Vancouver Sun

U.S. prosecutor sent dozens to death row

Flamboyant DA set Guinness record for 47 death sentence conviction­s

- MATT SCHUDEL

Joe Freeman Britt, a flamboyant district attorney from North Carolina notoriousl­y and proudly wore the title of the “deadliest prosecutor” in the United States by winning dozens of death-row conviction­s in his rural district.

Britt died on April 6, in his hometown of Lumberton, N.C. He was 80.

The death was first reported in North Carolina media outlets. The cause of death was not disclosed.

Britt took office as a district attorney in 1974, quickly building a reputation as a tenacious prosecutor in a rural area of eastern North Carolina that included Robeson and Scotland counties.

During the previous 27 years, no one in the two counties had been sentenced to death. After just one year on the job, Britt had won more death-row conviction­s than any other prosecutor in the country.

“I’m not some hick prosecutor just railroadin­g these people away,” Britt told Newsweek magazine in 1975. “I don’t like to use words like crusade, but I’m doing something I like doing that needs to be done.”

Robeson County had a population of about 100,000, equally divided among black, white and American Indian residents. It was one of the poorest regions in North Carolina, with a thriving drug trade and the state’s highest murder rate.

The 6-foot-6 Britt was an intimidati­ng courtroom presence, powerfully built with a shock of wavy hair and a flair for oratory, highlighte­d by his booming baritone voice. He brandished the bloody clothing of murder victims before the jury, waved a Bible in his hand and spoke as if channellin­g the voices of victims.

“That poor victim lying six feet undergroun­d has nobody to speak for him but me,” he told Newsweek, “and nobody to hear his side but 12 jurors.”

As a university student, Britt had campaigned against the death penalty, but after becoming a district attorney, he changed his mind.

He won a designatio­n in the Guinness World Records as “the deadliest prosecutor.”

Britt appeared on the CBS News show 60 Minutes and led training sessions throughout the country to teach other prosecutor­s how to win conviction­s. “Go after them and tear that jugular out,” he said in a session filmed by 60 Minutes.

Britt ultimately won 47 deathsente­nce conviction­s. Because of court rulings, appeals and overturned sentences, only two of the people he prosecuted were put to death.

One of them was Velma Barfield, a grandmothe­r and Sunday school teacher who was convicted of fatally poisoning her boyfriend. She admitted in court that she had also killed her mother and two elderly people in her care. (Her two husbands died in mysterious house fires, but she was not charged with their deaths.)

Barfield, known as North Carolina’s “Death Row Granny,” was executed by lethal injection in 1984.

Despite Britt’s dramatic effec- tiveness as a prosecutor, some of his practices drew criticism from other lawyers and outside observers.

“He’s a fair man who treats everyone the same,” one defence lawyer told the New York Times in 1988. “He’s mean to everyone.”

A 1983 study by an organizati­on investigat­ing justice in rural states found that Britt’s near-total control of the court system in Robeson and Scotland counties led to “a widespread and serious denial of (the) rights” of poor defendants.

Bails were set unreasonab­ly high, the study found, and the court calendar — set by Britt — often forced defendants to wait for weeks before their cases were heard. Minor- ity defendants were prosecuted at higher rates, and many were improperly told they would have to repay the state if they asked for a court-appointed lawyer.

After 14 years as a prosecutor, Britt ran for election as a superior court judge. His opponent in the race was Julian T. Pierce, a Lumbee Indian who had a degree from Georgetown University and had worked in Washington for the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Six weeks before the primary election in 1988, Pierce was shot three times at point-blank range with a shotgun in his home. Two men were arrested and charged with his killing, which was officially determined to be the result of a complicate­d family dispute.

Britt won his judgeship and presided for seven years over the same court in which he had been chief prosecutor. After serving as judge, Britt had a private practice as a defence lawyer before retiring in 2006.

The current prosecutor in the office is Johnson Britt, who has never tried to hide his disdain for his distant cousin.

“He is a bully, and that’s the way he ran this office,” Johnson Britt told the Times in 2014. “People were afraid of him. Lawyers were afraid of him. They were intimidate­d by his tactics. And he didn’t mind doing it that way.”

Joe Freeman Britt was born July 22, 1935, and grew up in Lumberton. His father was a lawyer. He was a graduate of Wake Forest University, then served in the army before receiving his law degree in 1963 from Florida’s Stetson University.

Britt was known for his courtroom quotations from the Bible and literary works, and his love of cigars.

Survivors include his wife of 48 years, Marylyn Linkhaw Britt of Lumberton; two children; and four grandchild­ren.

I’m not some hick prosecutor just railroadin­g these people away.

 ?? JIM BOUNDS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? District attorney Joe Freeman Britt brandished the bloody clothing of murder victims before the jury, waved a Bible and spoke as if channellin­g the voices of victims.
JIM BOUNDS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES District attorney Joe Freeman Britt brandished the bloody clothing of murder victims before the jury, waved a Bible and spoke as if channellin­g the voices of victims.

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