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Jonathan Bruce
REED
The
United States Court of Appeals For the Fifth Circuit
Jonathan Bruce Reed could be released after 30
years in death row
entertainment.wagerweb.com
January 14, 2009
A white man on Texas death row
for nearly 30 years could be freed because an appeals court has
ruled that prosecutors improperly excluded blacks from his jury in
the belief that blacks empathize with defendants.
Jonathan Bruce Reed was convicted and condemned
for the November 1978 rape-slaying of Wanda Jean Wadle at her
Dallas apartment.
But now the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
has ruled Dallas County prosecutors improperly excluded black
prospective jurors from Reed’s trial and ordered him released
unless prosecutors choose to retry him quickly.
“Although we do not relish adding a new chapter
to this unfortunate story more than 30 years after the crime took
place, we conclude that the Constitution affords Reed a right to
relief,” a three-member panel of the New Orleans-based court wrote
in the ruling posted late Monday.
Jamille Bradfield, a spokeswoman for Dallas
County District Attorney Craig Watkins, said it was premature to
comment on whether Reed would be retried.
“We still need time to dissect the opinion,”
she said Tuesday.
Reed has been on death row since September
1979, making him among the longest-serving prisoners awaiting
execution in Texas.
The 5th Circuit said Reed’s case mirrored the
capital murder case of Thomas Miller-El, on Texas death row for
nearly 20 years until the Supreme Court overturned his verdict,
citing racial discrimination during jury selection. Miller-El last
year took a life prison sentence as part of a plea deal.
The Supreme Court cited a manual, written by a
prosecutor in 1969 and used for years later, that advised Dallas
prosecutors to exclude minorities from juries. Documents in Miller-El’s
case described how the memo advised prosecutors to avoid selecting
minorities because “they almost always empathize with the accused.”
“Reed presents this same historical evidence of
racial bias in the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office,” the
5th Circuit panel said.
Reed, now 57, was identified as the man who
attacked Wadle and her roommate, Kimberly Pursley, on Nov. 1,
1978. He’d apparently entered their apartment by posing as a
maintenance man.
Pursley survived an attempted strangulation by
feigning unconsciousness. Two other residents identified Reed as
the man they saw in the apartment complex just before the time of
the attack.