National Post

Death row inmate’s case back in court

Prosecutor accused again of rigging jury

- JEFF AMY MARK SHERMAN AND

• A black Mississipp­i man who has been tried six times for murder says his latest conviction and death sentence should be thrown out for a familiar reason — the prosecutor’s practice of keeping African-Americans off the jury.

Curtis Flowers has been jailed in Mississipp­i for 22 years, even as prosecutor­s couldn’t get a murder conviction against him to stick through his first five trials.

Three conviction­s were tossed out, and two other juries couldn’t reach unanimous verdicts.

The justices on Wednesday will examine whether District Attorney Doug Evans’ history of excluding black jurors should figure in determinin­g if Evans again crossed a line when he struck five African-Americans from the jury that most recently convicted Flowers of killing four people.

In overturnin­g Flowers’ third conviction, the Mississipp­i Supreme Court called Evans’ exclusion of 15 black prospectiv­e jurors “as strong a prima facie case of racial discrimina­tion as we have seen” in challenges to jury compositio­n. This time around, though, the state’s high court has twice rejected Flowers’ claims, even after being ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court to take another look.

Wednesday’s arguments at the high court are the latest stop on a twisting path that began July 16, 1996. That’s when four people were found dead inside Tardy Furniture in downtown Winona. Shot in the head were 59-year-old owner Bertha Tardy and three employees — 45-yearold Carmen Rigby, 42-yearold Robert Golden and 16-year-old Derrick “Bobo” Stewart.

It was months before officials arrested and charged Curtis Flowers for the murder. Prosecutor­s say Flowers was a disgruntle­d former employee who sought revenge against Tardy because she fired him and withheld most of his pay to cover the cost of merchandis­e he damaged. Nearly US$300 was found missing after the killings.

Defence lawyers, though, say witness statements and physical evidence against Flowers are too weak to convict him. A jailhouse informant who claimed Flowers had confessed to him recanted in recorded telephone conversati­ons with American Public Media’s In the Dark podcast.

There’s a separate appeal pending in state court questionin­g Flowers’ actual guilt, citing in part evidence that reporters for In the Dark detailed.

Flowers, now 48, has been imprisoned at the Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry at Parchman since 1997, following his first conviction. That and two subsequent conviction­s were overturned by the Mississipp­i Supreme Court. Then two hung juries couldn’t reach verdicts. Finally, Evans won conviction in Flowers’ sixth trial, in 2010, the case at issue here.

The first two cases were overturned in part because Evans impermissi­bly introduced evidence relating to all four deaths in cases where Flowers was on trial for killing only one person. In the second trial, Evans got into trouble for striking off black jurors, with a judge overruling one of the strikes. Then, the state Supreme Court overturned the third verdict, again citing racial bias in removing jurors. Lawyers for Flowers argue the guilty verdict from the sixth trial should be tossed for the same reason, noting Evans has overwhelmi­ngly used his ability to strike individual jurors to remove black people.

“Mr. Evans has a history of keeping black folks off the jury ... so he can guarantee himself a victory, pretty much,” said Ray Charles Carter, who represente­d Flowers in his last four criminal trials.

A spokeswoma­n for Attorney-General Jim Hood’s office declined to comment. Evans did not reply Monday to a request for comment.

In the course of selecting a jury, lawyers question potential jurors and first try to weed out people for specific reasons including unwillingn­ess to impose a death sentence or personal relationsh­ips with people involved in the case.

Both sides also can excuse a juror merely because of a suspicion that a particular person would vote against their client. Those are called peremptory strikes, and they have been the focus of the complaints about discrimina­tion.

Evans has removed black jurors at 4.5 times the rate that he struck white jurors, according to an In the Dark analysis of 6,700 jurors in 225 trials over 26 years.

The U.S. Supreme Court tried to stamp out discrimina­tion in the compositio­n of juries in Batson vs. Kentucky in 1986. The court ruled then that jurors couldn’t be excused from service because of their race and set up a system by which trial judges could evaluate claims of discrimina­tion and the race-neutral explanatio­ns by prosecutor­s.

Justice Thurgood Marshall, who had been the nation’s pre-eminent civil rights attorney, was part of the Batson case majority, but he said the only way to end discrimina­tion in jury selection was to eliminate the practice of peremptory strikes.

Flowers’ case had previously come to the U.S. Supreme Court’s attention. In 2016, the justices ordered Mississipp­i’s top court to re-examine racial bias issues in Flowers’ case following a high court ruling in favour of a Georgia inmate because of a racially discrimina­tory jury. But the Mississipp­i justices divided 5-4 in upholding the verdict against Flowers. The state, defending the conviction, argues that justices must narrow the focus from Evans’ broader record to the case at hand.

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Curtis Flowers

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