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52 Conn. L. Rev. Online 1 (2019-2020)

handle is hein.journals/conntemp52 and id is 1 raw text is: 









CONNECTICUT

LAW REVIEW


VOLUME   52                 APRIL 2019              ONLINE EDITION



                              Essay


 The   Ultimate   Dilemma: Conceding a Client's Guilt to
                   Avoid   a Death Sentence

                        KENNETH  WILLIAMS

    One of the dilemmas death penalty lawyers frequently face is how best
to defend a client when there is overwhelming evidence of the client's guilt.
Because death penalty proceedings are litigated in two phases, attorneys
must often decide whether to put their energy and limited resources into both
phases of the trial or whether to put more emphasis on saving the client's
life by conceding guilt and presenting a vigorous punishment-phase defense.
By conceding guilt the attorney may retain credibility with the jury which
might make the jury more receptive to the arguments presented during the
punishment phase. However, the client may wish to continue to maintain his
innocence. This dilemma was faced by the attorney for Robert McCoy, a
Louisiana death row inmate who objected to his attorney's concession of
guilt and whose case ended up before the US. Supreme Court. This paper
discusses the Supreme Court's holding in McCoy v. Louisiana. The article
analyzes and critiques both the majority and dissenting opinions based on
the author's 25-year experience representing inmates sentenced to death.
The article also reconciles the decision in McCoy with the Court's previous
decision in Florida v. Nixon in which the Court decided a similar issue and
explains why the decisions are not inconsistent. The article also discusses
the predicament ofan attorney who must represent a defendant who objects
to the attorney's proposed strategy of conceding guilt. After McCoy, an
attorney in a death penalty case who believes that conceding his client's
guilt is the best course of action can proceed with this strategy unless the
client expressly objects to him doing so. The article concludes that the
Supreme  Court struck the right balance between the defendant's right to
maintain his innocence and the attorney's right to make good strategic
decisions.

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