Syllabus
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
481
U.S. 279
McCleskey v. Kemp
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No.
84-6811 Argued:
October 15, 1986 ---
Decided: April 22, 1987
In 1978, petitioner, a black man, was convicted in a
Georgia trial court of armed robbery and murder,
arising from the killing of a white police officer
during the robbery of a store. Pursuant to Georgia
statutes, the jury at the penalty hearing considered
the mitigating and aggravating circumstances of
petitioner's conduct, and recommended the death
penalty on the murder charge. The trial court
followed the recommendation, and the Georgia Supreme
Court affirmed. After unsuccessfully seeking
postconviction relief in state courts, petitioner
sought habeas corpus relief in Federal District
Court. His petition included a claim that the
Georgia capital sentencing process was administered
in a racially discriminatory manner in violation of
the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. In
support of the claim, petitioner proffered a
statistical study (the Baldus study) that purports
to show a disparity in the imposition of the death
sentence in Georgia based on the murder victim's
race and, to a lesser extent, the defendant's race.
The study is based on over 2,000 murder cases that
occurred in Georgia during the 1970's, and involves
data relating to the victim's race, the defendant's
race, and the various combinations of such persons'
races. The study indicates that black defendants who
killed white victims have the greatest likelihood of
receiving the death penalty. Rejecting petitioner's
constitutional claims, the court denied his petition
insofar as it was based on the Baldus study, and the
Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court's
decision on this issue. It assumed the validity of
the Baldus study, but found the statistics
insufficient to demonstrate unconstitutional
discrimination in the Fourteenth Amendment
context or to show irrationality, arbitrariness, and
capriciousness under Eighth Amendment
analysis.
Held:
1. The Baldus
study does not establish that the administration of
the Georgia capital punishment system violates the
Equal Protection Clause. Pp. 291-299.
(a) To prevail
under that Clause, petitioner must prove that the
decisionmakers in his case acted with
discriminatory purpose. Petitioner offered no
evidence specific to his own case that would support
an [p280] inference that
racial considerations played a part in his sentence,
and the Baldus study is insufficient to support an
inference that any of the decisionmakers in his case
acted with discriminatory purpose. This Court has
accepted statistics as proof of intent to
discriminate in the context of a State's selection
of the jury venire, and in the context of statutory
violations under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964. However, the nature of the capital
sentencing decision and the relationship of the
statistics to that decision are fundamentally
different from the corresponding elements in the
venire selection or Title VII cases. Petitioner's
statistical proffer must be viewed in the context of
his challenge to decisions at the heart of the
State's criminal justice system. Because discretion
is essential to the criminal justice process,
exceptionally clear proof is required before this
Court will infer that the discretion has been abused.
Pp. 292-297.
(b) There is no
merit to petitioner's argument that the Baldus study
proves that the State has violated the Equal
Protection Clause by adopting the capital punishment
statute and allowing it to remain in force despite
its allegedly discriminatory application. For this
claim to prevail, petitioner would have to prove
that the Georgia Legislature enacted or maintained
the death penalty statute because of an
anticipated racially discriminatory effect. There is
no evidence that the legislature either enacted the
statute to further a racially discriminatory purpose
or maintained the statute because of the racially
disproportionate impact suggested by the Baldus
study. Pp. 297-299.
2. Petitioner's
argument that the Baldus study demonstrates that the
Georgia capital sentencing system violates the
Eighth Amendment's prohibition of cruel and
unusual punishment must be analyzed in the light of
this Court's prior decisions under that Amendment.
Decisions since Furman v. Georgia, 408
U.S. 238, have identified a constitutionally
permissible range of discretion in imposing the
death penalty. First, there is a required threshold
below which the death penalty cannot be imposed, and
the State must establish rational criteria that
narrow the decisionmaker's judgment as to whether
the circumstances of a particular defendant's case
meet the threshold. Second, States cannot limit the
sentencer's consideration of any relevant
circumstance that could cause it to decline to
impose the death penalty. In this respect, the State
cannot channel the sentencer's discretion, but must
allow it to consider any relevant information
offered by the defendant. Pp. 299-306.
3. The Baldus
study does not demonstrate that the Georgia capital
sentencing system violates the Eighth Amendment.
Pp. 306-313.
(a) Petitioner
cannot successfully argue that the sentence in his
case is disproportionate to the sentences in other
murder cases. On the one [p281]
hand, he cannot base a constitutional claim on an
argument that his case differs from other cases in
which defendants did receive the death
penalty. The Georgia Supreme Court found that his
death sentence was not disproportionate to other
death sentences imposed in the State. On the other
hand, absent a showing that the Georgia capital
punishment system operates in an arbitrary and
capricious manner, petitioner cannot prove a
constitutional violation by demonstrating that other
defendants who may be similarly situated did not
receive the death penalty. The opportunities for
discretionary leniency under state law do not render
the capital sentences imposed arbitrary and
capricious. Because petitioner's sentence was
imposed under Georgia sentencing procedures that
focus discretion "on the particularized nature of
the crime and the particularized characteristics of
the individual defendant," it may be presumed that
his death sentence was not "wantonly and freakishly"
imposed, and thus that the sentence is not
disproportionate within any recognized meaning under
the Eighth Amendment. Gregg v. Georgia,
428 U.S. 153, 206, 207. Pp. 306-308.
(b) There is no
merit to the contention that the Baldus study shows
that Georgia's capital punishment system is
arbitrary and capricious in application. The
statistics do not prove that race enters into
any capital sentencing decisions or that race was a
factor in petitioner's case. The likelihood of
racial prejudice allegedly shown by the study does
not constitute the constitutional measure of an
unacceptable risk of racial prejudice. The inherent
lack of predictability of jury decisions does not
justify their condemnation. On the contrary, it is
the jury's function to make the difficult and
uniquely human judgments that defy codification and
that build discretion, equity, and flexibility into
the legal system. Pp. 308-312.
(c) At most, the
Baldus study indicates a discrepancy that appears to
correlate with race, but this discrepancy does not
constitute a major systemic defect. Any mode for
determining guilt or punishment has its weaknesses
and the potential for misuse. Despite such
imperfections, constitutional guarantees are met
when the mode for determining guilt or punishment
has been surrounded with safeguards to make it as
fair as possible. Pp. 312-313.
4. Petitioner's
claim, taken to its logical conclusion, throws into
serious question the principles that underlie the
entire criminal justice system. His claim easily
could be extended to apply to other types of
penalties and to claims based on unexplained
discrepancies correlating to membership in other
minority groups and even to gender. The Constitution
does not require that a State eliminate any
demonstrable disparity that correlates with a
potentially irrelevant factor in order to
[p282] operate a
criminal justice system that includes capital
punishment. Petitioner's arguments are best
presented to the legislative bodies, not the courts.
Pp. 314-319.
POWELL, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE, O'CONNOR, and SCALIA, JJ.,
joined. BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion in
which MARSHALL, J., joined, and in all but Part I of
which BLACKMUN and STEVENS, JJ., joined, post,
p. 320. BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion in
which MARSHALL and STEVENS, JJ., joined, and in all
but Part IV-B of which BRENNAN, J., joined, post,
p. 345. STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion in
which BLACKMUN, J., joined, post, p. 366.