Justices allow new hearings in North Carolina capital cases

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The Supreme Court of the United States has left in place lower court rulings ordering hearings over jurors in two North Carolina death penalty trials who reached beyond the jury room for biblical references to help their deliberations.

The justices on Monday rejected North Carolina’s appeal of the two rulings by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia.

In one case, a juror called her father in search of a biblical verse to help her decide between life and death for defendant Jason Wayne Hurst, who was sentenced to death for the 2002 shooting death of an acquaintance in Asheboro, North Carolina. The father pointed her to a verse containing the phrase “an eye for an eye.”

The appeals court ordered hearings to determine if jurors were improperly influenced.
 

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