The North Carolina Supreme Court announced on March 2 that it will hear appeals from three of the four pris­on­ers whose death sen­tences were reduced to life with­out parole under the state’s Racial Justice Act, then rein­stat­ed after the leg­is­la­ture repealed the law.

Passed in 2009 and repealed in 2013, the land­mark leg­is­la­tion allowed death-row pris­on­ers to chal­lenge their sen­tences on the basis of sta­tis­ti­cal evi­dence of racial dis­crim­i­na­tion. Marcus Robinson (pic­tured), Quintel Augustine, Christina Walters, and Tilmon Golphin all received reduced sen­tences in rul­ings by Cumberland County Superior Court Judge Gregory Weeks. 

The defen­dants pre­sent­ed evi­dence of jury strikes or accep­tances of more than 7,400 jurors from 173 cap­i­tal cas­es tried over a twen­ty-year peri­od. The study showed that for the entire peri­od cov­ered, pros­e­cu­tors across the state con­sis­tent­ly struck African-American jurors at approx­i­mate­ly dou­ble the rate of oth­er jurors, and dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly removed African-American jurors irre­spec­tive of their employ­ment sta­tus, whether or not they expressed reser­va­tions on the death penal­ty, or whether they or a close rel­a­tive had been accused of a crime. 

Weeks deter­mined that the study was valid [and] high­ly reli­able” and showed with remark­able con­sis­ten­cy across time and juris­dic­tions” that pros­e­cu­tors had sys­tem­i­cal­ly exclud­ed African-Americans from juries in death-penalty cases. 

In 2015, the state Supreme Court vacat­ed Weeks’ rul­ings and remand­ed the case to the Superior Court to per­mit more evi­dence to be pre­sent­ed. At that point, pros­e­cu­tors argued that the pris­on­ers could no longer rely on the Racial Justice Act because it had been repealed, and a new judge, Erwin Spainhour, agreed. 

The North Carolina Supreme Court will decide whether Spainhour’s rul­ing stands in the cas­es of Robinson, Augustine, and Walters. It did not yet announce whether it will hear Golphin’s case. 

Two addi­tion­al death-row pris­on­ers, Rayford Burke and Andrew Ramseur, will present relat­ed issues to the court. Their Racial Justice Act claims were filed, but not heard by a judge, before the law was repealed. 

James Ferguson, one of the attor­neys who worked on the Racial Justice Act cas­es, said, All we want is for the courts to look at the facts and make a fair deci­sion. When you real­ly look at the evi­dence, it’s clear that race is influ­enc­ing how we use the death penal­ty in North Carolina. This is a chance for the state’s high­est court to declare, defin­i­tive­ly, that racial bias in the death penal­ty is an urgent civ­il rights issue that can­not be swept under the rug.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Paul Woolverton, N.C. Supreme Court to hear Racial Justice Act death row cas­es, Fayetteville Observer, March 2, 2018; Chinelo Nkechi Ikem, NORTH CAROLINA SUPREME COURT TO RECONSIDER DEATH SENTENCES FOR THREE INMATES OF COLOR, Pacific Standard, March 2, 2018; Anne Blythe, Death row inmates will go before NC’s high­est court. Urgent civ­il rights issue,’ lawyer says., The News & Observer, March 2, 2018. See Race.