By: JAY WEAVER
Miami Herald

An Arizona death penal­ty case could have pro­found ram­i­fi­ca­tions for nine states — includ­ing Florida, with its 372 Death Row inmates — and might lead to major changes in how sen­tences in first-degree mur­der tri­als are meted out.

Already with­in the last two weeks, the U.S. Supreme Court has post­poned two Florida exe­cu­tions, the lat­est one Tuesday.

At the root of the issue: Ring v. Arizona, a 1994 tri­al of an armored van rob­ber who was con­vict­ed of mur­der by a jury and sen­tenced to die by a judge.

If the high court rules in favor of the con­vict­ed Phoenix mur­der­er, Timothy Ring, then all 795 Death Row inmates in those nine states could have their sen­tences com­mut­ed to life or they might get new sen­tenc­ing hear­ings. State leg­is­la­tors might also have to change their death sentencing laws.

In the sim­plest terms, the Supreme Court must decide whether a state jury or judge should decide if defen­dants found guilty of first-degree mur­der should face a life sen­tence or the death penalty.

In Arizona, the tri­al judge makes that call while con­sid­er­ing mit­i­gat­ing and aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances, with­out input from a jury. In Florida, the judge also has final say, but the jury before­hand makes a recommendation.

I think they will want to hit this one head on,” said Miami lawyer Gerald Kogan, a for­mer Florida Supreme Court jus­tice who has open­ly ques­tioned the effec­tive­ness of the death penal­ty in Florida. They have tak­en this case to make a def­i­nite state­ment — should that author­i­ty lie with the jury, or should it lie with the trial judge?”

Attorneys rep­re­sent­ing Death Row inmates are watch­ing the case anxiously.

If Ring los­es, we’re in the sta­tus quo,” said Todd Scher, a Fort Lauderdale lawyer with the Capital Collateral Regional Council, a state agency that han­dles death sen­tence appeals. If Ring pre­vails, there is the pos­si­bil­i­ty of flat-out com­mu­ta­tions to life because the statute is unconstitutional.”

PROCESS QUESTIONED

The Supreme Court has accept­ed the Ring v. Arizona case for oral argu­ments in April because it rais­es con­sti­tu­tion­al ques­tions about the process of impos­ing the death penal­ty in that state. The con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty, which exists in 38 states, is not at stake, said Phoenix attor­ney John Stookey, who filed the Ring peti­tion with the Supreme Court.

In addi­tion to Arizona and Florida, the oth­er states affect­ed by the high court case are Idaho, Montana, Alabama, Indiana, Delaware, Colorado and Nebraska.

THREE WERE CHARGED

Ring was charged with par­tic­i­pat­ing along with two oth­ers in the rob­bery of an armored van in Phoenix. A jury found him guilty of first-degree mur­der because the van dri­ver was shot and killed dur­ing the rob­bery. Ring’s max­i­mum statu­to­ry penal­ty, based on the jury’s ver­dict, was life imprisonment.

But the pre­sid­ing judge con­duct­ed a sep­a­rate sen­tenc­ing hear­ing to deter­mine whether cer­tain facts jus­ti­fied impos­ing the death penal­ty. At that hear­ing, an accom­plice with a plea bar­gain tes­ti­fied that Ring led the plan­ning of the rob­bery, shot the van’s dri­ver and lat­er asked to be con­grat­u­lat­ed” on his shot. The accom­plice had not tes­ti­fied at Ring’s tri­al, however.

After the sen­tenc­ing hear­ing, the judge imposed the death penal­ty, say­ing Ring mas­ter­mind­ed the rob­bery and killed the dri­ver for the mon­ey in the van. The judge also con­clud­ed that Ring act­ed in a heinous” and depraved” man­ner when he alleged­ly asked to be con­grat­u­lat­ed on his shot.

In papers filed with the Supreme Court, the Ring case spot­lights two ear­li­er high court deci­sions that are poten­tial­ly in conflict.

In Walton v. Arizona, a split Supreme Court found in 1990 that a tri­al judge’s sole respon­si­bil­i­ty to deter­mine a con­vict­ed mur­der­er’s death sen­tence does not vio­late the defen­dan­t’s due process right to a trial.

OTHER CONCLUSION

A decade lat­er, the 5 – 4 high court reached a dif­fer­ent con­clu­sion in a non­death-penal­ty shoot­ing case, Apprendi v. New Jersey. The major­i­ty ruled that the facts used to increase the defen­dan­t’s sen­tence by a judge should have been pre­sent­ed to a jury at tri­al — and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

While the defen­dant was sub­ject to a 10-year sen­tence in the racial­ly taint­ed shoot­ing, the judge made it 12 years in the sen­tenc­ing hear­ing after find­ing that it was a hate crime — a fac­tor nev­er con­sid­ered by jurors.

In 2000, Justices John Paul Stevens and con­cur­ring Justice Clarence Thomas dis­tin­guished Apprendi from the ear­li­er Walton case by say­ing tri­al judges can make fac­tu­al deter­mi­na­tions that result in the death penalty.

But Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, who dis­sent­ed in Apprendi, said the dis­tinc­tion was baf­fling.” She wrote: If the court does not intend to over­rule Walton, one would be hard-pressed to tell from the opin­ion it issues” in Apprendi.

CHANCE TO CLARIFY

That appar­ent con­fu­sion over those two ear­li­er rul­ings could per­suade the Supreme Court to clar­i­fy its stand with the Ring v. Arizona case.

There’s a con­flict,” said Raag Singhal, a Fort Lauderdale attor­ney who han­dles Death Row cas­es. Singhal, like oth­ers inter­viewed for this sto­ry, said the vote will prob­a­bly be close.

Singhal said the Ring case could turn out to be like the Supreme Court’s 1972 land­mark deci­sion in Furman v. Georgia, which found that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because of the dis­par­i­ty in how it was met­ed out based on race and oth­er fac­tors. That rul­ing led to the com­mu­ta­tion of all Death Row prisoners.

Their deci­sion [in Ring] would have a tremen­dous impact in Florida,” he said. If the sen­tenc­ing scheme is uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, then every­one on Death Row has been placed there because of an unconstitutional statute.”

Because of the Ring case, Gov. Jeb Bush, an advo­cate of the death penal­ty, signed an order Wednesday delay­ing today’s planned exe­cu­tion of Robert Trease.

The jus­tices grant­ed a reprieve Tuesday to Florida Death Row inmate Linroy Bottoson just three hours before he was sched­uled to die.