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Supreme Court Grants Relief to Duane Buck in Texas Racial Bias Death Penalty Case

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Feb 22, 2017 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

Saying that the law pun­ish­es peo­ple for what they do, not who they are,” the Supreme Court on February 22, 2017, grant­ed relief to Duane Buck (pic­tured, right), a Texas death-row pris­on­er who was sen­tenced to death after his own lawyer pre­sent­ed tes­ti­mo­ny from a psy­chol­o­gist who told the jury Buck was more like­ly to com­mit future acts of vio­lence because he is black. Writing for the six-Justice major­i­ty, Chief Justice Roberts (pic­tured, left) said that “[d]ispensing pun­ish­ment on the basis of an immutable char­ac­ter­is­tic flat­ly con­tra­venes this guiding principle.” 

Buck’s case turned on the legal ques­tion of whether his lawyer had pro­vid­ed inef­fec­tive assis­tance. The Court left no doubt on the issue. Chief Justice Roberts wrote that “[n]o com­pe­tent defense attor­ney would intro­duce such evi­dence about his own client.” 

Despite coun­sel’s defi­cient rep­re­sen­ta­tion, the low­er fed­er­al courts had refused to inter­vene, assert­ing that the ref­er­ences to race in the case had been brief and would have had only min­i­mal, if any, effect on the jury’s sen­tenc­ing deci­sion. The Chief Justice square­ly reject­ed that con­clu­sion, writ­ing: when a jury hears expert tes­ti­mo­ny that express­ly makes a defendant’s race direct­ly per­ti­nent on the ques­tion of life or death, the impact of that evi­dence can­not be mea­sured sim­ply by how much air time it received at tri­al or how many pages it occu­pies in the record. Some tox­ins can be dead­ly in small dos­es.” The Court explained that stereo­typ­ing black men as some­how more vio­lence-prone than oth­ers is a par­tic­u­lar­ly nox­ious strain of racial prejudice.” 

Buck’s attor­ney, Christina Swarns, who had argued the case before the Court in October 2016, said Today, the Supreme Court made clear that there is no place for racial bias in the American crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem.” The deci­sion, she said, reaf­firms the long­stand­ing prin­ci­ple that crim­i­nal pun­ish­ments — par­tic­u­lar­ly the death penal­ty — can­not be based on immutable char­ac­ter­is­tics such as race.” 

Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Samuel Alito, dissented.

(L. Hurley, U.S. top court backs Texas death row inmate in race case,” Reuters, February 22, 2017; P. Williams, Supreme Court Says Racial Testimony Biased Sentencing,” NBC News, February 22, 2017; SCOTUS Rules Duane Buck Entitled to New Sentencing Hearing in Texas Racial Bias Death Penalty Case,” Press Release from Duane Buck Defense Lawyers, February 22, 2017.) Read the opin­ion.

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