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Pedro Cruz
MUNIZ
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Kidnapping - Rape
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
December 20,
1976
Date of arrest:
2 days after
Date of birth:
September 25,
1956
Victim profile: Janis Carol Bickham,
19 (fine arts student)
Method of murder:
Beating
with a log
Location: Williamson County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on May 19,
1998
Date of
Execution:
May 19, 1998
Offender:
Pedro Muniz #575
Last Statement:
I know you can’t hear
me now but I know that it won’t matter what I have to say.
I want you to know that
I did not kill your sister. If you want to know the truth, and
you deserve to know the truth, hire your own investigators.
That’s all I have to
say.
Víctim: Janis Carol Bickham (19)
Pedro Cruz Muniz, 41, said he was innocent in a brief
final statement.
"All I want you to know is that I didn't kill your
sister,'' Muniz said, looking toward the brother of the victim standing
a few feet away.
Muniz, a 10th-grade dropout, was convicted of the
murder of Janis Carol Bickham, a fine arts student at Southwestern
University in Georgetown.
Ms. Bickham was abducted on Dec. 20, 1976, while
walking about a mile from campus. She was raped in an abandoned building
and beaten to death with a large rock.
Muniz, 19 at the time and already free on bail on a
rape charge, was arrested after witnesses told police they saw him in
the area that evening.
Muniz confessed, although he later insisted police
beat and threatened him into the confession.
Associated Press
Pedro Cruz Muniz
was 20 when convicted of the 1976 rape and beating death of a
student at Southwestern University in Georgetown.
Muniz was condemned for
the rape and beating death of Janis Carol Bickham, a 19-year-old
fine arts student. Ms. Bickham, who was from Matagorda County, was
abducted a few days before Christmas in 1976 while walking across a
bridge over the San Gabriel River about a mile from the campus.
Muniz followed her down
a city street and over a bridge. When she reached the end of the bridge,
Muniz grabbed her, dragged her down a ravine, over a stream, and through
a fence. He then took her to an abandoned cabana, where he raped her and
beat in her head with a log. When he was finished, he buried her body in
a pile of wood and fled.
Two days later, police
arrested Muniz, already free on bail on a rape charge, and charged him
with murder. He was taken before a magistrate, then placed in a local
jail. The next day, police questioned Muniz; this interview ultimately
led to Muniz's confession.
In his written
statement, Muniz admitted to having the aggravated and nonconsensual
sexual relations with Bickham that preceded her death. "It was something
that would happen in the big city, and it hit home," said Ed Walsh, the
former Williamson County district attorney who prosecuted the case. "It's
still very vivid in my mind. I can still see that girl and the way she
was beaten and left. I remember him as being, in my view, very arrogant,
very cold. I never saw him exhibiting any kind of remorse."
Muniz's conviction was
overturned in 1985 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled defendants must be
warned that a psychiatric examination could be used against them in
court. Such warnings were not required at the time of Muniz's arrest. "The
judge and district attorney at the time made all the right choices,
except they didn't anticipate a psychiatrist would be required to give
Miranda warnings," Williamson County District Attorney Ken Anderson said.
"Obviously no one did. We had no choice but to retry him."
A jury took about an
hour to convict Muniz at the 2nd trial. The Supreme Court refused a
formal appeal and a request from his attorneys that the execution be
postponed.
132 F.3d
214
PedroCruzMuniz,
Petitioner-appellant, v.
Gary L. Johnson, Director, Texas Department of Criminal
Justice,
Institutional Division, Respondent-appellee
United States Court
of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Jan. 2, 1998
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Western
District of Texas.
Before SMITH,
BARKSDALE and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH,
Circuit Judge:
Pedro
Muniz appeals the denial of his petition
for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. §
2254. Finding no reversible error, we affirm and
vacate the stay of execution.
Muniz raped and
murdered Janis Bickham in 1976. Before doing so,
he followed her down a city street and over a
bridge. When she reached the end of the bridge,
Muniz grabbed her,
dragged her down a ravine, over a stream, and
through a fence. He then took her to an
abandoned cabana, where he raped her and beat in
her head with a log. When he was finished, he
buried her body in a pile of wood and fled.
Two days later,
police arrested Muniz
and charged him with murder. He was taken before
a magistrate, then placed in a local jail.
The next day,
Officer William Shirley questioned
Muniz; this interview
ultimately led to Muniz's
confession. In his written statement,
Muniz admitted to
having the aggravated and nonconsensual sexual
relations with Bickham that preceded her death.
Muniz gave the
statement while in police custody after
receiving his Miranda warnings.
During this
interview, Shirley suggested at one point that
Muniz might want to
call a lawyer. Muniz
agreed, and Shirley picked up the telephone to
place the call for Muniz.
When asked for his lawyer's number,
Muniz indicated that he
would contact the lawyer later. Shirley then
hung up the phone and continued the interview.1
At the pre-trial
hearings concerning his motion to suppress the
confession, Muniz
testified that Shirley had coerced him into
giving the confession. He claimed that Shirley
had made him feel despondent, playing on his
fears for his family; had promised him leniency
in exchange for the confession; and had offered
to help his family if he signed the statement.
Shirley
testified that he told Muniz
that sometimes when a defendant confesses, the
state shows leniency. Shirley, however, denied
that he guaranteed a reduced charge or sentence
in exchange for Muniz's
statement.
Shirley also
stated that although he did offer to contact
social service agencies for
Muniz's family, he did not condition his
offer on whether Muniz
confessed. Shirley testified that he spoke with
Muniz about religion
and offered to get him a priest--an offer not
conditioned on a confession. During the
interview that led to the confession, Shirley
showed Muniz photos of
Bickham's body and of the crime scene.
The trial
judge credited Shirley's testimony over
Muniz's and admitted
the confession into evidence. In 1986, a jury
convicted Muniz of
capital murder and sentenced him to death.2
The Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, see
Muniz v. State, 851 S.W.2d
238, 259 (Tex.Crim.App.1993), whereupon
Muniz filed a state
habeas corpus petition, which was denied by the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in 1994. Two
months later, Muniz
filed a federal habeas petition, which was
denied in 1996.
We first must
address the applicability to this case of the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act ("AEDPA")
of 1996. After denying Muniz's
habeas petition, the federal district court
granted a Certificate of Probable Cause ("CPC"),
allowing him to appeal. We remanded in light of
our caselaw applying the AEDPA to similar cases.
See Muniz v. Johnson,
114 F.3d 43, 45-46 (5th Cir.1997). We instructed
the district court to narrow the issues for
appeal by issuing a Certificate of Appealability
("COA") under the new law. See id.
On remand, the
district court did as we had instructed and
issued a COA specifying the issues
Muniz could appeal.
Contemporaneously, however, the Supreme Court
decided Lindh v. Murphy, --- U.S. ----, 117 S.Ct.
2059, 138 L.Ed.2d 481 (1997), holding that the
AEDPA is inapplicable to cases like
Muniz's. See Lindh, ---
U.S. at ----, 117 S.Ct. at 2063.
In light of
Lindh, we erred in remanding this case for a COA.
Instead, the district court was correct
originally to have issued a CPC. Fortunately,
however, under the law of this circuit, we
construe the COA grant as a grant of a CPC. See
McBride v. Johnson, 118 F.3d 432, 436 (5th
Cir.1997).
Muniz claims that on
multiple occasions during the interrogation that
led to his confession, he invoked his right to
counsel. He further argues that the state can
offer only one instance of his voluntary re-initiation
of the interrogation. Therefore, he maintains,
we should find a Miranda violation, because the
state is unable to disprove all of the instances
in which he claims that he invoked his right to
an attorney. The well-settled rule is that "an
accused ... having expressed his desire to deal
with the police only through counsel, is not
subject to further interrogation by the
authorities until counsel has been made
available to him, unless the accused himself
initiates further communication, exchanges, or
conversations with the police." Edwards v.
Arizona, 451 U.S. 477, 484-85, 101 S.Ct. 1880,
1881, 68 L.Ed.2d 378 (1981).
At bottom,
Muniz's argument is an
attack on the trial court's factual finding that
Muniz made only one
request for a lawyer, rather than several.3
State court factual findings are presumed
correct under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)4
unless one of the statutory exceptions is met.
The exception at issue here is whether the state
court's "factual determination is not fairly
supported by the record." 28 U.S.C. §
2254(d)(8). "[T]he burden shall rest on the
applicant to establish by convincing evidence
that the factual determination by the State
court was erroneous." Id. § 2254(d).
Muniz testified that he
had made several requests for counsel; Shirley,
the only other person in the room at the time,
testified to the contrary. At the suppression
hearing prior to the first trial, Shirley stated
that Muniz asked for
counsel "at one period." At that hearing,
Shirley also testified, in response to a
question by defense counsel, that "there were a
couple of times [Muniz]
asked to talk to an attorney," but at the
suppression hearing before the second trial,
Shirley clarified his former testimony, stating
that there was only one request for an attorney
and that, as he began to place the call to
Muniz's lawyer,
Muniz decided to
continue the interview without counsel.
The record
supports the state court's finding that
Muniz made only one
request for counsel.5
Although Shirley equivocated at the first
suppression hearing, his subsequent testimony
provides enough evidence to support the trial
judge's conclusion that Muniz
requested counsel only once.6
Moreover, there is reason to disbelieve
Muniz's testimony given
at the suppression hearings.7
Given the record, therefore,
Muniz has not established "by convincing
evidence that the factual determination by the
State court was erroneous." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Muniz challenges the
voluntariness of his confession. A confession is
voluntary if it is "the product of a rational
intellect and a free will." Mincey v. Arizona,
437 U.S. 385, 398, 98 S.Ct. 2408, 2416, 57 L.Ed.2d
290 (1978) (internal quotations omitted). The
defendant, therefore, must show that but for
police coercion he would not have given the
confession. See Colorado v. Connelly, 479 U.S.
157, 163-64, 107 S.Ct. 515, 519-20, 93 L.Ed.2d
473 (1986).
"[T]he
ultimate question whether, under the totality of
the circumstances, the challenged confession was
obtained in a manner compatible with the
requirements of the Constitution is a matter for
independent federal determination." Miller v.
Fenton, 474 U.S. 104, 112, 106 S.Ct. 445,
450-51, 88 L.Ed.2d 405 (1985). Subsidiary
factual questions, however, are entitled to a
presumption of correctness: "[S]ubsidiary
questions, such as length and circumstances of
the interrogation, the defendant's prior
experience with the Miranda warnings, often
require the resolution of conflicting testimony
of police and defendant. The law is therefore
clear that state-court findings on such matters
are conclusive on the habeas court if fairly
supported by the record...." Id. at 117, 106
S.Ct. at 453. Accordingly, using the
presumptively correct factual findings of the
state court, we reweigh de novo the
voluntariness calculation.
"Whether the
police engaged in the coercive tactics alleged
by the defendant is a subsidiary fact; as such,
the trial court's finding is entitled to
deference on habeas review if it is supported in
the record." Pemberton v. Collins, 991 F.2d
1218, 1225 (5th Cir.1993) (citation omitted).
The record supports the trial court's factual
findings that Shirley did not promise leniency
in exchange for the confession.8
There is also sufficient evidence to support the
finding that Shirley did not condition his offer
to help Muniz's family
seek social services, or his getting a priest
for Muniz, on a
confession.9
In our
voluntariness calculation, therefore, we are
left with Shirley's showing
Muniz the murder scene pictures;
Shirley's appeal to Muniz's
religion; and Muniz's
alleged fatigued physical and emotional
condition at the time of the confession. We
cannot conclude that the totality of these
factors overpowered Muniz's
will or produced a confession that was not of
his own free choice.
Muniz was fully
informed of his Miranda warnings before he gave
his statement. The evidence supports the state
court's finding that he understood what these
warnings meant. Moreover, before he signed the
statement, Muniz was
asked by another officer--one who was not in the
room at the time the confession was written--whether
the statement he gave was voluntary.
Muniz stated that it
was.
Muniz also argues that
his fatigued physical and emotional condition at
the time of the confession made him more
susceptible to coercion. He argues that he was
arrested late at night on December 22, 1976.
Thereafter, he was taken to a magistrate and
then taken to a holding cell in the early hours
of December 23. He claims that at noon on
December 23, Shirley began the interview that
led to the confession.
Even assuming
this sequence of events, there appears to have
been ample time for Muniz
to rest before the interview started. Moreover,
there is nothing in the record to suggest that
he complained to the officers about his fatigue;
that he requested additional time to rest; or
that the officers conditioned additional rest
time on receiving his confession. These facts,
taken together, do not suggest a coerced
confession.
Muniz avers that the
prosecutor made improper closing arguments.
Specifically, he alleges that the prosecutor
deprived him of due process by disparaging his
constitutional rights and by improperly vouching
for the evidence. Muniz
failed to object to the prosecutor's closing
arguments at trial and did not raise the issue
on direct appeal in the state court or in his
state habeas proceedings.
A federal
habeas court may not consider a state prisoner's
claim if the state court based its rejection of
that claim on an independent and adequate state
ground. See Martin v. Maxey, 98 F.3d 844, 847
(5th Cir.1996). "In all cases in which a state
prisoner has defaulted his federal claims in
state court pursuant to an independent and
adequate state procedural rule, federal habeas
review of the claims is barred unless the
prisoner can demonstrate cause for the default
and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged
violation of federal law, or demonstrate that
failure to consider the claims will result in a
fundamental miscarriage of justice." Coleman v.
Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 750, 111 S.Ct. 2546,
2565, 115 L.Ed.2d 640 (1991). "This doctrine
ensures that federal courts give proper respect
to state procedural rules." Glover v. Cain, 128
F.3d 900, 902 (5th Cir.1997) (citing Coleman,
501 U.S. at 750-51, 111 S.Ct. at 2564-66).
"[P]rocedural
default does not bar consideration of a federal
claim on either direct or habeas review unless
the state court rendering a judgment in the case
'clearly and expressly' states that its judgment
rests on a state procedural bar." Teague v.
Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 298-99, 109 S.Ct. 1060,
1068-69, 103 L.Ed.2d 334 (1989) (plurality
opinion) (quoting Harris v. Reed, 489 U.S. 255,
263, 109 S.Ct. 1038, 1043-44, 103 L.Ed.2d 308
(1989)). This method for determining whether the
"independence requirement" is met, however, "assumes
that a state court has had the opportunity to
address a claim that is later raised in a
federal habeas proceeding. It is simply
inapplicable in a case such as this one, where
the claim was never presented to the state
courts." Id. at 299, 109 S.Ct. at 1069 (citation
omitted); accord Coleman, 501 U.S. at 735 n. *,
111 S.Ct. at 2557 n. *.10
The "adequacy"
of a state procedural rule depends on whether it
is "strictly or regularly followed" by the state
courts. Johnson v. Mississippi, 486 U.S. 578,
587, 108 S.Ct. 1981, 1987, 100 L.Ed.2d 575
(1988) (citations omitted). We make our adequacy
determination by looking at how the state courts
have applied the rule in a "vast majority of
similar claims." Amos v. Scott, 61 F.3d 333, 339
(5th Cir.) (emphasis omitted), cert. denied, 516
U.S. 1005, 116 S.Ct. 557, 133 L.Ed.2d 458
(1995).
The Texas
courts require a defendant to raise a
contemporaneous objection to a prosecutor's
improper closing arguments. See TEX.R.APP. P.
52(a); Penry v. State, 903 S.W.2d 715, 760 (Tex.Crim.App.),
cert. denied, 516 U.S. 977, 116 S.Ct. 480, 133
L.Ed.2d 408 (1995). The rationale for the
contemporaneous objection rule is that it
conserves judicial resources. A contemporaneous
objection allows the trial court to correct the
error at the time it occurs, or to grant a new
trial.
We have
previously held the contemporaneous objection
requirement to be an adequate state procedural
rule; the Texas appellate courts strictly and
regularly enforce it, see, e.g., Sharp v.
Johnson, 107 F.3d 282, 285 (5th Cir.1997), in
order to give defendants the proper incentive to
present their claims of error in a forum in
which they are most easily resolved.
Muniz made no objection
to the prosecutor's arguments at trial. He
suggests no reason why the state courts would
choose not to enforce the contemporaneous
objection rule in his case had he raised it on
direct appeal. Therefore, we conclude that the
rule would foreclose the Texas courts' direct
review of Muniz's
closing argument challenges.
Texas law also
requires habeas petitioners to present all of
their state habeas claims in their first
petition. See TEX.CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art.
11.071, § 5(a) (Vernon Supp.1998). Absent facts
giving rise to one of the statutory exceptions,
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals will not
entertain a new issue in a successive habeas
petition. See Ex parte Davis, 947 S.W.2d 216,
221 (Tex.Crim.App.1996).
Although
Muniz filed his first
state habeas action before art. 11.071 became
effective, the Court of Criminal Appeals
nonetheless has applied art. 11.071 to preclude
the raising of new issues in successive
petitions when the claimant's original petition
was filed before the statute's effective date.
See id. Recently, we held art. 11.071 to be an
adequate state procedural bar, finding that this
rule is strictly and regularly enforced in these
circumstances by the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals. See Nobles v. Johnson, 127 F.3d 409,
423 (5th Cir.1997).
Muniz failed to raise
his complaints about the prosecutor's improper
closing argument in his first state habeas
petition. He has made no showing that any of the
statutory exceptions would obtain in his case.11
He thus would be barred from raising these
issues under art. 11.071 in a successive
petition for collateral review in state court.
Muniz, therefore, would
find his challenges to the prosecutor's closing
argument barred from both direct and collateral
review in the state courts. As a result, we are
also barred from reviewing the claim unless
Muniz can make the
requisite showing of cause and actual prejudice,
or that a fundamental miscarriage of justice12
would result from our failure to address his
federal claims. See Coleman, 501 U.S. at 750,
111 S.Ct. at 2564-65.
Muniz has not attempted
to make a showing of cause and actual prejudice,
nor has he asserted actual innocence.
Accordingly, his challenges to the prosecutor's
closing argument are barred by the doctrine of
state procedural default.
Muniz contends that the
trial court effectively prevented the admission
of mitigating evidence at the sentencing stage
in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments. At the sentencing phase,
Muniz wanted to call
Merrill Person to testify. Person worked for the
state court system and had gotten to know
Muniz during his first
trial in 1977. She thereafter made visits to him
in prison and had contributed money to his
prison account so that he could purchase art
supplies.
Person swears
in an affidavit that she would have testified
that Muniz was
remorseful. Such testimony would have rebutted
the prosecutor's argument that defendant had
shown no remorse for the heinous crime.
Accordingly, this testimony would have helped to
negate the state's argument that
Muniz was likely to
commit crime in the future.13
The well-settled
rule is that the state may not prevent the
defendant from introducing any mitigating
evidence at the capital sentencing phase.14
Mitigating evidence is " 'any aspect of a
defendant's character or record and any of the
circumstances of the offense that the defendant
proffers as a basis for a sentence less than
death.' " Eddings, 455 U.S. at 110, 102 S.Ct. at
874 (quoting Lockett, 438 U.S. at 604, 98 S.Ct.
at 2964-65).
There is
little dispute that Person's testimony is
mitigating evidence falling within the scope of
the Lockett rule. The question, however, is
whether there was any state action that
prevented the defense from calling Person to
testify at the sentencing hearing. We conclude
that there was not.
The Texas Code
of Judicial Conduct, as it read at the time of
the trial, provided that a "judge should not
lend the prestige of his or her office to
advance the private interests of himself or
herself or others; nor should he or she convey
or permit others to convey the impression that
they are in a special position to influence him
or her. A judge should not testify voluntarily
in an adjudicative proceeding as a character
witness."15
The code extends this obligation to the members
of the judge's staff: "A judge should require
his or her staff and court officials subject to
the judge's discretion and control to observe
the standards of this Code."16
Person was a
court official subject to the trial judge's
discretion and control. Under the state conduct
code, therefore, it was entirely appropriate for
the judge to advise Person that she could not
testify voluntarily for the defendant as a
character witness at sentencing. Consequently,
to obtain Person's testimony, the defense would
have had to issue a subpoena.
This
requirement does not run afoul of the Eighth or
Fourteenth Amendment when applied at capital
sentencing, for it is designed to protect the
institutional impartiality of the courts. Were
Person allowed to testify voluntarily, she may
have signaled to the jury that the court
disfavored a death sentence for
Muniz. Her actions may
have had an impact on a wider audience as well,
for the public may have viewed such an action as
unfairly favoring one of the litigants over the
other.
Muniz responds that
issuing a subpoena for Person's testimony would
have been futile. He specifically points to
testimony at the recusal hearing for the trial
judge. There, Muniz's
attorney testified that he had seen the judge
sternly telling Person in the hallway that she
was not to testify voluntarily.
Muniz also points to
Person's affidavit, in which she swears that she
would not have testified voluntarily and that
she wished not to be subpoenaed, because she
believed it would upset the judge.
Although we
sympathize with defense counsel's dilemma--issuing
a subpoena and risk upsetting the witness and
the court, or foregoing the mitigating evidence--there
is an insufficient nexus between what can
properly be called state action--the existence
of the Canon and the actions of the prosecutor
and of the judge--and the defense's decision not
to subpoena Person.17
At bottom, defense counsel made a strategic
decision to forego Person's testimony, and
Muniz must now accept
the consequences of that choice.18
Muniz claims that the
jury's knowledge of his prior death sentence
amounts to a sentencing error of constitutional
magnitude and mandates our vacating his death
sentence. We disagree.19
The only means
by which the jury came to know of the prior
death sentence is that defense counsel elicited
it. When questioning a police officer at the
1986 sentencing phase, counsel asked the officer
if he knew whether Muniz
had committed any crimes since 1978; the officer
stated that he did not know of any such offenses.
The defense obviously wanted to use this
testimony to negate the future-dangerousness
prong of the Texas capital punishment scheme.
When the
prosecutor questioned the officer, he sought to
remedy the misperception that defense counsel
had left in the minds of the jurors. To do so,
the prosecutor asked why the officer had no
knowledge of any of Muniz's
post-1978 bad acts. The officer said this was
because Muniz was
incarcerated at the time.
Later, defense
counsel stated in his closing argument that
Muniz had not committed
any crimes in the recent past. In response, the
prosecutor stated in closing that "there are no
nineteen-year-old girls walking across bridges
at night on death row in [the state prison]."
We do not find
that this testimony "so infected" the sentencing
phase with unfairness that it rose to the level
of a due process violation. See Donnelly v.
DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637, 643, 94 S.Ct. 1868,
1871-72, 40 L.Ed.2d 431 (1974). The introduction
of a prior death sentence is allowable if it
does not mislead the jury in its sentencing
role. See Romano v. Oklahoma, 512 U.S. 1, 9, 114
S.Ct. 2004, 2010, 129 L.Ed.2d 1 (1994).
Although
Romano dealt with the introduction of an
unrelated offense, rather than a retrial for the
same offense, the rationale of that case speaks
broadly. Essentially, the Court held that once
the basic requirements of the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments are met--that is,
narrowing the class of eligible defendants and
an individualized inquiry--"the States enjoy
their traditional latitude to prescribe the
method by which those who commit murder shall be
punished." Romano, 512 U.S. at 7, 114 S.Ct. at
2009 (quotation omitted). The Court extended "this
latitude" to "evidentiary rules at sentencing
proceedings." Id.
Assuming that
this testimony is admissible under the Texas
Constitution and rules of procedure, we find no
federal constitutional violation in its
admission. After reviewing the record, we
believe that these comments were isolated enough
that they did not mislead the jury in its
sentencing role or diminish its sense of
responsibility in considering the death penalty.
Therefore, we find this claim to be without
merit.
Muniz challenges the
constitutionality of the introduction of an
unadjudicated, extraneous offense at the
sentencing phase. The introduction of such
evidence at capital sentencing is constitutional:
"[W]e hold that the admission of unadjudicated
offenses in the sentencing phase of a capital
trial does not violate the eighth and fourteenth
amendments." Williams v. Lynaugh, 814 F.2d 205,
208 (5th Cir.1987); accord Callins, 998 F.2d at
276-77 (5th Cir.1993). Accordingly, this claim
is without merit.20
Muniz challenges the
constitutionality of the instruction that the
jury not consider the length of time before his
parole eligibility under a life sentence when
determining whether to give him life in prison
or the death penalty. This claim is problematic
on a number of grounds.
Under the
Texas death penalty statute, it is
constitutional to instruct the jury not to
consider the length of time before a capital
defendant's eligibility for parole if he
receives a life sentence.
[D]ue process
requires the state to inform a sentencing jury
about a defendant's parole ineligibility when,
and only when, (1) the state argues that a
defendant represents a future danger to society,
and (2) the defendant is legally ineligible for
parole. [T]exas did not statutorily provide for
parole ineligibility at the time of [the
petitioner's] conviction....
Allridge v.
Scott, 41 F.3d 213, 222 (5th Cir.1994) (emphasis
in original). In Allridge, we distinguished
Simmons v. South Carolina, 512 U.S. 154, 114
S.Ct. 2187, 129 L.Ed.2d 133 (1994), upon which
Muniz relies, because
in Simmons, state law made the petitioner
legally ineligible for parole, while Texas
capital defendants, sentenced when
Muniz was, would be
eligible for parole in thirty-five years if
sentenced to life imprisonment.21
Accordingly, the claim has no merit under the
law of our circuit.22
The rule
Muniz would have us
adopt also would constitute a "new rule" in
violation of Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. at 299,
109 S.Ct. at 1069. Muniz
relies on Simmons v. South Carolina, 512 U.S. at
162, 114 S.Ct. at 2193 (plurality opinion), in
which the trial court prevented the jury from
knowing that a capital defendant was statutorily
ineligible for parole with a life sentence. The
Supreme Court found this action unconstitutional,
because the death penalty statute relied on the
jury's determination of the defendant's future
dangerousness. See id.
Muniz seeks to apply (and
expand) the Simmons rule to his case. Even
assuming, arguendo, that we did not foreclose
this extension of Simmons in Allridge, see
Allridge, 41 F.3d at 222, the Supreme Court has
declared Simmons a "new rule" under Teague. See
O'Dell v. Netherland, --- U.S. ----, ---- -
----, 117 S.Ct. 1969, 1973-74, 138 L.Ed.2d 351
(1997). Because Muniz's
conviction became final in 1993, see
Muniz v. Texas, 510
U.S. 837, 114 S.Ct. 116, 126 L.Ed.2d 82 (1993),
and Simmons was not decided until 1994, we
cannot apply this new rule to
Muniz's case unless one of the two Teague
exceptions attaches.
Teague
provides that a new constitutional rule can
apply retroactively on federal collateral review
only if the new rule (1) puts "certain kinds of
primary, private individual conduct beyond the
power of the criminal law-making to proscribe"
or (2) is a rule of procedure that is "implicit
in the concept of ordered liberty." Teague, 489
U.S. at 307, 109 S.Ct. at 1073 (quotations
omitted). This second exception is "reserved for
watershed rules of criminal procedure." Id. at
311, 109 S.Ct. at 1076.
By definition,
the rule Muniz seeks
does not fall within the ambit of the first
Teague exception. In O'Dell, the Court held that
the Simmons rule does not fit within the narrow,
second Teague exception. "Simmons possesses
little of the 'watershed' character envisioned
by Teague's second exception." O'Dell, --- U.S.
at ----, 117 S.Ct. at 1978. Thus, the Teague
exceptions are inapplicable, and
Muniz is barred from
seeking to have this new rule of constitutional
law applied retroactively to him.23
There being no
merit to any of Muniz's
claims, the judgment is AFFIRMED, and the stay
of execution is VACATED.
There is confusion in the
record about how many times
Muniz invoked his right to counsel. The
state trial and appellate courts found that he
did so only once. We conclude that this finding
is supported by the record. See infra part IV.A
Muniz
originally was convicted and sentenced to death
in 1977. This court issued a writ of habeas
corpus because the trial court had improperly
admitted psychiatric information obtained from
Muniz without the
benefit of Miranda warnings. See
Muniz v. Procunier, 760
F.2d 588, 590 (5th Cir.1985). The state retried
Muniz in 1986. At the
suppression hearing before trial, the trial
judge reincorporated all of the testimony from
the suppression hearing preceding the first
trial and heard new testimony from the relevant
actors
Muniz
does not contest the voluntariness of the re-initiation
when he told Shirley that he would call his
attorney at a later time. Rather, he rests the
validity of his claim on the fact that he made
several other requests for an attorney as to
which the state cannot account for a voluntary
re-initiation of the interview
These findings of fact were
dictated into the record by the trial judge and
were affirmed and adopted by the Court of
Criminal Appeals. See Muniz,
851 S.W.2d at 252
The trial judge, as fact
finder, was in the best position to evaluate the
credibility of witnesses, so the law defers to
his judgment. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). In this
case, the ambiguity may have been the result of
a confusing line of questioning from defense
counsel. The transcript of the suppression
hearing preceding the first trial is replete
with puzzling questions by defense counsel that
had the noticeable effect of eliciting
perplexing answers from the police officers
In other aspects of his
testimony concerning the confession,
Muniz's story had
changed drastically in the interim between the
1977 suppression hearing and the suppression
hearing before his retrial in 1986. For instance,
in the 1977 hearing, the defense concentrated on
the fact that Shirley had used coercive
influences on Muniz to
get him to confess. This coercion allegedly led
Muniz to break a glass
against his head. In 1986, however,
Muniz stated for the
first time that Shirley had smashed the glass
against Muniz's head
and threatened to shoot him if he did not
confess
In addition,
Muniz claims that he
was deprived of a meal before he entered the
interview in which he confessed. There is no
evidence in the record, however, that he ever
requested food, nor does he offer an explanation
why he decided not to make such a request.
Nothing in the record indicates that the
officers conditioned Muniz's
access to food and drink on his confessing
"[I]t is simply impossible to
'[require] a state court to be explicit in its
reliance on a procedural default,' where a claim
raised on federal habeas has never been
presented to the state courts at all. In such a
context, federal courts quite properly look to,
and apply, state procedural default rules in
making the congressionally mandated
determination whether adequate remedies are
available in state court." Harris, 489 U.S. at
270, 109 S.Ct. at 1047 (O'Connor, J., concurring)
(quoting Harris, 489 U.S. at 264, 109 S.Ct. at
1044 (majority opinion))
The exceptions include the
inability to raise the claim in the first
petition because of facts unknown at the time,
see TEX.CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 11.071, §
5(a)(1) (Vernon Supp.1998), and a showing of
actual innocence, see id. art. 11.071, §
5(a)(3). Muniz offers
no showing on any of these prongs, nor does he
argue that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
would find an exception applicable to his case
The Texas capital sentencing
scheme requires the jury to answer two questions
affirmatively. First, it must find that "the
conduct of the defendant that caused the death
of the deceased was committed deliberately and
with the reasonable expectation that the death
of the deceased or another would result."
TEX.CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(b)(1)
(Vernon 1981). Second, it must find that "there
is a probability that the defendant would commit
criminal acts of violence that would constitute
a continuing threat to society." Id. art.
37.071, § 2(b)(2)
See Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S.
586, 604, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 2964-65, 57 L.Ed.2d 973
(1978) (plurality opinion); accord Eddings v.
Oklahoma, 455 U.S. 104, 110, 102 S.Ct. 869, 874,
71 L.Ed.2d 1 (1982); cf. Penry v. Lynaugh, 492
U.S. 302, 319, 109 S.Ct. 2934, 2947, 106 L.Ed.2d
256 (1989) ("The sentencer must also be able to
consider and give effect to [mitigating]
evidence in imposing sentence.")
Cf. Callins v. Collins, 998
F.2d 269, 275 (5th Cir.1993) ("It is well
settled that no Penry claim can be asserted for
evidence that could have been, but was not,
introduced in the sentencing phase....")
The district court believed
there to be an Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment
violation here but held the error to be harmless.
The court reasoned that but for judicial
intervention--that is, the trial judge's telling
his employee, Person, that she could not testify
voluntarily--the defense would have had an
enthusiastic, credible witness at its disposal
Because the judge did not
actually prevent Person from testifying, however,
we disagree. Judicial enforcement of the ethical
code in these circumstances can operate within
the bounds of the Lockett rule. As long as the
judge leaves some reasonable avenue available to
the defendant to introduce any and all
mitigating evidence he wishes, the state and the
trial judge can otherwise structure the means by
which such mitigating evidence is introduced.
Alternatively, we find
Muniz's arguments
procedurally barred for the reasons mentioned
above in part V. He failed to make a
contemporaneous objection on these grounds,
although Texas courts would require such an
objection in this instance. See TEX.R.APP. P.
52(a); Norris v. State, 902 S.W.2d 428, 444-45 (Tex.Crim.App.),
cert. denied, 516 U.S. 890, 116 S.Ct. 237, 133
L.Ed.2d 165 (1995). Thereafter, he failed to
raise the issue to the state courts on direct
appeal
Muniz
also failed to raise this issue in his initial
state collateral claim. He thus would find this
claim barred in a subsequent state habeas action.
See TEX.CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.071, § 5(a). He
has not attempted to show cause and actual
prejudice--or a fundamental miscarriage of
justice--resulting from our refusal to reach the
issue.
The claim is also
procedurally barred. Muniz
was required to make a contemporaneous objection
to the introduction of this evidence at
sentencing. See TEX.R.APP. P. 52(a); Bell v.
State, 938 S.W.2d 35, 44-45 (Tex.Crim.App.1996),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 118 S.Ct. 90, 139
L.Ed.2d 46 (1997). His failure to do so
forfeited his right to review on direct appeal
in state court (he never attempted to raise it
on direct appeal in state court in any event),
and his failure to raise this issue in his first
state habeas claim forfeited his right to raise
it in a subsequent state habeas action. See
TEX.CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.071, § 5(a).
Muniz has made no
showing of cause and actual prejudice--or of a
fundamental miscarriage of justice--for us to
overcome the default
But cf. Brown v. Texas, ---
U.S. ----, ---- - ----, 118 S.Ct. 355, 355-57,
139 L.Ed.2d 276 (1997) (opinion of Stevens, J.,
respecting denial of petition for writ of
certiorari) (suggesting that Texas's prohibition
on informing juries of parole eligibility is in
"obvious tension" with Simmons )
The state argues that this
claim is procedurally defaulted. We need not
reach the issue, however, because we find the
claim Teague-barred. See Smith v. Black, 904
F.2d 950, 982 (5th Cir.1990) (adopting a
prudential rule that we decide Teague challenges
before reaching those based on procedural
default), vacated and remanded on other grounds,
503 U.S. 930, 112 S.Ct. 1463, 117 L.Ed.2d 609
(1992)