Marc Hayden wrote in the Washington Times:
With many Americans focused on headline-grabbing U.S. Supreme
Court cases, it would be easy to miss a critically important case that
has flown under the radar: Shinn v. Jones and
Ramirez. Despite the consolidated case’s low-profile, it has the
potential to fundamentally reshape the criminal justice system in a manner that
should offend conservatives’ core sensibilities — that of protecting life,
liberty, and unalienable rights.
The case revolves around something quintessentially American
— the right to an attorney and a fair trial. According to decades-old case law,
the Sixth Amendment provides Americans the right to “effective assistance of
counsel,” but not all lawyers are created equal. There are plenty of
reports of defense attorneys showing up to court drunk, sleeping during the
trial or simply ignoring exculpatory evidence. Thanks to the Sixth Amendment,
if an attorney’s assistance was so inadequate that it influenced the
case’s outcome, then the courts can order a retrial.
To obtain such relief, appellants must traverse the arcane
appeals process, but if state appellate courts rebuff them, they can apply for
relief in federal court via a writ of habeas corpus. This process is incredibly
time-consuming. In fact, the time between sentencing and execution in capital
cases can easily exceed 20 years.
During the interim, new evidence of ineffective counsel can
arise, which brings us to the crux of Shinn v. Jones and Ramirez, and the
stakes are high — very high. Both Barry Jones and David Ramirez face death
sentences for separate cases in Arizona, but appeals attorneys presented
evidence in federal court, questioning their verdict and sentence,
respectively.
In 1995, despite steadfastly maintaining his innocence, Mr.
Jones was convicted of an unconscionably heinous crime — child abuse resulting
in death — although there is evidence that suggests he may not be guilty.
Medical evidence available at the time would have poked holes in the
prosecutors’ case against Mr. Jones, according to court documents, but his
counsel failed to introduce it. While I can’t say for certain whether Mr.
Jones is innocent, it seems that the jurors passed their verdict based on
incomplete evidence.
Meanwhile, Mr. Ramirez’s guilt isn’t in question. A jury
convicted him in 1990 of a gruesome double murder. Still, there’s reason to
believe that Mr. Ramirez suffers from an intellectual disability, has brain
damage, and endured serious childhood trauma. However, his lawyers originally
failed to provide any evidence of this. Why is this important? Because
mitigating evidence such as this would have virtually ensured that he received
a sentence other than death.
Mr. Jones’ and Mr. Ramirez’s new attorneys have since
brought the aforementioned evidence to light in federal court. They claimed
that more effective counsel could have easily raised all of this evidence
during the original trials, and as a result, their clients deserve retrials.
It’s not unheard of for appeals attorneys to make such
11th-hour assertions in desperate bids to save their clients, but they
made a good case. How good? Federal courts overturned Mr. Jones’
conviction and ordered a new hearing for Mr. Ramirez.
Normally, this would ultimately trigger a retrial for Mr.
Jones and a new sentencing hearing for Mr. Ramirez, but instead, the State of
Arizona appealed the decision. Citing a provision in the Antiterrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Arizona asserts that new evidence
demonstrating the ineffectiveness of counsel cannot be considered in habeas
petitions if the defendant’s lawyers neglected to develop the evidence in state
court proceedings.
The State of Arizona’s interpretation of the AEDPA is
unique, to say the least. To date, no appellate court has adopted such a
reading, and the United States District Court in Arizona found the State of
Arizona’s argument laughable, calling it “simply illogical.” After all, it
makes no sense for the law to allow federal courts to entertain evidentiary
hearings on claims of ineffective counsel but then to forbid the consideration
of the same evidence simply because post-conviction relief counsel failed to
raise it in state court.
If the U.S. Supreme
Court sides with Arizona, the state will subsequently execute Mr.
Jones and Mr. Ramirez despite the evidence. This will also set a dangerous
precedent that new evidence of ineffective counsel — in all criminal cases, not
just capital cases — can never be considered in federal court even though such
claims almost always rely on new evidence.
This will lead to insidious effects that will
reverberate throughout the criminal justice system—ensuring that an untold
number of Americans, including the wrongly convicted, will never get a fair
trial. This should concern all Americans—especially the U.S. Supreme
Court’s conservative wing.
Conservatives believe in law and order, but you can have
neither as long as Americans are wrongly denied their constitutional rights and
stripped of their lives and liberties. Yet, that could become a regular
occurrence if the U.S. Supreme
Court rules in favor of Arizona.
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