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Exiting Justice Blasts ‘Discriminatory’ Death Penalty

Leon County Judge John Cooper on June 30, 2022, in a screen grab from The Florida Channel.
Hello World Media
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The Florida Channel
Leon County Judge John Cooper on June 30, 2022, in a screen grab from The Florida Channel.

In what might have been his last word on the issue as a member of the Florida Supreme Court, Justice James E.C. Perry on Thursday rendered a blistering analysis of the manner in which the death penalty is carried out in Florida.

Perry's 10-page dissent in the case of Mark James Asay came eight days before his constitutionally mandated retirement from the court on Dec. 30.

The Columbia Law School graduate referred to his pending departure in the dissent in a highly anticipated decision about the application of a seminal U.S. Supreme Court ruling early this year in a case known as Hurst v. Florida. The Hurst decision, premised on a 2002 ruling in a case known as Ring v. Arizona, found that Florida's system of allowing judges, instead of juries, to find the facts necessary to impose the death penalty was an unconstitutional violation of the Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury.

The Florida court on Thursday decided that the Hurst ruling should apply to all cases that were finalized after the 2002 Ring opinion — but not to cases, such as Asay, that were finalized before Ring. The effect will be that Death Row inmates sentenced after Ring will be able to seek new sentencing hearings while those in earlier cases, like Asay, will not.

But, in a blistering condemnation of the death penalty in general, Perry disagreed, calling the majority's decision "arbitrary" and one which "cannot withstand scrutiny under the Eighth Amendment" because it creates two groups of similarly situated persons.

"Coupled with Florida's troubled history in applying the death penalty in a discriminatory manner, I believe that such an application is unconstitutional," wrote Perry.

In a footnote, Perry, who is black, wrote that he is "aware of the irony" of discussing discrimination in the context of the case of Asay, who would be the first white person to be executed for killing a black victim in Florida.

"It does not escape me that Mark Asay is a terrible bigot whose hate crimes are some of the most deplorable this state has seen in recent history," Perry wrote. "However, it is my sworn duty to uphold the Constitution of this state and of these United States and not to ensure retribution against those whose crimes I find personally offensive."

More than 70 percent of Florida prisoners who have been executed were black men whose victims were white, Perry wrote.

"This sad statistic is a reflection of the bitter reality that the death penalty is applied in a biased and discriminatory fashion, even today," he wrote.

Because of his impending retirement, Perry wrote that he felt "compelled to follow other justices who, in the twilight of their judicial careers, determined to no longer 'tinker with the machinery of death.' "

Thursday's majority decision not to apply the Hurst decision to all of the nearly 400 inmates on Death Row "leads me to declare that I no longer believe that there is a method of which the state can avail itself to impose the death penalty in a constitutional manner," Perry wrote, adding that he would find that the Hurst ruling "applies retroactively, period."

Perry pointed out that the Florida court took a different approach to a U.S. Supreme Court decision that found life sentences for juveniles violated Eighth Amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishment. Florida justices said that decision should apply retroactively.