Texas Agrees to Sort of Comply with ICJ’s Avena Judgment…But It Will Go Ahead and Execute Medellin Anyway

Texas Agrees to Sort of Comply with ICJ’s Avena Judgment…But It Will Go Ahead and Execute Medellin Anyway

Almost buried amid the last-minute flurry of litigation over Medellin’s pending execution tonight at 7 p.m. EDT, Texas has made a potentially important but ambiguous concession to the ICJ.  It has agreed to support federal habeas petitions in the future for Mexican citizens arguing that a failure of consular notification had caused prejudice to their criminal conviction and death sentence.  Here is the somewhat curious but very interesting statement by Texas, made at the very end of a brief which aggressively resisted any attempt by the U.S. Supreme Court to block Medellin’s execution.

…the State of Texas acknowledges the international sensitivities presented by the Avena ruling, as well as the observation of Justice Stevens in his concurring opinion that “[t]he cost to Texas of complying with Avena would be minimal.”  …

For this reason, the State of Texas will take certain measures in future proceedings. Medellin has already received review and reconsideration of his claims under the Vienna Convention.  However, some defendants currently incarcerated in Texas and subject to Avena may not have received “review and reconsideration” of their claims of prejudice under the Vienna Convention on the merits.  Accordingly, and as an act of comity, if any such individual should seek such review in a future federal habeas proceeding, the State of Texas will not only refrain from objecting, but will join the defense in asking the reviewing court to address the claim of prejudice on the merits, as courts have done for Medellin. [emphasis added]

What is curious is that Texas is arguing that Mexicans will get review and reconsideration out of “comity.”  But it is not clear from the brief whether Texas is also undertaking to give the type of “review and reconsideration” required by the ICJ.  I have to assume that there is some difference between what Texas thinks “review and reconsideration” means via the Vienna Convention, and what the ICJ thinks, since it is executing Medellin with the claim that he got all the review and reconsideration required.  But plainly, the ICJ does not believe Medellin’s habeas hearing satisfies the “review and reconsideration” requirement. And since the ICJ is the institution that basically invented this requirement, why shouldn’t their views on what “review and reconsideration” means prevails?

So what is Texas getting itself into? Will it waive the “procedural default” argument that is often used to dismiss appeals made under the Vienna Convention? Will it commit to follow the ICJ’s interpretation of the “review and reconsideration” standard?  But then why not give Medellin this same review?  I don’t quite understand this?

This is the first time that I’ve seen any evidence of Texas cracking in its resolve to ignore the ICJ.  I applaud this sign of independent state foreign policy (for my general theory of why this is a good thing, see my article here), but I am a bit surprised.  Perhaps it is the influence of new Texas Solicitor General James Ho?

To sum up, Texas is agreeing to comply with the ICJ, but not out of legal obligation, and not necessarily by following the standards laid out by the ICJ, and not in a way that would prevent it from carrying out the execution of Medellin tonight.  I suppose ICJ enthusiasts might be ready to declare a victory here, but it is a partial one at best unless Texas’ governor surprises everyone by commuting Medellin’s sentence today.

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Benjamin Davis
Benjamin Davis

It is a move in the right direction but I suspect it masks something more cynical.  Having lived in Texas for three years, I suspect that what this is really about is permitting Medellin to be executed tonight.  In the future cases, the review Texas will give will be “Texas review” with lipservice to the Vienna Convention but essentially the “procedural default” standard remaining the same.  This is to permit the President to save some kind of face and the United States to save some kind of face.  It may be also an attempt to get a reaction from Mexico that the Texans can turn around and say “You see there ain’t no pleasin’ them foreigners!”  I think Mexico would be smart to insist today that Texas comply with the ICJ decision for Mr. Medellin – and leave it at that.  Texas wording is just weasel words of form when the substance of that Texas review was hollow, if at all, for Medellin and will be hollow for anyone in the future.  And Mr. Medellin will of course be dead in the future cases.
Best,
Ben

Law Student
Law Student

The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles (yesterday) also recommended against a temporary reprieve in Mr. Medellin’s case.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/DN-execute_05tex.ART.State.Edition1.4d75391.html

Law Student
Law Student

The denial from the BPP limits Gov. Perry’s ability to act; he is precluded from granting a reprieve of more than 30 calendar days.  Congress will reconvene on the 28th day of that potential reprieve, making it almost if not effectually, impossible for Congress to act on any legislation (hopefully more sensible legislation) within the timeframe available to Gov. Perry following the Board’s decision.

Steve Hall

Response…An interesting accommodation.  It’s unfortunate that Texas did not choose to follow the Oklahoma model, as cited by Justice Stevens in his concurring opinion in Medellin v. Texas.  Both the judiciary and the executive branches in Oklahoma made a point of providing additional review in the 2004 case of Osbaldo Torres.  Governor Henry’s commutation recognized the treaty’s importance to U.S. citizens and a respectful appreciation of the U.S. State Department’s request of Oklahoma.

steve charnovitz
steve charnovitz

This promise by Texas shows once again how ill-considered the US Supreme Court’s decision was.  The notion that it is acceptable for Texas to have its own policy regarding compliance with the ICJ while Oklahoma or other states  each have their own policies seems to invert the status of a treaty under the Supremacy Clause.

Perry Bechky
Perry Bechky

The Supreme Court’s 5-4 order refusing to stay the execution is here: http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/medellin-opinion-8-5-08.pdf . In my view, the unsigned per curiam opinion is a disgrace. There are four dissents, of which Justice Breyer’s is the most interesting.

H. Blix
H. Blix

Stevens’ dissent highlighted one problem here, and accidentally revealed one reason why yet additional procedure in this case, at least, was not going to move Texas (which for all those huffing and puffing about how dare Texas not follow the Oklahoma model, is a separate sovereign within our federalist system).

Stevens notes “that petitioner has been under a death sentence for 14 years….”  There’s an old saying that carries a very bright spark of truth: “justice delayed is justice denied.”  And while no one today is reasonably in favor of summary execution outside of full wartime conditions, 14 years of additional life was provided to Medellin, which was the entire lifetime of one of his two victims (who was 14 at the time of her murder).  The ICJ could not have picked a worse case to push forth this issue.

Law Student
Law Student

The US was to comply with Avena by means of its own choosing.  Absent the Supreme Court or Congress proscribing the manner by which states are to comply, may not each state implement Avena in any way it sees fit?  Now, of course, Texas has failed to implement the Avena judgment, and the US is in breach of international law. But this seems to be a matter for the Security Council of enforcement. Curiously, what effect will this have on the Avena provisional measures case now pending at the ICJ?  Jurisdiction was merely found on the lower standard of “prima facie jurisdiction” under Art. 60 of the Statute of the Court  (and very weakly at that, both versions are authoritative and “contestation”…).  There should not be jurisdiction for a new matter in the ICJ as the US has withdrawn its adherence to the Optional Protocol of the VCCR.  Now, that’s an exam question… I would be interested in how commentators believe that the ICJ should move forward in respect of the United States considering the recent execution and pending Avena interpretation case. * * * Justice delayed is justice denied (but for the other party) … if you look at other courts… Read more »

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[…] sentencia de la CIJ (Avena Case Implementation Act of 2008); por otro lado, parece que hay cierta voluntad política en Texas para permitir la “revisión y reconsideración” de las condenas de los nacionales […]