The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has upheld a fed­er­al dis­trict court’s deci­sion order­ing a new sen­tenc­ing hear­ing for Johnny Bennett, a black man who was sen­tenced to death by an all-white South Carolina jury in a tri­al taint­ed by a pros­e­cu­tor’s racial­ly-inflam­ma­to­ry cross-exam­i­na­tion and argument. 

Bennett was pros­e­cut­ed by Donald Myers (pic­tured), known as Death Penalty Donnie” for hav­ing sent 28 South Carolina defen­dants to death row. In response to defense argu­ment at Bennett’s sen­tenc­ing pro­ceed­ings in 2000 that Bennett would not pose a future dan­ger to soci­ety if incar­cer­at­ed for life, Myers repeat­ed­ly invoked vio­lent ani­mal ref­er­ences, call­ing Bennett King Kong on a bad day,” a cave­man,” a moun­tain man,” a mon­ster,” a big old tiger,” and “[t]he beast of burden.” 

Earlier in the tri­al, Meyers had elicit­ed irrel­e­vant tes­ti­mo­ny that a white wit­ness whom Bennett had assault­ed when he was a juve­nile had dreamt of being chased by black sav­ages.” The pros­e­cuter also gra­tu­itous­ly asked a wit­ness about sex­u­al rela­tions Bennett had had with a blonde-head­ed” prison guard. A juror lat­er described Bennett as just a dumb ni**er.”

The South Carolina Supreme Court upheld Bennett’s sen­tence, say­ing that the King Kong” com­ment was not sug­ges­tive of a giant black goril­la who abducts a white woman, but rather, descrip­tive of [Bennett’s] size and strength as they relat­ed to his past crimes.” It ruled that the jurors com­ments did not show that he was racial­ly biased at the time of the … trial.” 

In March 2016, a fed­er­al dis­trict court over­turned Bennett’s sen­tence, say­ing that Myers had made mul­ti­ple state­ments clear­ly cal­cu­lat­ed to excite the jury with racial imagery and stereo­types.” The District Court judge called Myers’ argu­ments a not so sub­tle dog whis­tle on race that this court can­not and will not ignore.” 

Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson, writ­ing the Fourth Circuit opin­ion called Myers’ com­ments unmis­tak­ably cal­cu­lat­ed to inflame racial fears and appre­hen­sions on the part of the jury.” He wrote, It is impos­si­ble to divorce the prosecutor’s King Kong’ remark, cave­man’ label, and oth­er descrip­tions of a black cap­i­tal defen­dant from their odi­ous his­tor­i­cal con­text. And in con­text, the prosecutor’s com­ments mined a vein of his­tor­i­cal prej­u­dice against African-Americans, who have been appalling­ly dis­par­aged as pri­mates or mem­bers of a sub­hu­man species in some less­er state of evolution.” 

John Blume, who rep­re­sent­ed Bennett in the Fourth Circuit argu­ment, said it was anti­thet­i­cal to the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem for a pros­e­cu­tor to pan­der to an all-white jury’s racial fears and implicit biases.”

Citation Guide
Sources

J. Gershman, Appeals Court Vacates Death Sentence of Black Man Whom Prosecutor Likened to King Kong,” Wall Street Journal Blog, November 21, 2016; M. Kinnard, Appeals court: King Kong’ com­ment prej­u­diced all-white jury,” Associated Press, November 22, 2016; A. Cohen, A Judge Overturned a Death Sentence Because the Prosecutor Compared a Black Defendant to King Kong,” The Marshall Project, March 282016.

Read the Fourth Circuit’s deci­sion. See Race and Prosecutorial Misconduct.