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Duane Buck Case: U.S. Supreme Court Stays Execution Of Texas Inmate

MICHAEL GRACZYK   09/15/11 09:51 PM ET   AP

Duane Buck

HUNTSVILLE, Texas — The U.S. Supreme Court halted the execution Thursday of a black man convicted of a double murder in Texas 16 years ago after his lawyers contended his sentence was unfair because of a question asked about race during his trial.

Duane Buck, 48, was spared from lethal injection when the justices, without extensive comment, said they would review an appeal in his case. Two appeals, both related to a psychologist's testimony that black people were more likely to commit violence, were before the court. One was granted; the other was denied.

Buck was sentenced to death for the fatal shootings of his ex-girlfriend and a man in her apartment in July 1995. Buck's guilt is not being questioned, but his lawyers say the jury was unfairly influenced and that he should receive a new sentencing hearing. His attorneys appealed to the Supreme Court and Texas Gov. Rick Perry to block the execution, saying a psychologist testified that black people were more likely to commit violence.

Buck's case is one of six convictions that then-Texas Attorney General John Cornyn – a political ally of Perry who is now a Republican U.S. senator – reviewed in 2000 and said needed to be reopened because of the racial reference. In the other five cases, new punishment hearings were held and each convict again was sentenced to die. State attorneys contend Buck's case was different from the others and that the racial reference was a small part of larger testimony about prison populations.

Perry is a capital punishment supporter and as frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination his actions now are coming under closer scrutiny. During his 11 years in office, 235 convicted killers in Texas have been put to death. His office said he has chosen to halt just four executions, including one for a woman who later was executed.

The reprieve from the nation's highest court came nearly two hours into a six-hour window when Buck could have been taken to the death chamber. Texas officials, however, refused to move forward with the punishment while legal issues were pending.

His lawyers called to tell Buck of the reprieve and the inmate was praying in his cell when Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark approached.

"Praise the Lord!" Buck told Clark. "God is worthy to be praised. God's mercy triumphs over judgment.

"I feel good."

In its one-paragraph decision, the court said it stopped the punishment so it could further look at Buck's request, known as a writ of certiori. If the court decided against the writ, the justices said the reprieve would be lifted, making Buck eligible for receiving a new execution date.

"We are relieved that the U.S. Supreme Court recognized the obvious injustice of allowing a defendant's race to factor into sentencing decisions and granted a stay of execution to Duane Buck," Kate Black, one of Buck's attorneys, said. "No one should be put to death based on the color of his or her skin. We are confident that the court will agree that our client is entitled to a fair sentencing hearing that is untainted by considerations of his race."

Buck was convicted of gunning down ex-girlfriend Debra Gardner, 32, and Kenneth Butler, 33, outside Houston on July, 30, 1995, a week after Buck and Gardner broke up. A third person, Buck's stepsister, Phyllis Taylor, also was wounded, though she has since forgiven Buck and sought for his death sentence to be commuted to life in prison.

Buck's attorneys went to the Supreme Court after losing appeals in lower courts. A clemency request to the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, all of whom are Perry appointees, also failed.

Perry was not in the state Thursday, meaning any final order to delay would have come from Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst. However the court's ruling meant neither Perry nor Dewhurst had to act on a request from Buck's lawyers that the governor use his authority to issue a one-time 30-day reprieve.

Assistant Attorney General Edward Marshall had told the Supreme Court on Thursday that Buck's appeals were attempts to relitigate claims that every court, including the Supreme Court, already rejected.

"The record in Buck's case reveals that no constitutional violation occurred during his sentencing trial," he told the justices.

The execution would have been the second this week and the 11th this year in Texas. Two more Texas prisoners are set to die next week.

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HUNTSVILLE, Texas — The U.S. Supreme Court halted the execution Thursday of a black man convicted of a double murder in Texas 16 years ago after his lawyers contended his sentence was unfair bec...
HUNTSVILLE, Texas — The U.S. Supreme Court halted the execution Thursday of a black man convicted of a double murder in Texas 16 years ago after his lawyers contended his sentence was unfair bec...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
psnyder325
Yep, I'm a Socialist. Deal.
03:40 AM on 09/21/2011
Since the advent of DNA evidence, 17 people have been freed from death row due to being convicted, though innocent. Isn't it time we did a better job? Americans USED to say they'd prefer to see ten guilty people go free than convict one innocent. What has happened to America? We've become callous, greedy, and full of blood lust. Mistakenly executing (or even convicting) even ONE person is one person too many!! We need tighter rules of evidence, and don't always believe the overly-aggressive prosecutors. Remember...the next false conviction could be you or a member of your family. No one thinks it will happen to them....until it the nightmare does.
g9
conservation ,Your grandchildrens future
04:26 PM on 09/29/2011
NOW the teabags applaud
01:33 PM on 09/20/2011
So this will prolong the case for how many more years? http://www.perspectivestv.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
05:19 PM on 09/19/2011
this man should be put to death because there's no question about his innocence, unlike troy davis, who shouldn't be executed. this is so backwards.
01:32 PM on 09/19/2011
Justice Delayed, Denied, Subverted

Lady Justice can be one fickle animal, at least when courts intervene.

The application of the ancient legal maxim dating back centuries that “Justice delayed is justice denied” becomes a legal minefield when activist jurists and ignorant juries delay, deny, and subvert fairness and equity in the interests of ideology or misperceived guilt.

Convicted murderer Duane Buck is an individual currently benefiting from delayed justice.

Found guilty and sentenced to death by lethal injection in Texas, Buck ultimately appealed his sentence to the Supreme Court of the United States which finally and tersely said it would consider his appeal hours before his scheduled execution.

Buck was supposedly praying in his Death Row cell when advised of the reprieve and said, “Praise the Lord! God is worthy to be praised. God’s mercy triumphs over judgment. I feel good,” as well he should, although he made no mention of whether his former girlfriend, another man, and his stepsister felt very good when he shot all three on July 30, 1995.

Buck’s appeal was based on his lawyers’ allegation that race had been a factor . . . . . .
(Read more at http://www.genelalor.com/blog1/?p=5490.)
02:39 PM on 09/18/2011
" His attorneys appealed to the Supreme Court and Texas Gov. Rick Perry to block the execution, saying a psychologist testified that black people were more likely to commit violence"....The Psychologist is obviously biased himself.....Being Black or White or Whatever...should have nothing absolutely nothing to do with an analysis...its Bull Sh**.......the fact that he/she did say that says it all....and im not for Capital Punishment....i believe having to live the rest of your life with the knowledge of what they did is punishment...
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Jack Daniels Esq
Hold the ice
04:46 AM on 09/18/2011
The quickest way to convert a liberal to a conservative is a tire-iron head-shot at the ATM
09:51 AM on 09/18/2011
I think any blunt force trauma to the head has a chance of making someone brain damaged enough to become conservative.
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Jack Daniels Esq
Hold the ice
10:55 AM on 09/18/2011
Dont think - obey instead
03:19 AM on 09/18/2011
It's has already been proven for the past 20yrs that more color convicts are executed than non color convicts. I'm not defending any black or latino convicts who commits violent crimes but it
doesn't make any sense to have black & latino convicts executed quick fast & a hurry than a white convict who made committed more severe crimes compare to the black & latino convicts. This why I don't believe in the death penalty because some of the laws to execute violent convicts are racial or political. Prison boards of administration around the country need to be investigated to see how board members decide who to execute when comparing violent criminals in the correctional system.
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publiknme
.....don't get me started!
02:50 AM on 09/18/2011
.......Rick Perry on how he doesn't lose sleep over xecutions

www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXB8avpzMyI
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Let ItFly10
THE TRUTH HURTS
10:43 PM on 09/17/2011
FRY HIS A S S, he killed two people, black or white he needs to go
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
05:20 PM on 09/19/2011
i totally agree. his case is very different from troy davis.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Let ItFly10
THE TRUTH HURTS
05:31 PM on 09/19/2011
no doubt
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carolinacookie4
10:40 PM on 09/17/2011
God Bless TEXAS.
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publiknme
.....don't get me started!
02:54 AM on 09/18/2011
..........blessing them with droughts, hurricanes, tumbleweeds, fire.....I'd say maybe he was trying to tell them something
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carolinacookie4
10:37 PM on 09/17/2011
How does what feel?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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04:18 PM on 09/17/2011
Apparently the majority of posters don't think the 6th. commandment applies to the state. And yet so many would insist that this is a Christian nation.
02:53 PM on 09/17/2011
Comments on this topic are mostly vapid and a waste of my time.
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philliplojek
Irritating liberals one at a time.
02:35 PM on 09/17/2011
Don't make sense to me. If his guilt is not being questioned, why not go through with the punishment?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bruin1954
Progressive Christian and a believer in Humanity
02:47 PM on 09/17/2011
It is the sentencing that is being questioned, not his guilt.
That is the reason for not going through with the punishment.
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philliplojek
Irritating liberals one at a time.
03:53 PM on 09/17/2011
Let's try this. But if his guilt of murder is not being questioned, why not execute him?
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MajorityLeft
AMERICANS PREFER DEMOCRATS
03:25 PM on 09/17/2011
you're ghoulish and blood thirsty...punishment according to who?..fog horn leg horn parry?
- gub parry has killed many innocent men...he gets off on that...like dubyuk got off on torture and killing innocent men and women.
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philliplojek
Irritating liberals one at a time.
03:54 PM on 09/17/2011
Punishment according to the laws on the books.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pita143
Virtue mine honour
01:46 PM on 09/17/2011
I applaud the SC for this decision. This kid will NOT get out of jail, the question is did the Judge allow totally misleading comments from a questionable expert and deny the Defense the ability to have their Psych expert.

At least now the courts can take a closer look and see if the Jury decision was based on unbalanced evidence and if it was, just put this guy in jail for the rest of his life.

This guy is NOT going to get out to roam the streets and the posts that even suggest that are full of nonsense. This is about a FAIR TRIAL, and nothing less.