After six tri­als marred by pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct and racial prej­u­dice, draw­ing a scathing rebuke from the U.S. Supreme Court, for­mer Mississippi death-row pris­on­er Curtis Flowers (pic­tured with the ankle mon­i­tor that had kept him under house arrest) has been exonerated.

On September 4, 2020, near­ly 23 years after he was first ques­tion­ably con­vict­ed of a quadru­ple mur­der in Winona, Mississippi, the Mississippi Attorney General’s office dropped all charges against Flowers and a Montgomery County tri­al judge dis­missed his indict­ment with prej­u­dice. The rul­ing means that local Mississippi pros­e­cu­tors may nev­er try Flowers a sev­enth time for the murders.

Today, I am final­ly free from the injus­tice that left me locked in a box for near­ly 23 years,” Flowers said in a state­ment. I’ve been asked if I ever thought this day would come. … With a fam­i­ly that nev­er gave up on me and with them by my side, I knew it would.”

Flowers is the fifth per­son sen­tenced to death in Mississippi to have been exon­er­at­ed since 1973 and the 171st death-row exon­er­a­tion nation­wide that DPIC has doc­u­ment­ed dur­ing that period. 

Flowers, who is African American, was tried for cap­i­tal mur­der six times by the same white pros­e­cu­tor, Fifth Circuit Court District Attorney Doug Evans. Four of the tri­als result­ed in con­vic­tions and death sen­tences imposed by all-white or near­ly all-white juries. Each con­vic­tion was over­turned for pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct. The two oth­er tri­als end­ed in hung juries, with every white juror vot­ing to con­vict and every Black juror vot­ing to acquit. The only direct evi­dence of guilt came from a jail­house infor­mant who claimed that Flowers had con­fessed to the mur­ders. In a taped inter­view with the American Public Media pod­cast In the Dark, that wit­ness admit­ted to hav­ing fab­ri­cat­ed the confession.

In June 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court vacat­ed Flowers’ con­vic­tion in his sixth tri­al, hold­ing that Evans had uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly removed Black prospec­tive jurors from serv­ing in the case because of their race. Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote that Evans’ relent­less, deter­mined effort to rid the jury of black indi­vid­u­als strong­ly sug­gests that the State want­ed to try Flowers before a jury with as few black jurors as pos­si­ble, and ide­al­ly before an all-white jury.” An APM inves­ti­ga­tion of dis­cre­tionary jury strikes by Fifth Circuit pros­e­cu­tors dur­ing Evans’ tenure found that the office exclud­ed African Americans at near­ly 4.5 times the rate at which they struck white jurors.

Following the Supreme Court’s deci­sion, Evans indi­cat­ed that he intend­ed to try Flowers a sev­enth time. Two civ­il rights firms filed a class action suit against Evans in November 2019 seek­ing an injunc­tion to bar his office from dis­crim­i­na­to­ri­ly exclud­ing black jurors from jury ser­vice because of their race. On December 16, 2019, the tri­al court released Flowers on bail while Evans decid­ed whether to pur­sue anoth­er tri­al. In January 2020, claim­ing confiden[ce] in both the inves­ti­ga­tion and the jury ver­dicts,” Evans vol­un­tar­i­ly with­drew from the case, turn­ing it over to new­ly elect­ed Attorney General Lynn Fitch. 

In a three-page motion filed September 4, Fitch asked that the charges against Flowers be dis­missed. As the evi­dence stands today,” she wrote, there is no key pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness that incrim­i­nates Mr. Flowers who is alive and avail­able and has not had mul­ti­ple, con­flict­ing state­ments in the record.” Fitch not­ed that the only wit­ness who offered direct evi­dence of guilt recant­ed his pri­or tes­ti­mo­ny, admit­ting that he was lying when he said Mr. Flowers made a jail­house con­fes­sion to the mur­ders.” In addi­tion, the motion point­ed out that anoth­er wit­ness who tes­ti­fied against Mr. Flowers … was lat­er con­vict­ed of mul­ti­ple counts of fed­er­al income tax fraud,” oth­er evi­dence point­ed to alter­na­tive sus­pects with vio­lent crim­i­nal his­to­ries,” and still oth­er pos­si­ble excul­pa­to­ry evi­dence” exist­ed that had not pre­vi­ous­ly been presented. 

Fitch moved to dis­miss the indict­ment with prej­u­dice, say­ing based on the total­i­ty of cir­cum­stances, it is in the inter­est of jus­tice that the State will not seek an unprece­dent­ed sev­enth tri­al of Mr. Flowers.” 

In a half-page order issued the same day, Judge Joseph Loper dis­missed the charges. “[I]n light of all the facts and cir­cum­stances relat­ing to this case and the record devel­oped in it,” he wrote, the inter­ests of jus­tice require that the State’s motion to dis­miss this case with prej­u­dice be GRANTED.”

Rob McDuff, a lawyer from the Mississippi Center for Justice on Flowers’ defense team said This pros­e­cu­tion was flawed from the begin­ning and was taint­ed through­out by racial dis­crim­i­na­tion. It should nev­er have occurred and last­ed far too long, but we are glad it is finally over.”

Tucker Carrington, who has rep­re­sent­ed Flowers on behalf of the Mississippi Innocence Project, praised the Attorney General’s action. Once Attorney General Fitch was giv­en respon­si­bil­i­ty for this case, her office did the right thing by con­duct­ing a thor­ough review of the evi­dence, includ­ing the sig­nif­i­cant evi­dence of inno­cence, cor­rect­ly con­clud­ing that this case should come to an end,” he said.

Flowers learned of the rul­ing in a phone call with his lawyers, dur­ing which he received a code from law enforce­ment to unlock the ankle bracelet that had con­fined him to house arrest. More than two decades after hav­ing first been wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death, he was finally free.

Citation Guide
Sources

Parker Yesko, It’s Over. Charges against Curtis Flowers are dropped, APM Reports, September 4, 2020; Emily Wagster Pettus and Jeff Amy, No 7th tri­al for Mississippi man freed from prison in 2019, Associated Press, September 4, 2020; Alissa Zhu, Finally free’: Mississippi AG drops case against Curtis Flowers, tried 6 times for the same crime, Mississippi Clarion Ledger, September 4, 2020; Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, After 6 Murder Trials and Nearly 24 Years, Charges Dropped Against Curtis Flowers, New York Times, September 4, 2020; Robert Barnes, Charges dropped against man who was pros­e­cut­ed six times for mur­der, Washington Post, September 4, 2020; Jordan S. Rubin, Curtis Flowers Charges Dropped, Avoiding Seventh Murder Trial, Bloomberg Law, September 42020

Read the Mississippi Attorney General’s Motion to Dismiss the charges against Curtis Flowers and the tri­al court’s order grant­i­ng the motion. See also the news release from defense coun­sel and the state­ments by coun­sel, Curtis Flowers, and the Flowers fam­i­ly. Photo by Curtis Flowers’ family.