Mumia Abu-Jamal
- Von: "MUMIA ABU-JAMAL"
<>
- Betreff: !*Second Legal Intelligencer
Article on Mumia's death penalty
- Datum: Donnerstag, 15. Oktober 2009
22:03
-
- Please go to http://www.freemumia.com/meeting.html for info on 10/17
- EMERGENCY MEETING and make plans to
attend!
- ============
-
- From: Hans Bennett
- -------------
- http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1202434533155&Mumia_AbuJamals_Life_May_Hinge_on_Case_of_NeoNazi_Triple_Murderer
-
- Mumia
Abu-Jamal's
- Life
May Hinge on
- Case
of Neo-Nazi
- Triple
Murderer
-
- Shannon P. Duffy
-
- 10-14-2009
-
- In a bizarre twist of fate, Mumia
Abu-Jamal -- the convicted cop
- killer whose quarter century on death
row in Pennsylvania has made him
- internationally famous -- may find
that his very life hinges on the
- outcome of a U.S. Supreme Court
argument on Tuesday in the case of a
- neo-Nazi triple murderer who wore a
Hitler mustache at trial as he
- testified proudly about his desire to
kill blacks, Jews and gays.
(Eine
bizarre Drehung des Schicksals hat Mumia Abu Jamal - den
verurteilten Polizistenmörder , der sich ein Viertel Jahrhundert
im Todestrakt in Pennsylvanien befindet, international berühmt
gemacht. Er meinte, dass es sein könnte, dass sein ganzes Leben
vom Ergebnis eines Obersten US-Gerichtsurteils am Dienstag über
einen dreifachen Neonazi-Mörder abhängt (Smith v. Spisak), der
bei der Gerichtsverhandlung einen Hitler Schnurrbart trug und
stolz seinen Wunsch ausdrückte, Schwarze Juden und Schwule zu
töten.)
-
- For Abu-Jamal, the stakes couldn't be
higher. And the worst-case
- scenario is that the decision in the
Ohio case, Smith v. Spisak, could
- directly lead to a reinstatement of
Abu-Jamal's death sentence.
-
- But the justices may never reach the
legal issues that Abu-Jamal
- shares with Frank Spisak, the neo-Nazi
convicted in that case. That
- could happen if the high court instead
focuses entirely on issues
- relating to whether Spisak's defense
lawyer at trial did such a poor
- job in delivering his closing argument
in the death penalty phase that
- his death sentence cannot stand.
- If Spisak secures a victory purely on
those grounds, the justices
- might find it unnecessary to rule on a
second issue -- whether the
- jury instructions were confusing and
faulty in Spisak's (and in Abu-
- Jamal's) case.
-
- Abu-Jamal's case has been in a kind of
legal limbo since April. The
- justices rejected Abu-Jamal's petition
for certiorari -- effectively
- upholding his conviction for the
murder of Philadelphia Police Officer
- Daniel Faulkner -- but took no action
on a petition from the
- Philadelphia district attorney seeking
to have his death sentence
- reinstated.
-
- It soon became clear that the justices
were holding the Philadelphia
- prosecutors' petition in abeyance
because they had agreed to hear
- Spisak's case, which raised a nearly
identical issue.
- Typically in such cases, the justices
decide the first case and then,
- if necessary, issue summary reversals
in the other pending cases that
- raised the same issue, sending them
back to the lower courts to
- reconsider in light of the high
court's most recent pronouncement.
-
- The issue that Abu-Jamal shares with
Spisak is that both men won court
- rulings that overturned their death
sentences based on Mills v.
- Maryland, a 1988 U.S. Supreme Court
decision that governs how juries
- should deliberate during the penalty
phase of a capital trial.
-
- In Mills, the justices struck down a
Maryland statute that said juries
- in capital cases must be unanimous on
any aggravating or mitigating
- factor.
-
- The 5-4 decision declared that
unanimity was properly required only
- for "aggravating" factors
that support death sentences, but that
- mitigating factors -- those that weigh
against imposing a death
- sentence -- must be handled more
liberally, with each juror free to
- find on his or her own.
-
- The question now before the courts is
whether Mills requires that
- death sentences in other states be
overturned if the juries in those
- states are misled by faulty
instructions or verdict forms to believe
- that mitigating factors require
unanimity.
-
- Perhaps even more important to the
justices is a corollary question of
- federalism: Is it fair for the federal
courts to overturn a state
- court's decision on how to
interpretMills by imposing its own
- interpretation that extends Mills
beyond its original scope?
-
- A BIZARRE CLOSING ARGUMENT
-
- But in Tuesday's argument, the
justices spent most of their time
- discussing Spisak's second argument --
that his trial lawyer had
- delivered such a poor closing argument
in the penalty phase that he
- was effectively denied effective
representation.
-
- On that point, the justices were all
over the map.
-
- "Have you ever heard or read a
defense summation that was more
- derogatory of the defendant than the
summation here?" Justice Samuel
- A. Alito Jr. asked Ohio Attorney
General Richard Cordray.
-
- Cordray insisted that the trial lawyer
had done the best he could with
- "the bed that was made by his
client, who got on the stand for days on
- end and spewed his racist propaganda,
made it clear that he was not
- only unrepentant but was
triumphant."
-
- Alito pressed the point, saying the
lawyer told the jury that Spisak
- demanded no sympathy, and asked:
"Isn't that exactly what he has to
- appeal for in order not to get a death
verdict, sympathy based on
- mental illness, despite the horrific
crimes that this person committed?"
-
- Cordray disagreed, saying he
considered the lawyer's speech to be part
- of a "coherent strategy"
that was premised on telling the jury: "I can
- sense that you are not feeling
sympathy for my client. Do what makes
- you a humane people, what makes us
proud as a people, and do not give
- the death penalty to a person who is
sick, demented, twisted, as my
- client has shown himself to be."
-
- Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg described
the closing argument as
- "disjointed" and said,
"it goes off on tangents that have nothing to
- do with the sentence. ... I mean, it
really is quite a stream of
- consciousness."
-
- But Ginsburg also asked Spisak's
lawyer, Michael Benza of Chagrin
- Falls, Ohio: "Do you know of any
case where ineffective assistance was
- found on the basis of a closing
argument alone?"
- Benza conceded he did not, but
insisted that was only because Spisak's
- case was "such an outlier."
-
- "I have been litigating capital
cases since 1993. I have never seen a
- closing argument like this,"
Benza said.
-
- A group of 20 law professors who teach
trial advocacy filed an amicus
- brief supporting Spisak that urged the
justices to declare that his
- trial lawyer's speech "was
deficient to such a level that it
- constituted ineffective assistance of
counsel."
-
- But several justices seemed inclined
to approve of the argument as a
- sound strategy.
-
- As Justice Stephen Breyer described
it: "It makes sense logically to
- say he has the worst defendant he has
ever seen. He's murdered lots of
- people in cold blood. He gets up on
the stand and says: I'm going to
- kill a lot more.' He sounds totally
bonkers."
-
- Breyer said he interpreted the trial
lawyer's strategy as recognizing
- that his insanity defense had failed,
but nonetheless arguing to the
- jury, "We don't execute people
who are crazy and this guy is crazy."
-
- Justice Antonin Scalia went further,
saying, "I thought it was a
- brilliant closing argument. ... Have
you ever conducted a capital case
- in which the defendant takes the stand
with a Hitler mustache and says
- he's glad for what he's done and he
will do it again? ... This was an
- extraordinary trial, and it seems to
me that the technique that
- counsel used to try to get mercy for
this fellow was the best that
- could have been done."
-
- In telephone interviews Tuesday
afternoon, lawyers on both sides of
- the Abu-Jamal case expressed guarded
optimism about the outcome in the
- Spisak case.
-
- FACTS DIFFERENT ENOUGH?
-
- Attorney Robert Bryan of San
Francisco, the lead lawyer for Abu-Jamal,
- said he believes the Mills issue as it
arose in Spisak's case is
- factually and procedurally different
enough that the outcome will not
- dictate how Abu-Jamal's case should be
decided.
-
- But Deputy District Attorney Ronald
Eisenberg, who attended the oral
- arguments, said he anticipates that
the justices will reach the Mills
- issue and will find fault in the way
the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
- Appeals applied it in Spisak's case.
-
- While most of the federal circuits
have declined to extend Mills to
- cases in which there was a risk of
juror confusion, Eisenberg said,
- the 6th Circuit did so in Spisak's
case and the 3rd Circuit committed
- the same error in Abu-Jamal's case.
-
- 'PADILLA v. KENTUCKY'
-
- In the first case argued Tuesday,
Padilla v. Kentucky, a lawyer told
- his client, Jose Padilla, a permanent
resident alien arrested for drug
- trafficking, that pleading guilty as
part of a plea agreement would
- not expose him to deportation. That
advice was flat wrong.
-
- Padilla sued in 2004, claiming
ineffective assistance that deprived
- him of his constitutional rights. But
the Kentucky Supreme Court ruled
- that incorrect advice on matters that
are collateral to the criminal
- case don't make out a case of
ineffective assistance under the Supreme
- Court's Strickland v. Washington
standard.
-
- Most U.S. Supreme Court justices
seemed wary of expanding the
- definition of ineffective assistance
to include flawed advice on
- matters beyond the actual criminal
case the lawyer is handling.
- "We have to decide whether we are
opening a Pandora's box here," said
- Scalia, who said flawed advice about
the effect of a guilty plea on
- child custody could be another issue
defendants would raise.
-
- Breyer also said, "The world is
filled with 42 billion circumstances"
- that could trigger
ineffective-assistance claims for other reasons.
-
- Stephen Kinnaird of Paul Hastings
Janofsky & Walker, arguing for
- Padilla, said deportation is "so
severe and so material" that the
- court could limit its ruling to advice
in that area. "The lawyer has
- the distinct duty to assess the
advantages and disadvantages of the
- plea."
-
- Deputy Solicitor General Michael
Dreeben told the court that a
- criminal defense lawyer does not have
a constitutional duty to advise
- his client about immigration law, but
if he or she does and does so
- incorrectly, "the lawyer has used
his professional skills to undermine
- a personal decision that belongs to
the defendant alone."
-
- The Padilla case is being tracked by
immigrant rights advocates who
- say thousands of immigrants have been
put in jeopardy by poor legal
- representation and advice. "Every
day, immigrants are advised to give
- up their rights and plead guilty to
charges that subject them to
- lifetime exile," said Benita
Jain, co-director of the Immigrant
- Defense Project.
-
- Tony Mauro, the U.S. Supreme Court
correspondent for The Legal
- Intelligencer affiliate The National
Law Journal, contributed
- reporting to this article.
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