Should
Maryland Carry Out the Premeditated Killing of Vernon Evans?
Statement
By Kevin Zeese in Reaction to the Stay of Evans' Execution
Maryland's premeditated killing of
Vernon Evans was stayed by the Maryland Court of Appeals on Monday, February 6, 2006.
The State's use of the power to kill another human should be a time
for reflection by Maryland and the nation. Do we want to be a nation
of executioners? Do we want to participate in killing people through
a very flawed justice system? Do we want to continue to continue the
cycle of violence?
There are many questions about the
death penalty generally, how it is applied in Maryland and how it was
applied in Evans' case. There is no question that the U.S. justice
system is imperfect. I know from having been a practicing criminal
lawyer that mistakes are made, biases exist and wealth makes a
difference in US courts. The questions about the death penalty are
so significant that 106 nations, most civilized countries, have
abolished it. The United States, Iran and China are the most
prolific executioners in the world.
The Maryland court system
has a record of false convictions in death penalty cases. For
example, in 1993 Kirk Bloodsworth was freed after DNA testing proved
his innocence. Yet, he had been convicted twice by Maryland courts.
In the past 30 years, 122 inmates were found to be innocent and
released from death row.
In 2003 the U.S. Supreme Court –
often hostile to death penalty defendants – overturned a death
sentence of Kevin Wiggins in Maryland because of ineffective
assistance of counsel. Ineffective counsel in death cases is all too
common, As Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has said: “I have yet to see
a death case among the dozens coming to the Supreme Court on
eve-of-execution stay application in which the defendant was well
represented at trial.” A death sentence seems to have more to do
with the defense lawyer than the defendant.
A 2003 study conducted by the
University of Maryland found that racial bias impacts capital
punishment in Maryland. A defendant is twice as likely to receive
the death penalty if the victim is white. And if the defendant is
black and the victim is white the odds are even greater. Further,
geography matters in Maryland, Baltimore County is 13 times more
likely to institute a death sentence then across the border in
Baltimore City.
All of
these weaknesses – racial bias, poor defense lawyering, geographic
bias – have shown themselves in the case of Vernon Evans.
Evans
was prosecuted in Baltimore County where the
State’s Attorney says he will seek the death penalty in every
“death-eligible” crime. In fact, the UMD Study found the office
sought death in 99 of 152 death-eligible crimes.
Evans was
the 'typical' death penalty defendant – he was African American and
the victims were white. The Baltimore County State’s
Attorney’s Office used 8 of his 10 peremptory strikes against
African Americans, even though they were only 31% of members that the
State had an opportunity to strike from the jury.
The jury
never heard compelling evidence that showed Evans was not guilty of
the actual shooting. In Maryland only the actual shooter is eligible
for a death sentence. Yet witnesses — including the only eyewitness
to the crime itself — never testified at Vernon’s trial or
sentencing. Since then, the eyewitness has testified under oath that
the shooter was taller than Vernon (who is only 5’2” and
nicknamed “Shorty”) and that the shooter’s clothes did not
match what Vernon was wearing at the time of the murders. Two other
witnesses have corroborated this account and cast doubt on the
State’s witnesses. Why didn't they testify? A combination of poor
defense lawyering and the failure of the prosecutor to provide
defense lawyers with FBI witness reports.
The jury was also
not told of mitigating circumstances that would normally be
considered in sentencing someone to death. Evans suffered frequent,
severe beatings at the hands of his father and was sexually assaulted
by a stranger as a young boy. Vernon’s first suicide attempt came
at the age of ten. His family sought no treatment for him, and he
turned to alcohol and drugs in his early teens. The jury was not
told this critical information and no court ever reviewed the
performance of his counsel at sentencing.
And,
the jury was misled to believe that Evans might be released on parole
when in fact he was facing a sentence of life with no possibility of
parole. Jurors in Evans case have said they would have sentenced him
to life if they had the option. Today, Maryland jurors do have that
choice.
The death penalty is akin to be struck by lightening
in the criminal justice system. The odds increase based on the
color of the victim, the color of the accused and geography and most
importantly the quality of legal representation. But only 2% of known
murderers are sentenced to death. Some of the most heinous murders do
not result in death sentences, while less heinous crimes are punished
by death. The National Law Journal concluded that capital trials are
“more like a random flip of the coin than a delicate balancing of
scales” of justice.
On December 2, 2005, the United States
carried out its 1,000th execution since capital punishment was
reinstated in 1976 when Kenneth Boyd was killed in North Carolina.
Boyd's lawyer, Thomas Maher, after watching the execution, said,
“This 1,000th execution is a milestone. It's a milestone we should
all be ashamed of.” The cycle of violence brutalizes all of us,
deadens our sensitivity to the precious nature of every single human
life. Rather than pandering to the lust for revenge let us hope that
Vernon Evans breaks the cycle and stops further killing by Maryland
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