Current:Home > ContactJudge overturns Mississippi death penalty case, says racial bias in picking jury wasn’t fully argued -GrowthSphere Strategies
Judge overturns Mississippi death penalty case, says racial bias in picking jury wasn’t fully argued
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:55:07
GREENVILLE, Miss. (AP) — A federal judge has overturned the death penalty conviction of a Mississippi man, finding a trial judge didn’t give the man’s lawyer enough chance to argue that the prosecution was dismissing Black jurors for discriminatory reasons.
U.S. District Judge Michael P. Mills ruled Tuesday that the state of Mississippi must give Terry Pitchford a new trial on capital murder charges.
Mills wrote that his ruling is partially motivated by what he called former District Attorney Doug Evans ' history of discriminating against Black jurors.
A spokesperson for Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch said Sunday that the state intends to appeal. Online prison records show Pitchford remained on death row Sunday at Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman.
Mills ordered the state to retry the 37-year-old man within six months, and said he must be released from custody if he is not retried by then.
Pitchford was indicted on a murder charge in the fatal 2004 robbery of the Crossroads Grocery, a store just outside Grenada, in northern Mississippi. Pitchford and friend, Eric Bullins, went to the store to rob it. Bullins shot store owner Reuben Britt three times, fatally wounding him, while Pitchford said he fired shots into the floor, court documents state.
Police found Britt’s gun in a car at Pitchford’s house. Pitchford, then 18, confessed to his role, saying he had also tried to rob the store 10 days earlier.
But Mills said that jury selection before the 2006 trial was critically flawed because the trial judge didn’t give Pitchford’s defense lawyer enough of a chance to challenge the state’s reasons for striking Black jurors.
To argue that jurors were being improperly excluded, a defendant must show that discriminatory intent motivated the strikes. In Pitchford’s case, judges and lawyers whittled down the original jury pool of 61 white and 35 Black members to a pool with 36 white and five Black members, in part because so many Black jurors objected to sentencing Pitchford to death. Then prosecutors struck four more Black jurors, leaving only one Black person on the final jury.
Prosecutors can strike Black jurors for race-neutral reasons, and prosecutors at the trial gave reasons for removing all four. But Mills found that the judge never gave the defense a chance to properly rebut the state’s justification.
“This court cannot ignore the notion that Pitchford was seemingly given no chance to rebut the state’s explanations and prove purposeful discrimination,” Mills wrote.
On appeal, Pitchford’s lawyers argued that some of the reasons for rejecting the jurors were flimsy and that the state didn’t make similar objections to white jurors with similar issues.
Mills also wrote that his decision was influenced by the prosecution of another Black man by Evans, who is white. Curtis Flowers was tried six times in the shooting deaths of four people. The U.S. Supreme Court found Evans had improperly excluded Black people from Flowers’ juries, overturning the man’s conviction and death sentence.
Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh called it a “relentless, determined effort to rid the jury of Black individuals.”
In reporting on the Flowers case, American Public Media’s “In the Dark” found what it described as a long history of racial bias in jury selection by Evans.
Mississippi dropped charges against Flowers in September 2020, after Flowers was released from custody and Evans turned the case over to the state attorney general.
Mills wrote that, on its own, the Flowers case doesn’t prove anything. But he said that the Mississippi Supreme Court should have examined that history in considering Pitchford’s appeal.
“The court merely believes that it should have been included in a ‘totality of the circumstances’ analysis of the issue,” Mills wrote.
veryGood! (59)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Poet Safiya Sinclair reflects on her Rastafari roots and how she cut herself free
- Judge blocks 2 provisions in North Carolina’s new abortion law; 12-week near-ban remains in place
- Watch livestream: Duane Davis to appear in court for murder charge in Tupac Shakur's death
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Shelling in northwestern Syria kills at least 5 civilians, activists and emergency workers say
- Highlights from AP-NORC poll about the religiously unaffiliated in the US
- Australia holds historic Indigenous rights referendum
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- A Texas neighborhood became a target of the right over immigration. Locals are pushing back
Ranking
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- California workers will get five sick days instead of three under law signed by Gov. Newsom
- Your blood pressure may change as you age. Here's why.
- Striking auto workers and Detroit companies appear to make progress in contract talks
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Dungeon & Dragons-themed whiskey out this week: See the latest brands, celebs to release new spirits
- AP, theGrio join forces on race and democracy panel discussion, as 2024 election nears
- American ‘Armless Archer’ changing minds about disability and targets golden ending at Paris Games
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
'It's going to help me retire': Georgia man wins $200,000 from Carolina Panthers scratch-off game
Tennessee Dem Gloria Johnson raises $1.3M, but GOP Sen. Marsha Blackburn doubles that in Senate bid
Western countries want a UN team created to monitor rights violations and abuses in Sudan
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Scottish authorities sign extradition order for US fugitive accused of faking his death
New technology uses good old-fashioned wind to power giant cargo vessels
Biden administration waives 26 federal laws to allow border wall construction in South Texas