Ruling in a pre-tri­al mat­ter in New Mexico, Judge Timothy Garcia of Santa Fe County’s First Judicial District Court held the state’s death penal­ty law to be uncon­sti­tu­tion­al based on a study by the Capital Jury Project. The Project’s research in 14 states had found that jurors often do not fol­low the law in mak­ing their sen­tenc­ing deci­sion. In par­tic­u­lar, the judge found that the jurors’ propen­si­ty toward mak­ing their sen­tenc­ing deci­sion dur­ing the guilt-inno­cence phase of the tri­al was an arbi­trary and capri­cious vio­la­tion of the United States Constitution and the New Mexico Constitution.”

The judge said that he would allow the death penal­ty tri­al to go ahead pro­vid­ed sep­a­rate juries were select­ed for the guilt-inno­cence phase and for the sen­tenc­ing phase, even though that change was not pro­vid­ed for under New Mexico law. The state elect­ed to for­go seek­ing the death penal­ty entire­ly, there­by putting off a legal con­fronta­tion on this issue.

(New Mexico v. Dominguez and Good, No. D‑0101-CR-200400521 and 522, Order, June 82007). 

See DPIC’s Report, Blind Justice: Juries Deciding Life and Death With Only Half the Truth (2005).

Citation Guide