The question in the case was whether defendant's lawyer had a meaningful chance to challenge the prosecutor’s stated reasons for striking Black jurors
A divided Supreme Court sided with a Black death row inmate from Mississippi who accused the white prosecutor in his case of intentionally and illegally striking potential Black jurors from the panel that heard his case, reported The New York Times.
Terry
Pitchford was convicted in 2006 for his role in the murder of a shopkeeper by a
12-member jury that included only one Black member. At the time, the county
where his trial took place was 40 percent Black.
In
its 5-to-4 decision, the Supreme Court said Mr. Pitchford’s
lawyer should have had an opportunity to challenge the prosecutor’s reasons for
striking all but one potential Black juror, consistent with a 40-year-old
landmark precedent barring race discrimination in jury selection. The decision
means that Mr. Pitchford, 40, who has served on death row for more than two
decades, is entitled to a new trial, his attorney said.
The
dispute in Mr. Pitchford’s case involved the same prosecutor whose jury-selection
practices were condemned by the Supreme Court in a separate decision
in 2019 that drew considerable public attention.
In that
case, the prosecutor Doug Evans spent decades trying to convict Curtis Flowers,
a Black man, of the 1996 murders of four people inside a furniture store.
During six trials, Mr. Evans repeatedly ensured Black people were excluded from
juries. The case was featured on a
season-long podcast, as well as in episodes of a
documentary series. Mr. Flowers spent 23 years in prison until he was
released in 2019 following the court’s decision. Charges against him were
dropped the following year.
The
question in Mr. Pitchford’s case was whether his lawyer had a meaningful chance
to challenge the prosecutor’s stated reasons for striking Black jurors.
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In
general, prosecutors have leeway to remove a certain number of potential
jurors, by issuing challenges that are discretionary and cannot be
second-guessed. Forty years ago, the Supreme Court carved out an exception in
the case Batson v. Kentucky. Under that ruling, when lawyers are accused of
discriminating based on race in jury selection, they must provide a different,
race-neutral explanation for their actions.
In recent
years, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority has turned away most appeals
from death row inmates. But writing for the majority, Justice Brett M.
Kavanaugh said the state judge had failed to provide Mr. Pitchford’s lawyer
“sufficient opportunity” to dispute the prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons for
striking four of five potential Black jurors, and had failed to explore if the
prosecutor’s reasons were “pretextual.”
Justice
Kavanaugh, who wrote the court’s 2019 decision in Mr. Flowers’s case as well,
has had a longstanding interest in race and jury selection. He was joined by
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and the court’s three liberal justices, Sonia
Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson.
Joseph
Perkovich, one of Mr. Pitchford’s lawyers, praised the court for recognizing
the “extreme failure of the state courts to enforce essential protections under
the Constitution.”
In a
statement, Megan Byrne, a lawyer at the ACLU’s Capital Punishment Project, said
the decision “properly recognizes that potential racial discrimination in jury
selection deserves meaningful scrutiny and careful review.”
Mr. Evans,
the prosecutor, has retired from the Montgomery County district attorney’s
office. The Mississippi attorney general’s office, which defended the
conviction, did not respond to a request for comment.
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