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Home » News » Politics

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Sotomayor panel equated death penalty, racism

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By Mark Sherman ASSOCIATED PRESS

As a director of a Puerto Rican advocacy group in the 1980s, Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor was part of a three-person committee that equated capital punishment with racism.

The Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund argued in a 1981 letter to the governor of New York, Hugh Carey, that "capital punishment represents ongoing racism within our society."

Judge Sotomayor later became a federal judge and spent 16 years on the bench without having to address the death penalty, one of the most contentious legal issues in the United States. That will change quickly if she is confirmed to the Supreme Court as its first Hispanic justice.

The court will hear arguments in three death-penalty cases in the term beginning in October. All of the upcoming cases deal with claims by death-row inmates and the power of federal courts to review their sentences after state courts have upheld them, not the constitutionality of the death penalty itself.

Only infrequently is the guilt of the person in doubt in such cases. Most often, what the court hears are prisoners' claims of ineffective lawyers or muddled jury instructions.

Justices, however, use such cases to voice their concerns about the fairness of who gets sentenced to death and who doesn't, particularly the uneven quality of lawyers in capital cases. The decisions often find the four liberal justices on one side, the four conservatives on the other and Justice Anthony M. Kennedy determining who wins.

Retiring Justice David H. Souter, whom Judge Sotomayor would replace, generally sides with the inmates, along with his liberal colleagues.

An examination of the Puerto Rican defense fund's records did not turn up any death penalty-related writings directly attributable to Judge Sotomayor. But her role in the group's advocacy against capital punishment is likely to be explored at her Senate confirmation hearing this summer, and should be, said Kent Scheidegger, legal director of the pro-death-penalty Criminal Justice Legal Foundation.

"It was a long time ago, so it's not anything we can say indicates her present attitudes," Mr. Scheidegger said.

Richard Dieter, executive director of the anti-capital-punishment Death Penalty Information Center, said that even if Judge Sotomayor opposes the death penalty, it would not preclude her from ruling against defendants "when that's what precedents and the Constitution require."

Mr. Dieter agreed with Mr. Scheidegger, though, that where she stands on the issue now is unknown, whatever she thought about the death penalty as a lawyer in her late 20s.

So far this year, there have been 29 executions: 15 in Texas, four in Alabama, two each in Georgia, Oklahoma and South Carolina, and one each in Florida, Missouri, Tennessee and Virginia.

The upcoming death penalty cases from Alabama, Ohio and Pennsylvania would be Judge Sotomayor's first sustained exposure to the issue of capital punishment. As a judge on the 2nd Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, which hears cases from Connecticut, New York and Vermont, Judge Sotomayor has had scant opportunity to deal with capital punishment.

Of those states, only Connecticut currently has a valid death penalty law and only one inmate, serial killer Michael Ross in 2005, has been executed there in roughly 50 years.

Although generally regarded as liberal in her views, Judge Sotomayor spent five years as a prosecutor in New York, and she has ruled against challenges to police searches and other claims by defendants.

Since becoming a federal judge in 1992, Judge Sotomayor has imposed life sentences on drug dealers and rejected criminal defendants' claims that they were subjected to unconstitutional searches. In 1999, she sided with prosecutors in upholding as evidence illegal drugs that were found during a search that a defendant claimed was unconstitutional. A conservative Supreme Court majority ruled the same way in a similar case this year.

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