Pubdate: Tue, 26 Sep 2006 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (MS) Copyright: 2006 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Jerry Mitchell LAWYER DEFENDS WORK IN OVERTURNED SENTENCE Jackson lawyer Rhonda Cooper said Monday she did her job in defending Cory Maye of Prentiss, who was convicted of killing a police officer in a 2001 drug raid. "I was trying to save somebody's life," she said. "It was do or die." On Thursday, Circuit Judge Michael Eubanks ruled that Maye should be removed from death row, concluding that Cooper did not represent her client adequately during the penalty phase of Maye's trial. Eubanks overturned the sentence and ordered a new sentencing hearing for Maye, who fatally wounded Prentiss police officer Ron Jones. The judge said he would rule later on the other matters raised by Maye's new defense team. "Judge Eubanks can't say I'm the bad guy when he's the big guy," Cooper said. Eubanks found that Cooper had adequately represented Maye during the guilt phase of the trial. "I'm pleased the judge found that I didn't do anything wrong in the trial," she said. On Jan. 23, 2004, jurors returned with their guilty verdict at 11:49 a.m. - a little more than an hour after they started deliberations. Cooper said the verdict stunned her. "It took my breath away," she said. "Nobody expected that." The proper verdict, she said, would have been manslaughter. She said she asked for more time to prepare for the penalty phase, but the judge turned her down, saying jurors from the sequestered panel were tired and wanted to go home. "We had the conviction," she said. "Why did we have to move into the penalty phase that afternoon?" She should have been given more time, perhaps a week, she said. "We didn't have to do it that Friday. Where is he going such that you have to rush it?" The penalty phase began at 2:20 p.m., and jurors began deliberating at 4:35 p.m. By 6 p.m., they agreed unanimously on a verdict - Maye deserved to die by lethal injection. The new defense team questioned why Cooper had the trial moved from Jefferson Davis County, where the homicide took place, but Cooper said she felt she had no choice since Jones' father was police chief in Prentiss. The team also questioned why Cooper failed to have Maye and others testify. The only defense witnesses were his mother and grandmother. "When the judge tells me to go forward, who else do I have but the mother and grandmother?" Cooper asked. "Why would I have Cory to testify in the penalty phase when I had him testify in the trial, and apparently the jury did not believe him?" Maye, 25, who had no previous criminal record, testified he had fallen asleep in the chair when officers raided his duplex the day after Christmas 2001 in search of drugs. Law enforcement officers first raided the apartment of Jamie Smith, 21, who lived on the other side of the duplex. They found drugs and arrested him. He since has skipped out on bond and has not been found. Officers testified at Maye's trial that they saw a light turned on inside Maye's duplex, knocked on his door and announced themselves but got no answer. They said Maye was standing when he fired on Jones. But Maye testified at his trial that he didn't hear police announce themselves, he grabbed his .380-caliber pistol and was on the floor when he fired upward in self-defense. He had been watching his 18-month-old daughter. Authorities found only remnants from a marijuana cigarette in Maye's duplex. As for the lack of African Americans on the jury - two of the 12 jurors were black - Cooper said many potential black jurors opposed the death penalty, leading to their dismissals. Maye's death sentence should have been overturned in 2004, she said. "He does not deserve to die under those circumstances, so if the sentence is set aside, that's what we wanted from the beginning. What's done ... is what should have been done before." In the end, "we got what we wanted, which is no death sentence," she said, "so if everybody has to celebrate at my expense to get Cory off death row, so be it." Staff writer Andrew Nelson contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine