Pulley v. Harris, 465 U.S. 37 (1984)
Pulley v. Harris is a seminal U.S.
Does the Eighth Amendment require a state appellate court to engage in a comparative proportionality review of all capital sentences to ensure a penalty is not disproportionate when compared with penalties in similar cases?
The Eighth Amendment does not require a state appellate court to conduct a comparative proportionality review of a death sentence, provided that the state's capital punishment system is not fundamentally unfair as a whole.
The Supreme Court held that the Eighth Amendment does not require the state to perform a comparative proportionality review in every capital case, as long as the state's death penalty scheme is fundamentally fair.
Pulley v. Harris is pivotal in defining the minimum constitutional requirements for sentencing processes in capital cases, establishing that while proportionality review is ideal, it is not a constitutional necessity. This case shapes the discourse on Eighth Amendment standards, providing a clear understanding that the fairness of a state's capital punishment framework is substantial on a whole-scheme basis rather than on specific procedural mandates. For law students, Pulley v. Harris serves as a critical study point in comprehending the balance of constitutional protections and state procedural autonomy in the realm of capital punishment.