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Zuern was charged with the murder of Gregory Earls, and was confined
awaiting trial at the Community Correctional Institution, a Civil
War-era prison known as "the Workhouse. Earls had been an informant
who testified against Zuern's father.
Phillip Pence was a 26-year-old Hamilton County Sheriff’s Deputy at
the CCI. Acting on a tip, Pence and 3 other jailers went to Zuern's
cell to check it for weapons.
They found Zuern standing in his cell,
naked. When the cell door swung open, Zuern lunged at Pence and
stabbed him in the chest with a sharpened bucket hook. The shank
pierced three holes in Pence's heart.
Zuern later pled guilty to the murder of Earls and was sentenced to
a life term.
Citations:
State v. Zuern, Not Reported in N.E.2d (WL 6507), Ohio App. 1
Dist., Jun 11, 1986. (Direct Appeal). State ex rel. Zuern v. Leis, Not Reported in N.E.2d (WL
33718), Ohio App. 1 Dist., Mar 28, 1990. (Discovery). State v. Zuern, Not Reported in N.E.2d (WL 256497), Ohio App.
1 Dist., Dec 04, 1991. (Postconviction).
Final Meal:
Mashed potatoes and gravy, lasagna, macaroni and cheese, garlic
bread, corn, chocolate milk and cherry cheese cake.
Final Words:
None.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction
Inmate #: 181416
Inmate: William G. Zuern
Race: White
Gender: Male
DOB: 12/5/58
County of Conviction: Hamilton
Received at DOC: 10/05/84
Offenses: COERCION. AGGRAVATED MURDER, AGGRAVATED MURDER
William G. Zuern
ProDeathPenalty.com
William G. Zuern, 45, was convicted of killing a
Hamilton County sheriff's jail officer in 1984. Zuern was found
guilty of aggravated murder for stabbing officer Phillip Pence in
the chest on June 9, 1984, with a dagger-like piece of metal.
In July of 2003, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals rejected a lower court ruling in favor of Zuern, which could
have provided a new trial for him.
Hamilton County sheriff's
officers said they received a tip from another prisoner that Zuern
had a homemade knife in his cell and that he had threatened to kill
a prisoner.
When officers arrived to search for the weapon, Zuern,
who had been told they were coming, stabbed Pence, officers said.
Prosecutors said he had prior intent to kill the officer.
A prisoner
who testified as a prosecution witness said that several weeks
before the stabbing, he saw Zuern sharpening part of a metal bucket
hook and heard Zuern express hostility toward jail officers for not
allowing him a full five minutes of telephone time.
UPDATE:
For nearly 20 years, a former jailhouse
officer has carried a copy of the death warrant for the man
convicted of murdering one of his best friends, hoping to one day
witness the man's execution. "That would be kind of a cathartic way
of closing the book on this," Gary Roush said Monday.
The Ohio
Supreme Court has set a June 8 execution date for William G. Zuern,
45, who killed jailer Phillip Pence with a homemade knife on June 9,
1984.
A federal judge has put the execution on hold. While an
appeals court considers whether to let the state proceed, the Ohio
Parole Board holds a hearing Tuesday in Columbus to determine
whether to recommend that Gov. Bob Taft grant clemency. "I was at
several days of the trial, including the death penalty phase, and
what Zuern said has stuck in my head for 20 years," Roush said. "He
said, 'I have no desire to beg or plead; do with me what you will.'
"He waived all mitigating factors. It was kind of like a spit in the
eye. I'd tell the parole board, why not fulfill his wishes?" Roush
plans to attend Zuern's execution, if the appeals court allows it to
go forward. "Our policy is family members have the first option,"
said Andrea Dean, spokeswoman for the Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction. "If they choose not to attend, they can name a
friend or someone who has something to do with the case."
Roush was a 22-year-old jailer at the Community
Correctional Institution, a Civil War-era prison known as "the
Workhouse," when Zuern killed Pence. Roush, Pence and two other
jailers, acting on a tip, had gone to "A" block to inspect two cells
for weapons just after the 10 p.m. lockdown. They found Zuern
standing in his cell, naked, Roush said. When the cell door swung
open, Zuern lunged at Pence. "I was only about 6 feet away from him
when he was killed," Roush said. "I saw everything."
Prosecutors got a quick conviction, and Roush was
not asked to testify at Zuern's trial. He left the Hamilton County
sheriff's department in 1990 to work in the suburban Miami Township
police department in Clermont County, east of Cincinnati.
Pence's
only local relative, half sister Sherry Behler, said she would not
attend the clemency hearing because her husband was scheduled for
medical tests. She said Roush would read her letter to the parole
board. "I understand there are people in jail who are innocent,"
Behler said. "With DNA testing and all they have now, those people
often go free. I feel with him, with all those eyewitnesses, the
appeals shouldn't have gone on so long." Behler said she would make
it to Zuern's execution, if that occurs. "His first execution date
was Feb. 5, 1985," she said. "He should have gone ahead and taken
his punishment at that time."
Court records show that Zuern fashioned a dagger-like
knife, known as a shank, out of a bucket hook and used it to stab
Pence in the chest.
Another jailer slammed the cell door shut,
locking Zuern inside, as deputies helped Pence to a picnic table
where inmates played cards. "All we saw at first was a little bitty
spot of blood on his T-shirt. I said, 'Damn, Phil, you got stuck,'"
Roush said. "He turned ash gray and his knees buckled." Roush
learned later that the shank had pierced three holes in Pence's
heart.
Zuern was convicted of aggravated murder and sentenced to
death for killing Pence. But he also is serving a life prison term
for his guilty plea to fatally shooting a Cincinnati man, Gregory
Earls, 24.
Zuern was awaiting trial for the shooting when he stabbed
Pence, a month after shooting Earls. Defense attorney Kate McGarry
has declined to say if Zuern has any living relatives, or what
attorneys would present at the clemency hearing.
In past appeals,
the defense has argued that prosecutors failed to turn over a memo
that would have indicated that Zuern wanted to kill a fellow
prisoner, rather than a jailer. They contend that would have showed
the lack of premeditation needed for a capital conviction.
Zuern put to death for stabbing
By Bob
Driehaus and Michael Rutledge - Cincinnati
Post
June 8, 2004
LUCASVILLE -- William G. Zuern, formerly of Price
Hill, died at 10:04 this morning for the murder of a Hamilton County
jailer. Zuern was sentenced to death for the fatal stabbing of
Hamilton County corrections officer Phillip Pence 20 years ago
tomorrow.
The 45-year-old died six minutes after two lethal
drugs -- pancuronium bromide to stop his breathing and potassium
chloride to stop his heartbeat -- began flowing into his veins. His
death was a peaceful one. His chest heaved several times, and his
lips parted with slightly labored breathing for several minutes
before his breathing stopped forever.
Zuern's face and shaved head
turned lightly purple before prison officials drew a curtain between
Zuern and the witnesses at 10:03 a.m. After a prison doctor
performed a quick examination, the curtain was reopened and Warden
James Haviland drew a microphone to his mouth and said, "Time of
death 10:04 a.m."
U.S. District Judge Walter Rice, ruling in Dayton,
had issued a stay in the execution order Monday, but that was
vacated by a three-judge panel of the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals
in Cincinnati. The full appeals court then rejected a request from
Zuern's attorneys that it intervene in the case. Attorneys did not
at tempt to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which would have been
Zuern's only hope to live another day.
Zuern's death was not enough for co-workers and
relatives of his victims. "William Zuern Jr. went too easy today. I
believe that he should have died the way Phil died," said Jeff Roush,
a Hamilton County sheriff's deputy who witnessed the murder of his
colleague and friend, Phillip Pence. "This case was nothing more
than putting a mad dog to sleep," he said. Rousch was unhappy that
Zuern never met his glare. "I think he just cowarded his way out. We
just glared at him (during his execution) but he wouldn't look at us,"
he said.
Rousch's thirst for vengeance was shared by Joseph Burton,
another coworker who witnessed Pence's murder, and family members of
Zuern's two murder victims -- Pence and Gregory Earls, who Zuern
fatally shot. "It was too easy on him. It was too easy," said Sherry
Behler, Pence's half-sister, after witnessing the execution.
Juanita Earls, the mother of Earls, Zuern's first victim, said after the
execution, "My son was murdered by William Zuern. I waited 20 years
to see justice done for my son. For that, I'm grateful. He died more
merciful than my son and Phillip Pence died. He was an animal."
Zuern was placed on his back on a padded table to
be prepped for his death. Technicians placed shunts into both of his
outstretched arms as Zuern alternately closed his eyes and narrowly
opened them. His face remained stoic throughout the process, which
took several minutes and caused him to bleed visibly out of his
right arm.
He was dressed in a prison-issued white shirt, blue pants
with red stripes running down each side, and white socks. He wore
his own brown hiking boots. His head was shaven, and he wore a thick
beard without a moustache. Zuern complied with every command,
lifting his hands to be placed in handcuffs before he was led into
the death chamber. The chamber was dimly lit with a tiled floor and
cinder block walls painted white.
Warden Haviland picked up a microphone and asked,
"Mr. Zuern, do you have any last statement you would like to make?"
"Nope," was Zuern's terse reply as he continued to stare at the
ceiling.
He never turned to see witnesses in either of two small
rooms that were separated by from the death chamber by windows.
Haviland gave a secret command at 9:58 a.m. to begin injecting the
drugs, and two officials turned on IVs to begin pouring drugs into
his veins.
Only one of the two cocktails contained the lethal drugs,
and neither operator knew which one was real and which was harmless,
according to Dean. Within two minutes, Zuern's breathing became
faint, and within three, breathing was no longer visible.
By 10:01, his head began turning purple. After Zuern was pronounced dead,
witnesses were led back through a courtyard where a black Cadillac
hearse awaited. Zuern was transported to a local funeral home and
will be buried in a state-run cemetery adjacent to a prison in
Chillicothe. His family did not have the means to arrange a private
burial, Dean said.
Zuern, who had been held on Death Row in
Mansfield, arrived in Lucasville shortly after 1 p.m. Monday. He ate
his last dinner about four hours later - mashed potatoes and gravy,
lasagna, macaroni and cheese, garlic bread, corn, chocolate milk and
cherry cheese cake.
This morning he had four pancakes, cereal,
orange juice and milk. He was offered a shower, but declined. He
steadfastly refused to communicate with the preparation team. The
team, designed to answer the condemned's questions and take care of
physical needs, said Zuern took extreme measures to avoid them. "He
has gone as far as putting toilet paper in his ears," a spokeswoman
said this morning. He has also turned his back to the counselors,
turned his face to the wall and stared at the ceiling, she said.
Two of his sisters, Ruby Simpkins and Ester Zuern,
arrived today but he refused to see them. He spent a restless night
Monday, falling asleep at about 10 p.m., but waking up several times
throughout the evening. During his 20-year prison stay, Zuern never
allowed a single visit by family or friends.
Only his attorneys saw
him, and he made no exception on the last day of his life. The
sisters, both of the Dayton area, were turned away from the prison.
Prison officials said he would meet with no spiritual adviser today.
He had no witnesses on his behalf at the execution. "He doesn't want
any witnesses," said Andrea Dean, a spokeswoman for the Ohio
Department for Rehabilitation and Correction. "Nobody will be there."
Pence's family had three witnesses: Behler, his
half-sister, Rousch and Burton. At Zuern's request, his last effects
will be destroyed : five books, a radio, a typewriter, a fan,
envelopes, toiletries, hot sauce, cocoa butter and garlic butter.
Outside the prison, death penalty opponents
gathered and prayed. They set up signs of protest and drawings and
photographs of previously executed Ohioans. Tina Bush, a member of
the Cleveland Coalition Against the Death Penalty, has been active
protesting capital punishment since 1999, when Ohio reinstated its
death penalty. "We are against the execution of any people. I do not
believe that because a person takes a life that the state should
take another life. Two wrongs do not make a right, and all killing
is wrong," she said. Bush said her opposition to state-sanctioned
killing is not meant as any lack of sympathy for victims. "Phillip
Pence should not have died at William Zuern's hand. William Zuern
should not die at the state's hand," her hand-made sign read. The
Rev. Neil Kookoothe, of St. Clarence Church in North Olmstead, said
he was there to be a witness for Zuern's fellow Death Row inmates
who the Catholic priest counsels in Mansfield.
In a statement issued Monday, Ohio Gov. Bob Taft,
who was a Hamilton County commissioner when Pence was killed, noted:
"Mr. Zuern has never shown remorse for his crimes, and during his
incarceration has engaged in other crimes and conduct violations,
including the kidnapping and threatened murder of two corrections
officers."
Taft noted Zuern, declined to participate in the clemency
process, and his at torneys did not attend the clemency hearings.
After thoroughly reviewing Zuern's criminal record and convictions
and recommendations from the Ohio Parole Board, county prosecutor's
office and sheriff's office, "I can find no compelling reason to
grant clemency," Taft said. Messages left Monday for Zuern's
attorneys in Dayton and New Mexico were not returned.
After Zuern was convicted of Pence's aggravated
murder, he had his defense attorneys read a statement in which he
said it was his opinion that there was "no testimony I or anyone
else could offer which would have any effect on this jury." Zuern
said he realized if he offered no mitigation evidence, the jury can
come to but one decision, and that is death by electrocution. "I
have no death wish, and I do not wish to die," his statement added.
"However it is not my nature to beg or crawl."
His attitudes toward
the sentence since his arrival at Lucasville, where Ohio conducts
all its executions, were not known, prison officials said. Zuern has
not talked to prison officials about the matter. Rice overturned
Zuern's conviction in 2000, but the Cincinnati-based 6th Circuit
reinstated it in July.
Zuern also is serving a life prison term for his
guilty plea to fatally shooting a Lower Price Hill man. He had been
awaiting trial on that slaying when county jail officials received a
tip that Zuern had a homemade knife. Zuern was alerted that officers
were coming to search the cell for the weapon and whenthey Arrived,
he stabbed Pence in the chest with a dagger-like piece of metal he
had fashioned from a bucket handle, officers said.
Zuern is the fourth Ohioan executed this year,
preceded by Lewis Williams of Cuyahoga County and Glenn Roe and
William Wickline, both of Franklin County. There are now 208 inmates
on death row in Mansfield, including one woman. Eleven people have
been executed by the state since the death penalty was reinstated in
February 1999. More than half the condemned are black, according to
the states figures. Blacks number 104, with 98 whites, three
Hispanics and four whose race was listed as other on Death Row.
After 20 years, man executed for fatally
stabbing prison guard
By Jonathan Drew - Cleveland
Plain Dealer
AP - June 9, 2004
Associated Press - Lucasville - A man was
executed Tuesday for stabbing a jail guard to death with a homemade
knife. He spent his final hours alone, refusing to see his two
sisters and sticking toilet paper in his ears to block out prison
staff. At one point, Zuern removed the paper from his ears and asked
a guard, "What time does all of this start?" said Andrea Dean,
spokeswoman for the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
When asked if he had any last words before execution, Zuern said, "Nope."
William Zuern, 45, was pronounced dead by
injection at 10:04 a.m. at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.
His lawyer, Kate McGarry, had decided against taking the typical
step of asking the U.S. Supreme Court to stop his execution, but she
would not say why she made that decision.
Zuern, who remained calm and kept his eyes
pressed tightly closed throughout most of the injection process, was
convicted of aggravated murder in the 1984 stabbing of jail officer
Phillip Pence in Cincinnati. At the time of that stabbing, Zuern had
been serving a life prison term for his guilty plea in the killing
of Gregory Earls of Cincinnati, according to the Cincinnati Post.
Pence's half-sister and two co-workers who
witnessed the stabbing watched as Zuern's breathing became jerky and
his face and fingertips turned blue when the muscle relaxant and
heart-stopping drugs traveled through his body. They said they
thought the execution was too easy on Zuern. "I believe he should
have died the way Phil died," former Hamilton County Sheriff's
Deputy Gary Roush said. "This case was nothing more than putting a
mad dog to sleep." Zuern had no witnesses at the execution, and no
relatives had come to visit him until his sisters came to the prison
Tuesday.
National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
William Zuern (OH) - June 8,
William Zuern is scheduled to be executed in Ohio
on 8 June 2004. He was sentenced to death in October 1984 for the
murder of a jail guard, Phillip Pence, in the Community Correctional
Institute in Hamilton County four months earlier. William Zuern has
been on death row for almost two decades.
According to the evidence at trial, William Zuern,
who was in pre-trial detention on a murder charge, stabbed Officer
Pence with a sharpened bucket hook during a cell search on 9 June
1984. Phillip Pence died in hospital as a result of the stab wound.
At the subsequent trial, the jury convicted William Zuern of
aggravated murder. The defendant waived his right to present
mitigating evidence, and the jury recommended a death sentence,
finding that the murder had been committed with prior calculation
and design.
The Supreme Court of Ohio affirmed the death
sentence in 1987. Two of the judges dissented on the grounds of a
prejudicial statement made by a prosecution witness in front of the
jury. The witness, a fellow inmate, had repeated a conversation he
said he had had with a jail guard shortly before the stabbing. He
recalled under questioning by the prosecutor that he had said of
William Zuern: "He is crazy, man, he is in here for murder, and he
won't hesitate to do it again".
The defence had called for a
mistrial, which the judge denied. The dissenting judges in the Ohio
Supreme Court wrote that they could not "imagine anything more
harmful or inflammatory in character than testimony of this nature…
[Zuern] was denied fundamental due process of law and a fair trial
by his peers and a second trial should be granted".
In 2000, a federal district judge granted William
Zuern a new trial on the grounds that the prosecution had withheld
evidence favourable to the defendant and which had undermined
confidence in the jury's decision that Zuern had planned the murder.
In 2003 the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit overturned the
district judge's decision, deciding that even if the prosecution had
turned over the evidence, the outcome of the trial would likely have
been the same.
In 6 minutes, life drains out for convicted
killer of jailer
By Sharon Coolidge - Cincinnati
Enquirer
Wednesday, June 9, 2004
LUCASVILLE - William G. Zuern died at 10:04 a.m.
Tuesday alone - just as he spent the last 20 years. No clergy, no
attorneys and none of Zuern's family watched as a prison executioner
pumped a lethal mix of drugs into his arms, killing him in six
minutes. Zuern, 45, said nothing and lived up to the promise he made
at his murder trial: He would not beg for his life.
Zuern was executed after exhausting all his
appeals in the June 9, 1984, fatal stabbing of Hamilton County
jailer Phillip Pence. Pence's sister and two men who worked with
Pence at the county's now-closed jail in Camp Washington watched
Zuern die.
Zuern appeared peaceful when he walked into the
death chamber just before 10 a.m. He kept his eyes closed and did as
he was asked. He climbed on the gurney and was strapped down. Asked
if he had he anything to say, he responded: "Nope." He put his arms
out and two members of the execution team injected the Price Hill
man with drugs that put him to sleep, stopped his breathing and shut
down his heart. He took several breaths and then appeared to slip
into a nap, with only a slight darkening of his cheeks and
fingertips indicating that life had drained from his 6-foot-1-inch,
270-pound body. The execution comes one day shy of the 20th
anniversary of Pence's murder.
A long wait
For nearly 20 years, Gary Rouse, who worked with
Pence at the jail, has carried a copy of Zuern's death warrant and
has waited for this day. "William Zuern went too easy,'' Rouse said
after witnessing the death. Zuern should have died as Pence did, he
said. With a panicked, pained look on his face. "This was like
putting a mad dog to sleep,'' Rouse said. Sherry Behler, Pence's
sister, said Zuern should have been put to death years ago. "The
appeals process took too long,'' she said.
Zuern was jailed awaiting trial for shooting to
death Gregory Earls, 23. Jailers got a tip that Zuern had a weapon
and when Pence went to search the cell, Zuern lunged at Pence,
stabbing him in the heart with a homemade knife fashioned from a
metal bucket handle. A Hamilton County judge sentenced Zuern to die
for Pence's death and imposed a life sentence for Earls' death.
The
case weaved its way through state and federal courts until last
month, when the Ohio Supreme Court set the execution date. Monday,
attorneys for Zuern and the state filed a flurry of motions that
briefly stayed the execution. But just before 7 p.m., a federal
appeals court ordered the execution to go forward. Zuern's lawyers
declined to appeal that decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Restless night, then relief
Zuern made the trip to the Death House at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville at 1:08 p.m.
Monday. He asked that the Bible be removed from his cell and refused
to listen to the execution team as they worked to prepare him. Zuern
stuffed toilet paper in his ears, said Andrea Dean, spokeswoman for
the state's prison system.
He ate all of his last dinner, which
included lasagna, macaroni and cheese, cherry cheesecake and
chocolate milk. He awoke at 4 a.m. Tuesday after a restless night of
sleep, Dean said. He ate a breakfast of four pancakes, cereal and
milk. He spent the rest of the morning pacing his cell. He did not
talk to the execution team - a group of volunteers who work in
various jobs and are specially trained for the execution.
Zuern sent his two sisters away after they drove
to the prison from the Dayton area. He has never had a visitor
during his 20-year prison stay, but the sisters had hoped he would
see them so they could spend one last time as a family. He declined
to shower before changing into the prison's execution uniform, which
included a white T-shirt, blue cotton pants and brown work boots at
9:30 a.m. Zuern is the 12th inmate - the third from Hamilton County
- to be executed since 1999, when the state resumed executions. The
execution began two minutes earlier than the scheduled 10 a.m. time.
He is the only one who has declined to have a spiritual adviser at
his side.
Because his family is unable to afford a funeral,
the state will bury Zuern's body in a Chillicothe cemetery Thursday.
A prison minister will preside. Zuern asked that his belongings - a
radio, typewriter and a handful of books - be destroyed. Seven
members of Zuern's first victim, Earls, spent the morning at the
prison, although they didn't witness the execution. "Even though he
didn't get death for my son, he still got it, and for that I'm
grateful,'' said Juanita Earls.
Rouse and another deputy, Joe Burton,
who worked with Pence, spoke passionately about how much Pence's
mother meant to him. "When (Pence) died, basically she died, too,''
said Burton, who remained close to Pence's mother, who died in 1999.
"One of her main wishes was to live to see this.'' "I might see her
on the other side,'' Burton added. "If I do, I'll tell her that
justice was served at 10:04 a.m. June 8, 2004."
Ohio inmate dies for killing guard
Execution of
William Zuern is the state's 12th since 1999
By James Drew - The Toledo
Blade
June 9, 2004
LUCASVILLE, Ohio - Condemned inmate William Zuern
did not want to listen. In the hours leading to his death yesterday
morning, Zuern stuck toilet paper in his ears as members of the
execution team explained the lethal injection procedure and were
ready to answer his questions. "He said he didn't want to hear
anything they had to say," said Andrea Dean, a state prison
spokesman.
Zuern's sisters, Ruby Simpkins and Ester Zuern,
traveled to the state maximum-security prison from their homes in
the Dayton area. Zuern, 45, refused to meet with them. They left the
prison 90 minutes before the execution, and a prison official
described them as very sad. "They wanted to visit with their brother
before the execution, and he chose not to," said Ms. Dean. "That is
why they haven't visited him in his entire prison stay. He told them
not to come and see him. They thought because this would be the last
time they could be together as a family, he would have a change of
heart today. But in fact he did not do that."
The state executed Zuern, a former Cincinnati
resident, for the aggravated murder of Phillip Pence, a jail officer
at the Community Correctional Institution, which was known as the "workhouse"
and is now closed. Zuern was in jail on charges that he murdered 26-year-old
Gregory Earls. On June 9, 1984, Mr. Pence and other jail guards went
to search Zuern's cell after being tipped off he had made a knife
out of a piece of metal. As the cell door opened, Zuern stabbed the
26-year-old Pence in the chest, piercing his heart.
"William Zuern went too easy today," said Gary
Roush, a fellow Hamilton County sheriff's deputy who was 22 and with
Mr. Pence when Zuern stabbed him. "I believe he should have died the
way that Phil died; the panicked look on his face, the pain." "Any
opponents of the death penalty, this case here is nothing worse than
putting a mad dog to sleep. In society, there is a place for
vengeance," said Mr. Roush, who now works for a township police
department in Clermont County. The time of Zuern's death was 10:04
a.m. He was the 12th man to be executed in Ohio since the state
resumed carrying out the death penalty in 1999.
Zuern never made eye contact with the three
victim witnesses and did not struggle or show any emotion as he was
strapped to the gurney and injected with three drugs that made him
unconscious, paralyzed his lungs, and stopped his heart. He had
declined to choose anyone to witness his death. When asked by Warden
James Haviland if he had a final statement, Zuern replied: "Nope."
"I did tell the victim's family that it hits closer to home,
especially since there were … people murdered right here at this
prison," said state prison director Reginald Wilkinson, referring to
the 1993 riot in which one guard was killed. "The people who work in
this business are a pretty tight-knit group of people, and
definitely don't like it when people disrespect the people who
perform this very serious work," Mr. Wilkinson added. Zuern became
the first condemned inmate since 1999 to decline access to a
spiritual adviser, Ms. Dean said.
Shortly after arriving at the maximum-security
prison in Lucasville on Monday from death row at the prison in
Mansfield, he asked for the Bible to be removed from his holding
cell. It was. Despite placing toilet paper in his ears, Zuern could
hear what the execution team members told him about the lethal
injection process, Ms. Dean said. In the holding cell down the hall
from the execution chamber, Zuern kept his back to the execution
team members in the hours leading to his death and was very distant,
Ms. Dean said.
Zuern's funeral is set for tomorrow afternoon.
His body will be buried at the state prison cemetery in Chillicothe.
Zuern asked the state to throw away the personal belongings he
brought with him to Lucasville from Mansfield: a radio, five books,
a fan, envelopes, a typewriter, and containers of hot sauce, cocoa
butter, and garlic powder.
Impending Ohio Execution Brings Back Violent
Memories
New Book Examines Causes of Lucasville Riot as Inmate
Faces Lethal Injection
PR Newswire
LUCASVILLE, Ohio, June 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Time is
running out for Mansfield Correctional Institution inmate William
Zuern, who is scheduled to be executed June 8 for the 1984 stabbing
death of corrections officer Phillip Pence. The Ohio Parole Board is
recommending the governor give no clemency to the convicted killer.
The execution will add one more chapter to the prison's violent past.
On Easter Sunday 1993, inmates took control of
the facility and held it for 11 days, resulting in what was then the
longest prison riot in American history. Nine inmates and one guard
were killed during the standoff. One of the hostages from the
infamous Lucasville riot now provides detailed insight into the
horrifying ordeal in "Siege in Lucasville" (now available through
AuthorHouse), by Gary Williams.
The violence that has resided behind concrete
walls and barbed wire in the past still haunts this location today.
Williams writes that the riot was the culmination of prisoner
defiance that had been a part of the prison for decades. His book
chronicles the uprising and takeover through the experiences of
prison guard Larry Dotson and details the entire grueling period,
including the beatings at the hands of an "inmate death squad."
Williams conveys the fear that Dotson and other hostages tried to
ignore in order to survive as it examines the events leading up to
the riots, including what he and others cite as lack of effective
leadership at the state level of the corrections department. "Siege
in Lucasville" is a case study in interpersonal communication,
leadership and crisis management. It exhibits how neglect,
insufficient funds and poor management can lead to catastrophe.
Highly acclaimed by those in criminal justice and academic law, "Siege
in Lucasville" takes a hard look at the Ohio Department of
Corrections and the factors that led to one of the worst prison
riots in American history.
Zuern's execution is scheduled for 10 a.m.
Ohio Adult
Parole Authority
Zuern Clemency Report
DATE: June 1, 2004
STATE OF OHIO ADULT PAROLE AUTHORITY
COLUMBUS, OHIO
Date of Meeting: May 25, 2004
IN RE: WILLIAM ZUERN #A181-416 MANCI
SUBJECT: Death Penalty Clemency
Minutes of the special meeting of the Adult
Parole Authority held at 10:30 Alum Creek Drive Columbus, Ohio 43205
on the above date.
CRIME, CONVICTION: A) Aggravated Murder with
three (3) specifications, B) Aggravated Murder
DATE, PLACE OF CRIME: A) June 9, 1984; Community Correctional
Institute, Cincinnati, Ohio, B) May 12, 1983
COUNTY: A) Hamilton, B) Hamilton
CASE NUMBER: A) B842052, B) B841776
VICTIM: A) Officer Phillip Pence, Hamilton County Deputy Sheriff, B)
Greg Earls
INDICTMENT: A) Aggravated Murder with three (3) specifications: (1)
defendant was prisoner in a detention facility; (2) victim was a
peace officer engaged in his official duties; and (3) defendant’s
specific purpose was to kill a peace officer. B) Aggravated Murder
PLEA: A) Not guilty, B) Guilty
TRIAL: A) Jury, B) N/A
VERDICT: A) Guilty to indictment, B) N/A
SENTENCE: A) Death, B) Life Sentence
ADMITTED TO INSTITUTION: October 5, 1984 (TIME SERVED: 235 months)
AGE AT ADMISSION: 25 years old, DOB: December 5, 1958
PAROLE ELIGIBILITY: N/A
PRESIDING JUDGE: Honorable William J. Morrissey
PROSECUTING ATTORNEY: Arthur M. Ney, Jr.
ACCOMPLICE: None
FOREWORD:
Clemency in this case was initiated by the
Honorable Bob Taft, Governor of the State of Ohio, and the Ohio
Parole Board, pursuant to Section 2967.03 of the Ohio Revised Code,
and Parole Board Policy 105-PBD-01. A Death Row Clemency Review
Hearing was conducted on May 25, 2004, with nine members of the Ohio
Parole Board participating. There were no participants present on
behalf of the defendant.
Present at the hearing on behalf of the State
were Assistant Hamilton County Prosecutor Ronald Springman,
Assistant Attorney General Charles Willie, and Assistant Attorney
General Tim Pritchard. Also present was Mr. Gary Roush, a friend and
former co-worker of the victim.
After reviewing and deliberating the information
provided, the Parole Board voted and reached a unanimous decision.
We now submit to the Honorable Bob Taft, Governor of the State of
Ohio our report and recommendation.
OFFENSE CASE #B842052:
The following account of the instant crime was
obtained from the Ohio Supreme Court’s review of this case on August
12, 1987, via appeal as of right, whereupon said court affirmed the
conviction and sentence imposed by the Hamilton County Court of
Common Pleas.
On May 14, 1984, defendant, William G. Zuern, was
incarcerated at the Community Correctional Institute (“CCI”) in
Hamilton County, Ohio. He was the sole occupant of a cell located in
a section of the institution designed for those individuals charged
with serious crimes. Some time in the latter part of May 1984, Zuern
had a conversation with another inmate, Wayne C. Lewis, in which he
expressed a general animosity towards correctional officers for
failing to give him his full five minutes of telephone time. Lewis
also had observed Zuern sharpening a straightened portion of a metal
bucket hook over the course of three days. Thereafter, Lewis
informed a corrections officer that appellant had a knife or a shank.
CCI supervisors ordered a search of several cells
to recover the weapon. On the evening of June 9, 1984, several
officers were ordered to search Zuern’s cell, among others. At
approximately 10:20 p.m., Officers Joe Burton and Phillip Pence
arrived to perform the search and found Zuern lying naked in his
bunk. Officer Pence ordered Zuern to get to his feet. Zuern then
stood at the door of the cell. Pence unlocked the cell and told
Zuern to come out and put his hands against the wall. Zuern suddenly
lunged at Pence and stabbed him with the metal shank. The instrument
entered Pence’s body at the lower left side of the chest.
After the door was secured and Zuern confined,
Pence lifted his shirt to observe the wound, at which time he began
to feel faint. After a nurse was summoned, Pence was rushed to a
nearby hospital. Despite efforts to save his life, Pence died. An
autopsy determined that death occurred as a result of the stab wound
to the chest which penetrated Pence’s heart. Authorities immediately
recovered the weapon used by Zuern. It was a long dagger-like piece
of metal, approximately seven inches long. One end was sharpened to
a point, and the other was curved into a loop.
Zuern was indicted for purposely causing the
death of another with prior calculation and design in violation of
R.C. 2903.01. Three specifications, pursuant to R.C. 2929.04(A)(4)
and (6), were part of the charge: that the offense was committed
while Zuern was a prisoner in a detention facility as specified in
R.C. 2929.04(A)(4); that the offense was committed while the victim
was a peace officer, whom Zuern knew to be such, and at the time of
the commission of the offense, the victim was engaged in his duties
as a peace officer as specified in R.C. 2929.04(A)(6); and that the
offense alleged in this indictment was committed while the victim
was a peace officer, whom Zuern knew to be such, and at the time of
the commission of the offense alleged herein, it was Zuern’s
specific purpose to kill a peace officer as specified in R.C.
2929.04(A)(6).
A jury trial was held and at the conclusion of
all proceedings, Zuern was found guilty of aggravated murder
including all three specifications. Zuern waived the mitigation
hearing which permitted the jury to consider all aggravating
circumstances. After the mitigation phase, the jury recommended that
the sentence of death be imposed. The trial court filed a written
opinion and having found that the aggravating circumstances
outweighed the mitigating factors beyond a reasonable doubt, imposed
the sentence of death.
OFFENSE-CASE #B841776:
In January, 1979 the victim took an undercover
police officer to Inmate Zuern’s father’s residence. The undercover
officer made a narcotic buy from the inmate’s father, and the father
was subsequently convicted for the offense and given probation. In
May, 1979 both the inmate and victim were incarcerated at the
Lebanon Correctional Institution. On May 6, 1979 inmate and victim
got into a fight in the yard that started with a confrontation by
the inmate. Eventually the victim was paroled and inmate Zuern was
released due to his sentence expiring.
On 5/12/83, at approximately 12:40 a.m. inmate
was at a friend’s house socializing when he saw the victim get out
of a car. The victim started walking toward the inmate, and the
inmate started yelling. After a short conversation, the inmate was
approximately 3 feet away from the victim when he drew a revolver
from the back of his pants, pointed it at the victim’s chest, and
fired one shot. The victim staggered backward, and the inmate fired
a few more shots. The victim was transported to the hospital where
he was pronounced dead. On November 19, 1984 the inmate pled to the
indictment of Aggravated Murder.
PRIOR RECORD: Juvenile:
10-19-72 Age 13 Malicious Destruction of Property
(4 counts)11-7-72: probation & restitution
01-15-73 Age 14 Burglary 4-4-73: probation, fine, costs and house
arrest.
03-21-73 Age 14 Violation of Court Order 3-23-73: Adjudicated
delinquent; probation, fine, house arrest. caught trying to sell
some contraband (marijuana) and a syringe.
05-29-73 Age 14 Violation of Court Order 6-6-73: permanent
commitment to OYC suspended, continued on probation; Failed to
attend school and obey parents.
12-13-73 Age 15 Violation of Court Order 12-14-73: adjudicated
delinquent.12-17-73: permanent commitment to OYC; paroled. 3-7-75.
09-11-75 Age 16 Petit Theft 9-26-75: continued under previous status
of official probation.
01-7-76 Age 17 Attempted Robbery 1-8-76: adjudicated delinquent;1-16-76:
commitment to OYC maximum security.
PRIOR RECORD: Adult:
03-7-78 Aggravated Assault Cincinnati, 6-2-78:
sentenced to 1-5 years,OSR. 5-27-83: released. (Shot victim James
Driscoll in the hip with a .22 handgun)
05-13-84 Aggravated Murder Cincinnati, 11-19-84:
plead guilty as charged. Sentenced to Life concurrent.
06-09-84 Aggravated Murder Cincinnati, 10-13-84:
Jury verdict of guilty as charged 10-15-84 sentenced to death.
10-14-85 Kidnapping Lucasville, 1985: Pled guilty
to Abduction of jailers and sentenced to 2-10 years.
INSTITUTIONAL ADJUSTMENT:
Since his admission to the institution, Zuern’s
adjustment has been problematic, as evidenced by his conduct
violations. Zuern’s misconduct has included the following incidents:
• On June 26, 1985, Zuern stabbed a fellow death
row inmate with a shank. The shank was made from a bedspring, with a
handle made of cloth and rubber bands. The inmate suffered a
superficial stab wound in the chest.
• On August 26, 1985, Zuern sprayed human waste
on Officer Michael Warren.
• On August 31, 1985, Zuern set fire in his cell
and was treated for smoke inhalation.
• On September 11, 1985, Zuern head-butted inmate
McLellan while being escorted to an RIB hearing.
• On September 27, 1985, during a hearing before
the Administrative Control Committee, Zuern overturned a table,
resulting in injury to Officer Jack Bendolph.
• On October 14, 1985, while being held in the J1
unit at SOCF, Zuern, along with fellow death row inmates John Byrd
and Jay Scott and inmate Eric Swofford, kidnapped Officer William
Dunn and Officer Randy Mehaffey. During the course of the
negotiations, Zuern threatened to kill the officers. At 2:53 a.m. on
October 15, 1985, the inmates released Officer Dunn in exchange for
a radio. At 3:46 a.m., the inmates released Officer Mehaffey in
exchange for an opportunity to air their grievances on a local radio
station. During the standoff, the inmates destroyed several sinks, a
toilet and an electric console. Zuern was indicted in Scioto County
for Kidnapping, with a specification due to his prior aggravated
felony conviction. Zuern agreed to plead to the lesser charge of
Abduction, and was sentenced to a term of 2-10 years. In addition,
Zuern along with the aboveindicated inmates raped and stabbed a
fellow inmate.
• On November 13, 1986, Zuern threw three cups of
human waste at Officer Asbery Arnett, one of which hit Officer
Arnett in the face. Zuern also threw two bars of soap at Officer
Arnett, both of which struck Officer Arnett in the head. When Zuern
was removed from his cell, officers located a shank in Zuern’s cell
fashioned from a bedspring, rubber bands and a toothbrush handle.
Zuern admitted that he planned to assault the guard with the weapon
because the guard gets paid for working at the institution. Zuern
also stated that he was bored and needed some excitement.
• On October 28, 1987, Zuern destroyed a sink.
PAROLE PLAN: N/A
COMMUNITY ATTITUDE: PROPONENTS TO CLEMENCY:
The Ohio Parole Board received no written
application for clemency on Zuern’s behalf and Zuern himself elected
not to be interviewed by a member of the Board. The only information
received from Zuern’s counsel was a letter dated May 21, 2004 from
attorney Kathleen McGarry. In sum, Ms. McGarry indicated that
defense counsel had decided not to participate in the hearing, and
it was their belief that their client would not want them to
initiate clemency proceedings or appear on his behalf. Therefore, no
request for clemency was made or mitigatory information presented by
Zuern or on his behalf through counsel. The Ohio Parole Board did
receive a petition containing 102 signatures requesting that the
Board recommend and the Governor commute Zuern’s death sentence.
OPPONENTS TO CLEMENCY:
Ronald Springman, Assistant Hamilton County
Prosecutor, and Charles Willie and Tim Prichard of the Ohio Attorney
General’s Capital Crimes Unit represented the State of Ohio at the
hearing before the Parole Board on May 25, 2004. Arguments offered
in opposition to the granting of Executive Clemency included:
• There exists no doubt that Zuern committed the
offense for which he received the death penalty. Zuern only disputed
at trial that the offense was committed with prior calculation and
design. However, Zuern surreptitiously obtained the weapon and took
days to develop it. Zuern knew that officers were going to search
his cell and disrobed prior to the attempted search in order to
appear non-threatening. Upon Officer Pence opening his cell, Zuern
lunged at Officer Pence and used the weight of his shoulder to
plunge the shank deep enough into Officer Pence’s chest to cause
death. Immediately after stabbing Officer Pence, Zuern sat back down,
remained calm and showed no remorse. Subsequent to stabbing Officer
Pence, Zuern stated that it felt good to stab someone and that he
“got his nut”. Zuern at no time since committing the offense has
shown any remorse.
• The trial was relatively short, uncomplicated
and straightforward. The facts of this case clearly indicate that
the death penalty was a proper punishment and was not unjustly
imposed. A jury lawfully imposed the death penalty on Zuern, and his
conviction and sentence have not been disturbed after nearly twenty
years of judicial scrutiny by every level of both the state and
federal courts.
• Zuern’s criminal history is extensive and
violent. He was incarcerated for an Aggravated Murder charge when he
committed the Aggravated Murder against Officer Pence. He
subsequently plead guilty to the additional Aggravated Murder charge
and was sentenced to Life.
• Zuern’s institutional conduct has been
problematic. There may be no inmate less deserving of clemency.
• No basis for the granting of clemency has been
offered. Former Deputy Sheriff Gary Roush appeared and spoke on
behalf of the victim Phillip Pence. Mr. Roush stated that the victim
was only 25 years old at the time of his death, and had just begun
his law enforcement career. The victim had plans to start his own
business, but was unable to do so due to his untimely death. In
addition, the victim was the only living relative of his mother.
When she died, no one was there to ensure that her grave was
properly attended to. Mr. Roush was present when the victim was
stabbed by Zuern and described the brutality of the offense.
Immediately after the stabbing, the other inmates were “going wild”,
except for Zuern who sat in his cell calmly. Mr. Roush stated that
Zuern lacks any redeeming value as a human being, and his
incarceration places other officers in jeopardy. Mr. Roush then read
a letter from the victim’s step sister Sherry Behler. Ms. Behler is
adamantly opposed to clemency. In addition, approximately 44 letters
in opposition to the commutation of Zuern’s death sentence have been
received.
CONCLUSION:
At present, William Zuern’s scheduled execution
date of June 8, 2004 has been stayed. Mr. Zuern declined an
interview by the Parole Board. The Parole Board reviewed the
documents and deliberated extensively on the information provided.
No mitigation was offered and no request for mercy was made by
William Zuern. The Parole Board could find no mitigating factors to
outweigh the overwhelming aggravating factors in this case.
Therefore, the undersigned members concur with the imposition of the
death penalty in this case, and find that the exercise of clemency
is not warranted.
RECOMMENDATION:
The Ohio Parole Board, nine (9) members
participating, by a vote of nine (9) to zero (0), recommends to the
Honorable Bob Taft, Governor of the State of Ohio, that Executive
Clemency be denied in the case of William Zuern #A181-416.
State v. Zuern,
Not Reported in N.E.2d (WL 6507), Ohio App. 1 Dist., Jun 11, 1986. (Direct
Appeal).
HILDEBRANDT, Judge.
The record discloses that beginning on May 14, 1984 defendant-appellant
William G. Zuern (appellant) was incarcerated at the Community
Correctional Institute (CCI) in lieu of a $1,000 bond. [FN1]
Appellant was the sole occupant of a cell located in a section of
the institution designated for those individuals who are charged
with serious crimes or who are under a high bond or considered to be
a special case.
During the period from June 5 through June 7 of
1984, appellant was observed by other inmates fashioning a weapon (a
shank) from a mop bucket handle. [FN2] This information was related
to the authorities in the institution on June 9, 1984. As a result
of that information, the members of the sheriff's department [FN3]
assigned to CCI prepared to search for the weapon. The focus of
their attention was the appellant's cell and the cell of another
inmate. The record also contains evidence that the appellant had
expressed animosity toward the CCI guards for their alleged failure
to allow him his full five minutes of telephone time.
At approximately 10:15 [FN4] on the evening of
June 9, 1984, Sheriff's Deputies Phillip Pence [FN5] and Joseph
Burton made their way to the appellant's cell to search for weapons.
As they approached the cell, appellant was reclining on a bunk.
Pence ordered the appellant to stand, exit the cell and place his
hands on a wall so that the deputies could accomplish their mission.
Appellant complied with the request to stand, and as Deputy Burton
opened the cell door, appellant lunged toward Deputy Pence and
stabbed him in the chest with the shank. Appellant withdrew the
weapon from his victim as Burton successfully closed the cell door,
thereby keeping the appellant within the cell. Initially, Pence was
able to raise his uniform shirt and undershirt to examine the wound,
which was approximately seven inches below the breastbone and three
inches left of midline. However, he soon collapsed, mortally injured.
Despite heroic efforts to save his life, Deputy Pence expired at
University Hospital approximately two hours later.
The Chief Deputy Coroner testified during the
proceedings below that Pence suffered a stab wound that entered the
right main chamber of his heart and exited through the upper chamber
of the right side of the heart. The coroner expressed his opinion
that the wound was the cause of Deputy Pence's death. The coroner
further testified that the shape of the shank [FN6] was consistent
with the wound to Pence's heart.
On June 11, 1984 the Grand Jury of Hamilton
County, Ohio indicted the appellant for the aggravated murder of
Phillip Pence. [FN7] The solitary count of the indictment carried
three specifications. The first stated that appellant was a prisoner
in a detention facility, as set forth in R.C. 2929.04(A)(4). The
second alleged that the victim was a peace officer, that appellant
knew this, and that the victim was engaged in his duties as a peace
officer at the time of the offense, as set forth in R.C.
2929.04(A)(6). The third specification alleged that the victim was a
peace officer, that appellant knew this, and that it was the
appellant's specific purpose to kill a peace officer, as set forth
in R.C. 2929.04(A)(6).
The cause was tried in the court below with the
intervention of a jury, which returned a verdict of guilty as
charged including all specifications. Appellant presented no
evidence during the guilt phase of the proceedings below and the
record discloses that he chose not to proceed to offer anything by
way of mitigation. For that reason there was no penalty phase after
the completion of the guilt phase of the trial. T.d. 66. The jury
further recommended that the appellant be sentenced to death.
On October 18, 1984 the court entered its
sentencing opinion, including its finding that the aggravating
circumstances which the appellant was found guilty of committing
outweighed the mitigating factors in the case. The court followed
the jury's recommendation that the death sentence be imposed upon
the appellant. From that judgment the appellant brings this timely
appeal in which he advances five assignments of error. Pursuant to
the mandates of R.C. 2929.05, we shall: (1) address and pass upon
each of the assignments (Section II); (2) determine independently
whether the aggravating circumstances found to exist in the case
outweigh, beyond a reasonable doubt, the mitigating factors (Section
III); and (3) determine whether the sentence of death is appropriate
after considering whether it is excessive or disproportionate to the
penalty imposed in similar cases (Section IV).
* * * *
In conclusion, we have found that there is no
merit to the five assignments of error raised by the appellant
concerning the proceedings below that resulted in his conviction for
aggravated murder. Next we find that the aggravating circumstances
of this case outweigh any and all mitigating factors beyond a
reasonable doubt. Finally, we hold that the sentence of death is
appropriate in this case, as it is neither excessive nor
disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases.
Accordingly, pursuant to R.C. 2929.05(A) , we affirm the appellant's
conviction and the sentence of death imposed upon him in this case.
SHANNON, P.J., and BLACK, J., CONCUR.
State ex rel. Zuern v. Leis,
Not Reported in N.E.2d (WL 33718), Ohio App. 1 Dist., Mar 28, 1990.
(Discovery).
PER CURIAM.
This original action in mandamus came on to be heard upon separate
motions for summary judgment filed by relator, William G. Zuern, and
respondents, Sheriff Simon L. Leis and the Hamilton County Sheriff's
Office (hereafter collectively referred to as "the Sheriff"). Upon
consideration of the motions, the supporting documents and the
stipulation filed by the parties, we conclude that no genuine issues
of material fact remain to be litigated and that relator Zuern is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
In this action, Zuern seeks a writ of mandamus
directing the Sheriff to disclose all of his investigative records
pertaining to the homicide of Deputy Sheriff Phillip Pence, for
which Zuern was convicted in 1984. Zuern asserts that the records
are subject to the compulsory-disclosure provisions of R.C. 149.43,
Ohio's public records law. The Sheriff has identified twenty-four
documents contained in his investigative file, and has refused to
disclose seventeen of those documents. While not disputing that the
seventeen documents are "public records" under R.C. 149.43(A)(1),
the Sheriff claims that they are excepted from release as trial-preparation
records under R.C. 149.43(A)(4). [FN1] The Sheriff has filed the
refused documents, under seal, with this court.
* * * *
As we have noted supra, the requested documents
have been filed with this court under seal. Resultantly, to
implement the granting of the motion of the relator for summary
judgment and our order that a writ of mandamus issue requiring that
the respondents disclose the contents of the requested documents and
grant free access to them, we order further that the documents,
which have been resealed by us, be returned to the respondents
forthwith by the clerk of the Court of Appeals for Hamilton County
by certified mail. Upon their receipt of the documents, the
respondents are instructed to proceed to afford full access to them
as ordered herein.
State v. Zuern,
Not Reported in N.E.2d (WL 256497), Ohio App. 1 Dist., Dec 04, 1991.
(Postconviction).
PER CURIAM.
This cause came on to be heard upon
the appeals, the transcript of the docket, journal entries and
original papers from the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, the
briefs and the arguments of counsel. Petitioner William G. Zuern
appeals from the order granting summary judgment to the state and
dismissing his petition for post-conviction relief brought pursuant
to R.C. 2953.21. The trial court held that an evidentiary hearing
was not necessary to determine the issues raised in Zuern's petition
and, concurrent with its entry dismissing the action and granting
the state summary judgment, filed its findings of fact and
conclusions of law. Zuern advances seventeen assignments of error.
Because none of these assignments is well taken, we affirm the
judgment of the trial court.
UNITED STATES
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
WILLIAM G. ZUERN,
Petitioner-Appellee/Cross-Appellant, v. ARTHUR TATE, Warden, Respondent-Appellant/Cross-Appellee.
Nos. 00-3526/3543
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Ohio at Dayton
No. 92-00771—Walter H. Rice, Chief District Judge
Argued: February 4, 2003
Decided and Filed: July 17, 2003
Before: BOGGS, NORRIS, and SILER, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
SILER, Circuit Judge. Arthur Tate, Warden, appeals the district
court's grant of a writ of habeas corpus to Petitioner William G.
Zuern on the basis of a Brady violation. Zuern appeals the
district court's denial of habeas corpus based on his claims of
insufficiency of the evidence, prejudicial conduct by a witness, and
juror misconduct. For the reasons stated below, we
REVERSE the district court's
grant of habeas corpus on the basis of the Brady violation, and
we AFFIRM the denial of habeas
corpus on all other claims.
I.
On May 14, 1984, Zuern was
incarcerated at the Community Correctional Institute ("CCI") in
Hamilton County, Ohio. In the latter part of May 1984, Zuern had a
conversation with inmate Wayne C. Lewis about the fact that
corrections officers failed to give Zuern his full five minutes of
telephone time. During the conversation, Zuern expressed general
hostility to the officers, saying that "[s]omebody should do something
to them sons of bitches." Lewis also had observed Zuern sharpening a
straightened portion of a metal bucket hook over the course of three
days. Lewis informed a corrections officer that Zuern had a knife or a
shank.
On June 9,
1984, inmate Loyal Hearst informed Deputy Kenneth Schweinefuss that
Hearst and Zuern had argued the day before and that Zuern stated he
was going to kill Hearst. Hearst also said that Zuern had a homemade
knife which he had sharpened on his cell floor. Schweinefuss recorded
this information in a memorandum. That evening, officers were ordered
to search Zuern's cell, among others. Before the officers arrived at
Zuern's cell, Zuern received a tip from another inmate that the
officers were coming to search his cell.
At
approximately 10:20 p.m., Officers Joe Burton and Phillip Pence
arrived to perform the search and found Zuern lying naked in his bunk.
Officer Pence ordered Zuern to get to his feet. Zuern then stood at
the door of the cell. Pence unlocked the cell and told Zuern to come
out and put his hands against the wall. Zuern lunged at Pence, fatally
stabbing him in the chest with the metal shank. The weapon was a long
dagger-like piece of metal, approximately seven inches long. One end
was sharpened to a point, and the other was curved into a loop.
II.
Zuern was
indicted for purposely causing the death of another with prior
calculation and design in violation of Ohio Revised Code § 2903.01. A
jury found Zuern guilty of aggravated murder and recommended a death
sentence; the trial judge sentenced Zuern to death. For our purposes,
three noteworthy events occurred at trial: (1) the prosecution failed
to turn over the memorandum from Schweinefuss; (2) while testifying
for the prosecution, Lewis improperly blurted out "[Zuern] is in here
for murder, and he won't hesitate to do it again"; and (3) a juror
overheard a television broadcast about Zuern's case.
In 1986,
the Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed Zuern's conviction and sentence.
Later, the Supreme Court of Ohio also affirmed. Ohio v. Zuern,
512 N.E.2d 585 (1987).
Zuern's
state court collateral appeals were likewise unsuccessful: the Court
of Common Pleas dismissed his request for relief without affording him
an evidentiary hearing; the Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed the
dismissal in State v. Zuern, Nos. C- 900481, C- 910229,
1991 WL 256497 (Ohio App. December 4, 1991); the Ohio Supreme Court
denied his request for further review.
Zuern then
sought federal habeas corpus relief, asserting 25 separate grounds or
claims for relief. The magistrate judge recommended finding that
Lewis's prejudicial statement mandated a writ of habeas corpus. The
district court disagreed, but found instead that the failure to turn
over the Schweinefuss memorandum (an alleged Brady violation)
mandated a writ.
III.
Zuern filed his petition
before the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act (AEDPA). Under pre-AEDPA analysis, "this court reviews a
district court's refusal to grant a writ of habeas corpus de novo,
but reviews the district court's factual findings for clear error."
Coe v. Bell, 209 F.3d 815, 823 n.2 (6th Cir. 2002).
IV.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Zuern was
convicted of aggravated murder, which under Ohio Revised Code §
2903.01 (A) requires a finding of prior calculation and design. In the
second habeas claim, Zuern argues that the facts presented at trial
are insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he acted with
prior calculation and design.(1)
The relevant jury instructions, to which neither party objected, are
as follows:
Prior calculation and design means that the purpose to cause the
death was reached by a definite process of reasoning in advance of the
homicide, which process of reasoning must have included a mental plan
involving studied consideration of the method and the instrument with
which to cause the death of another.
To constitute prior calculation, there must have been sufficient
time and opportunity for the planning of an act of homicide, and the
circumstances surrounding the homicide must show a scheme designed to
carry out the calculated decision to cause the death. No definite
period of time must elapse and no particular amount of consideration
must be given, but acting on the spur of the moment or after momentary
consideration of the purpose to cause the death is not sufficient.
It is not necessary that the defendant have a plan to kill a
specific individual. Prior calculation and design exists where the
defendant plans to kill any member of a certain class of persons, even
if he did not know in advance who the particular victim would be.
Prior calculation and design in such a situation may be found to exist
if the totality of circumstances show a prior calculation and design
to kill a member of a certain group.
In reviewing the sufficiency of
the evidence to support a criminal conviction, we must determine "whether,
after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential
elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt." Jackson v.
Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979).
No one disputes the fact that the
Zuern killed Pence. The only contested issue on this claim is whether
Zuern acted with the "prior calculation and design" needed for an
aggravated murder conviction. At trial, the jury heard evidence that
(1) eleven days before the stabbing, Zuern expressed general hostility
toward corrections officers, (2) Zuern had advance notice of the
weapons search, (3) instead of hiding the shank or getting rid of it,
Zuern kept the shank ready at hand knowing that the search was coming,
and (4) when the officers arrived at Zuern's cell, he initially
complied with their order to stand in front of the cell door, lunging
at Pence only after the cell door had been opened.
State v. Reed, 418 N.E.2d
1359 (Ohio 1981), presented a similar situation. In Reed, the
defendant shot and killed a police officer who had stopped his car to
investigate a botched robbery. Other than the evidence regarding the
shooting itself, the only evidence of prior calculation and design was
a statement Reed made to a classmate approximately a month before the
shooting that "if a cop got in his way (during a robbery) he would
blow him away." Id. at 1361.
The Ohio Supreme Court reversed
the conviction, finding insufficient evidence of prior calculation and
design:
In the case at bar, the evidence regarding the killing at most
indicates the presence of instantaneous deliberation. The statements
appellant made to a classmate that he would kill any police officer
who got in the way of a crime he might commit do not show that
appellant designed a scheme in order to implement a calculated
decision to kill. Not only were the remarks significantly removed from
the killing in terms of a time frame but they were very general in
nature and thus were not relevant to the killing of [the officer].
Id. at 1362-63.
Both Reed's and Zuern's statements
were made a significant time before the killing. If anything, Zuern's
statement is less inculpatory than Reed's, as Zuern's statement that
"[s]omebody should do something to them sons of bitches" does not
indicate an intent to kill or predict a specific situation or killing
method. In Zuern's case, the jury heard specific evidence that
immediately before the killing, Zuern received a warning that officers
were coming to his cell. However, in Reed, the jury heard
evidence that Reed was pulled over immediately before the killing (giving
him time to contemplate what to do when the officers arrived).
The one important difference
between Reed and Zuern is that in Zuern's case, the jury heard
evidence of Zuern's deliberate and prolonged creation of a murder
weapon. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
prosecution, the jury could have found that Zuern created the murder
weapon in order to kill an officer.(2)
Given this evidence, a rational jury could find beyond a reasonable
doubt that in killing Pence, Zuern acted with prior calculation and
design.
B.
Brady Violation
At trial, in explaining the
justification for the search of Zuern's cell, Schweinefuss testified
that an inmate had told him that Zuern had a knife. However, the
inmate's identity and the contents of Schweinefuss's memorandum were
not disclosed to the defense. The memorandum included the following:
[On June 9, 1984] Inmate Loyal Hearst called me to his cell and stated
that he and William Zuern had an argument on 6-8-84 and that Zuern
stated he was going to kill him the first chance he got. The inmate
Hearst also stated that Zuern had in his possession a homemade knife
which he had sharpened on his cell floor.
The Sixth Circuit recently
discussed the standard for reviewing alleged Brady violations:
Pursuant to the rule enunciated in Brady v. Maryland, the
government is required to turn over evidence in its possession that is
both favorable to the accused and material to guilt or punishment.
See United States v. Bencs, 28 F.3d 555, 560 (6th Cir.1994).
When the defendant, as in this case, asserts that the newly
discovered Brady evidence is exculpatory, the defendant will be
entitled to a new trial if he shows that the favorable evidence at
issue was "material." United States v. Frost, 125 F.3d 346, 382
(6th Cir.1997). In Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 115 S.Ct.
1555, 131 L.Ed.2d 490 (1995), the Supreme Court clarified the "materiality"
analysis. The Court explained that a showing of materiality does not
require that the suppressed evidence in question establish the
defendant's innocence by a preponderance of the evidence. Rather, the
"question is not whether the defendant would more likely than not have
received a different verdict with the evidence, but whether in its
absence he received a fair trial, understood as a trial resulting in a
verdict worthy of confidence." Id. at 434, 115 S.Ct. 1555;
Frost, 125 F.3d at 382-83 (6th Cir.1997). Nor does the defendant
need to "demonstrate that after discounting the inculpatory evidence
in light of the undisclosed evidence, there would not have been enough
left to convict." Kyles, 514 U.S. at 434-35, 115 S.Ct. 1555;
United States v. Smith, 77 F.3d 511, 515 (D.C.Cir.1996) (materiality
requirement is not a sufficiency-of-the-evidence test).
Instead, any favorable evidence, regardless of whether the
defendant has made a request for such evidence, is "material" if "there
is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to
the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different."
Kyles, 514 U.S. at 433-34, 115 S.Ct. 1555 (quoting United
States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682, 105 S.Ct. 3375, 87 L.Ed.2d
481 (1985)); Frost, 125 F.3d at 382. A "reasonable probability"
is "a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome."
Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682, 105 S.Ct. 3375; United States v.
Presser, 844 F.2d 1275, 1281 (6th Cir.1988).
Schledwitz v. United States, 169
F.3d 1003 (6th Cir. 1999).
Our analysis must focus on the
contents of the memorandum not already known by Zuern. Although Zuern
presumably knew that he had threatened Hearst's life, Zuern did not
know that Hearst had notified Schweinefuss or that Schweinefuss had
written a memo documenting the death threat.
Zuern argues that, with the memo,
he could with greater confidence pursue the defense of "I planned to
kill Hearst, not a corrections officer." Specifically, he argues that
memo would have given him greater certainty that he could prove his
death threat to Hearst through credible testimony from Hearst and/or
Schweinefuss.
In order to reject the Brady
claim, we must find either that (1) the memorandum would not have
helped Zuern prove that he planned to kill Hearst, or (2) even if
Zuern had convinced the jury that he planned to kill Hearst, he would
still have been found guilty. We find that even assuming the
memorandum would have helped Zuern prove that he planned to kill
Hearst, nevertheless he would have been found guilty because the jury
would still have found that he had planned to kill a corrections
officer. The prosecution's theory (Zuern planned to kill a corrections
officer) and Zuern's proposed theory (Zuern planned to kill Hearst)
are not mutually exclusive, as Zuern could have planned to kill both.
After hearing evidence of Zuern's
deliberate and prolonged creation of a murder weapon, the jury
certainly could find that Zuern acted with prior calculation and
design to kill someone. The jury apparently concluded that this "someone"
was a corrections officer. Indeed, as Zuern did not pursue the "I
planned to kill Hearst" theory, this conclusion was the jury's only
reasonable alternative. However, presentation of the alternative would
not affect the result. Specifically, even if Zuern had used the memo
to persuade the jury that he planned to kill Hearst, we do not believe
there is a reasonable probability that the jury would have found that
Zuern had not planned to kill a corrections officer.
C.
Witness Lewis's Prejudicial Statement
During the direct examination of
Lewis, the prosecutor questioned him about a conversation he had with
Officer Ron Doyle a matter of hours before Zuern killed Pence:
Question:What did you tell Officer Doyle?
Answer: I told Officer Doyle, "Officer Doyle, can we talk, could we
rap? I'm telling you, you know, Zuern has a shank or a knife or
whatever you want to call it." I said, "He is crazy, man, he is in
here for murder, and he won't hesitate to do it again."
At that point, Petitioner's counsel
moved for a mistrial, which the court denied. The court did, however,
instruct the jury to disregard Lewis's comment:
The Court: Members of the jury, you are admonished at this time that
any testimony just offered was a gratuitous remark by the witness, and
is excluded from your consideration as any part of the evidence in
this matter.
The dispute here is not over the
propriety of Lewis's comments (which everyone agrees were improper),
but rather over the appropriate remedy. When reviewing the trial
decision of a federal district court, the standard of review for a
decision not to grant a mistrial is abuse of discretion. United
States v. Chambers, 944 F.2d 1253, 1263 (6th Cir. 1991). When
conducting habeas review of a trial decision of a state court not
touching on a specific provision of the Bill of Rights, the standard
of review is even higher: reversal is not warranted unless the comment
"was potentially so misleading and prejudicial that it deprived [the
defendant] of a constitutionally fair trial." Donnelly v.
DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637, 641-42 (1974) (noting that "not every
trial error or infirmity which might call for application of
supervisory powers correspondingly constitutes a 'failure to observe
that fundamental fairness essential to the very concept of justice'").
Specifically, habeas review of this state decision involves "the
narrow [review] of due process, and not the broad exercise of
supervisory power that [a federal appellate court] would possess in
regard to (its) own trial court." Id.
Given this standard of review, we
turn to the question of whether a mistrial should have been granted.
In United States v. Forrest, 17 F.3d 916 (6th Cir. 1994), we
listed five factors to consider in determining whether a mistrial is
warranted after an improper reference: (1) whether the remark was
unsolicited, (2) whether the government's line of questioning was
reasonable, (3) whether the limiting instruction was immediate, clear,
and forceful, (4) whether any bad faith was evidenced by the
government, and (5) whether the remark was only a small part of the
evidence against the defendant. Id. at 920.
In Forrest, the trial judge
specifically directed the prosecutor to warn a witness (an ATF agent)
not to testify to Forrest's criminal past. Id. Nonetheless, the
agent twice referenced the fact that Forrest had been imprisoned for
robbery. Id. Wefound that "the agents 'blurting'
seem[ed] anything but accidental," but that the trial judge had given
a clear admonition and the prosecution had offered ample other
evidence of guilt. Id. at 921. Although noting that it was a "close
question" we found no abuse of discretion in the district court's
failure to grant a mistrial. Id. That case was decided in the
stricter supervisory capacity of direct review, not in a habeas corpus
petition.
In Zuern's case, the first four
Forrest factors weigh in favor of the Warden (the remark was
unsolicited, the line of questioning reasonable, the limiting
instruction immediate and clear, and evidence of bad faith is absent).
Forrest involved an improper statement about a robbery
conviction in the context of a cocaine distribution trial. Zuern's
case involves an improper statement about a prior murder in the
context of a murder trial. The prejudice faced by Zuern is greater
than that faced by Forrest. Not only is murder a much more heinous
crime than robbery, but the inappropriate propensity evidence is of
far greater weight (compare "a robber is likely to distribute cocaine"
with "a murderer is likely to commit murder"). Nevertheless, the
failure to grant a mistrial did not constitute a denial of fundamental
fairness.
D.
Failure to Excuse Juror Taylor
In the morning before the first
day of the trial on which evidence was presented, Juror Beulah Taylor
overheard a television broadcast about Zuern's trial. Specifically,
she overheard "a version of what had happened, why [Zuern] was in [jail]
in the first place,[and] that he had been there previous[ly]." Taylor
told the court that she could be fair, but would rather not serve.
Zuern's counsel did not immediately request that she be removed, but
the following morning, after viewing the broadcast at issue, he moved
for a mistrial, or, in the alternative, to remove Taylor from the jury.
Taylor was brought before the court a second time, and she again
indicated that she could be fair. The trial court declined either to
excuse Taylor or to declare a mistrial.
When reviewing a federal district
court's actions in a case of alleged juror misconduct, this court
reviews for abuse of discretion under all the circumstances. United
States v. Shackelford, 777 F.2d 1141, 1145 (6th Cir. 1985). Again,
as we are conducting habeas review of a state decision, we must focus
on "the narrow [review] of due process, and not the broad exercise of
supervisory power that [a federal appellate court] would possess in
regard to (its) own trial court." Donnelly, 416 U.S. at 641-42.
In United States v. Rugiero,
20 F.3d 1387 (6th Cir. 1994), we listed four points to consider in
cases of possible improper juror contact: "(1) when a defendant
alleges that an unauthorized contact with a juror has tainted a trial,
a hearing must be held; (2) no presumption of prejudice arises from
such a contact; (3) the defendant bears the burden of proving actual
juror bias; and (4) juror testimony at the 'Remmer hearing' is
not inherently suspect." Id. at 1390. Both the Ohio Supreme
Court and the federal magistrate judge in this case found that Zuern
had waived the claim for juror misconduct, as Zuern's counsel did not
request Taylor's removal after the first hearing on the issue. However,
the trial court allowed Zuern's counsel to raise the juror misconduct
objection the next day, and ruled on the merits that Taylor would
remain on the jury. Reaching the merits, we find no jury misconduct
error warranting reversal. The trial court properly held a Remmer
hearing, and concluded – based on Taylor's assurances – that she could
serve as a fair and impartial juror. Zuern has not met his burden of
proving actual juror bias.
V.
In sum, we find that (1)
sufficient evidence supports the jury finding of aggravated murder,
(2) had the Schweinefuss memorandum been disclosed to the defense,
there is not a reasonable probability that the result of the
proceeding would have been different, (3) the failure to grant a
mistrial after Lewis's prejudicial statement did not constitute a
denial of fundamental fairness, and (4) the failure to excuse Juror
Taylor after she saw a television broadcast about Zuern's case did not
constitute a denial of fundamental fairness.
Accordingly, we
REVERSE the district court's
grant of habeas corpus on the basis of the Brady violation, and
we AFFIRM the denial of habeas
corpus on all other claims.
*****
Footnotes
1 In the first habeas claim, Zuern
argues that newly discovered evidence (specifically, subsequent
testimony from Lewis and the Schweinefuss memorandum and deposition)
establishes that he did not act with prior calculation and design. The
Supreme Court has held that newly discovered evidence does not
constitute a freestanding ground for federal habeas relief, but rather
that the newly discovered evidence can only be reviewed as it relates
to an "independent constitutional violation occurring in the
underlying state criminal proceeding." Herrera v. Collins, 506
U.S. 390, 400 (1993). Therefore, Zuern's first habeas claim is best
resolved by our decision on the alleged Brady violation (discussed
below).
2 Indeed, because Zuern did not raise
the defense of "I planned to kill Hearst," the jury's only reasonable
inference is that Zuern created the weapon to kill a corrections
officer.