Petitioner and a codefendant, at a jury trial in a Florida
court, were convicted of first-degree murder and robbery of two
elderly persons at their farmhouse, and were sentenced to death.
The Florida Supreme Court affirmed. The court held that, although
the record supported no more than the inference that petitioner was
the person in a car parked by the side of the road near the
farmhouse at the time of the killings waiting to help the robbers
and killers (the codefendant and another) escape, this was enough
under Florida law to make petitioner a constructive aider and
abettor and hence a principal in first-degree murder upon whom the
death penalty could be imposed. It was thus irrelevant to
petitioner's challenge to the death sentence that he did not
himself kill and was not present at the killings, or whether he
intended that the victims be killed or anticipated that lethal
force might be used to effectuate the robbery or escape.
Held: The imposition of the death penalty upon
petitioner is inconsistent with the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments. Pp.
458 U. S.
788-801.
(a) The current judgments of legislatures, juries, and
prosecutors weigh heavily on the side of rejecting capital
punishment for the crime at issue. Only a small minority of States
-- eight -- allow the death penalty to be imposed solely because
the defendant somehow participated in the robbery in the course of
which a murder was committed, but did not take or attempt or intend
to take life, or intend that lethal force be employed. And the
evidence is overwhelming that American juries have repudiated
imposition of the death penalty for crimes such as petitioner's,
the statistics demonstrating that juries -- and perhaps prosecutors
-- consider death a disproportionate penalty for those who fall
within petitioner's category. Pp.
458 U. S.
788-796.
(b) While robbery is a serious crime deserving serious
punishment, it is not a crime "so grievous an affront to humanity
that the only adequate response may be the penalty of death."
Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U. S. 153,
428 U. S. 184.
The death penalty, which is "unique in its severity and
irrevocability,"
id. at
428 U. S. 187,
is an excessive penalty for the robber, who, as such, does not take
human life. Here, the focus must be on petitioner's culpability,
not on those who committed the robbery and killings. He did not
kill or intend to kill, and thus his culpability is different from
that of the robbers who killed, and it is impermissible for the
State
Page 458 U. S. 783
to treat them alike and attribute to petitioner the culpability
of those who killed the victims. Pp.
458 U. S.
797-798.
(c) Neither deterrence of capital crimes nor retribution is a
sufficient justification for executing petitioner. It is unlikely
that the threat of the death penalty for murder will measurably
deter one, such as petitioner, who does not kill or intend to kill.
As to retribution, this depends on the degree of petitioner's
culpability, which must be limited to his participation in the
robbery. Putting him to death to avenge two killings that he did
not commit or intend to commit or cause would not measurably
contribute to the retribution end of ensuring that the criminal
gets his just deserts. Pp.
458 U. S. 798-801.
399 So. 2d
1362, reversed and remanded.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. BRENNAN, J., filed a
concurring opinion,
post, p.
458 U. S. 801.
O'CONNOR, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J.,
and POWELL and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined,
post, p.
458 U. S.
801.
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
I
The facts of this case, taken principally from the opinion of
the Florida Supreme Court, are as follows. On April 1,
Page 458 U. S. 784
1975, at approximately 7:45 a.m., Thomas and Eunice Kersey, aged
86 and 74, were robbed and fatally shot at their farmhouse in
central Florida. The evidence showed that Sampson and Jeanette
Armstrong had gone to the back door of the Kersey house and asked
for water for an overheated car. When Mr. Kersey came out of the
house, Sampson Armstrong grabbed him, pointed a gun at him, and
told Jeanette Armstrong to take his money. Mr. Kersey cried for
help, and his wife came out of the house with a gun and shot
Jeanette Armstrong, wounding her. Sampson Armstrong, and perhaps
Jeanette Armstrong, then shot and killed both of the Kerseys,
dragged them into the kitchen, and took their money and fled.
Two witnesses testified that they drove past the Kersey house
between 7:30 and 7:40 a.m. and saw a large cream- or yellow-colored
car parked beside the road about 200 yards from the house, and that
a man was sitting in the car. Another witness testified that, at
approximately 6:45 a.m., he saw Ida Jean Shaw, petitioner's common
law wife and Jeanette Armstrong's mother, driving a yellow Buick
with a vinyl top which belonged to her and petitioner Earl Enmund.
Enmund was a passenger in the car along, with an unidentified
woman. At about 8 a.m., the same witness saw the car return at a
high rate of speed. Enmund was driving, Ida Jean Shaw was in the
front seat, and one of the other two people in the car was lying
down across the back seat.
Enmund, Sampson Armstrong, and Jeanette Armstrong were indicted
for the first-degree murder and robbery of the Kerseys. Enmund and
Sampson Armstrong were tried together. [
Footnote 1] The prosecutor maintained in his closing
argument that "Sampson Armstrong killed the old people." Record
1577. The judge instructed the jury that
"[t]he killing of a
Page 458 U. S. 785
human being while engaged in the perpetration of or in the
attempt to perpetrate the offense of robbery is murder in the first
degree even though there is no premeditated design or intent to
kill."
App. 6. He went on to instruct them that,
"[i]n order to sustain a conviction of first degree murder while
engaging in the perpetration of or in the attempted perpetration of
the crime of robbery, the evidence must establish beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant was actually present and was
actively aiding and abetting the robbery or attempted robbery, and
that the unlawful killing occurred in the perpetration of or in the
attempted perpetration of the robbery."
Id. at 9.
The jury found both Enmund and Sampson Armstrong guilty of two
counts of first-degree murder and one count of robbery. A separate
sentencing hearing was held, and the jury recommended the death
penalty for both defendants under the Florida procedure whereby the
jury advises the trial judge whether to impose the death penalty.
See Fla.Stat. § 921.141(2) (1981). The trial judge
then sentenced Enmund to death on the two counts of first-degree
murder. Enmund appealed, and the Florida Supreme Court remanded for
written findings as required by Fla.Stat. § 921.141(3) (1981).
The trial judge found four statutory aggravating circumstances: the
capital felony was committed while Enmund was engaged in or was an
accomplice in the commission of an armed robbery, Fla.Stat. §
921.141(5)(d) (1981); the capital felony was committed for
pecuniary gain, § 921.141(5)(f); it was especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel, § 921.141(5)(h); and Enmund was
previously convicted of a felony involving the use or threat of
violence, § 921.141(5)(b).
399 So. 2d
1362, 1371-1372 (Fla.1981). The court found that "none of the
statutory mitigating circumstances applied" to Enmund, and that the
aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances.
Id. at 1372. Enmund was therefore sentenced to death on
each of the murder counts.
Page 458 U. S. 786
The Florida Supreme Court affirmed Enmund's conviction and
sentences. It found that
"[t]here was no direct evidence at trial that Earl Enmund was
present at the back door of the Kersey home when the plan to rob
the elderly couple led to their being murdered."
Id. at 1370. However, it rejected petitioner's argument
that, at most, he could be found guilty of second-degree murder
under Florida's felony murder rule. The court explained that the
interaction of the "
felony murder rule and the law of
principals combine to make a felon generally responsible for the
lethal acts of his co-felon.'" Id. at 1369, quoting
Adams v. State, 341 So. 2d
765, 768-769 (Fla.1976), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 878
(1977). Although petitioner could be convicted of second-degree
murder only if he were an accessory before the fact, rather than a
principal, the Florida Supreme Court reasoned:
"[T]he only evidence of the degree of his participation is the
jury's likely inference that he was the person in the car by the
side of the road near the scene of the crimes. The jury could have
concluded that he was there, a few hundred feet away, waiting to
help the robbers escape with the Kerseys' money. The evidence,
therefore, was sufficient to find that the appellant was a
principal of the second degree, constructively present aiding and
abetting the commission of the crime of robbery. This conclusion
supports the verdicts of murder in the first degree on the basis of
the felony murder portion of section 782.04(1)(a)."
399 So. 2d at 1370. [
Footnote
2]
Page 458 U. S. 787
The State Supreme Court rejected two of the four statutory
aggravating circumstances found by the trial court. It held that
the findings that the murders were committed in the course of a
robbery and that they were committed for pecuniary gain referred to
the same aspect of petitioner's crime, and must be treated as only
one aggravating circumstance.
Id. at 1373. In addition,
the court held that "[t]he recited circumstance, that the murders
were especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel, cannot be approved."
Ibid., citing
Armstrong v. State, 399 So. 2d 953
(Fla.1981). [
Footnote 3]
However, because there were two aggravating circumstances and no
mitigating circumstances, the death sentence was affirmed. In so
doing, the court expressly rejected Enmund's submission that,
because the evidence did not establish that he intended to take
life, the death penalty was barred by the Eighth Amendment of the
United States Constitution. 399 So. 2d at 1371.
We granted Enmund's petition for certiorari, 454 U.S. 939
(1981), presenting the question whether death is a valid penalty
under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments for one who neither took
life, attempted to take life, nor intended to take life. [
Footnote 4]
Page 458 U. S. 788
II
As recounted above, the Florida Supreme Court held that the
record supported no more than the inference that Enmund was the
person in the car by the side of the road at the time of the
killings, waiting to help the robbers escape. This was enough under
Florida law to make Enmund a constructive aider and abettor, and
hence a principal in first-degree murder upon whom the death
penalty could be imposed. It was thus irrelevant to Enmund's
challenge to the death sentence that he did not himself kill and
was not present at the killings; also beside the point was whether
he intended that the Kerseys be killed or anticipated that lethal
force would or might be used if necessary to effectuate the robbery
or a safe escape. We have concluded that imposition of the death
penalty in these circumstances is inconsistent with the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments.
A
The Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment
is directed, in part, "
against all punishments which, by their
excessive length or severity, are greatly disproportioned to the
offenses charged.'" Weems v. United States, 217 U.
S. 349, 217 U. S. 371
(1910), quoting O'Neil v. Vermont, 144 U.
S. 323, 144 U. S.
339-340 (1892) (Field, J., dissenting). This Court most
recently held a punishment excessive in relation to the crime
charged in Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.
S. 584 (1977). There the plurality opinion concluded
that the imposition of the death penalty for the rape of an adult
woman
"is grossly disproportionate and excessive punishment for the
crime of rape, and is therefore forbidden by the Eighth Amendment
as cruel and unusual punishment."
Id. at
433 U. S. 592.
In reaching this conclusion, it was stressed that our judgment
"should be informed by objective factors to the maximum possible
extent."
Ibid. Accordingly, the Court looked to the
historical development of the punishment at issue, legislative
judgments, international opinion, and the sentencing decisions
juries have made before bringing its
Page 458 U. S. 789
own judgment to bear on the matter. We proceed to analyze the
punishment at issue in this case in a similar manner.
B
The Coker plurality observed that, "[a]t no time in the last 50
years have a majority of the States authorized death as a
punishment for rape."
Id. at
433 U. S. 593.
More importantly, in reenacting death penalty laws in order to
satisfy the criteria established in
Furman v. Georgia,
408 U. S. 238
(1972), only three States provided the death penalty for the rape
of an adult woman in their revised statutes. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 594.
The plurality therefore concluded that
"[t]he current judgment with respect to the death penalty for
rape is not wholly unanimous among state legislatures, but it
obviously weighs very heavily on the side of rejecting capital
punishment as a suitable penalty for raping an adult woman."
Id. at
433 U. S. 596
(footnote omitted).
Thirty-six state and federal jurisdictions presently authorize
the death penalty. Of these, only eight jurisdictions authorize
imposition of the death penalty solely for participation in a
robbery in which another robber takes life. [
Footnote 5] Of the remaining 28 jurisdictions, in
4, felony murder is not a capital crime. [
Footnote 6] Eleven States require some culpable mental
state
Page 458 U. S. 790
with respect to the homicide as a prerequisite to conviction of
a crime for which the death penalty is authorized. Of these 11
States, 8 make knowing, intentional, purposeful, or premeditated
killing an element of capital murder. [
Footnote 7] Three other States require proof of a culpable
mental state short of intent, such as recklessness or extreme
indifference to human life, before the death penalty may be
imposed. [
Footnote 8] In these
11 States, therefore, the actors in a felony murder are not subject
to the death penalty without proof of their mental state, proof
which was not required with respect to Enmund
Page 458 U. S. 791
either under the trial court's instructions or under the law
announced by the Florida Supreme Court.
Four additional jurisdictions do not permit a defendant such as
Enmund to be put to death. Of these, one State flatly prohibits
capital punishment in cases where the defendant did not actually
commit murder. [
Footnote 9] Two
jurisdictions preclude the death penalty in cases, such as this
one, where the defendant
"was a principal in the offense, which was committed by another,
but his participation was relatively minor, although not so minor
as to constitute a defense to prosecution. [
Footnote 10]"
One other State limits the death penalty in felony murders to
narrow circumstances not involved here. [
Footnote 11]
Nine of the remaining States deal with the imposition of the
death penalty for a vicarious felony murder in their capital
sentencing statutes. In each of these States, a defendant may not
be executed
solely for participating in a felony in which
a person was killed if the defendant did not actually cause the
victim's death. For a defendant to be executed in these States,
typically the statutory aggravating circumstances which are present
must outweigh mitigating factors. To be sure, a vicarious felony
murderer may be sentenced to death in these jurisdictions absent an
intent to kill if sufficient aggravating circumstances are present.
However, six
Page 458 U. S. 792
of these nine States make it a statutory
mitigating
circumstance that the defendant was an accomplice in a capital
felony committed by another person and his participation was
relatively minor. [
Footnote
12] By making minimal participation in a capital felony
committed by another person a mitigating circumstance, these
sentencing statutes reduce the likelihood that a person will be
executed for vicarious felony murder. The remaining three
jurisdictions exclude felony murder from their lists of aggravating
circumstances that will support a death sentence. [
Footnote 13] In each of these nine States,
a nontriggerman guilty of felony murder cannot be sentenced to
death for the felony murder absent aggravating circumstances above
and beyond the felony murder itself.
Thus, only a small minority of jurisdictions -- eight -- allow
the death penalty to be imposed solely because the defendant
somehow participated in a robbery in the course of which a murder
was committed. Even if the nine States are included where such a
defendant could be executed for an unintended felony murder if
sufficient aggravating circumstances are present to outweigh
mitigating circumstances -- which often include the defendant's
minimal participation in the murder -- only about a third of
American jurisdictions would ever permit a defendant who somehow
participated in a robbery where a murder occurred to be sentenced
to die. Moreover, of the eight States which have enacted new death
penalty statutes since 1978, none authorize capital punishment in
such circumstances. [
Footnote
14] While the current legislative judgment
Page 458 U. S. 793
with respect to imposition of the death penalty where a
defendant did not take life, attempt to take it, or intend to take
life is neither "wholly unanimous among state legislatures,"
Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 596,
nor as compelling as the legislative judgments considered in
Coker, it nevertheless weighs on the side of rejecting
capital punishment for the crime at issue. [
Footnote 15]
Page 458 U. S. 794
C
Society's rejection of the death penalty for accomplice
liability in felony murders is also indicated by the sentencing
decisions that juries have made. As we have previously observed,
"
[t]he jury . . . is a significant and reliable objective index
of contemporary values, because it is so directly involved.'"
Coker v. Georgia, supra, at 433 U. S. 596,
quoting Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.
S. 153, 428 U. S. 181
(1976). The evidence is overwhelming that American juries have
repudiated imposition of the death penalty for crimes such as
petitioner's. First, according to the petitioner, a search of all
reported appellate court decisions since 1954 in cases where a
defendant was executed for homicide shows that, of the 362
executions, in 339, the person executed personally committed a
homicidal assault. [Footnote
16] In 2 cases, the person executed had another person commit
the homicide for him, and, in 16 cases, the facts were not reported
in sufficient detail to determine whether the person executed
committed the homicide. [Footnote 17] The survey revealed only 6 cases out of 362
where a nontriggerman felony murderer was executed. All six
executions took place in
Page 458 U. S. 795
1955. By contrast, there were 72 executions for rape in this
country between 1955 and this Court's decision in
Coker v.
Georgia in 1977. [
Footnote
18]
That juries have rejected the death penalty in cases, such as
this one, where the defendant did not commit the homicide, was not
present when the killing took place, and did not participate in a
plot or scheme to murder is also shown by petitioner's survey of
the Nation's death-row population. [
Footnote 19] As of October 1, 1981, there were 796
inmates under sentences of death for homicide. Of the 739 for whom
sufficient data are available, only 41 did not participate in the
fatal assault on the victim. Of the 40 among the 41 for whom
sufficient information was available, only 16 were not physically
present when the fatal assault was committed. These 16 prisoners
included only 3, including petitioner, who were sentenced to die
absent a finding that they hired or solicited someone else to kill
the victim or participated in a scheme designed to kill the victim.
The figures for Florida are similar. [
Footnote 20] Forty-five felony murderers are currently on
death row. The Florida Supreme Court either found or affirmed a
trial court or jury finding that the defendant intended life to be
taken in 36 cases. In eight cases, the courts made no finding with
respect to intent, but the defendant was the triggerman in each
case. In only one case -- Enmund's -- there was no finding of an
intent to kill and the defendant was not the triggerman. [
Footnote 21]
Page 458 U. S. 796
The State does not challenge this analysis of the Florida
cases.
The dissent criticizes these statistics on the ground that they
do not reveal the percentage of homicides that were charged as
felony murders or the percentage of cases where the State sought
the death penalty for an accomplice guilty of felony murder.
Post at
458 U. S.
818-819. We doubt whether it is possible to gather such
information, and at any rate, it would be relevant if prosecutors
rarely sought the death penalty for accomplice felony murder, for
it would tend to indicate that prosecutors, who represent society's
interest in punishing crime, consider the death penalty excessive
for accomplice felony murder. The fact remains that we are not
aware of a single person convicted of felony murder over the past
quarter century who did not kill or attempt to kill, and did not
intend the death of the victim, who has been executed, and that
only three persons in that category are presently sentenced to die.
Nor can these figures be discounted by attributing to petitioner
the argument that "death is an unconstitutional penalty absent an
intent to kill,"
post at
458 U. S. 819,
and observing that the statistics are incomplete with respect to
intent. Petitioner's argument is that, because he did not kill,
attempt to kill, and he did not intend to kill, the death penalty
is disproportionate as applied to him, and the statistics he cites
are adequately tailored to demonstrate that juries -- and perhaps
prosecutors as well -- consider death a disproportionate penalty
for those who fall within his category. [
Footnote 22]
Page 458 U. S. 797
III
Although the judgments of legislatures, juries, and prosecutors
weigh heavily in the balance, it is for us ultimately to judge
whether the Eighth Amendment permits imposition of the death
penalty on one such as Enmund who aids and abets a felony in the
course of which a murder is committed by others but who does not
himself kill, attempt to kill, or intend that a killing take place
or that lethal force will be employed. We have concluded, along
with most legislatures and juries, that it does not.
We have no doubt that robbery is a serious crime deserving
serious punishment. It is not, however, a crime "so grievous an
affront to humanity that the only adequate response may be the
penalty of death."
Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 184
(footnote omitted).
"[I]t does not compare with murder, which does involve the
unjustified taking of human life. Although it may be accompanied by
another crime, [robbery], by definition, does not include the death
of or even the serious injury to another person. The murderer
kills; the [robber], if no more than that, does not. Life is over
for the victim of the murderer; for the [robbery] victim, life . .
. is not over, and normally is not beyond repair."
Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 598
(footnote omitted). As was said of the crime of rape in
Coker, we have the abiding conviction that the death
penalty, which is "unique in its severity and irrevocability,"
Gregg v. Georgia, supra, at
428 U. S. 187,
is an excessive penalty for the robber who, as such, does not take
human life.
Page 458 U. S. 798
Here, the robbers did commit murder; but they were subjected to
the death penalty only because they killed as well as robbed. The
question before us is not the disproportionality of death as a
penalty for murder, but rather the validity of capital punishment
for Enmund's own conduct. The focus must be on his culpability, not
on that of those who committed the robbery and shot the victims,
for we insist on "individualized consideration as a constitutional
requirement in imposing the death sentence,"
Lockett v.
Ohio, 438 U. S. 586,
438 U. S. 605
(1978) (footnote omitted), which means that we must focus on
"relevant facets of the character and record of the individual
offender."
Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.
S. 280,
428 U. S. 304
(1976). Enmund himself did not kill or attempt to kill; and, as
construed by the Florida Supreme Court, the record before us does
not warrant a finding that Enmund had any intention of
participating in or facilitating a murder. Yet under Florida law,
death was an authorized penalty because Enmund aided and abetted a
robbery in the course of which murder was committed. It is
fundamental that "causing harm intentionally must be punished more
severely than causing the same harm unintentionally." H. Hart,
Punishment and Responsibility 162 (1968). Enmund did not kill or
intend to kill, and thus his culpability is plainly different from
that of the robbers who killed; yet the State treated them alike,
and attributed to Enmund the culpability of those who killed the
Kerseys. This was impermissible under the Eighth Amendment.
In
Gregg v. Georgia, the opinion announcing the
judgment observed that "[t]he death penalty is said to serve two
principal social purposes: retribution and deterrence of capital
crimes by prospective offenders." 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 183
(footnote omitted). Unless the death penalty, when applied to those
in Enmund's position, measurably contributes to one or both of
these goals, it "is nothing more than the purposeless and needless
imposition of pain and suffering," and hence an unconstitutional
punishment.
Coker v. Georgia, supra, at
433 U. S. 592.
We are quite unconvinced, however, that the threat
Page 458 U. S. 799
that the death penalty will be imposed for murder will
measurably deter one who does not kill and has no intention or
purpose that life will be taken. Instead, it seems likely that
"capital punishment can serve as a deterrent only when murder is
the result of premeditation and deliberation,"
Fisher v. United
States, 328 U. S. 463,
328 U. S. 484
(1946) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting), for if a person does not
intend that life be taken or contemplate that lethal force will be
employed by others, the possibility that the death penalty will be
imposed for vicarious felony murder will not "enter into the cold
calculus that precedes the decision to act."
Gregg v. Georgia,
supra, at
428 U. S. 186
(footnote omitted).
It would be very different if the likelihood of a killing in the
course of a robbery were so substantial that one should share the
blame for the killing if he somehow participated in the felony. But
competent observers have concluded that there is no basis in
experience for the notion that death so frequently occurs in the
course of a felony for which killing is not an essential ingredient
that the death penalty should be considered as a justifiable
deterrent to the felony itself. Model Penal Code § 210.2,
Comment, p. 38, and n. 96. This conclusion was based on three
comparisons of robbery statistics, each of which showed that only
about one-half of one percent of robberies resulted in homicide.
[
Footnote 23] The most
recent national
Page 458 U. S. 800
crime statistics strongly support this conclusion. [
Footnote 24] In addition to the
evidence that killings only rarely occur during robberies is the
fact, already noted, that however often death occurs in the course
of a felony such as robbery, the death penalty is rarely imposed on
one only vicariously guilty of the murder, a fact which further
attenuates its possible utility as an effective deterrence.
As for retribution as a justification for executing Enmund, we
think this very much depends on the degree of Enmund's culpability
-- what Enmund's intentions, expectations, and actions were.
American criminal law has long considered a defendant's intention
-- and therefore his moral guilt -- to be critical to "the degree
of [his] criminal culpability,"
Mullaney v. Wilbur,
421 U. S. 684,
421 U. S. 698
(1975), and the Court has found criminal penalties to be
unconstitutionally excessive in the absence of intentional
wrongdoing. In
Robinson v. California, 370 U.
S. 660,
370 U. S. 667
(1962), a statute making narcotics addiction a crime, even though
such addiction "is apparently an illness which may be contracted
innocently or involuntarily," was struck down under the Eighth
Amendment. Similarly, in
Weems v. United States, the Court
invalidated a statute making it a crime for a public official to
make a false entry in a public record but not requiring the
offender to "injur[e] anyone by his act or inten[d] to injure
anyone." 217 U.S. at
217 U. S. 363.
The Court employed a similar approach in
Godfrey v.
Georgia, 446 U. S. 420,
446 U. S. 433
(1980), reversing a death sentence based on the existence of an
aggravating circumstance because the defendant's crime did not
reflect "a consciousness
Page 458 U. S. 801
materially more
depraved' than that of any person guilty of
murder."
For purposes of imposing the death penalty, Enmund's criminal
culpability must be limited to his participation in the robbery,
and his punishment must be tailored to his personal responsibility
and moral guilt. Putting Enmund to death to avenge two killings
that he did not commit and had no intention of committing or
causing does not measurably contribute to the retributive end of
ensuring that the criminal gets his just deserts. This is the
judgment of most of the legislatures that have recently addressed
the matter, and we have no reason to disagree with that judgment
for purposes of construing and applying the Eighth Amendment.
IV
Because the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the death penalty in
this case in the absence of proof that Enmund killed or attempted
to kill, and regardless of whether Enmund intended or contemplated
that life would be taken, we reverse the judgment upholding the
death penalty and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent
with this opinion.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Jeanette Armstrong's trial was severed and she was convicted of
two counts of second-degree murder and one count of robbery and
sentenced to three consecutive life sentences.
399 So. 2d
1362, 1371 (Fla.1981).
[
Footnote 2]
The Florida Supreme Court's understanding of the evidence
differed sharply from that of the trial court with respect to the
degree of Enmund's participation. In its sentencing findings, the
trial court concluded that Enmund was a major participant in the
robbery because he planned the robbery in advance and himself shot
the Kerseys. 399 So. 2d at 1372. Both of these findings, as we
understand it, were rejected by the Florida Supreme Court's holding
that the only supportable inference with respect to Enmund's
participation was that he drove the getaway car. The dissent, while
conceding that this holding negated the finding that Enmund was one
of the triggermen, argues that the trial court's finding that
Enmund planned the robbery was implicitly affirmed.
Post
at
458 U. S. 809.
As we have said, we disagree with that view. In any event, the
question is irrelevant to the constitutional issue before us, since
the Florida Supreme Court held that driving the escape car was
enough to warrant conviction and the death penalty, whether or not
Enmund intended that life be taken or anticipated that lethal force
would be used.
[
Footnote 3]
In
Armstrong, the Florida Supreme Court rejected the
trial court's conclusion that the Kerseys had been killed in order
to eliminate them as witnesses, and stated that, according to the
only direct account of the events, "the shootings were indeed
spontaneous, and were precipitated by the armed resistance of Mrs.
Kersey." 399 So. 2d at 963.
[
Footnote 4]
The petitioner argues a second question: whether the degree of
Enmund's participation in the killings was given the consideration
required by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. We need not deal
with this question.
[
Footnote 5]
Cal.Penal Code Ann. §§ 189, 190.2(a)(17) (West
Supp.1982); Fla.Stat. §§ 782.04(1)(a), 775.082(1),
921.141(5)(d) (1981); Ga.Code §§ 26-1101(b), (c),
27-2534.1(b)(2) (1978); Miss.Code Ann. §§ 97-3-19(2)(e),
99-19101(5)(d) (Supp.1981); Nev.Rev.Stat. §§
200.030(1)(b), 200.030(4), 200.033(4) (1981); S.C.Code §§
16-3-10, 16-3-20(C)(a)(1) (1976 and Supp.1981); Tenn.Code Ann.
§§ 39-2402(a), 39-2404(i)(7) (Supp.1981); Wyo.Stat.
§§ 6-4-101, 6-4-102(h)(iv) (1977).
[
Footnote 6]
Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 565.001, 565.003, 565.008(2) (1978)
(death penalty may be imposed only for capital murder; felony
murder is first-degree murder); N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§
630:1, 630:1(III), 630:1-a(1)(b)(2) (1974 and Supp.1981) (capital
murder includes only killing a law enforcement officer, killing
during a kidnaping, and murder for hire); 18 Pa.Cons.Stat.
§§ 2502(a), (b), 1102 (1980) (death penalty may be
imposed only for first-degree murder; felony murder is
second-degree murder); Wash.Rev.Code §§ 9 A. 32.030,
10.95.020 (1981) (death penalty may be imposed only for
premeditated killing).
[
Footnote 7]
Ala.Code §§ 13A-2-23, 13A-5-40(a)(2), 13A-2(a)(1)
(1977 and Supp.1982) (to be found guilty of capital murder,
accomplice must have had "intent to promote or assist the
commission of the offense" and murder must be intentional);
Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 38, �� 9-1(a)(3), 9-1(b)(6) (1979)
(capital crime only if defendant killed intentionally or with
knowledge that his actions "created a strong probability of death
or great bodily harm"); La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30(1) (West
Supp.1982) ("specific intent to kill"); N.M.Stat.Ann. §§
30-2-1(A)(2), 31-18-14(A), 31-20A-5 (Supp.1981) (felony murder is a
capital crime, but death penalty may not be imposed absent intent
to kill unless victim was a peace officer); Ohio Rev.Code Ann.
§§ 2903.01(B), (C), (D), 2929.02(A), 2929.04(A)(7) (1982)
(accomplice not guilty of capital murder unless he intended to
kill); Tex.Penal Code Ann. §§ 19.02(a), 19.03(a)(2)
(1974) ("intentionally commits the murder in the course of [a
felony]"); Utah Code Ann. § 76202(1) (1978) ("intentionally or
knowingly causes the death of another"); Va.Code § 18.2-31(d)
(1982) ("willful, deliberate and premeditated killing of any person
in the commission of robbery while armed with a deadly
weapon").
[
Footnote 8]
Ark.Stat.Ann. § 41-1501(1)(a) (1977) ("extreme indifference
to . . . life");
see also § 41-1501, Commentary ("an
inadvertent killing in the course of a felony will not . . .
support . . . a conviction entailing punishment by death");
Del.Code Ann., Tit. 11, §§ 636(a)(2), (6) (1979)
("recklessly" or "with criminal negligence" causes death during the
commission of a felony); Ky.Rev.Stat. § 507.020(1)(b)
(Supp.1980) (defendant must manifest "extreme indifference to human
life" and "wantonly engag[e] in conduct which creates a grave risk
of death . . . and thereby causes . . . death");
see also
Commentary following Criminal Law of Kentucky Annotated, Penal Code
§ 507.020, p. 677 (1978) (each accomplice's "participation in
[the] felony" must "constitut[e] wantonness manifesting extreme
indifference to human life").
[
Footnote 9]
Md. Code Ann., Art. 27, §§ 410, 412(b), 413(d)(10),
413(e)(1) (1982) (except in cases of murder for hire, only
principal in the first degree subject to the death penalty). In
addition, two jurisdictions already accounted for in
n 7,
supra, also preclude the death
penalty where the defendant did not commit the murder.
Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 38, �� 9-1(a)(3), 9-1(b)(6) (1979)
(defendant must actually kill victim); Va.Code §§
18.2-31(d), 18.2-10(a), 18.2-18 (1982) (except in cases of murder
for hire, only principal in the first degree may be tried for
capital murder).
[
Footnote 10]
Colo.Rev.Stat. § 16 103(5)(d) (1978); 49 U.S.C. §
1473(c)(6)(D) (same).
[
Footnote 11]
Vt.Stat.Ann., Tit. 13, §§ 2303(b), (c) (Supp.1981)
(capital murder reserved for offenders who commit a second
unrelated murder or murder of a correctional officer).
[
Footnote 12]
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 13-703(G)(3) (Supp.1981-1982)
("relatively minor" participation); Conn.Gen.Stat. §
53a-46a(f)(4) (Supp.1982) (same); Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(c)(4)
(Supp.1981) (same); Mont.Code Ann. § 46-18-304(6) (1981)
(same); Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523(2)(e) (1979) (same);
N.C.Gen.Stat. § 15A-2000(f)(4) (Supp.1981) (same).
[
Footnote 13]
Idaho Code § 19-2515(f) (1979); Okla.Stat., Tit. 21, §
701.12 (1981); S.D.Comp.Laws Ann. § 23A-27A-1 (Supp.1981).
[
Footnote 14]
See the Ala., Colo., Conn., Md. Ohio, Pa., S.D. and
Wash. statutes cited in nn.
5-7
9 10 12 and
13 supra.
[
Footnote 15]
The dissent characterizes the state statutes somewhat
differently. It begins by noting that 31 States "authorize a
sentencer to impose a death sentence for a death that occurs during
the course of a robbery."
Post at
458 U. S. 819.
That is not relevant to this case, however. Rather, at issue is the
number of States which authorize the death penalty where the
defendant did not kill, attempt to kill, or intend to kill. The
dissent divides the statutes into three categories. Its first
category of 20 statutes include 8 about which there is no
disagreement -- Cal., Fla., Ga., Miss., Nev., S.C. Tenn., and Wyo.
In 11 other States listed by the dissent -- Ariz., Colo., Conn.,
Idaho, Ind., Mont., Neb., N.M., N.C., Okla., and S.D. -- the
dissent looks solely at the provisions defining the crime of
capital murder. Colorado's capital sentencing statute makes a
defendant's minimal participation in a murder an absolute defense
to imposition of the death penalty.
See n 10,
supra. Contrary to the
dissent's claim that this provision would have been of no help to
petitioner,
see post at
458 U. S. 820,
n. 36, if the case is judged on the basis of the Florida Supreme
Court's findings,
see n 2,
supra, Colorado law may well have barred
imposition of the death penalty in this case. Similarly, the Ariz.,
Conn., Ind., Mont., Neb., and N.C. capital sentencing statutes do
not permit capital
brk:
punishment solely for vicarious felony murder, and reduce the
likelihood that the death penalty will be imposed on a vicarious
felony murderer, even where aggravating circumstances are present,
by making a defendant's minimal participation in the homicide a
mitigating circumstance.
See n 12,
supra. Three other States -- Idaho, Okla.,
and S.D. -- allow a defendant who does not intend to kill or
actually kill to be executed only where other aggravating
circumstances are present, and in those States, the felony murder
itself cannot serve as an aggravating circumstance.
See
n 13,
supra. New
Mexico's capital sentencing statute requires the jury to find at
least one statutory aggravating circumstance before the death
penalty may be imposed, and, in addition, aggravating circumstances
must outweigh mitigating circumstances. N.M.Stat.Ann. §§
31-20A-4(C)(1) and (2) (Supp.1981). The statute lists seven
statutory aggravating circumstances, six of which require an intent
to kill. §§ 31-20A-5(B)(G). The only aggravating
circumstance which does not include an intent element is not
applicable here, for it requires that the victim must be "a peace
officer who was acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty
when he was murdered." § 31-20A-5(A). The remaining State,
Vermont, limits the death penalty to narrow circumstances not
present here.
See n
11,
supra.
There is no disagreement that three States require a culpable
mental state short of intent before a nontriggerman may be put to
death,
compare n 8,
supra, with post at
458 U. S. 821,
n. 37, a mental state which Enmund was not proved to possess.
Similarly, the dissent's second category of seven States which
authorize the death penalty only if the defendant had specific
intent to kill the victim differs from our group of specific intent
States only because we include New Mexico in that group.
Compare n 7,
supra, with post at
458 U. S.
821-822, n. 38. Finally, there is no disagreement that
three States restrict application of the death penalty to felony
murderers who actually kill.
Compare n 9,
supra, with post at
458 U. S. 822,
n. 39.
[
Footnote 16]
See App. D to Brief for Petitioner.
[
Footnote 17]
There is no reason to believe that this group of 16 contains a
higher proportion of nontriggermen than does the rest of the
defendants studied.
[
Footnote 18]
See NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.,
Death Row U.S.A. 1, n. * (Oct. 20, 1981).
[
Footnote 19]
See App. E to Brief for Petitioner; NAACP Legal Defense
and Educational Fund, Inc., Death Row U.S.A. (Oct. 20, 1981).
[
Footnote 20]
See App. to Reply Brief for Petitioner A-1 - A-7.
[
Footnote 21]
These statistics concerning the number of vicarious felony
murderers who have been executed and the number of them on death
row are consistent with the findings of a study of 111 cases in
which the defendant was found guilty of a capital crime, and hence
could have received the death penalty. Kalven & Zeisel, The
American Jury and the Death Penalty, 33 U.Chi.L.Rev. 769 (1966).
The authors found that juries rebel "at imposing the death penalty
for the vicarious criminal responsibility of the defendant,"
id. at 776, to the extent that felony murder and
accomplice factors accounted for more jury decisions not to impose
the death penalty when the trial judge decided to impose the death
penalty than any other factor.
Id. at 777. The authors had
anticipated that, "because of the rigidity of the felony murder
rule, the jury's sense of equity would produce a broad area of
disagreement."
Id. at 776, n. 10. However, they found that
"disagreement over the rule emerges only at the level of the death
penalty."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 22]
"[T]he climate of international opinion concerning the
acceptability of a particular punishment" is an additional
consideration which is "not irrelevant."
Coker v. Georgia,
433 U. S. 584,
433 U. S. 596,
n. 10 (1977). It is thus worth noting that the doctrine of felony
murder has been abolished in England and India, severely restricted
in Canada and a number of other Commonwealth countries, and is
unknown in continental Europe. ALI, Model Penal Code § 210.2,
pp. 390 (Off. Draft and Revised Comments 1980) (hereafter Model
Penal Code). It is also relevant that death sentences have not
infrequently been commuted to terms of imprisonment on the grounds
of the defendant's lack of premeditation and limited participation
in the homicidal act.
See Wolfgang, Kelly, & Nolde,
Comparison of the Executed and Commuted Among Admissions to Death
Row, 53 J.Crim.L.C. & P.S. 301, 310 (1962).
[
Footnote 23]
The statistics relied upon by the American Law Institute may be
summarized as follows:
Robberies
Date & No. of Accompanied
Location Robberies by Homicide %
-------------------------------------------------
Cook County, Ill. 14,392 (est.) 71 .49
1926-1927
Philadelphia, Pa. 6,432 38 59
1948-1952
New Jersey 16,273 66 41
1975
Model Penal Code § 210.2, Comment, p. 38, n. 96.
[
Footnote 24]
An estimated total of 548,809 robberies occurred in the United
States in 1980. U.S. Dept. of Justice, Federal Bureau of
Investigation, Uniform Crime Reports 17 (1981). Approximately 2,361
persons were murdered in the United States in 1980 in connection
with robberies,
id. at 13, and thus only about 0.43% of
robberies in the United States in 1980 resulted in homicide.
See also Cook, The Effect of Gun Availability on Robbery
and Robbery Murder, in 3 R. Haveman & B. Zellner, Policy
Studies Review Annual 743, 747 (1980) (0.48% of all robberies
result in murder).
JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion. However, I adhere to my view that
the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual
punishment prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
See Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U. S. 153,
428 U. S. 227
(1976) (dissenting opinion).
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE POWELL,
and JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, dissenting.
Today the Court holds that the Eighth Amendment prohibits a
State from executing a convicted felony murderer. I dissent from
this holding not only because I believe that it is not supported by
the analysis in our previous cases, but also
Page 458 U. S. 802
because today's holding interferes with state criteria for
assessing legal guilt by recasting intent as a matter of federal
constitutional law.
I
The evidence at trial showed that, at approximately 7:30 a.m. on
April 1, 1975, Sampson and Jeanette Armstrong approached the back
door of Thomas and Eunice Kersey's farmhouse on the pretext of
obtaining water for their overheated car. [
Footnote 2/1] When Thomas Kersey retrieved a water jug
to help the Armstrongs, Sampson Armstrong grabbed him, held a gun
to him, and told Jeanette Armstrong to take his wallet. Hearing her
husband's cries for help, Eunice Kersey came around the side of the
house with a gun and shot Jeanette Armstrong. Sampson Armstrong,
and perhaps Jeanette Armstrong, returned the fire, killing both of
the Kerseys. [
Footnote 2/2] The
Armstrongs dragged the bodies into the kitchen, took Thomas
Kersey's money, and fled to a nearby car, where the petitioner,
Earl Enmund, was waiting to help the Armstrongs escape. Record
1348-1351. [
Footnote 2/3]
Ida Jean Shaw [
Footnote 2/4]
testified that, on March 31, the petitioner and the two Armstrongs
were staying at her house. When she awoke on April 1, the day of
the murders, the petitioner,
Page 458 U. S. 803
Jeanette, and Sampson, as well as Shaw's 1969 yellow Buick, were
gone.
Id. at 1185-1186. A little after eight o'clock,
either the petitioner or Sampson Armstrong entered the house and
told her that Jeanette had been shot.
Id. at 1187-1188.
After learning that Jeanette had been shot during a robbery, Shaw
asked the petitioner "[w]hy he did it." Enmund answered that he had
decided to rob Thomas Kersey after he had seen Kersey's money a few
weeks earlier.
Id. at 1205. [
Footnote 2/5] At the same time, Sampson Armstrong
volunteered that he had made sure that the Kerseys were dead.
Id. at 1207-1208.
Ida Jean Shaw also testified that, pursuant to the petitioner's
and Sampson Armstrong's instructions, she had disposed of a
.22-caliber pistol that she normally kept in her car, as well as a
.38-caliber pistol belonging to the Armstrongs.
Id. at
1198-1202. The murder weapons were never recovered. [
Footnote 2/6]
In his closing argument, the prosecutor did not argue that Earl
Enmund had killed the Kerseys. Instead, he maintained that the
petitioner had initiated and planned the
Page 458 U. S. 804
armed robbery, and was in the car during the killings. According
to the prosecutor, "Sampson Armstrong killed the old people."
Id. at 1577. [
Footnote
2/7]
After deliberating for four hours, the jury found Sampson
Armstrong and the petitioner each guilty of two counts of
first-degree murder [
Footnote 2/8]
and one count of robbery. [
Footnote
2/9] The jury
Page 458 U. S. 805
then heard evidence pertaining to the appropriate sentence for
the two defendants, and recommended the death penalty for each
defendant on each of the murder counts. [
Footnote 2/10]
In its sentencing findings, [
Footnote 2/11] the trial court found four statutory
aggravating circumstances regarding the petitioner's involvement in
the murder: (1) the petitioner previously had been convicted of a
felony involving the use of violence (an armed robbery in 1957),
Fla.Stat. § 921.141(5)(b) (1981); (2) the murders were
committed during the course of a robbery, § 921.141(5)(d); (3)
the murders were committed for pecuniary gain, §
921.141(5)(f); and (4) the murders were especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel because the Kerseys had been shot in a prone
position in an effort to eliminate them as witnesses, §
921.141(5)(h). App. 30-31;
399 So. 2d
1362, 1371-1372 (Fla.1981). [
Footnote 2/12]
Page 458 U. S. 806
The trial court also found that "
none of the statutory
mitigating circumstances applied" to the petitioner. App. 32
(emphasis in original). Most notably, the court concluded that the
evidence clearly showed that the petitioner was an accomplice to
the capital felony, and that his participation had not been
"relatively minor," but had been major in that he "planned the
capital felony and actively participated in an attempt to avoid
detection by disposing of the murder weapons."
Ibid.; 399
So. 2d at 1373.
See Fla.Stat. § 921.141(6)(d) (1981).
[
Footnote 2/13]
Considering these factors, the trial court concluded that the
"aggravating circumstances of these capital felonies outweigh the
mitigating circumstances," and imposed the death penalty for each
count of murder. App. 32; 399 So. 2d at 1373. The court sentenced
the petitioner to life imprisonment for the robbery. App. 28.
[
Footnote 2/14]
Page 458 U. S. 807
On appeal, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the petitioner's
convictions and sentences. [
Footnote
2/15] In challenging his convictions for first-degree murder,
the petitioner claimed that there was no evidence that he had
committed premeditated murder, or that he had been present aiding
and abetting the robbery when the Kerseys were shot. He argued
that, since the jury properly could have concluded only that he was
in the car on the highway when the murders were committed, he could
be found guilty, at most, of second-degree murder under the State's
felony murder rule. [
Footnote
2/16]
The court rejected this argument. Quoting from an earlier case,
the Florida Supreme Court held:
"'[A]n individual who personally kills another during the
perpetration or attempt to perpetrate one of the enumerated
felonies is guilty of first degree murder. . . . Moreover, the
felon's liability for first degree murder extends to all of his
co-felons who are personally present. As perpetrators of the
underlying felony, they are principals in the homicide. In Florida,
as in the majority of jurisdictions, the felony murder rule and the
law of principals combine to make a felon generally responsible for
the lethal acts of his co-felon. Only if the felon is an accessory
before the fact and not personally present does liability attach
under the second degree murder provision of the applicable statute
in the instant case.'"
399 So. 2d at 1369 (quoting
Adams v.
State, 341 So. 2d
765, 768-769 (Fla.1976) (footnote omitted),
cert.
denied, 434 U.S. 878 (1977)).
Page 458 U. S. 808
Consequently, the critical issue regarding liability was whether
the petitioner's conduct would make him a principal or merely an
accessory before the fact to the underlying robbery. Under Florida
law at the time of the murders,
"if the accused was present aiding and abetting the commission
or attempt of one of the violent felonies listed in the
first-degree murder statute, he is equally guilty, with the actual
perpetrator of the underlying felony, of first-degree murder."
399 So. 2d at 1370. Moreover,
"'the presence of the aider and abetter need not have been
actual, but it is sufficient if he was constructively present,
provided the aider, pursuant to a previous understanding, is
sufficiently near and so situated as to abet or encourage, or to
render assistance to, the actual perpetrator in committing the
felonious act or in escaping after its commission.'"
Ibid. (quoting
Pope v. State, 84 Fla. 428,
446, 94 So. 865, 871 (1922)).
The court noted that there
"was no direct evidence at trial that Earl Enmund was present at
the back door of the Kersey home when the plan to rob the elderly
couple led to their being murdered."
399 So. 2d at 1370. [
Footnote
2/17] Instead,
"the only evidence of the degree of his participation is the
jury's likely inference that he was the person in the car by the
side of the road near the scene of the crimes. The jury could have
concluded that he was there, a few hundred feet away, waiting to
help the robbers escape with the Kerseys' money."
Ibid. This evidence, the court concluded, was
sufficient to find the petitioner to be a principal under state
law, "constructively present aiding and abetting the commission of
the crime of robbery," and thus guilty of first-degree murder.
Ibid.
Page 458 U. S. 809
Turning to the trial court's written sentencing findings, the
State Supreme Court rejected two of the four aggravating
circumstances. First, the court held that two of the trial judge's
findings -- that the murders were committed both in the course of
robbery and for pecuniary gain -- referred to the same aspect of
the petitioner's crime. Consequently, these facts supported only
one aggravating circumstance. Second, citing
Armstrong v.
State, 399 So. 2d 953
(Fla.1981), the court held that "[t]he recited circumstance, that
the murders were especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel, cannot
be approved." 399 So. 2d at 1373. [
Footnote 2/18] The court affirmed the trial court's
findings that none of the statutory mitigating circumstances
applied.
Ibid. Because one of those findings was that
Enmund's participation in the capital felony was not minor, due to
his role in planning the robbery, the State Supreme Court
implicitly affirmed the finding that Enmund had planned the
robbery.
Regarding the petitioner's claim that imposition of the death
penalty, absent a showing that he intended to kill, would violate
the Eighth Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishments, the
court simply stated that the petitioner "offers us no binding legal
authority that directly supports this proposition, and we therefore
reject it."
Id. at 1371.
Page 458 U. S. 810
II
Earl Enmund's claim in this Court is that the death sentence
imposed by the Florida trial court, and affirmed by the Florida
Supreme Court, is unconstitutionally disproportionate to the role
he played in the robbery and murders of the Kerseys. [
Footnote 2/19] In particular, he contends
that, because he had no actual intent to kill the victims -- in
effect, because his behavior and intent were no more blameworthy
than that of any robber -- capital punishment is too extreme a
penalty. [
Footnote 2/20]
In
Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U. S. 153
(1976), a majority of this Court concluded that the death penalty
does not invariably violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments
Clause of the Eighth Amendment. [
Footnote 2/21]
See id. at
428 U. S. 187
(opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.) ("[W]hen a life has
been taken deliberately by the offender, we cannot say that the
punishment is invariably disproportionate to the crime. It is an
extreme sanction, suitable to the most extreme of crimes")
(footnote omitted);
id. at
428 U. S. 226
(opinion of WHITE, J.) (rejecting the argument that "the death
penalty, however imposed and for whatever crime, is cruel and
unusual punishment");
Page 458 U. S. 811
id. at
428 U. S. 227
(BLACKMUN, J., concurring in judgment). In no case since
Gregg and its companion cases, [
Footnote 2/22] has this Court retreated from that
position. [
Footnote 2/23]
Recognizing the constitutionality
Page 458 U. S. 812
of the death penalty, however, only marks the beginning of the
inquiry, for Earl Enmund was not convicted of murder as it is
ordinarily envisioned -- a deliberate and premeditated, unlawful
killing. Rather, through the doctrine of accessorial liability, the
petitioner has been convicted of two murders that he did not
specifically intend. [
Footnote
2/24] Thus, it is necessary to examine the concept of
proportionality as enunciated in this Court's cases to determine
whether the penalty imposed on Earl Enmund is unconstitutionally
disproportionate to his crimes.
A
The Eighth Amendment concept of proportionality was first fully
expressed in
Weems v. United States, 217 U.
S. 349 (1910). In that case, defendant Weems was
sentenced to 15 years at hard labor for falsifying a public
document.
Page 458 U. S. 813
After remarking that "it is a precept of justice that punishment
for crime should be graduated and proportioned to offense,"
id. at
217 U. S. 367,
and after comparing Weems' punishment to the punishments for other
crimes, the Court concluded that the sentence was cruel and
unusual.
Id. at
217 U. S.
381.
Not until two-thirds of a century later, in
Coker v.
Georgia, 433 U. S. 584
(1977), did the Court declare another punishment to be
unconstitutionally disproportionate to the crime. Writing for
himself and three other Members of the Court, JUSTICE WHITE
concluded that death is a disproportionate penalty for the crime of
raping an adult woman.
Id. at
433 U. S. 597.
[
Footnote 2/25] In reaching this
conclusion, the plurality was careful to inform its judgment
"by objective factors to the maximum possible extent [by giving
attention] to the public attitudes concerning a particular sentence
-- history and precedent, legislative attitudes, and the response
of juries reflected in their sentencing decisions."
Id. at
433 U. S. 592.
The plurality's resort to objective factors was no doubt an effort
to derive "from the evolving standards of decency that mark the
progress of a maturing society" the meaning of the requirement of
proportionality contained within the Eighth Amendment.
Trop v.
Dulles, 356 U. S. 86,
356 U. S. 101
(1958) (opinion of Warren, C.J.).
The plurality noted that, within the previous 50 years, a
majority of the States had never authorized death as a punishment
for rape. More significantly to the plurality, only 3 of the 35
States that immediately reinstituted the death penalty following
the Court's judgment in
Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.
S. 238 (1972) (invalidating nearly all state capital
punishment
Page 458 U. S. 814
statutes), defined rape as a capital offense. [
Footnote 2/26] The plurality also considered
"the sentencing decisions that juries have made in the course of
assessing whether capital punishment is an appropriate penalty for
the crime being tried."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 596.
See Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 181
(opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.) ("The jury also is a
significant and reliable objective index of contemporary values
because it is so directly involved"). From the available data, the
plurality concluded that, in at least 90% of the rape convictions
since 1973, juries in Georgia had declined to impose the death
penalty. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S.
597.
Thus, the conclusion reached in
Coker rested in part on
the Court's observation that
both legislatures
and juries firmly rejected the penalty of death for the
crime of rape.
See Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.
S. 280,
428 U. S. 293
(1976) (opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.) (concluding
that the State's mandatory death penalty statute violates the
Eighth Amendment because the "two crucial indicators of evolving
standards of decency respecting the imposition of punishment in our
society -- jury determinations and legislative enactments -- both
point conclusively to the repudiation of automatic death
sentences").
In addition to ascertaining "contemporary standards," the
plurality opinion also considered qualitative factors bearing on
the question whether the death penalty was disproportionate,
for
"the Constitution contemplates that, in the end, our own
judgment will be brought to bear on the question of the
acceptability of the death penalty under the Eighth Amendment."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 597.
The plurality acknowledged that a rapist is almost as blameworthy
as a murderer, describing
Page 458 U. S. 815
the crime of rape as "highly reprehensible, both in a moral
sense and in its almost total contempt for the personal integrity
and autonomy of the female victim."
Ibid. Despite the
enormity of the crime of rape, however, the Court concluded that
the death penalty was "grossly out of proportion to the severity of
the crime,"
id. at
433 U. S. 592,
in part because the harm caused by a rape "does not compare with
murder, which does involve the unjustified taking of human life."
Id. at
433 U. S.
598.
Coker teaches, therefore, that proportionality -- at
least as regards capital punishment -- not only requires an inquiry
into contemporary standards as expressed by legislators and jurors,
but also involves the notion that the magnitude of the punishment
imposed must be related to the degree of the harm inflicted on the
victim, as well as to the degree of the defendant's
blameworthiness. [
Footnote 2/27]
Moreover, because they turn on considerations unique to each
defendant's case, these latter factors underlying the concept of
proportionality are reflected in this Court's conclusion in
Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U. S. 586,
438 U. S. 605
(1978), that "individualized consideration [is] a constitutional
requirement in imposing the death sentence" (opinion of BURGER,
C.J.) (footnote omitted).
See id. at
438 U. S. 613
(opinion of BLACKMUN, J.) ("the Ohio judgment in this case
improperly provided the death sentence for a defendant who only
aided and abetted a murder, without permitting any consideration by
the sentencing authority of the extent of her involvement, or the
degree of her
mens rea, in the commission of the
homicide").
Page 458 U. S. 816
In sum, in considering the petitioner's challenge, the Court
should decide not only whether the petitioner's sentence of death
offends contemporary standards as reflected in the responses of
legislatures and juries, but also whether it is disproportionate to
the harm that the petitioner caused and to the petitioner's
involvement in the crime, as well as whether the procedures under
which the petitioner was sentenced satisfied the constitutional
requirement of individualized consideration set forth in
Lockett.
B
Following the analysis set forth in
Coker, the
petitioner examines the historical development of the felony murder
rule, as well as contemporary legislation and jury verdicts in
capital cases, in an effort to show that imposition of the death
penalty on him would violate the Eighth Amendment. This effort
fails, however, for the available data do not show that society has
rejected conclusively the death penalty for felony murderers.
As the petitioner acknowledges, the felony murder doctrine, and
its corresponding capital penalty, originated hundreds of years
ago, [
Footnote 2/28] and was a
fixture of English common law until 1957, when Parliament declared
that an unintentional killing during a felony would be classified
as manslaughter. [
Footnote 2/29]
The common law rule was transplanted to the American Colonies,
Page 458 U. S. 817
and its use continued largely unabated into the 20th century,
although legislative reforms often restricted capital felony murder
to enumerated violent felonies. [
Footnote 2/30]
The petitioner discounts the weight of this historical precedent
by arguing that jurors and judges widely resisted the application
of capital punishment by acquitting defendants in felony murder
cases or by convicting them of noncapital manslaughter. [
Footnote 2/31] The force of the
petitioner's argument is speculative, at best, however, for it is
unclear what fraction of the jury nullification in this country
resulted from dissatisfaction with the capital felony murder rule.
Much of it, surely, was a reaction to the mandatory death penalty,
and the failure of the common law and early state statutes to
classify murder by degree. In fact, it was in response to juror
attitudes toward capital punishment that most jurisdictions by the
early part of this century replaced their mandatory death penalty
statutes with statutes allowing juries the discretion to decide
whether to impose or to recommend the death penalty.
See
Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S.
291-292 (opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.).
[
Footnote 2/32] Thus, it simply
is not possible to conclude that historically
Page 458 U. S. 818
this country conclusively has rejected capital punishment for
homicides committed during the course of a felony. The petitioner
and the Court turn to jury verdicts in an effort to show that, by
present standards at least, capital punishment is grossly out of
proportion to the crimes that the petitioner committed. Surveying
all reported appellate court opinions since 1954 involving
executions, the petitioner has found that, of the 362 individuals
executed for homicide, 339 personally committed the homicidal
assault, and two others each had another person commit the homicide
on his behalf. Only six persons executed were "non-triggermen."
[
Footnote 2/33] A similar trend
can be seen in the petitioner's survey of the current death row
population. [
Footnote 2/34] Of
the 739 prisoners for whom sufficient data are available, only 40
did not participate in the homicidal assault, and, of those, only 3
(including the petitioner) were sentenced to death absent a finding
that they had collaborated with the killer in a specific plan to
kill. Brief for Petitioner 336.
See also App. to Reply
Brief for Petitioner (showing that of the 45 felony murderers
currently on death row in Florida, 36 were found by the State
Supreme Court or a trial court to have had the intent to kill; in 8
cases, the state courts made no finding, but the defendant was the
triggerman; and in 1, the petitioner's case, the defendant was not
the triggerman, and there was no finding of intent to kill).
Impressive as these statistics are at first glance, they cannot be
accepted uncritically. So stated, the data do not reveal the number
or fraction of homicides that were charged as felony murders, or
the number or fraction of cases in which the State sought the death
penalty for an accomplice guilty of
Page 458 U. S. 819
felony murder. Consequently, we cannot know the fraction of
cases in which juries rejected the death penalty for accomplice
felony murder. Moreover, as JUSTICE BLACKMUN pointed out in his
concurring opinion in
Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S. 615,
n. 2, many of these data classify defendants by whether they
"personally committed a homicidal assault," and do not show the
fraction of capital defendants who were shown to have an intent to
kill. While the petitioner relies on the fact that he did not pull
the trigger, his principal argument is, and must be, that death is
an unconstitutional penalty absent an intent to kill, for otherwise
defendants who hire others to kill would escape the death penalty.
See 458
U.S. 782fn2/20|>n. 20,
supra. Thus, the data he
presents are not entirely relevant. Even accepting the petitioner's
facts as meaningful, they may only reflect that sentencers are
especially cautious in imposing the death penalty, and reserve that
punishment for those defendants who are sufficiently involved in
the homicide, whether or not there was specific intent to kill.
Finally, as the petitioner acknowledges, the jury verdict
statistics cannot be viewed in isolation from state death penalty
legislation. The petitioner and the Court therefore review recent
legislation in order to support the conclusion that society has
rejected capital felony murder. Of the 35 States that presently
have a death penalty, however, fully 31 authorize a sentencer to
impose a death sentence for a death that occurs during the course
of a robbery. [
Footnote 2/35] The
States are not uniform in delimiting the circumstances under which
the
Page 458 U. S. 820
death penalty may be imposed for felony murder, but each state
statute can be classified as one of three types. The first
category, containing 20 statutes, includes those States that permit
imposition of the death penalty for felony murder even though the
defendant did not commit the homicidal act, and even though he had
no actual intent to kill. [
Footnote
2/36] Three additional
Page 458 U. S. 821
States, while requiring some finding of intent, do not require
the intent to kill that the petitioner believes is constitutionally
mandated before the death sentence may be imposed. [
Footnote 2/37] The second category,
containing seven statutes, includes those States that authorize the
death penalty only if the defendant had the specific intent (or
some rough equivalent) to kill the victim. [
Footnote 2/38] The third class of statutes, from
Page 458 U. S. 822
only three States, restricts application of the death penalty to
those felony murderers who actually commit the homicide. [
Footnote 2/39] The Court's curious method
of counting the States that authorize imposition of the death
penalty for felony murder cannot hide the fact that 23 States
permit a sentencer to impose the death penalty even though the
felony murderer has neither killed nor intended to kill his victim.
While the Court acknowledges that eight state statutes follow the
Florida death penalty scheme,
see ante at
458 U. S. 789,
n. 5, it also concedes that 15 other statutes permit imposition of
the death penalty where the defendant neither intended to kill or
actually killed the victims.
See ante at
458 U. S. 790,
n. 8 (Arkansas, Delaware, and Kentucky);
ante at
458 U. S.
793-794, n. 15 (New Mexico);
ante at
458 U. S. 791,
n. 10 (Colorado);
ante at
458 U. S. 791,
n. 11 (Vermont);
ante
Page 458 U. S. 823
at
458 U. S. 792,
n. 12 (Arizona, Connecticut, Indiana, Montana, Nebraska, and North
Carolina);
ante at
458 U. S. 792,
n. 13 (Idaho, Oklahoma, and South Dakota). Not all of the statutes
list the same aggravating circumstances. Nevertheless, the question
before the Court is not whether a particular species of death
penalty statute is unconstitutional, but whether a scheme that
permits imposition of the death penalty, absent a finding that the
defendant either killed or intended to kill the victims, is
unconstitutional. In short, the Court's peculiar statutory analysis
cannot withstand closer scrutiny.
Thus, in nearly half of the States, and in two-thirds of the
States that permit the death penalty for murder, a defendant who
neither killed the victim nor specifically intended that the victim
die may be sentenced to death for his participation in the
robbery-murder. Far from "weigh[ing] very heavily on the side of
rejecting capital punishment as a suitable penalty for" felony
murder,
Coker v. Georgia, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 596,
these legislative judgments indicate that our "evolving standards
of decency" still embrace capital punishment for this crime. For
this reason, I conclude that the petitioner has failed to meet the
standards in
Coker and
Woodson that the "two
crucial indicators of evolving standards of decency . . . -- jury
determinations and legislative enactments --
both point
conclusively to the repudiation" of capital punishment for
felony murder. 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 293 (emphasis added). In short, the death
penalty for felony murder does not fall short of our national
"standards of decency."
C
As I noted earlier, the Eighth Amendment concept of
proportionality involves more than merely a measurement of
contemporary standards of decency. It requires in addition that the
penalty imposed in a capital case be proportional to the harm
caused and the defendant's blameworthiness. Critical to the holding
in
Coker, for example, was that,
"in terms of moral depravity and of the injury to the person
and
Page 458 U. S. 824
to the public, [rape] does not compare with murder, which . . .
involve[s] the unjustified taking of human life."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S.
598.
Although the Court disingenuously seeks to characterize Enmund
as only a "robber,"
ante at
458 U. S. 797,
it cannot be disputed that he is responsible, along with Sampson
and Jeanette Armstrong, for the murders of the Kerseys. There is no
dispute that their lives were unjustifiably taken, and that the
petitioner, as one who aided and abetted the armed robbery, is
legally liable for their deaths. [
Footnote 2/40] Quite unlike the defendant in
Coker, the petitioner cannot claim that the penalty
imposed is "grossly out of proportion" to the harm for which he
admittedly is at least partly responsible.
The Court's holding today is especially disturbing because it
makes intent a matter of federal constitutional law, requiring this
Court both to review highly subjective definitional problems
customarily left to state criminal law and to develop an Eighth
Amendment meaning of intent. As JUSTICE BLACKMUN pointed out in his
concurring opinion in
Lockett, the Court's holding
substantially "interfere[s] with the States' individual statutory
categories for assessing legal
Page 458 U. S. 825
guilt." 438 U.S. at
438 U. S. 616.
[
Footnote 2/41]
See also
id. at
438 U. S.
635-636 (opinion of REHNQUIST, J.) (rejecting the idea
that intent to kill must be proved before the State can impose the
death penalty). Although the Court's opinion suggests that intent
can be ascertained as if it were some historical fact, in fact, it
is a legal concept, not easily defined. Thus, while proportionality
requires a nexus between the punishment imposed and the defendant's
blameworthiness, the Court fails to explain why the Eighth
Amendment concept of proportionality requires rejection of
standards of blameworthiness based on other levels of intent, such
as, for example, the intent to commit an armed robbery coupled with
the knowledge that armed robberies involve substantial risk of
death or serious injury to other persons. Moreover, the
intent-to-kill requirement is crudely crafted; it fails to take
into account the complex picture of the defendant's knowledge of
his accomplice's intent and whether he was armed, the defendant's
contribution to the planning and success of the crime, and the
defendant's actual participation during the commission of the
crime. Under the circumstances, the determination of the degree of
blameworthiness is best left to the sentencer, who can sift through
the facts unique to each case. Consequently, while the type of
mens rea of the defendant must be considered carefully in
assessing the proper penalty, it is not so critical a factor in
determining blameworthiness as to require a finding of intent to
kill in order to impose the death penalty for felony murder.
In sum, the petitioner and the Court have failed to show that
contemporary standards, as reflected in both jury determinations
and legislative enactments, preclude imposition of
Page 458 U. S. 826
the death penalty for accomplice felony murder. Moreover,
examination of the qualitative factors underlying the concept of
proportionality do not show that the death penalty is
disproportionate as applied to Earl Enmund. In contrast to the
crime in
Coker, the petitioner's crime involves the very
type of harm that this Court has held justifies the death penalty.
Finally, because of the unique and complex mixture of facts
involving a defendant's actions, knowledge, motives, and
participation during the commission of a felony murder, I believe
that the factfinder is best able to assess the defendant's
blameworthiness. Accordingly, I conclude that the death penalty is
not disproportionate to the crime of felony murder, even though the
defendant did not actually kill or intend to kill his victims.
[
Footnote 2/42]
Page 458 U. S. 827
III
Although I conclude that the death penalty is not
disproportionate to the crime of felony murder, I believe that, in
light of the State Supreme Court's rejection of critical factual
findings, our previous opinions require a remand for a new
sentencing hearing. [
Footnote
2/43] Repeatedly, this Court has emphasized that capital
sentencing decisions must focus "on the circumstances of each
individual homicide and individual defendant."
Proffitt v.
Florida, 428 U. S. 242,
428 U. S. 258
(1976) (opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.). In striking
down the mandatory capital punishment statute in
Woodson v.
North Carolina, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 304,
a plurality of the Court wrote:
"A process that accords no significance to relevant facets of
the character and record of the individual offender or the
circumstances of the particular offense excludes from consideration
in fixing the ultimate punishment of death the possibility of
compassionate or mitigating factors stemming from the diverse
frailties of humankind. It treats all persons convicted of a
designated offense not as uniquely individual human beings, but as
members of a faceless, undifferentiated mass to be subjected to the
blind infliction of the penalty of death."
". . . [W]e believe that, in capital cases, the fundamental
respect for humanity underlying the Eighth Amendment requires
consideration of the character and record of the individual
offender and the circumstances of the particular offense as a
constitutionally indispensable part of the process of inflicting
the penalty of death."
In
Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S. 605,
a plurality of this Court concluded:
"Given that the imposition of death by public authority is so
profoundly different from all other penalties, we cannot
Page 458 U. S. 828
avoid the conclusion that an individualized decision is
essential in capital cases. The need for treating each defendant in
a capital case with that degree of respect due the uniqueness of
the individual is far more important than in noncapital cases. . .
. The nonavailability of corrective or modifying mechanisms with
respect to an executed capital sentence underscores the need for
individualized consideration as a constitutional requirement in
imposing the death sentence."
(Footnote omitted.) Accordingly,
"the sentencer, in all but the rarest kind of capital case,
[may] not be precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor,
any aspect of the defendant's character or record and any of the
circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis
for a sentence less than death."
(Footnotes omitted.)
Id. at
438 U. S. 604.
See id. at
438 U. S. 613
(opinion of BLACKMUN, J.) (concluding that the Ohio capital
sentencing statute is unconstitutional because it "provided the
death sentence for a defendant who only aided and abetted a murder,
without permitting any consideration by the sentencing authority of
the extent of her involvement, or the degree of her
mens
rea, in the commission of the homicide");
Green v.
Georgia, 442 U. S. 95,
442 U. S. 97
(1979) (per curiam) (holding that the exclusion of evidence, from
the capital sentencing proceeding, that the petitioner was not
present when the victim was killed violated due process because
"[t]he excluded testimony was highly relevant to a critical issue
in the punishment phase of the trial");
Eddings v.
Oklahoma, 455 U. S. 104
(1982) (adopting the plurality's rule in
Lockett). Thus,
in deciding whether or not to impose capital punishment on a felony
murderer, a sentencer must consider any relevant evidence or
arguments that the death penalty is inappropriate for a particular
defendant because of his relative lack of
mens rea and his
peripheral participation in the murder. Because of the peculiar
circumstances of this case, I conclude that the trial court did not
give sufficient consideration to the petitioner's role in the
crimes, and thus did not consider the mitigating
Page 458 U. S. 829
circumstances proffered by the defendant at his sentencing
hearing. [
Footnote 2/44]
In sentencing the petitioner, the trial court found four
statutory aggravating circumstances: the petitioner had been
convicted previously of a violent felony; the murders had been
committed during the course of a robbery; the murders had been
committed for pecuniary gain; and the murders were especially
heinous, atrocious, or cruel. In its factual findings, the trial
court stated that the "armed robbery . . . was planned ahead of
time by the defendant Enmund," App. 30, and that he had shot each
of the victims while they lay prone in order to eliminate them as
witnesses.
Id. at 301. The court expressly found that
"
none of the statutory mitigating circumstances applied"
to the petitioner.
Id. at 32 (emphasis in original). Among
other findings, the court rejected Enmund's claim that his
participation in the murders had been "relatively minor," and found
instead that
"his participation in the capital felony was major. The
defendant Enmund planned the capital felony and actively
participated in an attempt to avoid detection by disposing of the
murder weapons."
Ibid. .
The Florida Supreme Court rejected these findings in part. The
court noted that there
"was no direct evidence at trial that Earl Enmund was present at
the back door of the Kersey home when the plan to rob the elderly
couple led to their being murdered."
399 So. 2d at 1370. Rather,
"the only evidence of the degree of his participation is the
jury's likely inference that he was the person in the car by the
side of the road near the scene of the crimes. The jury could have
concluded that he was there, a few hundred feet away, waiting to
help the robbers escape with the Kerseys' money."
Ibid.
Page 458 U. S. 830
Consequently, the court expressly rejected the trial court's
finding that Enmund personally had committed the homicides.
Reviewing the aggravating circumstances, the Supreme Court
consolidated two of them, and rejected the trial court's conclusion
that the murders had been "heinous, atrocious, or cruel," since the
evidence showed that the Armstrongs had killed the Kerseys in a gun
battle arising from Mrs. Kersey's armed resistance, and not that
the petitioner had killed them in an effort to eliminate them as
witnesses.
See Armstrong v. State, 399 So. 2d at 963.
Although the state statutory procedures did not prevent the
trial judge from considering any mitigating circumstances,
[
Footnote 2/45] the trial judge's
view of the facts, in part rejected by the State Supreme Court,
effectively prevented such consideration. In his erroneous belief
that the petitioner had shot both of the victims while they lay in
a prone position in order to eliminate them as witnesses, the trial
judge necessarily rejected the only argument offered in mitigation
-- that the petitioner's role in the capital felonies was minor,
undeserving of the death penalty, because the petitioner was in the
car when the fatal shots were fired. This fundamental
misunderstanding of the petitioner's role in the crimes prevented
the trial court from considering the "circumstances of the
particular offense" in imposing sentence.
Woodson v. North
Carolina, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 304. Moreover, this error was not so
insignificant that we can be sure its effect on the
Page 458 U. S. 831
sentencing judge's decision was negligible. [
Footnote 2/46] Accordingly, I would vacate the
decision below insofar as it affirms the death sentence, and remand
the case for a new sentencing hearing.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Much of the evidence concerning these crimes came from J. B.
Neal, to whom Sampson Armstrong made numerous admissions on the day
of the murders.
See Record 1344-1365.
[
Footnote 2/2]
J.B. Neal testified that Armstrong had told him that two guns
were involved; Jeanette had one and Sampson had the other.
Id. at 1354.
[
Footnote 2/3]
An autopsy revealed that Mr. Kersey had been shot twice, once
with a .38-caliber bullet and once with a .22-caliber bullet. Mrs.
Kersey had been shot six times; of the bullets that could be
identified, two were fired from a .38-caliber gun, and one from a
.22-caliber gun. According to a firearms expert, the .22-caliber
bullets were fired from the same gun, and the .38-caliber bullets
were fired from the same gun.
See 399 So. 2d
1362, 1364 (Fla.1981).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Ida Jean Shaw was the petitioner's common law wife and Jeanette
Armstrong's mother. She was later given immunity from prosecution
in return for her testimony. Record 1178-1179.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Thomas Kersey normally kept large sums of money in his wallet
and indiscriminately showed the cash to people he dealt with. A few
weeks before his murder, Kersey revealed the contents of his wallet
to the petitioner and bragged that at any time he could "dig up
$15,000, $16,000." 399 So. 2d at 1365.
See Record
1205-1206.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Ida Jean Shaw's trial testimony contradicted her earlier
statements to police. When police initially questioned her, she
insisted that Jeanette had been shot by an unknown assailant while
she and Jeanette had been traveling to a nearby town.
Id.
at 1191-1192. Later she gave investigators a statement implicating
the petitioner and Sampson Armstrong in the murders.
Id.
at 1209-1210. Subsequently, she gave two more statements
repudiating the statement implicating the petitioner.
Id.
at 1208-1209.
In his closing argument, the prosecutor acknowledged the
conflict between Ida Jean Shaw's testimony that she was not in the
yellow Buick the morning of the murders, and the testimony of a
witness who saw her in the car shortly before and after the
murders. The prosecutor deemed the inconsistency irrelevant.
Id. at 1671-1572.
[
Footnote 2/7]
At the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor theorized that the
petitioner was not the "trigger man," but the "person who set it
all up."
Id. at 1679. The prosecutor admitted that he did
not "know whether [the petitioner] set foot inside that house or
not. But he drove them there. He set it up, planned it."
Id. at 1679-1680. In this Court as well, the State
acknowledges that the petitioner "was apparently not the triggerman
in the two murders involved in his [
sic] case." Brief in
Opposition 14.
[
Footnote 2/8]
In Florida at the time of the Kersey murders, first-degree
murder was defined in Fla.Stat. § 782.04(1)(a) (1973) as
"[t]he unlawful killing of a human being, when perpetrated from
a premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed or
any human being, or when committed by a person engaged in the
perpetration of, or in the attempt to perpetrate, any . . .
robbery. . . ."
In instructing the jury on first-degree murder, the judge read
the above provision verbatim. Record 1605-1606. He also added
that
"[t]he killing of a human being while engaged in the
perpetration of or in the attempt to perpetrate the offense of
robbery is murder in the first degree even though there is no
premeditated design or intent to kill."
Id. at 1606.
Distinguishing first- and second-degree felony murder, the judge
stated:
"In order to sustain a conviction of first-degree murder while
engaging in the perpetration of or in the attempted perpetration of
the crime of robbery, the evidence must establish beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant was actually present and was
actively aiding and abetting the robbery or attempted robbery, and
that the unlawful killing occurred in the perpetration of or in the
attempted perpetration of the robbery."
"In order to sustain a conviction of second-degree murder while
engaged in the perpetration of or the attempted perpetration of
robbery, the evidence must establish beyond a reasonable doubt that
the unlawful killing was committed in the perpetration of or in the
attempted perpetration of robbery, and that the defendant actually,
although not physically present at the time of the commission of
the offense, did, nonetheless, procure, counsel, command or aid
another to commit the crime."
Id. at 1609-1610.
[
Footnote 2/9]
On the motion of the petitioner and the prosecution, Jeanette
Armstrong's trial had been severed from the trial of her
codefendants.
Id. at 50, 57. Jeanette Armstrong was tried
first, and convicted of two counts of second-degree murder and one
count of robbery. The trial judge sentenced her to three
consecutive life sentences. 399 So. 2d at 1371.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Under Florida law, the
"court shall conduct a separate sentencing proceeding to
determine whether the defendant should be sentenced to death or
life imprisonment."
Fla.Stat. § 921.141(1) (1981). The jury renders only an
"advisory sentence" based on the mitigating and aggravating
circumstances. § 921.141(2).
At the sentencing hearing, the petitioner presented no evidence,
Record 1677, but his attorney argued that the death penalty was
inappropriate because, at most, the evidence showed that the
petitioner saw Thomas Kersey's money, suggested the robbery, and
drove the Armstrongs to the Kersey house.
Id. at
1683-1684. He also argued that death was an excessive penalty
because the gunfight was spontaneous, and beyond the petitioner's
control.
Id. at 1684.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Initially, the trial court failed to make written findings as
required by Fla.Stat. § 921.141(3) (1981). On the first state
appeal, the Florida Supreme Court remanded the case for such
findings.
See App. 29.
[
Footnote 2/12]
Regarding the extent of the petitioner's involvement, the trial
court reasoned that, because two different guns had been used in
the murders, and because Jeanette Armstrong had been seriously
wounded by gunfire, the petitioner must have fired one of the guns.
Moreover, since each of the Kerseys was injured by a bullet of each
type, the petitioner must have shot each victim.
Id. at
31; 399 So. 2d at 1372.
[
Footnote 2/13]
The court also rejected the other statutory mitigating
circumstances. In particular, the petitioner did not have a record
free of criminal convictions, Fla.Stat. § 921.141(6)(a)
(1981); there was no evidence that he had acted under the influence
of extreme mental or emotional disturbance, § 921.141(6)(b);
there was no evidence that the victims were participants in or
consented to the crimes, § 921.141(6)(c); there was no
evidence that he acted under extreme duress or under the
substantial domination of another person, § 921.141(6)(e);
there was no evidence that the petitioner was incapable of
appreciating the criminality of his conduct or conforming his
conduct to the requirements of law, § 921.141(6)(f); and,
because he was 42 years old at the time of the offense, his age was
not a mitigating factor, § 921.141(6)(g). App. 32; 399 So. 2d
at 1372-1373.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The trial court made nearly identical findings for Sampson
Armstrong. In particular, it found that the murders were committed
during the course of a robbery, that they were committed for
pecuniary gain, and that they were especially heinous, atrocious,
or cruel.
See Armstrong v. State, 399 So. 2d
953, 960-961 (Fla.1981). The trial court considered the only
possible mitigating circumstance to be Armstrong's age (23), but
did not actually find that fact to be mitigating.
See id.
at 962 ("the factor of age was given no consideration"). Finding
that the aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating
circumstances, the trial judge imposed the death penalty for each
murder conviction, and imposed a life sentence for the robbery.
Id. at 955, 962.
[
Footnote 2/15]
The Florida Supreme Court also affirmed the convictions and
sentences of Sampson Armstrong.
See Armstrong v. State,
supra, at 960.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Second-degree murder, based on felony murder, is defined in
Fla.Stat. § 782.04(3) (1973):
"[W]hen committed in the perpetration of, or in the attempt to
perpetrate, any . . . robbery, . . . except as provided in
subsection (1), it shall be murder in the second degree . . .
punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for life or for such
term of years as may be determined by the court. "
[
Footnote 2/17]
The court also noted that Sampson Armstrong's admissions to J.
B. Neal made no mention of the petitioner, and that the
petitioner's admissions to Ida Jean Shaw indicated only "his
complicity." 399 So. 2d at 1370.
[
Footnote 2/18]
In
Armstrong, the Florida Supreme Court expressly had
rejected the trial court's conclusion that the Kerseys were
murdered in order to eliminate them as witnesses. "It simply cannot
be said that there was proof that the robbers killed in order to
assure that there would be no witnesses against them." 399 So. 2d
at 963. On the contrary,
"[t]he only direct account of what transpired is from the
testimony of J. B. Neal about Armstrong's statement to him. By that
account, the shootings were indeed spontaneous, and were
precipitated by the armed resistance of Mrs. Kersey."
Ibid. In reaching this conclusion, the State Supreme
Court also rejected the trial court's conclusions derived from the
pathologist's testimony. Rather than indicating that the victims
were prone when shot, the pathologist's testimony "as to the
direction of fire and the positions of the victims when shot [was]
equivocal, at best."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/19]
In this Court, the petitioner neither challenges his convictions
for robbery and felony murder nor argues that the State has
overstepped constitutional bounds in defining murder to include
felony murder. The petitioner's sole challenge is to the penalty
imposed for the murders.
[
Footnote 2/20]
Although the petitioner ostensibly relies on the fact that he
was not the triggerman, the core of his argument is that the death
penalty is disproportionate to his crime because he did not have
the specific intent to kill the Kerseys. Pulling the trigger is
only one factor, albeit a significant one, in determining intent.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 21-23 (counsel for petitioner
asserting that, so long as a defendant had the intent to kill, he
need not actually have pulled the trigger in order to be subjected
to capital punishment, and that, even if he had pulled the trigger,
he would not be subject to the death penalty absent a specific
intent to kill).
[
Footnote 2/21]
The Eighth Amendment provides that "Excessive bail shall not be
required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
punishments inflicted."
[
Footnote 2/22]
See Roberts (Stanislaus) v. Louisiana, 428 U.
S. 325 (1976) (holding that Louisiana's mandatory death
penalty statute violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments);
Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.
S. 280 (1976) (holding that the State's mandatory death
penalty statute violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments);
Jurek v. Texas, 428 U. S. 262
(1976) (upholding the Texas death penalty statute);
Proffitt v.
Florida, 428 U. S. 242
(1976) (upholding Florida's death penalty statute).
[
Footnote 2/23]
In only one case since
Gregg has this Court upheld a
challenged death sentence.
See Dobbert v. Florida,
432 U. S. 282
(1977) (holding that changes in the death penalty statute between
the time of the murder and the sentencing did not amount to an
ex post facto violation). In five cases, the Court vacated
the death sentence because the sentencer could not or did not
consider all mitigating factors proffered by the defendant.
See
Roberts (Harry) v. Louisiana, 431 U.
S. 633 (1977) (per curiam);
Lockett v. Ohio,
438 U. S. 586
(1978) (plurality opinion);
Bell v. Ohio, 438 U.
S. 637 (1978) (plurality opinion);
Green v.
Georgia, 442 U. S. 95 (1979)
(per curiam);
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.
S. 104 (1982) (adopting the reasoning of the
Lockett plurality as the holding of the Court). In two
cases, the Court reversed the judgments affirming the death
sentences because the jury had been selected in violation of
Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U. S. 510
(1968).
See Adams v. Texas, 448 U. S.
38 (1980);
Davis v. Georgia, 429 U.
S. 122 (1976) (per curiam). In five other cases, the
Court vacated death sentences for a variety of reasons unrelated to
the proportionality of the punishment to the crime.
See Gardner
v. Florida, 430 U. S. 349
(1977) (plurality opinion) (due process violated when defendant had
no chance to explain or deny information given to the sentencing
judge);
Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U.
S. 420 (1980) (plurality opinion) (reversing the death
sentence because the aggravating circumstance relied upon by jury
was not so tailored as to avoid arbitrary and capricious infliction
of death penalty);
Beck v. Alabama, 447 U.
S. 625 (1980) (holding that death penalty may not be
imposed where jury was precluded from considering lesser included
noncapital offense, when evidence existed to support such a
verdict);
Bullington v. Missouri, 451 U.
S. 430 (1981) (holding that Double Jeopardy Clause
prevented imposition of death sentence upon retrial when jury had
imposed life imprisonment at the first trial);
Estelle v.
Smith, 451 U. S. 454
(1981) (holding that admission of psychiatrist's testimony at the
penalty phase of the capital trial violated the defendant's Fifth
Amendment privilege against self-incrimination because he had not
been told before his psychiatric examination that his statements
could be used against him during the sentencing proceeding).
In
Coker v. Georgia, 433 U. S. 584
(1977), the Court vacated a death sentence for a man who had been
convicted of rape of an adult woman. Nevertheless, the Court made
clear that the death penalty is not
per se
disproportionate to the crime of murder.
See, e.g., id. at
433 U. S. 591
(opinion of WHITE, J.) ("It is now settled that the death penalty
is not invariably cruel and unusual punishment within the meaning
of the Eighth Amendment; . . . neither is it always
disproportionate to the crime for which it is imposed");
id. at
433 U. S. 604
(opinion of BURGER, C.J.) (accepting "that the Eighth Amendment's
concept of disproportionality bars the death penalty for minor
crimes," but rejecting the argument that death is a
disproportionate punishment for rape, much less murder).
[
Footnote 2/24]
Strictly speaking, this Court cannot state unequivocally whether
the petitioner specifically intended either to kill the Kerseys or
to have them killed because the trial court made no findings on
these issues. The trial court, however, did make the finding, not
rejected by the Florida Supreme Court, that the petitioner's
participation was not minor, but "major," in that he "planned the
capital felony and actively participated in an attempt to avoid
detection by disposing of the murder weapons." App. 32.
Accordingly, I proceed on the assumption that the petitioner's only
intent was to commit an armed robbery with his accomplices, the
Armstrongs.
[
Footnote 2/25]
JUSTICE POWELL concurred in the plurality's reasoning in
concluding that "ordinarily" death was disproportionate for such a
crime, but stopped short of a
per se rule. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 601.
JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE MARSHALL concurred in the judgment,
adhering to their previously announced views that the death penalty
is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by
the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
See id. at
433 U. S.
600-601.
[
Footnote 2/26]
In fact, two of those States, Louisiana and North Carolina, did
not define rape as a capital felony when they reenacted their death
penalty statutes following their invalidation in
Woodson v.
North Carolina, 428 U. S. 280
(1976), and
Roberts v. Louisiana, 428 U.
S. 325 (1976).
See 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 594.
Consequently, at the time
Coker was decided, only Georgia
authorized the death penalty for the rape of an adult woman.
[
Footnote 2/27]
The Court has conducted a less searching inquiry for punishments
less than death.
See Rummel v. Estelle, 445 U.
S. 263 (1980) (upholding, against an Eighth Amendment
challenge, a life sentence imposed under a state recidivist
statute);
Hutto v. Davis, 454 U.
S. 370 (1981) (per curiam) (upholding, on the basis of
Rummel, a 40-year sentence for two marihuana conviction).
In
Rummel, the Court expressly noted that, for purposes of
Eighth Amendment analysis, those "decisions applying the
prohibition of cruel and unusual punishments to capital cases are
of limited assistance in deciding the constitutionality "of prison
sentences. 445 U.S. at
445 U. S.
272.
[
Footnote 2/28]
According to one source, at early common law, most felonies were
capital crimes, but attempts were punished as misdemeanors and
accidental killings were not punishable at all. The felony murder
rule was an effort to create felony liability for accidental
killings caused during the course of an attempted felony.
See ALI, Model Penal Code § 210.2, Comment, p. 31, n.
74 (Off. Draft and Revised Comments 1980).
[
Footnote 2/29]
See English Homicide Act of 1957, 5 & 6 Eliz. 2,
ch. 11. The English attitude toward capital punishment, as
reflected in recent legislation, differs significantly from
American attitudes as reflected in state legislation; in 1965,
England abolished the death penalty for all murders.
See
Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act of 1965, 8 Hallisbury's
Statutes of England 541 (3d ed.1969).
[
Footnote 2/30]
See Comment, The Constitutionality of Imposing the
Death Penalty for Felony Murder, 15 Hous.L.Rev. 356, 364-365
(1978); Alderstein, Felony Murder in the New Criminal Codes, 4
Am.J.Crim.L. 249, 251-252 (1976).
[
Footnote 2/31]
See, e.g., Royal Commission on Capital Punishment
1949-1953, Report 31-33 (1953) (reporting that application of the
felony murder doctrine was limited to those cases in which the
verdict could have been intentional murder); Law Revision
Commission of the State of New York, 3d Annual Report 665, 668, and
n. 444 (1937). It is significant that the New York Legislature
rejected the Commission's recommendation of requiring some element
of
mens rea, and instead adopted a scheme giving jurors
discretion to recommend life sentences.
See 1937 N.Y.
Laws, ch. 67.
[
Footnote 2/32]
The extent of jury nullification and the nearly complete
repudiation of mandatory death penalty laws led a plurality of this
Court to conclude that the
"two crucial indicators of evolving standards of decency
respecting the imposition of punishment in our society -- jury
determinations and legislative enactments -- both point
conclusively to the repudiation of automatic death sentences."
Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 293
(opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.). These factors
supported the Court's conclusion that North Carolina's mandatory
death penalty law violated the Eighth Amendment.
[
Footnote 2/33]
See App. D to Brief for Petitioner. Moreover, the last
nontriggerman was executed in 1955. By contrast, 72 rapists were
executed between 1955 and this Court's 1977 decision in
Coker. Brief for Petitioner 34-35.
[
Footnote 2/34]
See App. E to Brief for Petitioner; NAACP Legal Defense
and Education Fund, Inc., Death Row U.S.A. (Oct. 20, 1981).
[
Footnote 2/35]
Only Missouri, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania define felony
murder as a crime distinct from capital murder.
See
Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 665.001, 565.003, 565.008(2) (1978);
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 630:1, 630:1-a(1)(b)(2),
630:1-a(III) (1974 and Supp.1981); 18 Pa.Cons.Stat. §§
2502(a), (b), (d), 1102(b) (1980). One exception to the New
Hampshire scheme is § 630:1(1)(b), which includes in the
definition of capital murder a death caused "knowingly" in the
course of a kidnaping. A fourth State, Washington, permits
imposition of the death penalty if premeditated murder is
aggravated by,
inter alia, commission during a felony.
Wash.Rev.Code §§ 9 A. 32.030(1)(a), 10.95.020(9)
(1981).
[
Footnote 2/36]
See Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 13-1105(A)(2), (C)
(Supp.1981-1982); Cal.Penal Code Ann. §§ 189, 190 (West
Supp.1982); Colo.Rev.Stat. §§ 18-3-102(1)(b),
18-1-105(1)(a) (1978 and Supp.1981); Conn.Gen.Stat.Ann.
§§ 53a-54b, 53a-54c, 53a-35a(1) (West Supp.1982);
Fla.Stat. §§ 782.04(1)(a), 775.082(1) (1981); Ga.Code
§§ 26-1101(b), (c) (1978); Idaho Code §§
18-4003(d), 4004 (1979); Ind.Code §§ 35-42-1-1(2),
35-50-2-3(b) (Supp.1981); Miss.Code Ann. §§
97-3-19(2)(e), 97-3-21 (Supp.1981); Mont.Code Ann. §§
45-5-102(1)(b), (2) (1981); Neb.Rev.Stat. §§ 28303(2),
28-105(1) (1979); Nev.Rev.Stat. §§ 200.030(1)(b),
200.030(4)(a) (1981); N.M.Stat.Ann. §§ 30-2-1(A)(2),
31-18-14(A), 31-20A-5 (Supp.1981); N.C.Gen.Stat. § 14-17
(1981); Okla.Stat., Tit. 21, §§ 701.7(B), 701.9(A)
(1981); S.C.Code §§ 16-3-10, 16-3-20(C)(a)(1) (1976 and
Supp.1981); S.D.Codified Laws §§ 22-16-4, 22-16-12,
22-6-1(1), 22-3-3 (1979 and Supp.1981); Tenn.Code Ann. §§
39-2402(a), (b) (Supp.1981); Vt.Stat.Ann., Tit. 13, §§
2301, 2303(b), (c) (1974 and Supp.1981); and Wyo.Stat. §§
6-4-101(a), (b) (1977).
Two of these States, Colorado and Connecticut, provide that it
is an affirmative defense to the capital crime if the accomplice
did not "in any way solicit, request, command, importune, cause or
aid the commission" of the homicidal act; was not armed with a
deadly weapon and had no reason to believe that his cofelons were
so armed; and did not engage or intend to engage, and had no reason
to believe that his cofelons would engage, in conduct "likely to
result in death or serious bodily injury."
See
Colo.Rev.Stat. § 18-3-102 (2) (1978); Conn.Gen.Stat. §
53a-54c (Supp.1982). Colorado also prevents imposition of the death
penalty if the defendant's role, though sufficient to establish
guilt, was "relatively minor." Colo.Rev.Stat. §
16-11-103(5)(d) (1978). Even if they were available under the
Florida statute, these provisions would have been of no help to the
petitioner, since the trial court found that there were no
mitigating circumstances, in part because Enmund's role in the
capital felony was not minor.
See Fla.Stat. §
921.141(6)(d) (1981). The State Supreme Court expressly affirmed
the trial court's finding of no mitigating circumstances, and
therefore the finding that the petitioner's role was not minor. 399
So. 2d at 1373.
Of course, not all of the statutes listed above are identical.
Several of them provide that robbery murder is a capital felony,
but require proof of additional aggravating circumstances,
e.g., the defendant had been convicted previously of a
violent felony, or the victim was a correctional officer, before
the death penalty can be imposed.
See, e.g., Okla.Stat.,
Tit. 21, § 701.12 (1981); N.M.Stat.Ann. §§
30-2-1(A)(2), 31-18-14(A), 31-20A-5 (Supp.1981). Others, like the
Florida statute, define robbery murder as a capital offense and use
the robbery as an aggravating circumstance. The common thread in
all of these statutes, however, is that the defendant need not have
the intent to kill in order to be subject to the death penalty. The
Court's additional subdivision of this group of statutes,
see
ante at
458 U. S.
791-793, and nn. 10-13, serves only to obscure the point
that 20 States permit imposition of the death penalty even though
the defendant did not actually kill, and had no intent to kill.
[
Footnote 2/37]
See Ark.Stat.Ann. §§ 41-1501(1)(a), (2), (3)
(1977) (a capital crime if death occurs during commission of the
felony "under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the
value of human life"); Del.Code Ann., Tit. 11, §§
636(a)(6), 636(b), 4209(a) (1979) (a capital crime only if the
death is caused "with criminal negligence"); Ky.Rev.Stat. §
507.020(1)(b), (2) (Supp.1980) (defendant must "caus[e] the death
of another person" under "circumstances manifesting extreme
indifference to human life [and while] wantonly engag[ing] in
conduct which creates a grave risk of death to another person"). It
is an affirmative defense to capital felony murder in Arkansas if
the "defendant did not commit the homicide act or in any way
solicit, command, induce, procure, counsel, or aid its commission."
Ark.Stat.Ann. § 41-1501(2) (1977).
At oral argument, counsel for petitioner stated that "the
determining factor is the intent to take life, conscious purpose to
take life." Tr. of Oral Arg. 18. Under the petitioner's proposed
standard, these statutes would be unconstitutional.
[
Footnote 2/38]
See Ala.Code §§ 13A-2-23, 13A-40(a)(2), (b),
(c), (d), 13A-2(a)(1) (1977 and Supp.1982) (the accomplice is not
guilty of capital murder unless the killing is intentional, and the
accomplice had "intent to promote or assist the commission" of the
murder); Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 38, �� 9-1(a)(3),
9-1(b)(6) (1979) (a capital crime only if the defendant killed
intentionally or with knowledge that his actions "created a strong
probability of death or great bodily harm"); La.Rev.Stat.Ann.
§ 14.30(1) (West Supp.1982) (defendant is guilty of capital
murder only if he had "specific intent to kill or to inflict great
bodily harm"); Ohio Rev.Code Ann. §§ 2903.01(B), (C),
(D), 2929.02(A), 2929.04(A)(7) (1982) (accomplice is not guilty of
the capital crime unless he "purposely cause[d]" the death and was
"specifically found to have intended to cause the death of
another"; if defendant is not the "principal offender," the death
penalty is precluded unless he "committed the aggravated murder
with prior calculation and design"); Tex.Penal Code Ann.
§§ 12.31, 19.03(a)(2), 19.02(a)(1) (1974) (defendant is
guilty of capital murder only if he "intentionally or knowingly"
caused death during the course of the robbery); Utah Code Ann.
§§ 76202(1)(d), (2), 76206(1) (1978) (defendant is guilty
of capital murder only if he "intentionally or knowingly" caused
the death during the course of the robbery); and Va.Code
§§ 18.2-31(d), 18.2-10(a) (1982) (capital murder only if
killing is "willful, deliberate and premeditated").
[
Footnote 2/39]
See Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 38, �� 9-1(a)(3),
9-1(b)(6) (1979) (a capital crime only if the defendant actually
killed the victim and the defendant killed intentionally or with
knowledge that his actions "created a strong probability of death
or great bodily harm"); Md.Ann.Code, Art. 27, §§ 410,
412(b), 413(d)(10), (e)(1) (1982) (except in cases of murder for
hire, only principal in the first degree subject to the death
penalty); Va.Code §§ 18.2-31(d), 18.2-10(a), 18.2-18
(1982) (except in cases of murder for hire, only the immediate
perpetrator of the homicide, and not accomplice before the fact or
principal in the second degree, may be tried for capital murder).
Note that Illinois and Virginia also require an intent to kill.
See 458
U.S. 782fn2/38|>n. 38,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/40]
The Court's attempt to downplay the significance of Enmund's
role in the murders,
see ante at
458 U. S.
786-787, n. 2, does not square with the facts of this
case. The trial court expressly found that, because Enmund had
planned the robbery, his role was not minor, and that therefore no
statutory mitigating circumstances applied. The Florida Supreme
Court affirmed the finding of no mitigating circumstances, thereby
affirming the underlying factual predicate -- Enmund had planned
the armed robbery. Moreover, even Enmund's trial counsel conceded
at the sentencing hearing that Enmund initiated the armed robbery
and drove the getaway car.
See 458
U.S. 782fn2/10|>n. 10,
supra.
The Court misreads the opinion below in suggesting that the
State Supreme Court deduced from the
sentencing hearing
that Enmund's only participation was as the getaway driver. In
fact, the court made that statement with respect to the
guilt phase of the trial. As I mentioned above, Enmund's
counsel conceded at the sentencing hearing that Enmund had
initiated the armed robbery.
[
Footnote 2/41]
It is not true, as the petitioner suggests, that an
intent-to-kill requirement would not interfere with the State's
substantive categories of murder. Prohibiting the death penalty for
accomplice felony murder would create a category of murder between
capital murder, for which the death penalty is permitted, and the
next statutory degree, for which some term of years (typically less
than life imprisonment) is imposed.
[
Footnote 2/42]
The petitioner and the Court also contend that capital
punishment for felony murder violates the Eighth Amendment because
it "makes no measurable contribution to acceptable goals of
punishment."
Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 592.
In brief, the petitioner and the Court reason that, since he did
not specifically intend to kill the Kerseys, since the probability
of death during an armed robbery is so low,
see ALI, Model
Penal Code,
supra, 458
U.S. 782fn2/28|>n. 28, § 210.2, Comment, p. 38, n. 96
(concluding from several studies that a homicide occurs in about
one-half of one percent of all robberies), and since the death
penalty is so rarely imposed on nontriggermen, capital punishment
could not have deterred him or anyone else from participating in
the armed robbery. The petitioner and the Court also reject the
notion that the goal of retribution might be served because his
"moral guilt" is too insignificant.
At their core, these conclusions are legislative judgments
regarding the efficacy of capital punishment as a tool in achieving
retributive justice and deterring violent crime. Surely, neither
the petitioner nor the Court has shown that capital punishment is
ineffective as a deterrent for his crime; the most the Court can do
is speculate as to its effect on other felony murderers and rely on
"competent observers" rather than legislative judgments.
See
ante at
458 U. S.
799-800. Moreover, the decision of whether or not a
particular punishment serves the admittedly legitimate goal of
retribution seems uniquely suited to legislative resolution.
Because an armed robber takes a serious risk that someone will die
during the course of his crime, and because of the obviousness of
that risk, we cannot conclude that the death penalty "makes no
measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment. "
[
Footnote 2/43]
Apparently, the Court also intends that the case be remanded for
a new death sentence hearing, consistent, of course, with its
holding today.
[
Footnote 2/44]
Although the petitioner challenges the constitutionality of his
sentencing hearing, he does not challenge the constitutionality of
the statutory capital sentencing procedures.
See Proffitt v.
Florida, 428 U. S. 242
(1976) (upholding the Florida scheme).
[
Footnote 2/45]
See Songer v. State, 365 So. 2d
696, 700 (Fla.1978) (holding that Fla.Stat. § 921.141(6)
(1981), which lists mitigating circumstances, does not restrict the
sentencer's consideration of mitigating circumstances to those
expressly listed in the statute);
Shriner v.
State, 386 So. 2d
525, 533 (Fla.1980),
cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1103
(1981); 399 So. 2d at 1371. As noted above, the petitioner offered
no additional evidence at the sentencing hearing in mitigation of
his crime.
See Record 1677. His counsel argued, however,
that the petitioner did not deserve the death penalty because his
role in the crime was relatively minor.
Id. at
1683-1685.
[
Footnote 2/46]
The Florida Supreme Court's opinion fails to correct this error
either by remanding for new sentencing or by evaluating the impact
of the trial court's fundamental misperception of the petitioner's
role in the killings. Rather, the court simply repeats three times,
without any discussion of the evidence, that there are "no
mitigating circumstances." 399 So. 2d at 1373. In light of the
court's dramatically different factual findings, this review is
inadequate to satisfy the
Lockett principle.