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Michael Lannier
PENNINGTON
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
October 21,
1991
Date of arrest:
Next day
Date of birth:
November 25,
1967
Victim profile: Bradley Thomas Grooms,
20 (convenience store clerk)
Method of murder:
Shooting (sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun)
Location: Comanche County, Oklahoma, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Oklahoma on July 19,
2005
Summary:
Pennington, a soldier stationed at nearby Fort Sill, entered a
Lawton 7-Eleven convenience store at 5:00 a.m. armed with a shotgun
he had recently purchased at K-Mart and demanded money.
He fired several rounds, one hitting clerk Bradley Grooms in the
back, at least one shot went into a cooler, and several were fired
at the cash register.
During the shooting, a second clerk, James Principi, hid in a
bathroom, locking himself in.
Despite killing Grooms and using all his ammunition, Pennington left
the store empty-handed when the register failed to open.
Pennington was identified to police by Principi and a customer in
the store who was acquainted with Pennington.
Police tracked Pennington to his wife's house in Akron, Ohio, where
he was arrested.
At trial, Pennington testified that a notorious gang member named
"T" entered the store with him and committed the murder.
Pennington was a weightlifter and body builder and on appeal claimed
that steroids turned him into a killer. No motive, other than greed
and a desire to eliminate witnesses, was determined for the murder.
Citations:
Pennington v. State, 913 P.2d 1356 (Okl.Cr. 1995) (Direct
Appeal). Sallahdin v. State, 947 P.2d 559 (Okl.Cr. 1997) (PCR). Sallahdin v. Gibson, 275 F.3d 1211 (10th Cir.) (2002)
(Habeas). Sallahdin v. Mullin, 380 F.3d 1242 (10th Cir. 2004) (Habeas).
Final Meal:
A small vegetarian pizza, a large garden salad with Italian dressing,
a hot fudge sundae, a bag of Oreo cookies and a pint of milk.
Final Words:
Declined.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Oklahoma Department of
Corrections
Inmate: MICHAEL L PENNINGTON
Alias: Sharieff Imani Sallahdin
ODOC# 218361
Birthdate: 11/25/1967
Race: Black
Sex: Male
Height: 5 ft. 06 in.
Weight: 131 pounds
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
County of Conviction: Comanche
Date of Conviction: 09/17/1993
Location: Oklahoma State Penitentiary, Mcalester
Oklahoma Attorney General
06/06/2005
News Release - W.A. Drew Edmondson,
Attorney General
Pennington Execution Date Set
The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals today set
July 19 as the execution date for Comanche County death row inmate
Michael L. Pennington. Pennington was sentenced to death for the
Oct. 21, 1991, murder of 20-year-old Bradley Thomas Grooms in Lawton.
Pennington shot Grooms during a robbery of the 7-11 convenience
store near Ft. Sill Boulevard and Rogers Lane where Grooms worked.
Currently, a request for an execution date for Tulsa County inmate
Kenneth Eugene Turrentine is pending before the court.
ProDeathPenalty.com
A former U.S. soldier who said steroids turned
him into a killer was executed Tuesday evening for the 1991 murder
of a convenience store clerk during a botched robbery attempt.
Michael L. Pennington, 37, a former weightlifter and body builder,
was convicted in 1993 of murdering Bradley Thomas Grooms, 20, during
a robbery attempt at a Lawton convenience store.
While the same store no longer occupies that
location, the memories remain. James Principi, who was working with
Bradley Grooms when Pennington shot him in the back, has refused
media requests for interviews.
An associate of Principi said he has
spent the past 13 years putting this event behind him and going
forward with his life, despite the memories. Pennington, who was
stationed at nearby Fort Sill, shot Grooms once in the back with a
sawed-off shotgun, then left the store empty-handed because he
couldn't open the register.
Police tracked Pennington to his wife's house in
Akron, Ohio, where he was arrested. Pennington said that anabolic
steroids, which he took to enhance his weightlifting and body
building regimen, altered his normal behavior and transformed him
from a disciplined soldier into a fleeing killer.
Louise Grooms was at her Indiahoma home Tuesday
night when her son's killer received a lethal injection at the
Oklahoma State Penitentiary. "Mr. Pennington has taken so much from
me," Grooms said Monday, commenting on why she wouldn't attend his
execution in McAlester. "I know it's all clinical, but it's not
something you deal with everyday," Grooms said, expressing her
concern for those who witnessed the execution. "I don't want him
taking any more from me." Referring to James Principi, Louise Grooms
said, "I'm glad that he survived," noting that, while the event
surely affected Principi, his family didn't lose him. "With his
surviving, that helped the police to identify Pennington."
Allison Carson, the Attorney General's Victims'
Witness Coordinator, called Grooms at 6:13 p.m., informing her of
Pennington's official time of death. "It's been a weird day," Grooms
said. "I have to call some friends in Florida. Maybe it'll sink in
by then." The emotion in her voice betraying her, Grooms said, "He
got options. He got to pick his last meal and all that stuff."
Pennington's options included addressing the witnesses. "No
statement," he said, when asked if he wished to make one, then he
looked to his left toward his mother, wife and spiritual adviser and
mouthed, "I love you."
At a recent clemency hearing, Grooms said
Pennington appeared apologetic but then filed a request for a stay
of execution in which he alleged his race was the reason he was
convicted and sentenced to death. Pennington was black. "That's not
it," Louise Grooms said, expressing hope that the execution would
send a message. "It's because you're a killer. Once you have killed,
what kind of a crime is lying? He's a liar and a killer. He didn't
have to do this. You can't get away with committing crimes."
While an exact motive was never determined, the
lead detective on Pennington's case said it appeared that he entered
the store at 5 a.m. Oct. 21, 1991, to rob it.
He fired several
rounds from a sawed-off shotgun he had purchased at Kmart. Bradley
Grooms was shot in the back, at least one shot went into a cooler
and several were fired at the cash register.
After the initial
gunshot, Principi hid in a bathroom, locking himself in. Pennington
didn't make off with any cash, police said. He flew out of Lawton
and was arrested the next day in his hometown of Akron, Ohio.
Bradley Grooms was barely 20 years old when he was killed. "Bradley
was 20 for two months and one week," his mother said. "It's like
he's still 19 to me."
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Michael L. Pennington - Oklahoma - July 19, 2005
6:00 p.m. CST
The state of Oklahoma is scheduled to execute 37-year-old
Michael L. Pennington, a black man, July 19th for the early morning
Oct. 21, 1991 shooting death of Bradley Grooms, 20, at a 7-11
convenient store in Comanche County.
He maintains the guilty party was a person he was
with, but that person was never found. On appeal, Pennington made
several claims ranging from jury misconduct to impermissible
admission of evidence. His defense counsel failed to reopen voir
dire when one of the jury members claimed that they could not be
fair and impartial. He claims that the prosecution’s use of a
preemptory challenge on another juror was racially motivated and was
a violation of his Fourteenth Amendment rights.
The death penalty is cruel and unusual. It is not
a deterrent, and costs more than a life in prison term. Although
African Americans make up 12% of the population, they account for
42% of current death row inmates. Since the United States ratified
the International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of
Racial Discrimination in 1994, U.S. courts and legislatures have
failed to act decisively in the face of evidence that race has a
significant impact on capital sentencing.
Please contact Governor Brad Henry and the Board
of Pardons and Paroles and ask them to spare the life of Michael L.
Pennington.
Former Soldier Executed for 1991 Slaying of
Clerk
NewsOK.com
AP - July 20, 2005
McALESTER (AP) - A former U.S. soldier and in-prison
convert to Islam was executed Tuesday evening for the 1991 murder of
a convenience store clerk.
Michael L. Pennington, 37, who changed his name
to Sharieff Sallahdin while at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary,
received a lethal injection and was pronounced dead at 6:10 p.m.,
corrections officials said.
The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals rejected a
stay request filed this past week. The U.S. Supreme Court also
declined to stop the execution.
Shortly before 6 p.m., the 5-foot-7 man was
strapped to a gurney in the execution chamber. Pennington's only
comment was, "No statement." He then mouthed the words "I love you,"
to two family members who witnessed his execution. None of the
victim's relatives attended the execution.
The former weightlifter and body builder was
convicted in 1993 of the murder of clerk Bradley Thomas Grooms, 20,
during a robbery attempt in Lawton on Oct. 21, 1991. Pennington, who
was stationed at nearby Fort Sill, shot Grooms once in the back with
a sawed-off, 12-gauge shotgun.
After killing Grooms, Pennington
fired several times into a cash register and throughout the store.
Despite killing Grooms and using all his ammunition, Pennington left
the store empty-handed when the register failed to open. Police
tracked Pennington to his wife's house in Akron, Ohio, where he was
arrested.
For his final meal, he requested a small
vegetarian pizza, a large garden salad with Italian dressing, a hot
fudge sundae, a bag of Oreo cookies and a pint of milk.
The next execution in Oklahoma is scheduled for
Aug. 11. Kenneth Eugene Turrentine, 52, is scheduled to die that day
for murdering his girlfriend during a Tulsa County killing spree.
Turrentine was convicted of the June 4, 1994, slayings of his sister,
Avon Stevenson, his girlfriend, Anita Louise Richardson, and
Richardson's children, Tina L. Pennington, 22, and Martise D.
Richardson, 13. Turrentine shot Stevenson at her home and Richardson
and her children at their residence, both in northeast Tulsa.
Former Soldier Executed for Murder
By Shaun Schafer - Washington Post
AP - July 19, 2005
McALESTER, Okla. -- A former U.S. soldier who
said steroids turned him into a killer was executed Tuesday evening
for the 1991 murder of a convenience store clerk during a botched
robbery attempt. Michael L. Pennington, 37, who changed his name to
Sharieff Sallahdin after converting to Islam at the Oklahoma State
Penitentiary, was given a lethal injection and pronounced dead at
6:10 p.m., corrections officials said.
Pennington's only comment was, "No statement." He
then mouthed the words "I love you" to two family members who
witnessed his execution. None of the victim's relatives were there.
The former weightlifter and body builder was
convicted in 1993 of murdering Bradley Thomas Grooms, 20, during a
robbery attempt at a Lawton convenience store. Pennington, who was
stationed at nearby Fort Sill, shot Grooms once in the back with a
sawed-off shotgun, then left the store empty-handed because he
couldn't open the register. Police tracked Pennington to his wife's
house in Akron, Ohio, where he was arrested.
Pennington said that anabolic steroids, which he
took to enhance his weightlifting and body building regimen, altered
his normal behavior and transformed him from a disciplined soldier
into a fleeing killer.
Local killer put to death
By Kevin J. Shutt - Lawton Constitution
July 20, 2005
Louise Grooms was at her Indiahoma home Tuesday
night when her son's killer received a lethal injection at the
Oklahoma State Penitentiary. Michael L. Pennington's mother, wife
and spiritual adviser were present in the small viewing room when
three chemicals were injected into his arms via tubes coming from
two holes in the wall behind his head.
Pennington, who changed his name while in prison
to Sharief Imani Sallahdin, made snoring sounds before his head
slowly cocked to his right and his eyes opened halfway. A prison
doctor pronounced Sallahdin's time of death as 6:10 p.m.,
approximately five minutes after the injections began.
"Mr. Pennington has taken so much from me,"
Grooms said Monday, commenting on why she wouldn't attend his
execution in McAlester. "I don't want him taking any more from me."
Pennington was convicted in 1993 of shooting
7-Eleven clerk Bradley Thomas Grooms, 20, in the back at the Fort
Sill Boulevard and Rogers Lane location. While the same company no
longer occupies that location, the memories remain. James Principi,
who was working with Bradley Grooms when Pennington shot him in the
back, has refused media requests for interviews.
An associate of Principi said he has spent the
past 13 years putting this event behind him and going forward with
his life, despite the memories. "I'm glad that he survived," Grooms
said, noting that, while the event surely affected Principi, his
family didn't lose him. "With his surviving, that helped the police
to identify Pennington."
Allison Carson, the Attorney General's
Victims' Witness Coordinator, called Grooms at 6:13 p.m., informing
her of Pennington's official time of death. "It's been a weird day,"
Grooms said. "I have to call some friends in Florida. Maybe it'll
sink in by then." The emotion in her voice betraying her, Grooms
said, "He got options. He got to pick his last meal and all that
stuff."
Pennington's options included addressing the
witnesses. "No statement," he said, when asked if he wished to make
one, then he looked to his left toward his mother, wife and
spiritual adviser and mouthed, "I love you."
A saline wash, injected through a pair of
intravenous lines flowing from two holes in the wall and ending in
each arm, was followed by three drugs used to effect the execution
sodium thiopental, vecuronium bromide and potassium chloride. Each
drug was punctuated by a shot of saline.
Three executioners inject
one drug each, in the order previously listed. Sodium thiopental
causes unconsciousness. Vecuronium bromide stops respiration and
potassium chloride ceases heart functions. "I know it's all clinical,
but it's not something you deal with everyday," Grooms said,
expressing her concern for those who witnessed the execution.
At a recent clemency hearing, Grooms said
Pennington appeared apologetic but then filed a request for a stay
of execution in which he alleged his race was the reason he was
convicted and sentenced to death. Pennington was black. "That's not
it," Grooms said, expressing hope that the execution would send a
message. "It's because you're a killer. Once you have killed, what
kind of a crime is lying? He's a liar and a killer. He didn't have
to do this. You can't get away with committing crimes."
While an exact motive was never determined, the
lead detective on Pennington's case said it appeared that he entered
the store at 5 a.m. Oct. 21, 1991, to rob it. He fired several
rounds from a sawed-off shotgun he had purchased at Kmart. Bradley
Grooms was shot in the back, at least one shot went into a cooler
and several were fired at the cash register.
After the initial
gunshot, Principi hid in a bathroom, locking himself in. Pennington
didn't make off with any cash, police said. He flew out of Lawton
and was arrested the next day in his hometown of Akron, Ohio.
Bradley Grooms was barely 20 years old when he
was killed. "Bradley was 20 for two months and one week," his mother
said. "It's like he's still 19 to me."
Pennington v. State,
913 P.2d 1356 (Okl.Cr. 1995) (Direct Appeal).
Defendant was convicted in the District Court,
Comanche County, Peter Clinton Moore, J., of capital murder and
defendant appealed. The Court of Criminal Appeals, Johnson, P.J.,
held that: (1) juror was properly not excused for cause; (2) trial
court substantially complied with procedure for drawing prospective
jurors' names; (3) prospective jurors were properly excused for
cause; (4) prosecutor provided race-neutral explanation for use of
peremptory challenge; (5) statute which allowed person 70 years of
age or older to opt out of jury service was not unconstitutional;
(6) in-court identification of defendant was independently reliable;
(7) defendant was not entitled to reversal based on prosecutor's
reference to his postarrest silence; (8) defendant waived his right
to remain silent; (9) shotgun was admissible; (10) defendant's wife
and father-in-law had authority to consent to search house; (11)
police reasonably believed that wife and father-in-law had authority
to consent to search bag and clothing; (12) check which defendant
wrote to purchase gun and testimony that defendant sawed off barrel
of shotgun were admissible; (13) postmortem photographs of victim
were admissible; (14) steriod rage syndrome evidence was not
admissible; (15) finding that defendant created great risk of harm
to others was not supported by evidence; (16) finding that defendant
killed victim to avoid arrest or prosecution was supported by
evidence; (17) finding that defendant presented continuing threat to
society was supported by evidence; (18) complaint to prison and
letter were authenticated; (19) admission of victim impact evidence
was not unconstitutional; (20) trial court's refusal to permit
certain mitigating evidence was not outcome determinative; and (21)
continuing threat aggravating circumstance was not vague or capable
of arbitrary and capricious use. Affirmed.
JOHNSON, Presiding Judge:
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Appellant, Michael L. Pennington, was tried by
jury for the crime of First Degree Murder (malice aforethought) in
violation of 21 O.S.1991, § 701.7, in Case No. CRF-91-386, in the
District Court of Comanche County before the Honorable Peter Clinton
Moore. The State filed a Bill of Particulars alleging three
aggravating circumstances: (1) the defendant knowingly created a
great risk of death to more than one person; (2) the murder was
committed for the purpose of avoiding or preventing lawful arrest or
prosecution; and (3) that defendant was a continuing threat to
society. Appellant was represented by counsel. The jury returned a
verdict of guilty and set punishment at death. The trial court
sentenced appellant in accordance with the jury's verdict. From this
Judgment and Sentence, appellant has perfected his appeal to this
Court.
SUMMARY OF FACTS
On October 21, 1991, James Principe and Bradley
Grooms were working the late shift at a 7-11 convenience store
located in Lawton at Fort Sill Boulevard and Rogers Lane.
At
approximately 5:00 a.m. that morning, Principe and Grooms were
stocking shelves, with Grooms located toward the front of the store.
During this time, a black male entered the store, went to the
bathroom, and left. This male was wearing a black and white outfit
with matching top and pants.
Principe described the pattern as cow-like
with black and white spots. About one minute after this male left
the store, Principe while still stocking shelves in the back of the
store, heard a loud bang. He stood up from his crouched position and
noticed another black man wearing sunglasses standing just inside
the door of the store looking in the direction of Grooms.
Principe
immediately heard Grooms exclaim, "Oh shit." With that, Principe
ducked down and made his way to the back of the store.
As he was running, he looked back and saw the man
again taking a step towards Grooms. At that point, Principe got a
good look at the shooter and noticed he was wearing a black trench
coat. As he continued moving to the back of the store, Principe
heard another shot. Principe ran to the bathroom and locked himself
inside.
While locked in the bathroom, Principe heard
several more shots. Then he heard the front door buzzer, and then
some voices. He heard the door buzzer again, and then came out of
the bathroom and contacted the police. He then observed Grooms
laying motionless between the first two aisles of the store.
Principe later identified appellant as the black man who did the
shooting.
During a canvass of the neighborhood for
witnesses, an individual was discovered who could shed some light on
what occurred while Principe was hiding in the bathroom and heard
the sound of voices. Lynn Renee Smith had stopped at the 7-11, just
after the shooting, to get a cup of ice.
Coincidentally, she had
known appellant for about three years and had seen him earlier that
evening at the Peacock Lounge. As Smith pulled up to the store, she
noticed appellant behind the cash register.
Smith believed that
appellant must work at the store. He asked her what she wanted. When
she told him, he gave her a cup and she got some ice. She did not
see anyone else while she was in the store, and she noticed that it
appeared to be unusually quiet.
Upon leaving the store, Smith drove
to her sister's house located approximately fifty yards from the
7-11 and backed into the driveway. As she looked towards the 7-11,
Smith saw appellant, wearing a black trench coat, leave the store
and drive away in his car. Smith also testified that appellant was
wearing a black baseball style cap, which he had on backwards. She
further noted that he had on sunglasses, which were not mirrored,
and described appellant as being about 5' 5" tall. She did not see
appellant wearing the black trench coat in the store.
The neighborhood canvass turned up two other
witnesses. Sylvia Smith (no relation to Lynn Smith) lived in the
neighborhood in the area of the 7-11. Smith heard a gunshot between
4:30 and 5:00 a.m. As she looked out of her window, she saw two
black males running up the street away from the 7-11.
Jose Rodriguez
lived almost next door to Sylvia Smith. He left for duty at Fort
Sill about quarter after 5:00 a.m. on the same morning. He stated
that he also saw two individuals running. He was unable to describe
the second runner, but he was able to recall that the first
individual appeared to have on a knee length black coat.
After leaving the store, appellant, who was a
soldier stationed at Ft. Sill, returned briefly to the barracks and
changed clothes. He then went to the airport and took the next
available flight to Dallas with an ultimate destination of Akron,
Ohio.
Appellant was taken into custody the following
day by Ohio authorities at the home of his wife in Akron. While in
custody, appellant volunteered information as to the location of the
shotgun. The shotgun was located in an orange duffel bag in the
basement of the Akron residence along with a green compass pouch
containing four shotgun shells.
Subsequent ballistics tests
conducted on the shotgun revealed that the five expended shells from
the scene, and one expended shell found in the orange duffel bag,
were fired from the shotgun found in the orange duffel bag. Another
search was conducted the next day in the area where the duffel bag
had been recovered. This time the police recovered a black baseball
style cap, a three quarter length trench coat, and a gray and black
sports sweatshirt.
The medical examiner, Dr. Boatsman, testified
that the cause of Bradley Groom's death was a shotgun wound to the
chest. Twelve pellet wounds were found in the left back and an exit
wound in the back right area of the neck.
An examination of the
scene indicated that nothing was missing from the store after the
incident. However, the cash register drawer had been pulled and
pried upon, and also apparently fired at, since four large holes
were in the front drawer area.
During the homicide investigation, the police had
learned that appellant was absent without leave from his unit. They
also learned of Priscilla Jordan, who was appellant's girlfriend in
Lawton. From Jordan the police discovered appellant owned a shotgun
which he kept in an orange duffel bag.
With this information the
police revisited the personnel at appellant's battery and obtained
information that led them to the K-Mart store where appellant had
purchased a Maverick Shotgun.
At trial, the defense called appellant. Appellant
first described his early life and military career. He also
described his problems with the premature birth of his child and his
plans to leave the military.
The morning of the 7- 11 shooting,
appellant decided to go home to Akron even though his discharge
papers had not yet been processed. He testified, that in order to
raise some money, he made a deal to buy some firearms to take home
to sell.
This deal was entered into with a man known only as "T."
Appellant went on to describe his version of how the events unfolded
in the early morning hours of October 21, 1991. "T" and two other
black males got into appellant's car somewhere near the Peacock
Lounge. The group rode around awhile to make sure they were not
followed. Eventually they directed appellant to stop near the 7-11
on Fort Sill Boulevard. Appellant parked near a massage parlor and
pawn shop close to the store. One of the men exited the vehicle
saying he was going to get the stuff.
Some time passed, so appellant decided to go into
the 7-11 to purchase some Lactaid milk. He took his $1,500.00 (to
purchase the guns) with him, but left his gun behind in the car. He
went on to testify that while he was in the store, "T" walked in
carrying appellant's shotgun. "T" immediately began firing the gun.
With that, appellant jumped behind the checkout counter. Then "T"
came behind the checkout counter and told appellant not to worry,
but to just give him the money he knew appellant had on him to
purchase the guns. Appellant gave "T" his cash. After that "T"
focused his attention on the locked cash register. "T" got mad and
shot the cash register several times and tried unsuccessfully to
yank it open. After that "T" ran out of the store with appellant's
gun.
Appellant states that he remained in the store in
a state of shock. He looked over and saw Grooms motionless and
assumed he was dead. This is the point at which Lynn Smith entered
the store and asked for the cup of ice. After she left, appellant
got a grip on himself and ran out of the store. As he was running
toward the car he saw his shotgun laying on the ground and picked it
up as a reflex action. He then drove off in his car and went back to
the post. Appellant stated that he did not call the police because
he feared "T" who was a notorious gang member. "T" was never found
or identified. Additional facts will be discussed as pertinent to
the assignments of error.
* * *
After carefully reweighing the aggravating
circumstances and all mitigating evidence, we find the aggravating
circumstances far outweigh the mitigating evidence and that the
sentence of death is factually substantiated and appropriate. When
reweighing, this Court must review the aggravating and mitigating
evidence to ascertain the role which the invalid "great risk of
death to more than one person" aggravator played in the jury
sentencing process. Stringer v. Black, 503 U.S. 222, 230, 112 S.Ct.
1130, 1136, 117 L.Ed.2d 367 (1992). The Court must then determine,
through the reweighing process, what the jury in this case would
have decided had it not considered the invalid aggravator. Stringer,
503 U.S. at 230, 112 S.Ct. at 1137 Richmond v. Lewis, 506 U.S. 40,
49, 113 S.Ct. 528, 535, 121 L.Ed.2d 411 (1992).
This Court has provided a thorough analysis of
the evidence offered in support of each of the aggravating
circumstances, as well as, the evidence in mitigation. We find the
discussion above to be sufficient. We do not need to set forth the
facts again except to say guilt is clear. We have appellant at the
scene, we have him with the death weapon together with an eyewitness
and a witness that knows appellant and places him at the crime
scene.
Upon carefully considering and reviewing the
evidence which supports the two valid aggravating circumstances, as
well as the evidence which may be considered mitigating, this Court
finds the sentence of death was factually substantiated and
appropriate. Furthermore, we find the jury's consideration of the
invalid aggravator did not play a significant role in its decision
to sentence appellant to death as the evidence supporting the two
valid aggravators was concrete and substantial. Finding no error
warranting reversal or modification, the Judgment and Sentence is
AFFIRMED.
AN APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMANCHE
COUNTY THE HONORABLE PETER CLINTON MOORE, DISTRICT JUDGE Appellant,
Michael L. Pennington, was tried by jury and convicted of Murder in
the First Degree (Malice Aforethought). Appellant was tried in Case
No. CRF-91-386, in the District Court of Comanche County before the
Honorable Peter Clinton Moore, District Judge. The jury recommended
punishment of death. The trial court sentenced accordingly. From
this Judgment and Sentence, appellant has perfected this appeal. The
Judgment and Sentence of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
Sallahdin v. State,
947 P.2d 559 (Okl.Cr. 1997) (PCR)
Following defendant's conviction for first-degree
malice aforethought murder, in the District Court, Peter Clinton
Moore, District Judge, and the affirmance of defendant's conviction
and sentence on appeal, 913 P.2d 1356, defendant filed application
for postconviction relief and requests for discovery and evidentiary
hearing. The Court of Criminal Appeals, Johnson, J., held that: (1)
claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel was barred; (2)
claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel was not
supported by any evidence; and (3) requests for discovery and
evidentiary hearing would not be granted. Denied. Lumpkin, J.,
concurred in the results and filed an opinion. Lane, J., concurred
in the results and filed an opinion.
OPINION DENYING APPLICATION FOR POST-CONVICTION
RELIEF AND REQUESTS FOR AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING AND DISCOVERY
JOHNSON, Judge.
Petitioner, Sharieff Sallahdin (formerly Michael Pennington), was
tried by a jury in the District Court of Comanche County, Case No.
CRF-91-386, before the Honorable Peter Clinton Moore. Petitioner was
convicted of First Degree Malice Aforethought Murder. The jury found
Petitioner guilty and sentenced him to death after finding three
aggravating circumstances. The trial court sentenced Petitioner
accordingly on September 17, 1993. On direct appeal in Case No.
F-93-968, Petitioner's conviction and sentence were affirmed.
Pennington v. State, 913 P.2d 1356 (Okl.Cr.1995) , cert. denied, 519
U.S. 841, 117 S.Ct. 121, 136 L.Ed.2d 72 (1996). A Petition for
Rehearing was filed on January 17, 1996. This Petition was denied on
April 26, 1996.
On January 15, 1997, Petitioner filed an initial
application for postconviction relief together with requests for
discovery and an evidentiary hearing with this Court. [FN1] The
issues that may be raised as well as our scope of review in this
matter are narrowly defined as follows:
FN1. 22 O.S. Supp.1995, § 1089(D)(1) provides
that an original application for post-conviction relief shall be
filed with this Court. The recent amendments to the Post-Conviction
Procedure Act do not require the State to respond to the original
application and no State response was filed.
The only issues that can be raised in post-conviction
are those which were not or could not have been raised in a direct
appeal and support a conclusion either that the outcome of the trial
would have been different but for the errors or that the defendant
is factually innocent. On review, this Court must determine whether
controverted, previously unresolved factual issues material to the
legality of the applicant's confinement exist, whether the
applicant's grounds were or could have been previously raised, and
whether relief may be granted.... This Court will not consider an
issue which was raised on direct appeal and is therefore barred by
res judicata, nor will we consider an issue which has been waived
because it could have been raised on direct appeal but was not.
McGregor v. State, 935 P.2d 332, 333-334 (Okl.Cr.), cert. denied,
521 U.S. 1108, 117 S.Ct. 2489, 138 L.Ed.2d 996 (1997) [footnotes
omitted]. Based upon the foregoing, we will not consider the claims
raised in Petitioner's first through eighth and tenth propositions
of error because they either were raised on direct appeal and are
now barred by res judicata, or could have been raised on direct
appeal and are now waived.
These propositions of error are as follows:
I. The prosecutor's references to petitioner's
post arrest silence violated Petitioner's rights to due process of
law in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
United States Constitution and Article II, §§ 7 and 9 of the
Oklahoma Constitution.
II. Misrepresentations by members of the jury of
facts that would have supported reasons to challenge those jurors
for cause denied Mr. Sallahdin a trial before an impartial jury as
required by the Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
III. The jury was not properly instructed
regarding life without parole, and as a result Mr. Sallahdin was
denied due process of law and a reliable sentencing proceeding in
violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United
States Constitution and Article II, §§ 7 and 9 of the Oklahoma
Constitution.
IV. Mr. Sallahdin was denied his Sixth Amendment
right to a trial by a fair and impartial jury, his Eighth Amendment
right to a reliable sentencing hearing, and his Fourteenth Amendment
right to due process of law because a member of his jury was asleep
during the defense's case.
V. The trial court deprived Mr. Sallahdin of a
fair and impartial jury, as guaranteed by the Sixth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments, by refusing to sustain his challenges for
cause against a juror who, after being accepted for cause, indicated
he could not be fair and impartial.
VI. Mr. Sallahdin's death sentence violates the
Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution
because the "Continuing Threat" aggravating circumstance, as it is
currently being applied is unconstitutionally vague.
VII. Failure of the Information to properly
allege the elements of the offense of First Degree Malice
Aforethought Murder under the law in effect at the time of the
offense resulted in fundamental and reversible error. This error
violated Mr. Sallahdin's rights under the Fifth, Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments.
VIII. The introduction of the Appellant's shotgun,
other items seized from his belongings, testimony about these items,
and the results of scientific tests concerning these items violated
Appellant's rights under the Fourth, Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments of the United States Constitution and Article II, §§ 7, 9
and 30 of the Oklahoma Constitution as these items were seized
without a search warrant and the police failed to obtain valid
consent.
X. Mr. Sallahdin's due process rights under the
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution
were violated when the Prosecutor failed to disclose exculpatory
evidence to the defense.
* * *
After carefully reviewing Petitioner's
application for post-conviction relief and requests for discovery
and an evidentiary hearing, we find that Petitioner is not entitled
to relief. Accordingly, Petitioner's Application for Post-Conviction
Relief and Application for an Evidentiary Hearing and Discovery are
DENIED.
Sallahdin v. Gibson,
275 F.3d 1211 (10th Cir.) (2002) (Habeas).
State prisoner whose conviction of capital murder
was affirmed on appeal, 913 P.2d 1356, petitioned for writ of habeas
corpus. The United States District Court for the Western District of
Oklahoma, Wayne E. Alley, J., denied the petition, and petitioner
appealed. The Court of Appeals, Briscoe, Circuit Judge, held that:
(1) defendant was not deprived of a fair and impartial jury; (2)
information was constitutionally adequate; (3) trial court's failure
to define life without parole for the jury was not constitutional
error; (4) prosecutor's references to post-arrest silence did not
violate defendant's right to remain silent; (5) two aggravators
applied to sentencing were supported by sufficient evidence; (6)
continuing threat aggravator was constitutional; (7) instructions
sufficiently informed the jury that it did not have to be unanimous
to find and apply mitigating circumstances to sentence; (8) proposed
testimony of psychiatrist as defendant's steroid expert in
sentencing phase was admissible; (9) defendant was prejudiced by the
absence of the proposed steroid testimony; and (10) determination of
counsel's reasons, or lack thereof, for foregoing the use of the
expert's testimony during the sentencing phase required remand to
district court. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
BRISCOE , Circuit Judge.
Petitioner-Appellant Sharieff Imani Sallahdin, formerly Michael
Pennington, [FN1] appeals from the district court's denial of his
federal habeas corpus petition brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
In his petition, Sallahdin lodged eleven challenges to his first
degree murder conviction and death sentence. His appeal contests the
district court's disposition of each challenge, raising the
following issues: (1) four challenges concerning the jury and
whether Sallahdin was deprived of due process of law and a fair and
impartial jury; (2) whether the information was constitutionally
adequate; (3) whether the trial court's failure to define life
without parole for the jury was constitutional error; (4) whether
the reference to post-arrest silence violated his constitutional
rights; (5) whether the two aggravators applied to his sentencing
are supported by sufficient evidence; (6) whether the continuing
threat aggravator is unconstitutional because it is vague and
applied in a standardless manner; (7) whether the jury instructions
failed to inform the jury that it did not have to be unanimous to
find and apply mitigating circumstances to his sentence; and (8)
whether Sallahdin was deprived of admissible mitigation evidence
concerning steroid-induced psychosis. This court has jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
FN1. Sallahdin formally changed his name.
Sallahdin's most troubling challenge concerns
whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present
mitigating evidence of the effects of Sallahdin's steroid use on his
behavior at the time of the crime. After carefully examining the
record, we are persuaded that, had this evidence been presented,
there is a reasonable probability the outcome of the sentencing
phase would have been different, i.e., that the jury would have
imposed a sentence other than death. Because, however, we are not
privy to trial counsel's reasons for not presenting this evidence,
and because we can envision circumstances where it would have been
constitutionally reasonable for counsel not to introduce this
evidence despite its potentially mitigative effect, we find it
necessary to reverse and remand this case to the district court for
an evidentiary hearing solely on this specific issue concerning
trial counsel's performance. As regards all other issues raised by
Sallahdin, we affirm.
FACTS
The pertinent facts concerning the murder are
undisputed as summarized by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals
in the opinion disposing of his direct criminal appeal. Pennington
v. State, 913 P.2d 1356 (Okla.Crim.App.1995), cert. denied, 519 U.S.
841, 117 S.Ct. 121, 136 L.Ed.2d 72 (1996). At approximately 5:00
a.m. on October 21, 1991, James Principe and Bradley Grooms were
stocking shelves at the 7-Eleven convenience store where they worked.
Principe heard a loud bang and saw a black man looking in Grooms'
direction. Principe ducked, made his way to the back of the store
and locked himself in the bathroom.
After emerging from the bathroom,
he contacted the police and then saw Grooms lying motionless on the
floor with a gunshot wound to the chest. Grooms died from his
injuries. Principe later identified Sallahdin as the man who shot
Grooms. That same morning, Lynn Smith stopped at the 7-Eleven to get
some ice. Sallahdin was behind the counter and gave her a cup of
ice. She did not see anyone else in the store. Upon leaving, she
looked back and saw Sallahdin leave the store and drive away in a
car. The following day, Sallahdin was taken into custody at his
wife's home in Akron, Ohio.
At trial, Sallahdin testified another man
committed the murder. The jury convicted Sallahdin of first degree
malice murder, which is punishable by death in Oklahoma. When the
trial proceeded to the sentencing phase, the State sought the death
penalty based on three aggravators: (1) Sallahdin posed a continuing
threat to society; (2) he committed the murder to avoid arrest or
prosecution; and (3) he knowingly created a great risk of death to
more than one person. In addition to the guilt phase evidence about
the crime, the State presented evidence of threats Sallahdin made
while incarcerated. The jury found all three aggravating
circumstances. After Sallahdin presented his own testimony in
mitigation and mitigating testimony from friends, family, commanders,
peers and others who knew him; the jury determined the aggravating
factors outweighed the mitigating evidence and fixed punishment at
death.
On direct appeal, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the conviction and death sentence, after striking
the great risk of death to more than one person aggravator and
reweighing the remaining aggravators against the mitigating
evidence. That court later denied post-conviction relief. Sallahdin
v. State, 947 P.2d 559 (Okla.Crim.App.1997) .
* * *
Steroid-Use Evidence
Sallahdin argues the trial court erroneously
denied him an opportunity to present mitigating evidence that he was
experiencing psychiatric effects from anabolic steroid use at the
time of the crime. According to Sallahdin, the steroids, taken to
enhance his weight lifting and body building regimen, altered his
normal behavior and therefore the trial court wrongly prevented him
from explaining what transformed him from a disciplined soldier into
a fleeing killer. He contends that if this steroid evidence had been
admitted, he probably would not have received a death sentence.
He also argues his conviction and death sentence are constitutionally
infirm because counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to
investigate and present evidence of the effects of his anabolic
steroid use on his behavior at the time of the crime. Apt. Reply Br.
at 19-20.
Preclusion of Steroid Evidence by Trial Court--Prior
to trial, Sallahdin disclosed that he intended to present the
testimony of Dr. Harrison Pope, a psychiatrist and steroid expert.
The State filed a motion in limine requesting that the trial court
enter an order prohibiting any testimony concerning "Steroid Rage
Syndrome." At the hearing on the motion, Dr. John A. Call, a
psychologist, testified for the State that "Steroid Rage Syndrome"
is not generally accepted as a bona fide diagnosable *1233 syndrome.
Tr. of Hear'g of May 4, 1993 at 4-6, 14.
During the hearing, Sallahdin's counsel stated
the defense intended to call Dr. Pope only at the sentencing phase
to introduce expert testimony that steroid use may explain the
change in Sallahdin's personality, and did not necessarily intend to
refer to "Steroid Rage Syndrome." See id. at 18-19.
The trial court
granted the State's motion in limine, limiting its decision to
finding only that the State showed there is no scientific theory
called "Steroid Rage Syndrome." Id. at 19-20. The court acknowledged
there may be other reasons steroid-use evidence could be admissible
and ordered written notice of Dr. Pope's testimony. Id. at 20, 30;
D. Ct. Rec. Vol. 3 at 77. In sum, contrary to Sallahdin's contention
the trial court denied him the opportunity to present any steroid
use testimony during either stage of the trial, the trial court
precluded only expert testimony concerning "Steroid Rage Syndrome,"
not all testimony, be it expert or otherwise, concerning the effects
of steroid use on Sallahdin.
Sallahdin filed a discovery supplement
withdrawing Dr. Pope as a possible first-stage witness and, in
response to the trial court's order, delineating Dr. Pope's
anticipated sentencing phase testimony. The supplement anticipated
Dr. Pope would testify: (1) steroids caused manic symptoms while
Sallahdin took them and depressive symptoms and impulse control
disorder during his withdrawal from them; and (2) to a reasonable
medical certainty, the change in Sallahdin's behavior was
attributable to steroid use. D. Ct. Rec. Vol. 3 at 70-73. The
supplement also represented Dr. Pope would not testify that "Steroid
Rage Syndrome" is a mental illness or that it was identified as such
in the medical or scientific communities. Id. at 73.
Approximately one month before trial, in a motion
to prohibit the State's expert from examining Sallahdin, counsel
again set forth his purpose for presenting expert testimony on the
effect of steroids on Sallahdin. D. Ct. Rec. Vol. 3 at 92-96.
The
motion indicated steroid use was comparable to problems caused by
alcohol consumption, was not a mental illness, and the steroid
evidence would only be used as mitigating evidence during the
sentencing phase of the trial to show the effects of steroid use on
Sallahdin-- not to show steroids caused him to commit the murder, or
to lower the degree of homicide, or as a defense. Id. at 92, 93-94.
Despite the court-ordered supplementation of Dr. Pope's testimony
and the motion delineating the intended use of the testimony,
counsel failed to call on Dr. Pope to testify or to present any
steroid evidence to the jury at either stage of the trial.
Sallahdin now argues on federal habeas that the
trial court erred in precluding evidence concerning the effects of
steroid use during the trial. Neither the trial court nor the state
appellate court addressed this specific issue on the merits. See
Pennington, 913 P.2d at 1370. The federal district court did not
hold an evidentiary hearing on the matter and relied solely on the
state court record. Accordingly, we review the federal district
court's conclusions of law de novo and perform an independent review
of its factual findings. See LaFevers, 182 F.3d at 711;
The federal district court determined the trial
court did not err in refusing to admit steroid-use evidence because:
(1) "Steroid Rage Syndrome" was not shown to be a reliable theory at
the time of the hearing, under either Frye or Daubert; [FN7] (2)
counsel specifically denied any intent to use the testimony during
the guilt phase; and (3) counsel did not request permission to
present the evidence at the sentencing proceeding. ROA, Vol. 1, Doc
27 at 5-6; 8-11. Although we agree with the district court's
determinations, the dispositive fact is that the trial court did not
actually preclude presentation of evidence about the effects of
steroid use on Sallahdin.
The trial court's ruling precluded only evidence
of "Steroid Rage Syndrome." The court expressly left open the
possibility of introducing other steroid evidence and ordered
counsel to provide the State with clarification of the steroid
expert's probable testimony. Counsel subsequently provided a
detailed discovery supplement containing the steroid expert's
anticipated testimony. D. Ct. Rec. Vol. 3 at 70-73. Counsel, however,
did not attempt to present such evidence to the jury and did not ask
the trial court for a ruling on its admissibility. Consequently, the
trial court never ruled on the admissibility of the steroid use
evidence and did not preclude Sallahdin from introducing such
evidence at either stage of the trial. Accordingly, the trial court
did not err as Sallahdin claims.
* * *
CONCLUSION
After considering Sallahdin's arguments on
appeal, we are not persuaded that constitutional error infected the
first stage of his trial. Likewise, we reject the majority of his
arguments concerning his sentence. We do, however, have concerns
regarding his claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing
to present steroid-use evidence during the second stage of trial. We
AFFIRM in part, and REVERSE in part, and REMAND the case to the
district court for an evidentiary hearing and further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
Sallahdin v. Mullin,
380 F.3d 1242 (10th Cir. 2004) (Habeas).
Background: State prisoner whose conviction for
capital murder and death sentence was affirmed on direct appeal, 913
P.2d 1356, petitioned for writ of habeas corpus. The District Court,
Wayne E. Alley, J., denied the petition, and petitioner appealed.
The Court of Appeals, Briscoe, Circuit Judge, 275 F.3d 1211,
affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. On remand, the
United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma,
held evidentiary hearing and granted conditional habeas relief in
form of a new sentencing hearing. State appealed.
Holding: The Court of Appeals, Briscoe, Circuit
Judge, held that prisoner failed to overcome presumption that his
trial counsel acted within wide range of reasonable professional
assistance by making strategic decision not to present mitigating
evidence of prisoner's steroid abuse, during sentencing phase.
Reversed. Ebel, Circuit Judge, filed dissenting opinion.
BRISCOE, Circuit Judge.
Respondent Mike Mullin, warden of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary,
appeals the district court's decision granting conditional habeas
relief in the form of a new sentencing hearing to petitioner
Sharieff Sallahdin, an Oklahoma state prisoner convicted of first
degree murder and sentenced to death. We exercise jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and reverse.
The relevant underlying facts of Sallahdin's
crime and state court proceedings were set forth in Sallahdin v.
Gibson, 275 F.3d 1211, 1221 (10th Cir.2002) (Sallahdin I ):
At approximately 5:00 a.m. on October 21, 1991,
James Principe and Bradley Grooms were stocking shelves at the
7-Eleven convenience store where they worked [in Lawton, Oklahoma].
Principe heard a loud bang and saw a black man looking in Grooms'
direction. Principe ducked, made his way to the back of the store
and locked himself in the bathroom. After emerging from the
bathroom, he contacted the police and then saw Grooms lying
motionless on the floor with a gunshot wound to the chest. Grooms
died from his injuries. Principe later identified Sallahdin as the
man who shot Grooms.
That same morning, Lynn Smith stopped at the
7-Eleven to get some ice. Sallahdin was behind the counter and gave
her a cup of ice. She did not see anyone else in the store. Upon
leaving, she looked back and saw Sallahdin leave the store and drive
away in a car. The following day, Sallahdin was taken into custody
at his wife's home in Akron, Ohio.
On direct appeal, the Oklahoma Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and death sentence, after
striking the great risk of death to more than one person aggravator
and reweighing the remaining aggravators against the mitigating
evidence. That court later denied post-conviction relief. Sallahdin
v. State, 947 P.2d 559 (Okla.Crim.App.1997).
In Sallahdin I, we affirmed the denial of all of
Sallahdin's federal habeas issues except one. We found "troubling"
Sallahdin's assertion that his trial counsel was ineffective for
failing to present second-stage mitigating evidence of the effects
of Sallahdin's steroid use on his behavior at the time of the crime.
Id. at 1220. With respect to that issue, we concluded: After
carefully examining the record, we are persuaded that, had this
evidence been presented, there is a reasonable probability the
outcome of the sentencing phase would have been different, i.e.,
that the jury would have imposed a sentence other than death.
Because, however, we are not privy to trial counsel's reasons for
not presenting this evidence, and because we can envision
circumstances where it would have been constitutionally reasonable
for counsel not to introduce this evidence despite its potentially
mitigative effect, we find it necessary to reverse and remand this
case to the district court for an evidentiary hearing solely on this
specific issue concerning trial counsel's performance. Id.
With respect to the evidentiary hearing on
remand, we stated: [T]he purpose of the evidentiary hearing will be
to determine trial counsel's reasons, or lack thereof, for foregoing
the use of [defense expert] Dr. Pope's testimony during the
sentencing phase. If trial counsel made a strategic decision not to
use Dr. Pope's testimony, the district court will then need to
assess whether that was a constitutionally reasonable decision under
the circumstances. If, however, it is established that trial counsel
was neglectful, or otherwise erred, in failing to call Dr. Pope as a
second-stage witness, then trial counsel's performance cannot be
deemed constitutionally reasonable. In turn, Sallahdin would be
entitled to federal habeas relief in the form of a new sentencing
proceeding. Id. at 1240-41.
During the evidentiary hearing on remand,
Sallahdin maintained that his trial counsel, Mark Barrett, was
neglectful in failing to present evidence of his steroid use.
Sallahdin relied exclusively on the testimony of Barrett to support
the theory. Barrett, who appeared primarily through videotaped
deposition testimony, testified that at some point during his two-year
representation of Sallahdin he hired Dr. Harrison Pope, a
psychiatrist and Harvard professor, as an expert on the
psychological effects of steroids.
According to Barrett, Pope
examined Sallahdin and concluded that Sallahdin "had suffered
extreme negative effects from the use of steroids, and, particularly
important in this case, from withdrawal of the use of steroids."
Barrett Dep. at 10. Barrett testified that, prior to trial, he and
Sallahdin were in agreement that Pope's testimony would be helpful
to the defense and should be presented during the second-stage
proceedings (assuming Sallahdin was found guilty at the conclusion
of the first-stage proceedings).
Approximately four days prior to
trial, Barrett submitted a written request to the director of the
Oklahoma Indigent Defense System (OIDS) requesting funding for
Pope's appearance at trial and the request was approved by the
director of OIDS on the day it was submitted. According to Barrett,
he had some recollection that, on the evening after the jury
returned its first-stage verdict and *1245 prior to the beginning of
the second-stage proceedings, he asked another attorney in his
office "to look into getting Dr. Pope there." Id. at 26.
Barrett conceded, however, that Pope ultimately
did not appear as a second-stage witness, but he was unable to
recall why he did not call Pope as a witness--he did not think he
made a strategic decision to not call Pope, nor did he think not
calling Pope was the result of his negligence. When asked if he made
a strategic decision not to present Pope's testimony, Barrett
testified: "I can't imagine that I did. I mean the difficulty in
answering that with any certainty is because there's no explanation
for all this that makes any sense to me. But it was important enough
evidence to us that I can't imagine making any such [strategic]
decision." Id. at 27.
Barrett testified that he did not remember
seeking Sallahdin's approval to forego the presentation of Pope as a
second-stage witness. Barrett testified that he vaguely remembered
approaching the bench during the second-stage proceedings and making
an offer of proof as to Pope's testimony, but conceded that the
transcript of the state court proceedings contained no such bench
conference or offer of proof. When asked if he simply neglected to
present Pope's testimony, Barrett testified he did not think that
was a "strong ... possibility," but admitted that "everything [wa]s
a possibility." Id. at 35.
On cross-examination, Barrett again
admitted that neglect was "a possibility," but questioned whether
that was in fact what had occurred: "I mean, it's not something I
could have just overlooked, hey, you know, the trial was going on, I
just kind of forgot about Dr. Pope. I mean, he's a Harvard professor
who was probably the world's leading expert on steroid use. The fact
that he was out there wouldn't have just slipped my mind." Id. at
58. Thus, Barrett carefully walked the line between admitting that
not calling Pope as a witness was a strategic decision and admitting
it was the result of his negligence.
Although respondent did not have the burden of
proof, he presented evidence from four witnesses to counter
Sallahdin's theory that counsel was negligent. Dr. John Call, a
forensic psychologist hired by the prosecution, testified that he
examined Sallahdin approximately two months before trial and, during
the examination, Sallahdin admitted he had not used steroids since
April 1991 (approximately five to six months prior to the homicide).
Call further testified that on August 23, 1993, approximately two
weeks prior to trial, he prepared and sent to the prosecutors a memo
stating, in pertinent part, that "by his own admission, Mr.
[Sallahdin] had not been using steroids for many months prior to"
the homicide. Evidentiary hearing tr. at 71.
Fred Smith, Jr., the assistant district attorney
who helped prepare the Sallahdin case for trial, testified that he
received and was aware of the contents of Call's memo. More
importantly, Smith testified that he recalled pretrial discussions
with Barrett in which Barrett stated he was not going to present
steroid-related evidence "as a mitigator in the second phase of the
trial." Id. at 49. According to Smith, Barrett stated his decision
to forego the defense was based on "the defendant having stopped
using steroids some time before the murder itself" and because he
"didn't want to run the risk of antagonizing or alienating the jury
by presenting this type of argument." Id. at 49-50.
Robert Schulte, the district attorney who tried
the case against Sallahdin, testified that, in accordance with
office policy, Call's memo would have been hand-delivered to
Sallahdin's counsel (but admitted he had no independent recollection
of giving the memo to Barrett). Schulte testified that Smith
informed him prior to trial that steroids would not be part of the
trial, and that steroids were never an issue at trial. To counter
Barrett's suggestion that the trial judge may have prohibited the
defense from presenting any evidence pertaining to steroid use,
Schulte testified that it was the trial judge's standard practice to
make a record of everything.
The final witness for the respondent was Darrell
Dawkins, a detective who worked on the Sallahdin case. Dawkins
testified that he participated in a post-arrest interview of
Sallahdin (approximately seven or eight days after the homicide) in
which Sallahdin indicated it had been "six months or longer" since
he had used steroids. Id. at 113. Dawkins acknowledged, however,
that he did not take any notes during the interview and had not
included this information in his report of the interview since,
according to him, he did not know that steroid use would be an issue
at trial.
Sallahdin presented rebuttal evidence from two
witnesses. Dale Johnson, an acquaintance from Sallahdin's hometown
of Akron, Ohio, testified that he and Sallahdin had lifted weights
together for many years, and that he and Sallahdin had regularly
purchased and used steroids. Johnson further testified that
Sallahdin's behavior was radically different when he was using
steroids--when using steroids, he was aggressive and reckless; when
not using steroids, he was quiet and reserved. According to Johnson,
Sallahdin traveled to Akron in August or September 1991 (approximately
a month or two prior to the homicide) and, during the visit,
purchased approximately $250.00 worth of steroids.
Sallahdin's second rebuttal witness was Barrett,
who denied telling prosecutors prior to the first-stage verdict that
he would not be calling Pope as a witness in the second stage.
Barrett testified that he would not have prepared and submitted a
request for funding for Pope's trial appearance if he had informed
the prosecution he would not be presenting Pope's testimony.
Barrett
further testified that Call's memo would not have affected his
decision because the defense had evidence (presumably Johnson's
testimony) that Sallahdin had used steroids in Akron shortly before
the homicide. Barrett also testified that, in light of how quickly
the jury returned its first-stage verdict, it was not his plan to
rely on a residual doubt theory during the second stage. On
cross-examination, Barrett admitted that he had no independent
memory of what transpired and was testifying based on what he
thought would have been consistent with the circumstances. Barrett
also admitted that he was certain he did not have any conversations
with Pope after the trial began.
On March 24, 2003, the district court granted
Sallahdin conditional habeas relief. The court examined Barrett's
testimony and rejected his suggestion that the trial court may have
prohibited him from presenting Pope's testimony. ROA, Doc. 77 at 3
("The trial record reveals no such ruling by the court.").
The court
further concluded, based upon Barrett's testimony, there was "no
evidence ... that trial strategy was the basis for failing to
proffer Dr. Pope's testimony as a witness during sentencing." Id.
The court acknowledged the respondent's contention "that the likely
reason ... Barrett did not offer Dr. Pope's testimony was the
discovery that [Sallahdin] had ceased taking steroids months before
the murder." Id. The court rejected this contention, however, on the
basis of Barrett's testimony that he had independent evidence that
Sallahdin "had taken steroids near the time of the crime," that he
had no recollection of Call's memo, and that he had no recollection
of being informed by the police "that his client had stopped his
steroid usage before the murder." Id. at 4. Ultimately, the district
court concluded:
Th[e] evidence establishes that there is no
discernible explanation for counsel's failure to call Dr. Pope to
the stand on Petitioner's behalf. Even applying the deferential
standard mandated by Strickland[ v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104
S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984) ], the Court cannot conclude that
Mr. Barrett's decision not to present the testimony was the result
of trial strategy given the importance of the steroid testimony and
the absolute lack of any basis for failing to present it. Fees and
expenses had been approved for Dr. Pope and Dr. Pope knew that he
would be needed with little advance notice should Petitioner be
convicted.
Despite being able to recall this information Mr. Barrett
is unable to remember why Dr. Pope did not appear and why no proffer
of evidence was made. Nothing in the trial court record indicates
that the court excluded the evidence or that court-imposed or other
time constraints prevented Mr. Pope from appearing at the trial.
Petitioner has met his burden under the first prong of Strickland.
Id.
The court ordered the State of Oklahoma "to
commence a new sentencing proceeding" within 180 days from the date
of its order. Id. at 5. The court stated that "[f]ailure to commence
such a proceeding," would "result in ... vacation of [Sallahdin]'s
death sentence and an order sentencing [Sallahdin] to life
imprisonment." Id. The district court stayed its conditional grant
of habeas relief pending appeal.
* * *
Lastly, it appears the district court's factual
finding of neglect was impacted by its erroneous conclusion that
there could have been no strategic "basis for failing to present"
the steroid-related evidence. ROA, Doc. 77 at 4. In our view, the
record on appeal supplies at least three reasons why "it would have
been constitutionally reasonable for counsel not to introduce this
evidence despite its potentially mitigative effect." Sallahdin I,
275 F.3d at 1220.
First, the jury could have viewed Sallahdin's
steroid use in a negative light. Not only are anabolic steroids
illegal, the jury could have drawn negative inferences from the fact
that Sallahdin knowingly used the substances for a period of
approximately four years, during which time he allegedly exhibited
various signs of aggressiveness and hostility toward friends and
family. In other words, the jury reasonably might have concluded
that Sallahdin's steroid use was reckless and that Sallahdin knew or
should have known that it might result in negative consequences.
Second, there was a significant risk that the jury, having found
Sallahdin to be less than a credible witness during the first-stage
proceedings, likewise would have discounted his steroid theory since
a critical component of that theory (Pope's scientific conclusions)
rested heavily on Sallahdin's self-reports of his psychiatric
symptoms.
Third, the evidence presented by respondent during the
evidentiary hearing on remand indicates the prosecution was in
possession of a powerful rebuttal to Sallahdin's steroid theory--post-arrest
statements by Sallahdin indicating he had not in fact used steroids
in close proximity to the murder.
For any or all of these reasons,
we conclude that Barrett reasonably could have decided not to
present a steroid-related defense during the second-stage
proceedings.
* * *
Ultimately, given the strong presumption of
reasonable professional assistance and the accompanying evidentiary
burden imposed on Sallahdin, we agree with respondent that it is
Sallahdin, rather than respondent, who must bear the brunt of
Barrett's faulty memory and his ambiguous testimony. See Yarborough,
124 S.Ct. at 5 (suggesting such a result where evidence is
insufficient to overcome presumption of reasonable professional
assistance); Williams, 185 F.3d at 1227-28 (reaching similar
conclusion where habeas petitioner's trial counsel unable to recall
his thought processes during trial); Fretwell v. Norris, 133 F.3d
621, 623-24 (8th Cir.1998) (rejecting district court's reliance on
trial counsel's inability to recall reasons underlying his
performance as basis for establishing lack of competent performance);
cf. United States v. Corrado, 304 F.3d 593, 605 (6th Cir.2002) ("The
party with the burden, in effect, bears the risks of [witness]
amnesia and faded memory because of the passage of time."). [FN5] As
the Eleventh Circuit noted in Chandler, "[a]n ambiguous or silent
record is not sufficient to disprove the strong and continuing
presumption" that counsel's performance was reasonable and that
counsel made all significant decisions in the exercise of reasonable
professional judgment. 218 F.3d at 1314 n. 15.
Thus, we agree with
respondent that the scales tipped in his favor at the start of the
evidentiary hearing (i.e., in favor of the "strong presumption" that
Barrett acted in a constitutionally reasonable fashion), and, given
Barrett's inability to remember, remained in respondent's favor at
the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing. We therefore conclude the
district court erred in holding that Sallahdin satisfied the first
prong of the Strickland analysis, and in turn granting Sallahdin
conditional habeas relief in the form of a new sentencing proceeding.