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A Texas Death Penalty Case Is Oveturned by TheSupreme Court

 
 
Reply Wed 26 Feb, 2003 06:58 am
Supreme Court sides with Texas death row inmate who claimed racial bias in jury selection Tuesday, February 25, 2003

ANNE GEARAN, Associated Press Writer

(02-25) 14:07 PST WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a black death row inmate deserves a new chance to press his claim that prosecutors stacked his jury with whites and death penalty supporters.

The 8-1 ruling is a rare example of the conservative-leaning court agreeing that a death row inmate may have been treated unfairly at trial. Thomas Miller-El claims Dallas County prosecutors had a long history of excluding blacks from juries on the theory they were more likely to side with a black defendant.

Miller-El's lawyers said Dallas prosecutors were once specifically trained to get rid of minority juror candidates because "they almost always empathize with the accused."
"Irrespective of whether the evidence could prove sufficient to support a charge of systematic exclusion of African-Americans, it reveals that the culture of the district attorney's office in the past was suffused with bias against African-Americans in jury selection," Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote.

Kennedy was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scalia, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer. Justice Clarence Thomas, the court's only black member, dissented. He said Miller-El did not prove black jurors were excluded because of their race.
Death penalty cases have been among the most divisive on the court, though the split among justices isn't the same in all cases.

Last year, the most conservative justices dissented when the court voted 6-3 to exempt
the mentally retarded from the death penalty. An unlikely alliance of seven justices, conservative and liberal, voted last year to overturn the capital punishment laws of states in which judges, not juries, had the final say over whether to sentence someone to death.
Miller-El had been scheduled to die last year for the 1985 murder of a 25-year-old hotel clerk, but the execution was put on hold when the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case. A second clerk, who was wounded and permanently paralyzed from the chest down, identified Miller-El as his attacker at trial.

Eight justices said Miller-El should have been given an opportunity to present his racial bias claim during his federal appeals. The court's action does not mean Miller-El will ultimately win his case, only that he gets a new hearing.
Still, Jim Marcus, one of Miller-El's lawyers, called the decision a significant victory.
The court majority said prosecutors used their power to strike potential jurors in removing nine out of 10 blacks eligible to sit on Miller-El's 1986 jury. Prosecutors had 14 chances to strike jurors without explaining why, and used 10 of them to exclude blacks, the court noted.

"Happenstance is unlikely to produce this disparity," the justices said.
The justices also noted that blacks and whites were questioned differently about their views on the death penalty. Most blacks heard a detailed account of what would happen to Miller-El when he was executed, and then were asked whether they could vote to execute someone. Only 6 percent of white potential jurors were given the same information.

In a separate case Tuesday, the Bush administration urged the court to put new limits on federal appeals involving claims of bad lawyering, an issue in many death row cases.
Joseph Massaro, the convicted hit man at the center of the argument, should not be given a new round of appeals to claim he was poorly represented, the government said. Massaro, who was sentenced to life in prison, did not make that claim in his initial appeals.

In speeches, Ginsburg and O'Connor have expressed concern about the quality of lawyers available to poor defendants facing the death penalty, but the court has recently sided with prosecutors in two cases involving bad lawyer claims. Another such case comes before the court next month.

Massaro's case will be decided later this year.
The cases are Miller-El v. Cockrell, 01-7662 and Massaro v. United States, 02-1559.
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New Haven
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Feb, 2003 04:28 pm
"A jury of your peers"

What about other aspects besides race? Why not intelligence and/or education?
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mamajuana
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Feb, 2003 11:27 pm
Joanne - I think this will turn out to be one of the important cases heard by the Supreme Court. They overturned a decision by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which happens to be the one that Bush is trying to place so many of his nominees on. This has been a very conservatice court, which decided the case did not warrant an appeal, and which has been responsible for many death penalty appeals being put aside. When you start linking this to the Justice Department's insistence on the death penalty being invoked, even after many DA offices had worked out other decisions, it gives a funny feeling.

And it's interesting that Thomas was the lone dissenter. It's beginning to appear that he has a hyper-sensitivity to anything pertaining to equal opportunity.
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JoanneDorel
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Feb, 2003 12:48 am
I think you are right mama this is a big one and it is especially delicious since it is a Texas case.
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mamajuana
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Feb, 2003 01:18 pm
I've had the feeling for some time that some members of the Supremes have had tickling consciences about the Florida fiasco. Also, there seems to be a difference of opinion now regarding the death penalty.

Ashcroft has actually interefered with some court cases in New York, arguing that death penalties be handed out in cases where this would upset the decisions of the court. An interference that shouldn't be.

And you're right about Texas. Wasn't it Bush who said that everyone in Texas who received a death sentence deserved to die? That he had no question about any decision?

Scalia - the strict constructionist - that's interesting, too. Of everyone involved on whom political pressure could be applied - Thomas is always the most likely. How do you think this ties up with the Estrada nomination? That's the Court of Appeals he's being named to.
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Death Row
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Oct, 2004 09:03 pm
TX. And it's murdering
Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad
0 Replies
 
Death Row
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Oct, 2004 09:06 pm
Murdering In TX.
Evil or Very Mad Stop the murdering Gov.Rick Perry. Look at thier cases before you murder another soul in TX. Stop it stop it.
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