New York Times

By ADAM LIPTAK

Not long after the United States Supreme Court inval­i­dat­ed Arizona’s death penal­ty statute in June and only a week before the Arizona Legislature enact­ed emer­gency leg­is­la­tion to rein­state it, two men accused of mur­der tried a bold legal maneu­ver that may save their lives. They pleaded guilty.

The pros­e­cu­tor was sur­prised but can­did: he said the men could plead guilty with­out fear of exe­cu­tion. He has since changed his mind. The judge, in Holbrook, Ariz., will hear argu­ments Thursday on the pros­e­cu­tor’s motion to undo the pleas.

He will not be alone in try­ing to untan­gle the con­se­quences of the Supreme Court’s deci­sion in Ring v. Arizona, which said juries rather than judges must make the cru­cial fac­tu­al deter­mi­na­tions that sup­port the death penal­ty. Courts and leg­is­la­tures in the nine states where juries do not make such find­ings, or ren­der only advi­so­ry ver­dicts, have had a busy sum­mer doing the same thing.

It’s a can of worms,” said Richard C. Dieter, the exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Death Penalty Information Center, a Washington advo­ca­cy group crit­i­cal of capital punishment.

Immediately after the deci­sion, even pros­e­cu­tors said that at least some of the 800 peo­ple already on death row in those states would be enti­tled to new sen­tences. But pros­e­cu­tors in Arizona, the state most direct­ly affect­ed by the deci­sion, have retreat­ed from that posi­tion. In pend­ing cas­es like the one in Holbrook, the Ring deci­sion has cre­at­ed intense pro­ce­dur­al con­fu­sion in several states.

In its rul­ing, the Supreme Court answered one ques­tion and cre­at­ed half a dozen oth­ers, includ­ing how the new rule affects defen­dants at var­i­ous stages in the cas­es against them; whether the deci­sion requires actions in states where juries ren­der advi­so­ry ver­dicts; what new laws are required to fix the prob­lem the court iden­ti­fied; and what hap­pens in cas­es like the one in Arizona.

The Ring deci­sion effec­tive­ly declared the death penal­ty statutes in five states uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, and it called into ques­tion statutes in four oth­er states where juries ren­der advi­so­ry ver­dicts but judges make the ultimate decision.

The five states in which judges made all of the rel­e­vant deci­sions are Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Nebraska. The four so-called hybrid states are Alabama, Delaware, Florida and Indiana. About 630 death row pris­on­ers are in the hybrid states, most of them in Florida and Alabama.

Several leg­is­la­tures have act­ed quick­ly, some­times by con­ven­ing spe­cial ses­sions, to fix their statutes by giv­ing juries a larg­er role. The supreme courts in a hand­ful of states are con­sid­er­ing Ring-related issues.

People on death row who have exhaust­ed their direct appeals face daunt­ing obsta­cles in argu­ing that the deci­sion should apply to them retroac­tive­ly. Courts have not been recep­tive to similar arguments.

People with pend­ing appeals are in a much stronger posi­tion. But they, too, are fac­ing vig­or­ous argu­ments from prosecutors.

On the day Ring was decid­ed, for instance, Kent Cattani, chief coun­sel of the death penal­ty appeals unit in the Arizona attor­ney gen­er­al’s office, said the 30 peo­ple on death row in Arizona who had not exhaust­ed their direct appeals would be enti­tled to resen­tenc­ings involv­ing juries. But in August, Mr. Cattani’s office filed papers in the Arizona Supreme Court argu­ing that the orig­i­nal death penal­ties should stand.

In a recent inter­view, Mr. Cattani said the revised posi­tion was the result of case-by-case analy­sis. He said all the Ring-relat­ed errors in these cas­es were harm­less because fac­tors sup­port­ing the death penal­ty were found implic­it­ly by juries in an ear­li­er phase of the tri­al, and because the Arizona Supreme Court rig­or­ous­ly reviewed death sentences.

That leaves peo­ple whose cas­es were pend­ing at the tri­al court lev­el when Ring was decided.

Nicholas S. Sizemore and Scott B. Brian, the two Arizona men who plead­ed guilty, were already serv­ing time for mur­der when they fatal­ly stabbed Carlos R. Ceniceros, a fel­low inmate, in November 2000. Mr. Sizemore, 21, was in the fourth year of a 30-year sen­tence. Mr. Brian, 38, was serv­ing a life sentence.

They were charged with first-degree mur­der, and the pros­e­cu­tion sought the death penal­ty. The case pro­ceed­ed fit­ful­ly until a rou­tine hear­ing on July 24, when the men announced they were pleading guilty.

The pleas star­tled the pros­e­cu­tor, Joseph Duarte. Serious crim­i­nal cas­es gen­er­al­ly end in plea bar­gains and occa­sion­al­ly result in tri­als. They almost nev­er end in sim­ple acknowl­edg­ments of guilt, and the defen­dant who sim­ply pleads is rarely bet­ter off as a consequence.

But in court that day, Mr. Duarte acknowl­edged that this case was the excep­tion. There does not appear to be a viable death penal­ty sen­tence to which Mr. Sizemore would be exposed,” he told the judge. He added a sim­i­lar com­ment about Mr. Brian.

The judge, Dale P. Neilson, agreed, telling the defen­dants that life in prison was the max­i­mum sen­tence and accept­ing their pleas. He sched­uled a sen­tenc­ing hear­ing for September. In Mr. Brian’s case, as every­one in the court­room that day under­stood it, the hear­ing would be point­less. He had got­ten a free pass for the killing and would face no addi­tion­al time or oth­er con­se­quences for it.

A week lat­er, the Arizona Legislature enact­ed emer­gency leg­is­la­tion, say­ing it want­ed no hia­tus in the impo­si­tion of the death penalty.”

A month after that, and just days before the sen­tenc­ing, Mr. Duarte had his own sur­prise for the court. He said in court papers that he had been wrong about the death penal­ty and that the sen­tenc­ing could pro­ceed under the new law. He sug­gest­ed that the defen­dants should be allowed to with­draw their pleas.

This drew a strong reac­tion from one of Mr. Sizemore’s lawyers in a court filing.

Why, in the name of God, would Mr. Sizemore want to with­draw?” the lawyer, Thomas J. Phalen, asked. So that the state can kill him?”

Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Indiana and Montana have all enact­ed laws to address the Ring deci­sion. Some of the statutes became effec­tive after the deci­sion but were draft­ed in antic­i­pa­tion of it.

Defense lawyers have com­plained about aspects of the new statutes. In Arizona, for instance, the Legislature lim­it­ed the abil­i­ty of both the tri­al and supreme courts to review a jury’s ver­dict and allowed vic­tims a larg­er role in pro­ceed­ings than Supreme Court prece­dent allows, said John Stookey, an Arizona lawyer who rep­re­sents capital defendants.

Before Arizona act­ed, lawyers for Mr. Sizemore and Mr. Brian sweat­ed about their tac­ti­cal deci­sion, ner­vous that they were miss­ing some­thing. In the end, they advised their clients to plead guilty.

It was like a win­dow open,” Mr. Phalen con­clud­ed, and it was clear as a mat­ter of law that there was no death penalty statute.”

Mr. Brian’s lawyer, Patrick McGillicuddy, said his client fol­lowed Mr. Sizemore’s bold move.”

Mr. Duarte, the pros­e­cu­tor, did not return a telephone call.

Mr. Cattani, of the attor­ney gen­er­al’s office, said Mr. Duarte had mis­spo­ken. The pros­e­cu­tor was wrong in terms of say­ing there’s no statute under which they can be sen­tenced,” he said. They could even have been sen­tenced under the old statute.”

That analy­sis is at odds with a state­ment in a let­ter Attorney General Janet Napolitano sent to Arizona judges the day Ring was decid­ed. Ms. Napolitano argued the Ring case in the Supreme Court and is now a can­di­date for governor.

It would now be uncon­sti­tu­tion­al to con­duct a cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing under the present ver­sion” of the death penal­ty statute, she wrote in June, urg­ing judges not to pro­ceed until the statute is amend­ed to con­form to the law.” She did not say what should hap­pen to defen­dants who plead­ed guilty in the meantime.