On August 12, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell said he would not com­mute the death sen­tence of Jerry Terrell Jackson, despite the emer­gence of evi­dence that Jackson was sub­ject­ed to extreme phys­i­cal and psy­cho­log­i­cal abuse, evi­dence not heard by his tri­al jury. Jackson is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on August 18 for the mur­der of 88-year-old Ruth Phillips. Federal District Court Judge Leonie Brinkema held a two-day hear­ing in 2008 where Jackson’s sib­lings first tes­ti­fied about the lev­el of child­hood abuse inflict­ed on Jackson and oth­er fam­i­ly mem­bers. She con­clud­ed that his sen­tenc­ing hear­ing was a trav­es­ty of jus­tice: The pic­ture paint­ed of Jackson by his own coun­sel all but invit­ed a death ver­dict,” and that his tri­al coun­sel was con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly inef­fec­tive.” She described the abuse as a con­tin­u­ous, sadis­tic course of con­duct that ter­ror­ized and dehu­man­ized Jackson through­out his child­hood.” However, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed the deci­sion last April, defer­ring to the Virginia Supreme Court, which upheld Jackson’s sen­tence. A peti­tion assert­ing inef­fec­tive­ness of coun­sel is pend­ing before the U.S. Supreme Court. If the peti­tion is denied, Jackson will be the first per­son exe­cut­ed in Virginia since Teresa Lewis in September 2010.

(T. Dietrich and P. Dujardin, Virginia exe­cu­tion: Should severe child­hood abuse spare a mur­der­er the death penal­ty?,” Daily Press, August 14, 2011). See Arbitrariness and Representation. Teresa Lewis was also denied clemen­cy by Gov. McDonnell, despite hav­ing an IQ of 72 and the fact that her two co-defen­dants, who actu­al­ly car­ried out the mur­ders that led to Lewis’s death sen­tence, were sen­tenced to life.

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