Cecil C. JOHNSON, Petitioner,
v.
Phil BREDESEN, Governor of Tennessee, et al.
Supreme Court of United States.
STEVENS, J.
The application for stay of execution of sentence of death presented to Justice STEVENS and by him referred to the Court is denied. The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.
*542 Statement of Justice STEVENS, with whom Justice BREYER joins, respecting the denial of certiorari.
Petitioner Cecil Johnson, Jr., has been confined to a solitary cell awaiting his execution for nearly 29 years.[1] Johnson bears little, if any, responsibility for this delay. After his execution date was set and on the day the Governor of Tennessee denied him clеmency, Johnson brought this Eighth Amendment challenge under Rev. Stat. § 1979, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to enjoin the State from executing him after this lengthy and inhumane delay. See Lackey v. Texas,
Johnson was tried and convicted of three counts of first degree murder in 1981. He continues to maintain his innоcence. Complaint ¶ 9. There was no physical evidence tying Johnson to the crime. See Johnson v. Bell,
This case deserves our full attention for another reason. Johnson has brought his Eighth Amendment claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. More typically, such claims have been brought in habeas corpus. See, e.g., Thompson v. Secretary for Dept. of Corrections,
In my view, these procedural questions are inextricably linked to the two underlying evils of intolerable delay. First, the delay itself subjects death row inmates to decades of especially severe, dehumanizing conditions of confinement. See Thompson,
In light of these coextensive cоncerns, I find it quite difficult to conclude, as the courts below did, that Johnson's § 1983 action is the functional equivalent of a habeas petition. Both the gravamen of petitioner's complaint and one of the central concerns animating Lackey is that the "method" of thе State's execution of a death sentencea lengthy delay due in no small part to the State's malfeasance in this caseis itself unconstitutional. We have held that "method" of execution claims are cognizable under § 1983. Hill v. McDonough,
Although the Court of Appеals' treatment of Johnson's claim as a habeas challenge is a close question, its decision to apply § 2244(b)(2)'s successive habeas bar is not. The Sixth Circuit's decision has the curious effect of forcing Johnson to bring a Lackey claim prematurely, possibly *544 at a time before it is ripe.[3] Moreover, construing this claim as the functional equivalent of a habeas action also has the unfortunate effect of inviting further delay: A petitioner would be compelled to return to state court to exhaust his Lackey claim in the first instance under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1). For these reasons, I am persuaded that a Lackey claim, like a claim that one is mentally incompetent to be executed, should, at the very least, not accrue until an execution date is set. See Ceja v. Stewart,
When I first expressed my views in Lackey, I did not envision such procedural obstacles to the consideration of a claim that nearly threе decades of delay on death row, much of it caused by the State, has deprived a person of his Eighth Amendment right to avoid cruel and unusual punishment. One does not need to accept the proposition "that the imposition of the death penalty rеpresents `the pointless and needless extinction of life with only marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purposes,'" Baze v. Rees,
THOMAS, J., concurring.
Justice THOMAS, concurring in the denial of certiorari. In 1981, the petitioner in this case was convicted and sentenced to death for three brutаl murders he committed in the course of a robbery. He spent the next 29 years challenging his conviction and sentence in state and federal judicial proceedings and in a petition for executive clemency. His challenges were unsuccessful. He now contends that the very proceedings he used to contest his sentence should prohibit the State from carrying it out, because executing him after the "lengthy and inhumane delay" occasioned by his appeals would violate the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on "сruel and unusual" punishment. See Ante, at 542 (citing Lackey v. Texas,
It has been 14 years since JUSTICE STEVENS proposed this "novel" Eighth Amendment argument. Lackey, supra, at 1045,
Undeterred, Justice STEVENS insists that petitioner's Eighth Amendment claim warrants relief. It does not, and Justice STEVENS' arguments to the contrary stand in stark cоntrast not only to history and precedent, but also to his own recent statement in Muhammad v. Kelly,
Eager to distinguish this case from Knight and all the other cases in which the Court has refused to grant relief on Lackey grounds, Justice STEVENS asserts that the petition here presents important questions regаrding the proper procedural vehicle for bringing a Lackey claim that merit this Court's review. First, the procedural posture in which a Lackey claim arises does not change the fact that the claim itself has no constitutional foundation. Accordingly, the claim's procedural posture does not matter for purposes of merits relief; a Lackey claim would fail no matter how it arrived. In addition, Justice STEVENS concedes that the unusual contours of petitioner's Eighth Amendment claim are the reason the procedural questions in this case are difficult. Given that, our order in this case rightly adheres to our precedents denying relief on Lackey claims, however presented. Second, even if the procedural claims in this case had merit, they would not warrant review because Justice STEVENS admits that a "sucсessful Lackey claim would have the effect of rendering invalid a particular death sentence," ante, at 543, and thus would "`directly call into question the "fact" or "validity" of the sentence itself,'" ante, at 543 (quoting Nelson v. Campbell,
At bottom, Justice STEVENS' аrguments boil down to policy disagreements with the Constitution and the Tennessee legislature. Ante, at 542-543 ("`[D]elaying an execution does not further public purposes of retribution and deterrence but only diminishes whatever possible benefit society might receive from pеtitioner's death.... In other words, the penological justifications for the death penalty diminish as the delay lengthens." (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Such views, no matter how "steadfast[ly]" held, *546 ante, at 542, are not grounds for enjoining petitioner's execution or fоr granting certiorari on the procedural questions that attend his Lackey claim. As long as our system affords capital defendants the procedural safeguards this Court has long endorsed, defendants who avail themselves of these procedures will face the delays Justice STEVENS laments. There are, of course, alternatives. As Blackstone observed, the principle that "punishment should follow the crime as early as possible" found expression in a "statute, 25 Geo. II. c. 37," decreeing that "in case of murder, the judge shall in his sentеnce direct execution to be performed on the next day but one after sentence passed." 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *397. I have no doubt that such a system would avoid the diminishing justification problem JUSTICE STEVENS identifies, but I am equally confident that such a system would find little support from this Court. See Knight,
NOTES
Notes
[1] "Inmates who are under a sentence of death shall be single-celled and housed in a maximum security unit separate from the general population." State of Tennessee, Dеpt. of Correction, Administrative Policies and Procedures, Index # 506.14(VI)(B)(2) (2009), online at http://www.state.tn.us/correction/pdf/ 506-14.pdf (as visited Dec. 1, 2009).
[2] The possibility that there was constitutional error in Johnson's case is far from unique. See Root, Cruel and Unusual Punishment: A Reconsideration of the Lackey Claim, 27 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 281, 312-313 (2002) (discussing error rates in capital trials) (citing J. Liebman, J. Fagan, & V. West, A Broken System: Error Rates in Capital Cases, 1973-1995, p. 5 (2000)).
[3] The State argues, and the courts below agreed, that Johnson should have brought his Eighth Amendment claim in the federal habeas proceeding he commenced in 1999. At that point in time, Johnson had been on death row for 18 years. This was one year longer than the petitioner in Lackey. Of course, by 1999, the Court had denied certiorari in Lackey and in Knight v. Florida,
