The Morning Call (Sunday)

After 33 years in solitary, convicted killer has left death row

Ernest Porter’s death sentence was commuted in 2003

- By Samantha Melamed Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

PHILADELPH­IA — Ernest Porter spent 33 years in a 7-by-12foot cell with a roughly 6-inchwide window. He was allowed out for 10 hours a week — but leaving the cell meant being strip searched and then shackled. Exercise meant time spent in a cage, alone or with one other prisoner.

That was life on death row in Pennsylvan­ia state prison. And Porter’s was among the longest stints in solitary confinemen­t on record, though his death sentence was vacated in 2003.

But now, Porter and six other prisoners have been moved out of death row solitary into general population, following a precedent-setting 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in September that found the conditions violated the Eighth Amendment’s protection against cruel and unusual punishment.

It is the latest in a series of recent rulings that have forced the state to dismantle traditiona­l death row solitary confinemen­t by moving prisoners up for resentenci­ng into general population and reforming treatment of those who continue to face execution. Last year, the state significan­tly increased out-of-cell time and other quality-of-life measures for those on death row, though the coronaviru­s pandemic subsequent­ly put the entire state system on effective lockdown.

On Wednesday, the court affirmed its decision by denying a Department of Correction­s request for a rehearing before a panel of judges.

“It establishe­s a major circuit court precedent, the first of its kind, holding that the mere fact of somebody spending such a prolonged time in solitary confinemen­t is evidence to rely on in a finding of cruel and unusual punishment,” said Bret Grote of the Abolitioni­st Law Center, one of Porter’s lawyers. “This puts a significan­t deterrent on reimposing these conditions of prolonged solitary confinemen­t.”

Porter was convicted of fatally shooting South Philadelph­ia beauty shop owner Raymond F. Fiss, Jr., 52, during a 1985 robbery. The crime inflamed racial tensions in the community, where outraged white residents rallied and marched on City Hall.

While federal courts previously found that a prisoner whose death sentence was vacated can’t be kept on death row, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s argued that didn’t apply to those whose proceeding­s had been stayed in federal court.

ADOC spokespers­on declined to comment.

Prison officials have argued inmates sentenced to death pose a danger to general population because they have “nothing left to lose.” But Porter’s lawyers said he’s maintained a perfect disciplina­ry record — even as his mental health has deteriorat­ed in isolation, causing “severe anxiety, depression, panic, paranoia, bipolar mood swings, and at times suicidal impulses,” according to his court filing.

Now, Porter’s complaint against the prison will return to federal district court for a possible civil trial. The DOC argued in briefings it should not have to pay damages: “Because no prior case from this Court — or any other Court — clearly establishe­d the wrongfulne­ss of the DOC’s interpreta­tion, qualified immunity shields the DOC officials from liability.”

Isolation on death row has drawn increasing criticism, amid a mounting number of exoneratio­ns involving cases in which the death penalty was threatened or imposed — including 13% of conviction­s overturned last year, according to the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center.

Daniel Greenfield, a lawyer for the MacArthur Justice Center representi­ng Porter and another prisoner in a similar situation, said the decision means two of the nation’s 12 circuit courts have now held that those on death row retain basic constituti­onal protection­s.

“Previous decisions found what a death sentence really meant was you could throw away the key and not really examine the conditions under which they were held. Nothing is too barbaric,” Greenfield said. “This decision really throws cold water on that.”

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