On April 22, 1987, the United States Supreme Court ruled in McCleskey v. Kemp that the same types of sta­tis­ti­cal data that were rou­tine­ly accept­ed as proof of racial dis­crim­i­na­tion in hous­ing, employ­ment, edu­ca­tion, and the denial of oth­er civ­il rights were not suf­fi­cient as proof that a death sen­tence had been unconstitutionally imposed.

Although Warren McCleskey had pre­sent­ed a sophis­ti­cat­ed sta­tis­ti­cal analy­sis of data from more than 2,500 mur­der cas­es in Georgia that showed that indi­vid­u­als who killed a white vic­tim were far more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death than oth­er defen­dants and that the odds he would be sen­tenced to death were 4.3 greater because he was Black and the man he was con­vict­ed of killing was white, the court dis­missed the study as con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly imma­te­r­i­al. Instead, to prove that his rights under the Eighth Amendment had been vio­lat­ed or he had been denied equal pro­tec­tion under the law, the Court required him to present direct proof of par­tic­u­lar­ized dis­crim­i­na­tion” against him by a state actor in his case.

At the time, philoso­pher and renowned death-penal­ty legal his­to­ri­an Hugo Adam Bedau wrote that the McCleskey deci­sion will be the death penalty’s Dred Scott.” Justice Lewis Powell, who authored the opin­ion for a 5 – 4 Court major­i­ty, lat­er sin­gled out the case as the one in which he most wished he had voted differently.

In a com­men­tary observ­ing the 35th anniver­sary of McCleskey, for­mer Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Richard Dieter called the deci­sion one of the Supreme Court’s most egre­gious missed oppor­tu­ni­ties.” The rul­ing not only led to McCleskey’s exe­cu­tion, Dieter wrote, but essen­tial­ly shut the door to all future claims based on a pat­tern of racial bias in sentencing.”

One pre­dictable con­se­quence of McCleskey has been sys­temic racial bias in car­ry­ing out the death penal­ty. 78% of the 1,473 exe­cu­tions since McCleskey, Dieter notes, have involved mur­ders of white vic­tims, even though the num­ber of Black mur­der vic­tims in the United States is greater than that of white victims.

McCleskey’s case rest­ed on a land­mark study by Professor David Baldus. But in a fol­low-up study pub­lished in 2019 in the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, Professors Scott Phillips and Justin Marceau found that the Baldus study had actu­al­ly under­stat­ed the race prob­lems inher­ent to the oper­a­tion of mod­ern death penal­ty jurispru­dence.” Following the cas­es in the Baldus study through the con­clu­sion of the legal process, they found that defen­dants con­vict­ed of killing white vic­tims in Georgia were 17 times more like­ly to be exe­cut­ed than those con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing black vic­tims. Georgia ulti­mate­ly exe­cut­ed 22 of the 972 defen­dants in the Baldus cas­es who had been con­vict­ed of killing any white vic­tim (2.26%), while only two of the defen­dants whose vic­tims were Black were exe­cut­ed (0.13%).

The new data, Phillips and Marceau argue, show that [the] trust in appel­late review as a check on dis­crim­i­na­tion is bad­ly mis­placed. Appellate judges appear unable or unwill­ing to reign in the racial dis­par­i­ties iden­ti­fied at the sentencing phase.”

In a law review arti­cle pub­lished in the Spring 2020 issue of the Columbia Human Rights Law Review, Professor Alexis Hoag argued that the same racial bias present in McCleskey is preva­lent today. Capital pun­ish­ment is sup­posed to be reserved for those who com­mit the worst of the worst’ crimes,” she wrote. Instead, as a result of bias, prej­u­dice and racism, it is dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly reserved for those charged with killing white vic­tims.” Marshalling three decades of data doc­u­ment­ing the con­tin­u­ing dis­crim­i­na­to­ry appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty since McCleskey, Professor Hoag advo­cat­ed mount­ing a new chal­lenge to the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty cen­tered on the under­val­u­a­tion of Black lives.”

In the lead McCleskey dis­sent, Justice William Brennan described how McCleskey’s lawyers would have to tell [him] that few of the details of the crime or [his] past crim­i­nal con­duct were more impor­tant than the fact that his vic­tim was white.” He famous­ly called the majority’s con­cerns that grant­i­ng relief to McCleskey would open the door to oth­er con­sti­tu­tion­al chal­lenges a fear of too much justice.”

The Court expressed con­cern that if McCleskey’s sen­tence was over­turned, it could mean that the remain­ing death sen­tences in Georgia would also be sus­pect, and sim­i­lar stud­ies might even present a chal­lenge to oth­er aspects of the jus­tice sys­tem,” Dieter wrote. Although address­ing racial bias on a soci­etal lev­el is indeed chal­leng­ing,” Dieter con­clud­ed, solv­ing the prob­lem of a biased sys­tem of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has a ready solu­tion: stop­ping the death penalty altogether.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Richard Dieter, A Fear of Too Much Justice, Medium, April 17, 2022; Hugo Adam Bedau, Someday McCleskey Will Be Death Penalty’s Dred Scott, Los Angeles Times, May 11987.