Linda Greenhouse, for­mer Supreme Court writer for the New York Times, recent­ly wrote about the rever­sal of a death sen­tence by the U. S. Supreme Court. The Court over­turned George Porter Jr.s death sen­tence because of the inad­e­quate rep­re­sen­ta­tion he received and the pow­er­ful mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence in Mr. Porter’s life that his attor­ney failed to inves­ti­gate and present to the jury con­sid­er­ing his clien­t’s life. The Court’s opin­ion not­ed, Our nation has a long tra­di­tion of accord­ing lenien­cy to vet­er­ans in recog­ni­tion of their ser­vice, espe­cial­ly for those who fought on the front lines as Porter did.” Ms. Greenhouse’s arti­cle con­trast­ed this rul­ing with one hand­ed down last month in the case of Robert J. Van Hook, who also claimed inad­e­quate coun­sel. In his case, the Court over­tuned a fed­er­al appeals court’s grant of relief, con­clud­ing that Van Hook’s lawyer made pro­fes­sion­al­ly rea­son­able” deci­sions regard­ing his case. Van Hook was also a mil­i­tary vet­er­an, and like Porter, was also a prod­uct of a vio­lent and abusive childhood.

Greenwood writes, Setting the Porter and the Van Hook cas­es side by side, what strikes me is how sim­i­lar­ly hor­rif­ic the two men’s child­hoods were — indeed, how com­mon such child­hoods were among the hun­dreds of death-row inmates… It is fan­ci­ful to sup­pose that each of these defen­dants had lawyers who made the effort to dig up the details and offer these sor­ry life sto­ries to the jurors who would weigh their fate. I don’t make that obser­va­tion to excuse the crimes of those on death row, but only to under­score the anom­aly of the mer­cy the court bestowed…on one of that num­ber.” Read the full article below.

December 32009

Selective Empathy
By LINDA GREENHOUSE

In over­turn­ing a death sen­tence this week of a Korean War vet­er­an whose lawyer failed to inform the jury about the man’s com­bat-relat­ed trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der, the Supreme Court drew cheers from vet­er­ans’ groups and death-penal­ty oppo­nents. But it also raised a question:

Is selec­tive empa­thy bet­ter than no empa­thy at all?

The vet­er­an, George Porter Jr., was 53 years old when, after a night of drink­ing, he shot his for­mer girl­friend and her new lover to death. It was 1986, and the Korean War had been over for 33 years. Mr. Porter saw heavy com­bat in Korea, and his life when he came home was a mess. It was evi­dent­ly a mess before Korea as well: he escaped his vio­lent and abu­sive fam­i­ly by join­ing the Army at the age of 17.

Sentenced to death in 1988 by a Florida judge for one of the mur­ders, Mr. Porter filed two rounds of unsuc­cess­ful appeals in the Florida courts. He then turned to the fed­er­al courts, seek­ing to over­turn his sen­tence by means of a writ of habeas cor­pus. His claim was that his lawyer’s fail­ure to inform the sen­tenc­ing jury about his wartime expe­ri­ence and its after­math fell below the Constitution’s min­i­mum stan­dards for adequate representation.

Ineffective assis­tance of coun­sel” is an excep­tion­al­ly dif­fi­cult claim on which to suc­ceed. The Supreme Court has found inef­fec­tive assis­tance only a hand­ful of times since it raised the bar in a 1984 case, Strickland v. Washington. That deci­sion requires defen­dants to prove two ele­ments: that the lawyer’s per­for­mance fell below an objec­tive stan­dard of rea­son­able­ness” and that there was a rea­son­able prob­a­bil­i­ty” that the out­come would have been dif­fer­ent if not for the bad lawyering.

The sec­ond prong is a spe­cial chal­lenge for death-sen­tenced defen­dants, who must demon­strate that an ade­quate lawyer would have pro­vid­ed the sen­tenc­ing jury with enough mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence to over­come the weight of the prosecution’s aggra­vat­ing evi­dence.” An abun­dance of aggra­vat­ing evi­dence is often the rea­son the pros­e­cu­tion is seek­ing the death penal­ty in the first place.

When the inef­fec­tive-assis­tance claim is made in a habeas cor­pus peti­tion in fed­er­al court, the bar is even high­er. Under a 1996 fed­er­al law, the defen­dant must show that the state court’s deci­sion was not sim­ply mis­tak­en on its own terms, but that it was con­trary to, or involved an unrea­son­able appli­ca­tion of, clear­ly estab­lished fed­er­al law, as deter­mined by the Supreme Court of the United States” — in oth­er words, that the state court had all but defied con­trol­ling Supreme Court prece­dent. The fed­er­al appeals court in Atlanta ruled that Mr. Porter was not enti­tled to habeas cor­pus because even if the Florida courts were wrong to regard his lawyer as ade­quate, they were not so wrong as to be unreasonably wrong.

That was the deci­sion the Supreme Court over­turned. It was objec­tive­ly unrea­son­able,” the jus­tices said, to dis­count the pos­si­bil­i­ty that a decent lawyer, pre­sent­ing a con­vinc­ing nar­ra­tive of Mr. Porter’s mil­i­tary ser­vice and lin­ger­ing trau­ma, could have per­suad­ed the jury to spare his life. The court then pro­vid­ed such a nar­ra­tive itself, with a vivid recita­tion of the bat­tles Mr. Porter’s unit had fought under extreme hard­ship and grue­some con­di­tions.” The opin­ion observed that our nation has a long tra­di­tion of accord­ing lenien­cy to vet­er­ans in recog­ni­tion of their ser­vice, espe­cial­ly for those who fought on the front lines as Porter did.”

There were sev­er­al notable fea­tures to this deci­sion, Porter v. McCollum. The most obvi­ous was that the 15-page opin­ion was unan­i­mous and unsigned, labeled sim­ply per curi­am,” mean­ing by the court.” The court had not heard argu­ment in the case and nev­er for­mal­ly accept­ed it for deci­sion. Evidently the jus­tices con­clud­ed that the right deci­sion was so obvi­ous that they could dis­pense with the for­mal­i­ty of fur­ther brief­ing and argument.

Beyond those pro­ce­dur­al niceties, the most notable fea­ture of all was the sym­pa­thy that all nine jus­tices dis­played for a man who, in the full­ness of his adult­hood and after promis­ing a friend that she would soon be read­ing about him in the news­pa­per, stole anoth­er friend’s gun and shot two peo­ple to death in cold blood.

Just last month, the same nine jus­tices, also per curi­am and also unan­i­mous­ly, sent chills down the spine of death-penal­ty oppo­nents by over­turn­ing a dif­fer­ent fed­er­al appeals court’s grant of habeas cor­pus to an Ohio death-row inmate who also claimed inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel. The inmate, Robert J. Van Hook, robbed and mur­dered a man he picked up in a gay bar. He is also a mil­i­tary vet­er­an, but one whose ser­vice was ter­mi­nat­ed because of alco­hol and drug abuse.

The appeals court found that his tri­al lawyer had con­duct­ed only a per­func­to­ry, last-minute search for mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence, and failed to inform the jury of such unset­tling and poten­tial­ly mit­i­gat­ing” details as the fact that Mr. Van Hook had a his­to­ry of men­tal ill­ness; that his par­ents had repeat­ed­ly beat­en him; that his father tried to kill his moth­er sev­er­al times in his pres­ence; and that his moth­er was com­mit­ted to a psy­chi­atric hos­pi­tal when he was a young child. Introducing this evi­dence could cer­tain­ly have tipped the scales in favor of his life,” the appeals court said in over­turn­ing the death sentence.

In its unsigned opin­ion revers­ing that deci­sion, Bobby v. Van Hook, the Supreme Court parsed the evi­dence that was pre­sent­ed and con­clud­ed that the lawyer’s deci­sion not to seek more” fell well with­in the range of pro­fes­sion­al­ly rea­son­able judg­ments.” The American Bar Association stan­dards in effect at the time of tri­al required no more, the opinion said.

Justice Samuel A. Alito added a con­cur­ring para­graph to observe that the A.B.A. is, after all, a pri­vate group with lim­it­ed mem­ber­ship,” and its views should not be giv­en spe­cial rel­e­vance” in deter­min­ing whether a lawyer’s per­for­mance meets constitutional standards.

The para­graph was not only gra­tu­itous. It also was a chill­ing reminder of how the court has changed since the retire­ment of the jus­tice whom Justice Alito replaced, Sandra Day O’Connor. In a 2003 major­i­ty opin­ion, Wiggins v. Smith, Justice O’Connor cit­ed the bar association’s stan­dards in con­clud­ing that a lawyer’s rep­re­sen­ta­tion of a Maryland death-row inmate had been con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly defi­cient. William H. Rehnquist, then the chief jus­tice, joined that opin­ion; only Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas dissented.

Setting the Porter and the Van Hook cas­es side by side, what strikes me is how sim­i­lar­ly hor­rif­ic the two men’s child­hoods were — indeed, how com­mon such child­hoods were among the hun­dreds of death-row inmates whose appeals I have read over the years and, I have to assume, among the 3,300 peo­ple on death row today. It is fan­ci­ful to sup­pose that each of these defen­dants had lawyers who made the effort to dig up the details and offer these sor­ry life sto­ries to the jurors who would weigh their fate.

I don’t make that obser­va­tion to excuse the crimes of those on death row, but only to under­score the anom­aly of the mer­cy the court bestowed this week on one of that num­ber. Am I glad that a hap­less 77-year-old man won’t be put to death by the State of Florida? Yes, I am. Am I con­cerned about a Supreme Court that dis­pens­es empa­thy so selec­tive­ly? Also yes.

(L. Greenhouse, Selective Empathy,” The New York Times, December 3, 2009; Porter v. McCollum, No. 08 – 10537 (U.S. Nov. 30, 2009) (per curi­am); Bobby v. Van Hook, No. 09 – 144 (U.S. Nov. 9, 2009 (per curi­am)). See also Arbitrariness and Representation.

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