Walker v. Georgia ( 2008 )


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  •                   Cite as: 555 U. S. ____ (2008)          1
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    ARTEMUS RICK WALKER v. GEORGIA
    ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME
    COURT OF GEORGIA
    No. 08–5385. Decided October 20, 2008
    JUSTICE THOMAS, concurring in the denial of the peti
    tion of certiorari.
    Petitioner brutally murdered Lynwood Ray Gresham,
    and was sentenced to death for his crime. JUSTICE
    STEVENS objects to the proportionality review undertaken
    by the Georgia Supreme Court on direct review of peti
    tioner’s capital sentence. The Georgia Supreme Court,
    however, afforded petitioner’s sentence precisely the same
    proportionality review endorsed by this Court in
    McCleskey v. Kemp, 
    481 U. S. 279
     (1987); Pulley v. Harris,
    
    465 U. S. 37
     (1984); Zant v. Stephens, 
    462 U. S. 862
    (1983); and Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U. S. 153
     (1976), and
    described in Pulley as a “safeguard against arbitrary or
    capricious sentencing” additional to that which is constitu
    tionally required, Pulley, 
    supra, at 45
    . Because the Geor
    gia Supreme Court made no error in applying its statuto
    rily required proportionality review in this case, I concur
    in the denial of certiorari.
    In May 1999, petitioner recruited Gary Lee Griffin to
    help him “rob and kill a rich white man” and “take the
    money, take the jewels.” Pet. for Cert. 5 (internal quota
    tion marks omitted); 
    282 Ga. 774
    , 774–775, 
    653 S. E. 2d 439
    , 443, (2007). Petitioner and Griffin packed two bicy
    cles in a borrowed car, dressed in black, and took a knife
    and stun gun to Gresham’s house. Petitioner lured
    Gresham outside, Pet. for Cert. 5, stabbed him 12 times in
    the chest and back, and dragged him to the side of the
    house to die, 
    282 Ga., at 775
    , 
    653 S. E. 2d, at 443
    . Griffin
    found Gresham’s wallet and house keys and gave the keys
    2                   WALKER v. GEORGIA
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    to petitioner, who said he had “ ‘one more to kill.’ ” 
    Ibid.
    However, because Mrs. Gresham and her daughter had
    been inside their house and had locked the door with chain
    and foot locks, petitioner did not succeed. The two men
    then fled the scene on their bicycles. Both were arrested
    within hours; petitioner was found with Gresham’s blood
    on his clothes and Gresham’s keys in his pocket. The
    knife used in the attack and a pistol were discovered
    nearby. 
    Ibid.
    Petitioner was charged with malice murder, felony
    murder, armed robbery, aggravated assault, attempted
    burglary, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
    Id., at 774, n. 1, 
    653 S. E. 2d, at 442, n. 1
    . A jury found
    him guilty on all charges and recommended the death
    penalty. 
    Ibid.
     In particular, the jury unanimously found
    five aggravating factors: that the murder was committed
    while petitioner was engaged in an armed robbery; that
    the murder was committed for the purpose of receiving
    money or a thing of monetary value; that the murder
    involved torture; that the murder involved aggravated
    battery; and that the murder was outrageously or wan
    tonly vile, horrible, or inhuman in that it involved deprav
    ity of mind. Id., at 781, 
    653 S. E. 2d, at 447
    . The trial
    court agreed with the jury’s recommendation and imposed
    a sentence of death for the malice-murder conviction. The
    court also imposed a life sentence for armed robbery and
    consecutive sentences of 20, 10, and 5 years for the re
    maining convictions. Id., at 774, n. 1, 
    653 S. E. 2d, at 442, n. 1
    .
    On direct appeal, the Georgia Supreme Court reviewed
    each statutory aggravating circumstance supporting the
    death sentence, see 
    Ga. Code Ann. §17
    –10–35(c)(2) (2008),
    and struck two of them—murder involving torture and
    murder involving aggravated battery—because they var
    ied from the applicable statutory language, 
    282 Ga., at 781
    , 
    653 S. E. 2d, at 447
    ; 
    Ga. Code Ann. §17
    –10–30(b)(7).
    Cite as: 555 U. S. ____ (2008)           3
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    With three valid statutory aggravating factors remaining
    and the full weight of the evidence supporting petitioner’s
    conviction, the Georgia Supreme Court found that peti
    tioner was eligible for the death sentence under state law.
    The Georgia Supreme Court then reviewed petitioner’s
    death sentence to determine whether it was “excessive or
    disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases,
    considering both the crime and the defendant.” 
    Ga. Code Ann. §17
    –10–35(c)(3). The court first determined that the
    life sentence imposed on Griffin for the same murder did
    not render petitioner’s death sentence disproportionate.
    Petitioner was more culpable for the murder, and Griffin
    was ineligible for the death penalty because he was ad
    judged mentally retarded. 
    Id., at 782
    , 
    653 S. E. 2d, 447
    .
    The Georgia Supreme Court then examined 21 cases in
    which a defendant received the death penalty for a “delib
    erate plan to kill and killing for the purpose of receiving
    something of monetary value.” Ibid., 
    653 S. E. 2d, 448
    .
    After reviewing these cases, the court concluded that
    petitioner’s death sentence was proportional to other
    death sentences imposed in Georgia and affirmed. 
    Ibid.
    There is nothing constitutionally defective about the
    Georgia Supreme Court’s determination. Proportionality
    review is not constitutionally required in any form. Geor
    gia simply has elected, as a matter of state law, to provide
    an additional protection for capital defendants. Pulley,
    
    465 U. S., at 45
    . In Pulley, the Court considered the his
    tory of Georgia’s capital sentencing scheme and dismissed
    JUSTICE STEVENS’ assertion that the constitutionality of
    Georgia’s scheme had rested on its willingness to conduct
    proportionality review. 
    Id.,
     at 44–46, 50; 
    id.,
     at 58–59
    (STEVENS, J., concurring in part and concurring in judg
    ment). The Court explained that, although it may have
    emphasized the role of proportionality review as “an addi
    tional safeguard against arbitrarily imposed death sen
    tences” in Gregg, 
    supra,
     and Zant, 
    supra,
     it had never held
    4                       WALKER v. GEORGIA
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    that “without comparative proportionality review the
    [Georgia] statute would be unconstitutional.” Pulley,
    
    supra, at 50
    . JUSTICE STEVENS acknowledged in his Pul
    ley concurrence that his interpretation of Gregg and Zant
    differed from the Court’s. 
    465 U. S., at 54
    . He continues
    to adhere to his distinctive interpretation of Gregg and
    Zant today, ante, at 2–3, 6, and questions whether the
    Georgia scheme as currently administered provides the
    additional review that he believes is constitutionally
    required. But, under this Court’s precedents, Georgia is
    not required to provide any proportionality review at all.
    Having elected to provide the additional protection of
    proportionality review, there can be no question that the
    way in which the Georgia Supreme Court administered
    that review in this case raised no constitutional issue.
    The State’s proportionality review was lauded in Gregg as
    a protective measure that would ensure that “[i]f a time
    comes when juries generally do not impose the death
    sentence in a certain kind of murder case, . . . no defen
    dant convicted under such circumstances will suffer a
    sentence of death” because there will be no comparable
    cases to support a finding of proportionality. 
    428 U. S., at 206
     (joint opinion of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.).
    Then, in McCleskey, 
    481 U. S., at 306
    , this Court upheld
    the proportionality review conducted by the Georgia Su
    preme Court and recognized that the Georgia court’s
    conclusion was supported by “an appendix containing
    citations to 13 cases involving generally similar murders.’’1
    ——————
    1 JUSTICE
    STEVENS accuses the Georgia Supreme Court in this case of
    engaging in “utterly perfunctory review” because it included “a string
    citation of 21 cases in which the jury imposed a death sentence” and
    “ma[de] no reference to the facts of those cases or to the aggravating
    circumstances found by the jury.” Ante, at 4. The accusation is entirely
    without foundation. The proportionality review upheld by this Court in
    McCleskey also contained a string citation of cases that failed to include
    the detailed discussion of each case’s specific facts that JUSTICE
    Cite as: 555 U. S. ____ (2008)                   5
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    In McCleskey, as here, the trial court followed the jury’s
    recommendation and imposed a death sentence for a black
    defendant who murdered a white victim during an armed
    robbery. 
    Id.,
     at 283–285; 282 Ga., at 774, 653 S. E. 2d at
    442.
    JUSTICE STEVENS nevertheless asserts that there is a
    “special risk of arbitrariness in cases that involve black
    defendants and white victims,” ante, at 3, and that the
    Georgia Supreme Court should have “looked outside the
    universe of cases in which the jury imposed a death sen
    tence,” ante, at 4–5. But he once again fails to acknowl
    edge that the Court considered and rejected similar argu
    ments in McCleskey, see 
    481 U. S., at
    306–319. The
    McCleskey Court considered whether a study based on
    Georgia’s application of the death penalty in the 1970’s
    showed a “major systemic defec[t]” in sentencing that
    correlates with race. 
    Id., at 313
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). And although that study found that the death
    penalty was imposed more often when a black defendant
    murdered a white victim than when a white defendant
    murdered a black victim, 
    id., at 286
    , the Court concluded
    that the study “[a]t most . . . indicate[d] a discrepancy that
    appears to correlate with race,” 
    id., at 312
    . According to
    the Court, “[a]pparent discrepancies are an inevitable part
    of our criminal justice system,” ibid., and there are other
    aspects of Georgia’s discretionary scheme that could ex
    plain the apparent discrepancy, 
    id.,
     at 311–313. The
    study did not “demonstrate a constitutionally significant
    risk of racial bias affecting the Georgia capital sentencing
    process.” 
    Id., at 313
    .
    ——————
    STEVENS suggests is somehow required by the Constitution. See
    McCleskey v. State, 
    245 Ga. 108
    , 116–117, 
    263 S. E. 2d 146
    , 152 (1980).
    The only difference between the string citation here and the string
    citation approved by this Court in McCleskey is that the citation here
    reflects an examination of at least 50% more cases.
    6                        WALKER v. GEORGIA
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    The McCleskey Court also considered the universe of
    cases included in the Georgia Supreme Court’s propor
    tionality analysis and held that “absent a showing that the
    Georgia capital punishment system operates in an arbi
    trary and capricious manner, [a defendant] cannot prove a
    constitutional violation by demonstrating that other de
    fendants who may be similarly situated did not receive the
    death penalty.” 
    Id.,
     at 306–307 (emphasis in original).
    The Court in Gregg also considered the issue and held that
    Georgia’s scheme would not be ineffective even if, in prac
    tice, the Georgia Supreme Court did not consider “nonap
    pealed capital convictions where a life sentence is imposed
    and cases involving homicides where a capital conviction
    is not obtained.” 
    428 U. S., at 204, n. 56
     (joint opinion of
    Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.).2 As a result, to the
    extent that JUSTICE STEVENS suggests that the Court’s
    ——————
    2 In Gregg, 
    428 U. S., at 204, n. 56
    , the Court noted that the Georgia
    Supreme Court “has the authority to consider such cases” involving
    “nonappealed capital convictions where a life sentence is imposed and
    cases involving homicides where a capital conviction is not obtained”
    and that it “does consider appealed murder cases where a life sentence
    has been imposed.” Petitioner contends, and JUSTICE STEVENS accepts,
    that the Georgia Supreme Court no longer considers murder cases
    where a life sentence has been imposed based on a law review note that
    studied the proportionality review conducted in 55 capital cases re
    viewed by the Georgia Supreme Court between 1994 and 2004. Ante, at
    7; Pet. for Cert. 23 (citing Note, Reviewing the Georgia Supreme
    Court’s Efforts at Proportionality Review, 
    39 Ga. L. Rev. 631
     (2005)).
    But petitioner and JUSTICE STEVENS do not point to any statement from
    the Georgia Supreme Court that such cases are no longer considered
    and there is no reason to believe that the court has changed its practice
    simply because its decisions do not explicitly cite to cases involving life
    sentences. See Pulley v. Harris, 
    465 U. S., 37
    , 48, n. 8 (1984) (“[T]he
    fact that . . . [a] court was not explicit about comparative review does
    not mean none was undertaken”). Moreover, in this case, the Georgia
    Supreme Court considered a life sentence in its proportionality review
    as it explicitly evaluated whether the sentence given Griffin for the
    same murder made petitioner’s death sentence disproportionate.
    Cite as: 555 U. S. ____ (2008)           7
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    precedent requires consideration of cases where the death
    penalty was not imposed, he is simply wrong.
    JUSTICE STEVENS’ disagreement with this Court’s death
    penalty precedents formed the basis for his dissent from
    the Court’s decision in McCleskey and his concurrence in
    Pulley, and he stands by those decisions in his statement
    today. But McCleskey, Pulley, Zant, and Gregg remain the
    law. Because the Georgia Supreme Court applied them
    faithfully and without any error, I concur in the denial of
    certiorari.