Judicial enforce­ment of con­sti­tu­tion­al rights in Texas death penal­ty cas­es has become increas­ing­ly rare and is vir­tu­al­ly non-exis­tent in the state’s fed­er­al courts, a new University of Houston Law Center study has found. The study, Reversal Rates in Capital Cases in Texas, 2000 – 2020, pub­lished online on April 27, 2020 in the UCLA Law Review, reports that rever­sal rates in cas­es in which Texas cap­i­tal defen­dants were sen­tenced to death in the first two decades of the 21st cen­tu­ry have plum­met­ed in com­par­i­son to grants of relief in earlier cases.

The authors of the study, University of Houston law pro­fes­sor David R. Dow (pic­tured, left) and Jeffrey R. Newberry, Clinical Supervising Attorney at the law center’s Death Penalty Clinic (pic­tured, right), believe the decrease in grants of relief can be attrib­uted to new lim­i­ta­tions on judi­cial review, not to fair­er tri­al pro­ceed­ings. The occa­sion­al rebukes by the [U.S.] Supreme Court of the low­er courts with juris­dic­tion over Texas cap­i­tal cas­es,” they write, sug­gests the best expla­na­tion for these sta­tis­tics is not that con­sti­tu­tion­al norms are being vig­or­ous­ly enforced in the tri­al courts, but instead that con­sti­tu­tion­al rights are increas­ing­ly dif­fi­cult to vindicate.”

The study tracked the cas­es of the 282 pris­on­ers sent to death row in Texas between January 1, 2000 and December 31, 2019. The researchers found just 28 cas­es in which pris­on­ers were suc­cess­ful in chal­leng­ing their con­vic­tions or death sen­tences, with the courts uphold­ing con­vic­tions and death sen­tences 90.1% of the time. The Texas num­bers con­trast sharply with his­tor­i­cal grants of relief in death penal­ty cas­es across the coun­try. A study by Columbia Law School pro­fes­sors James Liebman, Jeffrey Fagan, and Valerie West of death sen­tences imposed nation­wide between 1973 and 1995 showed that more than two-thirds of those cap­i­tal con­vic­tions or death sen­tences had been over­turned. The rever­sal rate in 21st cen­tu­ry Texas death sen­tences is 6.8 times lower. 

Dow and Newberry looked at cap­i­tal appeal out­comes at three stages of the judi­cial review process: direct appeal, state post-con­vic­tion review, and fed­er­al habeas cor­pus. They found that, at each stage of review, Texas courts upheld cap­i­tal con­vic­tions and death sen­tences about 95% of the time and that fed­er­al habeas cor­pus grants of relief were van­ish­ing­ly rare. On direct appeals that had been com­plet­ed at the time of the study, Texas death-row pris­on­ers over­turned their con­vic­tions or death sen­tences in 15 out of 262 cas­es, a rever­sal rate of 5.7%. The rever­sal rate at the state post-con­vic­tion stage — known in Texas as state habeas cor­pus — was vir­tu­al­ly iden­ti­cal: con­vic­tions or death sen­tences were over­turned in just 12 out of 214 adju­di­cat­ed appeals (5.6%). The Texas fed­er­al courts, they found, almost nev­er enforced death-row pris­on­ers’ fair tri­al rights. Only one cap­i­tal habeas cor­pus peti­tion­er of the 151 who com­plet­ed fed­er­al habeas cor­pus review (0.66%) was grant­ed relief. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit — which includes Texas — has vacat­ed a sec­ond grant of relief, and that case is cur­rent­ly before the full court pend­ing recon­sid­er­a­tion of the pri­or deci­sion issued by a three-judge panel. 

The Dow/​Newberry research is a fol­low-up to the Liebman study and a 2009 study by Dow and Hofstra law pro­fes­sor Eric M. Freedman that exam­ined fed­er­al habeas out­comes from 2000 to 2007 in cap­i­tal cas­es across the coun­try to mea­sure the impact of amend­ments to the fed­er­al habeas cor­pus statute in the mid 1990s. The Liebman study reviewed out­comes for cas­es begin­ning with the resump­tion of death sen­tences in the mod­ern era of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1973 and end­ing in 1995, just before the pas­sage of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA).

AEDPA, Dow and Newberry explain, was designed specif­i­cal­ly to accel­er­ate fed­er­al habeas review of state death penal­ty cas­es and short­en the time between sen­tenc­ing and exe­cu­tion.” It was there­fore unsur­pris­ing, they say, that Liebman report­ed much high­er rever­sal rates in his study peri­od than Freedman and Dow did in theirs. Liebman’s study found that near­ly 40% of cap­i­tal habeas cor­pus peti­tion­ers suc­ceed­ed in over­turn­ing their con­vic­tions or death sen­tences in the fed­er­al courts. After AEDPA, Dow and Freedman found that cap­i­tal habeas cor­pus peti­tion­ers were suc­cess­ful in obtain­ing rever­sals just 12% of the time, and only 4% of the time in the Fifth Circuit.

Dow and Newberry write, Even if we can­not state with cer­tain­ty that AEDPA itself has caused this pre­cip­i­tous decline in the suc­cess rate of death row inmates in their appeals, we can say that AEDPA rep­re­sents the bound­ary between two eras. In the first, death-sen­tenced inmates pre­vailed two-thirds of the time; in the sec­ond, their suc­cess rate per­cent­age is in the sin­gle-dig­its. If, there­fore, a prin­ci­pal objec­tive of AEDPA was to insu­late state-imposed death sen­tences from con­sti­tu­tion­al attack, the data strong­ly imply that objec­tive has been achieved. Death row inmates chal­leng­ing their con­vic­tions or sen­tences in Texas pre­vail dra­mat­i­cal­ly less often than they did before the enact­ment of AEDPA.” 

The find­ings fol­low on the heels of a 2018 study of Harris County, Texas death penal­ty cas­es that found ram­pant judi­cial rub­ber­stamp­ing” of pros­e­cu­tors’ pro­posed factfind­ings in state habeas appeals. Researchers from the University of Texas School of Law Capital Punishment Center exam­ined tri­al court orders in 191 Harris County cap­i­tal post-con­vic­tion pro­ceed­ings in which fac­tu­al issues were con­test­ed, and found that in 96% of the cas­es, local judges — many of whom had pre­vi­ous­ly served in the coun­ty dis­trict attorney’s office — had sim­ply adopt­ed the coun­ty pros­e­cu­tors’ pro­posed find­ings of fact ver­ba­tim. In the vast major­i­ty of cas­es, judges signed the prosecution’s pro­posed doc­u­ment with­out even chang­ing the head­ing. These prac­tices, the authors wrote, under­mine the accu­ra­cy and fair­ness of the death penal­ty,” and the com­bi­na­tion of the whole­sale adop­tion of pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al factfind­ings in the state courts and the def­er­ence the Texas fed­er­al courts have afford­ed such factfind­ing under the AEDPA amend­ments may con­tribute to the low rever­sal rates Dow and Newberry found.

Citation Guide
Sources

David R. Dow and Jeffrey R. Newberry, Reversal Rates in Capital Cases in Texas, 2000 – 2020, UCLA Law Review, April 272020.