East Bay man whose death penalty case was the catalyst for 2024 investigation into Alameda County DA’s office for jury exclusion is release

Share Page

Ernest Dykes, whose appeal last year of his 1995 death sentence was the catalyst for an investigation into 35 death penalty cases in California’s Alameda County for evidence that prosecutors had systematically excluded Jewish and Black individuals from jury pools stretching back to 1981, is now a free man.

Dykes was convicted in 1995 for the murder of 9-year-old Lance Clark and the attempted murder of his grandmother, Bernice Clark, during a robbery. When he appealed his sentence in 2023, a deputy district attorney reviewed his case and found handwritten notes indicating prosecutors had intentionally excluded Jewish and Black potential jurors from the jury pool. The notes were disclosed to Dykes’ lawyers, and Judge Vince Chhabria of the U.S. District Court of Northern California, who was presiding over the resentencing hearing, ordered Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price to review all capital convictions over the past 30 years for evidence of jury exclusion.

That review identified 35 cases dating back to from the mid-1980s through 2007 indicating jurors had been excluded because of race. More than half of those cases, including Dykes’, have resulted in resentences of less than death. There are more cases still to be reviewed.

You might also be interested in...

While we’re on the subject….

“Tennessee spent ninety minutes turning an execution chamber into a trembling medical farce — a grotesque national ritual where bureaucracy,...
Read More

In brief: May 2026

In Mississippi, lawmakers passed SB 2821, which authorizes the death penalty for the sexual abuse or attempted sexual abuse of...
Read More

Richard Glossip freed on $500,000 bail

After 29 years on Oklahoma’s death row, nine execution dates, and three last meals, Richard Glossip, who never killed anyone,...
Read More