Filed: Feb. 19, 2019
Latest Update: Feb. 19, 2019
Summary: ORDER RE: MOTION TO STRIKE ALL STATUTORY AND NON-STATUTORY AGGRAVATING FACTORS BECAUSE THEY WERE NOT FOUND BY THE GRAND JURY SHARON L. GLEASON , District Judge . Before the Court at Docket 289 is Defendant John Pearl Smith, II's Motion to Strike All Statutory and Non-Statutory Aggravating Factors Because They Were Not Found by the Grand Jury. The Government filed an opposition. 1 Mr. Smith did not file a reply. Mr. Smith asserts that "all of the Statutory and Non-Statutory Aggravating Ci
Summary: ORDER RE: MOTION TO STRIKE ALL STATUTORY AND NON-STATUTORY AGGRAVATING FACTORS BECAUSE THEY WERE NOT FOUND BY THE GRAND JURY SHARON L. GLEASON , District Judge . Before the Court at Docket 289 is Defendant John Pearl Smith, II's Motion to Strike All Statutory and Non-Statutory Aggravating Factors Because They Were Not Found by the Grand Jury. The Government filed an opposition. 1 Mr. Smith did not file a reply. Mr. Smith asserts that "all of the Statutory and Non-Statutory Aggravating Cir..
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ORDER RE: MOTION TO STRIKE ALL STATUTORY AND NON-STATUTORY AGGRAVATING FACTORS BECAUSE THEY WERE NOT FOUND BY THE GRAND JURY
SHARON L. GLEASON, District Judge.
Before the Court at Docket 289 is Defendant John Pearl Smith, II's Motion to Strike All Statutory and Non-Statutory Aggravating Factors Because They Were Not Found by the Grand Jury. The Government filed an opposition.1 Mr. Smith did not file a reply.
Mr. Smith asserts that "all of the Statutory and Non-Statutory Aggravating Circumstances are contained in [Docket] 168, entitled Notice of Special Findings, signed by two Assistant United States Attorneys. None of these aggravating circumstances were submitted to, nor were they found by, the Grand Jury."2 Mr. Smith asserts that the Supreme Court's decision in Hurst v. Florida3 requires that a jury find each fact necessary to impose a sentence of death. Mr. Smith interprets Hurst to mean that all aggravating factors are elements of the offense that must be submitted to and weighed by the grand jury.4
The Government responds that the Hurst decision is not as broad as Mr. Smith maintains, and that Hurst's requirement for jury fact-finding as to a defendant's eligibility for the death penalty is already built into the Federal Death Penalty Act: "the FDPA provides for the jury to have the ultimate discretion in determining a sentence—the exact remedy that the Hurst Court required of the state of Florida."5
DISCUSSION
The Grand Jury in this case issued a First Superseding Indictment that includes a "Notice of Special Findings." The Notice states that "[t]he Grand Jury further finds" and lists several threshold intent factors and five statutory aggravating factors.6 These five statutory aggravators are the same statutory aggravators listed in the Notice of Intent to Seek the Death Penalty.7 The statutory aggravating factors noticed in this case were submitted to and found by the Grand Jury.8
In contrast, the First Superseding Indictment does not contain the non-statutory aggravating factors noticed by the Government in its Notice of Intent.
The FDPA sets forth a specific procedure that a jury must follow in reaching a decision about whether to impose the death penalty. If a defendant is found guilty in the guilty-not guilty phase of trial, the trial moves into the penalty phase. The penalty phase consists of eligibility and selection.
In the eligibility portion, the jury considers three factors: whether the defendant was at least 18 years old at the time of the offense, whether the defendant had at least one of four enumerated mental states (referred to as gateway or threshold intent factors), and whether at least one statutory aggravating factor exists.9 These three factors must be found beyond a reasonable doubt.10 The jury must unanimously agree as to which threshold intent factor(s) and which statutory aggravating factor(s) exists.11 If, and only if, the jury finds these three factors beyond a reasonable doubt does the defendant become eligible for the death penalty.12 At that point, the maximum penalty the defendant can receive is the death penalty.
In the selection portion of the penalty phase, the jury considers whether aggravating factors outweigh the mitigating factors13 so as to warrant a punishment of death.14 It is in this selection portion that the jury—which has already determined that the defendant is eligible for the death sentence—considers non-statutory aggravating factors. "The non-statutory aggravating factors, although relevant to determining whether a jury decides to impose the death penalty, do not make a defendant statutorily eligible for any sentence that could not be otherwise imposed in their absence. They are neither sufficient nor necessary under the FDPA for a sentence of death."15 Because non-statutory aggravating factors do not increase the maximum punishment, they are not elements of the offense and the government need not submit them to the grand jury or charge those factors in the indictment.16
Hurst v. Florida does not change this outcome. Hurst found Florida's death penalty sentencing scheme violated the Sixth Amendment because it did not require a jury to find each fact necessary to impose the death sentence.17 Unlike Florida's sentencing scheme, the FDPA requires the jury to find the facts necessary to make the defendant death-penalty eligible.18 Thus, any aggravating factors that expose Mr. Smith to the death penalty must be found by the jury, negating any Hurst violation.
In light of the foregoing, IT IS ORDERED that the motion at Docket 289 is DENIED.