Texas cap­i­tal mur­der exoneree Christopher Scott (pic­tured) has urged Dallas County’s new District Attorney, Faith Johnson, to drop the death penal­ty from mur­der charges pend­ing against Erbie Bowser. Bowser, who is black, is a seri­ous­ly men­tal­ly ill Marine vet­er­an who was dis­charged from mil­i­tary ser­vice after hav­ing been diag­nosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. He faces four cap­i­tal charges in the killings of his girl­friend, his estranged wife, and their daugh­ters. When police found him, he was report­ed­ly recit­ing his name, rank, and ser­i­al num­ber, and the med­ical staff at the hos­pi­tal to which he was tak­en him described him as delu­sion­al. In a guest col­umn for the Dallas News, Scott — who served 12 years of a life sen­tence for a mur­der he did not com­mit — writes that the Dallas DA’s office has failed the African-American com­mu­ni­ty for gen­er­a­tions,” and says that “[t]he Bowser case offers an oppor­tu­ni­ty for Johnson to change the way her office has his­tor­i­cal­ly treat­ed African Americans accused of com­mit­ting cap­i­tal crimes.” He notes that in 2013, the Dallas District Attorney’s office agreed not to seek the death penal­ty in a near­ly iden­ti­cal case involv­ing a white defen­dant, William Palmer[, who had] stabbed his wife and both her par­ents to death while his wife’s sis­ter and her six-year-old hid in a clos­et.” Dallas has long been crit­i­cized for its his­to­ry of racial bias in enforc­ing its crim­i­nal laws, includ­ing bias in jury selec­tion and the appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty. During the 30-year admin­is­tra­tion of Henry Wade, the office pro­duced a train­ing man­u­al instruct­ing pros­e­cu­tors to exclude peo­ple of col­or from juries, and in a death penal­ty deci­sion in 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court found that black peo­ple in Dallas County had been almost cat­e­gor­i­cal­ly … exclud­ed from jury ser­vice.” The racial­ly dis­pro­por­tion­ate use of the death penal­ty has con­tin­ued in sub­se­quent pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al admin­is­tra­tions. A report from the Fair Punishment Project iden­ti­fied Dallas is one of only 16 U.S. coun­ties that imposed five or more death sen­tences between 2010 and 2015; sev­en of the eight peo­ple sen­tenced to death in that peri­od were black. Johnson, whom Wade hired in 1982, is the first African-American woman to serve as District Attorney and Bowser’s case is con­sid­ered a barom­e­ter of the path she will fol­low in cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tions. In addi­tion to the issue of racial fair­ness, Bowser’s case presents seri­ous ques­tions about the appro­pri­ate­ness of the death penal­ty for defen­dants with severe men­tal ill­ness, and in par­tic­u­lar, vet­er­ans with PTSD. Bowser has a his­to­ry of hal­lu­ci­na­tions and psy­chosis stretch­ing back to his ado­les­cence, and report­ed­ly was on more than a dozen med­ica­tions, includ­ing seda­tives and antipsy­chotics, at the time of his arrest. So far this year, sev­en states have pro­posed leg­is­la­tion to exempt peo­ple with seri­ous men­tal ill­ness, includ­ing PTSD, from the death penal­ty. [UPDATE: The Dallas District Attorney sought the death penal­ty against Mr. Bowser, but in May 2017, after a cap­i­tal mur­der tri­al that last­ed near­ly three weeks, jurors divid­ed on the appro­pri­ate sen­tence and Bowser was sen­tenced to life without parole.]

(C. Scott, Dallas DA should drop the death penal­ty against black man,” Dallas News, February 24, 2017; J. Pishko, Is Capital Punishment Making a Comeback in Dallas?,” Slate, February 28, 2017.) See Race and Mental Illness.

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