A fed­er­al District Court judge ordered a new sen­tenc­ing tri­al for Quintez Hodges, who is cur­rent­ly on Mississippis death row, because for­mer Assistant District Attorney James Kitchens, Jr., lied under oath dur­ing Hodges’s tri­al and the pros­e­cu­tor con­duct­ing the tri­al should have known that Kitchens’ tes­ti­mo­ny was false. Kitchens is now a judge on Mississippi’s cir­cuit court. As a part of the prosecution’s strat­e­gy to show Hodges lacked remorse and had a crim­i­nal his­to­ry, Kitchens false­ly tes­ti­fied that Hodges was giv­en a light sen­tence on a pre­vi­ous rob­bery charge. The judge ruled, “[The defen­dant] has shown that there exists a rea­son­able like­li­hood that the jury’s ver­dict might have been affect­ed as a result of the false tes­ti­mo­ny. In this instance, the State, seem­ing­ly uncon­cerned with the accu­ra­cy of the tes­ti­mo­ny to be giv­en in a tri­al where the result could be death, pro­vid­ed the jury with false information.”

(R. Balko, Federal Judge Rules That a Former Mississippi Prosecutor, Now a Judge, Lied in Court,” Reason​.com Blog, September 14, 2010). See Arbitrariness.

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