|
CAPITAL DEFENSE WEEKLY
As one might expect this time
of year, since the last edition there have been few notable opinions.
Most notable is the Third Circuit's opinion in Zachary Wilson
v. Beard that upholds the district court's grant of relief under Brady. In Wilson
trial counsel for the Commonwealth failed to
turn over large amounts of impeachment evidence. The suppressed
materials later surfaced and dramatically undermined both the
Commonwealth's case and its chief witnesses against Wilson.
As happens semi-regularly, a few opinions were missed last edition
because they had not yet been uploaded to Lexis & Westlaw.
Two cases from the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals fall areespecially
notable. The CCA in David
Dwayne Riley v. State ordered a new trial as "the trial court
should have given the jury a limiting
instruction regarding the proper use of evidence about Riley's prior
convictions." The other decision, Kim Vanpelt v. State, is
not noted or the holdings in the case, but rather the creative
lawyering of the Appellant's counsel which may provide some readers
with ideas for their own appellate litigation endeavors.
Unfortunately, Alabama , unlike every other appellate jurisdiction in
the nation, does not provide links to its opinions; Lexisone.com has
all the opinions at no costs.
In the news DPIC reports that "twenty-seven
people were exonerated and released from prison this year,
including
some who had been on death row, according to a new report from The
Innocence Project,
a national litigation and public policy organization dedicated to
exonerating wrongfully convicted people." Likewise DPIC notes
that " county
estimates in Texas indicate that the death penalty system is much
more expensive than sentencing inmates to life imprisonment."
As always, thanks for reading. - k
Pending
Executions
January 2010
7 Abdullah Sharif Kaazim Mahdi (f/k/a Vernon Lamont
Smith)* (Ohio)
7 Gerald Bordelon * (LA)(vol)
7 Kenneth Mosley* (Texas)
8 Quincy Allen* (SC)(vol)
12 Gary Johnson* (Texas)
14 Julius Young* (Okla)
February
4 Mark Brown* (Ohio)
24 Hank Skinner* (Texas)
* "serious" execution date / (s)
stay believed likely / (V) Volunteer / note this list may exclude any
recently added execution date
(note that none of the Pennsylvania dates listed are likely actual
execution dates)
Week
of December 21, 2009: In
favor of the Accused or Condemned
(initial list)
- Zachary
Wilson v. Beard, 2009
U.S. App. LEXIS 28244 (3rd Cir 12/23/2009) The prosecution failed to
turn over large amounts of impeachment evidence at trial. As
often happens those documents subsequently surfaced. The district court
granted relief under Brady
as the evidence critically undermined the Commonwealth's chief witnesses.
Week
of December 21, 2009: In Favor
of the State or
Government
(initial list)
- People
v. Keith Taylor, 2009 Cal. LEXIS 13168 (Ca 12/24/2009)
Relief denied on a grab bag of claims. Case is perhaps most
noteworthy for its docket sheet and counsel's ability, both for the
People and the Defense, to get extensions granted by the Court for
briefing. (still working through the opinion)
Week
of December 14, 2009: In
favor of the Accused or Condemned
- People
v.
Brian Nelson, 2009 Ill. LEXIS 2308 (Ill
12/17/2009) Trial court erred in removing deliberating penalty phase
juror simply because the juror wouldn't go along with the majority who
sought death. "Based upon the record, we conclude that had the jury
been
allowed to
continue to deliberate with Juror 20 as a member of the jury, a
nonunanimous verdict would likely have been rendered. According to the
jury foreperson's notes and interview, the jury was at loggerheads
because of Juror 20's position opposing a sentence of death for
defendant. Several of the jurors refused to sign the nonunanimous
verdict. Had the trial court not dismissed Juror 20, it would have sent
the jury back for further deliberations, with or without a Prim
instruction. Eventually, the nonunanimous verdict would most likely
have been signed and defendant would not have been sentenced to death.
To remand this matter for a new capital sentencing hearing under these
circumstances would deprive defendant of that one vote that
would have resulted in a sentence other than death. We conclude
therefore that remand for a second capital sentencing hearing would be
inappropriate. Instead, we must remand the matter to the trial court
for imposition of a sentence of imprisonment."
- David Dwayne Riley v. State, 2009 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS
172 (Ala. Crim. App. 12/18/2009) "[W]e conclude that the trial court
should have given the jury a limiting
instruction regarding the proper use of evidence about Riley's prior
convictions. We cannot assume that the jury would have understood,
without instruction, that it could use evidence about Riley's prior
convictions only for impeachment, particularly after the prosecutor's
rebuttal closing argument and his inference that Riley was a bad person
who could not be rehabilitated. Rather, we must conclude that, under
these circumstances, as was the case in Ex parte Minor,
the evidence about Riley's prior convictions was presumptively
prejudicial and its impact was egregious and that the trial court's
failure to instruct the jury regarding the proper use of evidence about
Riley's prior convictions rose to the level of plain error."
- Rueben Gutierrez v. State, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. Unpub.
LEXIS 817
(Tex. Crim. App 12/16/2009)(unpub) "We therefore order the parties to
brief the following issue: Whether an
order denying appointed counsel under Article 64.01(c) is an
immediately appealable order. 2 The parties shall also address whether
the absence of a certification of the right to appeal in the record has
any bearing on this issue."
Week
of December 14, 2009: In Favor
of the State or
Government
- Burney (Shaun Kareem) on H.C., 2009 Cal. LEXIS 12979
(Ca
12/17/2009) Denial of relief without a substantive discussion of the
issues raised.
- Bobby Baker, Jr. v. State, 2009 Ala. Crim. App.
LEXIS 173 (Ala. Crim. App. 12/18/2009) Relief denied on
claims relating to: (A) failure to excuse for cause or explore in
sufficient depth a veniremember's purported hostility to criminal
defendants; (B) "that the trial court erroneously admitted a recording
of a 911 telephone call into evidence;" (C) "the trial court erred in
admitting evidence about a prior act of domestic violence involving him
and the victim;" (D) "trial court erred in allowing the prosecutor to
play a recording of a
911 telephone call and to display photographs during his opening
statement;" (E) "trial court abused its discretion when it refused to
allow the defense to read the redirect examination of Eady from a
previous proceeding into evidence" (F) "the trial court erred in
allowing the prosecutor to read into evidence,
during the guilt phase of the trial, a letter [the condemned] had
written to the
victim's mother in which he stated that he would plead guilty and seek
the death penalty;" (G) "the trial court erred in overruling his
objection to the admission of the victim's statements;" (H) admission
of prior bad act testimony; (I) admission of certain "volunteered"
testimony of a psychologist as it relates to the defendant's record; (J)
" trial court erred in instructing the jury on the especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel aggravating circumstance;" and (K) "the propriety
of Baker's conviction and sentence of death. "
- Christopher Thomas Johnson v. State, 2009 Ala. Crim.
App. LEXIS 163 (Ala. Crim. App. 12/18/2009) Relief denied on claims
relating to waiver of both trial and appellate counsel; "sufficiency of
the State's evidence to sustain Johnson's guilty-plea conviction;" and
"propriety of Johnson's convictions and his sentence of death."
- Esaw Jackson v. State, 2009 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 167 (Ala.
Crim. App. 12/18/2009) Relief denied on claims relating to
lethal injection, "that charging him with three counts of capital
murder was
multiplicitous and that his resulting convictions and sentence of death
for all three counts violated principles of double jeopardy;" and
statutory review for plain error, as well as proportionality.
- Kim Vanpelt v. State, 2009 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 166 (Ala.
Crim. App. 12/18/2009) Relief denied over claims
relating to: [A] jury selection (removal of
juror for cause, death-qualifying the jury produced a conviction-prone
jury and disproportionately excludes minorities and women, failed to
use juror questionnaires or to individually question the prospective
jurors, failing to grant a pretrial motion to require the State to
reveal any exculpatory information about the prospective jurors; "using
only the licensed drivers list as the source for the master jury list
and master jury box;" failure to sequester the jury); [B] Batson("State
used 5 of its 25 peremptory challenges to strike 5 of 9 black jurors");
[C] introduction of life insurance policy (failure to provide a
proper
foundation & best-evidence rule); [D] use of hearsay
testimony
that two of the Decedents coworkers had told her after she signed
the
insurance policy that Vanpelt was going to kill her; [E] trial court
permitting the Appellant's ex-fiancee to testify that he proposed to
her less than one month before he married the decedent; [F]
admission
of testimony regarding the canine search; [G] admission of DNA
testimony concerning blood discovered in the Vanpelts' mobile home; [H]
testimony regarding tire tracks in the grass near where the body was
found; [I] "the State's medical examiner . . . should not have
been
allowed to testify to the results of a toxicological report she had not
prepared;" [J] "the circuit court erred in allowing the State to
introduce several letters that were identified as having been written
by Vanpelt" (who wrote the letters, the State obtained a handwriting
sample from him without his attorney being present); [K] overruling a
motion for a mistrial after one juror had contact with a deputy
sheriff; [L] "erroneous rulings" (circuit court erred in not declaring
a mistrial or imposing another "adequate" remedy when one of the jurors
was sleeping during part of the cross-examination of the medical
examiner; allowing the State to introduce the contents of a label from
a cleaning solution that was found in the Vanpelts' mobile home;
allowing a State witness to remain in the courtroom after the defense
had invoked the Rule; denying his motion to allow Vanpelt to view the
scene where victims body was found); [M] denying his motion to exclude
prejudicial photographs; [N] prosecutor committed reversible
error by
vouching for the police investigation; [O] jury instructions on
reasonable doubt were erroneous; [P] trial court and prosecutor erred
by misinforming the jury that its verdict in the penalty phase was a
recommendation; [R] Ring
(jury did not unanimously find that an aggravating circumstance existed
and because the jury did not unanimously find that the aggravating
circumstance outweighed the mitigating circumstances); [S]
denying his
motion to bar the imposition of the death penalty ("1) Alabama's
death-penalty statute is overbroad and fails to narrow the class of
murders eligible for a sentence of death; 2) there is a risk that he is
innocent; and 3) Alabama's death-penalty sentencing scheme is arbitrary
and violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
the United States Constitution because it leads to geographic and
racial differences in its impact."); [T] circuit court erred in
sentencing him without a complete presentence report; [U] finding
that
an element of the capital offense was also an aggravating circumstance;
[V] lethal injection; [W] prosecutorial misconduct (prosecutor
improperly suggested to the jury that it could not consider mitigating
evidence that had been presented in the penalty phase; prosecutor
improperly suggested that his office had already determined that
Vanpelt deserved to be sentenced to death; cumulative effect of the
individual instances of prosecutorial misconduct); [X] jury
instructions ("instructions on mitigating circumstances were erroneous
because the court instructed the jury that they must "avoid the
influence of any passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor;"
"the circuit court improperly failed to instruct the jury regarding
what to do if it found that the aggravating circumstance and the
mitigating circumstances were equally balanced;" [Y] "failed to
instruct the jury on the use of victim-impact evidence in the penalty
phase;" "failed to reinstruct the jury on the definition of reasonable
doubt during the penalty phase"); [Z] cumulative error; and [AA]
propriety of death sentence.
- Darick
Demorris Walker v. Kelly, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 27545
(4th Cir 12/16/2009)(dissent) Relief denied on Brady related claims.
"In habeas proceedings, defendant's conviction and death sentence are
affirmed where: 1) the district court properly conducted an evidentiary
hearing on the Brady issue and rendered a decision on the merits; and
2) the district court properly determined that, even if defendant were
able to show that the evidence at issue was withheld and that it was
favorable to him, the alleged Brady material does not undermine
confidence in the guilty verdict. " [via FindLaw]
- Jason
Farrell McGehee v. Norris, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 27434 (8th
Cir 12/16/2009) "The district court erred in considering mitigation
evidence which was not before the state courts; the Arkansas Supreme
Court's decision rejecting McGehee's mitigation argument was not
unreasonable or contrary to established law, and the district court
erred in granting habeas relief on the ground that the state court
improperly excluded certain mitigation evidence during the sentencing
phase of defendant's death penalty prosecution; any error in excluding
the evidence was harmless in light of the other mitigating evidence
concerning McGehee's dysfunctional family background which was admitted
and the overwhelming and horrific evidence of the crime; McGehee was
not entitled to an Ake expert as he did not make an initial showing
that his mental state was likely to be a significant factor at trial;
claims that sentence was disproportionate and that the state relied on
unconstitutional victim impact testimony are foreclosed by Eighth
Circuit precedent and AEDPA; district court did not abuse its
discretion in denying McGehee's request for an evidentiary hearing;
grant of habeas relief reversed and case remanded with directions to
dismiss the habeas petition." [via 8th Circuit Clerk's Office]
- Timothy
Wayne
Kemp
v. State, 2009 Ark. 631; 2009 Ark. LEXIS 831 (Ark
12/17/2009) "[A]ppellant was required to ask this court to recall our
mandate and allow him to pursue a second Rule 37 [postconviction[
petition. This court has consistently upheld the rule that a petitioner
is limited to one petition for postconviction relief unless the first
petition was specifically denied without prejudice to allow the filing
of a second petition."
- Joseph
Smith
v.
State, 2009 Fla. LEXIS 2067 (FL 12/17/2009) Relief
denied on claims relating to: "the State violated the Confrontation
Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United State Constitution when it
failed to present the biologists who performed the DNA tests on the
known sample taken from Smith and the unknown semen sample taken from
the victim‘s shirt;" the trial court erred when it permitted [State's
expert] to present opinion testimony that the victim had been sexually
assaulted;" and ""the trial court erred when it refused to suppress
statements by his brother....which related to comments made by Smith
with regard to the sexual battery and murder of the victim." [Note:
still reviewing.]
- State
v.
Christopher Cameron, 2009 Ohio 6479(Ohio 10th App.
12/10/2009) Relief denied on claims relating to: "1. The conviction is
contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. 2. Christopher
was denied effective assistance of counsel when his
counsel failed to give closing argument regarding the only charge of
which Christopher was convicted. [and] 3. The trial court
abused its discretion in overruling
Christopher's pre-trial motion for separate trial on the only charge of
which he was convicted."
- Anthony
Castillo
Sanchez v. State, 2009 OK CR 31 (Okla.
Crim. App. 12/14/2009) Relief denied on claims including: (A)
shackling before the jury; (B) life/death qualification; (C) "
admission of evidence tending to show that shoe prints at the scene of
the Busken murder were similar to a pair of Nike shoes owned by
Appellant;" (D) admission in to evidence a the calendar note held
admissible as a recorded recollection (harmless error); (E)
sufficiency; (F) admission of prior rape conviction; (G) State's
penalty phase closing; (H) denigration of the Defendant in the State's
closing; (I) Use of G-d in closing by the State; (J) use of the
continuing threat aggravator; (K) instruction on mitigation; (L)
iac for the defense closing " by all but conceding Appellant’s guilt of
rape and sodomy;" (M) cumulative error; and (N) statutory review. [Evidence
prof blog has more]
- Antonio
Lee Williams v. State, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS
1751
(Tex. Crim. App 12/16/2009) "Evidence was sufficient to sustain a
capital murder conviction under Tex. Penal Code Ann. 19.03 because
defendant engaged in a continuous and uninterrupted chain of conduct
over a very short period of time; a witness testified that when
defendant was shooting victim 1, the shots were coming 'rapidly,
nonstop, with no break'." [via Lexisone]
- Richard
Lee Tabler v. State, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. Unpub.
LEXIS
830 (Tex. Crim. App 12/16/2009) Relief denied on claims relating to: 1)
"sentence of death is unconstitutional because the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution preclude the
death penalty for the mentally ill;" 2) "prosecutor's closing argument
at punishment violated Tennard v. Dretke;" 3) "trial counsel was
ineffective when he failed to object to the prosecutor's closing
argument at the punishment phase that there had to be a nexus between
the mitigating evidence and the offense;" 4) "the trial
court erred at the guilt phase when it denied his request for jury
instructions on self-defense, defense of a third person, and the
lesser-included offense of murder;" 5) "trial court erred in
failing to suppress appellant's statements because they were the fruits
of his illegal arrest;" and 6) the use of the "10-12 rule."
- Ex
parte Terry Darnell Edwards, 2009 Tex. Crim.
App.
Unpub. LEXIS 808 (Tex. Crim. App 12/16/2009)(unpub) Relief denied in
near summary fashion and without a meaningful discussion of the merits.
If you
have problem with this
edition it is
available
at http://capitaldefenseweekly.com/archives/091221.htm
for printing. We'd simply ask that before printing consider our
environment and saving our trees. If you find this
email
useful, feel free to forward it or excerpt it. We prefer attribution,
but don't require it.
As
a reminder,we don't charge a subscription fee, but
if you find the weekly useful we'd appreciate even a nominal tax
deductible donation to a nonprofit involved in some
aspect of the capital punishment issue, such as Pennsylvanians
for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (website/donate)(where
I'm
currently
the
co-chair)
or
the
Fair
Trial
Initiative
(website/donate).
On
each
of
the
above
links
you're
able
to
donate
as
little
or
as
much as you want, or even
set up a monthly automated giving amount. As always, thanks for
reading, and special thanks go to Steve Hall whose Stand Down website is often borrowed
from here, as well as our "researchers" and "reporters" who have asked
not to be named. - k
SMALL PRINT
We've been at
this 11+ years now. Thanks to all
those whose time,
efforts, and contributions have made it possible.
*Indicates prior representation or other involvement in the
case by the author.
SUBSCRIBING
& ARCHIVES:
The
summaries above are normally published
forty (40) times (or so) a year. To subscribe: capital_defense_weekly-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
To
unsubscribe:
capital_defense_weekly-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
1997-2009COPYRIGHT
/ FAIR USE NOTICE: In plain English,
you can use these materials without attribution (although I would
appreciate the attribution) for any noncommercial purposes you see fit,
(such as professional education, your newsletter, etc.). You can't use
the works created by others contained in this newsletter identified
above (normally selected excerpts from the works of others) as I simply
can't give away the rights of others to their intellectual property.
Any derivative works must provide at least as equal or greater waiver
of intellectual property rights. Nothing in this newsletter constitutes
legal advice. The legalese, copyright, disclaimers, notices, &
terms of usage are available in full here.
Where in conflict with the plain English version of this disclaimer /
copyright notice, please go with the legalese
DISCLAIMER:
In
plain
English,
due
your
own
due
diligence.
Legalese:
Use
does
not
constitute
establishment
of
attorney-client
relationship. On a semi-regular basis
cases in which the writer(s) have participated in one manner or another
(including as counsel of record) may be covered here. As always, the
views expressed here represent an attempt to show what a given Court
held, not whether a particular court reached the right decision The
opinions noted above are normally "slip opinions" that may be modified
or withdrawn by the issuing court without notice. Note the citation
method we use is to permit readers to readily find opinions either from
a given court, Lexis, or the free Lexis product Lexisone.com.
OPEN
RESEARCH DATA:
Search terms for the weekly are
"capital habeas" or "capital postconviction" or "DEATH PENALTY" OR
"CAPITAL MURDER" OR "SENTENCED TO DEATH" OR "PENALTY PHASE" OR "SPECIAL
QUESTIONS" or "SENTENCE OF DEATH" OR "DEATH SENTENCE" or "capital
punishment" or "witherspoon"-
please
note, however, the terms "overproduce"
results, including all federal habeas corpus opinions. Execution
and
other
news
information
derived
from
Rick
Halperin,
DPIC,
Steve
Hall
&
media
accounts. Thx
-
karl keys
|