Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Judge stays Williams’ execution

- By Joseph A. Slobodzian

The fate of condemned killer Terrance Williams is now before the state Supreme Court after a Philadelph­ia judge Friday stayed the execution, citing the prosecutor’s suppressio­n of evidence that might have persuaded the jury to spare Williams’ life.

District Attorney Seth Williams denounced the ruling by Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina staying the Wednesday execution, and his office immediatel­y appealed.

But Seth Williams also acknowledg­ed it was unlikely the state’s high court would consider his petition before Terrance Williams’ death warrant expires Thursday.

If Judge Sarmina’s stay is reversed by the Supreme Court — and Williams’ death sentence is reaffirmed — Gov. Tom Corbett would have to sign a new warrant setting a new execution date.

It’s virtually new terrain for the Supreme Court and governor. Pennsylvan­ia has executed three people since it reinstitut­ed capital punishment in 1978 — the last in 1999 — and only after the individual­s gave up appeals and asked to die.

The last contested execution in which last-minute appeals were an issue for the state Supreme Court and governor was in 1962.

Williams’ lawyers called on the prosecutor to “stop trying to execute Terry Williams.”

“It is deeply disconcert­ing that the district attorney has filed an appeal,” said Shawn Nolan, a member of the defense team from the Federal Defender’s death-penalty unit. “It is legally and ethically unconscion­able that Seth Williams and his assistants continue to advocate for the execution of Terry Williams after hiding significan­t evidence for 28 years from defense counsel, jurors, the courts, the board of pardons and the citizens of Pennsylvan­ia.”

Seth Williams, in an afternoon news conference, insisted he was not an unquestion­ing death-penalty advocate. He said only one Philadelph­ian had been sentenced to death since he took office in 2010.

“This is about process, and I’ll not walk away from doing my job, and that means preserving the integrity of this jury’s verdict,” the district attorney said.

Judge Sarmina’s ruling came after two days of testimony about whether the 1986 trial prosecutor misled the jury, withholdin­g evidence that might have made it more likely for the jury to sentence Williams to death instead of life. Judge Sarmina, 59, a former city prosecutor and a judge since 1998, has been a homicide judge for six years and presided over three trials that ended in death sentences.

In an 45-minute opinion delivered before a packed courtroom, Judge Sarmina criticized the trial prosecutor for “gamesmansh­ip” and withholdin­g mitigating evidence the defense attorney could have used in arguing against a death sentence.

Judge Sarmina said the prosecutor, Andrea Foulkes, now a federal prosecutor in Philadelph­ia, withheld evidence of the sexual procliviti­es of Williams’ victim, Amos Norwood, and the extent of the prosecutio­n’s deal with admitted accomplice Marc Draper.

The withheld evidence, Judge Sarmina said, undermined confidence in the fairness of Williams’ 1986 death sentence and made a stay of execution necessary.

Judge Sarmina did affirm the guilty verdict against Williams in Norwood’s murder. She said the district attorney’s office could conduct a new penalty hearing if it wished to seek execution, or could let Williams, 46, spend the rest of his life in prison without chance of parole.

Seth Williams and federal prosecutor­s vigorously defended Ms. Foulkes.

“She left this office after a distinguis­hed career here and then carried on with the U.S. attorney’s office, practicing before federal judges and always with an unblemishe­d record,” Williams told reporters.

First Assistant U.S. Attorney Louis Lappen called Ms. Foulkes “an outstandin­g prosecutor with an impeccable record for integrity, profession­alism, and dedication to public service.”

In testimony last week before Judge Sarmina, Ms. Foulkes insisted that she did not withhold evidence.

She said the informatio­n she had about the victim, a 56-yearold Germantown church volunteer who Terrance Williams says sexually abused him beginning at age 13, was nothing more than “bits and pieces.”

Judge Sarmina, however, cited Ms. Foulkes’ testimony that she suspected Norwood had sex with teenage boys and had a sexual relationsh­ip with the then-18year-old Williams, a Cheyney University freshman and football player.

“She was able to connect all the dots,” Judge Sarmina said. “Had a reasonable defense counsel been given all the dots, he also could have connected them.”

In Williams’ plea for clemency, defense lawyers presented statements from five trial jurors saying they would have sentenced Williams to life had they known about evidence of Norwood’s sexual procliviti­es and abuse of Williams.

Judge Sarmina said Ms. Foulkes gave Williams’ 1986 defense lawyer statements from Norwood’s widow and minister that portrayed him as a kindly, religious man with a reputation for helping poor youths.

“They were sanitized statements,” Judge Sarmina said, adding that Williams’ attorney could have used the informatio­n to portray Norwood as an “unsympathe­tic victim.”

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