The way
Its purpose, court after court has declared, is to weigh the value of a defendant's entire life.
Though there is a certain quantitative element - aggravating factors are weighed against mitigating factors - it is, as federal courts have often ruled, a subjective thing. In
Because it is a trial not just for life, but as one expert has put it, a trial about life and its value, both prosecutors and defense attorneys face a different, and in many respects courts have said, a more stringent standard for their professional conduct. It is expected that defense attorneys will scour their client's past, seeking every witness, every scrap of evidence, anything that could possibly cast their client in a slightly better light. In most cases, defense attorneys will seek a continuance - a delay, sometimes a considerable delay - between the guilt and penalty phases of the trial, just to buy a little extra time to get their defense in order.
That did not happen in the
According to court records, at 1:45 p.m. that day - a little more than two-and-a-half hours after the jury returned its guilty verdict, and between 15 and 30 minutes after he had returned to the courthouse following his collapse -- Robert O. Marshall was sitting at the defense table, as the jurors prepared to hear arguments challenging them to give him life or give him death.
Earlier, in fact at the very moment that
As mitigation, Zeitz was to argue that
No new evidence was introduced and neither Kelly nor Zeitz called a single witness. In fact, Marshall's sister, Oakleigh, as well as his sons, all or some of whom might have offered testimony which could have persuaded at least one of the jurors that there was something in Marshall that deserved to be spared, had left the courthouse following the guilty verdict.
It never dawned on them, a court would later rule, that the death penalty phase of the case would occur on the same day.
In fact, the entire proceeding, according to court records, consisted of opening and closing statements by both the prosecutor and the defense attorney. In a recent interview with Crimelibrary, Kelly explained that all possible evidence to support both the aggravating and mitigating factors had already been introduced in the guilt phase of the trial. There was, he said, nothing to add.
In his statement to the jury, Zeitz cited
He closed with this: "All I can say is this, that I hope when you individually consider the death penalty, that you're each able to reach whatever opinion you find in your own heart, and that whatever you feel is the just thing to do, we can live with it."
In his closing statement, Kelly cited a few mitigating factors that applied to Maria Marshall. "Maria Marshall had no prior criminal history," the prosecutor said. "Maria Marshall was civic-minded, and this defendant did not give her the option of 30 years."
After deliberating for 90 minutes, the jury sentenced