On December 12, 2024, the Florida Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case of Michael James Jackson, who is challenging the constitutionality of Florida’s 2023 law that allows for non-unanimous jury death sentences. Mr. Jackson is represented by the ACLU, who argued that the Florida law is unconstitutional under the Supreme Court’s 2020 ruling in Ramos v. Louisiana, which struck down non-unanimous criminal convictions. According to the ACLU’s brief, Florida’s law has the same negative effects for death penalty sentencing as it does for criminal convictions in that it “permits essential fact findings needed for death to be decided non-unanimously and removes the ultimate decision from the jury[.]”
In 2016, the Florida Supreme Court, in Hurst v. Florida, acknowledged the requirement for juror unanimity. Subsequently, Mr. Jackson was among those on Florida’s death row who were awarded new sentencing hearings. His initial resentencing was scheduled for September 2019, but was derailed first by Hurricane Dorian, and then by the global Coronavirus pandemic, which shuttered courts across the state of Florida through 2021. Mr. Jackson’s resentencing hearing was further delayed by his request to severe his case from co-defendant, Alan Wade. Wade was awarded a life sentence in 2022.
In the meantime, the Florida legislature passed a new non-unanimity law, SB 450, which took effect in April 2023. At that time, Mr. Jackson was one of 40 individuals awaiting resentencing. On May 25, 2023, the jury recommended, again in an 8 – 4 vote, that Mr. Jackson be resentenced to death for the 2005 murders of James “Reggie” and Carol Sumner. A judge formally imposed the death sentence in August 2023.
Just two states, Florida and Alabama, allow for the imposition of death by non-unanimous juries. Earlier this year, an amicus brief, or friend-of-the-court brief, submitted by Black-led organizations and Black lawmakers in the Florida Supreme Court argued that this change to the state’s death penalty process violates capital defendants’ rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. Melanie Kalmanson, an attorney with Quarles & Brady LLP, wrote on behalf of the coalition that resentencing hearings have relied on “an arbitrary line-drawing based on the date” that sentencing was finalized.
Oral Arguments, Florida Supreme Court, December 12, 2024; Florida Supreme Court oral arguments next week, Tracking Florida’s Death Penalty, December 5, 2024; Michael J. Jackson resentenced to death following jury’s 8 – 4 recommendation, Tracking Florida’s Death Penalty, August 14, 2023;
Read the Jackson v. State of Florida, here. Read the NAACP amicus brief, here.