New York Times

By JOAN M. CHEEVER
op-ed

TAMFORD, Conn. — Thirty years ago today — June 29, 1972 — the Supreme Court ruled in Furman v. Georgia that the death penal­ty was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because it was admin­is­tered in a racial­ly and geo­graph­i­cal­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry man­ner. The deci­sion end­ed up sav­ing the lives of 611 inmates on death rows in 31 states. This week, in Ring v. Arizona, the court may have done the same for some of the 800 killers now housed on death rows in the nine states that allow judges, not juries, to impose a sen­tence of death, a pro­ce­dure that the Supreme Court found vio­lates a defen­dan­t’s right to a tri­al by jury.

After the Furman deci­sion, all 611 affect­ed inmates were resen­tenced to life terms that, in some states, real­ly meant between 10 and 30 years. (By 1976, the death-penal­ty states had suc­ceed­ed in pass­ing new laws that were found con­sti­tu­tion­al by the Supreme Court. The void­ing of death sen­tences as a result of the Furman deci­sion could not, how­ev­er, be reversed.) Inmates were able to reduce their terms because of good-behav­ior cred­it laws that cut sen­tences. Eventually, 310 — more than half of those who were on death rows in 1972 — com­plet­ed their sen­tences or were paroled.

Three of these for­mer death-row inmates killed again once they were out of prison. A Texas ser­i­al killer was con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing two women and was a sus­pect in the mur­ders of six oth­ers. He was exe­cut­ed in 1998. Two years after being paroled, anoth­er for­mer death-row inmate mur­dered a fel­low drug deal­er; he’s cur­rent­ly serv­ing a life sen­tence. A third mur­der­er, a prison escapee, killed anoth­er man in a jeal­ous rage after the two had smoked crack cocaine at an all-night party.

But those are the excep­tions. In 1994, short­ly after wit­ness­ing the exe­cu­tion of my client, Walter Williams, in Texas, I began trav­el­ing across the coun­try to find out what had hap­pened to the inmates saved by the Furman deci­sion who were even­tu­al­ly freed. I fol­lowed the incar­cer­a­tion and parole his­to­ry of all 310 from 1972 to 2002 and inter­viewed more than 125 of the 200 who are still liv­ing. Most have been law-abid­ing, work­ing mem­bers of the com­mu­ni­ty. About 90 parolees returned to prison briefly for tech­ni­cal vio­la­tions,” but most were paroled again. Only 4 per­cent were con­vict­ed of aggra­vat­ed felonies. Six were found to be inno­cent of the crimes for which they had been sen­tenced to death.

The inmates freed after the Furman deci­sion rep­re­sent one of the largest social exper­i­ments in crim­i­nal jus­tice his­to­ry. The rea­sons for their suc­cess are as var­ied as the men. Only a few said being so close to the elec­tric chair made them scared straight.” Many instead attrib­uted their suc­cess to a high­er pow­er,” an estab­lished reli­gious faith or a per­son­al spir­i­tu­al com­mit­ment that they devel­oped while on death row. (The only book most had been allowed to read was the Bible.) Many cred­it­ed strong ties with rel­a­tives, fel­low inmates, or cor­rec­tions offi­cials who had served as men­tors and, in some cas­es, father fig­ures. Almost all praised the prison edu­ca­tion pro­grams in which they learned valu­able skills or trades that helped them land jobs once paroled.

The his­to­ry of these men should force us to look more seri­ous­ly at sen­tenc­ing options oth­er than the death penal­ty — var­i­ous types of life terms. It also reminds us of an issue that has recent­ly ener­gized the cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment debate: the inno­cence of 101 inmates who were on death row.

The pow­er to abol­ish cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in this coun­try lies with the peo­ple, through their state leg­is­la­tures. Although the cur­rent Supreme Court has indi­cat­ed it will not itself abol­ish cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, it has at least begun to lis­ten to a grow­ing move­ment in the states.

Joan M. Cheever is a lawyer and a for­mer man­ag­ing edi­tor of The National Law Journal.