On January 11, 2003, Illinois Governor George Ryan--a Republican on record as saying that "some crimes are so horrendous . . . that society has a right to demand the ultimate penalty"--commuted the capital sentences of all 167 prisoners on his state's death row. Critics demonized Ryan. For opponents of capital punishment, however, Ryan became an instant hero whose decision was seen as a signal moment in the "new abolitionist" politics to end killing by the state.
In this compelling and timely work, Austin Sarat provides the first book-length work on executive clemency. He turns our focus from questions of guilt and innocence to the very meaning of mercy. Starting from Ryan's controversial decision, Mercy on Trial uses the lens of executive clemency in capital cases to discuss the fraught condition of mercy in American political life. Most pointedly, Sarat argues that mercy itself is on trial. Although it has always had a problematic position as a form of "lawful lawlessness," it has come under much more intense popular pressure and criticism in recent decades. This has yielded a radical decline in the use of the power of chief executives to stop executions.
From the history of capital clemency in the twentieth century to surrounding legal controversies and philosophical debates about when (if ever) mercy should be extended, Sarat examines the issue comprehensively. In the end, he acknowledges the risks associated with mercy--but, he argues, those risks are worth taking.
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Austin Sarat is the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College and Five College Fortieth Anniversary Professor. He is author, coauthor, or editor of more than fifty books, including "When the State Kills" and "Law, Violence, and the Possibility of Justice" (both Princeton), and "Divorce Lawyers and their Clients". His teaching has been featured in the "New York Times" and on the "Today Show". Sarat was the corecipient of the 2004 Reginald Heber Smith Award given biennially to honor the best scholarship on "the subject of equal access to justice."
"Today, more than ever, Americans are asking questions about what role, if any, the death penalty should have in modern law enforcement. Professor Sarat makes an important contribution to that debate by demonstrating the essential role of mercy and clemency in the criminal justice system. This thoughtful book should be read by every citizen who cares about the issue, and by every governor and president entrusted with the power to punish or pardon."--Senator Edward M. Kennedy
"In a very readable style, Austin Sarat's Mercy on Trial contributes mightily to the study of mercy, rehabilitation, redemption, and the complexity of the gubernatorial pardon. This work will help reform our justice system and hasten abolition."--George H. Ryan, former Governor of Illinois
"As one of America's preeminent scholars of the history and philosophical underpinnings of capital punishment, Austin Sarat has debunked every myth used to rationalize the death penalty. Now, with the publication of Mercy on Trial, Professor Sarat explores the jurisprudence and other factors surrounding capital clemency in America. He reminds us that, absent skilled advocacy, innocence offers little protection from state-sanctioned violence. Professor Sarat sends a powerful message to not only the legal community, but to every American who cares about human rights and equal justice under the law."--John D. Podesta, former Chief of Staff to President Clinton and President and CEO, Center for American Progress
"Should mercy play a role in a governor's decision to commute a death sentence, to spare a condemned person? The question is important with regard to what kind of society we want to have. We are indebted to Austin Sarat for addressing it in Mercy on Trial as well as examining Governor George Ryan's commutation of 167 death sentences in Illinois in 2003, the decline of clemency as a result of the 'tough on crime' politics of our time, and the legal, historical, and philosophical aspects of the clemency power. This book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand executive clemency in the United States."--Stephen B. Bright, Director, Southern Center for Human Rights
"Professor Austin Sarat has written a compelling, comprehensive, and persuasive book on mercy and the death penalty--a must-read for anyone concerned about capital punishment, and one that offers deeply philosophical and reflective views on one of the most controversial issues today. Whether you support or oppose the death penalty, Sarat's book is a powerful, probative, and thorough treatment of the subject, and will be well-received in many quarters."--Charles J. Ogletree, Jr., Jesse Climenko Professor of Law, Harvard Law School, and author of All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of Brown v. Board of Education
"Thought-provoking, gripping, well-researched, and always passionate, Mercy on Trial is a splendid book on one of our most controversial issues. You will be moved by it. You will want to discuss it. Austin Sarat is one of our greatest thinkers in the areas of jurisprudence and ethics. Must reading."--Harlan Coben, author of Tell No One, Just Look, and Gone for Good
"A thoroughly approachable and enjoyable read, Mercy on Trial is an in-depth exploration of the pardoning power and the paradox of a legal power that is not legally reviewable. With his usual interdisciplinary flair, Austin Sarat brings together law, current events, political history, and philosophical theory, and does so in a way that is illuminating and instructive."--David Garland, New York University, author of The Culture of Control
THE ILLINOIS STORY
If we simply use the term "mercy" to refer to certain of the demands of justice (e.g., the demand for individuation), then mercy ceases to be an autonomous virtue and instead becomes part of ... justice. It thus becomes obligatory, and all the talk about gifts, acts of grace, supererogation, and compassion becomes quite beside the point. If, on the other hand, mercy is totally different from justice and actually requires (or permits) that justice sometimes be set aside, it then counsels injustice. In short, mercy is either a vice (injustice) or redundant part of justice. -Jeffrie Murphy No one who has never watched the hands of a clock marking the last minutes of a condemned man's existence, knowing that he alone has the temporary Godlike power to stop the clock, can realize the agony of deciding an appeal for executive clemency. -Michael DiSalle Death is power's limit, the moment that escapes it. -Michel Foucault
ON JANUARY 10 AND 11, 2003, Governor George Ryan emptied Illinois's death row. Exercising his clemency powers under the state constitution, he first pardoned 4 and then commuted 167 condemned inmates' sentences in the broadest attack on the death penalty in decades. Ryan's act was a compelling moment in our society's continuing turmoil about crime and punishment, appearing, at first glance, to be a rare display of mercy in distinctly unmerciful times. As a seemingly humane, compassionate gesture in a culture whose attitudes toward punishment emphasize strictness not mercy, severity not forgiveness, it ran against the grain of today's tough-on-crime, law-and-order politics. In the controversy that it occasioned, Ryan's clemency put mercy on trial, forcing us to consider anew when and to whom it should be accorded.
It was, in addition, the single sharpest blow to capital punishment since the U.S. Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional in 1972. Because Ryan pardoned or commuted the sentences of sadistic rapists and murderers as well as those who seemed more sympathetic candidates for mercy and those whose convictions were questionable, his decision produced an explosive reaction among people who believe that death is both a morally appropriate and necessary punishment. They demonized Ryan and denounced his clemency in the strongest possible terms, claiming that he had dishonored the memory of murder victims, inflicted great pain on their surviving families, made the citizens of Illinois less safe, and abused his power. For opponents of capital punishment, Ryan became an instant hero. His decision, they claimed, would be a signal moment in the evolution of a "new abolitionist" politics. They hoped it would mark a turning point on the way toward the demise of state killing.
That Ryan acted with two days left in his term and in the face of vocal opposition from citizens, the surviving families of murder victims, prosecutors, and almost all of Illinois's political establishment only compounded the drama. In addition, and even to many opponents of capital punishment, Ryan's action was a worrying reminder of the virtually unchecked powers of chief executives at the state and federal level to grant clemency. In a society committed to the rule of law, to the idea that all of the government's actions should be governed and disciplined by rules, that all government powers should be checked and balanced, that those who govern always should be accountable for their acts, what Ryan did exposed a gaping hole in the fabric of legality. It seemed to push to, and beyond, the limits of law's ability to regulate executive power, and, like the actions of the president in times of national emergency, hinted at the specter of power out of control, a dangerous, undemocratic, unaccountable power lying dormant and waiting for an occasion to be exercised.
George Ryan hardly seemed typecast for such a dramatic part in our contemporary history. Prior to becoming governor, Ryan had had a long career in Illinois politics, serving in the state legislature from 1973 to1983, as lieutenant governor from 1983 to 1991, and as secretary of state in 1991. Because Ryan embodied a rather unremarkable combination of familiar midwestern Republican positions-fiscally conservative, moderate in his social views-his 1998 election as governor was barely noticed nationally and greeted with little fanfare locally. This white-haired, sixty-nine-year-old former pharmacist from Kankakee, Illinois, did not fit anyone's stereotype of either demon or hero, much less of the kind of national and international celebrity his clemency decision would make him. Nothing in his personality, or prior political record, suggested he would make much of a splash during his gubernatorial term or become a key national anti-death penalty activist. Ryan himself noted, "I mean, I am a Republican pharmacist from Kankakee. All of a sudden I've got gays and lesbians by my side. African-Americans. Senators from Italy, groups from around the world. It's a little surprising."
Throughout his career in government he had been an outspoken supporter of capital punishment, and in his gubernatorial campaign he had restated his belief in the appropriateness of the death penalty. "I believed some crimes were so heinous," Ryan said of his long-held position on capital punishment, "that the only proper way of protecting society was execution. I saw a nation in the grip of increasing crime rates; and tough sentences, more jails, the death penalty-that was good government." In 1977, after the Supreme Court lifted its ban on execution, a bill to reinstate the death penalty came before the state legislature in Springfield. When an anti-death penalty legislator asked his colleagues to consider whether they personally would be willing to throw the switch, "Ryan rose to his feet with 'unequivocal words of support' for execution-words he now regrets. The truth, though, was that Ryan never thought about capital punishment much before that vote or for more than twenty years afterward, except as an abstract idea of justice. 'I supported the death penalty, I believed in the death penalty, I voted for the death penalty.'"
During his tenure as governor his views about capital punishment were radically transformed, with the result that he took two particularly dramatic actions: the first a statewide moratorium on executions, which he announced in February 2000; the second his mass clemency. These two acts helped to galvanize and change the national discussion about capital punishment.
THE SHIFTING TERRAIN
By the time Ryan became governor, voices at both the national and state level had begun to raise new and disturbing questions about state killing. To take but one particularly important example, in February 1997 the American Bar Association issued a call for a nationwide moratorium on executions. The ABA proclaimed that the death penalty as "currently administered" was not compatible with central values of our Constitution. Thus it called
upon each jurisdiction that imposes capital punishment not to carry out the death penalty until the jurisdiction implements policies and procedures ... intended to (1) ensure that death penalty cases are administered fairly and impartially, in accordance with due process, and (2) minimize the risk that innocent people may be executed.
In the report accompanying its call for a moratorium, the ABA pointed to three glaring flaws in the death penalty process. First was the failure of most states to guarantee competent counsel in capital cases. Because those states have no regular public defender systems, indigent capital defendants are frequently assigned lawyers with no interest, or experience, in capital litigation. The result is often an incompetent defense that is all the more damaging in light of rules preventing defenses not raised, or waived, at trial from being raised on appeal or in habeas proceedings. The ABA thus called for the appointment of "two experienced attorneys at each stage of a capital case."
The second basis for the ABA's recommended moratorium was a significant erosion in postconviction protections for capital defendants caused by the passage of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. Contradicting the provisions of that act, the ABA said that "federal courts should consider claims that were not properly raised in state court if the reason for the default was counsel's ignorance or neglect and that a prisoner should be permitted to file a second or successive federal petition if it raises a new claim that undermines confidence in his or her guilt or the appropriateness of the death sentence." Third, the ABA called for a moratorium because of the persistence of "longstanding patterns of racial discrimination ... in courts around the country." The ABA cited research showing that defendants are more likely to receive a death sentence if the victim is white rather than black, and that in some jurisdictions African Americans tend to receive the death penalty more than do white defendants. The report urged the development of "effective mechanisms" to eliminate racial prejudice in capital cases.
Following the ABA's recommendation, activists mounted a statewide moratorium campaign in Illinois, and legislators introduced bills in the state legislature calling on then-governor Jim Edgar to stop executions and appoint a commission to conduct a comprehensive review of the state's death penalty system. The Chicago Council of Lawyers joined in the call for a moratorium, citing especially the fact that between 1993 and 1997 seven death row inmates had been freed after it was discovered that they were convicted and sentenced to death for crimes they did not commit. In July 1997 Governor Edgar signed into law a bill providing funds for postconviction DNA testing of inmates on death row. And late in that year, the Illinois State Bar Association formed a special committee to study the state's capital case process and to recommend needed reforms.
During the 1990s the increasingly availability of DNA testing throughout the country and in Illinois resulted in dramatic exonerations of inmates condemned to death, like those cited by the Chicago Council of Lawyers. Among the most striking and important of these cases was the exoneration in February 1999 of Anthony Porter. Porter, an African-American man with an IQ of 51, had been convicted and sentenced to die for the double homicide of Marilyn Green and Jerry Hillard in 1982. His conviction and sentence were later upheld on appeal by both the Illinois and the U.S. Supreme Court. However, forty-eight hours before his scheduled execution in 1998, a judge entered a stay to allow for a hearing on the question of whether Porter's IQ was so low that he should not be executed.
After the stay was entered, the case against Porter began to unravel when a key prosecution witness signed an affidavit saying that he lied under oath during the trial. In early 1999 an inmate in state prison admitted that his uncle and he "took care" of Green and Hillard because of a drug debt. Finally, a private investigator working on the Porter case with a Northwestern University journalism professor and his students obtained a videotaped confession from the uncle acknowledging that he had committed the murders. The Porter case quickly came to symbolize what death penalty opponents had long claimed about rampant problems in the administration of capital punishment, and it spurred calls for change. Newspaper editorials, the Illinois State Bar Association's Section on Criminal Justice, and many public officials called on Ryan to immediately stop all executions and launch a thoroughgoing review of the capital punishment system in Illinois. Yet Ryan at first refused. Instead, a spokesperson for the governor noted at the time of Porter's release that Ryan would "review death penalty case[s] on a case-by-case basis, just as the Supreme Court does, and will make an appropriate decision on each at an appropriate time."
Ryan's initial reaction to the Porter case echoed his predecessors' reactions to earlier exonerations. As his spokesperson put it, "I know people use these reversals as an argument for a moratorium ... but an argument can also be made that the system is working as designed." In Ryan's view, Porter's exoneration proved that the system worked. As he said at the time, "I still support the death penalty, and there's no question it ought to be applied fairly and accurately and I'm willing to work with anyone to ensure that process goes on. We're still looking for the best way to do that." Later, reflecting on the transformation of his views about the death penalty, Ryan put a different spin on the Porter case. "I was caught completely off-guard. Maybe I shouldn't have been, but I was. That mentally retarded man came within two days of execution, and but for those students Anthony Porter would have been dead and buried. I felt jolted into reexamining everything I believed in." Nonetheless, a conflicted Ryan still resisted a full-fledged review of Illinois's capital apparatus, though he endorsed one reform: an $18 million capital-crimes litigation fund to ensure that defendants like Porter, as well as prosecutors, have access to investigative resources.
In the meantime, a month after Porter's exoneration, Ryan received a clemency request in the capital case of Andrew Kokoraleis, who had been convicted and sentenced for his role in the kidnapping, rape, and mutilation murder of a twenty-one-year-old woman. Referring to himself as the "guy who pushes the plunger," Ryan publicly agonized about his decision, but, in the end, decided to let the execution proceed. He explained his denial of clemency by saying that "some crimes are so horrendous and so heinous that society has a right to demand the ultimate penalty."
Within three months of the Kokoraleis execution, two more Illinois death row inmates were exonerated: one by DNA evidence, the other when a jailhouse informant's testimony was discredited. The state judiciary began its own investigation, and calls for a moratorium grew more frequent and intense. Still, Ryan recalled, "I was resisting." But one day, "the attorney general called seeking a new execution date for an inmate. In my heart at that moment, I couldn't go forward with it." Ryan's critics suggested that his emerging doubts about capital punishment were less the product of a genuine change of heart than a political expedient designed to deflect attention from a brewing scandal and charges of corruption in the secretary of state's office during his tenure there.
Whatever its true motivation Ryan's transformation was facilitated by the publication in November 1999 of a four-part series in the Chicago Tribune entitled "The Failure of the Death Penalty in Illinois." Written by Ken Armstrong and Steve Mills, these articles painted a devastating picture of "a system so riddled with faulty evidence, unscrupulous trial tactics and legal incompetence" as to be unable to do justice reliably in capital cases. Armstrong and Mills documented numerous cases in which capital defendants were represented by incompetent lawyers. In addition, they reported that nearly half the state's death penalty cases were reversed on appeal, and many were marked by racial discrimination in jury selection. Their articles recounted case after case in which capital convictions were obtained on the basis of jailhouse snitches and confessions that police and prosecutors knew, or should have known, were of questionable value. The cumulative picture painted by the Tribune series was devastating. It exposed a system "so plagued by unprofessionalism, imprecision, and bias that ... the state's ultimate form of punishment is its least credible." (Continues...)
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