Specifically,
Justice Scalia said that AEDPA barred a habeas corpus writ regarding
any state court claim unless based on "... a decision that was contrary
to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
federal law." Justice Scalia surmised that, since the Supreme Court
"has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a
convicted defendant who ... is later able to convince a habeas court
that he is 'actually' innocent ... ," Davis is simply out of luck.
The
Constitution of the United States was adopted in 1787; the Bill of
Rights four years later in 1791. Apparently for Justice Scalia, these
past 218 years have not sufficed to "clearly establish" that federal
law is based on the premise that only the guilty are to be executed.
Justice
Scalia correctly noted that lower courts had already considered the
transcripts of witness testimony presented by Davis' attorneys
establishing his innocence. What Justice Scalia fails to mention is the
important fact that no court had yet heard from the live witnesses who
had recanted, and who, for example, presented evidence of police
pressure to secure their testimony.
Even
though Scalia Justice opines that the majority opinion leaves the
district court unable to decipher what is expected of it, in fact it is
very clear. The court is to conduct a full hearing at which the
witnesses Davis believes will show his actual innocence are allowed to
testify. And the state of Georgia will have full opportunity to rebut
that testimony. This seems to me to be a pretty straightforward
directive; and not one that imposes a major burden on the state of
Georgia.
If
the lower court conducts the hearing as directed by our nation's top
court and still concludes Davis was the shooter, so be it. Not having
been there, I am not in a position to judge.
However,
I was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee
in 1996 when we debated and voted on AEDPA. I can state unequivocally
that this legislation was not intended to preclude a claim of actual
innocence based on post-sentence evidence from being considered in a
habeas petition. Employing such a pinched and erroneous reading of the
law to deny a condemned man the opportunity to present substantial
evidence of innocence would constitute a major travesty of justice in
America.