More than half of the 441 death sentences handed down since
the death penalty was reinstated in the late 1970s have been deemed flawed and
overturned, Assistant Federal Defender Timothy Kane told the court. Among the
155 from Philadelphia, the reversal rate is 72%.
“The reliability of the system as a whole is cruel … and the
systemic problems affect every case,” Kane argued before an overflow crowd at
Philadelphia City Hall.
Most of the time, the sentence or verdict was reversed on
appeal because of the work of court-appointed lawyers working with limited
public funds, he said.
In the two test cases involved in the unusual “King’s Bench”
petition presented to the Supreme Court, transcripts of the defense portion of
their sentencing hearings run to just 14 pages combined.
Justice Debra Todd asked why the issue was urgent, given the
moratorium on executions that Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf imposed after taking
office in 2015. A lawyer for Attorney General Josh Shapiro, who opposed the
petition, said it was not. Shapiro’s office said that any amendments to the
death penalty should be decided by the state Legislature.
“The questions the report raises are important, and should
be thoroughly considered and resolved, by the General Assembly,” Shapiro’s
office said in its brief.
However, Kane said the Supreme Court needs to step in given
the failure of lawmakers to act on a troubling, bipartisan review completed
last year. He asked the court to declare the state statute unconstitutional and
convert the sentences of 137 men on death row to life imprisonment. There are
no women on death row in Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, who won
election in 2015 on an anti-death penalty platform, said that 82% of the
current death row inmates from Philadelphia are black.
Statewide, just under half of the current death row inmates
in Pennsylvania are black, compared to 11% of state residents. The death
penalty remains legal in 29 U.S. states, although four of those states,
including Pennsylvania, have a moratorium on executions.
The average appeal in Pennsylvania takes 17 years, straining
the resources of the court system, critic said.
The five Democrats and two Republicans on the state Supreme
Court did not indicate when they would rule.
The test case involves two men sentenced to death row in the
1990s — Jermont Cox of Philadelphia and Kevin Marinelli of Northumberland
County. Relatives of Marinelli’s victim, who was killed over a stereo during a
1994 home invasion robbery, oppose the appeal.
Only three people have been executed in Pennsylvania since
capital punishment was reinstated in 1978, the last of them in 1999.
The death penalty remains legal in 29 U.S. states, although
at least four of those states, including Pennsylvania, have a moratorium on
executions.
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