Current:Home > FinanceA DA kept Black women off a jury. California’s Supreme Court says that wasn’t racial bias -Global Capital Summit
A DA kept Black women off a jury. California’s Supreme Court says that wasn’t racial bias
View
Date:2025-04-13 20:27:26
One by one, a California prosecutor eliminated five out of six Black women from the jury pool for a death penalty case in which a white carpet cleaner slayed his client, a young mother.
The attorney in Alameda County had a reason for each dismissal. He believed one, for instance, appeared too reluctant to impose a death sentence. Another had a “liberal bent.” After the defense struck the last Black woman, the jury proceeded with no Black members even though Black people made up close to 15% of Alameda County’s population at the time.
That jury in February 2000 found Giles Albert Nadey guilty of murdering and sodomizing 24-year-old Terena Fermenick, and it sent him to death row.
Twenty-four years later, the Alameda District Attorney’s office is in the hot seat for allegedly striking Black and Jewish people from juries around the time of Nadey’s sentencing. A federal judge two months ago ordered it to review all of its death penalty cases to look for signs of racial bias.
In Nadey’s case, however, the California Supreme Court this week found that the prosecutor had valid reasons to dismiss the Black jurors. It upheld his sentence despite Nadey’s appeal contending his case was tainted by racial bias.
“We conclude in each instance the prosecutor’s reasons were inherently plausible and supported,” the court ruled, citing evidence from jury questionnaires and the prosecutor’s questioning of the stricken jurors.
Their 5-2 decision highlights the complexities of recent moves in court and in the Legislature to address racial bias in capital cases. Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2019 declared a moratorium on executions, writing in his executive order that “death sentences are unevenly and unfairly applied to people of color, people with mental disabilities, and people who cannot afford costly legal representation.”
In Alameda County, an appeal over the 1993 death penalty conviction of Ernest Edward Dykes recently uncovered evidence suggesting prosecutors for years excluded potential Black and Jewish jurors based on their identity. That was the root of U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria’s April order directing Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price to review the office’s past capital convictions.
Black Americans have historically had skeptical attitudes toward the death penalty, and some studies suggest that prosecutors have skewed juries to favor those who support capital punishment, often resulting in the exclusion of Black jurors.
There is less data available for Jewish Americans’ views on capital punishment, but a 2014 poll by the Public Religion Research Institute noted that Jewish Americans were less supportive of capital punishment than white Protestants and white Catholics, while more favorable to it than Black Protestants and Hispanics.
California allows prisoners to appeal on racial bias
The burden is largely on the defendant to prove racial bias in criminal hearings, but in 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court clarified that threshold, ruling that prosecutors have to provide reasonable, race-neutral explanations when challenged in court. California has since enacted greater protections for those contesting their sentences, including a 2022 law that allows those convicted before 2021 to petition the court if there is evidence of racial bias in their case.
As Price weighs potential re-trials or re-sentencing of over 30 affected cases, the court’s move in Nadey’s case highlights the high bar facing attorneys across the state who are seeking to fight capital sentences on the grounds of racial bias in courts.
The decision, written by Justice Carol Corrigan, opens by recounting the gory scene that Fermenick’s husband discovered when he found her body. Their infant was strapped in a car with a heavily soiled diaper, suggesting the baby had been there for some time. He picked up the child and began searching for his wife. He saw her body through a window with a wound to her neck. Investigators determined she’d been sexually assaulted.
The prosecutors used loaded language during the trial, calling Nadey a “tattooed pervert” and a “tattooed predator.” The Supreme Court ruling acknowledged the prosecutor made some errors in the trial, but it found they did not merit a reversal of the jury’s decision. Today, Nadey is 58 and serving time at a state prison in Vacaville.
Dissent points to death penalty reviews
In a dissent, two justices wrote that the court should have paid more attention to Nadey’s argument that Black women were improperly removed from the jury pool. They pointed to the federal order mandating reviews of Alameda County’s death penalty cases.
“Today’s decision is particularly jarring given what has come to light in federal court regarding capital jury selection in Alameda County around the time that Nadey was tried,” the dissent by Justice Goodwin Liu reads.
Advocates for racial justice and ending the death penalty, meanwhile, continue to call for further accountability in the courts. On Tuesday, a coalition of Black and Jewish leaders in Alameda County called attention to the mandated review of capital punishment cases in the county, urging Price to move quickly and unveiling new evidence suggesting prosecutors previously also discriminated against potential LGBTQ+ jurors. Few in attendance were deterred by the state court’s recent ruling.
“It’s unfortunately business as usual,” Robert Bacon, an attorney working with anti-death penalty advocates, told CalMatters, describing the justice’s decision as he stood on the steps of the René C. Davidson Courthouse in Oakland. “Both in the sense of their indifference to the problem of…racial discrimination in jury selection and also in their essentially putting on blinders and refusing to consider this information that’s come to light.”
___
This story was originally published by CalMatters and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
veryGood! (18)
Related
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- A brief history of Knicks' Game 7s at Madison Square Garden as they take on Pacers Sunday
- 6 people killed, 10 others injured in Idaho when pickup crashes into passenger van
- Widespread power outages from deadly Houston storm raise new risk: hot weather
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Watch this Air Force graduate's tears of joy when her husband taps her out
- U.S. governors urge Turks and Caicos to release Americans as Florida woman becomes 5th tourist arrested for ammo in luggage
- Roth 401(k) employer matches may trigger a tax bill for you. Here's what you need to know.
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Watch Dua Lipa make surprise appearance during Chris Stapleton's 2024 ACM Awards performance
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Doctor, 2 children who were students at LSU killed in Nashville plane crash: What to know
- Man acquitted in 2016 killing of pregnant woman and her boyfriend at a Topeka apartment
- Noncitizen voting, already illegal in federal elections, becomes a centerpiece of 2024 GOP messaging
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Watch Dua Lipa make surprise appearance during Chris Stapleton's 2024 ACM Awards performance
- Teachers criticize Newsom’s budget proposal, say it would ‘wreak havoc on funding for our schools’
- Supreme Court backs Biden on CFPB funding suit, avoiding warnings of housing 'chaos'
Recommendation
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
2024 Academy of Country Music Awards: The complete winners list
How many points did Caitlin Clark score last night? What she did in first home game for Fever
Scottie Scheffler emerges from wild PGA Championship ordeal looking like a real person
Small twin
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott gave few pardons before rushing to clear Army officer who killed a protester
Conservative media personality appointed to seat on Georgia State Election Board
Scheffler starts his day in jail, then finds peace and a chance to win in the midst of all the chaos