North Carolina Judge Finds Racial Bias in Death Penalty in Landmark Case
RALEIGH, N.C. – In a landmark case, a North Carolina judge ruled today that race played an impermissible role in jury selection for Hasson Bacote, a Black man who challenged his death sentence under the North Carolina Racial Justice Act (RJA). The court found evidence of discrimination in Bacote’s case, the cases prosecuted by North Carolina Assistant District Attorney Greg Butler, as well as in Johnston County and District 11, relying upon statistical, cultural, historical, and social science, in addition to court files and records. Consistent with prior case law, he ruled that the RJA does not require defendants to make a showing of discrimination in their own case but found that Bacote did prove discrimination in his case.
“This decision provides more definitive proof that capital prosecutions in North Carolina are tainted with racial bias and discrimination,” said Cassandra Stubbs, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Capital Punishment Project. “What we saw in Mr. Bacote’s case is that the more we look for evidence of discrimination in our state’s capital jury selection system, the more we find. This ruling creates a path to justice for the hundred plus individuals who have filed claims and whose cases were similarly tainted with bias.”
In his ruling, Superior Court Judge Wayland J. Sermons Jr. found that prosecutors deliberately struck Black jurors from jury service in Bacote’s case at three times the rate of white jurors. In his findings of discrimination, the judge also cited the prosecutor’s references to thinly veiled racist phrases to refer to Black defendants, like “thug,” “piece of trash,” and “predators of the African plain.”
“I am deeply grateful to my family, my lawyers, the experts, and to everyone who fought for justice — not just in my case, but for so many others,” said Hasson Bacote, petitioner. “I want to thank Bryan Stevenson in particular for showing how unfair the jury selection was in my case. When my death sentence was commuted by Governor Cooper, I felt enormous relief that the burden of the death penalty — and all of the stress and anxiety that go with it — were lifted off my shoulders. I am grateful to the court for having the courage to recognize that racial bias affected my case and so many others. I remain hopeful that the fight for truth and justice will not stop here.”
The judge’s ruling set out guidance and made important fact findings that could pave the way for others on death row with RJA claims to successfully challenge their death sentences. On Dec. 31, 2024, former Gov. Cooper commuted the sentences of 15 people on death row, including Hasson Bacote. Even though Bacote was already resentenced to life without parole, the judge issued a ruling in his case because of its importance for the 100-plus people with pending RJA claims.
“Racial discrimination in our courts and criminal legal system has long impacted death penalty sentencing,” said Ashley Burrell, senior counsel at the Legal Defense Fund. “Today’s ruling affirms what we have argued all along: racism infects the death penalty. We are hopeful that future decisions will result in relief under the RJA for other North Carolinians currently on death row.”
The North Carolina Racial Justice Act was a novel piece of legislation passed in 2009 that allowed people to challenge their death sentences if they could show race played a role in their trials. Those who prove racism stand to be resentenced to life without parole. Four individuals won their claims at a hearing in 2012 in Cumberland County and were resentenced to life without parole. The decisions in those cases were ultimately vacated in order to give the state more time to prepare its defense to the sweeping charges of statewide bias, although their life sentences were protected by double jeopardy.
The state legislature repealed the statute in 2013, but after a legal challenge, the North Carolina Supreme Court ruled in 2020 that those who had already filed claims under the RJA were entitled to hearings. Bacote’s case was the first to move forward since the Supreme Court ruling and is the first North Carolina case where a trial court ordered statewide discovery of prosecution notes from jury selection in all capital trials since 1980.
“The sweeping evidence of discrimination in jury selection and the definitive conclusions by Judge Sermons vindicate the legislature’s decision to enact the Racial justice Act in 2009,” said Gretchen M. Engel, executive director of the Center for Death Penalty Litigation. “The ruling creates an opportunity for leaders in North Carolina to turn the page on this shameful chapter for our state. At a minimum, Governor Stein and Attorney General Jackson should commit to addressing the failures of the criminal legal system and adopt policies that prevent this kind of discrimination in future death penalty cases.”
Bacote is represented by the ACLU Capital Punishment Project, the ACLU of North Carolina, the Legal Defense Fund, the Center for Death Penalty Litigation, and attorneys Jay Ferguson and Henderson Hill.
Court Case: North Carolina Racial Justice Act Litigation (North Carolina v. Hasson Bacote)
Affiliate: North Carolina