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Ernest MARTIN
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
January 21,
1983
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth:
September 22,
1960
Victim profile: Robert Robinson,
70(store
owner)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Ohio on June 18,
2003
On January 21, 1983, Martin revealed a plan to his girlfriend,
Josephine Pedro, to rob Robinson's Drug Store. She attempted to
dissuade him but said Martin threatened her if she did not cooperate
in the robbery.
Martin then left the apartment and returned approximately ten
minutes later with a gun he had stolen from a security guard. Martin
told his girlfriend she was to go to the store and attempt to buy
medicine for a cold.
When Robert Robinson, owner of the store, unlocked the door to allow
her entrance, Martin planned to follow her in and rob the premises.
At approximately 12:45 a.m., as planned, Pedro arrived at the store
and knocked on the door. Upon recognizing her, Robert Robinson
unlocked the door to let her in. However, he locked the door again
before Martin had a chance to gain entrance. As Robert stood in
front of the door after locking it, two shots were fired through the
door, killing Robinson.
Police later returned and arrested Pedro and Martin for the murder
of Robinson. After several days in jail, Pedro told the police that
she had helped set up the robbery by going to the store and that
Martin had shot Robert Robinson. Soon afterwards, Martin and his
father contacted Pedro asking her to change her statement.
An acquaintance, Antoinette Henderson, testified that she lived with
Pedro for about five or six months until the middle of December
1982. During December she heard Martin say he was going to rob
Robinson's store. He then threatened her with a gun, warning her
that she had better not tell anyone of his plan.
Final Meal:
A cheeseburger, french fries, apple pie and Pepsi.
Final Words:
Written statement: "Jesus Christ was put to death on the false
testimony of those who received money in exchange for the lies they
told. Just the same, the state of Ohio has succeeded in its quest
for my life by way of perjured testimony and false witnesses who
were paid to tell the lies they did. However, there has never been
any hate nor desire of revenge in my heart for them, for I know God
will repay those for each and every one of their sins that have gone
forgotten."
In the death chamber, Martin spoke about three minutes in what
prison officials said was the longest final statement by a condemned
inmate since Ohio resumed executions in 1999.
The statements were
not recorded. Here are some excerpts as transcribed by prison
officials: "I know that God is in control and those who are here are
not responsible. Just as Jesus Christ was lied on and slandered, so
I have been treated the same way. I have no hatred. I know God is in
control and I pray that he will forgive us of our sins, forgive the
media people watching of their sins and all that they have done. As
the Bible says, let those without sin cast the first stone. God
forgave us all. To my family, I love you all. I know I did not live
a good life. Thank God for allowing my sister and nephew to be here
and brother Morgan for his support. Hug Momma for me. Take care
family. Take care media. God bless you all."
Received at DOC: 08/03/83- Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in
Lucasville, Ohio.
Ernest Martin,
(September 22, 1960 – June 18, 2003), was executed
by the State of Ohio for the murder of a Cleveland
store owner. He was convicted of the crime on July
8, 1983, and spent 19 years, 11 months, and 10 days
on death row while his case was appealed.
The
crime
On December 20, 1982, Ernel
Foster, a security guard, was robbed of his .38
caliber Smith & Wesson revolver by a black male,
while waiting at a bus stop in Cleveland, Ohio.
Foster later testified that he chased the offender
for a block and a half and was able to see his face.
He further noted that the offender's hair was in
small braids.
On February 1, 1983, Foster was
summoned to the police station to view a line-up
composed of six black males. Foster was able to
identify Ernest Martin, noting that his hair was
braided in the same manner as it appeared on
December 20, 1982. Later, Foster identified Martin
in the courtroom as the man who had taken his weapon.
Martin's girlfriend, Josephine
Pedro, testified that he had threatened her with a
gun earlier that year, telling her that he had
stolen the weapon from a security guard. She wrote
down the serial number of the gun on the back of an
envelope box. The number was identical to the serial
number of Foster's weapon except that the letter "D"
had been purposely transformed into a "9." Pedro
testified that this was done to make the number
sequence look like a telephone number in order to
ward off any suspicion.
Pedro further testified that in
the early hours of January 21, 1983, Martin revealed
a plan to rob Robinson's Drug Store. She attempted
to dissuade him but Martin threatened her if she did
not cooperate in the robbery. Martin then left the
apartment and returned approximately ten minutes
later with the gun he had taken from Foster.
Martin devised a plan whereby
Pedro was to go to the store and attempt to buy
medicine for a cold. When 70-year-old Robert
Robinson, owner of the store, unlocked the door to
allow Pedro's entrance, Martin planned to follow her
in and rob the premises.
Martin wore gray pants, tennis
shoes and a waist length black leather jacket. He
covered his face with a brown knit cap in which he
cut holes for his eyes to avoid identification. At
approximately 12:45 a.m., Pedro arrived at the store
and knocked on the door. Upon recognizing Pedro,
Robinson unlocked the door to let her in.
However, he locked the door again
before Martin had a chance to gain entrance. As
Robinson stood in front of the door after locking it,
two shots were fired through the door fatally
wounding him. After firing the shots Martin
allegedly went to the apartment to change his
clothes and then returned to the store to finish the
robbery.
Monty Parkey, an employee of
Robinson, was in the back room at the time of the
shooting. After hearing the shots and seeing what
had occurred, Parkey called an ambulance and the
police. He then instructed Pedro to go to Robinson's
house to get Mrs. Robinson.
Pedro complied and upon returning
was interviewed by the police concerning the events.
She gave them her name and address and stated she
knew nothing about the shooting. Martin was also
present at this time and talked to the police. Upon
completing her interview, Pedro returned to her
apartment.
When Pedro reached the apartment
she called her neighbor, Larry Kidd. Martin returned
approximately thirty-five minutes later. Pedro asked
Martin whether the evening's events had been worth
it. He showed her a pile of bills under a blanket
which he then took into the bathroom and explained
that the robbery netted $39.
Martin then drove Kidd and Pedro
to an "after hours" spot for drinks. After they sat
down at the table, Martin took two spent cartridges
from his pocket and placed them on the table. Kidd
remarked: "Mr. Robinson got shot twice, and you got
two cartridges." Martin did not respond to this
comment.
The
investigation
Several days after the shooting
the police again questioned Pedro and Martin. By
this time the two had put together a story for the
police that Pedro had gone to the store to get cough
medicine when the deceased was shot and that Martin
only came to the store after she had been gone for
an unusually long time.
On January 29, 1983, the police
returned and arrested Pedro and Martin for the
murder of Robinson. After several days in jail,
Pedro told the police that she had helped set up the
robbery by going to the store and that Martin had
shot the deceased.
Soon afterwards, Martin's father
contacted Pedro asking her to change her statement.
While visiting Martin in jail, Martin's father again
asked Pedro to change her story.
Trial
During the trial, the state
introduced a letter dated February 13, 1983, wherein
Martin asked Pedro to "tell the truth" and implicate
a man named "Slim" for the murder-robbery of
Robinson. An additional letter dated February 17,
1983, in which Martin again asked her to implicate
"Slim", was also introduced into evidence. Pedro has
continually denied that "Slim" had anything to do
with these crimes.
The state also offered another
letter into evidence which had been written by
Martin to Pedro when he was in jail in February 1981
for another offense. Pedro identified the letter and
read it into the record. The letter asked Pedro to
lie for Martin and to implicate someone else for the
commission of the offense for which Martin was
charged. Pedro admitted lying for Martin pursuant to
the letter in the previous trial for the other
offense.
Finally, Antoinette Henderson
testified that she lived with Pedro for about five
or six months until the middle of December 1982.
During December she heard Martin say he was going to
rob Robinson's store. Martin threatened her with a
gun, warning her that she had better not tell anyone
of his plan.
During the trial the defense
presented no witnesses, but sought to introduce into
evidence written statements of Pedro and Henderson.
The court denied this request finding the written
statements were not inconsistent as alleged by the
defense.
The jury found Martin guilty of
the aggravated robbery of Ernel Foster and of the
aggravated robbery and aggravated murder of Robert
Robinson with the specification of being the
principal offender of the aggravated murder while
committing or attempting to commit aggravated
robbery. After the mitigation hearing was conducted,
the jury recommended that he receive the death
penalty.
Appeals
Although Martin's appeals
centered on his arrest and his claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel, he also attempted to
introduce evidence of his innocence.
E.J. Rieves-Bey lived across the
street from the victim's store and witnessed someone
running away from the scene after hearing shots
fired. Within two weeks of the killing, he gave a
statement to the Cleveland police describing the man
he saw fleeing as 5'10" and 170 lbs, roughly
matching Martin. Approximately a month later, he
told a court-appointed investigator that the man was
"About six foot, two maybe three . . . Maybe about
180, 200 pounds." He also stated, "I know he's
taller than Ernest Martin, and Ernest Martin is
smaller, way smaller."
The State subpoenaed Rieves-Bey
to testify, but he arrived just as jury
deliberations began. The State sought to reopen its
case and present the testimony of Rieves-Bey. The
defense successfully objected, and deliberations
continued.
At the hearing on Martin's motion
for a new trial, Rieves-Bey described the man he saw
fleeing from the scene as "about six foot, 200
pounds." He also stated that the man was wearing "a
black coat, and a brown mask and sort of a hat."
He testified that several minutes
after he saw the fleeing man, he saw Martin walking
toward the crime scene, and that he was wearing "(a)
brown long coat, lighter, a brown coat." This
description corroborated Pedro's testimony that
Martin wore a black leather jacket and brown mask
with holes cut for eyes, prior to and during the
crime, and that when he returned to the store after
the shooting, he wore a "long grey coat."
Rieves-Bey gave a 1997 deposition
for purposes of Martin's habeas corpus action. He
was incarcerated at the time. He insisted that
Martin "wasn't the man" that he saw fleeing the
scene. During the deposition, he admitted that his
cocaine addiction had impaired his memory, and that
he couldn't remember giving testimony in 1983 about
the case.
Martin's allegations of
ineffective assistance of counsel were rejected by
the appellate courts, and the federal courts also
found that "although petitioner's arrest could have
been illegal, his identification by the security
guard and his girlfriend's statements to police were
not suppressible fruits of the tainted action. The
overwhelming nature of the evidence of guilt
precluded petitioner from showing that prejudice
resulted from any alleged deficiency in his
counsel's cross-examination."
Execution
At the time of his execution,
Martin maintained his innocence and compared himself
to Jesus Christ, saying he too had been "lied on and
slandered."
"I don't hold any grudges or
hatred because God is in control of all things", he
said. "I thank God for this life even though it
wasn't always a good one. You all know that I love
you", he continued. "Hug mama and let everybody know
that I love them and that we'll see each other again.
You take care, media. God bless all of you. That's
all I have to say."
Court cases
State v. Martin, No.
84-1660, Supreme Court of Ohio, 19 Ohio St. 3d
122; 483 N.E.2d 1157; 1985 Ohio LEXIS 520;
State v. Martin, NO.
69554, Court Of Appeals Of Ohio, Eighth
Appellate District, Cuyahoga County, 1996 Ohio
App. LEXIS 2422, June 13, 1996,
State v. Martin, NO.
66938, Court Of Appeals Of Ohio, Eighth
Appellate District, Cuyahoga County, 1995 Ohio
App. LEXIS 571, February 16, 1995
Martin v. Mitchell,
00-3357/00-3359, United States Court Of Appeals
For The Sixth Circuit, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS
6484, March 28, 2002,
Martin v. Mitchell,
Nos. 00-3357/00-3359, United States Court Of
Appeals For The Sixth Circuit, 280 F.3d 594;
2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 1827; 2002 FED App. 0050P
(6th Cir.), August 7, 2001
ProDeathPenalty.com
On January 21, 1983, Ernest Martin shot to death, Robert Robinson,
owner of Robinson's Drug Store in Cleveland, and stealing less than
$40. Robert had let Martin's girlfriend in the store to buy some
cold medicine, and Martin shot him through the glass door. Martin
used a gun he had stolen from a security guard.
Josephine Pedro testified that in the early hours of January 21,
1983, Martin revealed a plan to rob Robinson's Drug Store. She
attempted to dissuade him but said Martin threatened her if she did
not cooperate in the robbery.
Martin then left the apartment and
returned approximately ten minutes later with the gun he had stolen
from a security guard. Martin told his girlfriend she was to go to
the store and attempt to buy medicine for a cold.
When Robert
Robinson, owner of the store, unlocked the door to allow her
entrance, Martin planned to follow her in and rob the premises.
Martin wore gray pants, tennis shoes and a waist-length black
leather jacket. He covered his face with a brown knit cap in which
he cut holes for his eyes to avoid identification.
At approximately 12:45 a.m., Pedro arrived at the store and
knocked on the door. Upon recognizing her, Robert Robinson unlocked
the door to let her in. However, he locked the door again before
Martin had a chance to gain entrance. As Robert stood in front of
the door after locking it, two shots were fired through the door,
fatally wounding him. After firing the shots Martin allegedly went
to the apartment to change his clothes and then returned to the
store to finish the robbery.
An employee at the drugstore was in the back room at the time of
the shooting. After hearing the shots and seeing what had occurred,
he called an ambulance and the police. He then instructed Pedro to
go to Robinson's house to get his wife.
Pedro complied and upon
returning was interviewed by the police concerning the events. She
gave them her name and address and stated she knew nothing about the
shooting. Martin was also present at this time and talked to the
police. Upon completing her interview, Pedro returned to her
apartment.
Martin returned approximately thirty-five minutes later.
Pedro asked Martin whether the evening's events had been worth it.
He showed her a pile of bills under a blanket which he then took
into the bathroom and explained that he had stolen between $38 and
$39 from the store.
Several days after the shooting the police again questioned Pedro
and Martin. By this time the two had put together a story for the
police that Pedro had gone to the store to get cough medicine when
the deceased was shot and that Martin only came to the store after
she had been gone for an unusually long time.
On January 29, 1983,
the police returned and arrested Pedro and Martin for the murder of
Robinson. After several days in jail, Pedro told the police that she
had helped set up the robbery by going to the store and that Martin
had shot Robert Robinson.
Soon afterwards, Martin's father contacted Pedro asking her to
change her statement. While visiting Martin in jail, Martin's father
again asked Pedro to change her story.
During the trial, the state
introduced a letter dated February 13, 1983, wherein Martin asked
Pedro to "tell the truth" and implicate a man named "Slim" for the
murder-robbery of Robinson.
An additional letter dated February 17,
1983, in which Martin again asked her to implicate "Slim," was also
introduced into evidence. Pedro has continually denied that "Slim"
had anything to do with these crimes.
The state also offered another
letter into evidence which had been written by Martin to Pedro when
he was in jail in February 1981 for another offense. Pedro
identified the letter and read it into the record.
The letter asked
Pedro to lie for Martin and to implicate someone else for the
commission of the offense for which Martin was charged. Pedro
admitted lying for Martin pursuant to the letter in the previous
trial for the other offense.
Finally, another woman testified that
she lived with Pedro for about five or six months until the middle
of December 1982. During December she heard Martin say he was going
to rob Robinson's store. Martin threatened her with a gun, warning
her that she had better not tell anyone of his plan.
Final Statement Of Executed Inmate Ernest Martin
NBC4Columbus.com
AP June 18, 2003
Lucasville, Ohio -- The written statement of
Ernest Martin, a convicted killer who was executed Wednesday at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility:
"Jesus Christ was put to death on the false testimony of those
who received money in exchange for the lies they told. Just the same,
the state of Ohio has succeeded in its quest for my life by way of
perjured testimony and false witnesses who were paid to tell the
lies they did. However, there has never been any hate nor desire of
revenge in my heart for them, for I know God will repay those for
each and every one of their sins that have gone forgotten."
In the death chamber, Martin spoke about three minutes in what
prison officials said was the longest final statement by a condemned
inmate since Ohio resumed executions in 1999. The statements were
not recorded. Here are some excerpts as transcribed by prison
officials:
"I know that God is in control and those who are here are not
responsible. Just as Jesus Christ was lied on and slandered, so I
have been treated the same way. I have no hatred. I know God is in
control and I pray that he will forgive us of our sins, forgive the
media people watching of their sins and all that they have done. As
the Bible says, let those without sin cast the first stone. God
forgave us all. "To my family, I love you all. I know I did not live
a good life. Thank God for allowing my sister and nephew to be here
and brother Morgan for his support. Hug Momma for me. Take care
family. Take care media. God bless you all."
Martin's family did not release a final statement. The widow of
the murder victim, Robert Robinson, did not witness the execution.
State Executes Ernest Martin
By Tom Chansky - Ohio News Network
June 18, 2003
Lucasville - A man convicted of killing a Cleveland drug store
owner in 1983 was executed Wednesday morning. Ernest Martin was
pronounced dead at 10:11 a.m. Wednesday at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville.
Martin was convicted of killing
Cleveland drug store owner Robert Robinson during a robbery in 1983.
Robinson was shot twice after he let Martin’s accomplice into the
store. Martin made off with between $38 and $39 in the robbery.
Martin had claimed that another man committed the murder. However,
he had dropped a claim of mental retardation and on Tuesday, the U.S.
Supreme Court refused to stop the execution. In his last words,
Martin compared himself to Jesus Christ, who was slandered before
his execution.
Andrea Dean, Spokesperson for the Ohio Department of Execution,
says there were no execution witnesses representing Robinson’s
family. She says it's the first time that's happened since the state
resumed executions in 1999.
Martin was the eighth person executed by the state since the
death penalty was reinstated in 1999. Ohio last executed a death row
inmate in April, when 44-year-old David Brewer was put to death for
a 1985 murder.
Here are the inmates executed since 1999:
-Wilford Berry, February 1999 (Berry was Ohio’s first execution in
36 years.)
-Jay D. Scott, June 2001
-John Byrd, February 2002
-Alton Coleman, April 2002
-Robert Buell, September 2002
-Richard Fox, February 2003
-David Brewer, April 2003
-Ernest Martin, June 2003
Convicted Killer Moved to Prison Where Execution Scheduled
Canton Repository
Tuesday, June 17, 2003
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) - A convicted killer
was transferred Tuesday to the maximum-security prison where he is
scheduled to be executed. Ernest Martin, 42, is to be executed by
injection Wednesday for shooting store owner Robert Robinson to
death during a robbery in Cleveland in 1983.
The U.S. Supreme Court, without comment, refused Tuesday to block
Martin's execution. Martin had asked the court on June 6 for time to
argue he received inadequate legal help during his trial.
He says
his trial lawyer should have asked a judge to suppress evidence
because he was arrested without a warrant, said Tim Payne, an
assistant public defender representing Martin. Martin previously
said he was mentally retarded and should not be executed, under a
U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year.
However, Martin dropped that
claim after a psychologist hired by his attorneys determined he was
not mentally retarded. He was being held in a cell a few feet from
the execution chamber at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility,
said Andrea Dean, spokeswoman for the state prison system.
Martin, who had been held at Mansfield Correctional Institution,
requested a special meal of a cheeseburger, french fries, apple pie
and Pepsi, Dean said. On Tuesday, Martin spoke on the phone with his
mother, Frances Martin, 67, of Cleveland.
In Lucasville, he visited
with his son, Darnell Reese, and his daughter, Laketta Tate. He also
visited with his sister, Debra Reese, brother, Curtis Martin, and
Charles Morgan, a spiritual adviser. Morgan, his sister and brother
planned to witness the execution. Martin would be the eighth inmate
Ohio has executed since the state began carrying out the death
penalty again in 1999.
Two Families Prepare For One Execution
By Lila J. Mills - Cleveland Plain Dealer
June 18, 2003
Anna Robinson spotted the lined trench coat on display at the
Higbee Co. department store downtown and knew she had to buy it for
her husband of almost 40 years.
Days later, Robinson saw her 70-year-old
husband in the coat, but it wasn't how she imagined. Robert Robinson
lay dead on the floor of his Fairhill Road convenience store, shot
in the chest by bullets that smashed through the store's front door.
Police used the coat to cover his bloody body. It was Jan. 21, 1983.
"I begged him to get bulletproof glass on that door," Anna
Robinson, now 85, said recently, her voice rising and still filled
with fury more than 20 years after the shooting. "My husband was
good to everybody," she said. "He would give people food on credit.
He was a good man. "A life for a life, that's what I say. Period."
Today the state is scheduled to take Ernest Martin's life by
lethal injection as punishment for Robert Robinson's murder. Martin
filed an appeal yesterday with the U.S. Supreme Court, asking to
fire his lawyers and have the justices order Ohio to appoint him new
ones. Yesterday, in a cell just steps away from the execution
chamber, Martin requested a meal of a cheeseburger, fries and a
Pepsi, prison spokeswoman Andrea Dean said. She described Martin as
upbeat and still hopeful of a legal victory.
He was a 22-year-old roofer when police arrested him within days
of the shooting. A jury convicted him of aggravated murder,
aggravated robbery and carrying a concealed weapon that June and he
was sentenced to die. More than 200 men have been sentenced to death
since then.
Martin will be the eighth man executed and the first of
three Ohio executions scheduled in a 10-day span. Martin is now 42
years old and has spent the past 20 years on death row. Two of his
children, now 22 and 24, were preschoolers the last time they saw
him.
Martin has always maintained his innocence.
Investigators never found a gun nor any other physical evidence
connecting Martin to the crime, the public defender's office said.
But testimony from his girlfriend, Josephine Pedro, helped seal his
fate. Martin and Pedro lived together on Frank Avenue, about a block
from Robinson's Fairhill Cut-rate Foods.
The store, now the site of
an abandoned gas station, was at Cedar Avenue and Fairhill Road,
which has since been renamed Stokes Boulevard. A woman who had lived
with Martin and Pedro told investigators she heard them plan to rob
Robinson. Pedro later told detectives she and Martin had planned the
robbery, although not the shooting.
Pedro went to the store about 1 a.m. on Jan. 21 and persuaded
Robinson to open the door, saying she had a cold and wanted to buy
Nyquil. Robinson's policy was to lock the door at 6 p.m. and open it
only for customers he knew. He let Pedro in, but then locked the
door again.
When Martin showed up, he was surprised to find the door
locked, prosecutors said, and shot through the door twice, hitting
Robinson in the chest. Prosecutors contended that Martin then ran
home, changed clothes and came back to the store, feigning concern
over what had happened. Before police arrived, he also stole about
$99 from the cash register, prosecutors said.
Martin declined to be interviewed for this story.
His family members said they believe Martin's trial was unfair.
They believe that Pedro, who was never charged with a crime, was
coerced into testifying. And after a hearing with no jurors present,
the trial judge barred testimony from the lone eyewitness, a man who
lived near the store and looked out of his apartment window after
hearing gunshots.
That witness, now in jail himself, told Martin's
defense team he saw another man running from the store after the
shooting. "There are two different justices out there," Martin's
brother Erwin, 41, said recently. "There really are. We didn't have
any money so we didn't have any defense. Justice is not blind, she's
peeking." After a five-day trial, jurors deliberated for three more
days before announcing their verdict. Martin was sentenced to death
a month later - not long after Ohio reinstated capital punishment.
The Robinsons had lived together in an apartment behind their
store. That fall, Anna Robinson closed the store, unable to run it
herself. With just $3,000 in the bank, she moved into subsidized
housing nearby. She continues to live there today.
Also that year, Martin and his family started on a quest to keep
him alive. Martin, who dropped out of John Hay High School in the
11th grade, improved his reading and devoured law books to assist
his defense. He wrote a 235-page autobiography.
His 67-year-old
mother, Frances Martin, said she cashed out her life insurance
policy to buy him books and a typewriter so he could try "to do for
himself what his lawyers didn't." She keeps a trial transcript and
other documents in a duffel bag at her house. Martin's sister Debra
Reese has meticulously looked up the legalese in those documents and
written the definitions of words she doesn't understand in the
margins. "I don't really sleep no more," Frances Martin said
recently. "He's on my mind all the time. I go to bed with him on my
mind and I wake up with him on my mind."
Three months ago, the Martin family got his scheduled March 24
execution postponed so his lawyers could argue that he is mentally
retarded and unfit for execution. Martin was in learning-disabled
classes in school, sucked his thumb throughout elementary school and
wet the bed until he was a teenager, his lawyers said in a clemency
application. But a psychologist the defense hired for Martin found
he wasn't retarded, and one of his lawyers dropped the claim on June
6.
On Friday, Gov. Bob Taft refused a last-ditch plea for clemency.
Taft wrote: "There is no doubt that Mr. Martin is guilty of the
murder of Robert Robinson, although he has persistently refused to
take responsibility for his actions." Martin's public defender, Tim
Payne, said that Martin's case is an example of how capital
punishment is "freakishly and arbitrarily applied." "I don't think
that this case is appropriate for capital punishment," Payne said.
The killing, if Martin did it, "wasn't planned and it was at night
through a glass door."
Since learning of Taft's decision, Martin's family has been
preparing to make the trip to Lucasville to witness the execution.
"I can't fathom going to see my brother die," said Martin's sister
Debra, "but somebody has got to be there for him." Martin wrote to
her recently and said, "If death is the only way I can be free then
I'm not scared." Robinson's widow won't make the trip to Lucasville
because of ill health.
On a recent chilly day, she looked around her tiny, drafty
apartment - with towels stuffed under the doors and window to keep
out the cold - and pondered the past 20 years. "I don't think he
should live," she said quietly. "He shot [Robert] for no reason at
all. If that hadn't happened, my husband would have been living yet
and I never would have had to move here."
Ohio Executes Man Who Killed Pharmacy Owner in Robbery
By Robert Anthony Phillips
TheDeathHouse.com
June 18, 2003
LUCASVILLE, Ohio -- Convicted killer Ernest Martin was executed
by lethal injection at the state prison this morning for the 1983
murder of a Cleveland pharmacy owner during a robbery.
Martin, 42,
became the eighth condemned murderer put to death in Ohio since the
state resumed executions in 1999. Two more convicted killers are
scheduled for execution in June. Martin, whose last ditch appeal was
rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court, was led into the Ohio death
house at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility shortly after 10
p.m.
Martin used his final written and verbal statements to claim that
like Jesus Christ, he had been slandered and sentenced to death
because of false and perjured testimony. "Just as Jesus Christ was
lied on and slandered so I have been treated the same way," he said
from the Death House before he was executed. "I have no hatred. I
know God is in control and I pray he will forgive you for your sins..."
Martin said he knew he did not "live a good life," but thanked God
for His forgiveness and for allowing his sister, nephew and brother
to support him. "Hug mama for me," Martin told one of his relatives.
JoEllen Culp, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction, said the lethal chemicals began to
flow shortly after 10 a.m. and Martin was pronounced dead at 10:11
a.m. A jury found Martin guilty of the murder of Robert Robinson on
Jan. 21, 1983. Martin stole less than $40 during the robbery.
Girlfriend a Decoy
Prosecutors contend that Martin hatched a plan to send his
girlfriend, Josephine Pedro, into the store just after closing -time
to buy cold medicine. When Robinson unlocked the door to let her in,
Martin shot Robinson through a window.
Robinson had locked the door
after allowing Pedro inside the store, and there was not time enough
for Martin to slip through behind his girlfriend, prosecutors said.
Pedro and Martin were initially charged with the murder. However,
Pedro later fingered Martin as the killer. Martin maintained that
his former girlfriend and others who claim to have heard him talk
about the robbery are lying.
During his final appeals, Martin's lawyers had claimed the
condemned man was mentally retarded and he was given inadequate
legal counsel during his trial. Martin was orginally scheduled for
execution in March, but the Ohio Supreme Court postponed the death
date based on claims by defense lawyers that Martin was mentally
retarded. However, after a psychologist reported that Martin was not
mentally retarded, lawyers for Martin dropped those claims. The U.S.
Supreme Court last year barred the execution of mentally retarded
murderers who were sentenced to death.
The Ohio Attorney General's office countered that Martin had
penned an autobiography while imprisoned, maintained a "B" average
in high school and researched and filed some of his own legal
motions while on Death Row. Timothy Payne, an attorney with the Ohio
Public Defender's office, also charged that Martin was the victim of
dispproportional punishment. He noted that Josephine Pedro was not
charged in connection with the robbery. Martin was denied clemency
by Gov. Bob Taft. The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected Martin's last
appeal.
Ohio Death Row
ERNEST MARTIN
On December 20, 1982, Ernel Foster, a security guard, was robbed
of his .38 caliber Smith & Wesson revolver, Model 10, Serial No.
D431784, by a black male, while waiting at a bus stop on East 93rd
Street and Kinsman Avenue.
Foster testified that he chased the
offender for a block and a half and was able to see his face. He
further noted that the offender's hair was in small braids. On
February 1, 1983, Foster was summoned to the police station to view
a line-up composed of six black males.
Foster was able to identify
the defendant-appellant, Ernest Martin, noting that his hair was
braided in the same manner as it appeared on December 20, 1982.
Later, Foster identified appellant in the courtroom as the man who
had taken his weapon.
Appellant's girlfriend, Josephine Pedro, testified that he had
threatened her with a gun earlier that year, telling her that he had
stolen the weapon from a security guard at East 93rd and Kinsman.
Pedro wrote down the serial number of the gun on the back of an
envelope box. The number was identical to the serial number of
Foster's weapon except that the letter "D" had been purposely
transformed into a 119." Pedro testified that this was done to make
the number sequence look like a telephone number in order to ward
off any suspicion.
Pedro further testified that in the early hours of January 21,
1983, appellant revealed a plan to rob Robinson's Drug Store. She
attempted to dissuade him but the appellant threatened her if she
did not cooperate in the robbery. Appellant then left the apartment
and returned approximately ten minutes later with the gun he had
taken from Foster.
Appellant devised a plan whereby Pedro was to go to the store and
attempt to buy medicine for a cold. When Robert Robinson, owner of
the store, unlocked the door to allow Pedro's entrance, appellant
planned to follow her in and rob the premises.
The appellant wore
gray pants, tennis shoes and a waist length black leather jacket. He
covered his face with a brown knit cap in which he cut holes for his
eyes to avoid identification.
At approximately 12:45 a.m., Pedro
arrived at the store and knocked on the door. Upon recognizing
Pedro, Robinson unlocked the door to let her in. However, he locked
the door again before the appellant had a chance to gain entrance.
As Robinson stood in front of the door after locking it, two shots
were fired through the door fatally wounding him. After firing the
shots the appellant allegedly went to the apartment to change his
clothes and then returned to the store to finish the robbery.
Monty Parkey, an employee of Robinson, was in the back room at
the time of the shooting. After hearing the shots and seeing what
had occurred, Parkey called an ambulance and the police.
He then
instructed Pedro to go to Robinson's house to get Mrs. Robinson.
Pedro complied and upon returning was interviewed by the police
concerning the events. She gave them her name and address and stated
she knew nothing about the shooting. The appellant was also present
at this time and talked to the police. Upon completing her interview,
Pedro returned to her apartment.
When Pedro reached the apartment she called her neighbor, Larry
Kidd. Appellant returned approximately thirty-five minutes later.
Pedro asked appellant whether the evening's events had been worth it.
He showed her a pile of bills under a blanket which he then took
into the bathroom and explained that he had stolen between $38 and
$39 from the store.
Appellant then drove Kidd and Pedro to an "after hours" spot for
drinks. After they sat down at the table, appellant took two spent
cartridges from his pocket and placed them on the table. Kidd
remarked: "* * * [M]ust be a night of the duces [sic], you got a
duce [sic] and a quarter, and Mr. Robinson got shot twice, and you
got two cartridges." Appellant did not respond to this comment.
Several days after the shooting the police again questioned Pedro
and appellant. By this time the two had put together a story for the
police that Pedro had gone to the store to get cough medicine when
the deceased was shot and that appellant only came to the store
after she had been gone for an unusually long time.
On January 29,
1983, the police returned and arrested Pedro and appellant for the
murder of Robinson. After several days in jail, Pedro told the
police that she had helped set up the robbery by going to the store
and that the appellant had shot the deceased.
Soon afterwards, appellant's father contacted Pedro asking her to
change her statement. While visiting appellant in jail, appellant's
father again asked Pedro to change her story.
During the trial, the
state introduced a letter dated February 13, 1983, wherein appellant
asked Pedro to "tell the truth" and implicate a man named "Slim" for
the murder-robbery of Robinson.
An additional letter dated February
17, 1983, in which appellant again asked her to implicate "Slim,"
was also introduced into evidence. Pedro has continually denied that
"Slim" had anything to do with these crimes.
The state also offered another letter into evidence which had
been written by the appellant to Pedro when he was in jail in
February 1981 for another offense. Pedro identified the letter and
read it into the record.
The letter asked Pedro to lie for appellant
and to implicate someone else for the commission of the offense for
which the appellant was charged. Pedro admitted lying for the
appellant pursuant to the letter in the previous trial for the other
offense.
Finally, Antoinette Henderson testified that she lived with Pedro
for about five or six months until the middle of December 1982.
During December she heard the appellant say he was going to rob
Robinson's store. Appellant threatened her with a gun, warning her
that she had better not tell anyone of his plan.
During the trial the defense presented no witnesses, but sought
to introduce into evidence written statements of Pedro and Henderson.
The court denied this request finding the written statements were
not inconsistent as alleged by the defense.
The jury found the appellant guilty of the aggravated robbery of
Ernel Foster and of the aggravated robbery and aggravated murder of
Robert Robinson with the specification of being the principal
offender of the aggravated murder while committing or attempting to
commit aggravated robbery.
After the mitigation hearing was
conducted, the jury recommended that appellant receive the death
penalty. On July 8, 1983, the trial court sentenced appellant to
death. On July 13, 1983, appellant filed a motion for a new trial.
On May 9, 1984, the motion was denied. On May 23, 1984, the court
filed its required judgment entry and separate opinion, pursuant to
R.C. 2929.03(F), finding that the aggravating circumstances
outweighed the mitigating factors. The following day, the trial
court filed its opinion on the motion for a new trial.
On August 5, 1983, appellant appealed his conviction to the court
of appeals. The court of appeals affirmed the sentence of the trial
court and issued a separate opinion as required by R.C. 2929.05(A)
on September 27, 1984.
Prison Activist / National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty
TAKE ACTION NOW !
ERNEST MARTIN - Scheduled Execution Date: March 26, 2003 10:00 AM
EST Ohio
NCADP - Execution Alert - The state of Ohio is scheduled to
execute Ernest Martin, a black man, March 26 for the 1983 murder of
Robert Robinson in Cleveland. Martin allegedly shot him through the
glass door of Robinson's drug store, which the victim owned. Over
the past two decades, Martin has maintained his innocence, and
repeatedly claimed that his ex-girlfriend and two of her friends
gave perjured testimony at his trial.
In 2001, Martin gave his first-hand perspective of the criminal
justice system from death row: "It has no scruples or qualms against
presenting an inmate, police informant, or someone willing to
provide false evidence just so there will be a conviction...[which
is apparent] taking into consideration the many innocent men which
DNA testing has proven to be innocent..."
According to the state, Josephine Pedro went to Robinson's Drug
Store on the night of Jan. 21, 1983 because Martin had coerced her
to do so. After Robinson, the drug store owner let her in and locked
the door behind her, Martin shot him through the glass from outside,
killing him almost instantly. Pedro initially told police
investigators that she knew nothing about the shooting, but later
turned on Martin and said he had been planning to rob the store for
months.
Since his incarceration in 1983, Martin has spent much his time
praying and writing. He is a practicing Christian, and has written
extensively on his wrongful conviction and death sentence, as well
as issues concerning racial injustice in the application of capital
punishment in the United States. In Illinois, Gov. George Ryan
recently granted a blanket commutation to all the inmates on death
row because of problems with innocence cases and systemic biases.
These same issues plague the death penalty process in Ohio, and the
state should re-evaluate its system before proceeding with more
executions. Please write Gov. Bob Taft and the state of Ohio and
request clemency for Ernest Martin.
UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Nos. 00-3357/3359
Ernest Martin, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Betty Mitchell, Warden, Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United
States District Court for
the Northern District of
Ohio at Cleveland.
No.
95-02393--Donald C. Nugent,
District Judge.
Argued:
August 7, 2001
Decided and Filed: February
7, 2002
Before:
NORRIS, SILER, and DAUGHTREY,
Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED:
Timothy R. Payne, OHIO
PUBLIC DEFENDER'S OFFICE,
Columbus, Ohio, for
Appellant. Norman E. Plate,
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF OHIO, Columbus,
Ohio, for Appellee.
ON BRIEF: Timothy
R. Payne, Kyle E. Timken,
OHIO PUBLIC DEFENDER'S
OFFICE, Columbus, Ohio, for
Appellant. Jon W. Oebker,
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF OHIO, Columbus,
Ohio, for Appellee. Ernest
Martin, Mansfield, Ohio, pro
se.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
SILER,
Circuit Judge. Petitioner
Ernest Martin, an Ohio death
row inmate, appeals the
district court's denial of
his petition for a writ of
habeas corpus filed
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. �
2254(a). The respondent
warden will be referred to
as the "State." This court
granted Martin's application
for a certificate of
appealablity ("COA"),
allowing review of his
claims of prosecutorial
misconduct, ineffective
assistance of counsel, and
sufficiency of the evidence,
subparts of those issues,
and the question of
procedural default as it
relates to these issues. For
the reasons stated hereafter,
we affirm.
BACKGROUND
On
direct appeal, the Ohio
Supreme Court summarized the
relevant facts as follows:
On December 20,
1982, Ernel Foster, a
security guard, was
robbed of his .38
caliber Smith & Wesson
revolver, Model 10,
Serial No. D431784, by a
black male, while
waiting at a bus stop on
East 93rd Street and
Kinsman Avenue. Foster
testified that he chased
the offender for a block
and a half and was able
to see his face. He
further noted that the
offender's hair was in
small braids. On
February 1, 1983, Foster
was summoned to the
police station to view a
line-up composed of six
black males. Foster was
able to identify the
defendant-appellant,
Ernest Martin, noting
that his hair was
braided in the same
manner as it appeared on
December 20, 1982. Later,
Foster identified
appellant in the
courtroom as the man who
had taken his weapon.
Appellant's
girlfriend, Josephine
Pedro, testified that he
had threatened her with
a gun earlier that year,
telling her that he had
stolen the weapon from a
security guard at East
93rd and Kinsman. Pedro
wrote down the serial
number of the gun on the
back of an envelope box.
The number was identical
to the serial number of
Foster's weapon except
that the letter "D" had
been purposely
transformed into a "9."
Pedro testified that
this was done to make
the number sequence look
like a telephone number
in order to ward off any
suspicion.
Pedro further
testified that in the
early hours of January 21,
1983, appellant revealed
a plan to rob Robinson's
Drug Store. She
attempted to dissuade
him but the appellant
threatened her if she
did not cooperate in the
robbery. Appellant then
left the apartment and
returned approximately
ten minutes later with
the gun he had taken
from Foster.
Appellant devised a
plan whereby Pedro was
to go to the store and
attempt to buy medicine
for a cold. When Robert
Robinson, owner of the
store, unlocked the door
to allow Pedro's
entrance, appellant
planned to follow her in
and rob the premises.
The appellant wore gray
pants, tennis shoes and
a waist length black
leather jacket. He
covered his face with a
brown knit cap in which
he cut holes for his
eyes to avoid
identification. At
approximately 12:45 a.m.,
Pedro arrived at the
store and knocked on the
door. Upon recognizing
Pedro, Robinson unlocked
the door to let her in.
However, he locked the
door again before the
appellant had a chance
to gain entrance. As
Robinson stood in front
of the door after
locking it, two shots
were fired through the
door fatally wounding
him. After firing the
shots the appellant
allegedly went to the
apartment to change his
clothes and then
returned to the store to
finish the robbery.
Monty
Parkey, an employee of
Robinson, was in the
back room at the time of
the shooting. After
hearing the shots and
seeing what had occurred,
Parkey called an
ambulance and the police.
He then instructed Pedro
to go to Robinson's
house to get Mrs.
Robinson. Pedro complied
and upon returning was
interviewed by the
police concerning the
events. She gave them
her name and address and
stated she knew nothing
about the shooting. The
appellant was also
present at this time and
talked to the police.
Upon completing her
interview, Pedro
returned to her
apartment.
When Pedro reached
the apartment she called
her neighbor, Larry Kidd.
Appellant returned
approximately thirty-five
minutes later. Pedro
asked appellant whether
the evening's events had
been worth it. He showed
her a pile of bills
under a blanket which he
then took into the
bathroom and explained
that he had stolen
between $38 and $39 from
the store.
Appellant then
drove Kidd and Pedro to
an "after hours" spot
for drinks. After they
sat down at the table,
appellant took two spent
cartridges from his
pocket and placed them
on the table. Kidd
remarked: "* * * [M]ust
be a night of the duces
[sic ], you got a duce
[sic ] and a quarter,
and Mr. Robinson got
shot twice, and you got
two cartridges."
Appellant did not
respond to this comment.
Several
days after the shooting
the police again
questioned Pedro and
appellant. By this time
the two had put together
a story for the police
that Pedro had gone to
the store to get cough
medicine when the
deceased was shot and
that appellant only came
to the store after she
had been gone for an
unusually long time. On
January 29, 1983, the
police returned and
arrested Pedro and
appellant for the murder
of Robinson. After
several days in jail,
Pedro told the police
that she had helped set
up the robbery by going
to the store and that
the appellant had shot
the deceased. Soon
afterwards, appellant's
father contacted Pedro
asking her to change her
statement. While
visiting appellant in
jail, appellant's father
again asked Pedro to
change her story. During
the trial, the state
introduced a letter
dated February 13, 1983,
wherein appellant asked
Pedro to "tell the
truth" and implicate a
man named "Slim" for the
murder-robbery of
Robinson. An additional
letter dated February
17, 1983, in which
appellant again asked
her to implicate "Slim,"
was also introduced into
evidence. Pedro has
continually denied that
"Slim" had anything to
do with these crimes.
The state also
offered another letter
into evidence which had
been written by the
appellant to Pedro when
he was in jail in
February 1981 for
another offense. Pedro
identified the letter
and read it into the
record. The letter asked
Pedro to lie for
appellant and to
implicate someone else
for the commission of
the offense for which
the appellant was
charged. Pedro admitted
lying for the appellant
pursuant to the letter
in the previous trial
for the other offense.
Finally, Antoinette
Henderson testified that
she lived with Pedro for
about five or six months
until the middle of
December 1982. During
December she heard the
appellant say he was
going to rob Robinson's
store. Appellant
threatened her with a
gun, warning her that
she had better not tell
anyone of his plan.
During
the trial the defense
presented no witnesses,
but sought to introduce
into evidence written
statements of Pedro and
Henderson. The court
denied this request
finding the written
statements were not
inconsistent as alleged
by the defense.
The jury found the
appellant guilty of the
aggravated robbery of
Ernel Foster and of the
aggravated robbery and
aggravated murder of
Robert Robinson with the
specification of being
the principal offender
of the aggravated murder
while committing or
attempting to commit
aggravated robbery.
After the mitigation
hearing was conducted,
the jury recommended
that appellant receive
the death penalty. On
July 8, 1983, the trial
court sentenced
appellant to death. On
July 13, 1983, appellant
filed a motion for a new
trial. On May 9, 1984,
the motion was denied.
On May 23, 1984, the
court filed its required
judgment entry and
separate opinion,
pursuant to R.C.
2929.03(F), finding that
the aggravating
circumstances outweighed
the mitigating factors.
The following day, the
trial court filed its
opinion on the motion
for a new trial.
On August 5, 1983,
appellant appealed his
conviction to the court
of appeals. The court of
appeals affirmed the
sentence of the trial
court and issued a
separate opinion as
required by R.C.
2929.05(A) on September
27, 1984.
State v. Martin, 483
N.E. 2d 1157, 1159-61 (Ohio
1985).
E.J.
Rieves-Bey lived across the
street from the victim's
store and witnessed someone
running away from the scene
after hearing shots fired.
Within two weeks of the
killing, he gave a statement
to the Cleveland police
describing the man he saw
fleeing as 5'10" and 170 lbs,
roughly matching Martin.
Approximately a month later,
he told a court-appointed
investigator that the man
was "About six foot, two
maybe three . . . Maybe
about 180, 200 pounds." He
also stated, "I know he's
taller than Ernest Martin,
and Ernest Martin is smaller,
way smaller."
The
State subpoenaed Rieves-Bey
to testify, but he arrived
just as jury deliberations
began. The State sought to
reopen its case and present
the testimony of Rieves-Bey.
The defense successfully
objected, and deliberations
continued.
At
the hearing on Martin's
motion for a new trial,
Rieves-Bey described the man
he saw fleeing from the
scene as "about six foot,
200 pounds." He also stated
that the man was wearing "a
black coat, and a brown mask
and sort of a hat." He
testified that several
minutes after he saw the
fleeing man, he saw Martin
walking toward the crime
scene, and that he was
wearing "[a] brown long coat,
lighter, a brown coat." This
description corroborated
Pedro's testimony that
Martin wore a black leather
jacket and brown mask with
holes cut for eyes, prior to
and during the crime, and
that when he returned to the
store after the shooting, he
wore a "long grey coat."
Rieves-Bey
gave a 1997 deposition for
purposes of Martin's
habeas action. He was
incarcerated at the time. He
insisted that Martin "wasn't
the man" that he saw fleeing
the scene. During the
deposition, he admitted that
his cocaine addiction had
impaired his memory, and
that he couldn't remember
giving testimony in 1983
about the case.
The
United States Supreme Court
denied Martin's petition for
a writ of certiorari,
see Martin v. Ohio, 474
U.S. 1073 (1986), and later,
his petition for rehearing.
See Martin v. Ohio,
475 U.S. 1040 (1986).
Thereafter, Martin
unsuccessfully exhausted his
remaining post-conviction
state court remedies and
appeals.
In
1995, Martin filed a motion
for stay of execution and
appointment of qualified
federal counsel in the
district court. In 1996,
Martin filed his petition
for a writ of habeas corpus
in the district court. The
district court denied his
petition and a certificate
of appealability on November
2, 1999. In February 2000,
it denied his motion for
amended judgment. In
November 2000, we granted
Martin's application for a
certificate of appealablity
to review his claims of
prosecutorial misconduct,
ineffective assistance of
counsel and sufficiency of
the evidence.
In
sum, Martin makes the
following claims: (A)
ineffective assistance of
trial counsel, Herbert
Adrine and James Carnes, for
their failure to (1)
challenge Martin's
warrantless arrest; (2)
investigate and otherwise
prepare for trial; (3)
interview witnesses; (4)
subpoena Rieves-Bey; (5)
effectively cross-examine
witnesses; (6) investigate
and otherwise prepare for
the mitigation phase; (7)
object to jury instructions;
(8) object to the use of
presentence investigation
and psychiatric clinic
reports at mitigation; (B)
ineffective assistance of
appellate counsel for
failing to make the
transcript of his hearing on
his motion for a new trial
part of the record on his
direct appeal; (C)
prosecutorial misconduct at
trial by improperly
commenting on his failure to
testify; and (D)
insufficiency of the
evidence supporting his
conviction.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because
Martin filed his habeas
petition on June 20, 1996,
our review is governed by
the Antiterrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act
of 1996, Pub. L. No.
104-132, 110 Stat. 1214
(1996) ("AEDPA"). See
Lindh v. Murphy, 521
U.S. 320, 326-27 (1997).
A federal court is
authorized to grant a
writ of habeas corpus to
a person in custody
pursuant to a state-court
judgment, but only if
the adjudication of the
claim
(1)
resulted in a decision
that was contrary to, or
involved an unreasonable
application of, clearly
established Federal law,
as determined by the
Supreme Court of the
United States; or (2) resulted
in a decision that was
based on an unreasonable
determination of the
facts in light of the
evidence presented in
the State court
proceeding.
28
U.S.C. � 2254(d).
The Supreme Court
has declared that "a
federal habeas court
making the 'unreasonable
application' inquiry
should ask whether the
state court's
application of clearly
established federal law
was objectively
unreasonable."
Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. 362, 409
(2000). In its
elaboration on the
meaning of the term "objectively
unreasonable," the Court
stated that "a federal
habeas court may not
issue the writ simply
because that court
concludes in its
independent judgment
that the relevant state-court
decision applied clearly
established federal law
erroneously or
incorrectly. Rather,
that application must
also be unreasonable."
Id. at 411.
Finally, a district
court's denial of the
writ is subject to
de novo review.
See Rogers v. Howes,
144 F.3d 990, 992 (6th
Cir.1998).
Wilson v. Mitchell, 250
F.3d 388, 393-94 (6th Cir.
2001). We review the
district court's findings of
fact on a disposition of a
petition for a writ of
habeas corpus for clear
error. See Cone v. Bell,
243 F.3d 961, 967 (6th Cir.
2001).
Habeas
corpus relief is
available only if the
applicant first exhausts
remedies available in state
court. See 28 U.S.C.
� 2254(b)(1)(A). "If the
state court adjudicates and
rejects a claim on adequate
and independent state
grounds, such as a state
procedural rule that
precludes adjudicating the
claim on the merits, the
petitioner is barred by this
procedural default from
seeking federal habeas
review of such claim, unless
the petitioner can show
'cause and prejudice' for
the default." See Cone,
243 F.3d at 967 (citing
Coleman v. Thompson,
501 U.S. 722, 750-51 (1991);
Wainwright v. Sykes,
433 U.S. 72, 87-88 (1977)).
However, there are
several prerequisites
before the cause and
prejudice test is
applied in a federal
court to any kind of
state procedural default.
"First, the court must
determine that there is
a state procedural rule
that is applicable to
the petitioner's claim
and that the petitioner
failed to comply with
the rule." Maupin v.
Smith, 785 F.2d
135, 138 (6th Cir.1986).
"Second, the court must
decide whether the state
courts actually enforced
the state procedural
sanction." Id.
Third, the procedural
default must be an "independent
and adequate" state
ground on which the
state can rely to
foreclose review of a
federal constitutional
claim. County Court
of Ulster County, New
York v. Allen, 442
U.S. 140, 148 (1979). If
these three
prerequisites are met, a
federal court must
determine whether the
petitioner is able to
meet the cause and
prejudice test to excuse
the state procedural
default.
The cause and
prejudice standard is a
two-part test in which
the petitioner must: (1)
present a substantial
reason to excuse the
default, Coleman,
501 U.S. at 754; and (2)
show that he was
actually prejudiced as a
result of the claimed
constitutional error,
United States v.
Frady, 456 U.S.
152, 167-69 (1982).
If the claims
presented in the federal
court were never
actually presented in
the state courts, but a
state procedural rule
now prohibits the state
court from considering
them, the claims are
considered exhausted,
but are procedurally
barred. Coleman,
501 U.S. at 752-53.
Id.
In Coleman v. Mitchell,
244 F.3d 533 (6th Cir.
2001), we explained the last
resort for habeas
petitioners who fail to show
cause and prejudice for
procedural default:
When
a habeas petitioner has
failed to show cause for
not asserting his
ineffective assistance
of appellate counsel
claim properly in the
Ohio courts, a federal
court may not reach the
merits of the habeas
claim unless the
petitioner can show that
refusal to consider his
claim would result in a
fundamental miscarriage
of justice. The
fundamental miscarriage
of justice exception
requires a showing that
"in light of the new
evidence, no juror,
acting reasonably, would
have voted to find him
guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt."
Schlup v. Delo, 513
U.S. 298, 329 (1995).
Id.
at 540.
As
relevant here, we have
recognized that Ohio applies
res judicata to bar
the consideration of
constitutional issues that
were not, but could have
been, raised on direct
appeal.
In 1967, the Ohio
Supreme Court held that
"[c]onstitutional issues
cannot be considered in
post-conviction
proceedings under
Section 2953.21 et
seq., Revised Code,
where they have already
been or could have been
fully litigated by the
prisoner while
represented by counsel,
either before his
judgment of conviction
or on direct appeal from
that judgment, and thus
have been adjudicated
against him." State
v. Perry, 226 N.E.2d
104, 105-06 (Ohio 1967)
(syllabus para. 7). In
State v. Cole,
443 N.E.2d 169 (Ohio
1982), the state supreme
court articulated how
this procedural rule
would apply with respect
to ineffective
assistance of trial
counsel claims. The
court explained: "Where
defendant, represented
by new counsel upon
direct appeal,
fails to raise therein
the issue of competent
trial counsel and said
issue could fairly have
been determined
without resort to
evidence dehors [i.e.,
outside] the record,
res judicata is
a proper basis for
dismissing defendant's
petition for post-conviction
relief." Id. at
170 (syllabus).
Martin's
sufficiency of the evidence
claim was raised in his
direct appeal and thus
preserved for federal
habeas review.
B.
Ineffective Assistance of
Appellate Counsel
The
district court found that
Martin had not procedurally
defaulted his claim of
ineffective assistance of
appellate counsel. This
claim took issue with
counsel's failure to make
the transcript of the
hearing on Martin's motion
for a new trial part of the
record for his direct
appeal. This argument, and
other ineffective assistance
of appellate counsel claims,
as discussed infra,
were raised in Martin's
post-conviction application
for delayed reconsideration,
as authorized by State
v. Murnahan, 584 N.E.
2d 1204, 1209 (Ohio 1992).
The application was denied
by the Ohio Court of Appeals
in a one-sentence opinion
that did not state whether
the decision was on the
merits or based upon
procedural grounds. The
district court, while
recognizing this court's
holding in Simpson v.
Sparkman, 94 F.3d 199,
203 (6th Cir. 1996) (when a
state court of appeals
decision is silent as to the
grounds for denying a claim,
it is assumed that the court
observed its own procedural
bar), nonetheless ruled that
it was improper to assume
that the claim was rejected
upon a procedural ground,
because Murnahan
had just been decided, and
the brief Court of Appeals
opinion did not state the
basis of its denial as
required by Murnahan.
The State does not challenge
this finding or otherwise
argue that this claim was
not preserved for federal
habeas review.
C. Ineffective
Assistance of Trial Counsel
/ Prosecutorial Misconduct
Martin
raised his claims of
ineffective assistance of
trial counsel in post-conviction
proceedings rather than by
direct appeal. Thus, these
claims were barred by
res judicata pursuant
to Perry. See
Byrd, 209 F.3d at 520.
Nonetheless, he argues that
these claims are not
procedurally defaulted
because the last state court
rendering judgment on the
case did not clearly and
expressly state that its
judgment rested on a
procedural bar See
Harris v. Reed, 489
U.S. 255, 262 (1989). This
contention is not accurate.
When addressing these claims,
the court held:
We
find that these were all
matters that could have
been addressed on
defendant's direct
appeal since defendant
was represented by new
appellate counsel and
are therefore barred by
the doctrine of res
judicata as found by the
trial court.
State v. Martin, 1995
WL 66698, *3 (Ohio App.
1995). Martin simply ignores
this opinion and focuses on
a lower court opinion that
was not the last state court
rendering judgment on the
case. Thus, this argument is
without merit.
Martin
also argues that the
ineffective assistance of
his appellate counsel is
cause and prejudice for not
raising his claims of
ineffective assistance of
trial counsel on direct
appeal. In Martin's post-conviction
application for delayed
reconsideration, he raised
claims of ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel, based upon the
failure of his appellate
counsel to raise the
ineffectiveness of trial
counsel for not challenging
his warrantless arrest,
objecting to jury
instructions, obtaining the
attendance of Rieves-Bey,
and performing effectively
at the mitigation phase. If
Martin can show that he
received ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel that rose to the
level of a violation of his
Sixth Amendment rights, it
would excuse his procedural
default. See
Seymour v. Walker, 224
F.3d 542, 550 (6th Cir.
2000) (citing Murray v.
Carrier, 477 U.S. 478,
488 (1986)). In Mapes v.
Coyle, 171 F.3d 408
(6th Cir. 1999), we provided
guidance on considerations
relevant to claims of
ineffective assistance of
appellate counsel.
The
cases decided by this
court on the issue of
ineffective assistance
of appellate counsel
suggest the following
considerations that
ought to be taken into
account in determining
whether an attorney on
direct appeal performed
reasonably competently.
(1)
Were the omitted issues
"significant and obvious"?
(2)
Was there arguably
contrary authority on
the omitted issues?
(3)
Were the omitted issues
clearly stronger than
those presented?
(4)
Were the omitted issues
objected to at trial?
(5)
Were the trial court's
rulings subject to
deference on appeal?
(6)
Did appellate counsel
testify in a collateral
proceeding as to his
appeal strategy and, if
so, were the
justifications
reasonable?
(7)
What was appellate
counsel's level of
experience and expertise?
(8)
Did the petitioner and
appellate counsel meet
and go over possible
issues?
(9)
Is there evidence that
counsel reviewed all the
facts?
(10) Were the omitted
issues dealt with in
other assignments of
error?
(11) Was the decision to
omit an issue an
unreasonable one which
only an incompetent
attorney would adopt?
Id.
at 427-28.
The
government responds by
arguing that Martin waived
this issue by not arguing
cause and prejudice before
the district court. Martin
submitted proposed findings
of fact and conclusions of
law to the district court
which included the general
statement, "In this case,
the ineffective
representation received by
Ernest Martin both at trial
and in his direct appeals
resulted in any procedural
default found to exist and
was so egregious as to
produce a miscarriage of
justice and to justify the
exercise of this Court's
equitable discretion to
grant habeas review of any
and all claims found to be
otherwise defaulted."
However, his claims of
ineffective assistance of
appellate counsel on his
habeas petition were
limited to the failure of
appellate counsel to have
the transcript of the
hearing on his new trial
motion made part of the
record on appeal.
Excusing
procedural default for
"cause and prejudice" and a
grant of relief for
ineffective assistance of
counsel involves an
examination of whether
prejudice occurred, see
Frady, 456 U.S. at
167-69; Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S.
688, 694 (1984). Thus, if
Martin's underlying
ineffective assistance of
trial counsel arguments lack
merit, he cannot show "cause
and prejudice" via
ineffective assistance of
appellate counsel. Of course,
our procedural default
analysis is ultimately
complicated by the fact that,
although Martin apparently
preserved ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel arguments for
federal review through his
Murnahan
application, he only
presented one such argument
with specificity on his
habeas petition and
that argument did not
include his claim that
appellate counsel should
have raised ineffective
assistance of trial counsel
with regard to the merits he
attempts to present in this
action.
Just
prior to the Mapes
court's recital of the
considerations relevant to
the constitutional
effectiveness of appellate
counsel, it noted that
Mapes's claim of ineffective
assistance of trial counsel
at the mitigation stage was
procedurally defaulted, but
could be addressed in
considering whether
appellate counsel was
ineffective in failing to
raise it on direct appeal.
Mapes, 171 F.3d at
427. Like Martin, Mapes
raised ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel, with regard to
mitigation, in a post-conviction
proceeding, id. at
412; however, unlike here,
Mapes's habeas
petition also sought relief
on this specific ground.
Another
concern in this regard is
the fact that our COA did
not grant review of the
ineffective assistance of
appellate counsel claims
that charged ineffective
assistance of trial counsel.
Of course, we would have no
reason to do so since these
specific issues were not
raised in the habeas
petition or considered
by the district court. The
COA did provide that the
parties could address the
question of procedural
default related to the merit
issues upon which the COA
was granted. Inasmuch as the
merits of the ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel arguments are
hopelessly intertwined with
the procedural default
arguments regarding the
merit claims upon which we
granted review, our grant of
review on procedural default
encompasses these claims.
At
oral argument, the State
conceded that Martin's
ineffective assistance of
counsel arguments that
relate to the performance of
his counsel at the
mitigation stage required an
examination of evidence
dehors the record and
that these claims therefore
were not procedurally
defaulted.
Martin
makes essentially the same
procedural default argument
with regard to his claim of
prosecutorial misconduct. In
claim O(c) of his post-conviction
application for delayed
reconsideration, he argued
that he received ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel because his counsel
had not argued that the
prosecutor had improperly
commented on his failure to
testify. He argues that
appellate counsel's
ineffectiveness in this
regard is cause and
prejudice and thus excuses
his failure to raise the
issue on direct appeal. He
did not raise this argument
before the district court.
Martin's
failure to raise ineffective
assistance of counsel and
prosecutorial misconduct on
direct appeal resulted in
procedural default. He
raised the merits of these
claims in his ineffective
assistance of appellate
counsel on his Murnahan
application, but he did not
petition the district court
for habeas relief
in this regard. Thus, our
discussion of the merits of
these claims, save the
effectiveness of his counsel
at mitigation, is limited to
his cause and prejudice
arguments.
II.
Ineffective Assistanceof Counsel
"The
benchmark for judging any
claim of ineffectiveness
must be whether counsel's
conduct so undermined the
proper functioning of the
adversarial process that the
trial cannot be relied on as
having produced a just
result." Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 686 (1984).
First, the
defendant must show that
counsel's performance
was deficient. This
requires showing that
counsel made errors so
serious that counsel was
not functioning as the "counsel"
guaranteed the defendant
by the Sixth Amendment.
Second, the defendant
must show that the
deficient performance
prejudiced the defense.
This requires showing
that counsel's errors
were so serious as to
deprive the defendant of
a fair trial, a trial
whose result is reliable.
Id.
at 687. Both prongs of the
inquiry are mixed questions
of law and fact reviewed
de novo. See id.
at 698.
A.
Ineffective Assistance of
Trial Counsel
1. Failure to
challenge Martin's
warrantless arrest.
Martin
argues that his counsel
should have moved to
suppress evidence that he
contends was the fruit of
his January 29, 1983
warrantless arrest at the
apartment he shared with
Pedro. The district court
held that this challenge
failed because the police
had probable cause to arrest
Martin. Martin points out
that, absent exigent
circumstances, police
officers are required to
secure an arrest warrant
prior to arresting a suspect
in his home. See Payton
v. New York, 445 U.S.
573, 587-90 (1980). The
State responds by arguing
that New York v. Harris,
495 U.S. 14, 17-18 (1990),
demonstrates that Martin's
warrantless arrest would not
have entitled him to have
the subsequent
identification by Foster and
Pedro's statement to police
suppressed.
Martin
does not argue that the
police lacked probable cause
to arrest him. Thus,
although Martin's arrest
could have been illegal, his
identification by Foster and
Pedro's statement to police
were not suppressible fruits
of this tainted action.
See id. As any motion
to suppress this evidence
would have failed, Martin
cannot show how the failure
to make the motion was a
result of his counsel's
deficient performance or
that the failure resulted in
prejudice to his defense.
Accordingly, Martin cannot
show that his appellate
counsel rendered ineffective
assistance by failing to
raise this issue on direct
appeal, and, therefore, he
cannot show cause and
prejudice for his procedural
default in this regard.
2.
Failure to investigate and
prepare for trial.
Martin
argues that his trial "counsel
failed to adequately prepare
the case and failed to
conduct minimal
investigation." Specifically,
he takes issue with
counsel's alleged failure to:
(1) retain the services of
experts such as a ballistics
expert or a psychologist for
purposes of mitigation; (2)
adequately prepare for
cross-examination of the
State's witnesses, to wit,
(a) to examine the statement
that Antoinette Henderson
gave to police, which
provided probable cause for
his arrest; and (b) to
contact and/or interview
Martin's mother, brother,
any of the State's witnesses,
and Rieves-Bey. Martin did
not raise this issue in his
direct appeal; thus, these
issues are procedurally
defaulted. However, we will
review the merits of these
issues for purposes of cause
and prejudice analysis.
As evidence of his
counsel's failings, Martin
points to a fee application,(1)
which shows that one of two
counsel spent 31 hours
preparing for trial. What he
does not show, however, is
how the retention of experts,
an examination of
Henderson's statement, and
contacting and/or
interviewing his family
members would have been
beneficial to his defense.
Thus he has shown no
prejudice with regard to
these alleged failings.
He
argues that Rieves-Bey's
belief that Martin was not
the man he saw fleeing from
the scene of the crime shows
that the failure to secure
this testimony prejudiced
his case. As stated above,
Rieves-Bey's statements,
while inconsistent with
regard to the description of
the fleeing man,
corroborated the factual
account of events testified
to by Pedro. Also, Rieves-Bey's
reliability as a witness is
questionable at best, given
the inconsistencies in his
statements and testimony,
and his admission of drug
use and its effect on his
memory. Both the State and
the defense sought to secure
Rieves-Bey's testimony, but
he could not be located in
time to appear at trial. His
testimony would have been
detrimental to Martin's
defense and its absence will
not support a finding that
his trial counsel performed
ineffectively, that his
appellate counsel was
ineffective for not raising
the issue on appeal, or that
he suffered prejudice by
these alleged failings.
3.
Ineffective cross-examination
Martin
argues that his trial
counsel rendered ineffective
assistance by failing to:
(1) effectively
cross-examine Pedro
regarding: (a) the
inconsistency between
Pedro's and Kidd's testimony
and Pedro's previous
statement concerning whether
Martin dropped the two off,
or went inside with them, at
an after-hours establishment;
(b) Pedro's "falling out"
with Henderson and the
question of whether
Henderson held a grudge
against Pedro and Martin;
(c) Pedro's rendition of how
she found money at
Robinson's store; (d)
Pedro's testimony that she
had argued with Martin on
the day of their arrests;
and (2) effectively
cross-examine Henderson,
regarding: (a) her grudge
against Martin; and (b)
inconsistency between her
testimony and Pedro's
testimony about overhearing
discussions of the plan to
rob Robinson.
Martin's
arguments with regard to
effective cross-examination
of Pedro and Henderson are
without merit. Martin points
only to attenuated
collateral facts and
nonexistent inconsistencies
in making this argument.
Where arguably material
inconsistencies exist, such
as Henderson's and Pedro's
recollections of when the
robbery was discussed, other
evidence (Foster's testimony
about the theft of the gun,
ballistics evidence, Kidd's
testimony about Martin's
possessing empty shell
casings) corroborates or
independently proves the
facts that Martin contends
effective cross-examination
would have questioned. In
sum, the overwhelming nature
of the evidence of guilt
precludes Martin from
showing prejudice resulting
from any alleged deficiency
in his counsel's cross-examination.
B.
Mitigation
Martin
makes three ineffective
assistance of counsel
arguments related to the
mitigation phase of his
capital conviction: (1)failure
to investigate or prepare
for mitigation; (2)failure
to object to a jury
instruction on the role of
the jury with regard to the
imposition of the death
sentence; and (3) counsel's
request for and the
preparation and introduction
of a presentence
investigation report and a
psychiatric clinic report.
1.Failure
to investigate and
otherwise prepare for
the mitigation phase.
Martin
argues that his counsel's
most egregious failings
occurred during the
mitigation stage of the
trial. He contends that an
examination of what occurred
(or did not occur) prior to
and at the mitigation
hearing proves that his
counsel failed to
investigate or otherwise
prepare for sentencing.
Counsel made no opening
argument at mitigation. They
called three witnesses:
probation officer Joanna
Hairston, who testified to
place her presentence report
into evidence; Martin's
mother; and his grandmother.
Martin's reply brief also
points to statements that
his counsel made to the
judge as evidence of
prejudice and/or total
abandonment.
Martin
claims that his counsel
failed to prepare for the
mitigation hearing by
failing to conduct an
investigation into his
background. He points to the
failure of counsel to
contact his immediate family
members, save counsel's "talking"
with his father and
requesting a written
statement from his mother.
He does note the possibility
of "limited contact [between
counsel and] other family
members at the courthouse on
the day of the hearing." He
lists eight family members
that have stated, through
affidavits, that they were
ready and willing to testify
at mitigation but were not
interviewed by counsel.
Martin does not show what
they would have testified to,
or how such testimony could
have aided him at sentencing.
Martin
also takes issue with his
counsel's failure to collect
records and documentary
evidence pertinent to his
medical, mental health,
educational, employment,
juvenile, and incarceration
histories. In his arguments,
Martin points to two
instances where the trial
judge took an exceptionally
active role (in his view,
taking the place of counsel
upon realizing their
deficiencies) at the
mitigation hearing. As
relevant to this argument,
he points to the trial
judge's independent
procurement of his records
from the Mansfield
Reformatory and the "Human
Services Agency." A
discussion of this
information occurred outside
of the presence of the jury.
The judge called the
reformatory's warden, who
informed the judge that a
psychological profile
resulting from interviews
and testing revealed "nothing
extraordinary that would
trigger their interests in
having further psychiatric
examinations of treatment
done of [sic] the
man." The judge later
provided defense counsel
with a letter from the
warden that was consistent
with their previous
conversation about the
records. Defense counsel
concluded that the letter
was of no value for
mitigation, but made it part
of the record for "appellate
purposes."
Mrs.
Martin's affidavit states
that counsel did not prepare
her to testify, and that she
did not know that she would
testify until the day of the
hearing. A review of her
testimony shows that it
described the following:
Martin's problems with
juvenile court and school;
his institutionalization as
a juvenile; her being on
welfare during his youth;
the lack of financial
support from Martin's father;
Martin's abnormal behavior
at school, which led to his
referral to the Child
Guidance Center; his
psychiatric testing at
school; his abuse at the
hands of her alcoholic
husband; his physical and
psychological injuries that
resulted from a gas
explosion; his dropping out
of school to work for money
to purchase adequate
clothing; and other
employment history. This
testimony and the probation
report apparently provided
the factual basis for the
one mitigating factor that
the trial judge found -
Martin's background,
although the court concluded
that it was outweighed by
the aggravating circumstance
of the crime.
After
Mrs. Martin's testimony, the
defense stated that it had
nothing further to offer.
The judge then began calling
into the audience, inquiring
as to whether other family
members were present and
wished to testify. This
constitutes the other action
by the judge that Martin
contends demonstrates his
counsel's ineffectiveness at
the hearing. When the judge
asked Martin's father, "Don't
you want to come up here and
speak for your son?", he
replied, "You mean come now?"
Defense counsel then stated
that Martin's father did not
want to testify, and the
judge asked, "You feel that
would not be helpful to the
defendant?", to which
counsel responded, "It might
not be in the best interest."
The judge then inquired
whether Martin's counsel
wanted to talk to a lady in
the courtroom. Counsel
responded, "I would like the
record to show, Judge, that
this is not the first time
we have talked to Mr.
Wilkins about testifying . .
. . Mr. Adrine [co-counsel]
has been in constant
communication with him. Up
to this point, they were
fine, but now, there seems
to be some interest - -"
Adrine then interrupted,
indicating that Martin's
grandmother would testify.
The judge then stated,
"Okay. Bring in the jury."
Earlier in the proceeding,
Adrine stated, "Yes, we
might further state for the
record, that we have been in
constant contact with the
family outside, inside,
during the course of the
hearing, and we have
discussed the matters fully
with both mother and father,
the brother, sister, and by
telephone we have had
several conversations."
Martin's
grandmother, Hattie Mae
Johnson, then testified
about the following facts:
she took care of Martin when
he was a baby and when he
was five and six years old;
he wanted to go to church
with her at that age; she
cooked for Martin and his
siblings and their frequent
hunger as children was due
to a lack of financial
support from their father;
Martin's mother had a hard
time raising her children
due to her asthma and
resulting inability to work
steadily; and Martin's
limited contact with his
father and their
relationship was not a
typically "tight" one
between father and child.
Both
parties then indicated they
had nothing further and
closing statements followed.
Defense counsel gave a
closing statement in which
he attempted to convey a
metaphor which analogized
Martin to a knotty "cord of
wood" that society had
unjustly cast aside at an
early age. He concluded by
stating:
If Ernest Martin is
guilty of this, I say,
let's improve. If he is
going to a [sic]
institution, let's see
if we can't do something
to change the outlook or
the view or maybe his
like that cord of wood,
and all he is worth is
casting aside, or
putting it in a wood
burning stove.
I don't know, but
this will be your choise
[typo]. My Bible always
says, judge, and says
judge thee not - we have
to be careful as to
whether you want the
same judgment.
Thank you again.
Martin
argues that the course of
these proceedings shows his
counsel's complete failure
to investigate mitigating
evidence and that this
insufficiency was so severe
that we should infer
prejudice pursuant to
United States v. Cronic,
466 U.S. 648, 658 (1984).
In
regard to the cooperation of
Martin, Carnes stated, "We
found him to be [a] very
difficult, uncooperative
client." Co-counsel Adrine,
added, "And even hostile at
times." Id. Martin
argues that this statement
shows that "Defense counsel
was [sic]
sabotaging their own
client's case." Martin's
lack of cooperation is
evident from an exchange
between his counsel and the
judge in which counsel
stated that Martin wanted to
give an oral statement, not
under oath, at sentencing,
but that he was unwilling to
tell counsel what the
statement would relate, even
though they had advised him
that he should do so.
He
also argues that defense
counsel impeached his
credibility by telling the
judge, just after the
exchange described
immediately above, that he
had admitted lying to them
about a letter "relating to
a different matter." They
argue that these two
statements further provide
evidence of "counsel's
abandonment of Mr. Martin."
In
support of these
propositions, he cites
several recent cases from
this circuit in which
habeas relief has been
granted for the failure of
counsel to investigate at
mitigation. This court's
opinion in Carter v.
Bell, 218 F.3d 581 (6th
Cir. 2000), reviewed these
cases and Williams v.
Taylor, 529 U.S. 362
(2000), as follows:
In
Williams, the
Supreme Court found that
trial counsel's
representation of the
petitioner during the
sentencing phase fell
short of professional
standards . . . .
* * *
In
Mapes v. Coyle,
171 F.3d 408, 426 (6th
Cir.1999), this Court
noted that "when a
client faces the
prospect of being put to
death unless counsel
obtains and presents
something in mitigation,
minimal standards
require some
investigation." Moreover,
in Rickman [v.
Bell, 131 F.3d 1150
(6th Cir. 1997)], this
Court found deficiencies
so severe as to dispense
with the need for a
showing of prejudice
under Strickland.
131 F.3d at 1157. The
Court noted that trial
counsel "did not
interview any witnesses,
conduct any legal
research, or obtain and
review any records,
including those
regarding [petitioner's]
employment, education,
mental health, social
services contacts,
military service, or
prison experience."
Id. Further, trial
counsel's trial
preparation "consisted
solely of interviews he
conducted with [the
petitioner]." Id.
Although we note that,
unlike Rickman,
there was no hostility
on the part of trial
counsel in this case, we
find that Rickman
stands for the relevant
proposition that the
complete failure to
investigate, let alone
present, existing
mitigating evidence is
below an objective
standard of reasonable
representation, and may
in fact be so severe as
to permit us to infer
prejudice.
In Groseclose
v. Bell, this Court
considered a Tennessee
case in which trial
counsel "almost entirely
failed to investigate
the case; he never, for
example, interviewed the
crime-incident witnesses
or any family members."
130 F.3d 1161, 1166 (6th
Cir.1997). In
Groseclose, trial
counsel failed to
present mitigating
evidence during the
sentencing stage of the
proceedings. Among other
things, trial counsel
failed to present the
defendant's military
record, religious and
volunteer activities, or
experts who could
testify about
sociological or
psychological factors.
See id. Under
these circumstances, the
Court found the
representation was
objectively unreasonable.
Seeid.
at 1170-71.
In
Austin v. Bell,
126 F.3d 843, 848 (6th
Cir.1997), this Court
held that the failure of
trial counsel "to
investigate and present
any mitigating evidence
during the sentencing
phase so undermined the
adversarial process that
[defendant's] death
sentence was not
reliable." Relying on
this Court's holding in
Glenn v. Tate,
71 F.3d 1204, 1206-08
(6th Cir.1995), that
counsel provided
ineffective assistance
where information was
not presented to the
jury at sentencing
because counsel made
little attempt to
prepare for the
sentencing phase, the
Austin court
found that "given that
several of [defendant's]
relatives, friends,
death penalty experts,
and a minister were
available and willing to
testify on his behalf,"
failure to present any
mitigating evidence "does
not reflect a strategic
decision, but rather an
abdication of advocacy."
Austin, 126
F.3d at 849.
Id.
at 595. In Coleman v.
Mitchell, 244 F.3d 533,
544-45 (6th Cir. 2001), we
clarified the import of some
of these recent cases as
follows:
We
recognized in Mapes
v. Coyle, 171 F.3d
408 (6th Cir.), cert.
denied, 528 U.S.
946 (1999):
Under the Ohio statute,
a capital defendant
found guilty of a death
specification has to
present some
mitigating evidence in
order to avoid the death
penalty. If a jury has
nothing to weigh against
the aggravating
circumstance, it almost
certainly must find that
the aggravating
circumstance outweighs
the (nonexistent)
mitigating circumstances,
and recommend death.
Id. at 426.
And, the Mapes
court also stated that "when
a client faces the
prospect of being put to
death unless counsel
obtains and presents
something in mitigation,
minimal standards
require some
investigation." Id.
Recently, in Carter
v. Bell, 218 F.3d
581, 600 (6th Cir.2000),
and Skaggs v. Parker,
235 F.3d 261, 269, 271
(6th Cir.2000), this
court has held that
failure to investigate
possible mitigating
factors and failure to
present mitigating
evidence at sentencing
can constitute
ineffective assistance
of counsel under the
Sixth Amendment.
* * *
While
recent decisions from
this court have
emphasized that failure
to present mitigating
evidence at sentencing
may constitute
ineffective assistance
of counsel under the
Sixth Amendment, counsel
may nevertheless make a
reasonable decision that
investigation is not
necessary. SeeStrickland, 466
U.S. at 691. Indeed, the
Strickland
Court noted that "[t]he
reasonableness of
counsel's actions may be
determined or
substantially influenced
by the defendant's own
statements or actions.
Counsel's actions are
usually based, quite
properly, on informed
strategic choices made
by the defendant and on
information supplied by
the defendant." Id.
Id.
(emphasis in original). We
then rejected Coleman's
claim that the failure of
his counsel to investigate
mitigating evidence amounted
to ineffective assistance
because Coleman had been
uncooperative and had
directed his counsel to
present limited evidence at
the hearing, instructing him
"not to investigate
mitigating factors." Id.
at 545-46.
Campbell
v. Coyle, ___ F.3d ____
, 2001 WL 863560 (6th Cir.
2001), another case
involving a habeas
petition filed by an Ohio
death row inmate, further
illuminates the standards
applicable to ineffective
assistance of counsel
arguments related to capital
sentencing proceedings. The
Campbell court
stated:
[W]e
note that the cases
where this court has
granted the writ for
failure of counsel to
investigate potential
mitigating evidence have
been limited to those
situations in which
defense counsel have
totally failed to
conduct such an
investigation. In
contrast, if a
habeas claim 'does
not involve a failure to
investigate but, rather,
petitioner's
dissatisfaction with the
degree of his attorney's
investigation,' the
presumption of
reasonableness imposed
by Strickland
will be hard to overcome.
Id.
at *19 (citing Lewis v.
Alexander, 11 F.3d
1349, 1353 (6th Cir.1993)) (emphasis
added). The court then
rejected the petitioner's
claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel at
sentencing, which were based
upon the alleged failure of
his counsel to discover that
he suffered from post-traumatic
stress disorder ("PTSD"),
because the petitioner had
not pointed to anything in
the record that showed he
suffered from PTSD or any
other psychological disorder.
Id. at 22. The
court stated:
We also note that,
unlike in Seidel
[v. Merkle,
146 F.3d 750, 752 (9th
Cir. 1998)]and
Glenn [cited
supra],
Campbell has not pointed
to anything in his
childhood medical
records indicating that
he has either PTSD or
some form of brain
damage. He has never
been diagnosed or
treated for PTSD,
whereas the medical
records in Seidel
explicitly noted the
defendant's mental
afflictions. See
Seidel, 146 F.3d at
755-56. At most,
Campbell's childhood
medical records would
have provided another
list of people to
interview. These former
physicians and
healthcare workers,
Campbell argues, would
have been able to expose
his mental condition.
This is much too
tenuous a claim to
support the conclusion
that Campbell was
prejudiced by his
attorneys' failure to
look into his childhood
medical records.
Id.
Here,
there was "something[,]"
Coleman, 244 F.3d at
544, of a mitigating nature
presented at the hearing by
defense counsel. There was
limited contact between
defense counsel and family
members, and his counsel
requested a presentence
report, which detailed his
background, and a
psychiatric report, which
recounted his history of
psychological evaluations
and included a "mental
status examination." Counsel
elicited the testimony of
Martin's mother and
grandmother, in which they
provided details of his
troubled youth. While
certainly not exhaustive,
this action constitutes an
investigation. Thus, Martin
cannot show that he suffered
constructive denial of
counsel, so he must show how
his counsel's deficiencies
prejudiced the outcome of
his sentencing proceeding.
See Strickland, 466
U.S. at 694.
Martin's
initial brief completely
fails to point to what
mitigating evidence further
action on the part of his
counsel would have uncovered.
The affidavits of those he
claims should have been
witnesses at the hearing do
not state what they would
have offered on his behalf.
Martin's reply brief
references the affidavit of
Dr. Nancy Schmidtgoessling,
which states "the transcript
material suggests that the
defense could not have put
on a well thought out, well
developed mitigation, as
they lacked the data to do
so." The affidavit also
states:
Among the significant
factors that defense
counsel failed to
present to the jury in
mitigation of the
sentence are the
following extremely
significant
psychological data:
A)
family history of
alcoholism;
B)
family history of
physical abuse;
C)
parental dysfunctional
and chaos that had a
significant impact on
Ernest Martin's adult
psychological
functioning;
D)
the impact of Martin's
less than average
intellectual functioning
(as noted in school
records) in his
adaptation;
E)
the history of
inappropriate behavior
and troubled emotional
status that was
recognized and even
attempted to be treated
during Martin's
childhood years.
* * *
Perhaps
most significantly,
however, the trial
defense failed in any
way to develop the fact
that Ernest Martin
suffers a severe
psychological disorder
that substantially
impairs his functioning
in society. This
diagnosis provides
considerable evidence
toward a finding of a
psychological disorder
that fulfills the
characteristics of
statutory mitigating
factors under R.C.
2929.04(B)(3) and (7).
This diagnosis was not
developed in the cursory
and incomplete
psychological workup
completed by the
Cleveland Court Clinic.
As
is evident from the
summaries above, the
testimony of Martin's mother
and grandmother did discuss
most, if not all, of the
factors in the affidavit.
Granted, defense counsel did
not produce expert testimony
to draw conclusions from the
facts presented by these two
witnesses, but their
testimonies did recount
facts and occurrences
showing everything that Dr.
Schmidtgoessling contends
was not, but should have
been, presented. Some of
this information is also
found in the presentence
investigation and the
psychological report given
to the jury. Dr.
Schmidtgoessling's affidavit
also fails to specify the "severe
psychological disorder" from
which Martin allegedly
suffers. Thus, this
"diagnosis" is no more than
a conclusory statement from
a psychologist who has never
examined Martin. This part
of the affidavit makes
reference to the fact that
the "Cleveland Court Clinic"
completed a psychological
workup of Martin for
purposes of mitigation. The
report generated from this
workup was attached to
Martin's motion to
supplement the record. Thus,
a psychological examination
of Martin was conducted and
a report of the examination
was provided to the judge
and jury during the
mitigation phase. Martin
argues that the report's
conclusions were self-serving
to the State and lacked
credibility merely because
it was generated by a State-employed
pschyoanalyst. We have never
found counsel to be
ineffective solely because
the expert used was on the
State payroll. After all,
the expert, Dr.
Schmidtgoessling, now being
touted by Martin, is
apparently a government
employee. Martin also argues
that his counsel was
ineffective for agreeing to
have the report prepared, as
discussed infra,
but in truth, his argument
rests on the fact that he
did not like the conclusions
it conveyed. As discussed
below, once the report was
requested, Ohio law required
that the sentencing judge,
the jury, and both parties
obtain copies for review.
Thus, this "psychological
workup" is also included in
the quantum of counsel's
preparation for and
performance at the
mitigation phase.
The
affidavits of Martin's
family members state their
willingness to testify at
his sentencing but do not
show what mitigating
evidence would have been
presented had they testified.
Although Martin has made an
attempt to show prejudice
with regard to mitigating
evidence about his
background and psychological
makeup, evidence of his
background was
presented and he has not
pointed to mitigating
psychological evidence that
should have been presented.
Thus, he has not shown
prejudice and his claims are
without merit.
Martin's
briefs did not take issue
with the lack of an
evidentiary hearing in the
district court with regard
to these specific claims. In
his Rule 59(e) motion for an
amended judgment, he
complained generally about
the district court's
application of AEDPA to his
petition and stated that the
application of the standards
for deciding the necessity
of an evidentiary hearing in
2254(e)(2) "present[ed]
the potential for
retroactive effects." At
oral argument, Martin's
counsel, in a limited way,
argued that he should be
entitled to an evidentiary
hearing with regard to his
claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel at the
mitigation phase.
The
applicable version of
2254(e)(2) provides:
(2)
If the applicant has
failed to develop the
factual basis of a claim
in State court
proceedings, the court
shall not hold an
evidentiary hearing on
the claim unless the
applicant shows that--
(A) the claim
relies on--
(i) a new rule of
constitutional law, made
retroactive to cases on
collateral review by the
Supreme Court, that was
previously unavailable;
or
(ii) a factual
predicate that could not
have been previously
discovered through the
exercise of due
diligence; and
(B)
the facts underlying the
claim would be
sufficient to establish
by clear and convincing
evidence that but for
constitutional error, no
reasonable factfinder
would have found the
applicant guilty of the
underlying offense.
As
stated above, these
ineffective assistance of
counsel claims were not
raised during Martin's
direct appeal. The Ohio
courts declined to review
these claims for this
failure. See Perry,
226 N.E.2d at105-06;
Cole, 443 N.E.2d at
170. Martin has "failed to
develop the factual basis of
[these] claim[s] in State
court proceedings,"
2254(e)(2), and, thus, a
hearing is only warranted if
he has shown that his claims
fit the exceptions in
2254(e)(2)(A) or (B).
Section
2254's Subsection
(e)(2)(A)(i) is not
applicable to this claim.
Therefore, a hearing would
be warranted only if Martin
has provided the requisite
showing that: " [this] claim
relies on . . . (ii) a
factual predicate that could
not have been previously
discovered through the
exercise of due diligence;
and (B) the facts underlying
the claim would be
sufficient to establish by
clear and convincing
evidence that but for
constitutional error, no
reasonable factfinder would
have found the applicant
guilty of the underlying
offense."
Martin
has not attempted to show
that the factual predicate
to his claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel at the
mitigation phase could "not
have been previously
discovered through the
exercise of due diligence."
His brief attempted no such
showing, and, at oral
argument, his counsel could
not explain why nearly 20
years had passed without an
attempt to depose, interview,
or otherwise contact
Martin's trial counsel.
Likewise, Martin's failure
to point to mitigating
evidence that presumably
should have been, but was
not presented, at sentencing,
i.e., his failure to show
prejudice, makes it clear
that he has not met the
requirement of
2254(e)(2)(B). Thus, Martin
is not entitled to an
evidentiary hearing with
regard to this claim.
2.
Failure to object to jury
instructions
This
claim does not involve
evidence dehors the
record, was not raised on
Martin's direct appeal, and
thus is procedurally
defaulted. However, we will
review the merits of these
issues for purposes of cause
and prejudice analysis.
Martin
argues that his counsel
rendered ineffective
assistance by failing to
object to jury instructions,
which he contends were
constitutionally infirm
pursuant to Caldwell v.
Mississippi, 472 U.S.
320 (1985), because they
allegedly improperly led the
jury to believe that the
ultimate responsibility for
the imposition of death lay
elsewhere by stating that
the jury only recommended
the death penalty to the
judge. Our court recently
rejected this argument in
Scott v. Mitchell,
209 F.3d 854, 877 (6th Cir.
2000), as follows:
We further conclude,
however, that the
district court correctly
determined that neither
of these claims had
merit. The trial judge
instructed the jury that
its recommendation of
death would be "just
that--a recommendation,"
while a recommendation
of life imprisonment "is
binding upon the Court,
and I, the Judge, must
impose the specific life
sentence which you
recommend." Scott claims
that this violates the
principle established in
Caldwell v.
Mississippi, 472
U.S. 320, 105 S.Ct.
2633, 86 L.Ed.2d 231
(1985), that courts must
not mislead the jury
into believing it has
less responsibility than
it actually does for
choosing the death
sentence.
We
recently rejected this
precise claim in
Mapes v. Coyle, 171
F.3d 408, 414-15 (6th
Cir.1999). Moreover, as
the district court
correctly held,
Caldwell is limited
to situations in which
the jury is misled as to
its role "in a way that
allows [it] to feel less
responsible than it
should for the
sentencing decision.
Thus, to establish a
Caldwell violation,
a defendant necessarily
must show that the
remarks to the jury
improperly described the
role assigned to the
jury by local law."
Romano v. Oklahoma,
512 U.S. 1, 9, 114 S.Ct.
2004, 129 L.Ed.2d 1
(1994) (citations and
alterations omitted);
see also Dugger,
489 U.S. at 407, 109
S.Ct. 1211;
Kordenbrock, 919
F.2d at 1101. As
Mapes points out,
this instruction
accurately describes
Ohio law. There is no
error with regard to
this instruction.
Id.
This holding also reflects
the state of Ohio law at the
time of Martin's sentencing,
and, thus, this argument is
without merit.
3. Presentence
investigation and
psychiatric clinic report
In
Martin's final subclaim
involving allegations of
ineffective assistance of
trial counsel at sentencing,
he contends that his counsel
ineffectively agreed to the
production of a presentence
report and psychological
evaluation. The presentence
investigation report
contained the following
statement concerning the
impact of the crime on the
victim's wife: "Mrs.
Robinson was very abrupt in
her comments and very
dramatic, indicating 'He
shot my husband in the back,
he is a skunk, and he needs
to get the electric chair.'"
Martin argues that this
statement is
unconstitutional under
Payne v. Tenn., 501
U.S. 808, 827 (1991), which
overruled Booth v.
Maryland, 482 U.S. 496
(1987), but left intact its
prohibition against such
statements. Although Mrs.
Robinson's statement was
somewhat inflammatory, the
presentation of the reports
also allowed Martin to
present his defense of the
charges without being
subjected to cross
examination. Both reports
relate that Martin denied
the robbery and the homicide.
The presentence
investigation also
elaborated on more specific
parts of his defense, such
as the appearance of "Slim"
with Pedro near the time of
the crime.
We
are careful to point out
that Martin has argued this
issue in terms of whether
his trial counsel rendered
ineffective assistance by
requesting these reports and
whether appellate counsel
rendered ineffective
assistance by not making an
issue of the requests for
the reports on appeal. In
this context, even if we
assumed that the inclusion
of Mrs. Robinson's statement
ran afoul of Payne
and Booth, this
claim is without merit in
the form in which it is
presented - ineffective
assistance of counsel. The
State points out that once
such a report is requested,
Ohio Rev. Code
2929.03(D)(1), requires that
it be furnished to the court,
the trial jury, if
applicable, the prosecutor,
and the offender or his
counsel. This requirement
also applies to the
psychiatric report. Thus, a
request for the reports
involves the type of
strategic decision that
Strickland, 466 U.S. at
690,holds should
not be second-guessed.
Martin's counsel did not
know that this specific
statement would be in the
presentence report, and
their strategic decision to
request it should not be
second-guessed. The same
reasoning is applicable to
the conclusions of the
psychological report.
Because raising the
effectiveness of his trial
counsel with regard to these
reports on direct appeal
would have been fruitless,
we cannot fault Martin's
appellate counsel for not
doing so.
C.
Appellate Counsel
Martin
argues that his appellate
counsel rendered ineffective
assistance by failing to
make the transcript of the
proceedings on his motion
for a new trial part of the
record on his direct appeal.
Viewing this claim in the
framework outlined in
Mapes, quoted above, it
lacks merit because its
underlying premises, that
counsel ineffectively failed
to procure Rieves-Bey's
testimony and that the
testimony would have changed
the outcome of the trial, is
incorrect.
As
discussed previously, both
parties attempted to locate
Rieves-Bey in time to
testify at trial. He gave
inconsistent statements and
testimony about the physical
description of the man he
saw flee from the crime
scene, stated that Martin
was not the fleeing man, and
that the police had the
wrong man; however, his
other testimony corroborated
Pedro's version and sequence
of the events, which was
highly incriminating. At
best, he was a problematic
witness because of his
admitted drug use and the
effect he admits it had on
his memory. Martin cannot
show prejudice as Rieves-Bey's
testimony was incriminating
and would not have aided his
defense. Accordingly, this
claim is without merit.
III.
Sufficiency of the Evidence
In
habeas cases we
review the sufficiency of
the evidence supporting a
jury verdict, through the
framework of 2254(d), to
determine whether, after
viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the
government, any rational trier of fact could have
found the essential elements
of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt. See
Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 324 (1979).
Martin
argues that the evidence
supporting his conviction
was insufficient because:
(1) Foster's identification
of him at the line-up was
unreliable and tainted by
police comments to Foster
that "we [have] the guy that
robbed you"; (2) the
government presented very
little physical evidence;
(3) witnesses Pedro and
Henderson were unreliable
because Pedro was not
charged for her involvement
and Henderson had a grudge
against him; and (4) the
evidence did not support a
finding that he had the
specific intent to kill
Robinson.
As
an initial matter, it must
be noted that "attacks on
witness credibility are
simply challenges to the
quality of the government's
evidence and not to the
sufficiency of the evidence."
United States v. Adamo,
742 F.2d 927, 935 (6th
Cir.1984). Thus, Martin's
arguments with regard to
Pedro and Henderson are
misplaced. The district
court's opinion contains an
exhaustive review of the
trial evidence that proved
Martin's guilt. This
recitation is consistent
with the record and
demonstrates that a rational
juror could conclude that
Martin committed the crimes
beyond a reasonable doubt
consistent with Jackson.
Thus, Martin's argument is
without merit.
IV.
Prosecutorial Misconduct
Martin
argues that "the State's
comment on Mr. Martin's
failure to testify violated
Martin's rights under the
Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments to the
United States Constitution."
Martin complains that the
following statement by
prosecutor in closing
argument caused these
violations: "Everybody
available testified . . . .
Everybody could identify the
defendant as the perpetrator
of the crime. Everybody
testified, and there is no
indications [sic]
when the police officer
testified that anyone other
than the defendant committed
the crime." Martin argues
that he was the only person
that could have refuted the
prosecutor's statement and
that the lack of evidence of
his guilt makes it likely
that the statement
contributed to his
prosecution.
The government
reiterates the district
court's conclusion that,
when read in context,(2)
it is apparent that the
prosecutor's statements were
referring to the thorough
nature of the police
investigation and the
presentation of the evidence
generated therefrom. The
district court also found
that the prosecutor "was
not describing the
evidence as uncontradicted
by the defense." (Emphasis
in original). The State's
argument also focuses on the
factors we outlined in
Byrd v. Collins, 209
F.3d 486 (6th Cir. 2000),
for analysis of such claims.
This Circuit has
explained that we will
not find "manifest
intent" where some other
explanations for the
prosecutor's comments
are equally possible.
United States v.
Ursery, 109 F.3d
1129, 1135 (6th
Cir.1997). In addition,
we have made clear that
the question is not
whether the jury
possibly or even
probably would view the
statements as comments
on the defendant's
failure to testify, "but
whether the jury
necessarily would have
done so." Id.
Id.
at 534.
Martin's
argument is without merit.
As the district court found,
the entire quote shows that
"some other explanations for
the prosecutor's comments
are equally possible."
Id. The comment was
isolated, as this is the
only comment complained of
by Martin. Evidence of guilt
was overwhelming. Finally,
the court instructed the
jury to draw no inference
about Martin's decision not
to testify.
AFFIRMED.
*****
Footnotes
1
We granted a motion
permitting Martin to file
these documents, although
they were not before the
district court. There is no
assertion of how many hours
were spent by co-counsel or
the investigator.
2
The relevant part of the
prosecutor's statement is
apparently not included in
the joint appendix in the
form of trial transcript.
The district court quoted
the statement as follows:
[Prosecutor:]
The detectives
investigated this case
at length. I dare say
that defense counsel
cannot tell you a
witness who saw
something or did
something in this case,
that the State could not
present as we have here
-
[Defense
Counsel:] Objection,
your Honor, to that
statement.
Court: Overruled.
[Prosecutor:]
Everybody available
testified. Everybody
could testify the
defendant as the
perpetrator of the crime.
Everybody testified, and
there is not indications
when the police officer
testified that anyone
other than the defendant
committed the crime.
That's why I am saying
when the defense counsel
argues to you, I want
you to be thinking if
you agree that this is
reasonable; that would
any counsel from my
standpoint, defense
counsel says, we
presented evidence in
this case, ask me, in my
mind's eye, or them,
where is the evidence
that substantiates the
position that you are
asking us to take.
Where is the evidence
that supports your
argument? And I am going
to go through the
evidence now, and you
will find that there are
facts given to you by
various witnesses, some
unknown to one another,
and so interrelated and
so pointing at Mr.
Martin, that there is
not doubt in this case.