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STATE OF LOUISIANA NUMBER:
J-3868 IN THE INTEREST OF JUVENILE
COURT JESSE RAY BEARD LASALLE
PARISH, LOUISIANA MOTION TO RECUSE THE DISTRICT
ATTORNEY
NOW
INTO COURT, through undersigned counsel, comes JESSE RAY BEARD, a juvenile, who
moves the Court as follows: 1. Jesse
Ray Beard (Jesse Ray) has been charged with a delinquent act. 2. The District Attorney
prosecuting the case is J. Reed Walters (“Walters”). 3. Walters has shown on
numerous occasions that he is so prejudiced and harbors such personal bias
against Jesse Ray and the other five African American youths now known as the
Jena 6, that he is incapable of fairly and impartially performing his duties as
the district attorney. 4. During
the relevant time period, Walters also served as attorney for the LaSalle
Parish School Board. In this
capacity, Walters provided counsel to the School Board of a nature which
created an irreparable conflict of interest with his duties as the district
attorney, thereby impairing his ability to perform his duties as the district
attorney fairly and impartially. 5. A district attorney must be
recused when his bias, prejudice, or personal interest in a case impairs his
ability to fairly and impartially perform his duties. WHEREFORE, JESSE RAY BEARD PRAYS that after due proceedings,
District Attorney J. Reed Walters be recused from this and all other matters
involving Jesse Ray. RESPECTFULLY
SUBMITTED: ___________________________ DAVID
J. UTTER Juvenile
Justice Project of Louisiana 1600
Oretha Castle Haley Blvd. New
Orleans, LA 70113 Telephone: (504) 522-5437 Fax: (504) 522-5430 STATE OF LOUISIANA NUMBER:
J-3868 IN THE INTEREST OF JUVENILE
COURT JESSE RAY BEARD LASALLE
PARISH, LOUISIANA MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO RECUSE THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY JESSE
RAY BEARD, by and through counsel, respectfully moves this Court to recuse District
Attorney J. Reed Walters and his office from prosecuting this case.[1] Jesse Ray Beard (“Jesse Ray”) submits
this motion to recuse pursuant to Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure Article 680, Article
I Section 2 of the Louisiana Constitution (Due Process), Article I Section 3 of
the Louisiana Constitution (Right to Individual Dignity), and the 5th and the 14th
Amendments to the United States Constitution. See La.
C. Cr. P. art. 680; La. const. art. I §2; La. const.
art. I §3; U.S. const. amend. V; U.S. const.
amend. XIV. As grounds, Jesse Ray states the following: INTRODUCTION On
August 31, 2006 African-American students arrived at school to find “two hangman’s
nooses hanging from the tree that sits in the center of the Jena High School
square tree . . . where most students assemble during recess and lunch breaks.”[2] “Incident More Hype than Reality”, Jena Times, p. 1A (Sept. 13,
2006). Disregarding the 4,863
recorded lynchings over the past 125 years, almost all in the Deep South and
almost all hangings of African-Americans, officials reported to the local media
that “most of the `racial tensions’ were more media hype than reality.” “In reality, the nooses had nothing to
do with racial bigotry, but rather an ignorant prank taken from the
mini-series, `Lonesome Dove.’” Id. In spite of a recommendation by the
school principal that the 3 noose hangers be expelled, the expulsion hearing
committee of the LaSalle Parish School Board voted to suspend the students
instead. Id. The attorney representing the school
board (both in the noose-hangers’ cases and also with regard to the expulsions
of six African-American students including Jesse Ray) was, and remains,
District Attorney J. Reed Walters; the very person who refused to prosecute
these white students but charged Jessie Ray with attempted murder for allegedly
hitting a fellow student.[3]
On December 4,
2006, after 3 months of racial tension at the school, including but not limited
to: 1) protests and a sit-in by African-American students; 2) numerous fights
between African-American and white youth that spilled off school grounds; 3) at
least one day of the entire school being placed on “lockdown;”[4]and
4) an arsonist’s fire that destroyed the main school building, Justin Barker
(Justin), a white student, was injured in a battery, allegedly by six
African-American students.[5] Shortly after the incident, sheriff’s
deputies arrested the young men, now known as the Jena 6, and charged them with
aggravated second degree battery.
Even though Justin was well enough to attend a school function hours
later, Mr. Walters increased the charges against the Jena Six to attempted
second degree murder, and conspiracy to commit attempted second degree murder, and
transferred one of the young men – Mychal Bell – to adult court.[6] Since that fateful
day when three white students placed hangman’s nooses on a tree in the center
of the square at Jena High School, Mr. Walters has repeatedly demonstrated his
bias and inability to fairly and impartially perform his duties as the
prosecutor in the Jena 6 cases. As
will be shown at a hearing on this motion, his personal bias in this case and conflict
of interests as prosecutor and school board attorney make him unfit to proceed
as prosecutor herein. Our nation’s
ugly history of lynching African-Americans and the symbol of the noose as a
deadly threat to African Americans made the hanging of those nooses from the
school yard tree an undeniable crime in the circumstances of this case. Mr. Walter’s manifest unwillingness to
prosecute this crime is the clearest sign of his bias and his inability to
fairly and impartially prosecute Jesse Ray. This impartiality is further highlighted when one compares
the leniency with which Mr. Walters treated the white noose hangers juxtaposed
against his treatment of the Jean Six.
Finally, Mr. Walters’ behavior in this and other cases involving Jesse
Ray show a willingness to abuse his power as the chief law enforcement officer
in LaSalle Parish to secure convictions, disregarding his primary duty to
justice. I.
The Law of Recusal District
attorneys are given broad power and discretion in prosecuting cases. However, the United States Constitution
and the Louisiana Constitution require that prosecutors’ broad discretion and
power is limited to ensure that prosecutors are always seeking justice and that
every prosecution is conducted fairly and impartially. If a prosecutor cannot conduct a
prosecution fairly and impartially, he must be recused. Louisiana Code
of Criminal Procedure Article 680(1) (“Article 680”) limits prosecutors’ power
by providing that a district attorney shall be recused when he “[h]as a
personal interest in the cause or grand jury proceeding which is in conflict
with the fair and impartial administration of justice.” Article 680’s recusal provision is not
only provided for but is required by constitutional guarantees of the fair and
impartial administration of justice.
Plaquemines Parish Comm’n Council v. Perez, 379 So.2d 1373, 1377
(La. 1980). Article 1 § 2 of the
Louisiana Constitution provides that “no person shall be deprived of life, liberty,
or property, except by due process of law.” The Louisiana Supreme Court has defined the essence of due
process as “protection from arbitrary and unreasonable action.” Plaquemines, 379 So.2d at
1377. Furthermore, due process
itself requires impartiality. See
Id. Additionally, Article I
Section 3 of the Louisiana Constitution commands that: “No person shall be denied the equal protection of the laws. No law shall discriminate against a
person because of race or religious ideas, beliefs, or affiliations.”[7] The Louisiana
Supreme Court has interpreted Article 680 (1) to require courts to recuse a
district attorney “when the situation presented raises questions as to whether
the district attorney’s ability to fairly and impartially perform his duties
has been impaired.” State v.
King, 956 So.2d 562, 567 (La. 2007).
Recusal is required even where the district attorney is not aware of his
partiality and despite his earnest assertions that he is impartial. Id. Furthermore, a defendant need not prove that a district
attorney will benefit personally or economically from prosecuting
the defendant. The Louisiana
Legislature and courts in Louisiana have made clear that a district attorney must
be recused if he is involved or interested in any extrinsic matters
which might, consciously or unconsciously, impair or destroy his power to
conduct the accused’s trial fairly and impartially. Id.; State v. Tate, 171 So. 108 (La. 1936). In fact, when the Louisiana Legislature
passed Article 680, it changed the grounds for recusal from requiring a showing
of a “personal interest adverse to that of the prosecution” to any “personal
interest in the cause which is in conflict with fair and impartial administration
of justice.” See, State
v. Bailey, NO. 2007-KK-1922 (La. 2007) (writ denied) (dissent) (discussing
change in language and requirements for recusal); See also La. C. Cr. P. art. 680. The proponent of
recusal must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the district
attorney has a personal interest which conflicts with the fair and impartial
administration of justice. Id.
at 566; State v. Snyder, 237 So.2d 392, 395. However, courts must apply an objective standard in making
its recusal determination. That
is, the proponent of recusal needs only to produce evidence that would lead a
reasonable person to question whether the district attorney can conduct the trial
fairly and impartially. King,
956 So. 2d at 570. What is more, if
there is a “close” case, courts must err on the side of recusal to promote the
fair and impartial administration of justice. Id. at 570.
Furthermore, courts have found that district attorneys had personal
interests in cases and ordered their recusal based on broad and varied factual
situations. In State v.
Marcotte, 86 So.2d 186 (La. 1956), a police constable was convicted of
battery and other offenses. Before
trial the defendant filed a motion asking the trial court to recuse the
district attorney in the case. The
defendant claimed that the district attorney had personal animosity against him
stemming from altercations with the district attorney’s father and because the defendant
and the district attorney had been politically opposed to each other for
years. Id. at 187.
Furthermore, the defendant alleged that during the previous primary, the
defendant had opposed the district attorney’s candidacy. In response to this political opposition,
one of the district attorney’s cohorts (with the knowledge and consent of the
district attorney) threatened the defendant saying, “unless [defendant] changed
his political activities and supported the district attorney’s candidacy,
[defendant] would suffer the consequences of vigorous prosecution and conviction
immediately after election ...but if he were to change his political support to
the district attorney, the charges would be dropped.” Id. The district attorney denied these
allegations in his answer to defendant’s recusal motion. The district attorney also claimed that
he held no animosity toward defendant and did not regard him as a personal
enemy. Id. The trial court denied defendant’s
recusal motion without allowing defendant to cross-examine the district
attorney or to provide proof to support his claims. Id. at 188.
The defendant appealed. The
Supreme Court of Louisiana held that it was improper for the trial court to
refuse to hear evidence on defendant’s motion because the allegations alleged
by the defendant, if sustained by a preponderance of the evidence, were
sufficient to require recusation of the district attorney on the ground that he
had a personal interest in the case.
Id. Other courts
have also considered a district attorney’s statements as evidence of
animosity. In King, the
court found that the district attorney’s comments that he would proceed with
charges against the defendant partially because the defendant had found himself
in the district attorney’s cross hairs was evidence of the district attorney’s
impermissible personal interest in the case. King, 956 So.2d 562 at 568. At the recusal hearing, the defendant’s lawyer testified
regarding a telephone call he had with the district attorney where the district
attorney said he would go forward with the charges against defendant because he
was upset by rumors about the district attorney’s family spread by the
defendant. Id. at 568. The court found that the evidence
supported recusal. In State v.
Snyder, 237 So.2d 392 (La 1970), the defendant was charged with perjury and
several counts of defamation for allegedly making defamatory comments about the
district attorney and other individuals.
All of the charges arose out of a heated political campaign in which the
district attorney supported the defendant’s rival. The district attorney nol-prossed the charges stemming from
the alleged defamation against the district attorney himself. However, he indicted the defendant for
the other alleged defamations. The
defendant filed motions to recuse the district attorney from the cases. Id. at 393-394. He claimed the following facts in
support of his recusal motion: 1) that the district attorney became engaged in
political activities in opposition to defendant’s candidacy, 2) acting in his
official capacity, the district attorney publicly expressed a judgment that the
defendant was guilty of the criminal offenses despite the fact that he had no
evidence to justify such a statement, and 3) the district attorney appeared on
a radio talk show where he threatened that all of the defendant’s previous
comments on radio programs would “be brought to the Grand jury …and the Grand
Jury …will have no other recourse but to return a great many indictments
against [defendant].” Id.
at 395. At the hearing on
defendant’s motion to recuse, the district attorney admitted that he had
developed strong personal animosity toward the defendant; but he claimed that
the animosity eroded after the election.
Id. The trial court overruled the defendant’s
motion and the defendant appealed.
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Louisiana found that based on the
evidence presented, the defendant had established, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that the district attorney “has a personal interest in the cause
which is in conflict with fair and impartial administration of justice” and
thus must be recused pursuant to Article 680(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. Id. The Court noted that “where such
deep-seated hatred has once evinced itself, the district attorney might, even
though unconsciously, have impaired his power to conduct [defendant’s] trial
fairly and impartially. Id. II.
The Grounds for Recusal Because of his
bias and conflict, Mr. Walters fails to see what any fair and unbiased
individual would see: A “hangman’s
noose” hung in a tree previously utilized by whites only, in the context and
circumstances of this case, is not, and can never be, a prank.[8] This failure, shown in his actions both
as counsel to the school board and as District Attorney, indicate a bias and
conflict of interest that, while shared with influential parts of the white
community, make it impossible to fairly and impartially prosecute Jessie Ray. As legal counsel to the LaSalle Parish
School Board, Mr. Walters was ultimately responsible for the legal opinion to
his clients that ensured that the noose-hangers’ school term was only
interrupted with suspension and weekend detentions, while guiding the system to
a full academic year expulsion for the Jena 6. After African-American students reacted in protest and
outrage to the noose-hanging and racial unrest engulfed the school, Mr. Walters
threatened the African-American students with ruining their lives with a
“stroke of his pen” if they did not behave, while ignoring any responsibility
the white students had in the unrest.
As District
Attorney, Mr. Walters refused to consider charging the three white students who
admitted to hanging the nooses, even though he could have proceeded under not
one, but four possible statutes: i.e.
terrorizing, institutional vandalism, violating Louisiana’s hate crime statute,
and assault. After refusing to
prosecute the white noose-hangers, Mr. Walters then made good on his threat to
African-Americans, in particular the Jena 6 and Jesse Ray, by overcharging the
Jena 6, and arguing for high bonds (thus guaranteeing that they all spent time
incarcerated before trial). Based
on the facts alleged herein, in addition to what will be adduced at a hearing
on the matter, it is clear that Mr. Walters has a personal interest and bias in
the cause which is in conflict with the fair and impartial administration of
justice. Pursuant to the
standards set forth in Article 680 of the Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure,
State v. Tate, 171 So. 108, and other Louisiana case law, the office of
the LaSalle Parish District Attorney, J. Reed Walters, must be recused from
this case. A.
Mr. Walters in His Capacity as School Board
Counsel: Slapping the Wrists of White Students and Hammering African-Americans. More than any
other image from African-American history, a hangman’s noose is a tangible,
visual, silent and deliberate threat intended to instill fear and intimidation. African-Americans
suffered death at the hands of white vigilantes for all of their history in our
nation, but nothing like the spectacle associated with public lynching.[9] Lynching was a prominent
component of the late 19th and 20th century American
political landscape, and was utilized as a tool for the systematic intimidation
of African-Americans.[10] Between 1882
(when reliable statistics are first available) and 1968, the vast majority of
the 4,863 recorded people lynched in the United States were southern,
African-American men.[11] “Lynch mobs”
enforced extralegal and barbarous death sentences of hanging and mutilation on
thousands of African-Americans in the southern United States.[12] From the 1890’s through the early
decades of the 20th century, state and federal lawmakers effectively
sanctioned the violence by allowing it to go unchecked and consistently turned
a blind eye to the thousands of lynchings.[13] "Lynchings were concentrated in a
swath running through Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana."[14] It is inconceivable that an experienced
Louisiana prosecutor would be unaware of this history. Community institutions were also
complicit in condoning lynching and in protecting perpetrators. Some local newspapers refused to report
lynchings in their communities, and others wrote stories advertising coming
lynchings and guaranteeing huge crowds. Local law enforcement, prosecutors, and even judges often
abdicated their obligation to find and punish lynchers. For example, police directed traffic at
the 1931 lynching of Matthew Williams in Salisbury, Maryland. The conspiracy of silence extended to
the white townspeople as well.
Whites often closed ranks to protect their friends and neighbors while fear
kept most African-Americans silent. Some elderly African-Americans are still unwilling to talk
openly about lynching today, even within their own families.[15] Mr. Walter’s bias became
clear when he ignored this history[16]
and either supported or failed to intervene when the LaSalle Parish School
Board expulsion hearing committee overrode school Principal Scott Windham’s
recommendation that the noose-hangers be expelled. Instead, the students received suspensions.[17] The obvious nature and significance of
this history was highlighted when CNN recently aired “The Noose – An
American Nightmare.” The program also
showed how important it is for unbiased prosecutors to quell potential violence
by prosecuting such crimes before they lead to a spiral of violence. Yet, bias can prevent a prosecutor from
carrying out his most basic duties. Principal
Windham knew and was willing to act on what the expulsion hearing committee and
Mr. Walters failed to recognize because of an overriding bias. The nooses were an overt, racist threat
to the African-American students who dared ask school officials if they could
sit with white students at lunch under a tree that had long been
associated as a gathering place exclusively for white folks. We cannot assume Mr. Walters is
ignorant of this background. Were Mr.
Walters not biased, he would recognize that in the context described and
considering the history of race, racism, and lynchings in the United States (especially
in the South), nooses hanging from a tree are a threat to the entire
African-American community. They
are a powerful, unequivocal statement to any African-American that he dare not
upset the dominant social order. Rather
than acknowledge the noose-hanging as the assault and/or hate crime that it
was, Mr. Walters' bias allowed him to accept the dominant view, seemingly held
by some white citizens in Jena, that the act was merely an “ignorant prank”;
and thus he supported his client’s (the school board’s) minor disciplining of
the three perpetrators of this racist act.[18] His treatment of the noose-hangers is in stark contrast with the swift
expulsions of the Jena 6.[19] All six were arrested and locked in
jails – four in the squalid LaSalle Parish Jail and two in juvenile
detention – immediately after the Dec. 4, 2006 battery on Justin Barker. By January 29, 2007, the LaSalle Parish
School Board upheld the year-long expulsions of four of the students, with the
fifth student apparently not appealing his expulsion. Jena
Times, p. 1A (Jan. 31, 2007). As counsel to the school board, Mr.
Walters ensured that the underlying facts of the incidents and possible racial
bias were not explored as part of the process, admonishing the school board
members that “[w]e’re not here to discuss the investigation or any other
students, we’re here to make sure the expulsion process was conducted in
accordance to Louisiana Statutes.” Id., at p. 3A.
The vote to uphold the expulsions was seven-one, with the lone dissent
coming from the Board’s sole African-American member. Id. Having acted as
counsel to the school board with the result he directed, Mr. Walters could not
then turn around and prosecute the noose cases in an unbiased way. Furthermore, he put himself in the
untenable position, through his conflict of interest in representing the school
board, of being seen as unfairly acting to expel the Jena 6 and not those who
hung the nooses. He cannot now deny his bias and his
personal stake in prosecuting Jesse Ray.
Mr. Walters’ bias and his interest in validating his advice to the
school board is a basis for this Court to recuse him. Contrary to the trial judge’s decision
in Bailey, a defendant moving for recusal is not required to prove that the
district attorney would receive some personal benefit from prosecuting the defendant. The proper standard, as announced in Tate,
only requires that a defendant show that the district attorney is involved or
is interested in an extrinsic matter which might consciously or unconsciously
impair or destroy his power to fairly and impartially conduct the defendant’s prosecution. Furthermore, even if the standard was
as the Bailey court suggested (i.e. that a defendant must show that the
district attorney received some personal benefit), the facts in this case would
still require a court to recuse District Attorney J. Reed Walters. The benefit that Mr. Walters receives from
prosecuting Jesse Ray is a professional benefit. By prosecuting Jesse Ray, Mr. Walters validates his advice
to the school board to expel Jesse Ray and his co-defendants. Concomitantly by not prosecuting the
noose hangers he validates his advice to the school board not to expel the
noose-hangers. It would be professionally
embarrassing to Mr. Walters to take any other course. Clearly this “conflict” made it impossible for Mr. Walters
to be objective in his duties as prosecutor. In addition, a further conflict of interest for Mr. Walters arises out of the civil litigation filed by the Barkers against the Jena 6 defendants and the School Board. It is very likely that Mr. Walters will be a witness in that litigation since he was counsel for the School Board at the time of the incident and remains its counsel today. It would be highly improper for him to continue as the prosecutor of the individual Jena 6 defendants in such circumstances. Criminal convictions of the Jena 6 would be advantageous to Walters' client the School Board because a civil jury would be more likely to allocate more of the blame and damages to the Jena 6 defendants if they have been convicted of a crime. The School Board could also argue that they cannot be expected to prevent criminal behavior. Alternatively, if the remaining Jena 6 defendants are acquitted (or if Walters would drop the charges -- as may well be mandated by the lack of credible evidence against at least some of the defendants), the School Board would be left as the primary focus of blame in the civil case. Finally, should there be a claim against the Jena 6 by the School Board (or even a defense grounded in alleged untoward action of the Jena 6) Mr. Walters could be seen as using his position as District Attorney to augment and support the interests of his client, the School Board. Such a conflict of interest is simply inappropriate. B.
Mr. Walters' Bias Allows Him to Make Good on his
Threat to African-Americans Students and to Abuse his Prosecutorial Power by
Refusing to Charge the White Students and Improperly Charging the
African-American Students. A month or so
after the nooses were hung, Mr. Walters was called to Jena High School by
Detective Paul Smith[20] to address
the students at a hastily called assembly. In a recent “chronology” of events disseminated by the Jena
Times, Mr. Smith claims the precipitating incident was a fight involving one of
the Jena 6. There is no way the
fight stemmed from racial tension and the nooses, the Jena Times assures us,
because according to them, from Sept. 9 (the day after Jena High was on
“lockdown” after someone reported a gun on campus) to Nov. 30, 2006 (the night
an arson’s fire burned the school’s main building down) “there were no such
reports of any violence or destruction during this time period.” “Disruptions at school were only those
of typical disruptions, nothing related to any racial divide, thus, putting to
rest any speculation that there was true racial tensions in town.” See Appendix C, pp. 7-11
(“Chronological Order of Events Concerning the `Jena 6’”). As
with most versions of events surrounding the Jena 6, Jena’s African-Americans
recall things differently. Indeed,
even the Jena Times’ “Chronology”, which contains lengthy narratives editorializing
on facts critical to the events and questions whether the nooses were “racial”,
notes an impassioned speech by an African-American mother about the nooses at a
school board meeting on Sept. 18, 2006 – nine days after the time of
supposed racial “peace” noted above.
Id. at pp. 6-7. It was Mr. Smith, the lead detective in
the Jena 6 case, not the school principal who called the assembly. Id. at p. 8. African American
students remember Mr. Walters harshly admonishing students to behave and obey school
rules, saying, “I can be your best friend or your worst enemy. I could take your lives away with the
stroke of my pen.”[21] Unfortunately,
this is precisely what Mr. Walters proceeded to do to the Jena 6. After Mr. Smith’s investigation of the battery
on Justin, which included a statement by one of the admitted noose-hangers
implicating three of the Jena 6 in the attack, all six African-American
students were arrested and incarcerated.
Bonds were set between $70,000 and $138,000, much too high for most to
secure bail and release. Although
the Jena 6 were charged with second degree battery at the time of their arrest,
Mr. Walters increased the charges to attempted second degree murder and
conspiracy to commit attempted second degree murder. In an unusually
public comment on a criminal case, especially one with an on-going
investigation, Mr. Walters noted in the front page of the local paper that he
“will do whatever is in my authority and power to bring justice to those
charged with criminal actions and help restore the schools to a place where the
teachers can teach and the children can learn free from the threat of
criminals.” See Jena Times
12/13/2007, p. 1A. In fact, in the
only conviction to date, Mr. Walters was found by a reviewing court to have exceeded his authority. As noted earlier, this included
overcharging 16 year old Mychal Bell in order to transfer the case to adult
court and incarcerate him with grown men in a squalid jail for 10 months, only
to drop the charges to aggravated second degree battery (a charge not transferable to adult court) after
the selection of an all-white jury, and securing a conviction forthwith. An appellate court determined Mr.
Walters’ actions exceeded his authority, reversed Mychal’s conviction, and
remanded the case back to juvenile court. [22]
Cite to 3rd Circuit opinion or attach if unpublished.[23] In contrast, Mr.
Walters was unable to identify a crime committed by the three white students
who admitted to hanging the nooses on schools grounds the day after
African-American students asked to sit with white students at lunch under a
tree long noted as a gathering place for whites. On September 19, 2007, in a statement to the press, Mr.
Walters claimed that he “researched state law and came to the conclusion that
there is no state criminal statute prohibiting the conduct [of hanging nooses
on school grounds].” The Jena
Times, p. 2A (Sept. 19, 2007). Undersigned
counsel’s research found a number of possible criminal statutes applicable to
the crimes committed by the white students. First, Mr. Walters
had grounds to initiate criminal proceedings against the individual(s) that
hung the nooses on the grounds of Jena’s high school under Louisiana’s
terrorizing or institutional vandalism statutes. In light of the facts surrounding the noose hanging, Mr. Walters
also could have prosecuted such individual(s) for violation of Louisiana’s hate
crimes statute. Louisiana’s hate
crime statute, provides: It shall be unlawful for any person to select the victim of the
following offenses against person and property because of actual or perceived
race, age, gender, religion, color, creed disability, sexual orientation,
national origin, or ancestry of that person or the owner or occupant of that
property or because of actual or perceived membership or service in, or
employment with, an organization: first or second degree murder; manslaughter;
battery; aggravated battery; second degree battery; aggravated assault with a
firearm; terrorizing; mingling harmful substances; simple, forcible, or
aggravated rape; sexual battery, second degree sexual battery; oral sexual
battery; carnal knowledge of a juvenile; indecent behavior with juveniles;
molestation of a juvenile; simple, second degree, or aggravated kidnapping;
simple or aggravated arson; placing combustible materials; communicating of
false information of planned arson; simple or aggravated criminal damage to
property; contamination of water supplies; simple or aggravated burglary;
criminal trespass; simple, first degree, or armed robbery; purse snatching;
extortion; theft; desecration of graves; institutional vandalism; or assault by
drive-by shooting. La. Rev. Stat. ann. § 14:107.2(A). In order to be guilty of violating
Louisiana’s hate crime statute, a defendant must be guilty of one of the underlying
offenses set forth in section 14:107.2(A). Hanging a noose constitutes not one but two of the specified
underlying offenses: terrorizing[24]
and institutional vandalism.”[25] Terrorizing was one of the goals of
lynchings in the American South. “Lynchings
…had three intertwined functions.
[The] first goal, [was] to maintain social order over the black
population through terrorism…"[26] Those nooses hanging from a tree
(perceived by many as a white only tree) represent that terrorism. In addition, Mr. Walters could have prosecuted such individual(s) for assault[27] if he had simply overcome his bias and recognized that a hanging noose, in light of the facts herein and its historical meaning in Louisiana, conveys a substantially similar message as that of a burning cross, and then relied on precedent establishing that a burning cross causes the person to whom it is directed to be in reasonable apprehension of receiving violence to his or her person. See, e.g., Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343 (U.S. 2002) (Supreme Court held that a state may prohibit intimidating cross-burning without violating the First Amendment’s prohibition on regulating free speech because burning a cross falls under the “true threat” exception to free speech.); Florida v. T.B.D., 656 So.2d 479 (Fl. 1995) (Supreme Court of Florida held that a statute prohibiting cross burnings on another’s property without written permission is constitutional, and holds that burning a cross is a threat. The Court stated that “an unauthorized cross-burning by intruders constitutes a direct affront to one’s privacy and security and has been inextricably linked in the state’s history, to sudden and precipitous violence – lynchings, shootings, whippings, mutilations, and home-burnings. The connection between a flaming cross in the yard and forthcoming violence is clear and direct.”). Additionally, in T.B.D., the dissenting opinion noted that the state could have prosecuted the cross-burner for assault: “the issue in this case is not whether the state can prohibit the contemptible act of cross-burning. Clearly, it can. . . . The defendant in T.B.D. could have been charged with any number of offenses other than the one at issue, including assault.” Although he was
unable to find a law to prosecute the noose-hangers, Mr. Walters’ creativity
knew no bounds when it came to charging and prosecuting the Jena 6. He charged the African-American youth
with attempted murder, even though Justin walked out of the hospital and attended
a school party hours after the incident.
He convinced the Mychal Bell jury that a tennis shoe was a dangerous
weapon in order to qualify for aggravated
second degree battery.[28] But he could not find a law to
prosecute the white boys who hung nooses from a tree on public school
grounds. As will be made clear at
a hearing on the matter, his failure to do so had little to do with the
Louisiana criminal code’s shortcomings, and everything to do with his personal
bias and interest in the case. C.
Mr. Walters Has Abused His
Authority in Other, Confidential Matters At a hearing on this motion, Jesse Ray will seek a public trial on matters that have heretofore been confidential, juvenile proceedings. Under our state’s juvenile code he apparently is not free to discuss the proceedings or release documents related to those proceedings. Jesse Ray will waive the confidentiality and protection it was supposed to provide and seek a full and open discussion of prosecutorial misconduct that occurred therein and in this proceeding that prove that Mr. Walters is unable to fairly and impartially perform his duties in this case. The United States
Supreme Court made clear in United States v. Berger -- echoed almost
immediately by our Supreme Court in State v. Tate, -- that a prosecutor’s
responsibility was to seek justice, not convictions: [The
prosecutor’s] interest . . . in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win
a case, but that justice shall be done. As such, he is in a peculiar and
very definite sense the servant of the law, the twofold aim of which is that
guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer. He
may prosecute with earnestness and vigor -- indeed, he should do so. But,
while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones.
. . . It is as much his duty
to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as
it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one. . . . United
States v. Berger, 295 U.S. at
88 (emphasis added).
The Louisiana Constitution of 1974 embraces the same principle when it states,
in Section 1 of Article I (The Origin and Purpose of Government): All Government, of
right, originates with the people, is founded on their will alone, and is
instituted to protect the rights of the individual and for the good of the
whole. Its only legitimate ends are to secure justice for all, preserve
peace, protect the rights and promote the happiness and general welfare of the
people. La.
Const. Art. I, sec. 1. In reference to the prosecutor’s responsibilities
towards fairness, our Supreme Court has plainly said: The district attorney
is a quasi judicial officer. He represents the State, and the State
demands no victims. It seeks justice only, equal and impartial justice,
and it is as much the duty of the district attorney to see that no innocent man
suffers as it is to see that no guilty man escapes. Plaquemines
Parish Commission Council v. Perez, Jr., 379
So. 2d 1373, 1376-1377 (La. 1980) citing State v. Tate, 185 La.
1006, 171 So. 108 (1936). As will be shown
at a hearing on this matter, it is clear that Mr. Walters’ behavior in this and
other cases involving Jesse Ray is not about justice, but instead has been
about securing convictions in a patently unfair and abusive manner. Conclusion Mr. Walters is
incapable of fairly and impartially prosecuting Jesse Ray Beard. His bias and conflict of interest in
this matter is made clear by his disparate treatment of the students at both
the school board level and as prosecutor.
In addition, his actions at the school board created a conflict of
interest and made it impossible for him to fairly and impartially act as a
prosecutor herein. Finally, Mr.
Walters’ actions in this and other cases abused his authority as a prosecutor
and prove his bias and prejudice toward Jesse Ray. Therefore, this Court should recuse Mr. Walters and his
office from this prosecution. Date: _____________________ RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED: ___________________________ DAVID J. UTTER Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana 1600 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd. New Orleans, LA 70113 Telephone: (504) 522-5437 Fax: (504) 522-5430 CERTIFICATE I hereby certify that a copy of the foregoing motion has been hand-delivered to Mr. Reed Walters, Assistant District Attorney, Parish of LaSalle, on this the ___ day of ______________, 2008. ___________________________________ DAVID J. UTTER ORDER Considering the foregoing motion, it is ordered that Jesse Ray Beard be granted a hearing herein and that same be heard on the ___________ day of ____________________, at ___ o’clock AM/PM, contradictorily with the State of Louisiana. Jena, Louisiana, this ___ day of ___________________, 2008. ___________________________________ JUDGE J. P. MAUFFRAY, JR. [1] When the
District Attorney himself is recused, Article 682 of the Louisiana Code of
Criminal Procedure requires the trial judge to appoint a qualified attorney of
that district “who is not an assistant to the recused District Attorney” or
notify the Attorney General to appoint a member of his staff or a District
Attorney of another district to act.
la. c. Cr. P. art.
682. Similarly, well-settled case
law clearly establishes that the District Attorney’s own assistant cannot
prosecute after his recusal. State
v. Buhler 62 So.2d 145, 148 (La. 1913); State v. Snyder, 237 S.2d
392, 395 (La. 1970). Cases in
which courts have allowed others in an office to prosecute upon recusal deal
with the recusal of an assistant
District Attorney where the power and control of the District Attorney over his
assistant was not an issue.
Since Motions to Change Venue are also pending in other Jena 6
prosecutions, it would seem most reasonable that the Attorney General should be
notified in accordance with Article 682.
[2] According to
one white resident, the tree had a history of association with white students
that went back to the days when the school was “initially integrated.” Race
Hate in Louisiana (BBC documentary, May 24, 2007). [3] By statute, the District Attorney of a particular district is the regular attorney for the parish school boards in that district. La. Rev. Stat. ann §16:2 (A) However, nothing prevents the school board from employing a general or special attorney which would relieve the district attorney of his responsibility under circumstances such as these. This approach should have been taken in this case to avoid the most obvious of conflicts. LA. Atty Gen Op. No. 90-150, 1990 WL 544667 (La. A.G. May 25, 1990) (Visitor's Commission may appoint Special Counsel); La. Atty. Gen. Op. No. 89-612, 1989 WL 454467 (LA. A.G. 1989) (Conflict of interest established that necessity required replacement under statute); LA. Atty. Gen. Op. No. 95-500, 1995 WL 815626 (LA. A.G. 1995) (School board may hire special counsel); LA. Rev. Stat. Ann. §42 263(A). How could Mr. Walters have been expected to fairly judge whether those who hung the nooses should be criminally prosecuted after possibly advising the school board in a situation where ultimately they were not even expelled from school? How could Mr. Walters have been expected to fairly judge whether those who hung the nooses and those involved in the fight should be criminally prosecuted when he possibly had already participated in school board determinations that one group should be expelled and not the other? [4] See “Incident More Hype Than Reality,” Jena Times, p. 2A (Sept. 13, 2006) (On Sept. 8, a week after the hangmen’s nooses menaced the African-American population, reports of a gun on campus caused police to search the entire building. 160 students were checked out of school early by their parents and another 150 had failed to come to school in the first place. So palpable was the racial tension and so panicked was the community that LaSalle Parish School Superintendent Roy Breithaupt appeared on local radio to claim the school was safe.) [5] Mychal Bell, the only defendant in the Jena 6 to go to trial, recently pled guilty to second degree battery and admitted to punching Justin once in the head. See, Appendix A (Transcript, Dec. 3, 2007 Guilty Plea and Sentence, State In the Interest of Mychal Bell, No. J-4002/J-4005). Mychal and his family contend that Mychal’s battery of Justin was provoked by racist and threatening behavior by Justin. Appendix B (Amended and Supplemental Answer, Reconventional Demand, and Cross Claim, David Barker, et al. v. LaSalle Parish School Board, et al., No. 35918, 28TH JDC, Parish of LaSalle, State of Louisiana) (In his family’s responsive pleading to a lawsuit by the Barkers, Mychal claims that a few days before the battery, Justin drove his pick-up truck by Mychal and a passenger in the truck pointed a shot-gun out the window, pointing at Mychal and pumping it once. In addition, Mychal claims that Justin called Mychal a “stupid ass nigger” before lunch, and that a tomato was thrown from Justin’s table at Mychal’s table during lunch. It was immediately after lunch, after Justin allegedly insulted Mychal again, that Mychal admitting to hitting Justin.) [6] A 16 year old with a promising college football career ahead of him, Mychal spent approximately 10 months in the adult jail in LaSalle Parish up to, during, and after his trial. After Mr. Walters amended the charges back down to Aggravated Second Degree battery, the all-white jury convicted Mychal in short order. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the conviction and held that Mr. Walters improperly transferred Mychal to adult court. As noted above, Mychal recently pled guilty to second degree battery. [7] The United States Constitution also mandates Due Process and Equal Protection in the 5th and 14th Amendments respectively. See U.S. const. amend. V; U.S. const. amend. XIV. [8] As President Bush recently declared: “Displaying [a noose] is not a harmless prank . . .”, but instead is “deeply offensive.” “They [nooses and references to lynchings] are wrong. And they have no place in America today.” See, e.g., www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23131433/. [9] Ronald L.F. Davis Ph.D, California State University Northridge, Creating Jim Crow: In-Depth Essay, The History of Jim Crow (2007), www.jimcrowhistory.org [10] Kevin Lawrence Pitts, Don’t Let the Past Repeat, The Diamondback, (September 18, 2007), www.Diamondbackonline.com [11] “Creating Jim Crow: In-Depth Essay”. Ronald L.F. Davis, Ph.D., California State University, Northridge, The History of Jim Crow, www.jimcrowhistory.org [12] “Hanging”.
Answers.com, 2007, www.answers.com. [13] “Explorations Lynching”. Digital History, digitalhistory.uh.edu, (2007). [14] Stewart E. Tolnay et. al, A Festival of Violence: An Analysis of Southern Lynchings, 1882-1930, (Chicago University Press 1992). [15] Sherrilyn A. Hill, Disempowering An Ugly Symbol,
Baltimore Sun,( September 20, 2007), www.baltimoresun.com [16] Jesse Ray will be prepared to provide expert testimony regarding the symbolic power of the hangman’s noose to African-Americans. [17] The extent of Mr. Walters’ role in the suspension/expulsion hearing of the noose-hangers is unclear. He is quoted as advising the school board during the expulsion decisions regarding the Jena 6. See, Jena Times, p. 1A (January 31, 2007). Of course, the extent and nature of this advice and his advice regarding the noose-hangers will need to be tested in discovery or at the hearing through the testimony of Mr. Walters and the school board members. Whether a privilege will be asserted in an attempt to hide such disclosures will also have to be tested under oath considering the public waiver of any suggested privilege. [18] It is
unclear whether the newspaper’s interpretation of the event was its own or that
of unnamed officials. The Sept.
13, 2006 article states that “officials note that most of the `racial tensions’
were more media hype than reality” and later calls the nooses an “ignorant
prank.” Jena Times, p. 1A (Sept. 13, 2006). The real question is who the
“officials” were. While the list
is possibly a long one that includes Mr. Walters himself, it does not matter
for purposes of this motion due to Mr. Walters' actions as school board counsel
that supported the lenient discipline. [19] According to the media reports, only five of the Jena Six were expelled. See, Jena Times, p. 3A (Jan. 31, 2007). At this time it is unclear who was not expelled, and while Jesse Ray was eventually allowed back at Jena High, and is the only one back, many of the six are attending school again, albeit not at Jena High School. [20] Mr. Smith was the lead investigator in the Jena 6 case and is now police chief of Jena. [21] Mr. Walters, in a statement provided to the Jena
Times, acknowledges such a statement to students, and admits that he pulled out
his ink pen to illustrate his point. “DA/School Officials Grant Exclusive
Interviews,” Jena Times web version, 10/03/2007. In addition, he claims he directed his comments to
disrespectful white girls in the audience; Jesse Ray will present testimony at
a hearing on this matter with a different interpretation of Mr. Walters’ words
and the circumstances of the assembly.
[22] Days before his re-trial in juvenile court, Mychal accepted a plea bargain. In return for a plea of guilty to a reduced charge of second degree battery, Mychal was given a disposition of 18 months in the custody of the Office of Youth Development, with no recommendation regarding juvenile prison, and a modification of a prior commitment to secure care, changing the prior disposition to no recommendation of juvenile prison. The plea bargain and modification of Mychal’s prior disposition meant that Mychal was freed from further prison or jail time, as he was allowed to serve this sentence concurrently with another 18 month sentence he had already begun serving for an unrelated set of charges. See, Appendix A (Transcript, Dec. 3, 2007 Guilty Plea and Sentence, State In the Interest of Mychal Bell, No. J-4002/J-4005).
[23] Indeed, this is not the first case to get under Mr. Walters’ skin. He was recused from a recent case when he let his personal feelings towards a defendant influence his charging decisions. See, State of Louisiana v. King, 956 So. 2d 562, 563 (La. 2007). [24]
Under Louisiana law, the criminal offense of terrorizing is defined as “[t]he
intentional communication of information that the commission of a crime of
violence is imminent or in progress or that a circumstance dangerous to human
life exists or is about to exist, with the intent of causing members of the
general public to be in sustained fear for their safety; or causing evacuation
of a building, a public structure, or a facility of transportation; or causing
other serious disruption to the general public.” La. Rev. Stat. ann.
§ 14:40.1(A). While Mr. Walters
does not have authority to prosecute Federal hate crimes it should be noted
that Donald Washington, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of La.,
recognized in his testimony before Congress that the noose hanging was a
federal hate crime. See Chicago
Tribune §1 p. 4, (October 17, 2007). [25]
The offense of institutional vandalism is defined, in relevant part, as
follows: A person commits the crime of institutional vandalism by
knowingly vandalizing, defacing, or otherwise damaging the following: ·
. . . ·
(3) any school, education facility, or
community center [or] ·
(4) the grounds adjacent to and owned
or rented by any institution, facility, building, structure or place described
in Paragraph 3. La. Rev. Stat. ann.
§ 14:225. [26] Stewart E. Tolnay et. al, A Festival of Violence: An Analysis of Southern Lynchings, 1882-1930, (Chicago University Press 1992). [27] Under Louisiana law, assault is defined as “an attempt to commit battery, or the intentional placing of another in reasonably apprehension of receiving a battery.” La. Rev. Stat. ann. §14:36. “Battery is the intentional use of force or violence upon the person of another.” La. Rev. Stat. ann. §14:33. [28]
"Aggravated second degree battery is a battery committed with a dangerous
weapon when the offender intentionally inflicts serious bodily injury.”
La. Rev. Stat. ann. §14:34 (2007)
(emph. added) |