Supreme Court’s worst decisions ever: legal expert

I did not alter this commentary at all. It is as it was done by the author. I did shorten up the colorful links at they are distracting. I agree with the author, we do not need to murder people because of what they did. If you are nosey? I will tell you a lifetime in prison is a living hell. It is not to be taken lightly. I wish all people could go and visit a level 4 at least. An hour out and the rest of the day in your cell besides meals. That is unless you messed up and then the meal comes to you.

Beside the law, there are political implications involved in this.

Alex Henderson

The Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Warren Burger, temporarily halted the death penalty in 1972 with its Furman v. Georgia ruling — which, according to legal scholars, amounted to a de facto moratorium on capitol punishment in the United States. But the Burger Court gave the death penalty the green light with Gregg, whose dissenters included Justices Thurgood Marshall (the Court’s first Black justice) and William J. Brennan Jr. (an appointee of GOP President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956).

The court’s decision in Gregg was an exercise in smoke and mirrors and wishful thinking. Fifty years of constitutional fiction is enough. It is time to face the fact that Gregg failed to put the death penalty on a sound footing and that nothing can improve on Gregg’s frailties.

Borrowing language from an earlier case, Justice William Douglas argued that giving “untrammeled discretion” to the judge or jury to make sentencing decisions in capital cases was “offensive to … the Constitution.” Such “discretionary statutes are unconstitutional,” he added, “in their operation.”

“They are pregnant with discrimination,” Douglas added, “and discrimination is an ingredient not compatible with the idea of equal protection of the laws that is implicit in the ban on ‘cruel and unusual’ punishments.”

The mere risk of discrimination was intolerable to the Furman court.

“Seven,” he says, “made the death penalty mandatory for murder. Others, including Georgia, instead attempted to make the process less ‘arbitrary’ by requiring capital jurors to find ‘aggravating’ factors, by separating capital trials into the guilt/innocence and sentencing phases we see today and by guaranteeing appellate review of all death sentences.”

Georgia identified the conditions under which someone who committed a capital crime would be “death-eligible.” It specified 10 aggravating factors, the presence of which would allow a jury to return a death sentence in the belief that such “guided discretion” would pass constitutional muster.

And it did.

Mandery suggests that the “political and legal momentum against Furman weighed on the Supreme Court justices when they heard Gregg v. Georgia. That led them to “reject the mandatory statutes, which they regarded as barbaric, but uphold the guided discretion approach.”

Discretion that is “suitably directed and limited” would “ensure … the sentencing authority is apprised of the information relevant to the imposition of sentence and provided with standards to guide its use of that information.”

“Guided” discretion sounds good. But, as the Gregg court recognized, that guidance could only take a jury so far. Once it was found that a capital crime fell within the aggravating factors specified in the statute, the offender could be given a death sentence.

Whether they would receive such a sentence was again left to the jury, to be exercised in a wholly discretionary manner. In Stewart’s view, what a jury was not to be trusted to do without the guidance given in the Georgia statute, they could now be entrusted to do.

Do you believe in magic? Apparently, Stewart and the six other justices who joined the majority did.

But even he recognized that his formula could only “minimize (not eliminate) the risk of wholly arbitrary and capricious action.” Nonetheless, the deed was done, and the death penalty was reborn.

Gregg, Mandery writes, “created the bedrock principles of modern death penalty jurisprudence: that a non-arbitrary death penalty satisfies the Constitution and that the requirement of non-arbitrariness could be satisfied by Georgia’s approach.” But since Gregg was handed down, we have learned that arbitrary and capricious action has remained characteristic of America’s death penalty system.