In the past two weeks, the Supreme Court over­turned grants of relief for two death-sen­tenced pris­on­ers. In both cas­es, low­er courts had found they received inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel at tri­al. The Court’s rul­ings are in line with its oth­er deci­sions in death penal­ty cas­es restrict­ing appeals for death-sen­tenced pris­on­ers and extolling the impor­tance of final­i­ty” over merits-based review. 

Under Strickland v. Washington (1984), an attor­ney is inef­fec­tive when 1) his per­for­mance is defi­cient, and 2) his defi­cient per­for­mance prej­u­dices the defen­dant. When an attor­ney fails to present cer­tain evi­dence, a court weighs the new evi­dence along­side the aggra­vat­ing and mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors present in the case and asks whether there is a rea­son­able prob­a­bil­i­ty” that the out­come might have been dif­fer­ent if the attor­ney had pre­sent­ed the new evi­dence at trial.

Thornell v. Jones

The Supreme Court grant­ed cer­tio­rari in December when offi­cials in Arizona asked for a rever­sal of the Ninth Circuit’s grant of relief to Danny Lee Jones. The Ninth Circuit had over­turned Mr. Jones’ death sen­tence based on his attorney’s fail­ure to intro­duce key mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence of Mr. Jones’ brain dam­age, child­hood phys­i­cal and sex­u­al abuse, and psy­chi­atric prob­lems. The Court appeared poised to rule in Arizona’s favor at oral argu­ment in April, when most of the jus­tices made com­ments sug­gest­ing that the Ninth Circuit had improp­er­ly applied the Strickland stan­dard for deter­min­ing whether a defense attorney’s con­duct prej­u­diced the defen­dant. However, the jus­tices appeared to dis­agree on whether the Court should vacate and remand the case — giv­ing the Ninth Circuit anoth­er chance to con­duct the Strickland analy­sis — or if it should reverse the case and impose its own judg­ment as to whether coun­sel was ineffective.

On May 30, the Court issued a 6 – 3 opin­ion in favor of Arizona, revers­ing the Ninth Circuit and hold­ing that Mr. Jones did not receive inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel. For the major­i­ty, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that the Ninth Circuit down­played the seri­ous aggra­vat­ing fac­tors present here and over­stat­ed the strength of mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence that dif­fered very lit­tle from the evi­dence pre­sent­ed at sen­tenc­ing.” The 16-page rul­ing effec­tive­ly rein­states Mr. Jones’ death sen­tence. (See DPIC’s ear­li­er cov­er­age of the facts of the case.) 

Justice Sonia Sotomayor dis­sent­ed, joined by Justice Elena Kagan. Justice Sotomayor wrote that though she agreed the Ninth Circuit improp­er­ly weighed the fac­tors in vio­la­tion of Strickland, the major­i­ty unnec­es­sar­i­ly goes fur­ther and engages in the reweigh­ing itself.” Because the record in this case is com­plex, con­test­ed, and thou­sands of pages long,” and it is not the Court’s usu­al prac­tice to adju­di­cate either legal or pred­i­cate fac­tu­al ques­tions in the first instance,” Justice Sotomayor would have vacat­ed the rul­ing below and allowed the Ninth Circuit to recon­sid­er the case. This dis­sent close­ly fol­lows Justice Sotomayor’s com­ments at oral argu­ment, where she said that she agreed the Ninth Circuit had not prop­er­ly bal­anced the fac­tors, but told Arizona’s attor­ney that we’re not factfind­ers, and we gen­er­al­ly don’t weigh evidence.” 

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sep­a­rate­ly dis­sent­ed and argued that the Ninth Circuit had prop­er­ly con­duct­ed the Strickland analy­sis to con­clude that Mr. Jones received inef­fec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion at tri­al. She said that though the Ninth Circuit’s dis­cus­sion of the aggra­vat­ing fac­tors was con­cise,” there is no bench­mark length for any such dis­cus­sion.” She also con­tend­ed that “[i]n its search for legal error in this cap­i­tal habeas case, the [major­i­ty] makes many mis­takes of its own, includ­ing mis­read­ing the Ninth Circuit’s opin­ion.” She echoed Justice Sotomayor in argu­ing that the Supreme Court is not the right tri­bunal to parse the exten­sive fac­tu­al record in this case.” 

Alabama v. Williams

On June 10, the Court grant­ed cer­tio­rari in an inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel case in Alabama, vacat­ed the Eleventh Circuit’s judg­ment, and remand­ed the case for fur­ther con­sid­er­a­tion in light of the recent deci­sion in Thornell. Like in Thornell, the state was the peti­tion­er in Alabama v. Williams after los­ing in the low­er fed­er­al cir­cuit court. Alabama filed its peti­tion eight days after the Supreme Court grant­ed review in Thornell and asked the Court to con­sid­er Williams and Thornell togeth­er to help illu­mi­nate recur­ring prob­lems with Strickland prej­u­dice.” While the Court did not con­sid­er the cas­es togeth­er, its sum­ma­ry deci­sion in favor of Alabama under­scores its sym­pa­thy to Alabama’s crit­i­cisms of Strickland—despite research sug­gest­ing that Strickland is a vir­tu­al­ly-impos­si­ble-to-fail” test for states, as courts have ruled that sleep­ing, drunk, and com­plete­ly inex­pe­ri­enced defense lawyers were adequately effective. 

Marcus Williams was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for the rape and mur­der of his 20-year-old neigh­bor, a young moth­er, com­mit­ted when Mr. Williams was 21. A few weeks after the mur­der, he attempt­ed to rape anoth­er woman. Mr. Williams, who had no sig­nif­i­cant crim­i­nal his­to­ry, even­tu­al­ly con­fessed to both crimes. At tri­al, his attor­ney pre­sent­ed only two mit­i­gat­ing wit­ness­es: Mr. Williams’ moth­er and great-aunt. The great-aunt met the attor­ney that day. The women tes­ti­fied that Mr. Williams had a chaot­ic child­hood, strug­gled after an injury end­ed his ath­let­ic career, and expressed remorse for the mur­der. However, Mr. Williams’ attor­ney did not use mon­ey allot­ted for a mit­i­ga­tion inves­ti­ga­tor and failed to uncov­er exten­sive evi­dence of trau­ma in Mr. Williams’ life. The jury nev­er heard that Mr. Williams had been sex­u­al­ly abused mul­ti­ple times by a male babysit­ter between the ages of 4 and 6, his moth­er was an alco­holic who often neglect­ed him, he start­ed drink­ing around age 12, and he came from a fam­i­ly with a per­va­sive his­to­ry of child­hood sex­u­al abuse and incest…which spans generations.” 

A dis­trict court con­duct­ed an evi­den­tiary hear­ing and grant­ed Mr. Williams habeas relief in a detailed 141-page opin­ion, which was affirmed by the Eleventh Circuit. Both courts con­clud­ed that had the jury heard the new evi­dence, there was a rea­son­able prob­a­bil­i­ty that Mr. Williams would not have been sen­tenced to death. 

Alabama argued that the Eleventh Circuit erred by only con­sid­er­ing the new evi­dence in a pos­i­tive light, ignor­ing the bad” as in Thornell, and the new evi­dence could have been a dou­ble-edged sword” that the jury inter­pret­ed neg­a­tive­ly. However, Mr. Williams’ attor­neys accused Alabama of mak­ing sig­nif­i­cant mis­state­ments about the facts and deci­sion below.” For instance, Alabama claimed that the Eleventh Circuit ignored” the attempt­ed rape case, but the Eleventh Circuit inde­pen­dent­ly reweighed all the avail­able evi­dence” from the dis­trict court, and the dis­trict court had devot­ed sev­en pages of prej­u­dice analy­sis to the attempt­ed rape. Alabama also sought to present as many sim­i­lar­i­ties to Thornell as pos­si­ble, but where Thornell involved three vic­tims, four statu­to­ry aggra­vat­ing fac­tors, sig­nif­i­cant­ly more mit­i­ga­tion pre­sent­ed at the orig­i­nal tri­al, and a con­vo­lut­ed” pro­ce­dur­al his­to­ry that includ­ed ten fed­er­al judges dis­sent­ing from a deci­sion in Mr. Jones’ favor, Williams involved one vic­tim, one aggra­vat­ing fac­tor, min­i­mal mit­i­ga­tion, and two courts approv­ing relief after weigh­ing all the factors. 

Mr. Williams’ attor­neys made a cru­cial point: where the dis­trict court ruled against Mr. Jones, the dis­trict court here ruled for Mr. Williams. As a result, where Arizona argued in Thornell that the Ninth Circuit should have deferred to the dis­trict court’s detailed find­ings after an evi­den­tiary hear­ing, Alabama was ask­ing for the oppo­site relief: to pun­ish the Eleventh Circuit for defer­ring to a dis­trict court’s detailed and evidence-supported findings. 

With this dis­tinc­tion laid bare, the Court’s sum­ma­ry judg­ment in Williams fol­low­ing Thornell offers lit­tle guid­ance to appel­late courts review­ing inef­fec­tive assis­tance of counsel cases. 

Alabama’s brief argued that grants of relief for Mr. Williams and Mr. Jones damage…the final­i­ty of con­vic­tions” and reflect dif­fer­ent symp­toms of the same root prob­lem — a will­ing­ness to treat new evi­dence as a one-way ratch­et in favor of the defen­dant.” In oth­er words, the appeals process may unearth new evi­dence that under­mines the orig­i­nal tri­al and death sen­tence, and appel­late courts may find that the new evi­dence mit­i­gates the defendant’s cul­pa­bil­i­ty. As Justice Jackson wrote in dis­sent in Thornell, the real cri­tique does not appear to relate to the…methodology. Rather, it mere­ly takes issue with the weight…assigned to each of the relevant facts.” 

Citation Guide
Sources

Austin Sarat, The Astonishing Lengths Samuel Alito Will Go to Execute Death Row Inmates, Slate, June 10, 2024; Amy Howe, Justices rein­state death sen­tence for Arizona man, SCOTUSblog, May 30, 2024; Alabama v. Williams (2024); Thornell v. Jones (2024); State’s Petition for Certiorari, Alabama v. Williams (2024); Marcus Williams’ Opposition Brief, Alabama v. Williams (2024); Williams v. Alabama (11th Cir. 2023); Williams v. Alabama (N.D. Ala. 2021); Michael L. Perlin, Talia Roitberg Harmon, and Sarah Chatt, A World of Steel-Eyed Death”: An Empricial Evaluation of the Failure of the Strickland Standard to Ensure Adequate Counsel to Defendants with Mental Disabilities Facing the Death Penalty, 53 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 261 (2020).