Lgbtq+ People

Bias in the Courtroom

Under the Fourteenth Amendment, the legal sys­tem must give equal pro­tec­tion to all, regard­less of immutable char­ac­ter­is­tics like gen­der or race — but igno­rance and bias in the legal sys­tem have long result­ed in unjust out­comes for queer peo­ple in death penalty cases.

Jury Selection 

The Supreme Court has held that pros­e­cu­tors may not exclude jurors based sole­ly on their race or gen­der, but it has nev­er ruled on whether the same pro­hi­bi­tion applies to sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion, or clar­i­fied whether all gen­der iden­ti­ties are pro­tect­ed. The Court has ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses apply to peo­ple who iden­ti­fy as gay, and based on this prece­dent the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held in 2014 that equal pro­tec­tion pro­hibits peremp­to­ry strikes based on sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion.” At least twelve states, includ­ing California and New York, have passed leg­is­la­tion or decid­ed cas­es bar­ring dis­crim­i­na­to­ry strikes against LGBTQ+ poten­tial jurors. The American Bar Association has urged all courts to fol­low suit, and the fed­er­al Equality Act intro­duced in June 2023 would enshrine jury access rights for mem­bers of the queer com­mu­ni­ty. However, there is cur­rent­ly no law that pre­vents actors in 38 oth­er states and the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment from using peremp­to­ry strikes to exclude jurors based on their sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion and gender identity. 

One major obsta­cle to ensur­ing equal pro­tec­tion for LGBTQ+ peo­ple is the fact that a poten­tial juror’s sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion or gen­der iden­ti­ty usu­al­ly isn’t evi­dent in the same way that their race might be (though racial iden­ti­ty is also vul­ner­a­ble to the legal system’s mis­takes and guess­work). Queer poten­tial jurors may not wish to pub­licly express their iden­ti­ty for fear of harass­ment and dis­crim­i­na­tion, or for their own rea­sons. The Sixth Amendment requires that a jury rep­re­sent a fair cross-sec­tion” of the com­mu­ni­ty, but com­mu­ni­ty demo­graph­ic sta­tis­tics do not track sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion or trans iden­ti­ty. As a result, legit­i­mate pri­va­cy con­cerns and con­sti­tu­tion­al com­mands for jury rep­re­sen­ta­tion sit in ten­sion. Courts have ruled dif­fer­ent­ly on whether lawyers can ask poten­tial jurors about their queer iden­ti­ty depend­ing on the facts of the case. 

Picture of Harvey Milk in purple surrounded by headlines and news articles about his death.

The death penal­ty tri­al of for­mer San Francisco Supervisor Dan White for the 1979 mur­ders of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk brought many of these issues to the fore. Milk was the first open­ly gay elect­ed offi­cial in the coun­try, and he and White had often clashed over Milk’s pro-LGBTQ+ polit­i­cal ini­tia­tives. White assas­si­nat­ed Milk and Moscone with his police-issue revolver in City Hall. The tri­al judge denied White’s defense attor­ney the right to direct­ly ask poten­tial jurors about their sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion, but the attor­ney was per­mit­ted to ask ques­tions such as Do you sup­port homo­sex­u­al rights?” and Do you have homo­sex­u­al friends?” to try to elic­it infor­ma­tion about each person’s sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion. The attor­ney then struck at least three peo­ple who iden­ti­fied as gay, result­ing in a seat­ed jury that had no open­ly gay mem­bers. The gay com­mu­ni­ty erupt­ed in anger when White received a sen­tence of sev­en years in prison for vol­un­tary manslaugh­ter instead of death. Protestors marched in the city chant­i­ng: All straight jury, no sur­prise /​Dan White lives and Harvey Milk dies.” 

According to Paul Lynd’s account of the case, mem­bers of San Francisco’s gay com­mu­ni­ty believed they had been delib­er­ate­ly exclud­ed” from the jury, and if their sex­u­al­i­ty rep­re­sent­ed a divid­ing line qual­i­fy­ing or dis­qual­i­fy­ing cit­i­zens for jury ser­vice, then les­bians and gay men were not equal under the jus­tice sys­tem and had no rea­son to have con­fi­dence in its judgments.” 

Just a few years lat­er, a San Francisco court allowed voir dire ques­tions about sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion in the death penal­ty tri­al of Edgar Hendricks, who had done sex work for male clien­tele and was accused of mur­der­ing two gay men who alleged­ly hired him. Hendricks expressed a strong hatred towards gay men and was lat­er con­vict­ed of two addi­tion­al mur­ders of gay men in Los Angeles. The judge held that the ques­tion­ing was appro­pri­ate because it relat­ed to Hendricks’ motives. Ultimately, two open­ly gay jurors were seat­ed, and one served as foreper­son; the jury sen­tenced Hendricks to death. Some saw the Hendricks case as pay­ing due sen­si­tiv­i­ty” to the San Francisco LGBTQ+ com­mu­ni­ty after the White case, as police and pros­e­cu­tors point­ed to the out­come in Hendricks as proof of their con­cern about solv­ing and pros­e­cut­ing crimes against les­bians and gay men.” 

However, in line with the his­tor­i­cal use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment against queer peo­ple, sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion often aris­es as a cap­i­tal tri­al issue when the defen­dant, not the vic­tim, is queer. Many poten­tial jurors arrive at the cour­t­house with an anti-gay bias. Studies have found that as many as 17% of poten­tial jurors admit that they could not be fair if one of the par­ties to the case was gay, 3.5 times more than the poten­tial jurors who said they could not be fair if a par­ty was female, Black, or Latino. While many of these stud­ies pre­date the Supreme Court’s 2015 deci­sion in Obergefell v. Hodges, which autho­rized gay mar­riage nation­wide and her­ald­ed an expo­nen­tial increase in pub­lic sup­port for queer rights, a minor­i­ty of Americans still hold staunch­ly anti-gay views. According to Gallup, while 71% of Americans sup­port same-sex mar­riage, 59% of week­ly church­go­ers and 51% of Republicans oppose it. Older peo­ple and res­i­dents of the South are also less like­ly to sup­port gay mar­riage. These same groups typ­i­cal­ly have more time and finan­cial secu­ri­ty to serve on juries, and since most active death penal­ty states are in the South, mem­bers of these groups are more like­ly to be asked to serve as a juror on a death penalty case.

Headlines and articles about Charles Rhines atop pride flag, with image of Rhines.

Evidence of explic­it juror bias has emerged in sev­er­al cap­i­tal cas­es. During delib­er­a­tions in the South Dakota tri­al of Charles Rhines, jurors report­ed­ly expressed a lot of dis­gust” that Rhines was gay, with one call­ing him that SOB queer.” During penal­ty phase delib­er­a­tions, jurors argued that if he’s gay, we’d be send­ing him where he wants to go,” and he shouldn’t be able to spend his life with men in prison.” Rhines raised these issues in an appeal to the Supreme Court, but the Court denied review and Rhines was exe­cut­ed on November 4, 2019. Mr. Rhines’s case rep­re­sents one of the most extreme forms anti-LGBT bias can take,” said Ethan Rice, an attor­ney with queer advo­ca­cy group Lambda Legal. Cases where bias is a fac­tor in jury deci­sion-mak­ing show exact­ly why the death penal­ty is unjust and should not be main­tained in our society.” 

In Eric Patricks case in Florida, a juror admit­ted dur­ing voir dire that he would have a bias” if he believed Patrick was homo­sex­u­al. Put it this way, if I felt the per­son was a homo­sex­u­al, I per­son­al­ly believe that per­son is moral­ly depraved enough that he might lie, might steal, might kill,” the juror said. Patrick, who was home­less, did not iden­ti­fy as gay, but engaged in sex work with men for mon­ey and was accused of killing a male client. His attor­ney did not object to the juror being seat­ed, and Patrick was ulti­mate­ly sen­tenced to death by the bare min­i­mum vote allowed in Florida at the time: 7 – 5. In 2018, the Florida Supreme Court over­turned Patrick’s sen­tence along with over 150 oth­er Florida death-sen­tenced pris­on­ers, but also ordered the tri­al court to con­duct an evi­den­tiary hear­ing to deter­mine if Patrick’s lawyer had been inef­fec­tive dur­ing jury selec­tion. Patrick died on death row in December 2023 at age 60 while awaiting resentencing. 

The Prosecution 

Once the jury has been select­ed, the par­ties present their cas­es. There are many exam­ples of cap­i­tal cas­es in which pros­e­cu­tors weaponized tropes about sex­u­al­i­ty to secure a death sentence. 

Jay Neill was accused in Oklahoma of the mur­ders of four peo­ple, includ­ing three women, dur­ing a bank rob­bery he com­mit­ted at age 19. His co-defen­dant was his room­mate and boyfriend Robert Grady Johnson. The dis­crim­i­na­tion began dur­ing the police inves­ti­ga­tion, with the Chief Inspector of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation declar­ing that in most cas­es of overkill…the per­pe­tra­tor turns out to be a homo­sex­u­al.” The state psy­chi­a­trist who declared Neill com­pe­tent to stand tri­al called him a lit­tle guy who wants to pout and put on a show.” At tri­al, the pros­e­cu­tor implored the jurors to con­sid­er Neill’s sex­u­al­i­ty when decid­ing on the punishment: 

I want you to think briefly about the man you’re set­ting [sic] in judg­ment on and deter­min­ing what the appro­pri­ate pun­ish­ment should be…I’d like to go through some things that to me depict the true per­son, what kind of per­son he is. He is a homosexual…You’re decid­ing life or death on a per­son that’s a vowed [sic] homosexual.”

The jury sen­tenced Neill to death. On review, a fed­er­al appeals court held that the prosecutor’s state­ments were improp­er, but harm­less. Neill was exe­cut­ed on December 122002.

Because the prosecutor’s bla­tant homo­pho­bic hate­mon­ger­ing at sen­tenc­ing has no place in the court­rooms of a civ­i­lized soci­ety, and Neill’s appel­late counsel’s fail­ure to raise the issue on direct appeal con­sti­tutes clear and plain prej­u­di­cial neglect, I respect­ful­ly dis­sent. […] I can­not sanc­tion — because I have no con­fi­dence in — a pro­ceed­ing taint­ed by a prosecutor’s request that jurors impose a death sen­tence based, even in part, on who the defen­dant is rather than what he has done.

- Judge Carlos F. Lucero, dis­sent­ing from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals deci­sion uphold­ing Neill’s con­vic­tion and sentence

North Carolina pros­e­cu­tors used Eddie Hartmans sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion to under­mine cru­cial mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence. When the defense pre­sent­ed evi­dence show­ing that Hartman had been sex­u­al­ly abused by sev­er­al old­er male rel­a­tives as a child, the pros­e­cu­tor repeat­ed­ly asked the tes­ti­fy­ing wit­ness­es whether they knew that Hartman was gay. The defense argued that by doing so, the state was improp­er­ly sug­gest­ing that Hartman had been ask­ing” for the abuse, but appel­late courts held that there was no error. Hartman was exe­cut­ed on October 3, 2003, over the protests of gay rights groups. 

The stereo­type expressed by the jurors in Charles Rhines’ case — that only a death sen­tence could be pun­ish­ment for a gay man because life in prison with oth­er men would be enjoy­able — has been a long­stand­ing tool of pros­e­cu­tors in cap­i­tal cas­es. In Calvin Burdines tri­al in Texas for the mur­der of his abu­sive male part­ner, the pros­e­cu­tor argued that send­ing a homo­sex­u­al to the pen­i­ten­tiary cer­tain­ly isn’t a very bad pun­ish­ment for a homo­sex­u­al.” It would be like set­ting a kid loose in a can­dy store,” he said. A pros­e­cu­tor in a Georgia case argued to the jury that if anal sodomy is your thing, prison isn’t a bad place to be.” On appeal, a fed­er­al judge wrote that the despi­ca­ble nature of this com­ment speaks for itself” and the prosecutor’s antics have no place in our sys­tem of jus­tice” — but con­curred in deny­ing relief to the defendant.

Prosecutors have weaponized a dif­fer­ent set of strate­gies against les­bian cap­i­tal defen­dants. According to attor­ney and activist Joey Mogul, the label­ing of a woman as a les­bian often false­ly brands her as a man hater, aggres­sive, and deviant, and thus more capa­ble of com­mit­ting a crime than a het­ero­sex­u­al woman.” Prosecutors draw on stereo­types to defem­i­nize” les­bian defen­dants and coun­ter­act the pro­tec­tion­ist notions” jurors might feel towards women. The woman’s gen­der trans­gres­sion” — her fail­ure to fol­low pre­scribed female norms of docil­i­ty, sub­mis­sive­ness, and het­ero­sex­u­al­i­ty — becomes an unspo­ken aggra­vat­ing fac­tor in the deci­sion to seek death. Against the back­drop of racial stereo­types that pros­e­cu­tors have wield­ed to por­tray non-white defen­dants as more dan­ger­ous, this defem­i­niza­tion” tac­tic becomes even more effec­tive when used against les­bian women of color.

Images of Wanda Jean Allen and Bernina Mata with news articles about their cases on purple background.

Wanda Jean Allen was accused of killing her girl­friend, Gloria Leathers, in Oklahoma. While both Allen and Leathers were les­bian women with vio­lent pasts — each had pre­vi­ous­ly killed anoth­er woman — pros­e­cu­tors gen­dered them dif­fer­ent­ly. The state told the jury that Allen was the man” and wore the pants” in the rela­tion­ship. Prosecutors also empha­sized that Allen some­times spelled her mid­dle name Gene,” the typ­i­cal male spelling. The jury did not hear key mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence, includ­ing that Allen had suf­fered two severe head injuries as a teen: she had been hit by a truck and stabbed in the left tem­ple, com­pro­mis­ing her brain func­tion and result­ing in an IQ in the intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty range. I also take excep­tion to the major­i­ty find­ing the evi­dence [Allen] was the man’ in her les­bian rela­tion­ship has any pro­ba­tive val­ue at all…its only pur­pose was to present the defen­dant as less sym­pa­thet­ic to the jury than the vic­tim,” Judge James Lane wrote in dis­sent to the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals rul­ing uphold­ing the con­vic­tion and sen­tence. Allen was exe­cut­ed on January 11, 2001, becom­ing the first Black woman put to death in the United States in near­ly fifty years. 

Bernina Mata, a Latina woman, was tried in Illinois for the mur­der of John Draheim, a white man whom she met at a bar. Mata’s co-defen­dant and room­mate Russell Grundmeier par­tic­i­pat­ed in the mur­der and tes­ti­fied against her in exchange for a plea deal. Mogul, who rep­re­sent­ed Mata on appeal, writes that though Grundmeier said he was in a sex­u­al rela­tion­ship with Mata, the state bom­bard­ed the jury with an avalanche of evi­dence of Ms. Mata’s les­bian­ism” as motive for the crime. Prosecutors read titles of books from Mata’s per­son­al library, includ­ing The Lesbian Reader, Call Me Lesbian, and Homosexuality, and asked ten tes­ti­fy­ing wit­ness­es about her sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion — all while min­i­miz­ing Grundmeier’s role in the crime. The state’s the­o­ry cul­mi­nat­ed in pros­e­cu­tor Troy Owen’s argu­ment to the jury: 

We are try­ing to show that [Ms. Mata] has a motive to com­mit this crime in that she is a hard­core les­bian, and that is why she react­ed to Mr. Draheim’s behav­ior in this way. A nor­mal het­ero­sex­u­al woman would not be so offend­ed by such conduct.”

Mata was sen­tenced to death, while Grundmeier received immu­ni­ty for the mur­der and was sen­tenced to just four years on a less­er charge. The pros­e­cu­tors flaunt­ed Ms. Mata’s sex­u­al­i­ty before the jury because they knew some jurors would find it dis­taste­ful and oth­ers would deem her to be sick, per­vert­ed, and more wor­thy of death,” Mogul writes. Mata’s sen­tence was over­turned when Governor George Ryan ordered a mass com­mu­ta­tion of Illinois’ death row in 2003; she is cur­rent­ly serv­ing life in prison. 

It is my belief that many pros­e­cu­tors delib­er­ate­ly and shame­less­ly raise a defendant’s queer iden­ti­ty or manip­u­late stereo­types of queers to prej­u­dice defen­dants before juries and inflame them into deliv­er­ing a death sentence. 

- Joey Mogul, attor­ney for Bernina Mata

The Defense 

The preva­lence of anti-LGBTQ+ ani­mus in American cul­ture means that some­times the very peo­ple charged with pro­tect­ing the inter­ests of queer defen­dants are the same ones who dis­crim­i­nate against them. 

Calvin Burdine was assigned a defense lawyer who dropped numer­ous slurs about his client’s sex­u­al­i­ty. Burdine’s attor­ney Joe Cannon used the words tush hog,” queer,” and fairy” to refer to his own client and his co-defen­dant at var­i­ous times dur­ing the tri­al. Cannon did not object to seat­ing three jurors who admit­ted to homo­pho­bia dur­ing voir dire, nor did he object to the prosecution’s intro­duc­tion of Burdine’s con­vic­tion under an anti-sodomy law (a type of law designed to crim­i­nal­ize gay sex that has since been deemed uncon­sti­tu­tion­al by the Supreme Court). The pros­e­cu­tor used the sodomy con­vic­tion to argue that Burdine would be a future dan­ger to soci­ety. An appel­late court lat­er vacat­ed Burdine’s con­vic­tion because Cannon slept through large por­tions of the tri­al — but did not rule on whether Burdine was also prej­u­diced by Cannon’s bias against his own client. Burdine is now serv­ing a life sentence.

Collage of articles about Gay Panic Defense with purple tones and image of standing man.

Another area in which queer­pho­bia is on dis­play is the much-crit­i­cized Gay/​Trans Panic Defense, when the defen­dant argues that he killed an LGBTQ+ vic­tim because the vic­tim made unwant­ed sex­u­al over­tures or revealed them­selves as trans­gen­der. A com­pre­hen­sive study of cas­es from 1970 to 2021 found that assert­ing this defense suc­cess­ful­ly result­ed in a reduc­tion of mur­der charges one-third of the time. Attorney Omar T. Russo argues that the defense is a form of vic­tim-blam­ing, as it puts the vic­tim under a micro­scope regard­ing his or her iden­ti­ty, rather than plac­ing the defen­dant under the micro­scope for his or her own con­duct.” It essen­tial­ly con­veys that non­vi­o­lent queer expres­sion, or even the per­cep­tion of it, jus­ti­fies mur­der. Critics argue that courts would nev­er accept such a defense based on a victim’s race or reli­gion, because a vio­lent response to those iden­ti­ties would be seen as big­ot­ed. The asser­tion of the Gay/​Trans Panic Defense implies that a vio­lent response to sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion or gen­der expres­sion is appropriate. 

California became the first state to ban the Gay/​Trans Panic Defense in 2014, with a law stat­ing that provo­ca­tion could not be objec­tive­ly rea­son­able if it result­ed from the victim’s actu­al or per­ceived sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion or gen­der iden­ti­ty. According to the Movement Advancement Project, sev­en­teen states and the District of Columbia have banned the defense as of spring 2024. The American Bar Association has called on all fed­er­al, trib­al, state, local and ter­ri­to­r­i­al gov­ern­ments to follow suit. 

An emerg­ing issue in cap­i­tal cas­es involv­ing queer peo­ple is defense use of gen­der dys­pho­ria as a mit­i­gat­ing fac­tor. Gender dys­pho­ria is a med­ical dis­or­der defined by the American Psychiatric Association as marked incon­gru­ence” between a person’s expe­ri­enced or expressed gen­der and the one they were assigned at birth.” Common comor­bidi­ties include oth­er psy­chi­atric dis­or­ders such as depres­sion and anx­i­ety as well as sub­stance abuse issues. Treatment typ­i­cal­ly involves aspects of a social and/​or med­ical gen­der tran­si­tion. The diag­no­sis is itself con­tro­ver­sial, as crit­ics argue that it could be mis­in­ter­pret­ed to pathol­o­gize trans peo­ple and rein­force a gen­der bina­ry that many trans peo­ple may not iden­ti­fy with, while oth­ers argue that it is nec­es­sary to allow trans peo­ple to access gen­der-affirm­ing med­ical care and insurance coverage.

Psychiatric dis­or­ders and sub­stance abuse are fre­quent­ly pre­sent­ed as mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors in cap­i­tal cas­es as part of an indi­vid­u­al­ized sen­tenc­ing deter­mi­na­tion. The evi­dence helps jurors empathize with the defen­dant and under­stand the events lead­ing up to the crime, with the goal of con­vinc­ing the jury to vote for life instead of death. Recently, sev­er­al death-sen­tenced pris­on­ers who began a gen­der tran­si­tion on death row have argued on appeal that their gen­der dys­pho­ria con­tributed to their deci­sion-mak­ing at the time of the crime or dur­ing the tri­al process. Attorney Madeline Porta observes that this argu­ment rais­es the ques­tion of what a crim­i­nal defense attor­ney should do when the inter­ests of her client con­flict with or cause harm to the inter­ests of oth­ers, par­tic­u­lar­ly mar­gin­al­ized and oppressed com­mu­ni­ties.” While a cap­i­tal defendant’s gen­der dys­pho­ria is undoubt­ed­ly impor­tant to under­stand­ing their men­tal state pre­ced­ing a mur­der, as depres­sion or sui­ci­dal­i­ty would be, observers fear that the evi­dence could be mis­in­ter­pret­ed to argue that trans peo­ple are more like­ly to com­mit cap­i­tal offens­es, and that bad faith actors will seize upon such argu­ments to demo­nize trans peo­ple in the broader culture. 

To ensure dig­ni­ty for trans defen­dants and pris­on­ers, experts say that courts must approach their cas­es with care, under­stand­ing and con­vey­ing to the pub­lic that gen­der dys­pho­ria is not the same as gen­der iden­ti­ty — it is the men­tal con­di­tion asso­ci­at­ed with not being able to express one’s true gen­der iden­ti­ty. And research shows that the over­whelm­ing major­i­ty of peo­ple with diag­nos­able men­tal dis­or­ders do not com­mit vio­lent crimes. The case of Leslie Ann Nelson illus­trates an evolv­ing approach to this issue. Nelson, a trans woman, argued at tri­al that her gen­der dys­pho­ria and relat­ed men­tal ill­ness con­tributed to the killing of two police offi­cers. A New Jersey jury sen­tenced her to death in 1997, but her death sen­tence was reversed because of pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct before a sec­ond jury sen­tenced her to death in 2001. This time, how­ev­er, the New Jersey Supreme Court con­duct­ed a detailed review of Nelson’s psy­cho­log­i­cal his­to­ry, includ­ing her gen­der dys­pho­ria, and ordered anoth­er sen­tenc­ing hear­ing after find­ing that that the jury instruc­tions had pre­vent­ed the jury from prop­er­ly weigh­ing aggra­vat­ing and mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors. New Jersey abol­ished the death penal­ty before that resen­tenc­ing hear­ing occurred, and Nelson is cur­rent­ly serv­ing a life sentence.

The Judge 

Research and report­ing show that judges may hold the same racistsex­ist, and mis­guid­ed beliefs as any mem­ber of the pub­lic — includ­ing ani­mus towards LGBTQ+ people. 

In Gregory Dickens’ case, the judge’s big­otry was per­son­al. Dickens, who was gay, was tried for the mur­der of a cou­ple in Arizona, though all par­ties acknowl­edged that it was Dickens’ 16-year-old com­pan­ion who pulled the trig­ger. Judge Tom Cole sen­tenced Dickens to death under Arizona’s law at the time, which gave judges and not juries the final pow­er to issue a death sen­tence. Three jurors wrote to the judge after the tri­al to protest the sen­tence. Evidence lat­er emerged that Judge Cole reg­u­lar­ly wrote hate-filled let­ters to his son Scott, who was gay and bat­tling AIDS. In one let­ter, Judge Cole said he hoped Scott would die in prison like all the rest of [his] f*ggot friends.” Scott’s friends recalled him com­ing home with bruis­es and injuries after meet­ing his father, includ­ing one inci­dent where Scott returned with a bro­ken car wind­shield and black eye after telling his father he planned to per­form in a drag show. Appellate courts held that Judge Cole’s bias was not enough to war­rant a new tri­al for Dickens. Dickens died on death row of an appar­ent sui­cide in 2014.

Protecting Jury Access and Banning Discriminatory Defenses

The American Bar Association unan­i­mous­ly approved a res­o­lu­tion in 2018 urg­ing all courts to extend Batson v. Kentucky (1986) to pro­hib­it dis­crim­i­na­tion against LGBTQ+ jurors. The Equality Act, cur­rent­ly pend­ing in Congress, would cement pro­tec­tions for LGBTQ+ peo­ple that would extend to their right to serve on a jury. The ABA also issued a unan­i­mous res­o­lu­tion in 2013 rec­om­mend­ing that state and local gov­ern­ments ban the Gay/​Trans Panic Defense. 

Exception for Explicit Bias During Jury Deliberations 

While juror delib­er­a­tions are gen­er­al­ly shield­ed from court and pub­lic scruti­ny, the Supreme Court held in Peña-Rodriguez v. Colorado (2017) that tri­al courts could con­sid­er evi­dence about jury delib­er­a­tions when a juror makes a clear state­ment that indi­cates he or she relied on racial stereo­types or ani­mus to con­vict.” In Peña-Rodriguez, where the defen­dant was accused of unlaw­ful sex­u­al con­duct, two jurors revealed that anoth­er juror had made racist com­ments includ­ing, I think he did it because he’s Mexican and Mexican men take what­ev­er they want.” The Court ruled that the tri­al court could inquire into the delib­er­a­tions to assess whether the juror’s state­ment denied the defen­dant his Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. 

Scholars and advo­cates have pro­posed extend­ing Peña-Rodriguez to apply to cas­es where a juror makes homo­pho­bic com­ments. They argue that, like racial bias, anti-LGBTQ+ bias impli­cates unique his­tor­i­cal, con­sti­tu­tion­al, and insti­tu­tion­al con­cerns” and risks sys­tem­at­ic injury to the admin­is­tra­tion of jus­tice” — and exist­ing pro­ce­dures like voir dire fail to rout such bias from the jury pool. Considering America’s his­to­ry of dis­crim­i­na­tion against queer peo­ple, includ­ing non­con­sen­su­al ster­il­iza­tion, forced con­ver­sion, impris­on­ment, and exe­cu­tion, they argue that the more pow­er­ful Peña-Rodriguez rem­e­dy is need­ed to address anti-queer ani­mus in jury trials. 

Accountability for Attorneys

Similarly, schol­ars have point­ed to the Supreme Court’s race-based deci­sion in Buck v. Davis (2017) as a pos­si­ble ana­logue that could pro­vide pro­tec­tions for queer defen­dants. Duane Buck’s own attor­ney pre­sent­ed an expert wit­ness who tes­ti­fied that Buck was sta­tis­ti­cal­ly more like­ly to com­mit future vio­lent crimes because he was Black. The Supreme Court held that Buck had received inef­fec­tive assis­tance of coun­sel. Our law pun­ish­es peo­ple for what they do, not who they are,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the major­i­ty. Dispensing pun­ish­ment on the basis of an immutable char­ac­ter­is­tic flat­ly con­tra­venes this guid­ing prin­ci­ple.” In the­o­ry, Buck could afford relief to queer defen­dants whose attor­neys dis­crim­i­nate against them, result­ing in inef­fec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion that led those defen­dants to be pun­ished for who they are.”

Scholars also argue that the state’s use of homo­pho­bic stereo­types in cap­i­tal cas­es should con­sti­tute reversible error. Once the defense estab­lish­es that the pros­e­cu­tion made biased com­ments about the defendant’s sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion or gen­der iden­ti­ty, there would be a pre­sump­tion in favor of a new tri­al, and the state would have to show why the com­ments did not prej­u­dice the defen­dant. This bur­den-shift­ing frame­work echoes the pro­ce­dure used under Batson to pre­vent pros­e­cu­tors from strik­ing jurors based on race or gender.