Supreme Court rules in favor of racially biased jury claims
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision on Thursday, ruled in favor of an Black man convicted of capital murder in Mississippi, who said the jury that convicted him was racially biased.
In the case, Pitchford v. Cain, Terry Pitchford was convicted of robbing a grocery store alongside Eric Bullins in 2004. Bullins shot and killed the store owner during the robbery and recieved a 20-year jail sentence.
However, during jury selection in Pitchford’s case, state prosecutors removed four of the five Black potential jurors. The jury, made up of 11 white jurors and 1 Black juror, convicted Pitchford of murder and sentenced him to death.
“The trial court did not afford Pitchford’s counsel a sufficient opportunity to rebut the prosecutor’s proffered race-neutral reasons for striking the four black jurors and never determined whether the prosecutor’s stated reasons were pretextual,” Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in the court’s majority opinon.
In Batson v. Kentucky, the high court established a precedent that jurors could not be excused from a case based on race. Rather, a prosectors must come up with a race-neutral explanation to excuse a juror. The majority of justices said the trial court did not adequately adhere to that requirement.
“Whether due to confusion, oversight, an overly hurried jury selection process, or some other cause, things broke down, and the ordinary trial-court procedure for resolving Batson claims at step three never occurred— notwithstanding the repeated efforts of Pitchford’s counsel to pursue and preserve the Batson objection,” Kavanaugh wrote.
However, Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Amy Coney Barrett disagreed with the majority arguments. Gorsuch, in the court’s dissenting opinion argued that state prosectors provided adequate reasons, other than race, to dismiss the Black jurors.
“One prospective juror, it said, had returned late to court after lunch break and had a history of mental problems,” Gorsuch wrote. “Two had brothers who had been convicted of violent offenses. Another ‘had no opinion on the death penalty.'”
Gorsuch also argued that the court’s majority opinon did not outline how the case should proceed in the future and what steps similar cases should take. The high court overruled lower court’s decisionmaking in this case and will return consideration of Pitchford’s conviction, with a clarified understanding of jury selection procedures.
Latest News Stories
Obama-era ‘Welcoming Cities’ program overlaps with illegal border crosser crimes
Expert blasts Illinois Congressman’s push to double H-1Bs as ‘tone-deaf’
Afghans arrested by ICE released into the country by the Biden administration
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher School Board Facilities Committee
Safety Upgrades Planned for Wilmington-Peotone Road; Gas Line Proposal Rejected
Officials: Stockton stands together after fatal shooting
IL strips explicit racial criteria from minority teacher scholarship program
Illinois quick hits: Armed sex offender sentenced; most are family farms
HHS: Pritzker ‘eroded public trust’ in public health
U.S. Supreme Court to decide birthright citizenship case
WATCH: House passes bills to block CCP’s influence on schools
New fiscal year begins with lowest border apprehensions in recorded history