Thirty-three years after a tri­al a fed­er­al appeals court described as a mix­ture of dis­turb­ing pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct and woe­ful­ly inad­e­quate assis­tance of coun­sel,” a Las Vegas tri­al court freed Paul Browning (pic­tured) from Nevadas death row. On August 21, 2019, Clark County District Judge Douglas Herndon ­— who in March had dis­missed mur­der and relat­ed charges against Browning ­— ordered state cor­rec­tions offi­cials to release Browning from cus­tody pend­ing the out­come of the prosecution’s appeal of his order dis­miss­ing the charges. Browning’s lawyer, Tim Ford, had ques­tioned Browning’s con­tin­ued deten­tion, argu­ing: How can Mr. Browning be sit­ting on death row, as he is now, when this court has said all charges against him are dis­missed? He’s not even a pre­tri­al detainee, and he’s on death row. That can’t be.”

Browning was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 1986 for the rob­bery and mur­der of Las Vegas jew­el­er, Hugo Elsen. Browning was rep­re­sent­ed at tri­al by a lawyer who had been prac­tic­ing crim­i­nal defense for less than a year and failed to inter­view the police who respond­ed to the scene, exam­ine the evi­dence against Browning, or inves­ti­gate the crime. The Nevada Supreme Court over­turned Browning’s death sen­tence in 2004 as a result of counsel’s inef­fec­tive assis­tance in the penal­ty phase of tri­al, but a sec­ond jury — hear­ing the same evi­dence against him — resen­tenced Browning to death in 2007

In 2017, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit over­turned Browning’s con­vic­tion based on extreme mal­func­tions” dur­ing the tri­al. With the death of pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness­es whom Browning’s tri­al coun­sel had failed to ade­quate­ly cross-exam­ine at tri­al, Judge Herndon dis­missed the mur­der and relat­ed charges against Browning, say­ing a fair tri­al con­sis­tent with due process is no longer possible.”

Browning has con­sis­tent­ly main­tained his inno­cence. In his post-con­vic­tion appeal, he pre­sent­ed evi­dence that police and pros­e­cu­tors had with­held evi­dence of a bloody foot­print found at the scene that did not match Browning’s shoes or foot size, mis­rep­re­sent­ed blood evi­dence in the case, manip­u­lat­ed eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny, failed to dis­close ben­e­fits it offered to a key wit­ness who may have com­mit­ted the mur­der and framed Browning, and that the stab wounds suf­fered by Elsen did not coher­ent­ly coin­cide” with the knife pros­e­cu­tors claimed Browning had used to com­mit the killing. Browning also argued that a min­i­mal­ly com­pe­tent defense inves­ti­ga­tion would have revealed the flaws in the prosecution’s evi­dence and the fal­si­ty of the rep­re­sen­ta­tions the pros­e­cu­tion had made to the jury.

The prosecution’s case unrav­eled in the post-con­vic­tion pro­ceed­ings. Prosecutors had told the jury that Elsen’s blood had been found on a tan jack­et owned by Browning. However, Elsen — who was able to describe his assailant before he died — told police the killer had worn a blue jack­et and lat­er DNA test­ing showed that of the blood on Browning’s jack­et was not Elsen’s. Elsen also said his assailant had shoul­der-length Jheri curls, which was com­plete­ly incon­sis­tent with Browning’s Afro-styled hair. Elsen’s wife failed to iden­ti­fy Browning in a line­up, but lat­er tes­ti­fied at tri­al that he was the killer. A white wit­ness who worked near the crime scene told police she had seen a man run by after the mur­der and thought it could have been Browning, but when police asked if she could be more sure” about whom she had seen, she said, No, I wouldn’t think so. No … They all look the same, and that’s just what I think when I see a black per­son, that they all look the same.” At tri­al, though, she unhesi­tat­ing­ly tes­ti­fied that Browning was the man she had seen. 

Following his release, Browning told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, I just want to find a lit­tle bit of peace after com­ing through all this mad­ness.” Speaking about his time on death row, he said: Being in there that long, you see a lot of things that affect you. You get to know peo­ple, no mat­ter how hor­ren­dous their crimes were. You see a lot of death — nat­ur­al caus­es, sui­cide. It affects you.” He also spoke about the mis­con­duct in his tri­al: It’s about me sit­ting there in court, start­ing with the pre­lim­i­nary hear­ing, and you see the wit­ness­es tes­ti­fy­ing against you — all of the mis­con­duct that occurred dur­ing tri­al. It’s just unjust. And it kind of hits you, right here in your gut. And that’s what has driven me.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Rachel Crosby, Inmate released from Nevada prison after decades on death row, Las Vegas Review-Journal, August 21, 2019; David Ferrara, Man with dis­missed mur­der con­vic­tion still on death row in Nevada, Las Vegas Review-Journal, August 82019.

Read the fed­er­al appeals court opin­ion in Browning v. Baker, No. 15 – 99002 (9th Cir. 2017) and watch the Ninth Circuit oral argu­ment in the case.