FindLaw​.com Legal Commentary

By EDWARD LAZARUS

Currently, in the Washington, D.C. area, pros­e­cu­tors from Maryland, Virginia, and the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment are com­pet­ing for the priv­i­lege of being the first to seek the death penal­ty against the belt­way snipers. As unseem­ly as these acts of polit­i­cal one-ups­man­ship may be, who can argue that the pun­ish­ment does not fit the crime?

The sniper duo, after all, has mul­ti­ple pre­med­i­tat­ed, cold-blood­ed mur­ders to answer for. They ter­ror­ized mil­lions of peo­ple for weeks on end.

Meanwhile, this week, the writer/​lawyer Scott Turow launched his new book Reversible Errors — the sto­ry of a man wrong­ly con­vict­ed of cap­i­tal mur­der and sen­tenced to death — by announc­ing his con­ver­sion to death penalty abolition.

A for­mer fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tor, Turow used to con­sid­er the death penal­ty an ugly neces­si­ty.” But since then, Turow achieved the exon­er­a­tion of a long time res­i­dent of Illinois death row, and has served on the com­mis­sion to review the death penal­ty in that state. And now Turow has come to believe that con­struct­ing a fair and accu­rate sys­tem of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment exceeds the grasp of human wisdom.

This is the fun­da­men­tal para­dox of the death penal­ty. For some ungod­ly rea­son, American soci­ety reg­u­lar­ly pro­duces human beings who com­mit mon­strous crimes, the kind of crimes that leave most of us com­fort­able with idea of exe­cu­tion in indi­vid­ual cas­es. Yet when we look at the death penal­ty en masse — that is, when we assess the DNA-val­i­dat­ed sta­tis­ti­cal cer­tain­ty of erro­neous con­vic­tion (not to men­tion the issues of class and racial bias) — many of the same peo­ple who would oth­er­wise have been moved to sup­port the death penal­ty, feel com­pelled to con­demn the whole system.

The pow­er of this para­dox is tear­ing apart the Supreme Court. 

The Way the Paradox Plays Out in the Supreme Court

Only a few years ago, a sub­stan­tial major­i­ty of the Court’s Justices was will­ing to let the death penal­ty oper­ate with an ever shrink­ing lev­el of judi­cial over­sight. Yet although the com­po­si­tion of the Court has not changed, that lais­sez faire atti­tude now hangs by a single vote.

Last week, a bit­ter­ly divid­ed Supreme Court refused by a 5 – 4 vote to recon­sid­er the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty for juve­niles, a pun­ish­ment that it express­ly coun­te­nanced as recent­ly as 1988, but that an increas­ing­ly vocal con­tin­gent on the court is begin­ning to pas­sion­ate­ly ques­tion. (The case was In re Kevin Nigel Stanford)

Usually deci­sions not to hear a case are unac­com­pa­nied by any com­ments from the jus­tices. In this case, though, the four dis­senters sig­naled their extreme dis­plea­sure in writ­ing. Not only did they crit­i­cize the major­i­ty for refus­ing to recon­sid­er the juve­nile death penal­ty, but they also declared the shame­ful prac­tice” incom­pat­i­ble with a civilized society. 

The Death Penalty Is Apparently Straining Courtesy Among the Justices

Part of the frus­tra­tion and anger evi­dent in the dis­sent sure­ly stemmed from the fact that, ordi­nar­i­ly, four votes (equal to the num­ber of dis­senters) is suf­fi­cient to grant review of a case. Stanford, how­ev­er, appar­ent­ly did not fall under the usual rule.

Why? Unlike in the typ­i­cal case, which comes up to the Supreme Court from the low­er courts, here the death row inmate had applied direct­ly to the Supreme Court for a writ of habeas cor­pus that would vacate his death sen­tence. Evidently, five votes are nec­es­sary to grant review of such a direct application.

One might have thought that at least one mem­ber of the Stanford major­i­ty would have accom­mo­dat­ed the strong views of the four dis­senters by agree­ing to set the case for argu­ment and deci­sion on the mer­its. Should a tech­ni­cal dis­tinc­tion poten­tial­ly cost a man his life? Stanford’s is a death case, no mat­ter how it reach­es the Court.

And what about the tout­ed cur­rent col­le­gial­i­ty of the Justices? Couldn’t one have lent a vote when it seemed to mean so much to the oth­er four — not to mean the death row inmate?

It seems that with­in the Court, the debate over the death penal­ty now leaves no room for accom­mo­da­tion or col­le­gial­i­ty. Instead, as was true in the late 1980s, there is an unbridge­able gap — between those who do not want to look again at the trou­bling real­i­ties of the cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sys­tem, and those anx­ious to pur­sue the legal con­clu­sions to which those real­i­ties point them. 

The Shift in the Views of Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer

The res­ur­rec­tion of this deep divide results from a steady shift in the views of Justices David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Stephen Breyer. (Justice John Paul Stevens has been a near-abo­li­tion­ist on death penal­ty issues for some time).

What is the source of the shift? For one thing, it is prob­a­bly sig­nif­i­cant that none of these jus­tices had mean­ing­ful expe­ri­ence with the death penal­ty pri­or to join­ing the Court. They are all from juris­dic­tions where the death penal­ty long ago with­ered into non-existence.

Coming to the issue afresh, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer spent their first few years on the Court in a state of rel­a­tive com­pla­cen­cy in the cap­i­tal cas­es. That has changed, and changed profoundly.

After years of inescapable con­fronta­tion with the death cas­es that inces­sant­ly bom­bard the Court, they have been moved from com­pla­cen­cy to active skep­ti­cism. Now they vote repeat­ed­ly to lim­it the scope of the death penal­ty and re-exam­ine the process by which it is imposed. 

The Resurrection of an Old and Deep Death Penalty Divide

In mov­ing in this direc­tion, the trio of Justices is fol­low­ing an hon­or­able path. Justice Harry Blackmun came to the Court in 1971 absolute­ly com­mit­ted to the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty. He retired, more than two decades lat­er, a death penalty abolitionist.

Blackmun’s trans­for­ma­tion did not reflect a moral con­ver­sion. Rather, it reflect­ed an evo­lu­tion of think­ing dri­ven by week­ly obser­va­tion of how police, pros­e­cu­tors, judges, and juries make the choice between life and death.

Thanks in part to DNA test­ing, we now know more than ever about the faults in this sys­tem. To a sci­en­tif­ic cer­tain­ty, we know that peo­ple con­fess to cap­i­tal crimes they did not com­mit, that key eye­wit­ness­es make trag­ic mis­takes, that foren­sic experts exag­ger­ate their knowl­edge, that infor­mants out­right lie (per­haps to secure prosecutorial favor).

Yet the sys­tem nev­er­the­less relies on such flawed evi­dence in deter­min­ing who should die. In short, it has a flaw at its heart.

We also know — to as close an approx­i­ma­tion of cer­tain­ty as sta­tis­tics per­mit — that race plays a pow­er­ful and insid­i­ous role in met­ing out death sen­tences. And we know to a moral cer­tain­ty that the sin­gle most impor­tant fac­tor in whether a defen­dant receives a death sen­tence is the qual­i­ty of his lawyer. 

Should the Supreme Court’s View Be Systemic, Or Individual?

All of which returns one to the para­dox. Is it the role of the Supreme Court to think about the snipers, or the system?

For five jus­tices, the pub­lic demand for pro­tec­tion and revenge against the evil­do­ers of the world takes prece­dence over sys­temic con­cerns. And so they have cre­at­ed an elab­o­rate set of rules to rel­e­gate to oth­ers the Herculean task of pro­tect­ing against inevitable human failure.

For the oth­er four, in con­trast, the seeds of doubt have sprout­ed and are grow­ing dai­ly. Onto all their desks, the habeas appli­ca­tions and the cert. peti­tions and the hor­ror sto­ries of inno­cent peo­ple sen­tenced to die will con­tin­ue to stream. Someday, and per­haps not so far away, the force of expe­ri­ence — as it did for Blackmun, as it has for Turow — will sure­ly car­ry the day.

*Edward Lazarus writes about, prac­tices, and teach­es law in Los Angeles. A for­mer fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tor, he is the author of two books — most recent­ly, Closed Chambers: The Rise, Fall, and Future of the Modern Supreme Court.