KEY POINTS
  • Is it right to hold a man accountable for a three-decade-old crime he does not remember committing? The Supreme Court will weigh this very issue.
  • In Madison v. Alabama, the high court for the first time will address the role of memory in capital punishment.
  • It will do so just as questions about memory, guilt and innocence have thrust the institution into an unwanted spotlight.
People wait in line to attend the opening day of the new term of the Supreme Court in Washington, October 1, 2018. 

Is it right to hold a man accountable for a three-decade-old crime he does not remember committing?

That, roughly speaking, is the question before eight justices of the Supreme Court on Tuesday, as they prepare to hear arguments in the death-penalty case of Madison v. Alabama, No. 17-7505.