Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill would allow some death row inmates to be resentence­d

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Jurors in 1994 recommende­d by a 9-3 vote that Rocky Myers be spared the death penalty and serve life in prison. A judge sentenced him to die anyway.

Myers is now one of nearly three dozen inmates on Alabama’s death row who were placed there under a now-abolished system that allowed judges to override a jury’s recommenda­tion in death penalty cases.

Activists held a rally Thursday outside the Alabama Statehouse urging lawmakers to make the judicial override ban retroactiv­e and allow those inmates an opportunit­y to be resentence­d.

“Justice demands us to afford those individual­s who are still on death row by judicial override the opportunit­y to be resentence­d,” Rep. Chris England, the bill sponsor, said.

Alabama in 2017 became the last state to abandon the practice of allowing judges to override a jury’s sentence recommenda­tion in death penalty cases. The change was not retroactiv­e. Alison Mollman, senior legal counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, said there are 33 people on Alabama’s death row who were sentenced to death by a judge even though a jury had recommende­d life imprisonme­nt.

The bill is before the House Judiciary Committee. It has yet to receive a vote with 13 meeting days remaining in the legislativ­e session.

A telephone message to a victims’ advocacy group left late Thursday afternoon about the bill was not immediatel­y returned.

Alabama this year became the first state to carry out an execution with nitrogen gas when it executed Kenneth Smith. Smith was one of two men convicted and sentenced to die in the 1988 murderfor-hire slaying of Elizabeth Sennett.

Smith’s initial 1989 conviction, where a jury had recommende­d a death sentence, was overturned on appeal. He was retried and convicted again in 1996. The jury that time recommende­d a life sentence by a vote of 11-1, but a judge overrode the recommenda­tion and sentenced Smith to death.

“Eleven people on his jury said he should still be here today. Eleven. One judge was all it took to override that decision,” Smith’s wife, Deanna Smith, said.

After the rally Thursday, supporters carried a petition to Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey’s office asking her to grant clemency to Myers.

Myers was convicted in the 1991 stabbing death of his neighbor Ludie Mae Tucker. Mae Puckett, a juror at Myers’ trial, told a legislativ­e committee last year that she and several other jurors had doubts about his guilt but feared if the case ended in a mistrial, another jury would sentence Myers to death. Puckett said she learned later that the judge had overridden their recommenda­tion.

 ?? AP PHOTO/KIM CHANDLER ?? Deanna Smith, wife of the first person to be executed in Alabama by nitrogen gas, hugs Esther Brown of Project Hope to Abolish the Death Penalty, after a rally Thursday in Montgomery, Ala.
AP PHOTO/KIM CHANDLER Deanna Smith, wife of the first person to be executed in Alabama by nitrogen gas, hugs Esther Brown of Project Hope to Abolish the Death Penalty, after a rally Thursday in Montgomery, Ala.

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