« New podcast for all sentencing fans (and especially defense attorneys) | Main | US Sentencing Commission produces another great updated set of "Quick Facts" publications »

July 5, 2022

Does commitment to equal justice mean AG Garland must or must not seek the death penalty for racist Buffalo mass murderer?

The question in the title of this post is prompted by this new Washington Post article, headlined "Garland weighs racial equity as he considers death penalty in Buffalo."  Here are excerpts from a long article:

The Biden administration’s pledge to pursue racial equity in the criminal justice system is facing a crucial test: whether federal prosecutors will seek the death penalty for the self-avowed white supremacist charged with slaughtering 10 Black people in a Buffalo grocery store in May.

Some survivors and family members of those killed told Attorney General Merrick Garland during a private meeting in June that they are supportive of bringing a capital case against the 18-year-old suspect, Payton Gendron, according to people involved in the discussion.  Their stance conflicts with the long-standing position of civil rights advocates, who have generally opposed the death penalty out of concerns it is unjust and disproportionately used against racial minorities....

Garland, under pressure from civil rights groups, issued a moratorium last summer on federal executions, after the administration of President Donald Trump carried out 13 in the final six months of his presidency.  As heinous as the Buffalo killings were, Black civil rights leaders say, seeking to execute the gunman would represent a setback in their efforts to abolish capital punishment.  “The reality for us is that the system is too often infused with racial bias. That doesn’t change because someone who is White, and who perpetrated violence against Black people, is put to death,” said Maya Wiley, president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

President Biden opposed the death penalty during his 2020 campaign, but he has not pushed forcefully for a blanket federal ban on executions since taking office.  His administration is under pressure to do more to confront rising white supremacy, a spike in hate crimes and a wave of gun violence.  While Garland’s moratorium does not ban prosecutors from seeking the death penalty, the Justice Department has not filed a notice to seek capital punishment under his leadership, officials said....

Federal prosecutors have charged Gendron with 26 hate crime counts.  But it is an additional gun-related charge that carries the potential penalty of death. He also faces state-level first-degree murder and hate crimes charges in New York, which does not allow state-sponsored executions....

Making matters more complex, some of the attorneys representing the families are advocates who vocally oppose the death penalty, including Ben Crump, a prominent civil rights attorney, and Terrence M. Connors, a Buffalo trial lawyer. So do some of Garland’s top deputies, including Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta, who joined him in Buffalo....

Garland gained national acclaim in the 1990s for helping lead the Justice Department’s successful capital conviction of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, who was put to death in 2001.  During his confirmation hearing last year, Garland said he stands by the outcome of that case but has since developed reservations over the death penalty.

At the hearing, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) cited the case of Dylann Roof — a White man sentenced to death for fatally shooting nine Black parishioners at a church in Charleston, S.C., in 2015 — and asked whether Garland would pursue capital punishment in a similar case. Garland responded that it would depend on the Biden administration’s policy.

The Justice Department has continued to back Roof’s death sentence, which was upheld by a federal appellate court last summer.  The department also is seeking the death penalty for Robert Bowers, a White man accused of killing 11 people and wounding six in an antisemitic attack at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018....

In opposing the death penalty, some opponents cite cases in which convicts on death row are exonerated in light of new evidence. But legal experts said the Buffalo case appears to lacks ambiguity: The suspected gunman allegedly wrote a 180-page screed denouncing Black people, shared plans for the attack on social media and live-streamed some of the shooting.

“Congress passed the law allowing the federal death penalty for the most heinous of crimes. If the Buffalo massacre doesn’t qualify, then it’s hard to see what would,” Cotton said in a statement. “Merrick Garland and President Biden ought to put aside their personal feelings, enforce the law, and focus on securing justice for the victims of this horrific crime.”

Garland has not been completely clear about his intent in pausing executions, said Nathan S. Williams, a former assistant U.S. attorney who helped prosecute Roof.  Though Garland cited technical issues concerning lethal injection in his memo announcing the moratorium, he also referenced fundamental unease about the death penalty’s “disparate impact on people of color.”  Garland’s moratorium “does not resolve what was posited in that memo: ‘Is the death penalty fundamentally unfair in its application?’ If you believe that, you would not pursue it” in Gendron’s case, Williams said.

Especially because the facts in Gendron's case are relatively similar to those that led to Roof being sent to federal death row, I can see a basis to say a commitment to equal justice demands pursuing the death penalty for Gendron. But, if one sincerely believes the entire system is fundamentally inequitable, I can also see a basis for saying a commitment to equal justice demands never seeking the death penalty. It will be interesting to see what AG Garland decides.

Prior related post:

July 5, 2022 at 12:25 PM | Permalink

Comments

Some things in law are hard and some are easy. This is easy. A long deliberated mass murder out of sheer hate where there is zero doubt that we have the right guy is an obvious case for allowing the jury to decide if the DP is warranted.

Not everything has to be about race, and too much is already. The question is whether a reasonable jury could conclude that the DP has been earned on the facts of this case. No normal person could say that a reasonable jury couldn't reach that conclusion.

If Biden wants to repeal the DP, let him ask Congress to do so. He hasn't and won't, as we all know. While it is still law, neither Biden nor Garland has the authority to repeal it.

The jury is the voice of the community. Let it speak.

Posted by: Bill Otis | Jul 5, 2022 3:24:16 PM

The only thing Garland should be weighing is, “Did he do it?”

This case, like many others, is why DP abolition is an awful idea. Does anyone have a bit of doubt that the accused did it?

It’s off the point, but I’ll say it anyway. The sooner the media, blogs, etc., stop printing names, photos, and manifestos from these people, the better. Mass killing, like LBGTQWERTY$#&^, is a social contagion. We can report on mass murderers without making them famous.

Posted by: TarlsQtr | Jul 5, 2022 4:48:37 PM

He killed 10 people. He should fry. I don't actually care one way or the other about the racist part. Killing 10 people is more than enough reason.

Posted by: William C Jockusch | Jul 6, 2022 11:07:43 PM

Post a comment

In the body of your email, please indicate if you are a professor, student, prosecutor, defense attorney, etc. so I can gain a sense of who is reading my blog. Thank you, DAB