A three-judge pan­el of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has grant­ed a stay of exe­cu­tion for fed­er­al death row pris­on­er Lezmond Mitchell to pre­vent the U.S. gov­ern­ment from exe­cut­ing him before the court can review an on-going appeal con­cern­ing pos­si­ble anti-Native American bias in his case. Mitchell, who was sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on December 11, 2019, is a mem­ber of the Navajo Nation and the only Native American on fed­er­al death row. His case is one of sev­er­al in the past year high­light­ing the ten­sion between trib­al sov­er­eign­ty and the pur­suit of the death penal­ty by state and federal officials.

When the Department of Justice announced in July its inten­tion to exe­cute Mitchell and four oth­er fed­er­al death-row pris­on­ers in a five-week span from December 9, 2019 through January 15, 2020, it false­ly claimed that the pris­on­ers had all exhaust­ed their appeals and that it was car­ry­ing out the exe­cu­tions to advance the inter­ests of the vic­tims’ fam­i­lies. In fact, although Mitchell’s ini­tial appeals had been denied, he was in the midst of lit­i­ga­tion in the fed­er­al courts and had been grant­ed a cer­tifi­cate of appeal­a­bil­i­ty,” mean­ing that the courts con­sid­ered the issues he raised to be wor­thy of fur­ther judi­cial review. Both the Navajo Nation and the vic­tims’ fam­i­ly told fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tors at the time of tri­al that they opposed the gov­ern­ment seek­ing the death penal­ty in the case. 

Mitchell’s attor­neys argued that his sched­uled exe­cu­tion would inter­fere with con­tin­u­ing legal chal­lenges to the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of his death sen­tence. They asked for a stay of exe­cu­tion such that he may lit­i­gate his appeal [con­cern­ing anti-Native American bias] to con­clu­sion.” A split pan­el of the fed­er­al appeals court vot­ed 2 – 1 on October 4 to grant the stay so that brief­ing could be com­plet­ed in the case and sched­uled argu­ment on the appeal for December 13

In 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado that state­ments by jurors that their ver­dict was influ­enced by racial stereo­types or ani­mus were admis­si­ble to chal­lenge the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of a defendant’s con­vic­tion. Mitchell’s lawyers sought to inter­view jurors about poten­tial racial bias in his case, cit­ing bias in the charg­ing deci­sion, the exclu­sion of Native American prospec­tive jurors, and a clos­ing argu­ment that was rid­dled with com­ment” dis­parag­ing Mitchell’s reli­gious beliefs and Navajo cul­ture.” The dis­trict court refused to per­mit Mitchell to talk to jurors, rely­ing on an Arizona pro­ce­dur­al rule bar­ring juror inter­views. Mitchell then asked the Ninth Circuit for per­mis­sion to appeal. On April 25, the Ninth Circuit found that he had pre­sent­ed suf­fi­cient basis for appeal and set a brief­ing sched­ule for the case. Notwithstanding this rul­ing, Attorney General Barr announced Mitchell’s exe­cu­tion date on July 25

Mitchell was sen­tenced to death for the 2001 mur­ders of Alyce Slim and her nine-year-old grand­daugh­ter on Navajo lands in Arizona. Mitchell was arrest­ed on a trib­al war­rant and ini­tial­ly held in a Navajo jail. During this time peri­od, he was not appoint­ed a lawyer, but he was ques­tioned repeat­ed­ly by FBI agents and even­tu­al­ly con­fessed to the crimes. 

Before Mitchell’s tri­al, Navajo Nation offi­cials wrote a let­ter to the fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tor explain­ing that they opposed the death penal­ty for Mitchell and that the the tak­ing of human life for vengeance” is counter to Navajo cul­ture and reli­gion. Slim’s daugh­ter and the moth­er of the deceased nine-year-old also opposed the pros­e­cu­tion seek­ing the death penal­ty. The pros­e­cu­tor assigned to the case rec­om­mend­ed to the United States Department of Justice that the case be tried non-cap­i­tal­ly. However, Attorney General John Ashcroft dis­re­gard­ed these opin­ions and ordered the pros­e­cu­tor to seek the death penal­ty. In a dis­sent from a pri­or Ninth Circuit rul­ing in the case, Judge Stephen Reinhardt not­ed that pri­or to this case, the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment had nev­er exe­cut­ed any Native American for an intra-Indian crime that occurred in Indian Country.” 

In November 2018, fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tors in New Mexico with­drew their notice of intent to seek the death penal­ty against Kirby Cleveland in the killing of a trib­al police offi­cer after Navajo Nation Attorney General Ethel Branch wrote to pros­e­cu­tors reit­er­at­ing the tribe’s oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty. In Patrick Murphy’s death-penal­ty case in Oklahoma, the Supreme Court will review a fed­er­al appeals court deci­sion that state pros­e­cu­tors lacked juris­dic­tion to pros­e­cute Murphy — a mem­ber of the Muskogee (Creek) Nation — because the mur­der occurred on Indian lands with­in the bor­ders of the Creek Reservation. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Harrison Mantis, Court stays exe­cu­tion of Navajo man to hear claim of pos­si­ble jury bias, Cronkite News, October 7, 2019; Donovan Quintero, Attorneys for Navajo man file stay of exe­cu­tion, Navajo Times, September 10, 2019; Christie Thompson, The Navajo Nation Opposed His Execution. The U.S. Plans to Do It Anyway, The Marshall Project, September 172019

Read Mitchell’s stay motion here. Read the stay order from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.