Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Petitioner claims that the California Supreme Court reviewed his death sentence in a manner inconsistent with this Court’s holding in Clemons v. Mississippi,
At the guilt phase of a capital trial in California, the trier of fact determines whether the “special circumstances” alleged by the prosecution are true. Cal. Penal Code Ann. § 190.1(a) (West 1988). At the penalty phase, the trier of fact weighs any aggravating circumstances, including the special circumstances found to be true, against any mitigating circumstances. § 190.3.
At petitioner’s trial, the jury found the existence of two special circumstances — that the murder was committed in the course of a kidnaping, and that the murder was accompanied by the infliction of torture. The California Supreme Court reversed the jury’s finding as to the special circumstance of torture, because the jury was not instructed that the circumstance required proof of intent to torture.
In my view, such cursory review is clearly insufficient under Clemons. Mississippi, like California, requires its juries to weigh aggravating and mitigating circumstances. In Clemons, the jury had considered an aggravating circumstance we assumed to be unconstitutionally vague — that the murder was ‘“especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel.’ ”
I would do the same here. The California Supreme Court did not reweigh the aggravating and mitigating circumstances. The court instead appears to have chosen Clemons’ second option, harmless error analysis. Rather than reviewing the record, however, to determine whether the jury would beyond a reasonable doubt have imposed the death sentence given a finding of one special circumstance rather than two, the California Supreme Court upheld the sentence based solely on the fact that the error did not alter the mix of evidence weighed by the jury at the penalty phase. This holding is irreconcilable with Clemons: The unconstitutional vagueness of the “especially heinous” instruction did not change the mix of evidence presented to the jury in that case either, but that fact alone did not support a finding of harmlessness. The California Supreme Court’s conclusion, moreover, makes little sense: All jury instruction errors would be harmless under this reasoning, because none of them add to or subtract from the evidence considered by the jury.
In a different case, the California Supreme Court’s brief discussion of this issue might be interpreted as a finding that the evidence of torture was so overwhelming that the instructional error
Lead Opinion
Sup. Ct. Cal. Certiorari denied.
