Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Adhering to my view that the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, Gregg v. Georgia,
I
Petitioner Malcolm Johnson was charged with the first-degree murder of Ura Thompson, an elderly woman who had been raped and suffocated in her apartment. Recognizing that the prosecution’s case against petitioner rested largely on the opinion of a police chemist, who would testify that petitioner’s hair, blood, semen, and clothing were consistent with physical evidence found in Thompson’s apartment, petitioner’s counsel requested the court prior to trial to appoint a chemist to aid in petitioner’s defense. Counsel argued that a chemist was needed to challenge the police chemist’s qualifications and testimony and to conduct an electrophoresis test, which even the prosecution conceded could show that petitioner was not the perpetrator of the crime. The trial court agreed -with counsel that the appointment of a chemist was warranted, but denied the request on the ground that the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals previously had rejected the view that criminal defendants were entitled to the assistance of such experts. Brief in Opposition 8.
At trial, the prosecution presented two kinds of evidence. First, the prosecution offered evidence showing that petitioner had in his possession at the time of his arrest several items missing from Thompson’s apartment. Second, the prosecution pre
During a separate sentencing proceeding, defense counsel offered mitigating evidence relating to petitioner’s personal background. Witnesses testifying on behalf of petitioner stated, for example, that petitioner’s father frequently had beaten petitioner and his mother, that petitioner’s parents eventually had separated, that petitioner had grown up in poverty, and that petitioner as a youngster had suffered from a mysterious and debilitating illness requiring a long hospital stay. Immediately after defense counsel offered this evidence, the trial court instructed the jury. As part of the charge, the trial court stated: “[Y]ou should not allow sympathy, sentiment or prejudice to affect you in reaching your decision. You should avoid any influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor when imposing sentence.” Id., at 19. After the delivery of these instructions, the prosecutor gave his closing argument, in which he ridiculed the mitigating evidence that petitioner’s counsel had offered. The prosecutor stated:
“I’ve got great empathy for his folks. But so what? . . . [H]is parents divorced when he was young. Oh, wow. . . . That’s a mitigating factor for violent conduct. That’s bologna [sic]. . . . Deprivation builds character. We ought to have fewer silver spoons in the mouths of our children and a little more deprivation. He wants to use that as a mitigating circumstance. ... I was offended by what happened in this courtroom when the little children were placed on the witness stand to try to generate sympathy for a cold-blooded killer. ... So what if he was sick or retarded: What’s that got to do with — we’re dealing with what he is today. . . . Not whether he had a disease when he was a baby, not whether he was mildly retarded at some time in his life.” Id., at 20-21.
At the close of the sentencing hearing, the jury recommended a sentence of death, and the court imposed that sentence.
II
This Court long has acknowledged that when a State brings criminal proceedings against an indigent defendant, it must take
The denial of petitioner’s request for the appointment of an expert chemist resulted in a fundamentally unfair trial in two respects. First, the denial prevented petitioner from raising doubts about the strength of the State’s evidence against him. The prosecution’s case against petitioner rested largely on the testimony of the police chemist that petitioner’s bodily fluids, hair, and clothing comported with samples found at the scene of the crime. We previously have recognized that “‘testimony emanating from the depth and scope of specialized knowledge is very impressive to a jury.’” Ake v. Oklahoma, supra, at 81, n. 7 (quoting F. Bailey & H. Rothblatt, Investigation and Preparation of Criminal Cases § 175 (1970)). Without expert assistance, a defendant will usually be powerless to create doubts in the jury’s mind about such testimony’s strength or correctness. As Justice (then Chief Judge) Cardozo once stated, a defendant is “at an unfair disadvantage if he is unable because of poverty to parry by his own [expert] witnesses the thrusts of those against him.” Reilly v. Berry,
Ill
In California v. Brown,
The problem in this case arises both from the trial court’s instruction to the jury and from the prosecutor’s closing argument. The instruction cautioned the jury to disregard not “mere sympathy,” but “sympathy” in general, which surely includes the sympathy deriving from petitioner’s mitigating evidence. The prosecutor’s closing argument emphatically endorsed the suggestion that the jury should disregard the mitigating evidence petitioner had offered. By consistently ridiculing the evidence relating to petitioner’s background — by saying time and again “so what?”— the prosecutor indicated that such evidence was irrelevant to the sentencing determination. Thus, the conjunction of the court’s antisympathy instruction and the prosecutor’s closing argument diverted the jury from considering the factors of background and character that this Court has decreed a jury must take into account in reaching a sentencing determination.
IV
The handling of this case almost ensured that petitioner would not prevail at either the guilt phase or the sentencing phase of his trial. The denial of the request for expert assistance deprived petitioner of a meaningful opportunity to contest his guilt. The court’s antisympathy instruction and the prosecutor’s closing argument denied petitioner a fair chance to challenge the appropriateness of the death penalty. Because I believe that the trial court unconstitutionally stacked the deck against petitioner at both stages of this capital proceeding, I would grant the petition for certiorari.
Lead Opinion
Ct. Crim. App. Okla. Certiorari denied.
