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Supreme Court News

Court Denounces Race Bias in Capital Cases

Tuesday, June 14, 2005 8:07:16 AM
By MICHAEL GRACZYK

 Death row inmate Thomas Miller-El, 50, sits in a visitation cell at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice in Livingston, Texas, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2002. The Supreme Court on Monday, June 13, 2005, overturned the conviction of Miller-EL, a black death row inmate, who said Texas prosecutors unfairly stacked his jury with whites, issuing a harsh rebuke to the state that executes more people than any other. The 6-3 ruling ordered a new trial for  Miller-El, who challenged his conviction for the 1985 murder of a 25-year-old Dallas motel clerk.  (AP Photo/Brett Coomer)HOUSTON (AP) - A U.S. Supreme Court decision that warns against bias in death penalty cases is the latest indication that the high court may be losing confidence in Texas, the state that executes more people than any other, legal experts say.

In Monday's 6-3 decision, the court sided with black murder suspects in Texas and California who said their juries had been unfairly stacked with whites. It was the fourth time in two years that the court has intervened in a Texas death penalty case.

"I think that probably one term ago a critical mass of justices on the Supreme Court lost confidence that the state courts in Texas or the federal courts reviewing cases in Texas were doing what they were supposed to be doing to correct constitutional errors," said David Dow, director of the Texas Innocence Network and a law professor at the University of Houston.


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