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Ruling takes killer off death row
by Emery P. Dalesio
Associated Press

Emery P. Dalesio

Associated Press

FAYETTEVILLE — A condemned killer’s trial was so tainted by the racially influenced decisions of prosecutors that he should be removed from death row and serve a life sentence, a judge ruled Friday in a precedent-setting North Carolina decision.

Superior Court Judge Greg Weeks’ decision in the case of Marcus Robinson comes in the first test of a 2009 state law that allows death row prisoners and capital murder defendants to challenge their sentences or prosecutors’ decisions with statistics and other evidence beyond documents or witness testimony.

Only Kentucky has a law like North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act, which says the prisoner’s sentence is reduced to life in prison without parole if the claim is successful.

“The Racial Justice Act represents a landmark reform in capital sentencing in our state,” Weeks said in Fayetteville on Friday. “There are those who disagree with this, but it is the law.”

Race played a “persistent, pervasive and distorting role” in jury selection and couldn’t be explained other than that “prosecutors have intentionally discriminated” against Robinson and other capital defendants statewide, Weeks said. Prosecutors eliminated black jurors more than twice as often as white jurors, according to a study by two Michigan State University law professors Weeks said he found highly reliable.

Robinson’s case is the first of more than 150 pending cases to get an evidentiary hearing before a judge. Prosecutors said they planned to challenge Weeks’ decision, and District Attorney Billy West declined further comment.

Weeks ruled race was a factor in prosecution decisions to reject potential black jurors before the murder trial of Robinson, a black man convicted of killing a white teenager in 1991. The jury that convicted Robinson had nine whites, two blacks and one American Indian.

Robinson and co-defendant Roderick Williams Jr. were convicted of murdering 17-year-old Erik Tornblom after the teen gave his killers a ride from a Fayetteville convenience store. Tornblom was forced to drive to a field, where he was shot with a sawed-off shotgun.

Robinson came close to death in January 2007, but a judge blocked his scheduled execution. Williams is serving a life sentence.

Nearly a dozen members of Tornblom’s family left the courtroom without commenting. Robinson’s mother, Shirley Burns, said she would advocate for the law, which a new Republican majority in the state’s General Assembly is trying to eliminate.

“Everybody is not guilty, everybody is not innocent, but at least be fair,” Burns said after the ruling. “It wasn’t all about Marcus. It’s about anyone who suffers discrimination.”

Central to Robinson’s case was the Michigan State University study. It reported that, of almost 160 people on North Carolina’s death row, 31 had all-white juries, and 38 had only one person of color.

Study co-author and Michigan State professor Barbara O’Brien told a North Carolina legislative panel last month the review of more than 7,400 potential capital jurors couldn’t find anything other than race to explain why potential black jurors were rejected by prosecutors more than twice as often as whites.

Robinson defense attorney James Ferguson of Charlotte told Weeks, who decided the case without a jury, that the study showed race was a significant factor in almost every one of North Carolina’s prosecutorial districts as prosecutors decided to challenge and eliminate black jurors.

“This case is important because it provides an opportunity for all of us to recognize that race far too often has been a significant factor in jury selection in capital cases,” Ferguson said when the hearing opened in January.

Union County prosecutor Jonathan Perry, who helped the Cumberland County District Attorney’s Office argue the case against Robinson, said the study was untrustworthy because it was based on a too-limited sample of death penalty cases to provide meaningful results. The study also failed to detect numerous nonracial reasons that a person might be struck from a jury, Perry said.

The Republican-led Legislature tried to repeal the Racial Justice Act earlier this year, but lawmakers failed to override a veto by Gov. Beverly Perdue, a Democrat.

In 1998, Kentucky was the first state to enact a similar law. But the American Bar Association said in a report it was unclear exactly how often it has been used except for during the 2003 trial of an African-American man accused of kidnapping and killing his ex-girlfriend, who was white. In that case, the defendant’s lawyers used the Kentucky Racial Justice Act during jury selection to include questions that would address the issue of racial discrimination. The defendant, Nathaniel Wood, was convicted of wanton murder and other crimes and sentenced to life in prison without parole.

___

Associated Press writer Janet Cappiello contributed to this report from Louisville, Ky.

Comments
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stilllearning
|
April 23, 2012
How in the world was this discrimination? The defendant had two lawyers and there was the prosecution. If the defendant's lawyers didnt object to the jury that was chosen that was their fault. This guy shot a 17 year old child in the face. How in the world did justice prevail? If that would have been a white man shot a 17 year old black kid would that had been discrimination? Oh yeah it was and it was discrimination because the man wasnt lock up and charge right away! This makes no sense. What about the vicitm's family!!
disgustedinrobeson
|
April 22, 2012
I have been following this story since last week and this is one of the things that just ticks me off so bad. Maybe there was an issue with the jurors but guilty is guilty and the fact that this person is even still living and having to be paid for with my tax money is so frustrating. The 17 y/o kid never had a chance and the fact that the killer is black is a crock in that it is going to be the reason he is allowed to live. That is why this country is in the shape it is in. Someone on one of the other news site made so much sense when they said that they (lawmakers and the like) have a problem with the KKK but the NAACP and PEW and Jesse JAckson and those people are no different and stir up racial crap worse than KKK ever thought of. Give me a break, hold these people (killers) or whatever kind of criminal it is accountable and make them pay with their lives or limbs and you would see the crime rate seriously drop. But people and slimeball lawyers are so good at working on "rights" and "poor pitiful me" bull when the rights of the victims and their families are pushed to side for the sake of the color of someones skin or because their daddy beat them or some crap like that. I will be the first to say that the day and time someone hurts a member of my family with malicious intent I will do my best to save taxpayers money and make sure there will be no chance for our justice system to use some sort of racial or any other excuse instead of letting it be what it is that some people are just mean and do not deserve to walk among other humans and need to die like the animals they are. Wake up america and quit making excuses for people that are just plain BAD.
PercyKution
|
April 24, 2012
EXACTLY. Could'nt have been said better.
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