Salon

By DAVID LINDORFF 

When pros­e­cu­tors elim­i­nate jurors opposed to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, they also weed out women and minori­ties and stack the deck against defendants.

Ellen Reasonover found out the hard way that no good deed goes unpun­ished. When the St. Louis res­i­dent approached police with infor­ma­tion she thought might help them catch the killer of a gas- sta­tion atten­dant, they arrest­ed her instead, based on high­ly circumstantial evidence.

Constructing a case against her by rely­ing on the tes­ti­mo­ny of 2 jail­house snitch­es, the state sought the death penal­ty. An all-white jury con­vict­ed the young black woman, and all but one mem­ber of the pan­el vot­ed to have her exe­cut­ed. Earlier this year, a fed­er­al judge threw out her con­vic­tion, rul­ing that the wit­ness­es — with the knowl­edge of the pros­e­cu­tor — had fab­ri­cat­ed their tes­ti­mo­ny. So after serv­ing 18 years in prison, Reasonover was released.

Reasonover’s jury was ready and will­ing to believe the pros­e­cu­tor’s case at least part­ly because, as in all cap­i­tal cas­es, the jury pool had been care­ful­ly, and legal­ly, purged of any­one who had doubts about the death penal­ty — a cat­e­go­ry that con­ve­nient­ly and dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly includes African-Americans and women. The very peo­ple many experts say are most like­ly to ques­tion pros­e­cu­tors’ argu­ments and hold to a pre­sump­tion of inno­cence — death-penal­ty oppo­nents — had been sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly kept out of the jury box.

A major­i­ty of Americans still back the death penal­ty, but polls have shown a steady ero­sion in sup­port. A Gallup poll done in February, for exam­ple, indi­cat­ed that 66 % sup­port it, down from 80 % in 1984. Moreover, with grow­ing num­bers of peo­ple exon­er­at­ed in the past few years after long prison stays, many peo­ple are appar­ent­ly also los­ing con­fi­dence in the integri­ty and fair­ness with which it is administered.

The fair­ness issue became a leit­mo­tif in the pres­i­den­tial cam­paign. Although both pres­i­den­tial can­di­dates said they sup­port­ed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, the media focused on Bush’s record of pre­sid­ing over more exe­cu­tions than any pre­vi­ous Texas gov­er­nor, includ­ing 40 just this year, and on the appar­ent inequities in the state’s judi­cial sys­tem. During the 2nd debate, Bush seemed to grin when dis­cussing the death penal­ty — an action that prompt­ed a point­ed ques­tion from a mem­ber of the audi­ence dur­ing the 3rd and last debate.

The ques­tions about cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment have prompt­ed some states to take some pre­cau­tion­ary steps. In Illinois, where more than a dozen death-row inmates have been proven inno­cent since 1977, the Republican gov­er­nor, George Ryan, announced a mora­to­ri­um ear­li­er this year. Other states are study­ing the issue and fac­ing grow­ing calls for sim­i­lar mora­to­ria and for auto­mat­ic access by con­demned con­victs to DNA test­ing, which in some cas­es has con­clu­sive­ly exonerated inmates.

Yet despite this new con­cern, a major and con­tro­ver­sial ele­ment of the sys­tem is being large­ly ignored: the right of pros­e­cu­tors and judges to elim­i­nate, for cause,” any poten­tial jurors who say they might not be will­ing or able to vote for death dur­ing the penal­ty phase of a murder trial.

Whatever one might think about the death penal­ty itself, the trou­ble with screen­ing out death-penal­ty skep­tics — a process known as death-qual­i­fy­ing” the jury — is that it does a lot more than sim­ply elim­i­nate jurors opposed to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. It makes for juries that tend to be white, male and sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to con­vict the per­son accused of the crime in the first place. In a 1968 land­mark study, Hans Zeisel, a law pro­fes­sor at the University of California at Berkeley, found that death-qual­i­fy­ing juries led to an 80 % increase in the conviction rate.

When you excuse all the peo­ple who are opposed to the death penal­ty, it’s a kind of law-and-order screen­ing device,” says Craig Haney, a pro­fes­sor of psy­chol­o­gy and soci­ol­o­gy at the University of California at Santa Cruz who has been polling jurors and study­ing jury selec­tion for 35 years. You end up with a group of peo­ple who eval­u­ate evi­dence a lit­tle dif­fer­ent­ly, who are more like­ly to find evi­dence to be incrim­i­nat­ing, and who gen­er­al­ly don’t even under­stand or accept the con­cept of pre­sump­tion of inno­cence.” But pro­po­nents of death-qual­i­fy­ing say that if there were no such pro­ce­dure, near­ly every jury would like­ly include one or more mem­bers who would veto any death-penal­ty con­vic­tion, essen­tial­ly ren­der­ing void the cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment statutes of 31 states and the fed­er­al judi­cial sys­tem. Moreover, they add, defense attor­neys get to excuse any poten­tial juror who pub­licly admits to an inflex­i­ble intent to impose death on any­one con­vict­ed of mur­der, regard­less of mit­i­gat­ing cir­cum­stances or the instruc­tions of a judge.

But defense attor­neys counter that since not many poten­tial jurors are will­ing to state such a posi­tion so blunt­ly, few actu­al­ly get exclud­ed on those grounds. And they stress that the effects of death-qual­i­fi­ca­tion on the racial com­po­si­tion of juries can be quite stark.

In a 1994 study, for exam­ple, Haney and coau­thors Aida Hurtado and Luis Vega report­ed that while minori­ties account­ed for 18.5 % of the peo­ple in the California jury pools they exam­ined, they rep­re­sent­ed 26.3 % of those exclud­ed from jury pan­els through the death-qualifying process.

A North Carolina jury study con­duct­ed in 1982 found an even greater dis­par­i­ty, with 55.2 % of black poten­tial jurors being exclud­ed dur­ing the death-penal­ty qual­i­fy­ing process in con­trast to 20.7 % of whites. Studies also indi­cate that women tend to be exclud­ed, since they are also more like­ly to oppose the death penalty.

The net effect is that — despite Supreme Court rul­ings that exclud­ing jurors because of race is grounds for a mis­tri­al — pros­e­cu­tors can achieve much the same result with­out specif­i­cal­ly using race as the cri­te­ri­on. Death-qual­i­fy­ing a jury basi­cal­ly elim­i­nates half of the poten­tial black jurors,” agrees David Bruck, a South Carolina defense attor­ney who spe­cial­izes in death-penal­ty cas­es. It’s quite an eth­nic cleans­ing that goes on and it is very disturbing.”

The right to excuse jurors for cause is impor­tant because both sides in a crim­i­nal case are grant­ed only a lim­it­ed num­ber of so-called peremp­to­ry chal­lenges,” which allow them to dis­miss poten­tial jurors with­out hav­ing to offer any rea­son at all.

Prosecutors know that death-qual­i­fy­ing a jury is a great way to help ensure a con­vic­tion. That, say experts, is one rea­son why many of them — par­tic­u­lar­ly in juris­dic­tions with high death-penal­ty rates like Texas, Florida, Illinois, Virginia, California and Pennsylvania — delib­er­ate­ly over­charge in mur­der cas­es even where they know the death penal­ty is not appro­pri­ate or likely.

In oth­er words, the process can lead to high­er con­vic­tion rates — and most like­ly to more wrong­ful con­vic­tions — not just in cap­i­tal cas­es, but in oth­er mur­der cas­es, too.

In Philadelphia, District Attorney Lynne Abraham seeks the death penal­ty from the out­set in an aston­ish­ing 85 % of mur­der cas­es, accord­ing to a study from the city’s pub­lic defend­er’s office. One rea­son for the Philadelphia dis­trict attor­ney’s predilec­tion for cap­i­tal cas­es may be a jury selec­tion train­ing tape pre­pared in the mid-1980s by then Assistant District Attorney Jack McMahon.

In that tape, which is fea­tured in the appeal by black jour­nal­ist Mumia Abu-Jamal of his 1982 death sen­tence for the killing of a white Philadelphia cop, McMahon urges pros­e­cu­tors to seek to impose the death penal­ty in as many cas­es as pos­si­ble. That way, he explains help­ful­ly, they then get the ben­e­fit of death-qual­i­fy­ing jurors, and with their peremp­to­ry chal­lenges they can remove even those who express vague or minor con­cerns about impos­ing the ultimate sanction.

Abraham’s office did not return repeat­ed phone calls seeking comment.

Ironically, McMahon, now in pri­vate prac­tice, has become a vocal crit­ic of the very prac­tice he once cham­pi­oned. The rea­son dis­trict attor­neys like Abraham so fre­quent­ly seek the death penal­ty is that they get a con­vic­tion-prone jury,” says McMahon, who now defends clients in cap­i­tal cas­es. Now they’ll all tell you they don’t do that, but they’re full of crap and they know it. No one who’s been work­ing in this busi­ness would say that if they were hon­est. The whole process of death-qual­i­fi­ca­tion is terribly unfair.”

McMahon insists that he has­n’t had a change of heart. I’ve always known this to be true,” he explains. But when you’re a pros­e­cu­tor you do what works to your advan­tage as a pros­e­cu­tor. It’s per­mis­si­ble, so you take advan­tage of it. But I will say that now that I’m on the defense side, I can see what a hand­i­cap it is for the defense.”

In Abu-Jamal’s 1982 mur­der tri­al in Philadelphia, the jury pool was in fact gut­ted of blacks dur­ing the death-penal­ty screen­ing con­duct­ed by pros­e­cu­tor Joseph McGill, despite objec­tions raised by the defen­dan­t’s attor­ney. In a city that is almost 44 % black, the for­mer Black Panther end­ed up with a sin­gle African-American on the jury that con­vict­ed him and sen­tenced him to death. In addi­tion to screen­ing out more than 20 black jurors through the death-qual­i­fi­ca­tion process, McGill used his peremp­to­ry chal­lenges to elim­i­nate anoth­er 11 black poten­tial jurors who had­n’t expressed any par­tic­u­lar con­cern about the death penalty.

The National Association of Attorneys General takes no posi­tion on the issue of the fair­ness of death-penal­ty qual­i­fy­ing of juries.

But one aca­d­e­m­ic expert who does defend jury qual­i­fy­ing in death-penal­ty cas­es is Paul Cassell, a law pro­fes­sor at the University of Utah College of Law and a for­mer fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tor. A death-penal­ty advo­cate who served as an attor­ney for the fam­i­lies of vic­tims of the 1995 Oklahoma City bomb­ing, Cassell ques­tions the accu­ra­cy and sig­nif­i­cance of the jury atti­tu­di­nal sur­veys cit­ed to challenge death-qualifying.

I am not sure that juror atti­tudes car­ry over into the con­vict­ing or sen­tenc­ing of peo­ple,” he says. While con­ced­ing that he is not aware of any stud­ies refut­ing the claim that death-qual­i­fied juries are more con­vic­tion-prone, he insists that the argu­ment remains unproved.

Meanwhile, crit­ics of death-penal­ty qual­i­fy­ing say the prob­lem is not just that the impan­eled jurors are more inclined to lis­ten to pros­e­cu­tors. The very process of death-qual­i­fy­ing, they say, can bias poten­tial jurors against the defendant.

Consider this. In any oth­er crim­i­nal tri­al, whether it’s pet­ty lar­ce­ny, assault with a firearm or attempt­ed mur­der or rape, attor­neys are express­ly barred from dis­cussing pos­si­ble penal­ties before or dur­ing the tri­al. The rea­son: Courts have long felt that dis­cussing the penal­ty could encour­age the jurors to start assum­ing that the defen­dant is somehow guilty.

Yet in death-penal­ty cas­es, where the issue of guilt or inno­cence is most cru­cial, we go ahead and dis­cuss the ulti­mate penal­ty every time before the tri­al,” says Santa Cruz psy­chol­o­gy professor Haney.

We all laugh when the Queen of Hearts in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” says, Sentence first — ver­dict after­wards.” But in this coun­try’s cap­i­tal tri­als, that’s basi­cal­ly what’s going on.

The qual­i­fi­ca­tion process itself can become extreme­ly con­tort­ed and bizarre. Once poten­tial jurors have expressed oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty, the defense attor­ney — seek­ing to sal­vage that per­son for the pan­el or at least force the pros­e­cu­tor to use up a peremp­to­ry chal­lenge — often pos­tu­lates par­tic­u­lar­ly heinous mur­der sce­nar­ios so they will con­cede that under some extreme cir­cum­stances they might indeed con­sid­er vot­ing for death.

Take Betty Brown. The 67-year-old black Philadelphia woman was thrown off the pan­el of prospec­tive jurors in the Abu-Jamal tri­al after she said she opposed the death penal­ty. Trying to keep her on the jury pan­el, a defense attor­ney asked how she would feel about the death penal­ty if one of her two sons had been mur­dered. “ I don’t even like to think about some­thing like that hap­pen­ing to my boys,’ ” she recalls say­ing. But I told the judge, Killing a mur­der­er would­n’t bring back my son.’ ”

Brown says she thinks it is sim­ply wrong” for peo­ple like her to be exclud­ed from juries for their beliefs. But giv­en her firm oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty, might she have been unable to find the defen­dant in that cap­i­tal case guilty? No, no,” she says flat­ly. If he’s guilty, he’s guilty, and I’d say it. And I was will­ing to serve.”

While many poten­tial jurors are kept off pan­els because of their anti- death-penal­ty beliefs, Haney reports that some impan­eled jurors who are squea­mish about impos­ing the death penal­ty can end up hav­ing their ear­li­er com­ments thrown back at them dur­ing the penalty deliberations.

A lot of jurors we’ve inter­viewed after tri­als have told us when they’d object to death oth­er jurors would tell them, You promised the judge that you’d be will­ing to impose the death penal­ty,’ ” says Haney. The hypo­thet­i­cal argu­ment that they could con­ceiv­ably impose death in some par­tic­u­lar sit­u­a­tion is lat­er treat­ed like a pledge to do it.”

Given the inher­ent prob­lems in death-qual­i­fy­ing juries, why has there been so much focus on pos­si­ble mora­to­ri­ums, DNA test­ing, poor defense lawyer­ing and oth­er fac­tors and so lit­tle con­cern expressed about the very fair­ness of the jury-selection process?

Probably the main rea­son is that the Supreme Court has already ruled the mat­ter — in favor of the pros­e­cu­tion. Before 1968, it was rou­tine for all those opposed to the death penal­ty to be exclud­ed from juries in cap­i­tal cas­es. That year, in Witherspoon vs. Illinois, which dealt specif­i­cal­ly with the process of vet­ting poten­tial jurors for their death-penal­ty views, the Supreme Court imposed strict lim­its on how eas­i­ly they could be excluded.

After hear­ing about the high­er con­vic­tion rates found in the Berkeley study and oth­er research, it ruled that only those who absolute­ly, under no imag­in­able cir­cum­stances, could ever vote for death, could be exclud­ed. The court held that by exclud­ing all death penal­ty oppo­nents the state had crossed the line of neu­tral­i­ty” and cre­at­ed a tri­bunal orga­nized to return a ver­dict of death.”

But in 1986, a recon­sti­tut­ed high court under Chief Justice William Rehnquist broad­ened the per­mis­si­ble grounds for exclud­ing jurors. In Wainwright vs. Witt, the court basi­cal­ly grant­ed pros­e­cu­tors free rein to excuse any poten­tial juror who expressed any qualms at all about impos­ing the death penal­ty, since that would impair the per­for­mance of his duties as a juror in accor­dance with his instruc­tions and his oath.” Under this stan­dard, sal­vaging a juror through with­er­spoon­ing” — get­ting death- penal­ty oppo­nents to acknowl­edge that under par­tic­u­lar­ly heinous cir­cum­stances they would vote for death — has become much tougher.

The high court also made state courts the final arbiters of the fair­ness of jury selec­tion, mak­ing it extreme­ly dif­fi­cult to obtain fed­er­al review of con­vic­tions on jury-selection grounds.

The prob­lem is that once the Supreme Court decides some­thing, Americans have a ten­den­cy to assume that it means it is a good thing, not just an allow­able thing, so they just stop think­ing about it,” says South Carolina attor­ney Bruck. But in this case, the court did­n’t say it was a good thing, just that they’d allow it unless more stud­ies came along to show it was a real­ly serious problem.”

A major dif­fi­cul­ty in address­ing the issue is that — short of elim­i­nat­ing the death penal­ty — there’s no easy fix. And though some mem­bers of Congress would like to reform the death-penal­ty sys­tem at the fed­er­al lev­el, a Bush pres­i­den­cy does not augur well for change.

Neither does the com­po­si­tion of the Supreme Court. Even if the courts found the prac­tice to be uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because it ends up bias­ing a jury, it could cause mon­u­men­tal night­mares by poten­tial­ly open­ing up the door to a new tri­al for near­ly every one of the 3,600 inmates on death row — not to men­tion many more who, like Reasonover, received less than cap­i­tal sen­tences but were judged by a death-qualified jury.

Nor is sim­ply allow­ing defen­dants’ attor­neys the unfet­tered right to dis­miss death-penal­ty pro­po­nents the answer. Assuming we main­tain the death penal­ty, as is clear­ly the pop­u­lar incli­na­tion at the moment, that approach would make it dif­fi­cult to impan­el jurors who would con­vict in cap­i­tal cas­es — a polit­i­cal­ly unten­able solu­tion in death-penalty states.

Some have sug­gest­ed using unscreened jurors for the guilt phase of a tri­al and then screen­ing and seat­ing a new pan­el for the penal­ty phase. But the new pro-death-penal­ty jurors would have heard none of the nuances of the tri­al evi­dence and would clear­ly be prej­u­diced against a defen­dant already found guilty of the crime.

A mod­i­fied reform being pro­posed by some crit­ics, includ­ing Haney and Bruck, is to wait until the penal­ty phase of a tri­al to death-qual­i­fy the jurors; those express­ing strong objec­tions to the death penal­ty could be replaced with alter­nate jurors who had attend­ed the entire tri­al. But in order to have enough alter­nates on hand, there would have to be many more of them than usu­al to avoid the chance of a mis­tri­al. Given the dif­fi­cul­ty courts are already hav­ing fill­ing jury box­es, this would be a major challenge.

A third pos­si­bil­i­ty sug­gest­ed by death-penal­ty advo­cate Cassell would be to grant the judge the author­i­ty to impose the sen­tence with­out a jury’s direc­tion, as hap­pens in Colorado and Arizona. But for the most part both sides oppose such a move — pros­e­cu­tors because it deprives them of the ben­e­fits of death-qual­i­fy­ing, and defend­ers because they gen­er­al­ly would rather bet on con­vinc­ing at least one juror to vote against death than on hav­ing to con­vince a judge.

The pub­lic’s oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty is not like­ly to increase dra­mat­i­cal­ly any­time soon. So unless new stud­ies prove that qual­i­fy­ing juries is so dis­crim­i­na­to­ry that even the cur­rent con­ser­v­a­tive Supreme Court feels com­pelled to reex­am­ine the issue, we’re stuck with a process that is clear­ly flawed — and flawed in a way many experts agree increas­es the like­li­hood of mis­tak­en con­vic­tions and executions.

Nowadays more peo­ple believe in the death penal­ty, so I don’t think there’s much chance there will be a change in the way we pick death- penal­ty case juries,” says Haney. But my phi­los­o­phy is that you have to keep col­lect­ing the data and mak­ing the case until some court is will­ing to look at it again and do some­thing about it.”

(source: Salon Magazine; Philadelphia jour­nal­ist Dave Lindorff is work­ing on a book on the Mumia Abu-Jamal case for Common Courage Press. Research for this arti­cle was fund­ed in part through a grant from the Fund for Constitutional Government)