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Douglas Alan ROBERTS
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
May 18,
1996
Date of arrest:
Same day (surrenders)
Date of birth: July
8,
1962
Victim profile: Jerry
Velez (male, 40)
Method of murder: Stabbing
with knife
Location: Kendall County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on April 20,
2005
Summary:
Roberts stole a car from a woman at knifepoint at a San Antonio
convenience store.
Fearing that the car had been reported stolen, Roberts later drove
into an apartment complex parking lot and abducted Jerry Velez in
his own car at knifepoint.
Roberts robbed Velez of his cash and ordered him to drive him out of
San Antonio. Roberts ordered Velez out of the car on a desolate road
outside the city at knifepoint. Velez lunged and Roberts stated he
repeatedly stabbed Velez, then ran over his body as he drove away in
the car.
Roberts drove to Austin, called 911 and told the dispatcher he
kidnaped and killed Velez.
In a videotaped interview with police, Roberts gave a complete
confession.
Citations:
Roberts v. Dretke, 381 F.3d 491 (5th Cir. 2004)(Habeas). Roberts v. Dretke, 356 F.3d 632, 641 (5th Cir.2004) (Habeas).
Final Meal:
Three Southern fried chicken breasts, two bacon, lettuce and tomato
sandwiches, three enchiladas, ground beef, two grilled pork chops,
six corn tortillas, four deviled eggs, 12 green olives with Italian
ketchup, butter beans and cabbage seasoned with hambone, broccoli
with cheese sauce, fried onion rings, french fries, tomato, lettuce,
cheese, picante sauce, onions and jalapenos.
Final Words:
Roberts was upbeat and animated in the seconds before the lethal
drugs were administered. "I've been hanging around this popsicle
stand way too long, I want to tell you all. When I die, bury me deep,
lay two speakers at my feet, put some headphones on my head and rock
'n' roll me when I'm dead. I'll see you in heaven some day." Roberts
was smiling and mouthing "I love you all" to friends watching
through a window, then said "I've got to go" and took his final
breath.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Friday, April 15, 2005
Douglas
Alan Roberts Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Douglas Alan Roberts, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 20, 2005.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On May 18, 1996, Douglas Alan Roberts stole a car
from a woman at knifepoint at a San Antonio convenience store.
Fearing that the car had been reported stolen, Roberts later drove
into an apartment complex parking lot and abducted Jerry Velez in
his own car at knifepoint. Roberts robbed Velez of his cash and
ordered him to drive him out of San Antonio. Velez complied and
drove Roberts out of the city.
After pulling onto a desolate rural road in
Kendall County, Roberts ordered Velez out of the car at knifepoint.
Velez lunged at Roberts and landed on top of the man’s knife.
Roberts stated he repeatedly stabbed Velez, then ran over the victim
with his car. The State’s evidence proved Velez was run over,
perhaps as many as three times.
Following the killing, Roberts drove to Austin,
then called 911 and told the dispatcher he kidnaped and killed Velez.
In a videotaped interview with police, Roberts admitted kidnaping
and murdering Velez.
A large bowie-like knife used in the killing was
recovered from the front seat of Velez’s car.
An autopsy determined that Velez was stabbed five
times and that his ribs were fractured or broken, and his right lung
was punctured. Velez also suffered “blunt trauma” to his brain. The
Bexar County medical examiner stated the cause of Velez’s death was
a combination of the stab wounds and trauma.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
05/18/96 -- Roberts murders Jerry Velez during
the course of a robbery and kidnaping.
01/08/97 -- Roberts is convicted of capital murder.
01/09/97 -- A Kendall County jury answered the special issues
resulting in a death sentence.
06/17/97 -- Roberts filed a brief raising four points of error.
05/13/98 -- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
Roberts’conviction and sentence.
07/20/98 -- Roberts files a writ application raising four claims.
11/20/98 -- A district judge recommended that habeas relief be
denied.
12/14/98 -- The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari review of the
Texas court’s opinion on direct appeal.
01/27/99 -- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied relief.
01/21/00 -- Roberts filed a federal habeas petition.
10/22/03 -- A San Antonio federal court denied relief and granted a
certificate of appealability COA) on two issues.
03/26/03 -- Roberts asked the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to expand
the issues on which a COA was granted.
01/09/04 -- The 5th Circuit granted a COA on two additional issues.
08/16/04 -- The 5th Circuit affirmed the lower court’s denial of
habeas relief.
09/30/04 -- A Kendall County state district court ordered Roberts’
execution for April 20, 2005.
12/22/04 -- Roberts petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for certiorari
review and asked for a stay of execution.
04/04/05 -- The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari review and the
stay request.
01/18/05 -- The trial court reset Roberts’ execution for April 20,
2005.
ProDeathPenalty.com
Douglas Roberts was sentenced to death for the
kidnapping, robbery and murder of Jerry Valez.
Velez was abducted at knifepoint and forced to
drive his car out of San Antonio on Interstate 10.
When they arrived in Kendall County, Roberts told
Velez to turn off onto a road near Highway 46 and stop the car.
Roberts told Velez to give him his shirt, and Velez lunged at him.
Roberts stabbed Velez seven times, then ran over Velez's body when
fleeing the scene in the victim's car.
Roberts then drove to Austin and called 911 from
a pay phone, telling the operator he had killed a man.
Roberts directed his attorney that he wanted to
be convicted and sentenced to death and that he should dismiss any
potential jurors who expressed any reservations about assessing the
death penalty and not to fight the death penalty or ask for a life
sentence during closing arguments not to present any mitigating
evidence. Then Roberts appealed on the grounds that his attorney had
provided ineffective assistance.
Douglas Alan Roberts
Txexecutions.org
Douglas Alan Roberts, 42, was executed by lethal
injection on 20 April 2005 in Huntsville, Texas for the kidnapping,
robbery, and murder of a 40-year-old man.
On 18 May 1996, Roberts, then 33, robbed a San
Antonio convenience store and stole a customer's car at knifepoint.
He drove into an apartment complex parking lot and pulled a knife on
Jerry Velez, who was in his car. Roberts got in the vehicle, robbed
Velez of his cash, and ordered Velez to drive out of town. When they
were on a rural road, Roberts instructed Velez to stop the car and
get out. Velez then lunged at Roberts. Roberts stabbed Velez
repeatedly. He then ran over Velez with his own car several times.
After the killing, Roberts drove to Austin. He
stopped at a pay phone, called 911, and reported that he had killed
a man. He waited to be arrested, then gave a videotaped confession.
A Bowie knife was recovered from the front seat of Velez's car. An
autopsy determined that Velez was stabbed five times. He also
suffered blunt trauma to his brain.
At his trial, Roberts instructed his attorney to
call no defense witnesses and to pick a jury that favored the death
penalty. Roberts' only prior conviction as an adult was for credit
card fraud in 1983. According to one source, he also had a juvenile
conviction for aggravated robbery.
A jury convicted Roberts of capital murder in
January 1997. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the
conviction and sentence in May 1998. All of his subsequent appeals
in state and federal court were denied.
In an interview from death row, Roberts said that
he was high on cocaine when he killed Velez. "I was stoned out of my
mind," he said. Lost in an unfamiliar place, he saw Velez and
thought, "this guy is going to take me out of the city. So I
kidnapped him and his vehicle. "I guess he decided at the last
minute he didn't want to be stranded, or thought he could overpower
me," Roberts said.
Roberts called police after the drug high wore
off, and waited to be picked up because he realized that drugs had
complete control over him. "This was someone I'd gotten off the
street. Who was it going to be the next time? A little woman? A
little kid?" Roberts said that he first tried cocaine at age 10.
As his execution date approached, Roberts asked
his lawyers not to file any last-minute appeals on his behalf. He
told a reporter that the had no desire to die, but he saw his
execution as a way to end the loneliness and isolation of death row,
which he described as "23 hours a day in a cement box." "I killed
the guy they said I killed," he said. "There's no question about
that ... So if you've got to spend the rest of your life like this,
and if you're like me and know the Lord, the today's a good day to
go."
Roberts was upbeat and animated as the execution
procedure began. "I've been hanging around this Popsicle stand way
too long, I want to tell you all," Roberts said in his last
statement. "When I die, bury me deep, lay two speakers at my feet,
put some headphones on my head, and rock 'n' roll me when I'm dead."
He then added, "I'll see you in Heaven some day." He then told the
warden he was ready, and the lethal injection was administered. As
the drugs took effect, Roberts smiled and mouthed "I love you all"
to his friends. He then said "I've got to go," and took his final
breath. He was pronounced dead at 6:21 p.m.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Douglas Alan Roberts - Texas - April 20, 2005
6:00 PM CST
The state of Texas is scheduled to execute
Douglas Alan Roberts, a white man, April 20 for the 1996 murder of
Jerry Velez in Kendall County. Roberts stabbed Velez during a
confrontation after he had stolen Velez’s car.
Roberts committed the crime while using crack
cocaine. After the effects of the cocaine wore off, he dialed 911
from a pay phone reporting what he had done and disclosing his
location. He waited to be arrested by a responding officer.
Roberts told his attorney that he wanted to be
executed, rather than spend the rest of his life in prison. The
trial that followed was one of the shortest death penalty trials in
the modern era lasting two to three days including jury selection.
He has a strong ineffective assistance of counsel claim. His trial
attorney presented no mitigating arguments and no competency hearing
was held. Roberts and his attorney deliberately sought out pro-death
penalty jurors in an effort to assure his death sentence.
When the jury came back deadlocked, the judge,
instead of ordering a sentence of life imprisonment, instructed the
jury to continue deliberating in accord with Roberts’ wishes.
The problem of ineffective assistance of counsel
highlights one of the most common and difficult flaws with the death
penalty system. More than 90 percent of persons on death row were
not able to hire their own attorney. Frequently when attorneys are
appointed to defendants they are ill-equipped to give their client
quality or even competent legal representation. Roberts’ trial
attorney assisting in seeking out a death sentence and the judge’s
behavior make a mockery of the justice system.
Please write Governor Perry and the Board of
Pardons and Paroles protesting a death penalty system which would
allow such a blatant miscarriage of justice to take place.
Texas inmate who acknowledged murder executed
By Michael Graczyk -
Houston Chronicle
AP - April 20, 2005
A convicted murderer who said he first tried
cocaine at age 10 was executed Wednesday evening for abducting and
fatally stabbing a San Antonio man whose car he stole nine years ago
while he was high.
Douglas Roberts, 42, was upbeat and animated in
the seconds before the lethal drugs were administered. "I've been
hanging around this popsicle stand way too long," he said when asked
if he had a final statement. "I want to tell you all. "When I die,
bury me deep, lay two speakers at my feet, put some headphones on my
head and rock 'n' roll me when I'm dead." "I'll see you in heaven
some day," he added.
Roberts, 42, was smiling and mouthing "I love you
all" to friends watching through a window nearby when the drugs
began to take effect. He gasped and sputtered. He was pronounced
dead eight minutes later, at 6:21 p.m. He was the fifth Texas
prisoner put to death this year.
Roberts' appeals were rejected earlier this month
by the U.S. Supreme Court, and he asked his lawyers not to file
last-minute actions to keep him alive. "Why go through the trouble
for nothing?" he told The Associated Press last week. "The appeals
have run their course through the system." He insisted he had no
desire to die but saw his execution as a way to end the loneliness
and isolation of death row, which he described as "23 hours a day in
a cement box." "So if you've got to spend the rest of your life like
this, and if you're like me and know the Lord, then today's a good
day to go," he said.
Roberts was convicted of killing Jerry Velez, 40,
who was abducted in San Antonio in the early morning of May 18,
1996. Roberts, who worked as a machinist and lived in the Austin
suburb of Round Rock, had just robbed a San Antonio convenience
store and stole a customer's car at knifepoint. Lost in an
unfamiliar place and "stoned out of my mind," Roberts said he
spotted Velez walking to a row of cars parked outside an apartment
complex. "I'm thinking: This guy is going to take me out of the
city," said Roberts, who was armed with a Bowie knife. "So I
kidnapped him and his vehicle." The pair drove to a dirt road in a
remote area of Kendall County, about 30 miles northwest of San
Antonio, where Roberts said he and Velez scuffled. "I guess he
decided at the last minute he didn't want to be stranded or thought
he could overpower me," Roberts said.
An autopsy later showed Velez was stabbed five
times, had ribs broken, a lung punctured and head injuries. Evidence
at Roberts' trial showed the victim had been run over with a car as
many as three times.
Roberts drove back toward Austin where he called
police from a pay phone and told a dispatcher about the slaying,
then waited for authorities to pick him up. "I knew drugs got to the
point where they were controlling you and you were not controlling
them," he said. "This was someone I'd gotten off the street. Who was
it going to be the next time? A little woman? A little kid? "I
killed the guy that they said I killed," Roberts said. "There's no
question about that."
Instead of the manslaughter or reduced murder
charge he expected, he was indicted for capital murder. At his trial,
he told his attorney to call no defense witnesses and pick a jury
that favored the death penalty. His jury deliberated two hours
before convicting him and the following day decided he should be put
to death.
In appeals that were rejected earlier by the
courts, lawyers said Roberts had a difficult childhood and suffered
from depression and possible brain damage. Roberts said his father
was an alcoholic.
Roberts was to have shared the death chamber
Wednesday with another condemned prisoner, Milton Mathis, for a rare
back-to-back execution. Mathis, however, won a reprieve Tuesday from
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. At least four Texas inmates
have execution dates in May, beginning with Lonnie Pursley, set to
die May 3 for the 1997 robbery and beating death of a man in Polk
County in East Texas.
Texas Set for Two Executions Wednesday Night
By Jeff Franks -
Reuters News
April 18, 2005
Houston, Texas (Reuters) - Texas, the leading U.S.
death penalty state, is set to carry out a rare double execution on
Wednesday night, when two men convicted of separate murders will
receive lethal injections. Barring intervention by the courts or Gov.
Rick Perry, Douglas Roberts, 42, will be put to death first,
followed quickly by Milton Mathis, 26, officials said on Monday.
Originally, they said Mathis would go first but
later said that was incorrect because Roberts was sent to prison
before Mathis. "Witnesses to the first execution will be escorted
out and witnesses to the second will be brought in," said prison
spokeswoman Michelle Lyons. "All the medical supplies and bedding
will be switched. When we proceed will depend, as always, on what is
working in the courts," she said.
Texas leads the nation with 340 executions since
resuming capital punishment in 1982 after the lifting of a death
penalty by the U.S. Supreme Court. It was the last state to kill two
people on the same night. That took place on Aug. 9, 2000 when Brian
Roberson, 36 and Oliver Cruz, 33, died 30 minutes apart in the Texas
death chamber, which is at a state prison in Huntsville, 75 miles
north of Houston. Texas also did it on Jan. 31, 1995 and June 4,
1997. Before that, it had not happened in the state since Sept. 5,
1951.
The most known executions in Texas in one day
took place on Feb. 8, 1924 when the state used its new electric
chair to put five people to death.
Lyons said Mathis and Roberts would be held in
separate cells near the death chamber and would have separate
chaplains to assist them in the hours leading up to execution.
Shortly after 6 p.m. CDT on Wednesday, Roberts is scheduled to be
strapped into the lone gurney in the death chamber and injected with
a lethal mix of chemicals. His body will be removed; then officials
will change the needles and tubes used to inject the chemicals,
change the gurney sheets and bring in Mathis. "We basically treat it
as two separate events that happen to happen on the same evening,"
said Lyons.
Having two executions on the same day is just a
coincidence because the dates are set by the judges who preside over
the criminal cases of each inmate. The judges usually do not consult
with each other and their only scheduling criteria is that no
executions are performed around Christmas or Easter, officials said.
Mathis was condemned for a 1998 shooting spree at
a reputed drug den near Houston that left two people dead and
another paralyzed. Roberts was sentenced to death for kidnapping and
stabbing a San Antonio man to death in 1996. They would be the fifth
and sixth people executed in Texas this year.
Texas executes man for abduction-slaying
Dallas Morning News
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) -- A convicted murderer
who said he first tried cocaine at age 10 was executed Wednesday
evening for abducting and fatally stabbing a San Antonio man whose
car he stole nine years ago while he was high.
Douglas Roberts, 42, was upbeat and animated in
the seconds before the lethal drugs were administered. "I've been
hanging around this popsicle stand way too long," he said when asked
if he had a final statement. "I want to tell you all. "When I die,
bury me deep, lay two speakers at my feet, put some headphones on my
head and rock 'n' roll me when I'm dead." "I'll see you in heaven
some day," he added. Mr. Roberts, 42, was pronounced dead eight
minutes later, at 6:21 p.m. He was the fifth Texas prisoner put to
death this year.
Mr. Roberts' appeals were rejected this month by
the U.S. Supreme Court, and he asked his lawyers not to file last-minute
actions to keep him alive. "Why go through the trouble for nothing?"
he said last week. "The appeals have run their course through the
system." He insisted he had no desire to die but saw his execution
as a way to end the loneliness and isolation of death row.
Mr. Roberts was convicted of killing Jerry Velez,
40, who was abducted in San Antonio early on May 18, 1996.
Mr. Roberts, who worked as a machinist and lived
in the Austin suburb of Round Rock, had just robbed a San Antonio
convenience store and stolen a customer's car at knifepoint. Lost in
an unfamiliar place and "stoned out of my mind," he said he spotted
Mr. Velez walking to a row of cars parked outside an apartment
complex.
The pair drove to a dirt road in a remote area of
Kendall County, about 30 miles northwest of San Antonio, where Mr.
Roberts said he and Mr. Velez scuffled, and he killed Mr. Velez.
Texas inmate looking forward to death
By
Michael Graczyk - Denton Record Chronicle
AP - April 20, 2005
Convicted Texas inmate Douglas Roberts insisted
he had no desire to die but saw his execution Wednesday evening as a
way to end the loneliness and isolation of death row. Roberts, 42,
faced lethal injection for the 1996 abduction and fatal stabbing of
a San Antonio man whose car he stole.
The U.S. Supreme Court earlier this month refused
to review Roberts' case and he instructed his lawyers to not file
any additional appeals to try to keep him from becoming the fifth
Texas prisoner executed this year. "If I have to live my life in
prison, let's make today that last day," Roberts said in an
interview last week. "It's not a question of wanting to die. It's a
question of not wanting to live in this oppressive prison system.
"So if you've got to spend the rest of your life like this, and if
you're like me and know the Lord, then today's a good day to go."
Roberts, who blamed a cocaine addiction for his
slaying nine years ago of Jerry Velez, 40, initially was to have
shared the death chamber Wednesday evening with another condemned
prisoner, Milton Mathis, for a rare back-to-back execution. Mathis,
however, won a reprieve Tuesday from the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals after his lawyers argued the 26-year-old from Houston may be
mentally retarded and ineligible for the death penalty. The Supreme
Court has barred the execution of the mentally retarded. Mathis was
convicted of killing two men at a Houston crack house in 1998. The
appeals court returned the case to his Fort Bend County trial court
for additional review.
Roberts, who was living in the Austin suburb of
Round Rock, said he was lost in San Antonio and driving car he had
just stolen in a robbery when he spotted Velez outside the apartment
complex where Velez lived. Roberts pulled out a knife and demanded
Velez accompany him out of town. They headed about 30 miles toward
Boerne in Kendall County, where Roberts said he stopped on a dirt
road "away from everything."
"I was stoned out of my mind," he said. "I guess
he decided he didn't want to be stranded or thought he could
overpower me." The men scuffled and Velez was stabbed repeatedly,
then run over with his own car. When his cocaine high subsided,
Roberts phoned police to claim responsibility. "I knew drugs got to
the point where they were controlling you and you were not
controlling them," he said. "I wasn't going to go through my life
looking over my shoulder."
He thought he'd be charged with manslaughter or a
reduced murder charge. Instead, he was indicted for capital murder.
"Surprised don't even begin to cover that," he said.
Over the objections of his lawyer, Roberts at his
trial demanded jurors who favored the death penalty and asked that
no witnesses be called in his defense. A psychiatrist determined
Roberts was competent to make those decisions. "I killed the guy
they said I killed," Roberts said last week. "There's no question
about that. The police didn't come looking for me. I called them. I
said: 'Here I am. Come get me.'"
Roberts, who described life on death row as "23
hours a day in a cement box," grew up in Houston. He said he first
tried cocaine about the age of 10 to deal with an abusive home
environment. "I believe in God," Roberts said. "I don't have no fear.
I have nothing but love in my heart... I know there's a place in
heaven for me and come Wednesday night, I'm going to be there."
At least four more Texas inmates have execution
dates for May.
Murderer upbeat, joking in seconds before
execution
'Put some headphones on my head and rock 'n' roll me when
I'm dead'
CNN News
Thursday, April 21, 2005
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) -- A convicted murderer
who said he first tried cocaine at the age of 10 was executed
Wednesday for abducting and fatally stabbing a man during a drug-induced
haze nine years ago.
Douglas Roberts, 42, was upbeat and animated in
the seconds before the lethal drugs were administered. "I've been
hanging around this popsicle stand way too long," he said. "When I
die, bury me deep, lay two speakers at my feet, put some headphones
on my head and rock 'n' roll me when I'm dead." "I'll see you in
heaven some day," he added.
At his trial, Roberts told his attorney to call
no defense witnesses and pick a jury that favored the death penalty.
His jury deliberated two hours before convicting him and the
following day decided he should be put to death.
Roberts was convicted of killing Jerry Velez, 40,
who was abducted in San Antonio in May 1996. Roberts, a machinist,
had just robbed a San Antonio convenience store and stole a
customer's car at knifepoint. Lost in an unfamiliar place and
"stoned out of my mind," Roberts said he spotted Velez walking to a
row of cars parked outside an apartment complex. The pair drove to a
dirt road in a remote area about 30 miles northwest of San Antonio,
where Roberts and Velez scuffled.
Roberts was armed with a Bowie knife, and an
autopsy showed Velez was stabbed five times, had ribs broken, a lung
punctured and head injuries. Evidence at Roberts' trial showed the
victim had been run over with a car as many as three times. Roberts
drove back toward Austin where he called police from a pay phone and
told a dispatcher about the slaying, then waited for authorities to
pick him up.
Roberts was to have shared the death chamber
Wednesday with another condemned prisoner, Milton Mathis, for a rare
back-to-back execution. But Mathis won a reprieve Tuesday from the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Roberts was the fifth Texas
prisoner put to death this year.
Roberts v. Dretke,
381 F.3d 491 (5th Cir. 2004)(Habeas)
Background: State prisoner who was convicted of
capital murder petitioned for writ of habeas corpus. The United
States District Court for the Western District of Texas, Edward C.
Prado, J., denied the writ. Petitioner sought and was granted, 356
F.3d 632, an expanded certificate of appealability (COA).
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Emilio M. Garza,
Circuit Judge, held that:
(1) state habeas court's conclusion that petitioner was not entitled
to a competency hearing was neither unreasonable nor contrary to
Supreme Court precedent so as to warrant federal habeas relief on
due process grounds;
(2) state habeas court's conclusion that performance of petitioner's
appointed defense counsel was not deficient, as required to
establish ineffective assistance claim, for failure to further
investigate petitioner's medical history, was reasonable and not
contrary to Supreme Court precedent, and thus did not warrant
federal habeas relief;
(3) state habeas court's conclusion that trial strategy of
petitioner's appointed defense counsel did not amount to deficient
performance was reasonable and not contrary to Supreme Court
precedent, and thus did not warrant federal habeas relief;
(4) petitioner failed to establish prejudice, as required to
establish ineffective assistance of counsel claim, from failure of
his trial counsel to further investigate his medical history so as
to provide basis for evidentiary hearing as to his competence to
stand trial and to direct trial strategy; and
(5) petitioner was not entitled to an evidentiary hearing in the
district court on his competence to stand trial in state court.
Affirmed.
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:
Douglas Alan Roberts appeals the district court's denial of his
petition for habeas relief. He challenges both his Texas state
capital murder conviction and his sentence. The district court
denied relief on all grounds in Roberts's petition, but granted a
COA as to the questions 1) whether the trial court acted reasonably
in not sua sponte holding a competency hearing, and 2) whether the
federal district court erred in not granting an evidentiary hearing,
discovery, and expert assistance in connection with the federal
habeas proceedings.
We expanded the scope of the COA to include the
questions whether Roberts's trial attorney rendered ineffective
assistance of counsel by 1) failing to properly develop evidence
confirming or refuting that Roberts was mentally ill, and 2) failing
to make adequate use of his court-appointed psychiatrist. We find
that the district court correctly concluded that the state habeas
court's denial of Roberts's habeas claims was not unreasonable. We
further find that the district court did not abuse its discretion by
refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing. We thus AFFIRM the district
court's ruling.
While high on crack-cocaine Roberts killed Jerry
Lewis Vasquez. Within a few hours of the killing, after he sobered
up, Roberts alerted local police of his crime and confessed to the
killing. Roberts was then charged with the murder of Vasquez. Texas
appointed Roberts counsel to represent him in his capital trial.
Roberts immediately instructed his trial counsel, Steven Pickell, to
steer the trial towards the imposition of the death penalty. To no
avail, Pickell tried to discourage Roberts from this course.
However,
consistent with Roberts's instructions, Pickell waived voir dire,
chose jury members who favored the death penalty, did not interview
family members before trial, called no witnesses during the guilt/innocence
phase of the trial, called no witnesses during the punishment phase,
did not request a jury instruction on parole laws, and made no
argument in favor of a life sentence. Pickell spent a total of fifty
hours preparing for Roberts's trial. Consequently, neither the
conviction nor the punishment were contested in any meaningful way.
Apparently concerned that Roberts may not have
been right of mind, Pickell requested, and Texas granted, funding
for a psychiatrist, Dr. Michael Arambula, M.D., to analyze Roberts's
mental state. A short time prior to trial, Dr. Arambula interviewed
Roberts for two hours. Based on that interview, police reports about
Roberts, and the victim's autopsy report Dr. Arambula produced a
psychiatric evaluation.
In making this evaluation, Dr. Arambula did
not review any of Roberts's medical records, including records
relating to Roberts's psychiatric hospitalization that occurred
after a recent "suicide ideation." Pickell did not collect these
records and Dr. Arambula did not request them. Pickell also did not
inform Dr. Arambula about a head injury that Roberts suffered as a
child. Neither Pickell nor Dr. Arambula spoke to any of Roberts's
family members or former treating physicians about his medical and
psychiatric history.
Dr. Arambula's report notes that Roberts admitted
that he had previously "wanted to commit suicide," but that when
asked "Mr. Roberts's denied any past psychiatric history, other than
his addiction to crack cocaine," and denied that he currently had
suicidal thoughts. It also noted that Roberts showed no signs of "anxiety,
hallucinations, or delusions" and that "he denied that he felt sad."
And finally it noted that Roberts's explained that he "didn't want
to be locked up the rest of his life" and that Roberts blamed his
"crack cocaine addiction" for his "taking the life of an innocent
bystander."
Based on these observations, Dr. Arambula's
stated in his report that "I cannot conclude that Mr. Roberts
suffers from any significant degree of depression ... or for that
matter any other psychiatric disturbance." He further stated that
"[t]he most salient issue in Douglas Roberts's history is his
addiction to crack cocaine." And after first acknowledging that
"Depression can sometimes affect a person's judgment and
decision-making so severely that [he] wish[es] for premature death,"
he concluded that "I cannot find that depression exists to such a
degree that its presence would coerce Mr. Roberts into seeking the
death penalty."
Based on this report and his own observations,
Pickell concluded that Roberts was competent to stand trial and to
make decisions regarding trial strategy, including decisions
explicitly designed to ensure the imposition of the death penalty.
He also concluded that it was unnecessary to request a competency
hearing. The trial judge never saw Dr. Arambula's report, but based
on his own observations of Roberts he decided that there was no
reason to hold a competency hearing. Roberts was subsequently
convicted and sentenced to death.
In both his direct appeal and state habeas
application Roberts challenged his conviction and sentence. Among
other claims, Roberts brought a Pate claim arguing that the trial
judge should have ordered a competency hearing, and several
Strickland claims arguing that Pickell provided ineffective
assistance of counsel by not investigating Roberts's medical history
and by adhering to Roberts's decisions regarding trial strategy. The
state courts denied relief, concluding that both the trial judge and
Pickell reasonably relied on their own observations of Roberts, and
in the case of Pickell on Dr. Arambula's report, in deciding that a
competency hearing was unnecessary and that Roberts was competent to
direct his trial strategy towards a death sentence.
The state habeas court did, however, find that
Dr. Arambula's medical conclusions about Roberts's mental health
were based on an incomplete understanding of Roberts's medical and
psychiatric history. It found that Pickell "did not make available
to Dr. Arambula the previous medical records of the defendant as
part of Dr. Arambula's examination and analysis, nor did he advise
Dr. Arambula of a previous head injury suffered by the defendant."
Those medical records were compiled a year before the murder while
Roberts was in a psychiatric facility after threatening suicide. It
is also clear from the record, and specifically Dr. Arambula's
report, that the doctor did not speak to any of Roberts's family
members or former physicians regarding Roberts's medical,
psychiatric, or social history.
During the state habeas proceedings, counsel was
once again appointed for Roberts. His counsel, David Sergi, made
multiple requests for funding to investigate Roberts's case. His
first request was funded, and his second request was partially
funded, and partially denied. After his initial investigation into
Roberts's file and medical history, and after his second funding
request, Sergi determined that he needed both expert testimony
regarding Robert's mental health and a full mental health
examination of Roberts to adequately present Roberts's habeas claims.
Sergi made an oral inquiry to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
regarding the possibility of the necessary further funding.
Sergi
was informed that he had met the funding cap set for Roberts's case
and no further funding would be forthcoming. He then decided to make
no further requests for assistance. On Roberts's behalf, Sergi made
a request to the state habeas trial judge to hold an evidentiary
hearing. At such a hearing, he claims he would have challenged
Pickell's conclusions concerning Roberts's mental health and his
decisions regarding trial strategy. Further, he would have
challenged Dr. Arambula's diagnosis of Robert's mental health at the
time of trial. The state habeas court refused to hold a hearing and
adopted in full Texas's recitation of the facts. Based on those
facts, it then denied habeas relief on all claims.
Roberts then brought the present federal habeas
petition. Counsel was again appointed for Roberts. His new counsel
requested funding for a mental health examination and requested an
evidentiary hearing and a period of discovery. All of these requests
were denied by the district court. The district court concluded that
Roberts had not diligently developed the factual record in state
court and was thus not entitled to discovery, funding for a mental
health examination or an evidentiary hearing. It concluded that
Roberts's state habeas counsel's oral request for funding for a
mental health examination and his request for an evidentiary hearing
did not constitute due diligence in developing the factual record.
The district court did, however, grant Roberts a COA on his request
for an evidentiary hearing.
On the substance of Roberts claims, the district
court held that the state habeas court erred in denying Roberts's
Pate claim, and concluded that the trial court should have ordered a
competency hearing. It, however, further concluded that although the
state habeas court's ruling was incorrect, it was not unreasonable.
As to Roberts's ineffective assistance of counsel claims, it held
that Roberts could not establish prejudice during the guilt/innocence
phase of the trial because the evidence of his guilt was
overwhelming.
It further held that as to the punishment phase of
Roberts's trial, Pickell's performance was not deficient because
Pickell simply followed Roberts's orders regarding trial strategy.
It granted an additional COA on the Pate claim. Roberts requested
that this Court expand the COA to include his ineffective assistance
of counsel claims. We granted that request in part, granting a COA
as to whether Pickell rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by
failing to properly develop evidence of Roberts's mental illness, or
by failing to make adequate use of Roberts's court-appointed
psychiatrist. See Roberts v. Dretke, 356 F.3d 632, 641 (5th
Cir.2004). Roberts now brings this appeal.
* * *
We have held that in cases where a petitioner was
denied an evidentiary hearing by the state habeas court and was
denied funding by the state due to a cap on spending "failure to
fully develop the record below is not attributable to any fault of"
the petitioner. Clark, 202 F.3d at 765 (holding § 2254(e)(2) not
applicable when petitioner's request for investigation funds and
evidentiary hearing were denied); see also Beazley v. Johnson 242
F.3d 248, 273 (5th Cir.2001) ("We do not suggest the state has an
obligation to pay for investigation of as yet undeveloped claims;
but if the prisoner has made a reasonable effort to discover the
claims ... § 2254(e)(2) will not bar him from developing them in
federal court.").
However, "[m]ere requests for evidentiary
hearings will not suffice; the petitioner must be diligent in
pursuing the factual development of his claim." Dowthitt v. Johnson,
230 F.3d 733, 758 (5th Cir.2000). We have already held that Roberts
was not diligent in seeking his medical records and affidavits from
family members. See Roberts, 356 F.3d at 641. And while further
funding from the state might have provided Roberts the opportunity
to seek expert assistance, it is not clear that, without access to
the medical records that Roberts failed to gather, such an expert
would have produced any useful testimony.
Regardless, no action by
the state habeas court prevented Roberts from seeking an affidavit
from Dr. Arambula concerning whether a more complete understanding
of Roberts's medical history would have led to a change in his
medical opinion about Roberts's mental health and competence. While
the state habeas court could have been more helpful with regards to
funding and holding an evidentiary hearing, Roberts was not diligent
in developing the factual record to support his claim with the
resources at his disposal.
The district court did not err by
refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing. III The district court
correctly concluded that the state habeas court's denial of
Roberts's Pate and Strickland claims was not unreasonable or
contrary to Supreme Court precedent. Further, the district court did
not err by concluding that it was legally forbidden from holding an
evidentiary hearing. The district court's ruling is AFFIRMED.
Roberts v. Dretke,
356 F.3d 642 (5th Cir. 2004)(Habeas)
Background: State prisoner petitioned for writ of
habeas corpus. The United States District Court for the Western
District of Texas, Edward C. Prado, Judge, denied the writ, and
petitioner sought a certificate of appealability (COA) on
ineffective assistance claim.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Emilio M. Garza,
Circuit Judge, held that:
(1) petitioner was entitled to a COA on his claim that defense
counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to
properly develop evidence of petitioner's mental illness, and
(2) petitioner was also entitled to a COA on his claim that counsel
was deficient by failing to make adequate use of petitioner's court-appointed
psychiatrist. Granted.
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner Douglas Alan Roberts ("Roberts") seeks a certificate of
appealability ("COA") on his claims that his attorney rendered
ineffective assistance in his Texas death penalty trial, wherein he
was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. [FN1]
Roberts contends that his trial attorney, Steven Pickell ("Pickell"),
rendered ineffective assistance of counsel because of his deficient
preparation, including (1) his failure to adequately prepare for
trial, specifically his failure to hire an investigator and
interview witnesses for trial including Roberts's family members
about testifying as mitigating witnesses in the punishment phase of
Roberts's trial; (2) failure to properly develop evidence of
Roberts's mental illness; and (3) his failure to make adequate use
of Roberts's court-appointed psychiatrist. Roberts maintains that
the state court decision holding that Pickell satisfied the minimum
standard of performance required of an attorney representing a
capital client who is known to have mental health problems is an
unreasonable application of clearly established federal law, and
that the district court's conclusion to the contrary is at least
debatable among jurists of reason.
FN1. The district court granted Roberts a COA on
one other claim presented in his federal habeas petition. Roberts's
instant petition is limited to his request for COA on his
ineffective assistance claim, which was denied a COA in the district
court.
Before trial, Roberts advised Pickell of his
desire to be convicted and sentenced to death. Pickell filed several
pre-trial motions on Roberts's behalf, including a motion for
expenses for a mental health expert, which the court granted to the
extent of $1,000. A court-appointed psychiatrist, Dr. Michael
Arambula ("Dr. Arambula"), conducted a "mental status examination"
of Roberts. Pickell did not ask Dr. Arambula to investigate
Roberts's family history, compile a social or psychiatric history of
Roberts, or evaluate the potential mitigating evidence. The purpose
of Dr. Arambula's mental status examination of Roberts was, simply,
to ascertain whether Roberts was competent to direct his trial
strategy towards death.
In preparing his report, Dr. Arambula relied
exclusively on his own clinical interview with Roberts, the police
reports, and the victim's autopsy report. Dr. Arambula was not,
however, furnished with any other medical records, such as the
record of Roberts's treatment for "psychiatric problems" and
"suicide ideation," which occurred less then one year before the
crime at issue in this case. Nor was Dr. Arambula made aware of a
head injury Roberts had suffered as a child.
In his report, which
was furnished to Pickell, Dr. Arambula concluded that Roberts did
not suffer from any significant degree of depression, and that
"[t]he most salient issue in Douglas Roberts's history is his
addiction to crack cocaine." [FN2] Dr. Arambula concluded that, in
seeking the death penalty for himself, Roberts was simply exercising
his "right" to choose death over life. [FN3]
FN2. Dr. Arambula elaborated: Douglas Roberts's
history reveals a reported episode of depression (he calls it a
nervous breakdown) after which he started using crack cocaine. Over
the ensuing years however, it is difficult to find another
psychiatric disturbance[ ] (other than cocaine addiction) in his
history. Further, Mr. Roberts denies experiencing any recent
symptoms of depression during his sobriety in the Kerrville jail,
and [the] mental status examination of him only reveals mild
lability (instability) of his mood and affect. As a result, I cannot
conclude that Mr. Roberts suffers from any significant degree of
depression, or for all that matters, any other psychiatric
disturbance.
FN3. Dr. Arambula explained: Depression can
sometimes affect a person's judgment and decision-making so severely
that they wish for a premature death. This situation is not so
unusual in cases where patients refuse treatment or make suicide
attempts under the duress of depression. Prior to my examination of
Mr. Roberts, this issue was foremost in my approach to examining him.
However, and as I state earlier, I cannot find that depression
exists to such a degree that its presence would coerce Mr. Roberts
into seeking the death penalty. Albeit surprising to most people,
choosing death over life in the absence of severe mental disease is
the right of any individual. Douglas Roberts's psychiatric
evaluation fits this bill.
At various stages of the trial proceedings,
Roberts and Pickell held "defense conferences" outside of the
presence of the trial court and the prosecutor. These conferences,
which Pickell transcribed, provide a record of Roberts's direction
of a trial strategy towards death: Roberts instructed Pickell to
excuse venire members who expressed any reservations about assessing
the death penalty; not to "fight the death penalty" or ask for a
life sentence in the closing argument; not to request a jury
instruction on the parole laws, not to contact Roberts's family
members about the trial or subpoena them as mitigation witnesses for
the punishment phase; not to call Dr. Arambula or any other mental
health expert as a mitigation witness at the punishment phase, not
to request that the jury be instructed that its failure to reach a
decision on punishment will result in a life sentence; and not to
present any evidence that would "help the jury answer [the
punishment] questions in such a way that a life sentence would
result."
Consistent with Roberts's instructions, Pickell accepted
venire members who were favorable to the death penalty; struck
venire members opposed to the death penalty; conducted no individual
voir dire to rehabilitate venire members who had initially indicated
they were opposed to the death penalty; [FN4] did not interview
Roberts's family members before trial; called no witnesses at the
guilt/innocence phase of the trial; called no witnesses at the
punishment phase; did not request a jury instruction on the parole
laws; and made no argument in favor of a life sentence.
FN4. Roberts waived individual voir dire of the
jury panel in a pre-trial motions hearing.
On direct appeal, Roberts argued that Pickell
rendered ineffective assistance by complying with Roberts's
self-destructive orders and directions. Roberts maintained that
Pickell should have ignored his directions where those directions
worked to Roberts's detriment. The court rejected this argument. It
reasoned that, in every instance where Pickell followed Roberts's
self-destructive instructions, Pickell had advised a contrary course
of action, but Roberts had "disregarded that advice and directed his
counsel to comply with the requests and orders." The court concluded
that Roberts "cannot now claim his trial counsel was ineffective for
complying with [Roberts's] own orders and requests on the conduct of
his defense."
On state habeas review, Roberts claimed that
Pickell rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. Roberts argued
that Pickell's failure to request a competency hearing; to furnish
Dr. Arambula with copies of his psychiatric records; school records
and other background information; and to furnish the trial court
with a copy of Dr. Arambula's report constituted ineffective
assistance.
The court found that Pickell failed to make Roberts's
previous medical records available to Dr. Arambula and failed to
advise Dr. Arambula of a head injury Roberts suffered as a child.
However, the court also found that Pickell "did not observe, during
the course of his pretrial meetings with the defendant or at any
other phase of his investigation," evidence to support "incompetency
or insanity." It reasoned that Pickell's "lay" observations in
dealing with Roberts, taken together with his prior experience, led
him to believe that there was no reasonable expectation that it
would be of any value to raise issues of incompetency or insanity.
The court thus concluded:
The actions and demeanor of the defendant through
these proceedings did not raise an issue as to require or
necessitate a competency hearing. The failure of trial counsel, Mr.
Pickell, to request a competency hearing, was not error nor did it
amount to ineffectiveness of counsel.
On federal habeas review, Roberts re-urged his
state-court claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Roberts
argued that Pickell rendered ineffective assistance by (1) failing
to request a competency hearing for Roberts; (2) refusing Roberts's
request for an EEG; (3) failing to adequately investigate Roberts's
background; (4) failing to request a full neurophysical evaluation
of Roberts; (5) failing to adequately prepare Dr. Arambula by
furnishing him with copies of Roberts's relevant medical records;
(6) deferring to Roberts's desires to waive individual voir dire,
not to request a jury instruction regarding the impact of parole
eligibility on a life sentence, not to call Roberts's family members
to testify in mitigation at the punishment phase of trial, and not
to argue in favor of a life sentence; (7) failing to request a
speedy trial and, instead; (8) advising Roberts to waive individual
voir dire as a means of securing a speedier trial setting; (9)
failing to advise Roberts that jurors who favor the death penalty
were predisposed to convict; and (10) failing to adequately
cross-examine and rebut bloodstain pattern analysis testimony given
by a prosecution witness.
In support of his petition, Roberts offered
materials that had never been presented to the state courts,
including: affidavits from his father and brother, records relating
to his nine-day treatment at a psychiatric hospital for "suicide
ideation," documents relating to a lawsuit stemming from an accident
in which he was injured as a child, his own affidavit, his mother's
mental health records, his own medical records from prison, and his
handwritten notes to Pickell.
The federal habeas court found that Roberts
failed to exhaust all available state remedies with regard to
several aspects of his ineffective assistance claim, including his
allegations that Pickell was ineffective for refusing Roberts's
request for an EEG; for failing to request a neurophysical
evaluation of Roberts; for failing to advise Roberts that jurors who
favor the death penalty were predisposed to convict; and for failing
to adequately cross-examine and rebut bloodstain pattern analysis
testimony given by a prosecution witness. Thus the district court
found that Roberts had procedurally defaulted on these aspects of
his ineffective assistance claim.
On the merits, the federal habeas court concluded
that Pickell's decision not to request a competency hearing did not
constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court
found that Pickell did not perform deficiently because he "could
have reasonably relied on Dr. Arambula's conclusions, which
confirmed said counsel's own independent observations regarding [Roberts's]
obvious ability to consult with counsel and understand the
proceedings against him."
Additionally, the court concluded that
Pickell's performance did not prejudice Roberts's defense, "given
the total absence of any evidence presented to the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals in the course of [Roberts's] direct appeal and
state habeas corpus proceeding showing that [Roberts] could have
satisfied the constitutional standard for showing incompetence to
stand trial...."
On the remaining aspects of Roberts's claim of
ineffective assistance, the court concluded that Roberts failed to
show deficient performance. It found that the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals reasonably held that Roberts's "clear specific
directives to his trial counsel precluded a finding that said
counsel acted in an objectively unreasonable manner when said
counsel chose to follow [Roberts's] directives regarding trial
strategy." It further found that Roberts made no showing of
prejudice, as he did not present the state courts with any "allegations
that, but for the act or omission of his trial counsel, [he] would
have relented from his clearly self- destructive course of conduct."
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, we GRANT Roberts a COA
on his claims that Pickell rendered ineffective assistance of
counsel by failing to properly develop evidence of Roberts's mental
illness, [FN6] and by failing to make adequate use of his court-appointed
psychiatrist.
FN6. We do not issue a COA as to counsel's
failure to seek a full neurophysical examination (including an EEG)
of Roberts, as this claim is procedurally barred. Nor do we issue a
COA as to counsel's failure to interview Roberts's family members
about testifying at the punishment phase of Roberts's trial.
* * *
Petitioner's application for writ of habeas
corpus is DENIED.