidegger served for six years in the United States Air Force as a Nuclear Research Officer. He took his law degree with distinction from the University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law in 1982 and practiced civil law in Northern California. He was general counsel of California Cooler, Inc. from 1984 until 1986, when he joined the Foundation.
Execution Methods and Deciding Implementation of the Death Penalty - Podcast
John Bessler, Kent Scheidegger
Criminal Law & Procedure Practice Group Podcast
During oral argument in Glossip v. Gross, Justice Samuel Alito pointed to what he called "a...