The U.S. Supreme Court has direct­ed a fed­er­al appeals court to recon­sid­er whether Georgia death-row pris­on­er Keith Tharpe (pic­tured) is enti­tled to fed­er­al court review of his claim that he was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly sen­tenced to death because he is black. On January 8, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 6 – 3 opin­ion send­ing Tharpe’s case — in which a racist juror used an offen­sive slur to describe the defen­dant and doubt­ed whether African Americans have souls — back to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit for fur­ther con­sid­er­a­tion whether the fed­er­al courts should hear his claim of juror bias. Seven years after Tharpe was sen­tenced to death, his attor­neys obtained a sworn affi­davit reviewed and ini­tialed by Barney Gattie, a white man who served as a juror at Tharpe’s tri­al. In his state­ment, Gattie said, After study­ing the Bible, I have won­dered if black peo­ple even have souls,” and, there are two types of black peo­ple: 1. Black folks and 2. Ni[**]ers.” Gattie also expressed his belief that Tharpe wasn’t in the good’ black folks cat­e­go­ry in my book, [and] should get the elec­tric chair for what he did.” According to Gattie, the vic­tim was one of the nice black folks,” but “[i]f [the vic­tim] had been the type Tharpe is, then pick­ing between life and death for Tharpe wouldn’t have mat­tered so much.” Despite these state­ments, the Georgia state courts reject­ed Tharpe’s racial-bias claim after pros­e­cu­tors obtained a sec­ond affi­davit from Gattie assert­ing that he was not a big­ot. State pros­e­cu­tors have not denied that Gattie made these state­ments, but have attempt­ed to defend them by say­ing that Gattie had been drink­ing when he signed the affi­davit. The Georgia fed­er­al courts had also denied Tharpe relief on the claim, defer­ring to the fact-find­ing of the state courts that Gattie’s big­ot­ed state­ments were not prej­u­di­cial. However, in 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court decid­ed two major cas­es that Tharpe said required the fed­er­al courts to recon­sid­er his claim: Buck v. Davis, a Texas death-penal­ty case in which the racial­ly biased tes­ti­mo­ny of an expert wit­ness cre­at­ed an unac­cept­able risk that Buck was sen­tenced to death because he was black, and Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado, a case that over­turned a state-court rule that pre­vent­ed defen­dants from using racial­ly biased state­ments made by a juror as evi­dence of juror mis­con­duct dur­ing delib­er­a­tions. Georgia was sched­uled to exe­cute Tharpe in September 2017, but the Supreme Court grant­ed him a last-minute stay to decide whether to review his case. The Court ulti­mate­ly accept­ed review of the case, issued a per curi­am rul­ing in Tharpe v. Sellers with­out fur­ther brief­ing or argu­ment, and returned the case to the Eleventh Circuit, which must now con­sid­er whether to issue a Certificate of Appealability — a pro­ce­dur­al pre­req­ui­site to con­sid­er­ing an issue on appeal. Brian Kammer, Tharpe’s attor­ney, said, We are thank­ful that the U.S. Supreme Court rec­og­nized the seri­ous impli­ca­tions for fun­da­men­tal fair­ness of the clear evi­dence of racial ani­mus on the part of one of the jurors who sen­tenced Mr. Tharpe to death.” Justice Clarence Thomas dis­sent­ed, joined by Justices Alito and Gorsuch, crit­i­ciz­ing the Court for inter­fer­ing in the case and fail­ing to respect the low­er courts’ judgments.

(Bill Rankin, Supreme Court sends case of racist juror back to Atlanta appeals court, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, January 8, 2018; Amy Howe, Court sends case of Georgia death-row inmate back to low­er courts over Thomas dis­sent, SCOTUSBlog, January 8, 2018; Press Release, BREAKING — Attny Statement Re: SCOTUS Cert Grant in GA Racial Bias Death Penalty Case, January 8, 2018; Andrew Cohen, Why I Believe the Supreme Court Needs to Stop This Georgia Execution, Esquire, September 14, 2017.) Read the opin­ion and the dis­sent here. See Race and U.S. Supreme Court.

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