(CNN) โ A convicted murderer who has been on Californiaโs death row for 33 years must either be released or retried after a federal judge on Thursday approved the state attorney generalโs request to do so because of prosecutorial misconduct in jury selection decades ago.
The judgeโs ruling, at the request of California Attorney General Rob Bonta, gives the Alameda County prosecutorโs office 60 days to retry 71-year-old Curtis Lee Ervin or let him go free. Ervin was found guilty of a 1986 murder-for-hire.
It is the latest development in the ongoing review of dozens of death penalty cases that current Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price says shows prosecutors deliberately excluded Black and Jewish prospective jurors. Price told CNN it is a practice that started in the 1980s and ran through the early 2000s.

On Friday Priceโs office told CNN in an email there was no information on plans on how to proceed with Ervinโs case. Bonta conceded the Alameda prosecutors in the Ervin case illegally excluded Black jurors. Alameda County now must make a decision by September 30.
In 1991 jurors found Ervin guilty of murder in the death of Carlene McDonald, the 43-year-old ex-wife of Ervinโs co-defendant, Robert McDonald. McDonald was also found guilty and died in prison. CNN has attempted to reach out to family members of the victim.
Ervinโs lawyer, Pamala Sayasane, said her client is โoverjoyed and in disbelief. Heโs been incarcerated for 38 years. Heโs grateful to everyone who helped him. Iโm in a daze, as is my client.โ
Sayasane said the state attorney generalโs concession โis rarely made. Itโs a big thing and itโs going to have ramifications for others on death row.โ
CNN has reached out to Bontaโs office for comment.
Sayasane told CNN all six potential Black women were excused from serving on the jury. Three male Black potential jurors were excused, although one Black male was seated and another was an alternate, Sayasane said. Excluding potential jurors based on sex, race or ethnicity is a violation of the 14th Amendmentโs Equal Protection Clause. These are known as Batson violations.
Last year Price initiated an investigation into potential prosecutorial misconduct during jury selection in the case of Ernest Dykes, who was found guilty in 1993 of shooting a 9-year-old. Last month, she announced plans for the resentencing of Dykes and one other death row inmate for Batson violations. She also suggested some of the death penalty prosecutors may have acted criminally.
In her interview with CNN, Price said a current prosecution team uncovered boxes with notes showing previous deputy district attorneys had intentionally excluded Black and Jewish jurors.
โThe markings by the prosecutor next to the names of Black jurors were affirmative evidence of the prosecutionโs fixation with the jurorsโ race,โ said Brian Pomerantz, an attorney who is lead counsel for three of the cases being reviewed and is involved in the settlement of dozens of the other cases.
โAll of these people deserve to have either a new trial or a resolution of their current case that rectifies the injustice โฆ of the unconstitutional trials that they had,โ Pomerantz said.
Prosecuting a crime again almost four decades old โwould be almost impossible to retry,โ according to defense attorney Linda Kenney Baden, whose high-profile clients have included Phil Spector, Casey Anthony and Aaron Hernandez.
โWitnesses have died so youโd have to rely on transcripts,โ which she said is โtough for a jury to sit through.โ Baden said another difficulty is โnew prosecutors donโt want to sully their reputationโ by losing a controversial case.
In April the Alameda County DAโs office shared some of the notes written during jury selection by prosecutors in the Dykes case. Those notes showed a bias against potential Jewish and Black jurors, according to the DAโs office.
CNN previously shared images of the notes and others given to CNN by Pomerantz. โMust goโ was written next to the name of a Black man; another juror had the word โJewishโ underlined on their questionnaire. Farther down, a handwritten note reads: โI liked him better than any other Jew. But no way.โ Dykes will be resentenced on August 13 and is expected to be released early next year after decades in prison.
Price, who took office as the county district attorney last year and is currently facing a recall, has said she believes racial profiling of jurors was potentially widespread and well-known in the department under her predecessors. Studies have also found patterns of racial bias in jury selection from California and Washington to Connecticut and New York, as well as the Deep South.
Price has said her office is engaged in settlement negotiations between lawyers representing inmates on death row whose cases are under review and the California Attorney Generalโs Office.
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