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William L.
THOMPSON
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Kidnapping - Rape - Torture
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
March 30,
1976
Date of arrest:
2 days after
Date of birth:
February 19,
1952
Victim profile: Sally
Ivester
Method of murder:
Beating
Location: Dade County, Florida, USA
Status: Sentenced to death on June 26, 1976
DC #053779 DOB: 02/19/52
Eleventh
Judicial Circuit, Dade County, Case #76-3350
Judge, 1st
Sentencing: The Honorable N. Joseph Duran, Jr.
Judge, 2nd
Sentencing: The Honorable John A. Tanksley
Resentencing Judge: The Honorable S. Peter Capua
Attorney, 1st
Sentencing: Arthur Rothenberg - Assistant Public Defender
Attorney, 2nd Sentencing: Harry Solomon, Esq.
Attorneys, Resentencing: Joy
Carr, Esq., Raymond Badini, Esq. & John Lapinsky, Esq.
Attorney, Direct Appeal I: Louis
M. Jepeway, Esq.
Attorney, Direct Appeal II:
Harry Solomon, Esq.
Attorney, Direct Appeal,
Resentencing: Geoffrey C. Fleck, Esq.
Attorney, Collateral Appeals:
Terri Backhus and Stacie Brown – CCRC-S
Date of Offense: 03/30/76
Date of Sentencing I: 06/24/76
Date of Sentencing II: 09/20/78
Date of Resentencing: 08/25/89
Circumstances of Offense:
William Thompson was convicted
and sentenced to death for the 03/30/76 kidnapping, rape and murder of
Sally Ivester.
William Thompson, Rocco Surace,
Barbara Savage and Sally Ivester were staying together in a motel room
in Dade County.
Thompson and Surace instructed the two women to call
their families in order to obtain money. Both Thompson and Surace
became enraged when Sally could only get $25 from her family, when she
had previously claimed that she could get close to $200.
At that time, Surace ordered Sally into the bedroom where he began to strike her in
the face with his chain-link belt. Surace ordered Sally to take off her
clothes, while Thompson systematically beat her with the chain-link
belt.
The two men then sodomized her with the leg of a chair and also
with a nightstick. The violent ramming tore the inner lining of the
vaginal wall, causing internal bleeding.
Thompson and Surace burned
Sally with cigarettes and lighters, forced her to eat a sanitary napkin,
and lick beer off the floor.
The two men then took Sally to a phone
booth and ordered her to call her mother to ask for more money. After
the phone call, Thompson and Surace took Sally back to the motel room
where the brutal beating continued. Sally died from the injuries
sustained in the assault.
Barbara Savage, who was a
witness to the murder of Sally Ivester, testified that she feared for
her life if she tried to leave the motel during the malicious attack.
*****
Codefendant Information:
Rocco Surace pled guilty to the
kidnapping, rape and murder of Sally Ivester. The trial court sentenced
him to death; however, the Florida Supreme Court reversed the sentence
on appeal.
At Surace’s retrial, Thompson testified, claiming
responsibility for the entire incident and Surace was found guilty of
Second Degree Murder. He was sentenced to life and died on 11/14/93
while in the custody of the Florida Department of Corrections.
05/07/76 Defendant was arraigned and entered
a plea of “not guilty” to all counts charged in the indictment.
06/15/76 Defendant changed his plea to
“guilty” on all counts charged in the indictment.
06/15/76 Judgment rendered by the trial
court.
06/17/76 Upon advisory sentencing, the jury
voted by a majority for the death penalty.
06/24/76 The defendant was sentenced as
followed:
Count I: First-Degree
Murder - Death
Count II: Kidnapping - Life
Count III:
Sexual Battery – Life
06/23/77 Upon Direct Appeal, the Florida
Supreme Court reversed the judgments and sentence of death and remanded
to the trial court with instructions to allow Thompson to withdraw his
guilty plea and proceed to trial.
09/18/78 The defendant again pled guilty to
all counts charged in the indictment.
09/18/78 Judgment rendered by the trial
court.
09/20/78 Upon advisory sentencing, the jury
voted by a majority for the death penalty.
09/20/78 The defendant was sentenced as
followed:
Count I: First Degree Murder - Death
Count II: Kidnapping - Life
Count III: Sexual Battery – Life
09/09/87 In a consolidated opinion, FSC
remanded Thompson’s case for resentencing under the dictates of
Hitchcock v. Dugger.
*****
Resentencing Summary:
04/17/89 A new penalty phase commenced
before a new jury.
06/06/89 Upon advisory sentencing, the jury,
by a 7 to 5 majority, voted for the death penalty.
08/25/89 Thompson was
resentenced as followed:
Count I: First-Degree Murder – Death
Count II:
Kidnapping – Life
Count III:
Sexual Battery – Life
*****
Case Information:
On 07/30/96, Thompson filed a
Direct Appeal in the Florida Supreme Court. At the same time, he filed
a Motion to Vacate Judgment and Sentence (3.850) in the State Circuit
Court. Thompson’s 3.850 Motion was denied, after which he filed an
appeal in the Florida Supreme Court on 10/29/76.
The Florida Supreme
Court then consolidated Thompson’s Direct Appeal and his 3.850 Appeal.
In those appeals, Thompson argued that his motivation for pleading
guilty was based on “a failure of communication or a misunderstanding of
the facts.”
On 06/23/77, in a consolidated opinion, the Florida Supreme
Court reversed Thompson’s convictions and sentences, and remanded with
instructions to allow Thompson to withdraw his guilty plea and proceed
to trial.
On 02/27/78, Thompson filed a
Petition for Writ of Certiorari in the United States Supreme Court,
which was denied on 04/24/78.
Upon returning to the State
Circuit Court, Thompson again entered a plea of guilty on all counts
charged in the indictment and Thompson was again sentenced to death. On
12/11/78, Thompson filed a Direct Appeal in the Florida Supreme Court.
In that appeal, he argued that the trial court erred in denying his
request for additional psychiatric testing and in denying his request
for a presentence investigation.
Thompson also contended that the trial
court erred by convening an advisory jury over his objection and then
excluding jurors who opposed the death penalty. Thompson’s last
contention was that the trial court ignored evidence of domination by
Rocco Surace, Thompson’s accomplice. The Florida Supreme Court found no
merit to Thompson’s claims and affirmed the convictions and sentence of
death on 07/03/80.
Thompson then filed a 3.850
Motion in the State Circuit Court. That motion was denied and Thompson
filed an appeal in the Florida Supreme Court. In that appeal, Thompson
claimed that Rocco Surace “forced him to take full blame for the murder”
and that his testifying at Surace’s trial as being the dominant
participant in the murder of Sally Ivester was the product of coercion.
As such, Thompson claimed that his death sentence was inappropriate
because Surace, who he claimed was the “moving force” in the murder, was
given a life sentence. On 02/11/82, The Florida Supreme Court affirmed
the denial of Thompson’s 3.850 Motion.
Thompson next filed a Petition
for Writ of Habeas Corpus in the United States District Court, Southern
District. He concurrently filed a motion for a continuance, asserting
that there were two claims not included in the petition. Thompson
argued the inclusion of his claims that he involuntarily and
unintelligibly entered a guilty plea and that he received ineffective
assistance of counsel. Thompson’s attorney argued that these claims
could not have been raised earlier because trial counsel had represented
Thompson in all previous post conviction proceedings.
The State opposed
the Motion for Continuance as a “deliberate bypass” and an “abuse of
writ.” At this point, the attorney general notified the court that the
State waived exhaustion of the two unexhausted claims; however, the
District Court rejected that waiver. The United States District Court
then granted Thompson’s Motion for Continuance to allow Thompson to
exhaust the two claims at the state level.
On 02/22/82, Thompson filed
an additional 3.850 Motion in the State Circuit Court. The State then
filed an interlocutory appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for
the Eleventh Circuit arguing the granting of the continuance and that
the District Court erred “in not giving effect to the State’s waiver of
exhaustion.” There was an order entered putting a stay on all
proceedings at the state level pending the disposition of the
Interlocutory Appeal in the United States Court of Appeals.
The United
States Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court’s decision to grant
Thompson’s Motion for Continuance; however, the cause was remanded to
the United States District Court to allow the court to consider
accepting or rejecting the State’s waiver of Thompson’s two unexhausted
claims as directed in the guidelines set forth by the Court of Appeals.
On remand, the District Court accepted the State’s waiver and, after an
evidentiary hearing, denied Thompson’s Petition for Writ of Habeas
Corpus. Thompson then filed an appeal of that denial in the United
States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. In that appeal,
Thompson argued that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and
that the trial court limited the consideration of non-statutory evidence
heard during the sentencing phase. Thompson also claimed that the court
did not conduct an adequate inquiry into his competency to stand trial
and that his guilty plea was coerced through death threats from his
codefendant Rocco Surace. On 04/10/86, the United States Court of
Appeals agreed with the District Court and affirmed the denial of
Thompson’s Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus.
Thompson next filed a Petition
for Writ of Certiorari in the United States Supreme Court, which was
denied on 05/04/87.
Thompson then returned to the
State level and filed a 3.850 Motion in the State Circuit Court. That
motion was denied, after which Thompson filed an appeal in the Florida
Supreme Court. Thompson concurrently filed a Petition for Writ of
Habeas Corpus in the Florida Supreme Court. On 09/09/87, the Florida
Supreme Court, in a consolidated opinion, remanded Thompson’s case for
resentencing under the dictates of Hitchcock v. Dugger. The
high court deemed Thompson’s Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus to be
moot in light of the remand granted by Thompson’s 3.850 Appeal
The State then filed a Petition
for Writ of Certiorari, which was denied on 03/21/88.
On 08/25/89, William Thompson
was resentenced to death. He then filed a Direct Appeal in the Florida
Supreme Court. In that appeal, he argued that the trial court erred by
admitting the prior testimony of witness Barbara Savage when she could
not be located to testify at the resentencing. Thompson also argued
that the trial court erred by failing to grant his motion to strike the
jury panel when the jury apparently became concerned that Thompson,
having served 13 years in prison already, could be released after just
12 years if given a life sentence. Thompson also claimed that the trial
court erred by allowing the State to introduce Thompson’s prior
inconsistent testimony given at the trial of his codefendant Rocco
Surace. Lastly, Thompson contended that the trial court erred by
permitting autopsy photos as evidence and in its consideration and
application of aggravating and mitigating circumstances.
The Florida
Supreme Court agreed with Thompson that the admission of the autopsy
photos was an error, but deemed it harmless considering the testimony of
Barbara Savage, the medical examiner, and other crime scene photos that
were admitted into evidence. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed
Thompson’s sentence of death on 06/04/92.
On 04/01/93, the court denied
Thompson’s Motion for Rehearing and issued a clarified opinion
addressing the issue of the jury instruction given for the heinous,
atrocious, and cruel (HAC) aggravating factor as dictated by the United
States Supreme Court’s decision in Espinosa v. Florida.
Thompson argued that he was entitled to a new sentencing hearing because
the HAC instruction given to his jury was defective.
The Florida
Supreme Court noted that, given the circumstances of this torturous
murder, the application of the HAC aggravating factor was justified
under any definition and beyond a reasonable doubt. The Florida Supreme
Court again affirmed the sentence of death on 04/01/93.
Thompson then filed a Petition
for Writ of Certiorari in the United States Supreme Court, which was
denied on11/08/93.
Thompson next filed a 3.850
Motion in the State Circuit Court. That motion was denied, after which
he filed an appeal in the Florida Supreme Court. Thompson concurrently
filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus in the Florida Supreme
Court. In a consolidated opinion, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed
the denial of Thompson’s 3.850 Appeal and denied his Petition for Writ
of Habeas Corpus on 04/13/00.
On 06/13/01, Thompson filed
another Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus in the United States District
Court, which was dismissed on 12/14/01. That court then granted, in
part, a motion for certificate of appealability. On 02/04/02, Thompson
filed an appeal in the United States Court of Appeals in which the
denial of his Habeas was affirmed on 02/06/03.
Thompson filed a 3.850 Motion in
the State Circuit Court on 06/18/03. The motion was denied on 11/12/03.
Thompson filed a Petition for
Writ of Certiorari in the United States Supreme Court on 08/01/03. The
petition was granted on 04/04/05. The United States Supreme Court
vacated Thompson’s judgment and remanded the case to the United States
Court of Appeals of the Eleventh Circuit.
On 08/09/04, Thompson filed a
3.850 Motion in the circuit court. The motion was denied on 12/17/04.
On 02/15/05, Thompson filed a
3.850 Appeal in the Florida Supreme Court. The appeal is currently
pending.