On December 15, the Delaware Supreme Court ruled in Powell v. State that death-row pris­on­er Derrick Powell will get the ben­e­fit of its August 2016 deci­sion in Rauf v. State declar­ing Delaware’s death sen­tenc­ing statute uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. The court direct­ed that Powell be resen­tenced to life with­out parole, in a rul­ing that also paves the way for resen­tenc­ing Delaware’s twelve oth­er death row pris­on­ers to life. 

The court’s hold­ing is based upon a legal prin­ci­ple called retroac­tiv­i­ty. When the court decid­ed Rauf, it deter­mined that Delaware’s cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing statute vio­lat­ed due process and the Sixth Amendment in part because it did not require that the jury find unan­i­mous­ly and beyond a rea­son­able doubt all facts legal­ly nec­es­sary to impose a death sen­tence. Applying Delaware law, the court held that Rauf was a type of legal rul­ing that should apply to all cap­i­tal cas­es in which juries did not make such a find­ing because Rauf had announced a new water­shed pro­ce­dur­al rule for cap­i­tal pro­ceed­ings that con­tributed to the reli­a­bil­i­ty of the fact-finding process.” 

The court explained that, pri­or to Rauf, Delaware cap­i­tal defen­dants had been sen­tenced to death using a pre­pon­der­ance of the evi­dence stan­dard” in which the death penal­ty could be imposed if the pros­e­cu­tion proved that aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances jus­ti­fy­ing the death penal­ty even slight­ly out­weighed mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors that could jus­ti­fy spar­ing the defen­dan­t’s life. That bur­den of proof, the court said, was mate­ri­al­ly low­er than if juries were required rule out the death penal­ty if any juror had rea­son­able doubt as to whether the aggra­vat­ing evi­dence outweighed mitigation. 

In Powell’s case, his jury, apply­ing the less­er pre­pon­der­ance-of-the-evi­dence stan­dard, vot­ed 7‑to‑5 that aggra­vat­ing fac­tors out­weighed mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors and rec­om­mend­ed a death sen­tence. Under the court’s rul­ing, Powell’s death sen­tence was auto­mat­i­cal­ly con­vert­ed to a sen­tence of life with­out the pos­si­b­li­ty of pro­ba­tion or parole or any oth­er reduc­tion.” The Delaware Attorney General’s office did not appeal the court’s rul­ing in Rauf, which was based sole­ly on the fed­er­al con­sti­tu­tion, to the U.S. Supreme Court. Because the Powell retroac­tiv­i­ty deci­sion is based on Delaware state law, it does not raise fed­er­al con­sti­tu­tion­al ques­tions and would not be sub­ject to review by the federal courts.

Citation Guide
Sources

C. Geidner, Delaware’s Current Death Row Inmates Will Now Get Life Sentences, State High Court Rules, BuzzFeed News, December 15, 2016; R. Chase, Delaware court says death penal­ty rul­ing is retroac­tive, The Washington Post, December 152016.

Read the opinion.