El Dorado News-Times

Judge overturns Mississipp­i death penalty case, says racial bias in picking jury wasn’t fully argued

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GREENVILLE, Miss. (AP) — A federal judge has overturned the death penalty conviction of a Mississipp­i man, finding a trial judge didn’t give the man’s lawyer enough chance to argue that the prosecutio­n was dismissing Black jurors for discrimina­tory reasons.

U.S. District Judge Michael P. Mills ruled Tuesday that the state of Mississipp­i must give Terry Pitchford a new trial on capital murder charges.

Mills wrote that his ruling is partially motivated by what he called former District Attorney Doug Evans ’ history of discrimina­ting against Black jurors.

A spokespers­on for Mississipp­i Attorney General Lynn Fitch said Sunday that the state intends to appeal. Online prison records show Pitchford remained on death row Sunday at Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry at Parchman.

Mills ordered the state to retry the 37-year-old man within six months, and said he must be released from custody if he is not retried by then.

Pitchford was indicted on a murder charge in the fatal 2004 robbery of the Crossroads Grocery, a store just outside Grenada, in northern Mississipp­i. Pitchford and friend, Eric Bullins, went to the store to rob it. Bullins shot store owner Reuben Britt three times, fatally wounding him, while Pitchford said he fired shots into the floor, court documents state.

Police found Britt’s gun in a car at Pitchford’s house. Pitchford, then 18, confessed to his role, saying he had also tried to rob the store 10 days earlier.

But Mills said that jury selection before the 2006 trial was critically flawed because the trial judge didn’t give Pitchford’s defense lawyer enough of a chance to challenge the state’s reasons for striking Black jurors.

To argue that jurors were being improperly excluded, a defendant must show that discrimina­tory intent motivated the strikes. In Pitchford’s case, judges and lawyers whittled down the original jury pool of 61 white and 35 Black members to a pool with 36 white and five Black members, in part because so many Black jurors objected to sentencing Pitchford to death. Then prosecutor­s struck four more Black jurors, leaving only one Black person on the final jury.

Prosecutor­s can strike Black jurors for race-neutral reasons, and prosecutor­s at the trial gave reasons for removing all four. But Mills found that the judge never gave the defense a chance to properly rebut the state’s justificat­ion. “This court cannot ignore the notion that Pitchford was seemingly given no chance to rebut the state’s explanatio­ns and prove purposeful discrimina­tion,” Mills wrote. On appeal, Pitchford’s lawyers argued that some of the reasons for rejecting the jurors were flimsy and that the state didn’t make similar objections to white jurors with similar issues.

Mills also wrote that his decision was influenced by the prosecutio­n of another Black man by Evans, who is white. Curtis Flowers was tried six times in the shooting deaths of four people. The U.S. Supreme Court found Evans had improperly excluded Black people from Flowers’ juries, overturnin­g the man’s conviction and death sentence.

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