
The Department of Justice under President Donald Trump announced on Friday a decisive move to strengthen the federal death penalty by readopting proven lethal injection protocols from his first term and expanding execution methods to include firing squads, fulfilling a key campaign promise to deliver swift justice for the most heinous crimes.
In a 52-page report titled Restoring and Strengthening the Federal Death Penalty, the DOJ detailed challenges in procuring lethal injection drugs and directed the Bureau of Prisons to modify protocols to include additional constitutional methods such as firing squads, electrocution, and lethal gas asphyxiation.
The official DOJ statement declared: “Among the actions taken are readopting the lethal injection protocol utilized during the first Trump Administration, expanding the protocol to include additional manners of execution such as the firing squad, and streamlining internal processes to expedite death penalty cases.”
This bold step addresses the chronic shortages of lethal injection drugs that have stalled executions for years, ensuring that federal law enforcement can carry out sentences without endless delays caused by activist challenges and supply chain issues pushed by anti-death penalty advocates.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche instructed the Bureau of Prisons to reinstate the pentobarbital-based lethal injection protocol successfully used during Trump’s first term, when 13 federal executions were carried out in a six-month period between July 2020 and January 2021.
Firing squads, already authorized in five states including Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Utah, offer a reliable, constitutional alternative that minimizes prolonged suffering and logistical headaches.
President Trump directed the DOJ on his first day back in office to resume seeking the death penalty aggressively, reversing the Biden-era moratorium that effectively granted leniency to terrorists, cop killers, and child murderers.
Under Biden, 37 of the 40 federal death row inmates had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment in December 2024, leaving only three: Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Dylann Roof, and Robert Bowers.
The DOJ report emphasizes that methods like firing squads are consistent with Supreme Court precedent under the Eighth Amendment and align with practices in states that refuse to let radical abolitionists undermine justice for victims.
Conservatives have long argued that the death penalty serves as a powerful deterrent against the worst offenses—mass shootings, drug cartel atrocities, and brutal rapes and murders—sending a clear message that American society will not tolerate savagery.
By expanding protocols to include firing squads, the Trump administration is prioritizing the rights of victims and their families over the comfort of convicted monsters who forfeited their own right to life through unspeakable acts.
This policy shift streamlines internal processes at the Bureau of Prisons, cutting through bureaucratic red tape that has allowed death row inmates to game the system with frivolous appeals for decades.
The report notes that the Trump DOJ has already authorized seeking death sentences against 44 defendants, with Acting AG Blanche approving nine of those cases so far, signaling a renewed commitment to capital punishment for barbaric crimes.
Critics on the left are predictably howling about “cruelty,” yet they ignore how these same criminals inflicted unimaginable pain on innocent Americans without a second thought, from 9/11 plotters to MS-13 gang members terrorizing communities.
During Trump’s first term, the 13 federal executions demonstrated that focused leadership can deliver results where weak-kneed predecessors failed.
The revival of single-drug pentobarbital lethal injections alongside firing squads ensures backup options are ready, preventing pharmaceutical companies and European activists from dictating American justice policy through boycotts.
Supporters of law and order view this as overdue accountability, especially as violent crime and fentanyl deaths continue to plague cities still recovering from soft-on-crime experiments.
Firing squads provide a swift and certain end, often described by experts as one of the most humane methods available because they cause near-instantaneous unconsciousness when properly conducted by trained marksmen aiming at the heart.
The DOJ memo highlights that the federal government had never formally included firing squads before, but states have maintained them as viable options without successful constitutional challenges.
This announcement comes as the administration pushes legislative proposals to clarify death penalty eligibility and reduce delays in judicial review, ensuring that justice is not just served but served efficiently.
President Trump’s commitment to backing the men and women in blue extends to making sure those who ambush police officers or commit treasonous acts against the nation face the ultimate consequence without decades of taxpayer-funded appeals.
Opponents claim the death penalty risks executing the innocent, yet rigorous federal processes, multiple layers of review, and DNA evidence have made wrongful convictions exceedingly rare in capital cases.
By contrast, life without parole often means career criminals continue to endanger prison staff and issue orders from behind bars, as seen with numerous gang leaders still directing violence from supermax facilities.
The move also prepares for potential new execution facilities or relocations to accommodate these methods, showing a serious dedication to restoring the full force of federal law.
Americans who have watched repeat offenders evade true punishment for far too long applaud the Trump DOJ for choosing strength over symbolism in the face of rising threats from domestic terrorists and transnational crime.
This policy directly counters the Biden Justice Department’s efforts to commute dozens of capital sentences and impose indefinite pauses, which conservatives argue emboldened criminals and demoralized law enforcement.
As the report states, restoring these protocols is part of the highest duty of public servants: “Under President Trump’s leadership, the Department of Justice is once again enforcing the law and standing with victims.”