Monday, June 7, 2010
HANK SKINNER; UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CAPITAL PUNISHMENT UNIT HEADS BACK TO THE SUPREME COURT; FOURTH TIME IN FOUR YEARS;
"HANK’S JAILHOUSE “WIFE” (A FRENCH ANTI-DEATH PENALTY
"WE ARE PLEASED THAT THE SUPREME COURT HAS AGREED TO HEAR OUR CLIENT'S APPEAL," OWEN SAID. "THIS DECISION REPRESENTS THE NECESSARY FIRST STEP TO OUR EVENTUALLY OBTAINING THE DNA TESTING THAT MR. SKINNER HAS LONG SOUGHT." OWEN SAID THE CASE PRESENTS ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY FOR STUDENTS IN THE CAPITAL PUNISHMENT CLINIC TO PLAY A SUBSTANTIAL ROLE IN LITIGATION AT THE NATION'S HIGHEST COURT. "THIS IS THE FOURTH TIME IN RECENT YEARS THAT THE COURT HAS AGREED TO HEAR A CASE IN WHICH OUR CLINIC WAS INVOLVED, AND WORKING ON THOSE CASES HAS BEEN AMONG OUR CLINIC STUDENTS' MOST MEMORABLE AND PROFESSIONALLY VALUABLE EXPERIENCES," OWEN SAID. HE ADDED THAT BRIEFS IN THE CASE WILL BE SUBMITTED BETWEEN NOW AND LATE SUMMER WITH THE COURT EXPECTED TO HEAR ORAL ARGUMENT IN THE FALL."
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS: AUSTIN;
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BACKGROUND: The editor of the Texas Tribune says in a note that "Hank Skinner is set to be executed for a 1993 murder he's always maintained he didn't commit. He wants the state to test whether his DNA matches evidence found at the crime scene, but prosecutors say the time to contest his conviction has come and gone......We told the story of the murders and his conviction and sentencing in the first part of this story." Reporter Brandi Grissom, author of the Tribune series on Hank Skinner, writes: "I interviewed Henry "Hank" Watkins Skinner, 47, at the Polunsky Unit of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice — death row — on January 20, 2010. Skinner was convicted in 1995 of murdering his girlfriends and her two sons; the state has scheduled his execution for February 24. Skinner has always maintained that he's innocent and for 15 years has asked the state to release DNA evidence that he says will prove he was not the killer."
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"AUSTIN,Texas — The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on May 24 to resolve a dispute among the lower federal courts over the reach of a federal civil rights statute in a DNA evidence case brought by Texas death row prisoner Hank Skinner," the University of Texas notes in a release issued on May 27, 2010;
"This marks the fourth time in as many years that the Supreme Court has granted plenary review in a case in which the Capital Punishment Clinic of The University of Texas School of Law is serving as counsel to a condemned prisoner," the release continues.
"Clinical Professor Rob Owen of the Capital Punishment Clinic, along with lawyers from the firm of Skadden Arps, represents Skinner in his bid to use a civil rights statute (42 U.S.C. § 1983) to gain access to certain evidence from the crime scene for DNA testing — testing Skinner says can prove him innocent. Lawyers for Skinner, who was convicted of a triple slaying, contend that state authorities' refusal to grant Skinner post-conviction DNA testing violated his rights under federal law.
On March 24, 2010, the high court stayed Skinner's execution while it considered his appeal. Now that it has agreed to hear the case, the Court will decide whether a habeas petition or a suit under Sec. 1983 is the appropriate vehicle for presenting this type of due process claim.
"We are pleased that the Supreme Court has agreed to hear our client's appeal," Owen said. "This decision represents the necessary first step to our eventually obtaining the DNA testing that Mr. Skinner has long sought."
Owen said the case presents another opportunity for students in the Capital Punishment Clinic to play a substantial role in litigation at the nation's highest court.
"This is the fourth time in recent years that the Court has agreed to hear a case in which our clinic was involved, and working on those cases has been among our clinic students' most memorable and professionally valuable experiences," Owen said. He added that briefs in the case will be submitted between now and late summer with the Court expected to hear oral argument in the fall.
Skinner, who has maintained his innocence, was convicted and sentenced to death in 1995 for murdering his girlfriend Twila Busby and her two adult sons in their home in the Panhandle town of Pampa on New Year's Eve 1993.
Skinner was arrested at a neighbor's home about three hours after the victims' bodies were found, with blood from two of the victims on his clothes. While this evidence ties Skinner to the crime scene, toxicological experts say he was physically incapable of committing the murders due to having ingested massive amounts of alcohol and codeine. A witness for the prosecution confirmed that 90 minutes before the crime, Skinner was lying on the living room couch in a stupor, completely unresponsive.
For 10 years, Skinner has sought access to certain evidence from the crime scene for the purpose of performing forensic DNA testing he says could clear him. He has sought DNA testing on vaginal swabs and fingernail clippings taken from Busby at the time of her autopsy, two knives recovered at the home, a hand towel found with one of the knives, a man's windbreaker jacket found next to Busby's body and some human hairs from Busby's hands. Of these items, only a few of those hairs have been previously DNA tested, and the results of those tests were inconclusive.
After failing to obtain such access though repeated formal and informal requests, as well as two separate state court proceedings under Texas' post-conviction DNA testing statute, Skinner filed suit against Gray County District Attorney Lynn Switzer in November 2009. Skinner invoked 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the refusal to grant him access to the evidence under Texas' DNA testing statute was so arbitrary as to deny due process of law. The district court dismissed Skinner's lawsuit, and the Fifth Circuit affirmed, both relying on a 2002 decision in which the Fifth Circuit had determined that such an action could proceed only as a habeas corpus petition, not as a civil rights lawsuit.
That legal conclusion, shared by the Fourth Circuit, is at odds with the view of six other federal Courts of Appeals, and that conflict was the basis of the petition for writ of certiorari that Skinner filed with the Supreme Court in February as Skinner v. Switzer, No. 09-9000."
The release can be found at:
http://www.utexas.edu/news/2010/05/27/law_capital_punishment-2/
Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;