The process of death qual­i­fi­ca­tion, which excludes peo­ple who oppose the death penal­ty from serv­ing on cap­i­tal juries, is racial­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry, civ­il rights advo­cate Reverend Dr. William J. Barber II wrote in an October 102022 op-ed.

Rev. Barber and his co-authors, pas­tor Dumas Harshaw Jr. and preach­er Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, intro­duce their arti­cle with a recog­ni­tion of J.W. Hood, a Black man and AME Zion pas­tor, who fought to abol­ish slav­ery and co-authored North Carolina’s mod­ern con­sti­tu­tion. Today, he’s exact­ly the kind of per­son who’s most like­ly to be denied the right to serve on a jury,” they write. A cen­tu­ry and a half after Hood spoke of the impor­tance of jury ser­vice, a Wake County death penal­ty case is expos­ing the real­i­ty that Black people’s right to be rep­re­sent­ed in the jury box is still under threat in North Carolina.” 

They explain that stud­ies show that Black peo­ple are more like­ly to oppose the death penal­ty and ques­tion evi­dence pre­sent­ed by law enforce­ment,” and are there­fore more like­ly to be exclud­ed from cap­i­tal juries dur­ing the death qual­i­fi­ca­tion process. This ignores the fact that the views of Black jurors are shaped by racial dis­crim­i­na­tion in the legal sys­tem. The authors write, this per­spec­tive is the result of the African-American expe­ri­ence in the United States, which is shaped by the racist his­to­ry of polic­ing and the death penal­ty. Rules that do not rec­og­nize this fact make it impos­si­ble for us to work togeth­er toward a multiracial democracy.”

The op-ed was writ­ten in sup­port of a law­suit filed by the ACLU on August 16, 2022 on behalf of Brandon Xavier Hill to chal­lenge death qual­i­fi­ca­tion in his case. Serving as evi­dence for the motion, a Michigan State University study of jury selec­tion in eleven Wake County, North Carolina cap­i­tal tri­als between 2008 and 2019, con­duct­ed by law pro­fes­sors Catherine M. Grosso and Barbara O’Brien, found sta­tis­ti­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant evi­dence of racial and gen­der dis­par­i­ties in death qual­i­fi­ca­tion. The researchers found that death qual­i­fi­ca­tion removed Black poten­tial jurors at 2.16 times the rate of their white counterparts.” 

Rev. Dr. Barber con­nects the exclu­sion of Black jurors from serv­ing in cap­i­tal cas­es to the ongo­ing dis­en­fran­chise­ment of Black vot­ers dur­ing elec­tions. He returns to J.W. Hood, cit­ing his belief that if Black peo­ple were to be full cit­i­zens of North Carolina, they need­ed three basic rights: to serve in the jury box, to tes­ti­fy in court, and to vote.” Barber states, This is not only a vio­la­tion of the rights of the accused, but also of cit­i­zens who under­stand, as Hood did, that our coun­try can­not be a func­tion­ing democ­ra­cy if we reg­u­lar­ly exclude large cohorts of our neigh­bors from the bal­lot and jury box.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Rev. William J. Barber II, Dumas Harshaw Jr., and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, Rev. William Barber: Stop exclud­ing Black peo­ple in NC from death penal­ty juries, The News & Observer, October 102022