A Kansas cap­i­tal defen­dant is chal­leng­ing the prosecution’s deci­sion to pur­sue the death penal­ty in his case, invok­ing a height­ened stan­dard of review the Kansas con­sti­tu­tion applies to infringe­ments of fundamental rights. 

The pre­tri­al chal­lenge, which will be the sub­ject of a hear­ing in the Sedgwick County District Court begin­ning February 6, 2023, was filed by the ACLU in the case of Kyle Young, an African-American defen­dant who faces cap­i­tal charges in a 2020 dou­ble mur­der at a Wichita hotel. The motion alleges that the Kansas death penal­ty vio­lates state and fed­er­al pro­hi­bi­tions against cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment because it denies cap­i­tal defen­dants a fair and impar­tial jury, is arbi­trar­i­ly and dis­crim­i­na­to­ri­ly applied, and serves no legit­i­mate penological purpose. 

The Kansas Bill of Rights declares that life, lib­er­ty, and the pur­suit of hap­pi­ness” are inalien­able nat­ur­al rights.” Young’s lawyers argue that a land­mark 2019 Kansas Supreme Court rul­ing on abor­tion rights that applied a strict scruti­ny” stan­dard of state con­sti­tu­tion­al review for laws that infringe on fun­da­men­tal rights should apply to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. For the very same rea­sons lib­er­ty applies to repro­duc­tive rights, life should apply to the death penal­ty,” said ACLU Capital Punishment Project senior coun­sel Henderson Hill.

In 2022, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled in a dif­fer­ent case that the death penal­ty, as writ­ten, did not vio­late the state constitution’s inalien­able” right to life. It held, when a per­son is con­vict­ed of cap­i­tal mur­der beyond rea­son­able doubt, he or she for­feits the inalien­able right to life … and the state may impose law­ful pun­ish­ment for that crime.” Young, who has not been con­vict­ed and is pre­sumed inno­cent, argues that he is enti­tled to the ben­e­fit of strict scruti­ny review and that the death penal­ty is uncon­sti­tu­tion­al as it is applied in the state of Kansas.

Young has sub­mit­ted to the court more than a dozen expert reports address­ing a broad range of issues relat­ed to Kansas’ death penal­ty. A report by Columbia University Professor Jeffrey Fagan, who exam­ined death-eli­gi­ble cas­es in Sedgwick County from 1994 to 2020, found that pros­e­cu­tors’ deci­sions to seek the death penal­ty were influ­enced by race and gen­der. Fagan’s analy­sis iden­ti­fied a con­sis­tent pat­tern of pref­er­ences by pros­e­cu­tors to charge cap­i­tal mur­der and seek the death penal­ty in cas­es where the vic­tim is White, and espe­cial­ly when the vic­tim is a White female.” 

A report by University of California – Irvine Professor Mona Lynch on the part of cap­i­tal jury selec­tion known as death-qual­i­fi­ca­tion” — the process of remov­ing poten­tial jurors from ser­vice in a cap­i­tal case because of their expressed oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty — pre­sent­ed the results of a sur­vey of 573 jury-eli­gi­ble adults in Sedgwick County. Lynch’s sur­vey found sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ences based on race and gen­der in poten­tial jurors’ views about the death penal­ty and their vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty to being exclud­ed from jury ser­vice because of those views. While 63.4% of white poten­tial jurors indi­cat­ed that they sup­port the death penal­ty, 55.7% of poten­tial Black jurors said they opposed it. In par­tic­u­lar, 67.3% of white men expressed sup­port for the death penal­ty, while 64.3% of Black women said they opposed it. 

The death-qual­i­fi­ca­tion process, Lynch found, would reduce the share of Black jurors eli­gi­ble to serve on Sedgwick County cap­i­tal jurors by 13.8%, from 10.9% of the jury-eli­gi­ble sam­ple [to] only 9.4% of the death qual­i­fied sam­ple,” She con­clud­ed that death qual­i­fi­ca­tion has the poten­tial to dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly exclude Black jury-eli­gi­ble cit­i­zens, espe­cial­ly impact­ing Black women.” 

Young also pre­sent­ed a report by University of California – Berkeley Law Professor Elizabeth Semel, direc­tor of the school’s Death Penalty Clinic, who reviewed 133 Kansas court deci­sions on claims that Kansas pros­e­cu­tors had dis­crim­i­na­to­ri­ly exer­cised dis­cre­tionary jury strikes on the basis of race. Semel found that Kansas pros­e­cu­tors dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly exer­cised peremp­to­ry strikes against Black jurors, and … relied upon racial stereo­types to jus­ti­fy their strikes,” fur­ther reduc­ing the rep­re­sen­ta­tion of African Americans on Kansas juries. She report­ed that in the past thir­ty years, Kansas courts had issued only pub­lished opin­ion over­turn­ing any con­vic­tion based on a defendant’s jury discrimination challenge. 

A fourth study, con­duct­ed by University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Professor Frank Baumgartner, exam­ined rates of cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tion from fil­ing charges to impos­ing a sen­tence of death and their rela­tion­ship to homi­cide data. He found what he called impor­tant dis­par­i­ties both with regards to the race and gen­der of the vic­tims of the crime, and in the com­bined racial char­ac­ter­is­tics of the offend­er and vic­tim of the crime,” show­ing that the death penal­ty is dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly sought and obtained in cas­es with white vic­tims, and par­tic­u­lar­ly white female vic­tims, as com­pared to Black vic­tims. Though Black men account for rough­ly a third of all Kansas homi­cide vic­tims, this State has nev­er imposed the death penal­ty for the mur­der of a Black man,” Baumgartner wrote. 

Baumgartner also found no sta­tis­ti­cal cor­re­la­tion at all between homi­cides and death sen­tences over time, and very lit­tle cor­re­la­tion across counties.” 

An expert report by vet­er­an cap­i­tal defense lawyers, Professor Sean O’Brien, University of Missouri, Kansas City School of Law, and Marc Bookman, Executive Director of the Atlantic Center for Capital Representation, reviewed the state’s pro­ce­dures and mech­a­nisms for pro­vid­ing legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion to Kansas cap­i­tal defen­dants at tri­al and in the appel­late process. They found that the state’s cap­i­tal defense sys­tem can­not guar­an­tee effec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion to every per­son who may face cap­i­tal charges and sen­tences in the future” and that “[i]n the absence of such a guar­an­tee, the Kansas sys­tem for admin­is­ter­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment will inevitably pro­duce arbi­trary and unre­li­able death sentences.” 

In court fil­ings, Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett, derid­ed Young’s motion. According to these experts, even well-mean­ing efforts … have proven inef­fec­tive to cor­rect an under­fund­ed crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem built on a cen­turies-old foun­da­tion of racism, giv­en what the defense experts describe as racist pros­e­cu­tors, a racist media, inef­fec­tu­al judges, and racist jurors inca­pable of fol­low­ing the court’s instructions.” 

Citation Guide
Sources

Jonathan Shorman, Kansas death penal­ty faces new chal­lenge with ACLU invok­ing land­mark abor­tion deci­sion, The Kansas City Star, January 182023

Read the expert reports filed in Kansas v. Young.