By KAREN ABBOTT
Rocky Mountain News 

Justices to review death penal­ty – Supreme Court will decide if judge’s pan­el is constitutional

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Friday to review an Arizona death penal­ty case that could change Colorado’s method of impos­ing death sen­tences. It could elim­i­nate the Colorado death penal­ty scheme,” defense lawyer David Lane said.

It also could spare the lives of 3 of the 6 men now on Colorado’s death row.

The issue before the U.S. Supreme Court is whether it is con­sti­tu­tion­al for judges, instead of juries, to decide whether a con­vict­ed defen­dant should be sen­tenced to death.

The rul­ing could affect death penal­ty laws in 9 states where hun­dreds of pris­on­ers may have been sen­tenced to die by judges instead of by juries.

Among them are 3 Colorado inmates:

Francisco Martinez, con­vict­ed of lead­ing the 1997 gang rape and tor­ture of Brandy Duvall in an Adams County home.

George Woldt, con­vict­ed of the 1997 kid­nap­ping, rape and mur­der of for­mer Littleton High School ath­lete Jacine Gielinski.

In Colorado, juries decide if a defen­dant is guilty or not guilty. In cas­es where pros­e­cu­tors seek the death penal­ty, a pan­el of 3 judges then hears tes­ti­mo­ny about aggra­vat­ing and mit­i­gat­ing cir­cum­stances and decides if a con­vict­ed defen­dant should be sen­tenced to death or to life in prison with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.

Aggravating cir­cum­stances are those that make a crime par­tic­u­lar­ly heinous. Mitigating cir­cum­stances are those that weigh in favor of lenien­cy for the defendant.

The Arizona sys­tem is sim­i­lar to Colorado’s, but only I judge makes the life or death decision.

The U.S. Supreme Court will review the Arizona case of Timothy Stuart Ring, who was sen­tenced to die for the 1994 killing of an armored van dri­ver in Phoenix dur­ing a robbery.

Ring and many oth­er pris­on­ers con­demned to die have appealed their sen­tences recent­ly under a 2000 U.S. Supreme Court rul­ing in a New Jersey hate crime case that did­n’t involve death or the death penalty.

In that case, a man was con­vict­ed of shoot­ing a gun into the home of his black neigh­bors and yelling racial epi­thets about them.

Under New Jersey law at the time, a judge could impose a tougher sen­tence after decid­ing that a defen­dan­t’s action was a hate crime.

The nation’s high court ruled in the New Jersey case that it was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al for a judge to decide facts lead­ing to a tougher sentence.

Only juries can make such fac­tu­al deter­mi­na­tions, the U.S. Supreme Court said.

In order to get a death penal­ty in Colorado,” Lane said, the 3‑judge pan­el has to find addi­tion­al facts” beyond those deter­mined by the jury.

Defense lawyer Nathan Chambers said the U.S. Supreme Court won’t rule direct­ly on Colorado’s sys­tem, but if it finds Arizona’s sys­tem uncon­sti­tu­tion­al that could mean Colorado’s is also.

There would be clear author­i­ty then that Colorado’s sen­tenc­ing scheme would be con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly invalid,” Chambers said.
I think that this case will def­i­nite­ly have impli­ca­tions for Colorado’s cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing scheme,” he said.
In the past, court rul­ings inval­i­dat­ing death penal­ty laws have sent state leg­is­la­tures, includ­ing Colorado’s, scur­ry­ing to pass new laws that meet high court standards.

But if Colorado’s exist­ing death penal­ty laws turn out to be uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, and leg­is­la­tors pass new ones, they won’t apply to any­one sen­tenced under the exist­ing law because laws can’t be applied retroac­tive­ly, Chambers and Lane said.

I sus­pect that their death sen­tences would be inval­i­dat­ed,” Chambers said.