Follow Us

Washington state Supreme Court requires hearings when litigants claim racial bias in verdict

A new trial must be held if the court cannot prove that racial bias was not a factor.

Published: October 31, 2022 11:38am

Updated: October 31, 2022 12:41pm

The Washington state Supreme Court unanimously ruled that courts must hold hearings if a litigant argues that a verdict was due to racial bias or prejudice.

"Racism is endemic, and its harms are not confined to any place, matter, or issue," Justice Raquel Montoya-Lewis wrote in the 33-page majority opinion earlier this month.

The decision puts responsibility on the court to prove that bias was not a factor in the ruling.

If the court "cannot prove that racial bias was not a factor, that verdict is fundamentally incompatible with substantial justice," and a new trial must be held, the opinion stated. 

The case started after Janelle Henderson, a black woman, was rear-ended by Alicia Thompson, a white woman, and said she started to experience exacerbated Tourette's syndrome symptoms, The Seattle Times reported. Henderson sought $3.5 million in 2017, but the defense portrayed her as "confrontational" and "combative," and the jury awarded her $9,200.

"These terms evoke the harmful stereotype of an 'angry Black woman,'" Justice Montoya-Lewis wrote.

The court ruled in June that criminal litigants have a right to a hearing if they claim racial bias was a factor in their verdict.

"Today we emphasize that while the legal framework differs in the civil context, the same principle applies," the court wrote.

The Facts Inside Our Reporter's Notebook

Just the News Spotlight

Support Just the News