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On Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Tennessee, Eastern Division.
The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.
Justice MARSHALL, with whom Justice BRENNAN joins, dissenting.
At the sentencing stage of a capital proceeding, Tennessee requires a capital defendant to prove that any mitigating circum- [473 U.S. 911 , 912] stances he has established outweigh any aggravating circumstances the State has proved. State law provides:
Sentencing juries are instructed that the defendant's failure to carry this burden requires automatic imposition of a death sentence. As the State Supreme Court has held: "[I]f the State does prove an aggravating circumstance beyond a reasonable doubt, then unless the jury finds that mitigation exists and outweighs the aggravating circumstance, it can only impose the death penalty." State v. Melson, 638 S.W.2d 342, 366 (Tenn.1982), cert. denied,
I continue to believe such instructions and statutes are inconsistent with the Court's Eighth Amendment precedents.* They impermissibly suggest to the jury a more limited role than the Eighth Amendment requires it to play. A jury must always be free to confront the ultimate question whether " 'death is the appropriate punishment' " in the specific case, even where mitigating factors do not outweigh aggravating factors. Lockett v. Ohio,
Tennessee's statute appears to write less quantifiable mitigating factors, such as the desire to render mercy, out of the sentencing proceeding. Because the statute is likely to mislead sentencing juries into believing that only mitigating factors they can label and "weigh" against aggravating ones can properly be considered, I would grant certiorari to review the statute's constitutionality. I therefore dissent.
[
Footnote *
] See White v. Maryland,
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Citation: 473 U.S. 911
No. 84-6447
Decided: July 01, 1985
Court: United States Supreme Court
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