News and Events | Press release
March 21, 2008

Pierce Law student works on death penalty case reversed by U.S. Supreme Court

Contact:
Barbara Wilson
Associate Director of Communications
phone: (603) 513-5111
cell: (603) 986-4191

Franklin Pierce Law Center's Frederick Millett, a third-year student from Grand Haven, MI, is celebrating this week after learning that the death penalty case he worked on as an extern this past fall at the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, GA was reversed by the United States Supreme Court. On Wednesday, March 19, the Court issued an opinion, authored by Alito, reversing, the conviction in the case of Snyder v. Louisiana. Millett worked with Attorney Stephen Bright, president and founder of the SCHR, to prepare the reply brief.

According to Millett, “In 1996, as in 1939, Allen Snyder, an African-American, was convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to death, this time in Jefferson Parish, LA. The prosecutor in his case struck all five potential black jurors using nearly half of his peremptory challenges to get an all-white jury. The prosecutor then, both in the media and to the jury during the sentencing Read more in the Concord Monitorphase, compared Snyder's case to the O.J. Simpson case, decided just a year earlier, and urged the all-white jury to not let Snyder ‘get away with it’ like O.J. did. The jury sentenced Snyder to death and his conviction was upheld twice by the Louisiana Supreme Court. Snyder appealed to the United States Supreme Court, arguing that since the prosecutor peremptorily struck African-American jurors because of their race, his conviction and death sentence were unconstitutional based on the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. For this reason, the Supreme Court of the United States agreed to hear the case and granted certiorari.”

"This experience has definitely built my confidence and confirmed for me the fact that I want to go into litigation. In addition, I learned how to help people who truly needed it,” says Millett.

>> read March 24 editorial in the Concord Monitor 

>> read more about Millett's story in the Concord Monitor

>> read more about Millett's externship