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Donald Jay
MILLER
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Murder for hire
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: June 12, 1992
Date of birth: May 21, 1963
Victim profile: Jennifer Geuder, 18
Method of murder: Shooting
Location: Pima County, Arizona, USA
Status: Executed by lethal injection in Arizona on November 8, 2000
Summary:
Jennifer Geuder went out to a drive-in with her boyfriend, Jose
Luna, and Miller. Unbeknownst to Jennifer, Luna solicited Miller's
help in killing her because she was demanding $50 child support
payments.
Miller and Luna drove Ms. Geuder to Mount Lemmon, where Luna shot
her once in the head. Jennifer fought for her life and tried to hide
under her car. They then drove her to a desert area, where Miller
shot her five times in the head.
Luna pled guilty to first degree murder and received a life sentence.
Miller waived federal appeals.
Last Meal
Two guacamole tostadas; two tacos; one strawberry
malt; one Dr. Pepper; one lemon meringue pie; five whole jalapenos;
one lemon, one lime; one quart of strawberry ice cream.
ProDeathPenalty.com
On June 13, 1992, a jogger discovered Jennifer
Geuder's body lying in a desert area on the east side of Tucson.
Jennifer had been shot six times in the head. Jennifer had gone out
the previous evening with her married boyfriend, Jose Luna, and the
defendant, Don Miller.
Unbeknownst to Jennifer, Luna had solicited
Miller's help in killing her because she was demanding $50 a month
in child support payments. Miller and Luna drove her to Mount Lemmon,
where Luna shot her once in the head. Although critically wounded,
Jennifer did not die. Miller and Luna drove Jennifer back to a
desert area in Tucson.
Evidence at trial indicated that Jennifer fought
for her life, and tried to hide under her car. Miller shot Jennifer
five times in the head. Luna pled guilty to first degree murder and
received a life sentence.
NOTE:
This inmate has waived further appeals but
could change his mind at any time and stop the execution from
proceeding on this date.
UPDATE:
After hearing emotional testimony from
the mother and father of Donald Miller's victim, the Arizona Board
of Executive Clemency voted unanimously Tuesday not to stand in the
way of Wednesday's scheduled execution. "I wish he would have given
Jenny a reprieve," said Ron Geuder, whose daughter, Jennifer, was
shot 5 times in the head by Miller in June 1992.
"With all due respect to this committee, this is
a no-brainer. Don't give him a reprieve. He can do that for himself
today or tomorrow."
Miller has waived his federal appeals, and he
said he wants to die by injection at 3 p.m. today. But because he
has not exhausted the appeals available to him, he can change his
mind even after his last meal.
Arizona Department of
Corrections
On June 13, 1992, a jogger discovered Jennifer
Geuder's body lying in a desert area on the east side of Tucson.
Ms.Geuder had been shot six times in the head. Jennifer had gone out
the previous evening with her boyfriend, Jose Luna, and the
defendant, Miller.
Unbeknownst to Jennifer, Luna solicited Miller's
help in killing her because she was demanding child support payments.
Miller and Luna drove Ms. Geuder to Mount Lemmon, where Luna shot
her once in the head. Although critically wounded, Jennifer did not
die. Miller and Luna drove Jennifer back to a desert area in Tucson.
Evidence at trial indicated that Jennifer fought
for her life, and tried to hide under her car. Miller shot Jennifer
five times in the head. Luna pled guilty to first degree murder and
received a life sentence.
PROCEEDINGS
Presiding Judge: Lawrence Fleischman
Prosecutor: Rick Unklesbay
Start of Trial: July 6, 1993
Verdict: July 12, 1993
Sentencing: December 20, 1993
Aggravating Circumstances - Especially cruel, heinous, and depraved
Mitigating Circumstances - None sufficient to call for leniency
A man convicted of killing an 18-year-old woman
after she asked his friend for $50 per month child support was
executed by injection Wednesday. It was the 1st of 2 executions
scheduled one day after the election. A man convicted of killing his
grandmother and uncle was to be put to death in Pennsylvania. Both
men declined appeals.
Donald Miller, 36, was convicted in Arizona of
shooting Jennifer Geuder at the request of his friend, Jose Anthony
Luna, the father of Geuder's then-1-year-old son.
The 2 took Geuder to a drive-in movie on June 12,
1992, and afterward stopped to pick up Miller's gun. Later that
night, Miller shot Geuder once in the back of the head. She didn't
die, and they took her into the desert east of Tucson where Miller
shot her 5 more times. Her body was found the following day.
Luna pleaded guilty to 1st-degree murder and is
serving 39 years to life in prison. Miller was convicted.
Miller declined to pursue federal appeals, saying
he would rather die than continue to live in prison. A public
defender won a last minute stay late Tuesday after an appeals court
said there was evidence Miller might not be competent. But that stay
was lifted after the state Attorney General's office appealed.
Miller still had an option to stop the execution
until the last minute if he reconsidered appealing, corrections
officials said Wednesday.
Miller becomes the 3rd condemned inmate to be put
to death in Arizona this year and the 22nd overall since the state
resumed capital punishment in 1992.
Miller becomes the 73rd
condemned inmate to be put to death this year in the USA and the
671st overall since America resumed executions on January 17, 1977.
(sources: Associated Press & Rick Halperin)
State v. Miller,
186 Ariz. 314, 921 P.2d 1151 (1996)
PROCEDURAL POSTURE: The
defendant was convicted in Superior Court (Pima) of premeditated
first-degree murder and kidnapping. He was sentenced to death for
the murder. This is the defendant's automatic, direct appeal to the
Arizona Supreme Court.
AGGRAVATING CIRCUMSTANCES:
(F)(6) (Heinous, Cruel or Depraved) -
UPHELD
Cruel: Upheld. Mental Anguish: Found. The Court held that the
victim experienced "great mental and physical suffering."
Defendant was held responsible for the actions of his co-defendant
from the point of giving the co-defendant a gun. "Thus, Miller
is responsible for the suffering the victim experienced after
being shot on Mt. Lemmon and driven down to the desert, a period
of time in which Miller had the gun. The victim clearly
experienced even more mental and physical anguish at the desert.
She struggled to escape. By Miller's admission, he shot the
victim repeatedly once they stopped." 186 Ariz. at 325. Physical Pain: Found. See Mental Anguish.
Heinous or Depraved: Upheld. Gratuitous Violence: Found. The Court held
that cutting or pulling the victim's hair out was sufficient to
constitute gratuitous violence. The gratuitous violence finding
in this case is unusual. There was some factual disagreement
over whether the victim's hair was pulled or cut, but the State
eventually stipulated that the hair had been cut. The trial
court assumed at sentencing that defendant had pulled out large
clumps of the victim's hair. During the sentencing, defendant
interrupted to assert that the hair was cut, not pulled. The
trial court stated that "whether it was cut or yanked it
demonstrates a lack of humanity about somebody." On appeal, the
Court agreed with the trial court, stating that "[w]hether he
cut her hair or pulled it out, he inflicted injury beyond that
necessary to kill." 186 Ariz. at 325. In most other cases in
which the Court has found the existence of gratuitous violence,
a far greater level of violence occurred. Senselessness: Found. The trial court found
senselessness and defendant did not challenge that finding. Helplessness: Found. The Court held that the trial
court's finding of helplessness was not inconsistent with its
finding that the victim was attempting to escape. The co-defendant
had already shot the victim when defendant approached the victim
with a gun in hand. At the time defendant approached the victim,
she was helpless.
MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCES:
The Court found that the following mitigating
circumstances existed, but were not sufficiently substantial to call
for leniency:
Remorse; Difficult Childhood/Family
History; and Model Prisoner [became religious after arrest]
The Court found that the defendant failed to
prove by a preponderance of the evidence the existence of the
following as mitigating circumstances:
(G)(1) Significant Impairment [intoxication];
Duress; Impulsivity; Cooperation; Follower; Lack of Criminal
History; Lack of Intent to Kill; Sentencing Disparity;
Intelligence; Family Ties
JUDGMENT: Convictions and
sentences affirmed.
231 F.3d 1248 (9th Cir. 2000)
DON JAY MILLER, By and Through Nancy Follin
Jones, Petitioner-Appellant, v.
TERRY STEWART, et al., Respondents-Appellees.
No. 00-99017
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH
CIRCUIT
Argued and Submitted by Telephone November 7, 2000
Filed November 7, 2000
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the District of Arizona Raner C. Collins,
District Judge, Presiding D.C. No. CV-00-630-TUC-RCC
Before: REINHARDT, RYMER, and
FISHER, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
Nancy Follin Jones, an
attorney with the Pima County Public Defenders Office (PCPD),
appeals the denial of her motion to proceed as next friend and
to stay the execution of Don Jay Miller, an Arizona prisoner
under sentence of death who has declined to seek federal habeas
relief and refused to be represented in doing so by Jones or
PCPD. Miller's execution is currently scheduled for November 8,
2000 at 3:00 p.m.
The motion was filed November
5. On November 6, the district court found that Jones lacks the
requisite standing to maintain this action as Miller's next
friend. Accordingly, it denied Jones's motion to proceed as next
friend and for a stay, and dismissed the petition for writ of
habeas corpus filed by Jones for lack of jurisdiction. The court
issued a certificate of appealability. Jones has appealed from
the district court's order, and requests a stay of execution
pending our consideration of it. Having heard argument by
telephone, we grant the stay, and remand for an evidentiary
hearing.
Don Miller is what is known in
the death penalty trade as "a volunteer." He has stated that he
wishes to be executed. The State insists that the federal courts
must presume Miller is competent to make this choice, and that
he does so voluntarily and intelligently, because the state
superior court in a 1998 Faretta1
hearing found Miller competent to represent himself in state
post-conviction proceedings.
The State acknowledges,
however, that the Farettta hearing did not purport to determine
Miller's competence to choose to die or the voluntariness of
that decision. Because no court has ever made the appropriate
inquiry and because current evidence suggests that Miller may
not be competent, we grant the motion for stay of execution and
remand this matter to the district court for an evidentiary
hearing.
Miller's hearing in state
court two years ago was on a far different matter. It was a
Faretta hearing a hearing on whether Miller was competent to
elect to represent himself in his effort to defeat the State's
decision to execute him. In Faretta, the Supreme Court held that
individuals have a constitutional right to represent themselves.
See Faretta, 422 U.S. at 806.
In Miller's case, all the
state court determined was that he was able to meet the minimal
standard necessary to exercise that constitutional right. See id.
at 835 (defendant must be "made aware of the dangers and
disadvantages of self-representation, so that the record will
establish that 'he knows what he is doing and his choice is made
with eyes open'").
A far different question,
however, is raised when the issue posed is whether an individual
is competent to choose to be executed in short, to choose death,
and whether he has made that choice voluntarily, knowingly, and
intelligently. See Rees v. Peyton, 384 U.S. 312, 313 (1966) (directing
the district court to determine Rees's mental competence "in the
present posture of things, that is, whether he has the capacity
to appreciate his position and make a rational choice with
respect to continuing or abandoning further litigation or on the
other hand whether he is suffering from a mental disease,
disorder, or defect which may substantially affect his capacity
in the premises") (emphasis added).
Whether someone is competent
to waive counsel, and whether he has done so voluntarily,
knowingly and intelligently, raises different questions and
requires different findings than whether someone is competent to
elect to die. See Faretta, 422 U.S. at 835; cf. Rees, 384 U.S.
at 313. Because here the state court determination of competency
and voluntariness stemmed from a different inquiry, in this
case, unlike in Brewer2
and Baal,3
there is no competency determination to which federal courts
must give deference.
The Faretta findings were made
on October 26, 1998 at a time when Miller was confined in county
jail and was still determined to fight his conviction and
sentence. The State's psychiatric expert, and the state court,
found Miller competent to choose to represent himself when he
was still fighting for his life. Dr. Morenz, a psychiatrist,
expressly states that when he opined that Miller in 1998 was
competent to represent himself, Morenz "placed great emphasis on
[Miller's] indication that he would be pursuing his federal
appeals with counsel." See Declaration by Barry Morenz, November
2, 2000; see also Morenz's August 6, 1998 Psychiatric Evaluation
of Miller.4 Now
the States urges us to defer to that determination -- that
Miller was competent to choose to represent himself -- for
purposes of resolving the far different question of whether
Miller is competent to choose to die.
Moreover, it is undisputed
that Miller's circumstances have changed drastically since the
time of the 1998 Faretta hearing and even since the time of the
subsequent reaffirmation of the state court order. Confined in
maximum security and all but totally isolated in "SMU II" on
Arizona's death row, Miller has given up his fight for life. Yet
no court has ever made any competency determination since this
change.
Here, the preliminary issue is
standing. In order to establish standing, the next friend must:
(1) provide an adequate explanation such as inaccessibility,
mental incompetence, or other disability why the real party in
interest cannot appear on his own behalf to prosecute the action;
and (2) be truly dedicated to the best interests of the person
on whose behalf he or she seeks to litigate and have some
significant relationship with the real party in interest. No one
questions Nancy Jones's dedication or significant relationship
with Miller.
In the absence of a prior
state court finding to which we defer, we must look to the
entire record. Mr. Miller's history of depression and abuse are
well-documented. The record shows that Mr. Miller was physically,
sexually, and psychologically abused as a child. He grew up in
an environment of abuse and neglect. His mother, who at times
ran a "massage parlor" and at other times was a stripper, once
chased him with a butcher knife and put out cigarettes on the
body of one of his siblings. He has a documented history of
suicidal impulses, depression, alcohol abuse, and physical
injuries. Significantly, in 1982, as a juvenile offender, he
threatened suicide should he not be released from confinement.
In recent affidavits, both of
the psychiatric experts who examined Miller for purposes of the
1998 state Faretta hearing adamantly state that their
examinations were made for the sole purpose of determining
whether Mr. Miller was competent to waive counsel, not for the
purpose of determining whether Mr. Miller is competent to choose
to die. Both experts state that it is well accepted that
conditions such as those present in the SMUII where Miller is
housed can cause psychological decompensation to the point that
individuals may become incompetent. Both experts note that due
to Mr. Miller's background, he is highly susceptible to the
effects of physical isolation on death row. Neither expert
believes that Miller's competency to make the decision to die
should be assumed at this point.
In this case we deem it
significant that a substantial question has been raised
regarding recent changes to Miller's mental condition. As noted,
the doctors who previously found him competent to waive counsel
now raise serious questions regarding his competency to make the
decision to die. In addition, Julie Hall, counsel for the
Arizona Capital Representation Project, has submitted a
declaration stating that Miller told her he was willing to pay
with his life to escape the conditions of SMUII. Hall, who has
been in regular communication with Miller, attests that Miller's
mental state has declined, he has become increasingly depressed,
and he has resigned himself to dying.
In July of this year, Miller
suffered auditory hallucinations. Finally, this court in Comer
recognized the harsh conditions of death row in Arizona and its
possible effects on those who live there, and on that basis
ordered an evidentiary hearing. See Comer v. Stewart, 215 F.3d
910, 916 (9th Cir. 2000) ("we and other courts have recognized
that prison conditions remarkably similar to Mr. Comer's
descriptions of his current confinement can adversely affect a
person's mental health"). Mr. Comer was also confined in SMUII.
The district court distinguished Comer in part on the ground
that there the defendant sought to withdraw a habeas application
while here the defendant declined to file one. We conclude that
the same legal analysis as to competency is applicable in both
circumstances.
In this narrow circumstance in
which no court has ever determined Mr. Miller's competency to
choose to die or the voluntariness of his decision, there is
sufficient evidence in the record to require an evidentiary
hearing as to Miller's competency. Such evidence is sufficient
to establish jurisdiction for that purpose in the federal courts
and to mandate a stay in this case. See Barefoot v. Estelle, 463
U.S. 880 (1983). It is also sufficient to permit next friend
status for the evidentiary proceedings.
Stay Granted; Remanded for
Further Proceedings in Conformance with this Opinion.
*****
NOTES:
See Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806
(1975).
See Brewer v. Lewis, 989 F.2d 1021, 1027
(9th Cir. 1993).
See Demosthenes v. Baal, 495 U.S. 731,
732-33 (1990).
In that report, in determining Miller's
competence to represent himself, Dr. Miller relied on the
following facts: "Mr. Miller understood that he has has been
convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. He
understood that his current attorneys were Brian Metcalf and
Nancy Jones. He indicates that his attorneys will not raise
some issues that he believes are relevant in his appeal. He
states that these issues particularly have to do with the
performance of prior attorneys that have represented him. (Also,
he states there are other legal issues that his attorneys do
not feel are relevant that he wishes to be raised. Therefore,
at this point, he would prefer to represent himself. Mr.
Miller indicated that he believed that the jury instructions
that the judge gave at trial were inadequate. He believes
his attorney's closing arguments were also inadequate. He
understood that errors found by the appellate court could be
harmless, procedural, or fundamental, which may or may not
result in his conviction being overturned. He indicates that
his current attorney is primarily interested in having his
sentence reduced from the death penalty to natural life.)
[¶] Mr. Miller also understood that he had an option to
forego further state appeals and to begin a federal appeals
process. Mr. Miller indicates that he has been in contact
with some federal attorneys who will represent him in the
federal stage of the appeals' process. He is comfortable at
this point with their representing him later on. He also
continues to consider waiving further state appeals and
going directly to the federal appeals' stage. Mr. Miller
believes that he has a reasonable chance to prevail with his
appeals. He also believes that he has several years of
appeals before the imposition of the death penalty would
actually take place."
*****
FISHER, Circuit Judge, Concurring:
Under Whitmore, the "prerequisite
for 'next friend' standing is not satisfied where an evidentiary
hearing shows that the defendant has given a knowing,
intelligent, and voluntary waiver of his right to proceed, and
his access to court is otherwise unimpeded." Whitmore v.
Arkansas, 495 U.S. 149, 165 (1990) (citing Gilmore v. Utah, 429
U.S. 1012, 1017 (1976) (Stevens, J., concurring)). The
evidentiary hearing the Court reviewed in Whitmore addressed the
specific question whether the defendant "had 'the capacity to
understand the choice between life and death and to knowingly
and intelligently waive any and all rights to appeal his
sentence.'" Id. (quoting Simmons v. State, 766 S.W.2d 422, 423 (Ark.
1989)). The Court analyzed the Arkansas trial court proceedings
as follows:
Simmons was questioned by
counsel and the trial court concerning his choice to accept the
death sentence, and his answers demonstrate that he appreciated
the consequences of that decision. He indicated that he
understood several possible grounds for appeal, which had been
explained to him by counsel, but informed the court that he was
"not seeking any technicalities." In a psychiatric interview,
Simmons stated that he would consider it "a terrible miscarriage
of justice for a person to kill people and not be executed," and
there was no meaningful evidence that he was suffering from a
mental disease, disorder, or defect that substantially affected
his capacity to make an intelligent decision.
Id. at 165-66 (citing Rees v.
Peyton, 384 U.S. 312, 314 (1966)).1
Similarly in Demosthenes v.
Baal, 495 U.S. 731 (1990), there had been a full evidentiary
hearing following Baal's decision to abandon his petition for
postconviction relief regarding the specific question of his
competency to do so. Again, the Court summarized the nature and
substance of that hearing:
At that hearing, Baal
testified that he did not want to continue any postconviction
proceedings. He further testified that he knew the date he would
be put to death, the reason he would be put to death, and that
his waiver of postconviction relief would result in his death. A
state psychiatrist testified that Baal was competent; a state
prison official who had observed Baal also testified as to
Baal's competence.
The court also reviewed the
reports of three psychiatrists who had examined Baal and
concluded that he was competent to stand trial. Based on this
evidence, the court held that Baal was aware of his impending
execution and of the reason for it, and thus was sane under the
test set forth in Ford v. Wainright, 477 U.S. 399, 106 S.Ct.
2595, 91 L.Ed.2d 335 (1986). The court further held that Baal
was in control of his faculties, was competent to choose to
decline to pursue an appeal, and had made an intelligent waiver
of his right to pursue postconviction relief.
Id. at 732-33.
This court applied Whitmore
and Baal in Brewer v. Lewis, 989 F.2d 1021 (9th Cir. 1993),
denying next friend standing to petitioner because she had not
presented meaningful evidence of incompetency sufficient to
overcome two prior state trial court findings of competency,
each based on a full hearing where the trial court questioned
Brewer personally. Unlike these cases, I believe Miller's state
court competency hearings did not address the competency issue
presented here. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth by Judge
Reinhardt and as amplified below, I concur in the order of stay
and remand.
There has not been a hearing
focused on Miller's competency to waive or abandon his right of
appeal and to submit to execution. Rather, the state trial court
hearings on October 26, 1998 and December 13, 1999 concerned
Miller's competency to represent himself and pursue his appeal.
Although Judge Rymer cites to Miller's statement that he "has
been fighting for his execution since 1996," the record of the
hearings reflects an assumption that Miller was planning to
challenge his conviction, not abandon it.
Indeed, the two doctors who
examined Miller's competency in 1998 have stated they did not
consider the impact of incarceration and proceeded on the
assumption he was planning to appeal. Neither evaluated him for
purposes of waiving his appeal rights. Moreover, the record of
the December 13 hearing consists of a minute order and does not
reveal the contents of the court's discussion with Miller.
Accordingly, I do not believe the findings of Miller's
competency to be of the same character and weight as a
determination focused and based on evidence directly relevant to
voluntarily submitting to execution.
Absent such a state court
determination, I believe Jones has presented sufficient
meaningful evidence to raise a question of Miller's competency
to waive his appeal rights at least enough to warrant an
evidentiary hearing as to Miller's current competency. First,
although Miller directly and through his advisory counsel
insists that he is competent and his actions are voluntary,
crediting his position begs the question of his competence.
Second, both Doctors Morenz
and Morris qualify the nature and scope of their competency
evaluations provided in 1998, stating they did not consider the
impact on Miller of death row living conditions and concluding
that "further evaluation of Miller is definitely warranted to
ascertain whether his psychological conditions have deteriorated
to the point that he is incompetent to be executed...."
Admittedly, neither has seen or spoken to Miller directly since
1998, but they are not strangers to Miller, know his troubled
history and their speculation as to the potential for adverse
effects of incarceration in SMU II finds support in this court's
own assessment of that facility in Comer v. Stewart, 215 F.32
910, 917-18 (9th Cir. 2000).
Third, the two state doctors
who evaluated Miller on October 18, 2000, although purporting to
give Miller a clean bill of health, acknowledged that he had
been suffering "temporary auditory hallucinations" hearing
voices as a result of working on at hard labor. Moreover, his
decision to abandon his appeals once he entered SMU II suggests
the conditions of confinement may indeed have adversely affected
his mental state.
In sum, there has never been a
hearing focused on Miller's competency to waive his appeal
rights and submit to execution, the issue instead being
litigated on affidavits and representations and arguments of
counsel. On this record, I believe there is a substantial
question as to Miller's present competence sufficient to support
this court's jurisdiction to issue a stay of execution pending
an evidentiary hearing. If Miller is found currently incompetent,
then Jones would have standing to file habeas proceedings as his
next friend; otherwise, she would not. (Because the Arizona
Supreme Court on November 6, 2000 granted Jones' motion to
appear as next friend, although denying her motion to stay
execution, I am assuming she meets the second prong of the next-friend
standing test of Whitmore.)
NOTE:
In Rees v. Peyton, the Court reviewed a
petitioner's request to withdraw, against the advice of his
current counsel, a petition challenging his death sentence.
Noting concerns about the petitioner's mental health and the
absence of a prior judicial determination of competency, the
Court declined to dismiss the petition and ordered the
district court to conduct a hearing to determine "whether [the
petitioner] has capacity to appreciate his position and make
a rational choice with respect to continuing or abandoning
further litigation...." 384 U.S. at 314.
*****
RYMER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I dissent from the
unprecedented view that there is a difference of constitutional
magnitude between what the majority characterizes as "competency
to choose to die or the voluntariness of his decision," maj. op.
at 8, and competency to make legal decisions and the
voluntariness of those decisions including the decision by a
prisoner under sentence of death not to file for habeas relief
in federal court. A state court determined that Miller was
competent and intelligently, knowingly and voluntarily chose to
represent himself.
There is no substantial
evidence that his mental condition or ability to make rational
decisions has changed. All of the evidence is to the contrary:
the state court's determination in 1998 and reaffirmation in
December, 1999; Miller's own statements then, and currently,
that he does not want to be represented by the lawyers who seek
to be his "next friend," that he does not want the warrant of
execution (now set for November 8 at 3:00 p.m.) to be suspended,
and that he understands the consequences; and the report of a
Department of Correction psychiatrist and psychologist who
examined Miller in October 2000 and found no evidence of any
major mental illness. As Nancy Follin Jones, the putative "next
friend." has produced no meaningful evidence of mental
incompetence, I would affirm the district court.
As set forth in detail in
State v. Miller, 186 Ariz. 314, 921 P.2d 1151 (1996), Miller was
convicted of first degree murder and kidnaping, and sentenced to
death. Following the Arizona Supreme Court's denial of Miller's
direct appeal, he filed a pro per notice of post-conviction
relief in the trial court. The court appointed the Pima County
Public Defender, who had represented Miller on appeal, to
prepare a supplemental post-conviction petition. However, Miller
sought to represent himself. PCPD challenged his ability to
waive counsel, and the trial court authorized an examination by
PCPD's expert, Dr. Larry Morris. After receiving Morris's report,
PCPD chose not to present evidence of incompetency.
The trial court then appointed
Dr. Barry Morenz to evaluate Miller and report to the court.
Morenz noted that Miller had recently been moved to the prison's
Special Management Unit II (SMU II), which Miller described as "very
oppressive," and that Miller was enjoying a "slightly greater
measure of freedom" as a result of being temporarily housed at
the time at the Pima County Jail. Miller was diagnosed with
polysubstance dependence (in remission) and, provisionally, an
antisocial personality disorder. In his opinion, Miller was "competent
to make informed legal choices," including the choice to waive
counsel.
The trial court conducted a
hearing on Miller's motion to proceed pro per on October 26,
1998, and found that Miller knowingly, intelligently and
voluntarily waived his right to counsel in post-conviction
proceedings and granted his motion for self-representation. The
court appointed Harriette Levitt as advisory counsel.
On December 13, 1999, the
state court held another hearing at which it reaffirmed Miller's
competency to represent himself and set a firm March 13, 2000
deadline for filing a post-conviction petition. Although Miller
filed a request for early relief on his involuntary confession
claim, he failed to file further pleadings after the court
ordered him to file all potential claims simultaneously. On
March 31, 2000 the state court dismissed Miller's post-conviction
petition on the ground that the involuntary confession claim had
been decided on appeal. He did not seek review in the Arizona
Supreme Court.
PCPD sought to intervene and
filed a motion for reconsideration, but Miller's advisory
counsel informed the court that Miller opposed PCPD's
intervention, did not want further delays in the case, and
wanted a warrant of execution to issue. The court found that
PCPD lacked standing and denied the motion. When PCPD sought
special action relief in the Arizona Supreme Court, Miller filed
an affidavit pro per stating that he did not wish to pursue
issues regarding sentencing in a Rule 32 petition, that he
requested that the warrant of execution be issued, and that he
did not wish the warrant to be suspended.
As he explained: "I chose not
to raise the issue, fully understanding the potential
consequences of my decision." On September 26 the Arizona
Supreme Court declined to accept jurisdiction of the special
action petition and granted the State's motion for a warrant of
execution. PCDP filed a petition for certiorari to the United
States Supreme Court and a motion for stay of execution, which
are still pending.
On October 24, the Federal
Public Defender (FPD) filed a motion in district court
requesting a limited appointment of counsel for the purpose of
meeting with Miller to explain the federal habeas review process.
Miller indicated that he did not wish to pursue federal habeas
review, but said he did not object to the FPD's visits. The
district court denied the motion for limited appointment but
granted visitation rights.
Miller was examined on October
18, 2000 by a psychologist and a psychiatrist employed by the
Arizona Department of Corrections after issuance of the pending
warrant of execution. They found no evidence of any major mental
illness. Their report notes that Miller has made no requests for
mental health services or for treatment since his incarceration
in 1993, nor have any observations of significant mental or
emotional distress been made with one exception in July 2000
when Miller was stressed from work on a hard-labor crew.
Finally, on November 6,
Miller's advisory counsel filed a declaration based on her most
recent conversation with Miller. It represents that Miller
states that "the conditions of incarceration in SMU II and his
mental health or depression have nothing to do with this
decision." Miller further states that he has been fighting for
his execution since 1996, two years before the move to SMU II,
and that the only reason he gave up his appeal is the fact that
he does not wish to grow old in prison.
Jones and FPD filed several
other motions regarding visitation, but these are not relevant
to disposition of this appeal.1
"The burden is on the 'next
friend' clearly to establish the propriety of his status and
thereby justify the jurisdiction of the court." Whitmore, 494
U.S. at 164. In order clearly to establish standing, a
petitioner must present "meaningful evidence that [the
petitioner] was suffering from a mental disease, disorder, or
defect that substantially affected his capacity to make an
intelligent decision." Id. at 166.
This appeal turns on whether
Jones presented meaningful evidence that Miller's mental
condition has deteriorated since December 13, 1999 when the
state trial court reaffirmed his competence and understanding of
the consequences of failing to pursue post-conviction relief (originally
determined October 26, 1998). We presume the correctness of the
trial court's determination. Demosthenes v. Baal, 495 U.S. 731,
735 (1990) (per curiam). Jones does not suggest, nor did the
district court find, any basis upon which to conclude that the
state court's finding was not fairly supported.
Jones argues that Miller is
not presently capable of making a knowing, voluntary and
intelligent waiver of his right to counsel in federal court and
his right to seek a stay of execution and a writ of habeas
corpus because the conditions of confinement at the Arizona
State Prison's SMU II were never considered at the time of the
state court competency determination. She relies upon Comer v.
Stewart, 215 F.3d 910, 917-18 (9th Cir. 2000), to contend that
the effect of prison conditions specifically those in SMU II
must be considered as a separate inquiry into the voluntariness
of such a waiver.
In addition to a number of
older records, Jones submitted her own declaration, a
declaration by Julie Hall (Jones's counsel) which questions the
voluntariness of Miller's actions, and the declarations of the
two physicians who examined Miller in 1998, to demonstrate that
Miller suffers from a serious, long-term history of depression
and post-traumatic stress disorder that caused him to succumb to
the effects of solitary confinement and abuse at SMU II.
Jones's declaration sets forth
her belief that Miller "is operating under a mental disability
that prevents him seeking relief on his own behalf in the courts."
She states that it is "the result of life long trauma that has
resulted in severe depression and symptoms of post-traumatic
stress disorder combined with the psychologically disabling
conditions of solitary confinement."
The declarations by Dr. Morris
and Dr. Morenz say the same thing; that in their 1998
evaluations, neither was asked to consider what impact the
conditions of confinement may have had on Miller's decision to
waive counsel; that each has read information regarding the
daily living conditions and virtual total physical isolation of
death row inmates at SMU II; that based upon well-accepted
psychological studies on the effects of physical isolation on
subjects kept under conditions akin to those of death row
inmates at SMU II, such conditions can cause psychological
decompensation in certain individuals to the point that those
individuals are unable to comprehend their current life
situations and may be incompetent; that each has an
understanding that Miller suffers from symptoms typically
associated with post-traumatic stress and his history suggests
he has had problems with depression throughout; that individuals
in similar circumstance are susceptible to the effects of
physical isolation like the conditions of SMU II; and based on
information concerning the conditions of confinement and the
concerns expressed by the court in Comer, further evaluation of
Miller is warranted to ascertain whether his psychological
conditions have deteriorated to the point that he is incompetent
to be executed or able to waive all appeals.
These declarations are not
meaningful evidence that Miller is not currently competent. Nor
do they show that Miller's decision to forgo further proceedings
is not "the product of a free and deliberate choice." Comer, 215
F.3d at 917.2
Neither Dr. Morris nor Dr. Morenz has examined Miller since 1998
and their statements about the possible deterioration of his
mental condition during incarceration at SHM II are purely
speculative. See Brewer v. Lewis, 989 F.2d 1021, 1025 (9th Cir.
1993) (opinions by doctors who never met petitioner and by
physician who examined and found him competent several years
before but speculates, based on information not available at
that time, that condition may have deteriorated is inconclusory
and insufficient to outweigh substantial evidence demonstrating
competence).
While Jones may have seen him,
she is not a physician and her views are not supported by any
objective evidence in the record. Cf. Vargas, 159 F.3d at 1170 (new
evidence of illnesses not previously diagnosed and medications
not previously required tends to prove that mental condition has
deteriorated since a prior competency determination). As in Baal
and Brewer, this conclusory evidence is insufficient to outweigh
the state court's determination and the October 18, 2000
examination and report.
I therefore agree with the
district court, that Jones has not met the threshold showing of
standing as "next friend" to support federal court jurisdiction
to issue a stay. Accordingly, I would affirm dismissal of the
petition and dismiss the request for a stay as moot.
In an order issued November 6, 2000, the
Arizona Supreme Court granted Jones's motion to appear as "next
friend" but denied her motion for stay of execution. The
Court subsequently clarified its order as granting "next
friend" status only for the purpose of ruling on her motion
in the Supreme Court for a stay of execution.
I assume, without needing to decide, that
Comer (from which I partially dissented) applies to this
case which involves a petitioner's decision not to file a
federal habeas decision as distinguished from a decision to
withdraw a pending appeal.