THE NATION

By ROBERT SHERILL

Part 2 of 2

The Supreme Court’s Dismaying Muddle

From this day for­ward, I no longer shall tin­ker with the machin­ery of death. For more than 20 years I have endeavored…along with a major­i­ty of this Court, to devel­op pro­ce­dur­al and sub­stan­tive rules that would lend more than the mere appear­ance of fair­ness to the death penal­ty endeav­or. Rather than con­tin­ue to cod­dle the Court’s delu­sion that the desired lev­el of fair­ness has been achieved…I feel moral­ly and intel­lec­tu­al­ly oblig­at­ed sim­ply to con­cede that the death penal­ty exper­i­ment has failed.
-Justice Harry Blackmun, dis­sent­ing, Callins v. Collins, 1994


The pri­ma­ry source of this humon­gous, ongo­ing trav­es­ty of jus­tice is the US Supreme Court. In the ear­ly 1970s, it had its best chance to rid the nation of the death-penal­ty headache, but it failed then, and it has been mak­ing things worse ever since. Many legal schol­ars would agree with Carol and Jordan Steiker, who wrote in the Harvard Law Review in 1995: How and why did the Court cre­ate a body of law at once so messy and so mean­ing­less?… The Supreme Court’s cho­sen path of con­sti­tu­tion­al reg­u­la­tion of the death penal­ty has been a dis­as­ter, an enor­mous reg­u­la­to­ry effort with almost no rationalizing effect.”

The hey­day of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the United States was in the 1930s, when exe­cu­tions aver­aged 167 a year. In the 1940s, the aver­age dropped to 129. The dra­mat­ic decline that began in the 1950s (with an aver­age of sev­en­ty-two) was large­ly due to the civ­il rights move­ment, which raised hell about the dis­pro­por­tion­ate use of minor­i­ty bod­ies for exe­cu­tion (55 per­cent of all exe­cu­tions; 90 per­cent of those for rape). Since most of the nation’s exe­cu­tions were in the South, one did­n’t need a keen legal mind to see that racial bias had some­thing to do with it. Because of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund’s hero­ic onslaught of law­suits chal­leng­ing the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty, the num­ber of exe­cu­tions plum­met­ed to forty-two in 1961 and down, down, final­ly, to two in 1967. Then a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions took place while the states and the low­er courts wait­ed for the Supreme Court to decide what should be done next.

Traditionalists’ Last Stand
The qui­et that fol­lowed was bro­ken in 1971 when the Supreme Court heard McGautha v. California. The deci­sion in that case was very strange indeed, con­sid­er­ing the 180-degree turn­around the Court would make the very next year, in Furman v. Georgia. The con­flict between those two deci­sions, com­ing so close togeth­er, fore­told the chaos to come.

In McGautha, lawyers for two men con­vict­ed of mur­der, one from California, the oth­er from Ohio, argued that their tri­als were con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly intol­er­a­ble because the juries were left with noth­ing but their con­science, intel­li­gence and sense of fair play to guide them. They said the juries should have been giv­en stan­dards for mea­sur­ing the wicked­ness of the crimes, and for delv­ing into the char­ac­ter, the back­ground and the intent of the defen­dants to deter­mine if rea­sons for mer­cy could be found. Additionally, lawyers for the Ohio defen­dant com­plained that their man had­n’t got a fair shake because his jury had decid­ed on guilt and pun­ish­ment at the same time, instead of sep­a­rat­ing the deci­sions into two process­es, as had been done for the California defendant.

The Supreme Court’s 5‑to‑4 opin­ion, writ­ten by Justice John Harlan, an Eisenhower appointee, came down to this: The tra­di­tion­al sys­tem of leav­ing life-and-death deci­sions to a jury’s unguid­ed dis­cre­tion was work­ing OK and did not offend the Constitution. Common sense and fair play were enough. People who want­ed to write spe­cif­ic guid­ing stan­dards” for weigh­ing degrees of guilt and inno­cence were ask­ing the impos­si­ble, because putting such guid­ance in lan­guage which can be fair­ly under­stood and applied” would be a task beyond present human ability.”

Harlan’s skep­ti­cism was prophet­ic.
As for the Ohio defen­dan­t’s oth­er com­plaint – that he did­n’t get a fair shake because the guilt phase and the penal­ty phase of the tri­al were not sep­a­rat­ed – that gave Harlan a chance to thumb his nose at those eggheads at the American Law Institute and the National Commission on Reform of Federal Criminal Law who had rec­om­mend­ed the sep­a­ra­tion. Tough luck, said Harlan, for the Constitution does not guar­an­tee tri­al pro­ce­dures that are the best of all worlds, or that accord with the most enlight­ened ideas of stu­dents of the infant sci­ence of criminology.”

It was the old boy’s last big chance to strike a blow for tra­di­tion. Shortly there­after, Harlan retired and died. If he had lived even anoth­er year he would have been shocked to see the daz­zling speed with which the Supreme Court can change its mind. It hap­pened with Furman v. Georgia. The nine sep­a­rate opin­ions totaled 50,000 words, the most volu­mi­nous dia­logue in Court his­to­ry. Stanford University law pro­fes­sor Robert Weisberg likened it to a bad­ly orches­trat­ed opera, with nine char­ac­ters tak­ing turns to offer their own arias.”

The case dealt with appeals from three black men who had been sen­tenced to death, one for mur­der, the oth­er two for rap­ing white women. William Furman was the mur­der­er. At tri­al he gave this descrip­tion of how he acci­den­tal­ly shot his white vic­tim through a door: They got me charged with mur­der and I admit, I admit going to these folks’ home and they did caught me in there and I was com­ing back out, back­ing up and there was a wire down there on the floor. I was com­ing out back­wards and fell back and I did­n’t intend to kill nobody. I did­n’t know they was behind the door. The gun went off and I did­n’t know noth­ing about no mur­der until they arrest­ed me, and when the gun went off I was down on the floor and I got up and ran. That’s all to it.” As a mat­ter of fact, the Georgia Supreme Court accept­ed Furman’s expla­na­tion, but it nev­er­the­less upheld the death sen­tence. (Let us pause to point out the obvi­ous: This was, as Furman’s attor­ney said, a reg­u­lar gar­den-vari­ety bur­glary mur­der.” A white defen­dant would have got maybe twenty years.)

In Furman, as in McGautha, the Supreme Court was asked if the death sen­tence was cru­el and unusu­al.” This time, it said yes – but it was a weak yes. Only two of the 5‑to‑4 major­i­ty, William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall, thought cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment itself cru­el and unusu­al, but all five of the major­i­ty said the way the penal­ty was applied was unconstitutional.

What galled them was that judges, pros­e­cu­tors and juries were admin­is­ter­ing the penal­ty so ran­dom­ly, so capri­cious­ly, that it was like being struck by light­ning,” said Justice Potter Stewart. Justice Byron White – who want­ed more, not few­er exe­cu­tions – com­plained that after being exposed to hun­dreds and hun­dreds of fed­er­al and state crim­i­nal cas­es” that could have result­ed in the death penal­ty and see­ing only a hand­ful of defen­dants select­ed for exe­cu­tion, he con­sid­ered the sys­tem total­ly irra­tional and just based on luck. Justice Brennan also empha­sized the ele­ment of luck: When a coun­try of over 200 mil­lion peo­ple inflicts an unusu­al­ly severe pun­ish­ment no more than 50 times a year,” even though thou­sands of mur­ders are com­mit­ted annu­al­ly, it smacks of lit­tle more than a lottery system.”

The Supreme Court’s deci­sion was good news for the 600 or so res­i­dents of the nation’s death rows, includ­ing such nota­bles as Robert Kennedy’s assas­sin, Sirhan Sirhan, whose sen­tences were inval­i­dat­ed. Some were freed; most were resen­tenced to life terms, with a chance for parole. (The man who gave his name to the case, William Furman, was paroled in 1984, worked on con­struc­tion jobs and stayed out of trou­ble. His vot­ing rights were restored in 1988.)

The records of the 600 show just how capri­cious­ly the death pro­gram had been oper­at­ing. Two-thirds of the con­demned were on Southern death rows, the most by far in Florida and Texas, with Georgia and Louisiana close behind. All of the eighty-one who had been con­demned for rape were in the South, near­ly one-third of them in Florida, with Georgia and Louisiana tied for sec­ond place. Fifty-five per­cent of the cap­i­tal offend­ers were black, 43 per­cent white, 1 per­cent Hispanic. Records also showed that juries had rarely allowed the men’s back­grounds to have any mit­i­gat­ing effect on their sen­tences. True, most had pre­vi­ous­ly com­mit­ted crimes, but these were usu­al­ly prop­er­ty crimes. Nearly three-fourths had nev­er been con­vict­ed for a vio­lent crime. Only 39 per­cent had ever before been in an adult prison.

In Furman, the Court was giv­en the best chance it had ever had, and prob­a­bly the best chance it would ever have in the next hun­dred years (con­sid­er­ing how sel­dom lib­er­al judges are appoint­ed), to escape from the death-penal­ty dilem­ma. Why, oh why, did they stop short? Why did they say mere­ly that the death penal­ty was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because it had­n’t been applied fair­ly? Why not say it was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because it could nev­er be applied fair­ly, and was there­fore cru­el and unusual?

Instead, the Court sent the state leg­is­la­tors back to the draw­ing board to try again. 

The Blind Leading the Blind

For the states whose law­mak­ers believed in cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, which was most of them, Furman was an excru­ci­at­ing turn of events. They were left, as Robert Weisberg put it, with an emo­tion­al and con­fus­ing ensem­ble of exhortations…to solve a prob­lem that the Court could bare­ly iden­ti­fy.” They were expect­ed to come up with a sys­tem that would give at least the sym­bol­ic appear­ance of objec­tiv­i­ty and pre­dictabil­i­ty. Fumbling along, three dozen states even­tu­al­ly wrote reformed” death-penal­ty statutes. Ironically, most of the new laws did exact­ly what the defense attor­neys in the McGautha case had asked for and which the Court’s major­i­ty at that time had scorned.

In most states, the new laws called for split­ting the cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment rit­u­al into two parts. First the jury would decide whether the defen­dant was guilty. If it judged him guilty, then the jury would recon­vene to decide whether he should pay for his crime by being exe­cut­ed or by serv­ing some por­tion of his life in prison. Most, but not all, of the new statutes required that the death-penal­ty phase be guid­ed by a check­list of aggra­vat­ing and mit­i­gat­ing cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing the mur­der: What was the killer’s moti­va­tion? What was his crim­i­nal record? How bru­tal, how inde­fen­si­ble was the crime? Who were his vic­tims? Did he deserve sym­pa­thy because of his age, because of a wretched home life, because he was an addict, because of his men­tal state at the time of the mur­der, etc.? The check­list was clear­ly intend­ed to keep the jury’s mind nar­row­ly focused, to keep it from wan­der­ing all over the psy­chic land­scape as it alleged­ly had in the pre-Furman days. On paper these check­lists had the refined air of sci­en­tif­ic for­mu­las. In fact, they were any­thing but sci­en­tif­ic, and they would, as the result of oth­er Supreme Court rul­ings, become about as well-ordered as the con­tents of a typical wastebasket.

Florida, which had more peo­ple on death row than any oth­er state when the old law was thrown out, appar­ent­ly felt naked with­out one, and it was the first to write a new law, com­plet­ing it with­in six months. But oth­er Deep South states were close behind. Some were so eager to start exe­cut­ing mur­der­ers again that they began fill­ing up their death rows even before the new statutes had been approved by the Supreme Court. But they did­n’t have to wait long. 

Populism Gone Berserk
In Furman, the major­i­ty had said the man­ner of decid­ing who would be sen­tenced to death row was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, but they left hang­ing the ques­tion of whether the pun­ish­ment itself was cru­el and unusu­al” and hence uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. In 1976 that was answered when the Court approved the new death penal­ty statutes in Georgia, Texas and Florida.

The lead opin­ion in Gregg v. Georgia was writ­ten by Justice Stewart. In Furman, he had com­plained that death was being dealt out with all the ran­dom­ness of being struck by light­ning.” Now, speak­ing for the Court’s major­i­ty, he came up with an absolute­ly bizarre ratio­nal­iza­tion for con­clud­ing that the new statutes would result in judg­ments as depend­able as a light switch. Why would this be? Because they were the voice of the local peo­ple – the com­mu­ni­ty’s belief,” as expressed by the leg­is­la­tures. What! He thought the US Supreme Court should bow to the bias­es of local and state polls in con­sti­tu­tion­al mat­ters of life and death?

If the Georgia leg­is­la­ture (or the Texas leg­is­la­ture, or any oth­er leg­is­la­ture) said cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was need­ed, then who was the Court to say it was wrong? The Court, Stewart wrote, had a high regard for fed­er­al­ism” (i.e., states’ rights) and the abil­i­ty of a leg­is­la­ture to eval­u­ate, in terms of its par­tic­u­lar State, the moral con­sen­sus con­cern­ing the death penal­ty and its social util­i­ty.” These ques­tions should be left to the leg­is­la­tures to eval­u­ate in terms of their own local con­di­tions and with a flex­i­bil­i­ty of approach that is not avail­able to the courts.”

This was indeed a strange, stun­ning sur­ren­der, com­ing as it did from a Supreme Court that over the pre­ced­ing twen­ty-two years (begin­ning with the Brown v. Board of Education rul­ing in 1954), had been knock­ing the unholy crap out of com­mu­ni­ty belief” in seg­re­ga­tion in half a dozen major civ­il rights cas­es. Like those civ­il rights cas­es, of course, most death-penal­ty cas­es had emerged from the South. 

Florida’s Folly, and Spenkelink
Not sur­pris­ing­ly, the exe­cu­tion that haunt­ed the new era was in the South’s most enthu­si­as­tic sen­tencer of the damned, Florida. As pre­vi­ous­ly men­tioned, the vic­tim was John Spenkelink. On May 25, 1979, he became the first per­son in twelve years to be exe­cut­ed in the United States against his will. (Gary Gilmore had invit­ed Nevada to kill him, and it com­plied in 1977.)

The back­ground and fore­ground of Spenkelink’s case dra­mat­i­cal­ly demon­strat­ed the way race and social sta­tus would con­tin­ue to dom­i­nate the death penal­ty despite the reforms” of Furman. It also illus­trat­ed the con­fu­sion that would for­ev­er arise from the new guiding standards.

The death penal­ty is sup­posed to be reserved for the worst of the worst” crimes. In an effort to guar­an­tee this, Florida list­ed this catchall cat­e­go­ry – the cap­i­tal felony was espe­cial­ly heinous, atro­cious and cru­el” – among the aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances that a jury should con­sid­er when decid­ing on the penal­ty. The Florida Supreme Court said it felt the mean­ing of such terms is a mat­ter of com­mon knowl­edge” and an ordi­nary man would not have to guess at what is intend­ed.” However, appar­ent­ly fear­ing that tri­al judges and lawyers might stum­ble where ordi­nary men would not, the court sup­plied anoth­er bushel of mod­i­fiers, explain­ing, for exam­ple, that heinous” means extreme­ly wicked and shock­ing­ly evil” and that atro­cious” means out­ra­geous­ly wicked and vile.”

Well, OK. But watch­ing the Florida high court itself inter­pret these words was anoth­er mat­ter, and quite enough to leave the ordi­nary man scratch­ing his head. For instance, Thomas Halliwell, a for­mer Green Beret, became so enraged at his lover’s hus­band that he shat­tered the man’s skull with a steel bar and then used a machete, hack­saw and fish­ing knife to cut up the body for stor­age in a garbage can and foot­lock­er. The tri­al jury said that was indeed a heinous, atro­cious and cru­el crime, but the Florida Supreme Court said it was not, because the muti­la­tion had occurred many hours” after the crime.

Well, if beat­ing some­body to death with a nine­teen-inch steel bar was­n’t espe­cial­ly heinous, how about beat­ing some­body to death with a roof­ing hatch­et? How about mor­tal­ly wound­ing some­body with a knife and leav­ing him to die painful­ly over a long peri­od? How about tying up three peo­ple and shoot­ing them in the head? When con­vic­tions rais­ing these ques­tions came before the court, the answer in each case was no, not espe­cial­ly.” And in oth­er cas­es that were no blood­i­er or even far less bloody, the court ruled in the opposite direction.

One such case involved Spenkelink, a 24-year-old for­mer con­vict and drifter. He had picked up a hitch­hik­er named Joseph Szymankiewicz, anoth­er for­mer con­vict, in the Midwest, and togeth­er they drove to Florida. Along the way, Szymankiewicz, who was larg­er and stronger, forced Spenkelink to have sex­u­al rela­tions with him and bul­lied him into play­ing Russian roulette. When they reached Tallahassee, Florida, Spenkelink dis­cov­ered that his abuser had also stolen his mon­ey. They fought, and Spenkelink shot Szymankiewicz to death.

That was on February 4, 1973. Shortly there­after, a Tallahassee jury con­vict­ed Spenkelink of first-degree mur­der, find­ing the crime espe­cial­ly heinous, and rec­om­mend­ed the death penal­ty. The tri­al judge (who in Florida is empow­ered to over­turn a jury’s ver­dict) agreed, and so did the Florida Supreme Court. This was just an ordi­nary skid-row killing, one trashy nobody killing anoth­er trashy nobody in an ordi­nary fight, after con­sid­er­able provo­ca­tion and with con­sid­er­able jus­ti­fi­ca­tion. If the rhubarb had tak­en place in Miami, at the oth­er end of the state, where homi­cides are as com­mon as cumu­lus clouds and attract lit­tle more atten­tion, Spenkelink would prob­a­bly have drawn ten years in the pen­i­ten­tiary and four inch­es on page 12 of the Miami Herald.

But as Chief Justice Warren Burger acknowl­edged in his Furman dis­sent, geog­ra­phy does mat­ter: There are doubt­less pris­on­ers on death row who would not be there had they been tried before a dif­fer­ent jury or in a dif­fer­ent State. In this sense, their fate has been con­trolled by a for­tu­itous cir­cum­stance.” Burger was using for­tu­itous by its first def­i­n­i­tion, hap­pen­ing by chance” – the kind of exe­cu­tion the US Supreme Court was sup­pos­ed­ly try­ing to get away from.

But the Court showed no sym­pa­thy for Spenkelink’s for­tu­itous cir­cum­stance” of being tried in Tallahassee, Florida’s cap­i­tal, an ingrown small town near the bor­der of Alabama and Georgia whose recent his­to­ry had been marred by acts of racial intol­er­ance. It was a place where – as Justice Richard Ervin of the Florida Supreme Court not­ed in his pas­sion­ate argu­ment against the exe­cu­tion – names like Spenkelink and Szymankiewicz sound for­eign and strange,” and where, because the con­demned pris­on­er had no fam­i­ly roots or busi­ness con­nec­tions, all the ingre­di­ents were present for the exer­cise of invid­i­ous parochial dis­crim­i­na­tion.… The result here is an old sto­ry, often repeat­ed in this juris­dic­tion where the sub­con­scious prej­u­dices and local mores out­weigh humane, civ­i­lized under­stand­ing when cer­tain seg­ments of the pop­u­la­tion are up for sen­tenc­ing for murder.”

In short, Justice Ervin was say­ing in a nice way that Spenkelink had been judged at his tri­al as the equiv­a­lent of a white nig­ger (a word still cur­rent in north Florida in those days).

Indeed, many believed it was his white­ness that prob­a­bly doomed him to be the first to die. On the same day that Governor Bob Graham signed Spenkelink’s war­rant, he also signed one for Willie Jasper Darden, who, one might fair­ly argue, had com­mit­ted a much more heinous crime than Spenkelink. A career crim­i­nal, Darden had shot a fur­ni­ture own­er and while he lay dying tried to force the man’s wife into a sex act. When a 16-year-old boy saw the mur­dered man lying in the door­way and rushed up to help, Darden shot him in the mouth, throat and back.

But Darden was black, and Florida was espe­cial­ly sen­si­tive on this point. Under the old death penal­ty it had exe­cut­ed twice as many blacks as whites, and twice as many blacks as whites were wait­ing on its death row to be exe­cut­ed when Furman had giv­en every­one a reprieve. So Spenkelink drew the short straw. It was racism, but this time in reverse. (Willie Jasper Darden, by the way, would not be exe­cut­ed until 1988.) 

The Court Begins to See That It Screwed Up
With Spenkelink’s exe­cu­tion, the death-penal­ty indus­try start­ed off at the bot­tom of a pit, and the more it clawed at the sides try­ing to get out, the more fool­ish it looked. The Court seemed to real­ize it had got­ten itself mired in some­thing too com­plex for mor­tal men and women – even for those who wore black robes and looked solemn – and began show­ing signs of pan­ic. It had hoped that with the for­mal­ized check­list of aggra­vat­ing and mit­i­gat­ing cir­cum­stances, the states could han­dle this on their own. The last thing the Court want­ed to do was micro­man­age things. But that’s what happened.

Sandra Lockett, 21, was the get­away dri­ver for the rob­bery of an Ohio pawn­shop. Murder was not sup­posed to be in the plan, but one of her accom­plices killed the pawn­shop own­er any­way. She faced the death penal­ty as an acces­so­ry. It was her bad luck that the crime was com­mit­ted right when the Ohio leg­is­la­ture was writ­ing its death-penal­ty statute. It had orig­i­nal­ly said that many things could be con­sid­ered to mit­i­gate the offense. But after the pawn­shop shoot­ing, the leg­is­la­ture cut the mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors to three – none of which applied to Lockett. She was sen­tenced to die.

Coming to her res­cue, the Supreme Court ruled in Lockett v. Ohio (1978) that no state statute could lim­it the mit­i­gat­ing cir­cum­stance and that the jury must be allowed to con­sid­er any­thing the defen­dant thinks might invite mer­cy. A humane ges­ture, yes. But look what it did to the vaunt­ed speci­fici­ty” of the mit­i­ga­tion list that was sup­posed to be the key to avoid­ing arbi­trari­ness. Look what it did to the sup­posed cure-all, guid­ed dis­cre­tion.” Now, mit­i­ga­tion was wide open. If the same thing hap­pened to the aggra­va­tion side of the penal­ty tri­al, well, what would be left of the Furman reforms? The answer to that came with Barclay v. Florida in 1983

Unguided Discretion Is Back
As a mem­ber of the Black Liberation Army, Elwood Barclay had helped mur­der a white youth in an attempt to start a race war. Although his tri­al was in Jacksonville, a city with a racist past, the jury kept its cool and vot­ed sev­en to five to give Barclay a life sentence.

But there was a hitch. In writ­ing their death-penal­ty statutes to sat­is­fy Furman, four states, includ­ing Florida, had giv­en judges the pow­er to over­ride the jury. The jury’s deci­sion is mere­ly advi­so­ry; the judge may rule oth­er­wise. For Barclay, Judge R. Hudson Olliff ruled oth­er­wise. This was the fourth time Olliff had over­ruled juries that vot­ed for life. No mat­ter by what mar­gin the jury vot­ed for mer­cy – and in one case it was vot­ed by ten to two – Judge Olliff was unswayed. Unlike the juries, he did not find a sin­gle mit­i­gat­ing fac­tor in the lives of these four men. But in Barclay’s case, he went dra­mat­i­cal­ly beyond mere­ly over­rul­ing the jury. Judge Olliff list­ed sev­er­al statu­to­ry” aggra­vat­ing fac­tors that in fact did not exist – and then threw in a very spe­cial one of his own cre­ation: Barclay, the judge said, deserved death because he had preached hatred of white peo­ple. That was def­i­nite­ly not statutory.

Florida law did not per­mit any changes in its statu­to­ry aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances. Surely the appel­late courts would­n’t let Olliff get by with mess­ing around like that. When the case reached the Supreme Court, sev­er­al Justices, even those among the major­i­ty (who approved of Barclay’s death sen­tence), sound­ed amazed that the sen­tence could have been upheld by the Florida Supreme Court. But nev­er mind. Mere errors of state law,” said Justice William Rehnquist, are not the con­cern of this Court.”

With the Barclay deci­sion, one crit­ic said, the Court was telling state Supreme Courts that they could uphold death sen­tences even where the penal­ty tri­al seemed clear­ly to vio­late fed­er­al or state law.” With the Court now will­ing to accept inflat­ed and man­gled aggra­vat­ing statutes – com­ing on top of the Lockett expan­sion of mit­i­gat­ing statutes – where did that leave the penal­ty tri­al? It had become a mal­leable legal toy, like Silly Putty, for the courts to play with.

Further evi­dence that guid­ed dis­cre­tion” was dead came when the Supreme Court ruled that it was per­fect­ly con­sti­tu­tion­al for a state to allow a tri­al judge to reverse a jury’s rec­om­men­da­tion of life. Whoa! The whole pur­pose of Furman and Gregg had been to get away from the unguid­ed dis­cre­tion” of juries. Was the unguid­ed dis­cre­tion of a judge, over­rul­ing the guid­ed dis­cre­tion of a jury, any better?

In any event, the deci­sion hard­ly raised the qual­i­ty of mer­cy in the judi­cial sys­tem. Surveys have found that in the four states where judges have the pow­er to over­ride juries, they almost always use it to change the ver­dict to death. In Alabama, the ratio is ten to one. 

The Last Gasp of Death-Penalty Reform
By the ear­ly 1980s, many legal schol­ars were say­ing that the Supreme Court had sim­ply giv­en up try­ing to keep any part of the Furman and Gregg reforms alive. Law jour­nals were begin­ning to fill up with essays about what Robert Weisberg called the dereg­u­la­tion of death.” With the aggra­va­tion and mit­i­ga­tion rules in lim­bo, only pro­por­tion­al­i­ty remained of the post-1976 reforms, and it was about to die, too.

In its Gregg v. Georgia deci­sion – approv­ing mod­els for the new death-penal­ty statutes – the Court had gone out of its way to urge oth­er states to adopt the pro­por­tion­al­i­ty” part of Georgia’s statute. It required the state Supreme Court to ask two com­mon­sense ques­tions: In this par­tic­u­lar case, is death an exces­sive pun­ish­ment or is it pro­por­tion­al to the offense? When com­pared with fac­tu­al­ly sim­i­lar cas­es, was the death sen­tence exces­sive in this case? One would assume that this kind of weigh­ing and com­par­ing is so basic to jus­tice that the states would­n’t have to be goad­ed into doing it. In any event, to please the Supreme Court, most states had writ­ten pro­por­tion­al­i­ty require­ments into their capital statutes.

But by the ear­ly 1980s the back­log of pris­on­ers await­ing exe­cu­tion had become such a mob (1,209 in 1983) that state appel­late courts, most of which had nev­er been keen on pro­por­tion­al­i­ty any­way, began com­plain­ing that they just could­n’t han­dle it, par­tic­u­lar­ly the part about com­par­ing one case with oth­ers that were sim­i­lar – a process that is extreme­ly time-con­sum­ing but that is the very heart of cap­i­tal jus­tice. So in 1984 (Pulley v. Harris) the Supreme Court said, OK, just for­get it – pro­por­tion­al­i­ty isn’t a con­sti­tu­tion­al require­ment. After that, most states put pro­por­tion­al­i­ty aside and did for­get it. Georgia’s mod­el” pro­por­tion­al­i­ty statute has in the past twen­ty-four years been used only twice to overturn convictions. 

Rehnquist-izing Justice
One thing became quite clear as the 1980s rolled along: The Court was get­ting mean­er, as the ranks of its hard-lin­ers got big­ger. In 1953, when William Rehnquist was a clerk at the Supreme Court and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were about to be elec­tro­cut­ed at Sing Sing, he wrote a memo say­ing, It is too bad that draw­ing and quar­ter­ing has been abol­ished.” When he grew to Justicehood, per­haps he was no longer so blood­thirsty, but he was not shy about say­ing the death indus­try’s exe­cu­tion line was far too slow. His impa­tience was shared by Justices Byron White and Lewis Powell. In 1981 Rehnquist gained anoth­er ally in Sandra Day O’Connor, and in 1986 he could cel­e­brate not only being pro­mot­ed to Chief Justice (over great protests from Senate lib­er­als) but also being joined on the bench by Antonin Scalia, that philo­soph­i­cal heir of Torquemada.

Clearly, the Court very much want­ed to make life as dif­fi­cult as pos­si­ble for defen­dants. Preferably, to shut them out.

For instance, as we have seen over and over, the most authen­tic com­plaint that can be made by most con­demned men is that they were giv­en an incom­pe­tent defense attor­ney and there­fore did not receive a con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly guar­an­teed fair tri­al. But the Court was tired of hear­ing that com­plaint, and in 1984 (Strickland v. Washington), it said the com­plaint would no longer be con­sid­ered grounds for review unless the defen­dan­t’s lawyer did such a lousy job that there was a rea­son­able” like­li­hood that the lawyer’s mis­takes brought about the death sentence.

Well, specif­i­cal­ly, just how bad could a tri­al attor­ney be and still not be con­sid­ered inef­fec­tive”? What if the lawyer slept through the tri­al? That is accept­ed as rea­son­ably effec­tive assis­tance. What if the attor­ney made no effort to bring in wit­ness­es who could prove the defen­dan­t’s inno­cence – as hap­pened to Gary Graham – at the guilt stage of tri­al? That’s OK, even though it’s clear­ly mal­prac­tice. What if he did­n’t present any mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence – none at all – at the sen­tenc­ing phase? That’s OK too (Burger v. Kemp, 1987). In fact, since 1984 not one appeal based on inef­fec­tive assis­tance has been grant­ed by the Supreme Court.

Other actions have almost shut the door on habeas cor­pus, which used to be a gen­er­ous­ly avail­able way to cut through the bureau­crat­ic bull­shit and get to a hear­ing in fed­er­al court. Now, even if you come with a wag­onload of evi­dence of your com­plete inno­cence, there are Congressional dic­tums and Supreme Court rul­ings that can be used to turn you away.

From Congress, with Clinton’s bless­ing, came the Anti-ter­ror­ism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. This act, for the first time in his­to­ry, sets a one-year dead­line for fil­ing a fed­er­al habeas cor­pus peti­tion after the defen­dant has wad­ed through the state appel­late sys­tem. Furthermore, a fed­er­al court will no longer be allowed to review the fair­ness of a defen­dan­t’s tri­al; instead, it will decide only whether the state court unrea­son­ably” applied fed­er­al law in deny­ing the defen­dan­t’s appeal. Federal courts, in short, are a rub­ber stamp to state actions in cap­i­tal cas­es. Naturally, the Supreme Court has embraced the AEDPA’s restrictions.

Three years ear­li­er, the Rehnquist Court had already start­ed slam­ming the door. In the infa­mous Texas case Herrera v. Collins, it declared that if a defen­dant has evi­dence show­ing his inno­cence, he has no right to a fed­er­al hear­ing unless he pre­sent­ed the evi­dence before the state’s statu­to­ry cut­off date (in Texas, that’s thir­ty days after the tri­al), unless the defen­dant presents a tru­ly per­sua­sive show by clear and con­vinc­ing evi­dence… that no rea­son­able juror would have found the defen­dant eli­gi­ble for the death penalty.”

Most legal schol­ars, read­ing between the lines, sum­ma­rize Herrera as mean­ing it is not uncon­sti­tu­tion­al to exe­cute an innocent man.

The prac­ti­cal effect of Herrera and the AEDPA is seen in the exe­cu­tion of Gary Graham. He was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for fatal­ly shoot­ing a man in a Houston gro­cery-store park­ing lot in 1981. He was con­vict­ed almost sole­ly on the tes­ti­mo­ny of a woman who said she saw Graham that night, but only fleet­ing­ly, through the wind­shield of her parked car. Graham’s tri­al attor­ney con­duct­ed vir­tu­al­ly no inves­ti­ga­tion and put on no wit­ness dur­ing the guilt phase of the trial.

In 1993, how­ev­er, Graham got help from some real attor­neys, who found that police lab tests showed that the gun tak­en from Graham on the night of the mur­der was not the weapon that fired the fatal bul­let. The new attor­neys inter­viewed two employ­ees of the store who had seen the mur­der­er and were cer­tain it was­n’t Graham. Several of the orig­i­nal jurors came for­ward to state that they would not have con­vict­ed him if they had heard the tes­ti­mo­ny from the other eyewitnesses.

Too late. Graham’s new evi­dence of inno­cence was offered after the manda­to­ry cut-off date. He was exe­cut­ed this past June 22. Herrera and the AEDPA killed him.

In the Herrera deci­sion, Chief Justice Rehnquist stat­ed, per­haps in jest, that even if an inno­cent defen­dant could get no help from the courts, he could file a request for exec­u­tive clemen­cy.” Graham, as every­one knows, was deal­ing with a gov­er­nor who did not believe in clemen­cy. But, for that mat­ter, few governors do. 

The Young and Retarded Are Fair Game
Along the way the Rehnquist Court made such notable con­tri­bu­tions to the uplift of soci­ety as rul­ing that the Constitution approved the exe­cu­tion of the men­tal­ly retard­ed and the exe­cu­tion of murderous 16-year-olds.

Admittedly, the men­tal defec­tive who brought about one of those rul­ings, Johnny Paul Penry, is an exceed­ing­ly bru­tal guy. On the morn­ing of October 25, 1979, he entered the home of Pamela Carpenter in Livingston, Texas, and beat her, stabbed her with scis­sors and raped her. She died a few hours lat­er. He was on parole when he did it, hav­ing recent­ly served time for a pre­vi­ous rape. By the death-penal­ty stan­dards of any state, that crime would clear­ly have made any nor­mal per­son eli­gi­ble. But is cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment real­ly meant for some­one who has had organ­ic brain dam­age from birth, has an IQ of between 50 and 63, is rat­ed by clin­i­cal psy­chol­o­gists as hav­ing the men­tal age of a 6‑and-a-half-year-old child and has been unable to fin­ish the first grade?

In 1989, the Supreme Court said yes, it was con­sti­tu­tion­al (Penry v. Lynaugh).

Raising this issue on appeal for the pen­ni­less defen­dant was a good­heart­ed but over-the-hill lawyer. His per­for­mance in pre­sent­ing his plea to the US Supreme Court got this review from Alan Dershowitz:


To say the least, his pre­sen­ta­tion was a dis­as­ter. The attor­ney spoke halt­ing­ly, and his words were dif­fi­cult to under­stand. He seemed not to under­stand some of the jus­tices’ ques­tions. When he did, he fre­quent­ly gave the wrong answers. He could­n’t find need­ed ref­er­ences. He became so bogged down in tech­ni­cal detail that Sandra Day O’Connor had to remind him, with only three min­utes left in his argu­ment time, that he had not addressed the main issues – whether it was con­sti­tu­tion­al to exe­cute a men­tal­ly retarded prisoner.


Needless to say, the Court decid­ed that Penry’s death sen­tence was perfectly constitutional.

This was a rare instance of bad luck cre­at­ing good luck. The deplorable defense Penry received got nation­al atten­tion and, as men­tioned ear­li­er, prompt­ed one of New York’s best law firms to come to his res­cue. Spending hun­dreds of hours of pro bono time on his behalf, it has kept Penry’s case alive, and Penry alive, too.

Actually, some states had­n’t been hold­ing off until they heard from the Court. They had been exe­cut­ing mur­der­ers with IQs in the 50s and 60s since 1984, and they still are. Some experts in men­tal retar­da­tion count thir­ty-four exe­cu­tions in this group so far.

As for teenagers, in 1988 the Court said Oklahoma could­n’t exe­cute some­one who was under 16 at the time of the crime, but it was OK if Kentucky want­ed to kill some­one who was at least 16. But vir­tu­al­ly all states have refused to even con­sid­er going below 17. Sixteen death rows now hold eighty men, a third of them in Texas, who were juve­niles when they mur­dered. Since 1976, sev­en­teen men have been exe­cut­ed for crimes com­mit­ted when they were juveniles.

Anyone who has been keep­ing score on death penal­ties will not be sur­prised that most of these men­tal defec­tives and teenagers have dark skin. 

Racism Wins Again
That brings us to what sure­ly is one of the most inde­fen­si­ble judg­ments relat­ing to race in the Court’s his­to­ry; no, not as vile as the sep­a­rate but equal” of Plessy v. Ferguson, but it spoke to the same junk­yard jus­tice that whites had his­tor­i­cal­ly reserved for blacks. The case was McCleskey v. Kemp, a Georgia case decid­ed in 1987. If the Supreme Court nev­er again with­in our life­time takes up the ques­tion of cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment, we can at least say that McCleskey closed that dra­ma in a duplic­i­tous style per­fect­ly befit­ting the char­ac­ter of the Court.

Aside from the fact that McCleskey, a black man, was sen­tenced to die for killing a white per­son, the details of the crime and tri­al are not worth men­tion­ing. All that real­ly mat­ters are the sta­tis­tics com­piled by law pro­fes­sor David Baldus, sta­tis­ti­cian George Woodworth and attor­ney Charles Pulaski Jr. for McCleskey’s appeal, and the response of the Supreme Court’s majority.

The Baldus study has been called the most elab­o­rate attempt ever made to show the dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly racial impact of any pub­lic pol­i­cy.” Examining more than 2,000 mur­der cas­es that took place in Georgia in the 1970s, it shows that peo­ple charged with killing whites were 4.3 times more like­ly to get a death sen­tence than those who killed blacks. Obviously, pros­e­cu­tors and juries in Georgia did­n’t put a very high val­ue on black lives. The death penal­ty was hand­ed down in 22 per­cent of cas­es involv­ing black defen­dants and white vic­tims but in only 1 per­cent involv­ing black defen­dants and black vic­tims. The basis for McCleskey’s appeal was that he was being dis­crim­i­nat­ed against because of his race and because of the race of his vic­tim, in vio­la­tion of the Fourteenth Amendment, which promised equal jus­tice. He asked that his death sen­tence be overturned.

Justice Powell, who had been a cor­po­rate lawyer for forty years in Richmond before being appoint­ed to the Court by Nixon in 1971, wrote the lead opin­ion, joined by those oth­er four pall­bear­ers, Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justices White, O’Connor and Scalia. The opin­ion boiled down to this:

(1) Just because blacks as a group are dis­crim­i­nat­ed against does­n’t mean that McCleskey can prove he was per­son­al­ly dis­crim­i­nat­ed against. (2) The Baldus study may indi­cate a dis­crep­an­cy that appears to cor­re­late with race,” but appar­ent dis­par­i­ties in sen­tenc­ing are an inevitable part of our crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem.” Nobody’s per­fect. (3) Then Powell real­ly got sil­ly. If we let these blacks get by with claim­ing they were picked on because of their col­or, he said, the next thing you know, defense lawyers may start argu­ing that jury deci­sion-mak­ing was influ­enced by such arbi­trary vari­ables as the defen­dan­t’s facial char­ac­ter­is­tics, or the phys­i­cal attrac­tive­ness of the defen­dant or the victim.”


Because the Supreme Court ruled stu­pid­ly in McCleskey, the nation’s old race prob­lem is now joined by a new one. Up to now, the debate has been over whether race dic­tates con­vic­tions in state mur­der tri­als. But the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment has death-penal­ty statutes too, and although it has­n’t exe­cut­ed any­one since John Kennedy was President, that seems about to change. Juan Raul Garza is sched­uled to die next year. President Clinton put it off for his suc­ces­sor to han­dle because the case has brought inter­na­tion­al crit­i­cism. Garza is a migrant Mexican farm­work­er who became a big-time drug deal­er, smug­gling tons of mar­i­jua­na from Mexico and, in the process, mur­der­ing three men in Texas. His lawyers don’t claim he was inno­cent of that crime. They claim that the death penal­ty is unfair­ly applied by racial­ly biased fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tors. Garza is one of twen­ty men on fed­er­al death row. Sixteen are minor­i­ty defen­dants (most are African-American). Gregory Wiercioch, a lawyer with the Texas Defender Service, wants to know why fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tors asked for the death penal­ty for Garza but not for gringo defen­dants in a dozen cas­es like his – mul­ti­ple drug-relat­ed mur­ders. If the McCleskey deci­sion had gone the oth­er way, this kind of sor­did pig­ment-count­ing would have been avoided.

If the McCleskey deci­sion depress­es you, let your depres­sion be mod­i­fied just a lit­tle by the fact that after its author, Justice Powell, retired, his biog­ra­ph­er asked him if there were any votes he had made while on the Court that he would now change. Yes, he said: He would change McCleskey. He added, I would [now] vote the oth­er way on any cap­i­tal case.” He also admit­ted that at the time he wrote the opin­ion for McCleskey, he knew pre­cious lit­tle about sta­tis­tics. Ah, what might have been! If Powell had only had his change of heart before McCleskey, which, like most of the major death-penal­ty cas­es, was decid­ed by one vote, 5 to 4, that case just might have sent such strong shock waves through the legal sys­tem that it would have wiped out capital punishment.

Another notable change of heart occurred, this one for Justice Blackmun. For years, though he said he was offend­ed by the death penal­ty, he had vot­ed to uphold it with­out blanch­ing. Indeed, before reach­ing the Supreme Court, he even wrote an appel­late court opin­ion uphold­ing the death penal­ty for rape. But before he left the Court he was sick of all that. Better too late than nev­er, per­haps, but the folks on death row prob­a­bly don’t see much dif­fer­ence between the two.

So what has the Supreme Court left us with? Hugo Adam Bedeau, one of the best schol­ars of this grim his­to­ry, says, We now have the most com­plex and cum­ber­some sys­tem for admin­is­ter­ing the death penal­ty the world has ever seen; it is nei­ther fair nor effi­cient. Few like it, and the more famil­iar­i­ty one has with it, the less one finds to like about it.”

Ironically, dur­ing the years when the Supreme Court was fran­ti­cal­ly try­ing to hold the jer­ry-built death penal­ty togeth­er, the nations we are most close­ly linked to – includ­ing Canada, Germany, France, Italy and Britain – were abolishing it.

Now, except for places like China, Iraq and Iran, we have it all to our­selves. But isn’t that appro­pri­ate for the world’s only superpower?