USA - Texas. Raymond Riles resentenced to life

USA - Raymond Riles (TX)

11 June 2021 :

Raymond Riles resentenced to life
Harris County Judge Ana Martinez resentence Riles, now 71, Black, the longest serving death row inmate in the U.S., to life in prison (WITH parole) after prosecutors concluded he's ineligible for execution and not competent for retrial due to his long history of mental illness
Riles has spent more than 45 years on death row for fatally shooting John Thomas Henry in 1974 at a Houston car lot following a disagreement over a vehicle. He is the country's longest serving death row prisoner, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
Riles was resentenced after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled in April (see HoC 14/04/2021) that his “death sentence can no longer stand” because jurors did not properly consider his history of mental illness.
Riles attended his resentencing by Zoom from the Polunsky Unit in Livingston, which houses the state’s death row inmates. He said very little during the court hearing.
In a statement, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said Riles is incompetent and “therefore can’t be executed.”
During his time on death row, Riles has been treated with heavy antipsychotic medications but was never deemed mentally competent to be executed, according to prosecutors and his attorneys. He had been scheduled for execution in 1986 but got a stay due to competency issues. Judge Martinez was not able to resentence Riles to life in prison without parole because it was not an option under state law at the time of his conviction.
Riles’ new sentence means he is immediately eligible for parole. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles will automatically conduct a parole review in his case.
The district attorney’s office as well as Henry’s family have indicated they will fight any efforts to have Riles released on parole.
A co-defendant in the case, Herbert Washington, was also sentenced to death, but his sentence was overturned, and he later pleaded guilty to two related charges. He was paroled in 1983.
When Riles was tried, state law did not expect jurors to consider mitigating evidence such as mental illness when deciding whether to choose the death sentence. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1989 that Texas jury instructions were unconstitutional because they didn’t allow appropriate consideration of intellectual disability, mental illness or other issues as mitigating evidence in the punishment phase of a capital murder trial.
But Riles’ case remained in limbo because lower courts failed to enforce the Supreme Court’s decision until at least 2007, according to his attorneys.
That then gave Riles a realistic chance to prevail on this legal issue, but it wasn’t until recently that he had contact with attorneys who were willing to assist him, his lawyers said.
While prosecutors argued at Riles’ trial that he was not mentally ill, several psychiatrists and psychologists testified for the defense that he was psychotic and suffered from schizophrenia. Riles’ brother testified that his “mind is not normal like other people. He is not thinking like other people.”
While the Supreme Court has prohibited the death penalty for individuals who are intellectually disabled, it has not barred such punishment for those with serious mental illness, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
In 2019, the Texas Legislature considered a bill that would have prohibited the death penalty for someone with severe mental illness. The legislation did not pass.

https://apnews.com/article/us-supreme-court-coronavirus-pandemic-health-0347336e68b1dcb499327d63e15dace7

 

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