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[Available at http://capitaldefenseweekly.com/archives/080218.htm]
Several wins are noted this
edition. With names as
American as Pepin,
Tassin,
Cole/Abdul-KabirMoreno,
Mata,
Kerr, Harper, Ramirez, & Harlow the "wins" this
edition run
the gamut from pretrial evidentiary rulings to methods of execution to
plain old fashion jury instruction error prosecutorial suppression of
favorable evidence to just plain bad lawyering.
Nebraska has effectively
ended its death penalty, for now, in State
v. Raymond Mata.
The Nebraska Supreme Court in Mata ruled the electric chair amounts to
cruel and unusual punishment under the state constitution. Nebraska was
the only state in the U.S. that uses the
electric chair as its sole execution method. What this means is that in
Nebraska people can still be sentenced to death but not executed. As
of now there remains real doubt as to whether there are enough
votes in Omaha to change the method of execution.
The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals on its own motion granted penalty phase relief in Ex
parte Moreno,). The Moreno Court grants relief in light
of Penry error.
Specifically, the CCA grants rehearing and vacates as the jury
instructions used in the trial did not permit the jury to give adequate
effect to Moreno’s troubled childhood within the framework of the Texas
Special Question regime. Further, the trial court erred in failing to
give a jury instruction that would have permitted the jury to impose a
life sentence on the basis of the Defendant’s mitigation case alone.
In Humberto
Pepin v. the United States,
a pretrial capital case from the federal Eastern District of New York,
the Government appeals to the Second Circuit certain evidentiary
rulings. Specifically, the Government sought relief from the trial
court’s exclusion of evidence of child abuse by the defendant and
evidence relating to the defendant’s previous conviction for child
endangerment, as well as the trial court’s exclusion of evidence of
post-mortem dismemberment of the victims in both the guilt and penalty
phases of the trial. The panel affirms the exclusion of the child
abuse evidence, but remands on evidence of post-mortem dismemberment.
The
Fifth Circuit granted relief Robert Tassin, Jr. v. Cain, in light of
Giglio, Napue, and Bagley. In that case counsel for a cooperating
witness “testified after trial that he believed, prior to trial,
that [his client] would get a ten-year sentence if she testified
consistently with [] prior statements inculpating Robert and he
relayed this belief to her, although emphasizing that nothing was
guaranteed. Her attorney recalled meetings with the judge where the
possibility of a ten-year sentence was discussed. According to the
attorney’s affidavit, the judge stated that he typically gave
defendants in [the witness'] position a fifteen- to thirty-year
sentence but that he might shorten that sentence to ten years if she
testified consistently. [The witness] relayed her belief in this deal
in her pre-trial letter to her friend Shorty, stating, “I am
looking at 10 years and the judge said that I would have to do 6
years out of that.” Yet at trial, [the witness] testified that she
might receive ninety-nine years in prison and that she didn’t know
whether her testimony would “have any bearing” on her sentence.
Most importantly, the district attorney capitalized on this
misrepresentation in his closing argument, stating, “She faces up
to ninety-nine years in jail for armed robbery. . . . So she has no
reason to lie to anybody. . . . You call five to ninety-nine years a
deal?” The State not only allowed deceptive testimony to go
uncorrected; it also capitalized on its key witness’s testimony to
argue that there were no pending agreements affecting her
credibility.”
The
federal district court in Wyoming threw out James Harlow’s death
sentence for the murder of Cpl. Wayne Martinez at the state
penitentiary. [Opinion is in three parts, here,
here
& here
/
zip] In the 232-page ruling, habeas relief was granted as: [1]
Conflicts between Harlow’s trial attorney, Keith Goody, and former
state Public Defender Sylvia Hackl, including Goody being in the
unenviable position of being forced to chose between his job & his
client & all but being told mid-trial he was going to be fired for
too aggressively representing his client; [2] The Wyoming Public
Defender’s Office failure to provide enough money for an adequate
investigation into circumstances related to the case including only
paying just $15 /hour for investigatory costs; [3] The withholding of
exculpatory evidence relating to the state’s witnesses; and [4] Trial
court’s refusal to allow Harlow’s attorney to adequately death &
life qualify the jury.
The
SCOTUS has handed down Danforth
v. Minnesota (a
noncapital case). The Danforth
Court ruled, inter alia,
that state courts, as opposed to the federal
courts, may apply new rules of criminal law and procedure
retroactively. The choice post-Danforth
for state courts is how much additional protection, if any, do state
courts want to afford their defendants. Danforth is a potential
milepost to measure the continuing “Scalia
revolution in criminal law..” Danforth
holds the Court does not create rights, it declares them (an
interesting development in and of itself). Finally, Danforth
is about the role of remedies where there is a rights violation and
the ability of states to create greater procedural protection than
permitted in federal court.
In the news, the work of
pathologist Dr.
Steven Hayne and “forensic odentologist” Dr. Michael West has
directly led to innocent men being sentenced to death and imprisoned in
the Gulf states. Two
Innocence Project clients, Levon
Brooks & Kennedy Brewer, convicted of separate child murders in the
same small town were cleared based on new evidence proving their
innocence. Brewer,
who served much of his 15 years in prison on death row, was fully
exonerated after all pending charges against him were dropped. He is
the first
person exonerated by post-conviction DNA testing in Mississippi and
the 213th nationwide. Several additional Hayne/West cases currently are
being reexamined in light of the pair's less than stellar
work.
Elsewhere in the news, absurdly low rates for appointments in
capital cases can lead to equally absurd results — dragooning counsel
in to representation -- as DPIC notes
“Judge Stephen Roth of Utah has decided to force an unwilling attorney
to handle the appeal of death-row inmate Ralph Leroy Menzies after no
qualified lawyers were willing to take the assignment for the amount of
pay offered. “ The Los
Angeles Daily Journal notes that the “[s]tate budget woes have put
the brakes on the California Supreme Court’s proposal to reform the
death-penalty appeal. The San Jose Mercury News notes the death penalty panel looks at reasons for reversals
(this is an evolving story, and I’m trying to find local blogger
coverage as I am not in any way familiar with the nuances of the
story). The
New Hampshire Senate killed expansion of that state’s death penalty
22-2. Johnny
Paul Penry has pleaded to life. The Pentagon
has announced discloses that the Pentagon is putting its
final touches on six
Guantanamo prosecutions allegedly arising from the 9/11 attacks.
Extensive amounts
of new
scholarship is noted, unfortunately, not all of it can be readily
noted here.
Please note, during the last few weeks my work schedule
tightened remarkably
which has distracted me from writing. As always thanks for reading. - k
SCOTUS
- Danforth v.
Minnesota, No. 06–8273 (2/20/2008) Teague does not bar state's
applying retroactivity rules differently than federal habeas corpus.
Weeks of February 4 &
February 11, 2008 – In
Favor
of the
Accused or Condemned
- United
States v. Humberto Pepin, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 2553 (2nd Cir
2/6/2008) A pretrial capital case from
the federal Eastern District of
New York,
the Government appeals to the Second Circuit certain evidentiary
rulings. Specifically, the Government sought relief from the trial
court’s exclusion of evidence of child abuse by the defendant and
evidence relating to the defendant’s previous conviction for child
endangerment, as well as the trial court’s exclusion of evidence of
post-mortem dismemberment of the victims in both the guilt and penalty
phases of the trial. The panel affirms the exclusion of the child
abuse evidence, but remands on admissibility relating to evidence of
post-mortem dismemberment.
- Ted
Calvin Cole, n/k/a Jalil Abdul-Kabir vs. Dretke, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS
3288 (5th Cir 2/15/2008) On remand from the Supreme Court, writ of
habeas corpus relief granted with instructions.
- Ex
parte Jose Angel Moreno,
2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 158 (Tex. Crim. App. 2/6/2008) The Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals on its own motion grants penalty phase
relief. The Moreno Court grants relief in light of Penry error.
Specifically, the CCA grants rehearing and vacates as the jury
instructions used in the trial did not permit the jury to give adequate
effect to Moreno’s troubled childhood within the framework of the Texas
Special Question regime. Further, the trial court erred in failing to
give a jury instruction that would have permitted the jury to impose a
life sentence on the basis of the Defendant’s mitigation case alone.
- State
v. Raymond Mata, No. S-05-1268, ___N.W.2d___(Neb 2/8/2008)
Relief denied on numerous claims relating to resentencing following a Ring
remand including a possible "cert worthy" issue on hybrid sentencing
(jury found aggravating factors, three judge panel set
punishment).
The Nebraska Supreme Court, more importantly strikes down the sole
means
of execution in that state, the electric chair. As a practical
matter
this means that in Nebraska people can still be
sentenced to death but not executed.
- Ex parte Ricky Eugene Kerr, No. AP-75,500 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2/6/2008) (unpublished ) Remand ordered for further hearings
on the issue
of penalty phase ineffectiveness. (Note: The CCA's opinion is
ambiguous
enough as to the trial court's treatment of Kerr's claims on
these points that a real possibility exists the above analysis is
incorrect.),
-
Richard
Scott Harper v. State,
2008 Ga. LEXIS 150 (Ga 2/11/2008) In this pretrial appeal the Georgia
Supreme Court holds that if this "case goes to trial, the [ ]
jury will not hear evidence of items seized during an illegal search of
his desk."
- Richard
Raymond Ramirez v. Ayers,
CV-91-3802-CBM (C.D. Cal.) Relief granted as the jury foreman
affirmatively misrepresented his pending FBI application for employment
during voir dire.
- James Martin Harlow v. Murphy, No. 05-CV-039-B (D. Wyo.
2/15/2008) [here,
here
& here
/
zip] Relief granted on: [1] Conflicts between Harlow’s trial attorney, Keith Goody,
and former state Public Defender Sylvia Hackl, including Goody being in
the unenviable position of being forced to chose between his job &
his client & all but being told mid-trial he was going to be fired
for too aggressively representing his client; [2] The Wyoming Public
Defender’s Office failure to provide enough money for an adequate
investigation into circumstances related to the case including only
paying just $15 /hour for investigatory costs; [3] The withholding of
exculpatory evidence relating to the state’s witnesses; and [4] Trial
court’s refusal to allow Harlow’s attorney to adequately death &
life qualify the jury.
Week
of February 4 & February 11, 2008 – In
Favor of the State or Government
- Kevin
Green v. Johnson,
2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 2967 (4th Cir 2/11/2008) [via Findlaw] "Denial of
habeas petition brought by death row inmate is affirmed over
petitioner’s claims that: 1) he is mentally retarded making his
sentence unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment; and 2) trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to appeal his
non-capital convictions after the first of his two trials."
- Mays
Wilson Tate, Jr. v. True, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3129 (4th Cir
2/13/2008) (unpublished) Relief denied on claims relating to whether:
(A) "he was deprived of
his right to be present at trial
by the State's administration of the anti-psychotic drug, Mellaril;"
(B) "the State's administration of his medication
interfered with his right to the effective assistance of counsel. In
essence, Tate claims that due to the administration of the medication,
he was too sleepy to assist his counsel;" and (C) IAC relating to
"(1)
failing to object to trial proceedings in Tate's absence; (2)
failing to raise any objection to the trial proceeding while Tate's
faculties were seriously affected by his medication; (3) refusing an
on-the-spot psychological review; and (4) treating the medication issue
as he did."
- Dale
Leo Bishop v. Epps,
2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3020 (5th Cir 2/11/2008) COA denied on
claims
relating to "(1) ineffective assistance of post-conviction counsel, (2)
ineffective
assistance of trial counsel, (3) improper jury instruction, and (4)
improper waiver of jury sentencing."
- Derrick
Leon Jackson v. Quarterman, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3200 (5th Cir
2/14/2008) COA denied. "Jackson raises two issues in this application
for a COA. He argues that
reasonable jurists could debate whether there was sufficient evidence
to support his conviction for capital murder. He also argues that
reasonable jurists could debate whether he was denied effective
assistance of counsel."
- Rodney
Charles Rachal v. Quarterman, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3290 (5th Cir 2
/14/2008) "We divide our review of Rachal's issues into three
categories: (1)
the claims he failed to exhaust in state court ["trial counsel was
ineffective for not
discovering and presenting more mitigating evidence at the punishment
phase .. . . concerning Rachal's difficult upbringing, troubled
family, and medical difficult & the Texas "special issues"
jury instructions did not give the jury an adequate vehicle for
considering all relevant mitigating evidence at the punishment phase:]
; (2) his requests for a
stay and abeyance pending further action in state court [lethal
injection & the aforementioned IAC claim]; and (3) the
claims that, to some extent, are preserved for federal habeas review
["trial court violated his right to effective legal assistance by
appointing only one attorney for his defense" & "the trial court's
decision at the penalty phase to admit evidence that Rachal committed
another, unindicted homicide"]."
- Curtis
Moore v. Quarterman,
2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3206 (5th Cir 2/14/2008) [via Findlaw] “In a
capital murder case, an application for a Certificate of Appealability
(COA) from a denial of habeas relief is denied where, on the record,
reasonable jurists could not disagree with the district court’s
determination that a mental retardation claim, under Atkins v.
Virginia, was beyond the reach of AEDPA relief.”
- Darwin
Brown v. Sirmon, 2008 U.S. App.
LEXIS 2543 (10th Cir 2/5/2008) The
grounds on which relief
was denied include: "“(1) the use of dual juries constituted structural
error; (2)
the trial court conducted improper voir dire by excusing improperly for
cause six jurors whose views on the death penalty would not
substantially impair their ability to consider all punishment options;
(3)
the introduction of evidence arising out of Mr. Brown’s warrantless
arrest violated his 4th, 8th, and 14th Amendment rights;(4)
Mr. Brown’s convictions and death sentence were the product of a
fundamentally unfair adjudicatory process infused with prosecutorial
misconduct and unfairly prejudicial photographic evidence in violation
of the 8th and 14th Amendments; (5) the trial court committed
constitutional error in denying his requested jury instructions on
non-capital offenses; (6)
the State introduced insufficient evidence to support the “especially
heinous, atrocious, or cruel” aggravating factor in violation of his
rights under the 8th and 14th Amendments, and the aggravator itself is
unconstitutional; (7) the “continuing threat” aggravating circumstance
is unconstitutional and was not supported by the evidence; (8) the
“avoid arrest” aggravating circumstance was applied in an
unconstitutional manner; (9) victim impact evidence violated his 8th
and 14th Amendment rights; and (10) cumulative error.”
- Konstantinos
X. Fotopoulos v. Sec. Dep’t of Corr.,
2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158 (11th Cir 2/14/2008) "[T]he Court reversed
the grant of habeas
relief to a Florida inmate sentenced to death for two 1989 murders. The
Court rejected the fact-finding that Fotopoulos’s counsel was
ineffective for allowing the state to put on inconsistent theories
regarding Fotopoulos’ guilty, one which emphasized his domination of
his accomplice, and one which did not. The Court found that defense
counsel’s testimony indicated that he made a reasonable strategic
decision on how to address the inconsistent arguments of the State –
and the district court should have deferred to the fact-finding by the
State of Florida on this point. Finally, no prejudice to Fotopoulos
occurred, as he acknowledged his "prime responsibility" for the
murders. The
Court also rejected the district court’s conclusion that the State’s
reliance on inconsistent theories violated Due Process. The Court noted
that the Supreme Court of the United States had not squarely held that
putting on inconsistent theories violated Due Process at the time of
the State court decision affirming the death sentence. Consequently,
under AEDPA, the State court judgment was not "clearly contrary" to
Supreme Court precedent, and deserved deference. [via
Eleventh Circuit Blog]
- State
v. James Cornell Harrod, 2008 Ariz. LEXIS 22 (Az 2/14/2008)
Relief denied over claims relating to: (A) trial court erred by
permitting his ex-wife, Anne Costello, to testify to privileged marital
communications; (B) trial court erred in allowing a witness to assert a
blanket privilege against self-incrimination to all questions
concerning his business operations and payments to Harrod; (C) lack of
competence; (D) changing prosecutorial theories of liability at trial
vs. resentencing; (E) trial court erred in refusing to allow him
to
present residual doubt evidence during the penalty phase of the
sentencing proceeding; (F) trial court instructions and jury verdict
form impermissibly crated a presumption of death; and (G) statutory
review of sentence.
- State
v. Frank Dale McCray,
2008 Ariz. LEXIS 21 (Az 2/14/2008) Relief denied on claims
relating to
whether: (A) trial court erred in admitting the DNA evidence because
the State did
not establish a sufficient chain of custody to authenticate the
evidence; (B) use of a prior sexual assault with a dangerousness
enhancement qualified him for the (F)(2) prior violent crime
aggravator; (C) the trial court violated his right to due process by
providing the jury with an unconstitutionally vague instruction on the
"especially cruel" aspect of the (F) (6) aggravator; (D) technical
flaws as to means of execution in the judgment of conviction; and and
(E) statutory review.
- People
v. Alphonso Howard,
2008 Cal. LEXIS 1194 (Cal 2/4/2008) (concurrence) Relief denied on a
litany of issues, however, most notably, on the standards for Batson/Wheeler
claims (peremptory challenges) when, despite the defense not meeting
the threshold showing for such a claim, the prosecution
nonetheless
offers a
purported justification for the challenges. Other claims include
those
concerning: (1) use of color autopsy photographs, (2) motive
instruction, (3) consciousness of guilt instruction, (4) murder
instructions, (5) lesser included offenses instruction, (6) reasonable
doubt instruction, (7) evidence of other crimes, (8) alleged coercion
of deadlocked jury, (9) constitutionality of death penalty statute,
(10) flight instruction, (11) accomplice testimony, and (12) notice of
aggravating evidence.
- People
v. Spencer Rawlins Brasure,
2008 Cal. LEXIS 1412 (Cal 2/7/2008) [via Findlaw] "A conviction and
death sentence for kidnapping and torture murder is affirmed on
automatic appeal over claims of error regarding: 1) group voir dire on
attitudes toward the death penalty; 2) introduction of crime scene and
autopsy photographs; 3) instructions regarding accomplices' and
defendant's role in causing death; 4) a felony-murder instruction; 5)
standard instructions on jury's consideration of evidence; 6) Griffin
error; 7) instruction on weighing aggravating and mitigating
circumstances; 8) challenges to the death penalty statute; 9)
instruction on mitigating circumstances; 10) a refusal of special
instructions on mitigating circumstances; 11) juror misconduct; 12)
international norms and the Eighth Amendment; 13) international law;
14) direction to disregard guilt phase instructions; 15) cumulative
prejudice; 16) a victim restitution order and parole revocation
restitution fine."
- Samuel
Jason Derrick v. State, 2008 Fla. LEXIS 142 (FL
2/7/2008) Relief denied on
claims relating to
whether: “(1) he was
denied access to files and records pertaining to his case in violation
of his constitutional rights; (2) he received ineffective assistance of
counsel during pretrial and at the guilt phase; (3) the State withheld
material and exculpatory evidence or presented misleading evidence or
both; (4) he received ineffective assistance of counsel during the
penalty phase; (5) resentencing counsel was ineffective for failing to
obtain a mental health expert; and (6) he was deprived of
a
fundamentally fair trial because of the cumulative error present during
the proceedings."
- Pinkney
Carter v. State,
2008 Fla. LEXIS 179 (FL 2/14/2008) [via Findlaw] “Defendant’s
convictions for first-degree premeditated and felony murder as well as
his two death sentences are affirmed over claims that: 1) the statute
abolishing the voluntary intoxication defense is unconstitutional; 2)
insufficient evidence supports defendant’s convictions; 3) the trial
court erred in finding burglary and CCP aggravators; 4) the trial court
erred in the weight given to burglary and prior violent felony
aggravators; 5) the issuance of a sentencing order lacked clarity; 6)
the court erred in refusing to require the state to follow a promise it
made to the government of Mexico that it would not seek a death
sentence if defendant were released into the state’s custody; 7) the
death sentence was illegal under Ring; 8) the giving of standard jury
instructions diminished the jury’s sense of responsibility for
sentencing; and 9) the sentences were not proportionate”
- Noel
Doorbal v. McNeil,
2008 Fla. LEXIS 215, No. SC05-383 (FL 2/14/2008) [via Findlaw] “Denial
of defendant’s motion to vacate his convictions of first-degree murder
and sentences of death, as well as a petition for habeas relief, are
affirmed and denied, respectively, over claims of error regarding: 1) a
motion to disqualify the judge; 2) a denial of a motion to depose
assistant state attorneys; 3) summary denial of postconviction claims;
4) an amended rule 3.851 motion; 5) denial of a motion for a
continuance of the postconviction proceedings; 6) the denial order; and
7) ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. “
- Gary
Ray Bowles v. State, et al.,
2008 Fla. LEXIS 214 (FL 2/14/2008) [via
Findlaw] “Denial of petitioner’s motion to vacate his sentence of death
and a petition for a writ of habeas corpus are affirmed and denied,
respectively, over claims of error regarding: 1) whether trial counsel
were ineffective for failing to present an expert to testify to mental
mitigation; 2) the heinous, atrocious, or cruel (HAC) aggravator; 3)
summary denial of a postconviction claim regarding ineffective
assistance on mental mitigation; 4) Ring and Apprendi claims; 5) a
Crawford claim regarding an officer’s testimony; and 6) whether
appellate counsel was ineffective. “
- Samuel
Jason Derrick v. State, 2008 Fla. LEXIS 142 (FL 2/7/2008) Relief
denied on claims relating to ineffective
assistance of counsel when trial counsel failed to call a
"confessionologist."
- Wade
Greely Lay v State, 2008 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 6 (Okla. Crim. App.
2/12/2008) Relief denied on issues including pro se representation at
trial ((1) that he had no constitutional right to pro se
representation in the penalty phase of a capital trial and that the
trial court erred in allowing him to represent himself; (2) that if a
defendant can represent himself in the penalty phase of a capital
trial, the Constitution requires the trial court to appoint second
chair/standby counsel to assist; (3) that the trial court abused its
discretion in failing to grant Lay's request for second chair/standby
counsel; and (4) that Lay's waiver of counsel was inadequate for the
penalty phase of his trial); juror misconduct; lack of adequate jury
voir dire, lack of penalty phase severance, failure to adequately
instruct the jurors as to the evidence introduced at the joint penalty
phase trial, circumstantial evidence instruction, and victim
impact.
- Ex
parte Anibal Canales,
2008 Tex. Crim. App. Unpub. LEXIS 132 (Tex. Crim. App. 2/13/2008) State
postconviction petition dismissed as "an abuse of the writ" based on
Wiggins claims.
- Jimmie
Urban Lucero v. State,
2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 219 (Tex. Crim. App. 2/13/2008) The Court of
Criminal Appeals affirms on: claimed jury misconduct (use of external
evidence / Bible reading during deliberations); a bad jury instruction
on mitigation; evidentiary rulings based on witness testimony; improper
penalty phase closings & constitutionality of the Texas Statute.
Noncapital
of Note During the Weeks of February 4 & February 11, 2008
- Gerardo Flores v. State, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 218
(Tex. Crim.
App. 2/13/2008) Affirming, over numerous claims, the state’s capital
fetal homicide statute.
- Jerome
Alvin Anderson v. C.A. Terhune,
2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227 (9th Cir 2/15/2008) (en banc) Stating “I
plead the Fifth” should be construed as an invocation of the right to
counsel. State court’s interpretation to the contrary results in the
grant of habeas relief.
(Initial
List for
the Weeks of February 18, 2008) – In
Favor of the State or Government
- Jimmie
Wayne Lawrence v. Branker, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3761 (4th Cir
2/22/2008) [via FindLaw] "
Grant of habeas relief to condemned inmate, vacating death sentence, is
reversed where: 1) the state court reasonably applied Strickland in
rejecting petitioner's claim that his counsel was ineffective for not
appealing the use of his burglary conviction as an aggravator; 2)
another of his ineffective-assistance claims is procedurally defaulted;
and 3) his due-process claims relating to the adjudication of his state
post-conviction motion are not cognizable on federal habeas review. "
- Daniel
Wayne Cook v. Schriro, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 3511 (9th Cir
2/20/2008) "The 9th affirms the denial of a petition in a capital case.
The
petitioner represented himself, and the Faretta waiver was knowingly
and proper. Bad things flowed as a result, such as preserving most
trial and sentencing issues. The petitioner's attempt to raise IAC in
the appellate context was also denied. The 9th held that the
prosecutor's rebuttal was proper, and did not comment on silence.
Lastly, there was no evidence to support the giving of a second degree
jury instruction." [via the Ninth
Circuit Blog]
- Comm.
v. Mumua Abu-Jamal, 2008 Pa. LEXIS 98 (Penn 2/19/2008)
Claims
relating to perjured testimony by state's witnesses should have been
brought earlier.
- State
v. Michael Dale Rimmer,
2008 Tenn. LEXIS 108 (Tenn 2/20/2008)
"Upon careful review of the entire record, we hold as follows:
(1) although the trial court erred during the sentencing hearing by
excluding evidence solely on the grounds of hearsay, the evidence was
either introduced through other means or lacking in relevance or
reliability, so the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt;
(2)
for a waiver of his right to testify to have been valid, a
defendant need not state on the record that he was informed by counsel
of our ruling in State v. Cazes, 875 S.W.2d 253, 266 (Tenn. 1994);
(3) the jury instruction defining reasonable doubt does not offend due
process; (4) references by defense counsel and a defense witness that
the defendant previously had been on "death row" did not, under these
circumstances, entitle the defendant to a new sentencing hearing; and
(5) the sentence of death satisfies the proportionality guidelines."
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