Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Robert Lee THOMPSON
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robberies
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: 1996
Date of birth:
April 1, 1975
Victims profile: Men
(convenience store clerks)
Method of murder:
Shooting (.25 caliber semiautomatic
pistol)
Location: Harris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed by lethal injection in Texas on November 19, 2009
Name
TDCJ
Number
Date
of Birth
Thompson, Robert Lee
999276
04/01/75
Date
Received
Age
(when Received)
Education Level
08/10/98
23
10 years
Date
of Offense
Age
(at the Offense)
County
12/05/96
21
Harris
Race
Gender
Hair
Color
Black
Male
Black
Height
Weight
Eye
Color
5-8
252
Brown
Native
County
Native
State
Prior
Occupation
Harris
Texas
Unknown
Prior
Prison Record
None
Summary of incident
Thompson and a co-defendant
entered a convenience store and robbed the clerk.
When they
were leaving the store, Thompson, who possessed a .25-caliber
pistol, and the co-defendant, Sammy Butler, who possessed a .38-caliber
pistol, fatally shot the store clerk.
Thompson and Butler had
robbed at least 8 other convenience stores, with three of them
involving the fatal shooting of the clerks.
Co-defendants
Sammy Butler
Race
and Gender of Victim
other male
Summary:
Thompson, armed with a .25 caliber semiautomatic, and
Sammy Butler, armed with a .38 caliber revolver, entered
a 7-Evenings convenience store in Houston. Thompson
pointed his pistol at store clerk Mubarakali Meredia,
who was at the counter, and told him to open the cash
register and hand over all of the money.
Thompson shot
Meredia in the abdomen when he did not move quickly
enough. Thompson also shot at Meredia’s cousin, Mansor
Bhai Rahim Mohammed, who also worked at the shop, when
Rahim began running toward the rear of the store.
Thompson then shot Meredia three more times as he lay on
the floor. Thompson ordered Meredia to get up and get
the money for him. Meredia did so. Then Thompson put his
pistol to Meredia’s neck and pulled the trigger. Nothing
happened because Thompson had run out of bullets.
Thompson hit Meredia on the head with the butt of his
gun and struck him with the cash register drawer.
Nonetheless, Meredia survived.
Thompson took the money
and ran out of the store, while Butler grabbed a stack
of lottery tickets and followed behind Thompson.
Thompson jumped into the driver’s seat of their car,
while Butler got into the passenger’s seat, rolled down
his window, and fired two shots at Rahim who had run to
the front door. One bullet hit Rahim in the chest, and
he died. Thompson later told detectives he went on a two-month
crime spree in 1996 because God told him to do something
about Middle Eastern and Asian store clerks who
discriminated against blacks.
The killing was one of three he
acknowledged to authorities. In two of the slayings,
Thompson told detectives he was the gunman. Accomplice
Sammy Butler was tried separately and sentenced to life
in prison.
Citations:
Thompson v. State, 2003 WL 21466925 (Tex.Crim.App.
2003). (Direct Appeal) Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d 549 (Tex.Crim.App.
2005). (PCR) Thompson v. Quarterman, 292 Fed.Appx. 277 (5th
Cir. 2008). (Habeas)
Final/Special Meal:
Final Words:
Thompson, in brief comments from the death chamber
gurney, invoked Allah as his God, thanked friends and
his mother for their love and support and urged his
mother, who sobbed as she watched through a window:
“Smile, be happy, don’t cry.” He said he had not meant
any harm to his victims’ families, none of whom was
present. “I know Allah will forgive me,” he said. “Allah
is the forgiver.”
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Department of Criminal Justice
Thompson, Robert Lee
Date of Birth: 4/1/75
DR#: 999276
Date Received: 8/10/98
Education: 10 years
Occupation: Unknown
Date of Offense: 12/5/96
County of Offense: Harris
Native County: Harris
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Black
Eye Color: Brown
Height: 5' 08"
Weight: 252
Summary of incident: Thompson and a
co-defendant entered a convenience store and robbed the
clerk. When they were leaving the store, Thompson, who
possessed a .25-caliber pistol, and the co-defendant,
Sammy Butler, who possessed a .38-caliber pistol,
fatally shot the store clerk. Thompson and Butler had
robbed at least 8 other convenience stores, with three
of them involving the fatal shooting of the clerks.
Co-defendants: Sammy Butler
Prior Prison Record: None.
Texas Attorney General
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Media Advisory: Robert Lee Thompson
scheduled for execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg
Abbott offers the following information about Robert Lee
Thompson, who is scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m.
on November 19, 2009. Thompson was convicted and
sentenced to die in a state district court for the 1996
murder of Mansor Bhai Rahim Mohammed, a convenience
store clerk.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On December 5, 1996, Thompson, armed
with a .25 caliber semiautomatic, and Sammy Butler,
armed with a .38 caliber revolver, entered a 7-Evenings
food Store in Houston.
Thompson pointed his pistol at store
clerk Mubarakali Meredia, who was at the counter, and
told him to open the cash register and hand over all of
the money. Thompson shot Meredia in the abdomen when he
did not move quickly enough. Thompson also shot at
Meredia’s cousin, Mansor Bhai Rahim Mohammed, who also
worked at the shop, when Rahim began running toward the
rear of the store. At Butler’s trial, the State offered
evidence that Butler also shot at Rahim, and threatened
several other customers.
Thompson then shot Meredia three more
times as he lay on the floor. Thompson ordered Meredia
to get up and get the money for him. Meredia did so.
Then Thompson put his pistol to Meredia’s neck and
pulled the trigger. Nothing happened because Thompson
had run out of bullets. Thompson hit Meredia on the head
with the butt of his gun and struck him with the cash
register drawer. Nonetheless, Meredia survived.
Thompson took the money and ran out
of the store, while Butler grabbed a stack of lottery
tickets and followed behind Thompson. Thompson jumped
into the driver’s seat of their car, while Butler got
into the passenger’s seat, rolled down his window, and
fired two shots at Rahim who had run to the front door.
One bullet hit Rahim in the chest, and he died.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 2, 1997, a Harris County
grand jury indicted Thompson for capital murder for the
robbery and killing of Mansoor Bhai Rahim Mohammed. A
jury found Thompson guilty of capital murder on March
25, 1998. On April 1, 1998, following a separate
punishment hearing, the jury answered “Yes” to the first
special sentencing issue, future dangerousness. The jury
also answered “Yes” to the second special issue, finding
that Thompson caused the death, or intended to kill, or
anticipated that a human life would be taken. The jury
answered “No” to the third special issue, whether
mitigating circumstances existed warranting a sentence
of life imprisonment. In accordance with state law, the
trial court assessed Thompson’s punishment at death. The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Thompson’s
conviction. The U.S. Supreme Court denied Thompson’s
petition for the writ of certiorari on December 15,
2003.
Thompson filed a state application
for writ of habeas corpus in the trial court on July 13,
2000, while his direct appeal was still pending. On
January 25, 2005, the trial court entered findings of
fact and conclusions of law recommending Thompson’s
application be denied. The Texas Court of Criminal
appeals ordered further briefing on two of Thompson’s
allegations related to his accomplice’s conviction for a
lesser included offense. On November 9, 2005, the Court
of Criminal Appeals rejected both of Thompson’s briefed
claims with an opinion, adopted the trial court’s
findings and conclusions regarding all of Thompson’s
other claims, and denied the application. Thompson filed
a federal habeas petition in a U.S. district court on
October 20, 2006. The district court dismissed
Thompson’s petition with prejudice and denied a
certificate of appealability (COA) on November 29, 2007.
On December 10, 2007, Williams filed a motion to alter
or amend the judgment, which the district court denied
on December 21, 2007. The United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit denied Thompson a COA on August
19, 2008. The U.S. Supreme Court denied Thompson’s
petition for certiorari on March 23, 2009.
Thompson filed a subsequent state
habeas application in the trial court on June 16, 2009.
The Texas Court of Criminal appeals dismissed the
application with a written order on September 16, 2009.
To date, Thompson has not filed a petition for
certiorari from the dismissal of his subsequent state
habeas application.
EVIDENCE OF FUTURE DANGEROUSNESS
During the punishment phase, the jury
heard evidence that the robbery-murder in which Rahim
was killed was only one part of a robbery-murder spree
during which Thompson, as the triggerman, had committed
two additional capital murders within twenty-four hours
of Rahim’s killing. (Thompson had three pending capital
murder charges at the time of trial).
Inmate executed after Perry
rejects clemency
Huntsville Item
Online
Associated Press -
November 19, 2009
Texas inmate Robert Lee Thompson was
executed Thursday evening for his part in a fatal
Houston store holdup after Gov. Rick Perry rejected a
parole board’s recommendation to spare Thompson because
he wasn’t the gunman.
Thompson, 34, was an accomplice to
triggerman Sammy Butler when 29-year-old store clerk
Mansoor Bhai Rahim Mohammed was gunned down 13 years
ago. Butler received life in prison. A jury gave
Thompson death.
Thompson’s lawyer told the Texas
Board of Pardons and Paroles Thompson’s punishment
wasn’t fair and the panel voted 5-2 Wednesday to
recommend his sentence be commuted to life. Perry didn’t
have to follow their rare recommendation and the
execution was carried out about 45 minutes after his
decision.
Thompson, in brief comments from the
death chamber gurney, invoked Allah as his God, thanked
friends and his mother for their love and support and
urged his mother, who sobbed as she watched through a
window: “Smile, be happy, don’t cry.” He said he had not
meant any harm to his victims’ families, none of whom
was present. “I know Allah will forgive me,” he said.
“Allah is the forgiver.”
His mother cried uncontrollably,
stomped her feet and finally demanded to be taken from
the witness area before her son was pronounced dead at
6:19 p.m., nine minutes after he was injected with the
lethal drugs. Thompson was the 23rd inmate executed this
year in Texas and the second this week.
Earlier Thursday, Thompson also lost
an appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the
punishment. The parole board’s 5-2 vote came in response
to a petition from Patrick McCann, Thompson’s attorney,
who argued the case was similar to that of Kenneth
Foster, who also was convicted and sentenced to die
under the Texas law of parties. Under that law,
offenders conspiring to commit one felony like robbery
can all be held responsible for another ensuing crime,
such as murder. “After reviewing all of the facts in the
case of Robert Lee Thompson, who had a murderous history
and participated in the killing of Mansoor Bhai Rahim
Mohammed, I have decided to uphold the jury’s capital
murder conviction and capital punishment for this
heinous crime,” Perry said in a statement. “There is no
reason to set aside the capital murder conviction handed
down by a Texas jury and upheld by numerous state and
federal courts.”
Perry commuted Foster’s sentence to
life two years ago. Foster became only the second inmate
since Texas resumed carrying out executions in 1982 who
won a recommendation from the parole board as his
execution loomed. In the first case, in 2004, Perry
rejected the board’s recommendation and mentally ill
prisoner Kelsey Patterson was executed. Perry’s
explanation for commuting Foster’s sentence was that
Foster and his co-defendant were tried together on
capital murder charges for a slaying in San Antonio. In
Thompson’s case, he and Butler were tried separately.
At least half a dozen other Texas
inmates have been executed under the law of parties. The
U.S. Supreme Court since 1982 has barred the death
penalty for co-conspirators who don’t themselves kill.
The justices made an exception in 1987, however, ruling
that the Eighth Amendment didn’t prohibit the execution
of someone who plays a major role in a felony that
results in murder and whose mental state is one of
reckless indifference. McCann’s appeal before the
Supreme Court raised questions about the competence of
Thompson’s trial lawyers.
Evidence at his trial showed Thompson,
who is black, told detectives he went on a two-month
crime spree in 1996 because God told him to do something
about Middle Eastern and Asian store clerks who
discriminated against blacks. The killing was one of
three he acknowledged to authorities. In two of the
slayings, Thompson told detectives he was the gunman.
In a recent interview with The
Associated Press, Thompson said he wasn’t against
punishment for crime. “That’s the foundation of our
system,” he said. “But I am against the unfairness of
the system, the way it picks and chooses.” Thompson was
21 at the time of Mohammed’s shooting. Another clerk at
the same store was shot four times by Thompson but
survived. “I wasn’t thinking of this being wrong. It was
more: You’re not doing us right,” he said of the store
clerks. “They rob us. They watch us like crazy. We’re
all victims.” Asked if he’d ever killed someone, he
replied: “No one died in front of me. I’ve shot at
people. Different things happen.”
Evidence showed he and Butler were
responsible for at least eight other convenience store
robberies, three of them resulting in deaths. Thompson
blamed the spree on the recklessness of youth. “It was
impulsive ... nothing planned,” he said. “Just — Bam!”
Parole board urges clemency for
man set to die
By Michael
Graczyk - AP
Dallas Morning News
11/18/2009
The Texas Board of Pardons and
Paroles, in a highly unusual move, is recommending
commuting the sentence of a convicted murderer set to
die Thursday to life in prison. Robert Lee Thompson's on
death row for his part in the fatal shooting of Houston
convenience store clerk 13 years ago. The board's action
Wednesday leaves the decision on whether Thompson lives
or dies with Gov. Rick Perry.
The 34-year-old Thompson was
condemned under the Texas law of parties for being an
accomplice when 29-year-old Mansoor Bhai (BYE) Rahim (rah-HEEM')
Mohammed was gunned down 13 years ago. Thompson's
partner, Sammy Butler, received a life term while
Thompson got death.
Perry rejects advice to spare
Houston killer
By Allan
Turner - The Houston Chronicle
Nov. 19, 2009
Houston killer Robert Lee Thompson is
headed to the death chamber tonight after Gov. Rick
Perry rejected the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole's
clemency recommendation. Perry's announcement came
shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal
from Thompson's lawyers. Thompson's execution is
scheduled for 6 p.m.
"After reviewing all of the facts in
the case of Robert Lee Thompson, who had a murderous
history and participated in the killing of Mansoor Bhai
Rahim Mohammed, I have decided to uphold the jury’s
capital murder conviction and capital punishment for
this heinous crime," Perry said in a written statement.
"There is no reason to set aside the capital murder
conviction handed down by a Texas jury and upheld by
numerous state and federal courts."
Thompson, 34, didn't fire the shot
that killed convenience store clerk Mansoor Rahim during
a 1996 robbery, but was still sentenced to die under
Texas' so-called “law of parties,” which says a
defendant can be sentenced to death for participating in
a capital crime.
Court documents indicate the robbery
of the Seven Evenings convenience store was to have been
a final stickup in a series committed by Thompson and
his accomplice, Sammy Butler. The store was staffed by
Rahim and a cousin, Mubarakali Meredia and, in a death
row interview, Thompson said he had harbored resentment
against merchants he considered exploitative of blacks.
Thompson approached Meredia at the
checkout counter, pulled a pistol and demanded money. As
the clerk opened the register, Thompson shot him four
times. He then spotted Rahim at the store's rear and
fired two shots in his direction. Then, trial records
indicate, Thompson aimed his weapoon at Meredia's neck
and pulled the trigger a fifth time. Out of ammunition,
the pistol failed to fire. He then pistol-whipped the
clerk and beat him over the head with the cash tray.
Meredia survived the attack.
As the robbers fled — Thompson at the
getwaway car's wheel, Butler in the passenger seat —
Rahim charged into the parking lot. Butler fired two
shots, killing him.
Even though Thompson did not fire the
fatal bullet, under Texas' law of parties, he was a
killer as culpable as Butler and eligible for the death
penalty.
Thompson was tried first and
sentenced to death. In Butler's case, prosecutors failed
to prove he intended to kill Rahim. He was sentenced to
life in prison.
The case bore similarities to the
only case in which Perry voluntarily commuted a death
sentence to life in prison. In August 2007 he spared the
life of Kenneth Foster, who had been convicted of
capital murder in a law of parties case stemming from a
deadly San Antonio traffic altercation.
As with Thompson, Foster, who had
been the getwaway driver in a series of robberies, did
not fire the lethal bullet. Texas' law of parties
stipulates that a person may be held culpable if he
“solicits, encourages, directs, aids or attempts to aid
the other persons to commit the offense.” Additionally,
it holds that if one felony offense grows out of the
commission of another felony — a murder stemming from a
robbery, for example — all parties in the first crime
may be held responsible for the second.
Thompson was the second Harris County
killer scheduled for execution this week. On Tuesday,
U.S. District Judge Lee Rosenthal granted Gerald
Eldridge a 90-day stay so that he could receive further
psychological evaluation. His attorney, Lee Wilson,
argued that Eldridge, 45, might be seriously mentally
ill and incompetent to be exeucted. Eldridge was
convicted in the 1993 murder of his former girlfriend,
Cynthia Bogany, 28, and her 9-year-old daughter,
Chirrisa.
Robert Lee
Thompson
ProDeathPenalty.com
In December 1996, Robert Lee Thompson
and Sammy Butler robbed a convenience store while armed
with handguns. During the robbery, Thompson approached
the cash register, pointed his gun at the clerk behind
the counter, and demanded money. He shot that first
clerk in the stomach when he did not move quickly enough.
Then he shot at, but missed, a second clerk, Mansoor
Bhai Rahim Mohammed, who was running toward the back of
the store. Turning his attention back to the first clerk,
who was lying on the floor, he shot him three more times
before demanding he get up and give him the money. That
first clerk did so, after which Thompson put his handgun
to the first clerk's neck and pulled the trigger. Upon
discovering he already had fired all of the bullets in
that weapon, he hit that first clerk over the head with
the cash register drawer. He then fled with Butler. As
Thompson drove away, Butler fired his handgun from the
passenger window and fatally shot Mansoor (at whom
Thompson had previously, unsuccessfully shot). The first
clerk survived and testified at Thompson's trial.
Thompson's indictment charged he
caused the victim's death during the robbery by shooting
him with a firearm. At the time of his trial in March
1998, Thompson had three capital murder, and several
aggravated robbery, charges pending against him,
including the one at hand, stemming from similar
robberies. Regarding all of those charges, by the time
his counsel was appointed, he had made statements to the
police confessing his involvement in all of them. The
jury was instructed it could find Thompson guilty of
capital murder if he: (1) specifically intended to kill,
and did kill, the victim; (2) intended to kill the
victim by "soliciting, encouraging, directing, aiding,
or attempting to aid" Butler's shooting him during the
robbery; or (3) conspired with Butler to commit the
robbery and Butler's shooting the victim "was committed
in furtherance of the conspiracy and was an offense that
Thompson should have anticipated". The jury found him
guilty. In response to the jury's answers to the special
issues, Thompson was sentenced to death.
Robert Lee
Thompson
Texas Execution Information Center by
David Carson - Txexecutions.org
Robert Lee Thompson, 34, was executed
by lethal injection on 19 November 2009 in Huntsville,
Texas for the robbery and murder of a convenience store
clerk.
On 5 December 1996, Thompson, then
21, and Sammy Butler, 19, entered a convenience store in
Houston. Thompson was carrying a .25-caliber
semiautomatic pistol, while Butler was carrying a .38-caliber
revolver. Thompson pointed his pistol at clerk
Mubarakali Meredia, who was at the counter, and ordered
him to open the cash register and hand over all the
money. Thompson shot Meredia in the abdomen when he did
not move quickly enough. He also shot at employee Mansor
Rahim - who was Meredia's cousin - when Rahim began
running toward the rear of the store. Butler also shot
at Rahim and threatened several customers.
Thompson then shot Meredia three more
times as he lay on the floor. Thompson ordered Meredia
to get up and get the money for him. Meredia did so.
Then Thompson put his pistol to Meredia’s neck and
pulled the trigger, but he had run out of bullets. He
hit Meredia on the head with the butt of his gun and
struck him with the cash register drawer. He then took
the money and ran out of the store, while Butler grabbed
a stack of lottery tickets and followed behind him.
Thompson jumped into the driver’s seat of their car,
while Butler got into the passenger’s seat and rolled
down his window. Meanwhile, Rahim ran to the front door.
Butler then fired two shots through the glass door at
Rahim. One bullet hit him in the chest, and he died.
Meredia survived.
After his arrest, Thompson, who was
black, he told detectives that he had been on a two-month
crime spree. He confessed that he and Butler had
committed two other robbery-murders within 24 hours of
Rahim's killing. In those, Thompson said, he fired the
fatal shots. Under Texas' "law of parties", a defendant
can be found guilty of capital murder for participating
in a killing, even if he does not personally inflict the
fatal injury.
In his taped confession, Thompson
gave a lengthy explanation of why he had decided to
start robbing and killing store owners. He stated, in
part, "... I look at it, they [Japanese, Chinese,
Vietnamese, and Middle Eastern people] come to our
country. They come in our communities. They spend our
money ... 'cause, you know, they come over here, they
not giving back to our communities that you're taking
from. And when we come to your stores, ah they, we go in
their stores, they watch us, they, they always following
us thinking we gonna steal 'cause we black. You know
it's the point that you can't feel comfortable when you
spending your own money. You know, and you going in
their store 'cause you can't help but go to their store
'cause it's in our community ... So, it wasn't that I
was robbing them for their money. It was just a point,
how can you come in our neighborhoods and do us like
that and think we not God's people ... The only image
that you get from a black person on the news is, is
robbing, killing, and stuff like that. That's all you
see. But in God's heart and in God's eye, who's to say
that's wrong? Who's to say that God put you in a store,
to own that store, and you made promises to Him and by
you disobedient to Him that He won't punish you for it
'cause He will. Regardless if it's gonna be me, using
me, it's gonna be somebody that you gonna get punished
for ..."
A jury convicted Thompson of capital
murder in March 1998 and sentenced him to death. The
Texas Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction and
sentence in June 2003. All of his subsequent appeals in
state and federal court were denied.
Samuel Lee Butler was convicted of
three counts of capital murder, plus one conviction for
aggravated robbery, and was sentenced to life in prison.
He remains in custody as of this writing.
The day before Thompson's execution,
the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles voted 5-2 to
recommend that Governor Rick Perry commute his death
sentence to life. It was only the third time during
Perry's nine-year tenure that the board has made such a
recommendation. The governor cannot grant clemency
without the board's recommendation, but he is not
obligated to follow it. In 2004, the board recommended
clemency for Kelsey Patterson over concerns over his
mental competency. Perry denied to issue clemency, and
Patterson was executed.
In 2007, Perry granted clemency for
Kenneth Foster. Like Thompson, Foster was convicted and
sentenced to death under the law of parties. However, in
making his decision to spare Foster from the death
chamber, Perry stated that his reason was because Foster
and his co-defendant were tried and convicted together.
Thompson and Butler were tried separately.
"After reviewing all the facts in the
case of Robert Lee Thompson, who had a murderous history
and participated in the killing of [Rahim], I have
decided to uphold the jury's capital murder conviction
and capital punishment for this heinous crime," Perry
said in a written statement on the morning of Thompson's
execution.
Thompson, who converted to Islam
while in prison, began his last statement by praising
Allah and expressing love to his mother and friends. He
then apologized for his crime. "I never meant any of
your family to get hurt," he said to an empty chamber
normally occupied by the victim's family. "I know Allah
will forgive me." While Thompson was speaking, his
mother, Audrey Champs, stamped her feet and sobbed "Oh
God, oh God, oh God". She asked to be escorted from the
witness room. The lethal injection was then started. He
was pronounced dead at 6:19 p.m.
Thompson v. State, Not
Reported in S.W.3d, 2003 WL 21466925 (Tex.Crim.App.
2003). (Direct Appeal)
Defendant was convicted in a jury
trial in the trial court, Harris County, of intentional
murder while in the course of committing or attempting
to commit robbery, for which he was sentenced to death.
Defendant appealed. The Court of Criminal Appeals,
Womack, J., held that: (1) defendant waived for
appellate review issue as to whether police officer's
testimony constituted improper expert testimony as to
defendant's truthfulness; (2) allegation of defendant's
character witness that juror made comment on witness' or
defendant's race did not necessitate investigation into
possible prejudice or bias on juror's part; (3) defense
counsel did not render ineffective assistance of counsel;
and (4) defendant waived for appellate review issue as
to whether trial court lessened State's burden of proof
on special issue. Affirmed.
Holcomb, J., concurred in judgment.
Johnson, J., dissented in part. WOMACK, J., delivered
the opinion of the Court, in which KELLER, P.J., and
MEYERS, PRICE, KEASLER, HERVEY, and COCHRAN, JJ., joined.
On March 25, 1998, a Harris County
jury convicted the appellant of the intentional murder
of Mansoor Bhai Rahim Mohammed while in the course of
committing or attempting to commit robbery on December
5, 1996. Tex. Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2). Pursuant to the
jury's answers to the special issues in Texas Code of
Criminal Procedure Article 37.071, sections 2(b) and
2(e), the trial court sentenced the appellant to death.
Art. 37.071, § 2(g).FN1 Direct appeal to this Court is
automatic. Art. 37.071, § 2(h). The appellant raises ten
points of error. He does not contest the sufficiency of
the evidence. We affirm.
In his first point of error, the appellant argues that
the trial court should have sustained his objection to
Officer Milton F. Waters's testimony that he believed
the appellant was telling the truth when the appellant
professed his “philosophy of life.” FN2 At trial, the
appellant objected to Waters' testimony on the ground
that it was speculative. In his brief, he argues that
Waters' testimony constituted improper expert testimony
as to the truthfulness of the appellant's statement.
Because his trial objection does not comport with the
issue raised on appeal, he has preserved nothing for our
review. Tex.R.App. Proc. 33.1(a); Knox v. State, 934 S.W.2d
678, 687 (Tex.Crim.App.1996); Barnes v. State, 876 S.W.2d
316, 325 (Tex.Crim.App.), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 861,
115 S.Ct. 174, 130 L.Ed.2d 110 (1994). We overrule point
of error one.
FN2. During an audiotaped statement
to the police admitted at trial, the appellant professed
his “philosophy” behind killing foreign convenience
store owners, in part: [W]hen I found out that my
girlfriend she was pregnant, you know, a lot of
pressures come on me. So, I began to talk to God ... and
a lot of things that we have done, you know, I don't
want people to think that I'm crazy. I don't want you to
look at me and say that he got a mental problem ‘cause
don't nobody know God's heart on how it is. Don't nobody
know what God puts on a man heart. Only that man and God
knows that he comes together with, you know. So, it's
just like I wasn't going out to just rob people for
money and to hurt them. It wasn't that; it was I was
looking at my people how we can be here all our lives.
We can't get a job unless somebody help us out. We can't
get it on our own selves. Or, you never hear about our
people in the news talking about positive black people
too much, unless, it is, unless you're a singer or you
in sports and stuff like that. You never hear the
positive things.... You know, you never hear the
positive things about vice-presidents, or, or like, like
in big major companies you never hear the things about
accountants, you know, you know different, different
positions that a lot of people get credit for that you
never hear black people getting credit for. And it's
funny how other people can come from other countries,
come to this country, the government give them money to
start off, give ‘em money, enough money to send their
children to schools, where we got children here, we got
people here, you know, that, that want opportunities to
go to school, want to have start, you know, money to
start off a small business, you know, stuff like that.
You can't get that kind of stuff being as an African
American because if people say you can, you can't ‘cause
I'd have tried it. My credit, before my credit, you
know, just ever got messed up, I tried to get a grant.
You know, I'd had, never had no bad credit, never had no
loans to go to school and stuff like that. You know,
opportunities just like that never came to me. And, so
you know, I look at it, they [Japanese, Chinese,
Vietnamese, and Middle Eastern people] come to our
country. They come in our communities. They spend our
money .... ‘cause, you know, they come over here, they
not giving back to our communities that you're taking
from. And when we come to your stores, ah they, we go in
their stores, they watch us, they, they always following
us thinking we gonna steal ‘cause we black. You know
it's the point that you can't feel comfortable when you
spending your own money. You know, and you going in
their store ‘cause you can't help but go to their store
‘cause it's in our community. But when you have black-owned
stores and stuff like that, you never get ‘em in our
community ‘cause it's never that opportunity for black
people to have their own stores.... So, it wasn't that I
was robbing them for their money-it was just a point,
how can you come in our neighborhoods and do us like
that and think we not God's people.... The only image
that you get from a black person on the news is, is
robbing, killing, and stuff like that. That's all you
see. But in God's heart and in God's eye, who's to say
that's wrong? Who's to say that God put you in a store,
to own that store, and you made promises to Him and by
you disobedient to him that he won't punish you for it
‘cause He will. Regardless if it's gonna be me, using
me, it's gonna be somebody that you gonna get punished
for. And in your heart, you know you being punished....
You know you just been judged.... [ Sic et passim ].
In his second point of error, the
appellant alleges that the trial court violated the
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments by refusing defense
counsel's request to investigate the core prejudices
behind one juror's statement, “poor little black boy,”
following the testimony of Tommy Collier. During the
punishment phase, Collier, a character witness for the
appellant, testified that the appellant was active in
his church, that the appellant's life was worth sparing,
and that Collier did not agree with the appellant's
“philosophy of life.” As Collier left the stand, one
juror allegedly remarked “poor little black boy.” Both
Collier and the appellant are African-American. Collier
testified outside of the jury's presence that a male
juror had made the statement, although Collier could not
identify the juror. The trial court refused defense
counsel's request to question each of the male jurors
individually about the statement.
For obvious reasons, we have long
held that voir dire examination is the time to uncover
potential prejudice or bias in prospective jurors during
voir dire, and that a defendant who begins the inquiry
in the middle of the trial is not acting timely. [D]efense
counsel has an obligation to ask questions calculated to
bring out that information which might be said to
indicate a juror's inability to be impartial, truthful,
and the like. Unless defense counsel asks such questions,
we must hold … that the purportedly material information
which a juror fails to disclose is not really “withheld”
so as to constitute misconduct which would warrant
reversal. Jones v. State, 596 S.W.2d 134, 137 (Tex.Crim.App.1980),
overruled on other grounds, Sneed v. State, 670 S.W.2d
262, 266 (Tex.Crim.App.1984); see Gonzales v. State, 3
S.W.3d 915, 916-17 (Tex.Crim.App.1999). Because defense
counsel did not diligently question the jurors about
racial bias during voir dire, an alleged bias manifested
later does not constitute juror misconduct.
Perhaps more importantly, the
statement that the witness heard is not a clear
manifestation of racial bias against the appellant. To
begin with, it is not clear whether the statement
referred to the witness or the appellant. If it did
refer to the appellant, it is not clear whether it was
sincere or ironic. If it was ironic, it is not clear
that racial animosity was its gravamen. It seems at
least possible that it could have been a skeptical
summary of the witness's depiction of the appellant,
which was markedly different from the other evidence
that the jury had heard about his character. That is,
the remark could have been the juror's opinion that the
witness wanted the jury to see the appellant as just a
poor, little, black boy.
Therefore, we do not sustain the
appellant's argument that the trial court violated the
Fifth or Fourteenth Amendments in refusing to allow
counsel to probe any alleged racial bias through mid-punishment
phase questioning. We overrule point of error two.
In points of error three, four, seven,
eight, nine, and ten, the appellant contends that trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance under the
federal and state constitutions. Because we have adopted
the federal standard for reviewing claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel under the corresponding provision
of the Texas Constitution, Hernandez v. State, 726 S.W.2d
53 (Tex.Crim.App.1986), we will analyze both federal and
state constitutional claims under Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674
(1984). Under Strickland, a defendant must first
demonstrate that his trial counsel rendered deficient
performance, proving by a preponderance of the evidence
that trial counsel's representation fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing
professional norms. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-88
McFarland v. State, 845 S.W.2d 824, 843 (Tex.Crim.App.1992),
cert. denied, 508 U.S. 963, 113 S.Ct. 2937, 124 L.Ed.2d
686 (1993). Secondly, he must show that there is “a
reasonable probability that, but for counsel's
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
would have been different.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694;
see also Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 390-95, 120
S.Ct. 1495, 146 L.Ed.2d 389 (2000) (reaffirming
Strickland's prejudice standard as the proper standard
in most cases). In assessing claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel on direct appeal, this Court has
indulged a strong presumption that counsel's actions
fall within the wide range of reasonable professional
assistance, absent evidence to the contrary. Busby v.
State, 990 S.W.2d 263, 268-69 (Tex.Crim.App.1999), cert.
denied, 520 U.S. 1081 (2000); Jackson v. State, 877 S.W.2d
768, 771 (Tex.Crim.App.1994). Furthermore, the
reasonableness of counsel's actions may be determined or
substantially influenced by the defendant's own
statements or actions. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690.
There is often a procedural problem
as well. A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel
often is better made by habeas corpus because an
appellate record usually does not disclose relevant
facts, particularly about counsel's strategic choices.
This is especially so when the alleged error of counsel
is one of omission. We will not apply the general
doctrine that forbids raising a claim on habeas corpus
after it was rejected on appeal. Jackson v. State, 973
S.W.2d 954 (Tex.Cr.App.1998). Cf. Massaro v. United
States, 538 U.S. 500, 123 S.Ct. 1690, 155 L.Ed.2d 714,
71 U.S.L.W. 4310 (2003) (adopting same rule for federal
courts, and resolving a circuit split).
We shall take up the appellant's
points in the order in which they arose at trial.
In his ninth point of error, the
appellant argues that he received ineffective assistance
of counsel when the State forced defense counsel to
agree to excuse Juror West. Because Juror West indicated
on her questionnaire that participating as a juror in
the instant case would negatively affect her schooling,
the State probed her answer and discovered that she
would probably have to drop her classes for the semester
if she served as a juror, something she did not want to
do.FN3 Regardless, she said that she could still act as
a fair and impartial juror. The State, defense counsel,
the trial court, and the appellant then engaged in the
following exchange: [State]: I'll agree to let this lady
go so she can go to school if they want to agree. [Defense
counsel]: I guess we have to agree. [State]: I'm sorry.
[Defense counsel]: That's fine Terrance. We agree. [The
Court]: Do you agree with that, Mr. Thompson? [The
appellant]: Yes, sir.
FN4. Article 35.05 states: “One summoned upon a special
venire may by consent of both parties be excused from
attendance by the court at any time before he is
impaneled.”
In his tenth point of error, the
appellant contends that he was denied the effective
assistance of counsel when the State questioned a
prospective juror outside of defense counsel's presence.
After a recess during individual voir dire examination,
the prosecutor initiated the voir dire examination of
Juror Honc with the following exchange: [Prosecutor]:
Good Morning, Mister-is it Honc? [Honc]: That's correct.
Q: It's Honc. How are you doing? A: Just fine. Q: Again,
my name is Terrance Windham. I'm real pleased to meet
you, sir. You met Mr. Greenlee [defense counsel] and
Connie [defense counsel] and Casey [prosecutor]
yesterday. They're out right now, but they'll be back
in.
The appellant cites the prosecutor's
statement-“They're out right now”-as proof that neither
defense counsel were in the court room while the
prosecutor examined Juror Honc.
Counsel's statement is ambiguous as
to which of the three people the prosecutor was
referring, and it seems more likely that it referred to
the co-counsels on both sides. Further, the record does
not support the contention that both defense counsel
missed Juror Honc's voir dire. Defense counsel Greenlee
began his voir dire of Juror Honc immediately upon the
conclusion of the prosecutor's examination. Without any
additional evidence that counsel indeed missed the voir
dire of Juror Honc, the appellant has failed to provide
this Court enough information even to initiate a
Strickland analysis. See Tex.R.App. Proc. 38.1. We
overrule point of error ten.
In his seventh point of error, the
appellant alleges that trial counsel rendered
ineffective assistance for failing to request a charge
on the lesser-included offense of murder. Without
objection, the trial court's charge authorized the jury
to convict the appellant of the offense of capital
murder as a principal or as a party, or the lesser-included
offense of aggravated robbery. The appellant argues that
the jury may have believed that the appellant only
knowingly caused the death of the victim, thereby
entitling the appellant to a charge on the lesser-included
offense of murder.
In order to establish his claim that
trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance for
failing to request the instruction, the appellant must
show that he was entitled to an instruction on the
lesser-included offense of murder. Kinnamon v. State,
791 S.W.2d 84, 97 (Tex.Crim.App.1990) (since the
evidence did not authorize submission of a murder
instruction as a lesser-included offense, the
appellant's trial counsel did not render ineffective
assistance for failing to request it), overruled on
other grounds, Cook v. State, 884 S.W.2d 485 (1994).
Since Royster v. State, 622 S.W.2d 442 (Tex.Crim.App.1981),
we have consistently held that the appellant must meet a
two-prong test to establish his entitlement to present
to the jury a charge on a lesser-included offense:
“first, the lesser included offense must be included
within the proof necessary to establish the offense
charged, and, second, some evidence must exist in the
record that if the defendant is guilty, he is guilty
only of the lesser offense.” Rousseau v. State, 855 S.W.2d
666, 672 (Tex.Crim.App.), cert. denied, 510 U.S. 919,
114 S.Ct. 313, 126 L.Ed.2d 260 (1993); see also Aguilar
v. State, 682 S.W.2d 556, 558 (Tex.Crim.App.1985). The
second prong of the test requires that the record
contain some evidence “that would permit a jury
rationally to find that … he is guilty only of the
lesser included offense.” Skinner v. State, 956 S.W.2d
532, 543 (Tex.Crim.App.1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S.
1079, 118 S.Ct. 1526, 140 L.Ed.2d 677 (1998).
The capital murder statute under
which the State indicted the appellant requires an
intentional murder committed in the course of robbery.
Tex. Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2). The murder charge the
appellant asserts the trial court should have included
requires a person to intentionally or knowingly cause
the death of an individual. Id. at § 19.02(b)(1).
Because the proof necessary for capital murder committed
in the course of robbery includes the elements of murder,
murder is a lesser-included offense of capital murder.
See Art. 37.09. The appellant admitted in a taped
confession to planning the robbery of the Braeswood
convenience store with the co-defendant, Sammy Butler.
Upon first arriving at the convenience store, the
appellant purchased a beer and left. A short time later,
he and Butler returned to the store to exchange the beer.
Mohammed's cousin, Mubarakali Meredia, was working
behind the cash register at the time. When Meredia
handed the appellant a bag for the new beer, the
appellant pulled out a .25 caliber pistol and demanded
all of the money from the register. Meredia opened the
cash register and “began to go down” behind the counter.
The appellant shot Meredia in the abdomen, and Meredia
fell to the floor. The appellant then went behind the
counter to retrieve the money, pistol-whipped Meredia,
and shot him three or four more times. The appellant
ordered Meredia to get up and hand over the money, and
Meredia complied.
Meanwhile, Mohammed and a customer,
who were standing at the meat counter, ducked down
behind the counter when they heard the gunshots. Butler,
who was standing near the front door, shot at them with
a .38 caliber gun. Butler grabbed a case of lottery
tickets, and he and the appellant fled the store. As
they got in the car, they saw Mohammed approaching the
front door of the store. According to the appellant,
Butler then began shooting at Mohammed through the glass
door. The confession included the following: Q [Investigator
Waters]: Okay. And, then you run outside and get in the
car, and you are driving and Sammy is in the passenger
side? A [The appellant]: Yes. Q [Waters]: And he-he
shoots at the store, or is somebody coming up to the
door? A: Well, he shoots-And, the man [Mohammed] was
coming up and going back. He just shot basically at the
window just to make the man go run back in the store as
we get away. * * * Q [Sergeant Swaim]: Do you know how
times-how many times Sammy shot at this guy? Was it once
or twice, or? A: Well, he just, you know, he shot. * * *
Q [Waters]: He shot once inside the store and once
outside. A: No, he just kept on shooting. He unloaded
and I unloaded. Q [Swaim]: Okay, you weren't-you weren't
like counting the shots? A: No. Q [Swaim]: But, he-he
was shooting at this guy? A: Yeah. Q [Swaim]: So you
think this guy is coming out to try to see where y'all
went, get a license plate number, or something like that?
A: Yeah. Q [Swaim]: I'm assuming that's why- A: Yeah. Q
[Swaim]: Sammy shot him....
The appellant argues that Butler only
knowingly committed murder by shooting at the door of
the convenience store, which would not prove the intent
element of capital murder, entitling the appellant to an
instruction on the lesser-included offense of murder.
To decide whether defense counsel's
failure to request a charge constitutes ineffective
assistance, we would first have to decide whether such a
failure would be below an objective standard of
reasonable professional competence. As is usual in an
appeal, the record does not indicate the reason for
counsel's omitting to request the charge. Therefore it
is not possible on this record to decide the first issue.
Of course, if that issue were decided in the appellant's
favor, we would still have to decide whether he was
prejudiced, which would require one or two more
decisions: whether the evidence would have entitled a
party to a charge on the lesser-included offense of
murder (a point on which we express no opinion), and, if
it did, whether the outcome of the case would have been
different in reasonable probability. Point of error
seven is overruled.
In point of error eight, the
appellant alleges that trial counsel rendered
ineffective assistance in failing to object to the
testimony of three witnesses who testified to the
character of the victims during the guilt-innocence
phase. He specifically complains of the following four
exchanges between the witnesses and the State: [State]:
Did you know the people who ran that store, the clerks
that worked there? [Floyd]: Yes. Q: And had you known
them for a while? A: Yes. Q: What type of people were
they? A: They were nice people. If you come in the store
they talked with you, smile and laugh with them. They
were very nice people. I knew them. * * * [State]: Was
he down there on the floor with you, the clerk? [Floyd]:
Yes, he was over me. Q: On top of you? A: Yes. Q: Was it
like he was shielding you, trying to protect you? A: Yes.
* * * [State]: Did you know the clerks that worked there?
[Scott]: Yes. Q: Were they pretty good people? A: Yes. *
* * [State]: Did you know that clerk? [Brown]: I've seen
him from going in the store. Q: Okay. And was he always
pretty nice to you when you went in the store? A: Yes,
very.
The appellant relies on Texas Rule of
Evidence 404(a)(2) for the proposition that the State
may not introduce victim character evidence unless it
specifically rebuts evidence that the victim was the
first aggressor. In fact, Rule 404(a)(2) disallows
evidence of a person's character or trait of his
character “ for the purpose of proving action in
conformity therewith on a particular occasion, except
... to rebut evidence that the victim was the first
aggressor” (emphasis added).
Again the record does not disclose
the reason why counsel did not object, which may have
been strategic. If the omission was below the standard
of reasonable professional competence, there would
remain two questions: whether the evidence was
introduced to prove that the victims acted in conformity
with their character, rather than to establish the
witnesses' general familiarity with the convenience
store and its clerks, and whether a successful objection
would have affected the outcome of the trial in
reasonable probability. We overrule point of error eight.
In his third point of error, the
appellant argues that his trial counsel lessened the
State's burden of proof on the appellant's extraneous
offenses, ensuring an affirmative answer to the future
dangerousness special issue.FN5 See Art. 37.071, §
2(b)(1).
FN5. The appellant also alludes to a
due process violation. Not only has the appellant
inadequately briefed this point, to address it would
render all of point three multifarious. See Tex.R.App.
Proc. 38.1; Dunn v. State, 951 S.W.2d 478, 480 (Tex.Crim.App.1997).
During defense counsel's closing
argument on punishment, he stated: And in the State of
Texas-which may very well be different than other states-you're
allowed to hear evidence of unadjudicated extraneous
offenses; and, so, the State brought you seven of those,
two of which were capital murders. Now, your role in
that particular process, in terms of viewing the
extraneouses, is not to find [the appellant] guilty of
extraneous offenses. That may or may not be for another
jury to decide. Your duty and responsibility-the
information was given to you to help you, if it does, in
trying to answer the notion of whether or not this young
man would be a threat in the future.
The appellant argues that counsel
alleviated the State's burden of proof on extraneous
offenses, when, in fact, counsel explained to the jury
that its role was not to render a verdict on the
extraneous offenses but to consider them in assessing
the special issues-a true statement.
It seems unlikely that the argument
would have such an effect, especially since it was not
contrary to the court's charge: [Y]ou may consider such
evidence only if the extraneous crime or bad act has
been shown by the State beyond a reasonable doubt to
have been committed by the defendant.... The presumption
of innocence alone is sufficient for you to find that
the defendant did not engage in the extraneous offense
or act of misconduct that has been placed in evidence
unless the jurors are satisfied beyond a reasonable
doubt of the defendant's guilt or responsibility
therefor after careful and impartial consideration of
all the evidence in the case. [Emphasis added].
Because the appellant has failed to
establish that trial counsel rendered deficient or
prejudicial performance, we overrule point of error
three.
In point of error four, the appellant
argues that trial counsel rendered ineffective
assistance of counsel by lessening the State's burden of
proof on the second special issue.FN6 During punishment
phase closing arguments, counsel Williams paraphrased
the second special issue as requiring the jury to
determine whether the appellant was “responsible for the
killing in some kind of way.” The appellant believes
that counsel's statement alleviated the State's burden
of proof on the second special issue, a trend since voir
dire.FN7
FN6. In the instant case, the trial
court submitted to the jury the second special issue,
pursuant to Article 37.071, § 2(b)(2): Do you find from
the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that [the
appellant], the defendant himself, actually caused the
death of Mansoor Bhai Rahim Mohammed, on the occasion in
question, or if he did not actually cause the death of
Mansoor Bhai Rahim Mohammed, that he intended to kill
Mansoor Bhai Rahim Mohammed or another, or that he
anticipated that a human life would be taken? FN7. The
appellant also argues that co-counsel's statements-“And
there are just a few things I want to point out to you.
I don't know what they could be. [Lead counsel] really
covered just about everything we need to talk to you
about.”-alleviated the State's burden of proof on the
second special issue. He fails to offer this Court any
reasoning for this claim, nor can the Court glean one.
See Tex.R.App. Proc. 38.1.
Our view of the record is that
counsel adhered to a strategy first manifested during
voir dire, when he concentrated his questioning
regarding the special issues almost exclusively on
future dangerousness and mitigation. Likewise, during
closing arguments on punishment, counsel Williams merely
paraphrased the second special issue following counsel
Greenlee's fuller explication.
Absent evidence to the contrary, we
must presume that counsel strategically decided to avert
attention from the second special issue throughout trial,
first during voir dire,FN8 and later in punishment phase
closing arguments. See Busby, supra. It would be a
reasonable strategic decision that the other special
issues were more likely to swing in the appellant's
favor, and that counsel should avoid repetition of an
issue that, in light of the jury's guilty verdict, was
weak. Because we conclude that counsel's actions
conformed with trial strategy, we overrule point of
error four.
FN8. The appellant cites several
instances of the State's and trial court's voir dire
where the appellant believes defense counsel should have
objected. Further, he believes defense counsel should
have more fully explicated the issue during his own voir
dire of the jurors.
In points of error five and six, the
appellant argues that the trial court lessened the
State's burden of proof on the second special issue by
explaining to the jury during voir dire that it need
find only that the appellant should have anticipated the
victim's death to answer the second special issue
affirmatively, in violation of the state and federal due
course of law and fair trial provisions.FN9 The
appellant failed to object to the trial court's voir
dire of the jury, therefore failing to preserve this
error for review. Tex.R.App. Proc. 33.1(a); Knox, 934
S.W.2d at 687; Barnes, 876 S.W.2d at 325. We overrule
points of error five and six.
FN9. The trial court's charge on
parties following guilt-innocence and the second special
issue track the statutory language required by Tex.
Penal Code § 7.02 and Art. 37.071, § 2(b)(2),
respectively.
Finding no reversible error, we
affirm the judgment of the trial court.
HOLCOMB, J., concurred in the
judgment. JOHNSON, J., dissented as to Point Two.
Cochran,
J., delivered
the opinion of
the Court in
which
Meyers, Price,
Womack, Keasler,
Hervey,
and
Holcomb,
JJ., joined.
Keller,
P.J., filed a
concurring
opinion.
Johnson,
J., dissented.
O P I N I
O N
Applicant was
convicted of
capital murder
for the shooting
death of Mansor
Bhai Rahim
Mohammed during
an aggravated
robbery at the
7-Evenings Food
Store in
Houston. Based
upon the jury's
answers to the
special issues
set out in
Article 37.071,[1]
the trial court
set punishment
at death. This
Court affirmed
applicant=s
conviction and
sentence on
direct appeal.[2]
Applicant raises
six claims in
his habeas
corpus
application
filed pursuant
to Article
11.071 of the
Texas Code of
Criminal
Procedure. We
ordered the
parties to brief
two of those
claims which we
rephrased:
1)Whether
applicant is
factually
innocent of the
offense of
capital murder;
and
2)Whether
applicant was
deprived of the
effective
assistance of
counsel due to
his trial
counsel's
failure to
request a charge
on felony murder.
Both of these
claims hinge
upon the Anewly
available fact
that Sammy
Butler,
applicant's
triggerman-accomplice,
was convicted of
felony-murder
after
applicant's
trial.
Applicant's
position on the
first claim is
that
There is no
evidence that
Applicant
personally
killed the
complainant. To
the contrary,
the only
evidence is that
Butler committed
the offense.
Thus,
Applicant's
guilt is
derivative of
Butler's guilt.
Simply stated,
at most
Applicant is
guilty of the
offense for
which Butler is
guilty.
Regarding the
second claim,
applicant argues
that the only
viable defense
strategy in his
trial was to
request a jury
instruction on
felony-murderBa
strategy which
succeeded in the
accomplice's
trial. Because
applicant's
counsel did not
request an
instruction on
felony-murder,
applicant
contends that
his trial
attorney
provided
ineffective
assistance of
counsel under
Strickland v.
Washington.[3]
For the reasons
set out below,
we reject both
of these claims.
As for his
remaining claims,
we adopt the
trial court's
findings of fact
and conclusions
of law. Based
upon those
findings and our
independent
review, we deny
relief.
I.
The State's
evidence at
trial showed
that applicant
and Sammy Butler
acted together
in planning the
armed robbery at
the 7-Evenings
Food Store.
Applicant told
Butler that this
would be their
last robbery and
it was going to
be Aa big one.
Applicant, armed
with a .25
caliber
semiautomatic
weapon, went
into the
convenience
store to
exchange a beer
he had purchased
earlier. Butler,
armed with a .38
caliber
revolver, came
into the store
with him.
Applicant
approached
Mubarakali
Meredia, who was
tending the
counter, pointed
his pistol at Mr.
Meredia, and
told him to open
the cash
register and
hand over all of
the money.
Applicant shot
Mr. Meredia in
the abdomen when
he did not move
quickly enough.
He shot at Mr.
Meredia's cousin,
Mansor Bhai
Rahim Mohammed,
who also worked
at the shop,
when he began
running toward
the back of the
store.[4]
Applicant then
shot Mr. Meredia
three more times
as he lay on the
floor. He
ordered Mr.
Meredia to get
up and get the
money for him.
Mr. Meredia did
so. Then
applicant put
his pistol to Mr.
Meredia's neck
and pulled the
trigger. Nothing
happened. He had
run out of
bullets. So
applicant hit Mr.
Meredia on the
head with the
butt of his gun
and struck him
with the cash
register drawer.
Nonetheless, Mr.
Meredia survived.
Applicant took
the money and
ran out of the
store. Butler
grabbed a stack
of lottery
tickets as he
followed behind
applicant.
Applicant jumped
into the
driver's seat of
their car, while
Butler got into
the passenger's
seat, rolled
down his window,
and fired two
shots at Mr.
Rahim who had
run to the front
door. One bullet
hit Mr. Rahim in
the chest, and
he died.
Based upon this
evidence, the
jury convicted
applicant of
capital murder.
During the
punishment phase,
the jury heard
evidence that
this robbery-murder
was only one
part of a
robbery-murder
spree during
which applicant,
as the
triggerman, had
committed two
additional
capital murders.[5]
Based upon all
of the evidence
submitted, the
jury found that
applicant would
pose a future
risk of danger
and that there
were no
mitigating
circumstances
that would call
for a life
sentence. The
judge sentenced
him to death.
Approximately
six months after
applicant's
conviction, his
accomplice,
Sammy Butler,
was tried for
capital murder.
The jury in that
case returned a
guilty verdict
on the lesser-included
offense of
felony-murder
and sentenced
Butler to life
imprisonment.
II.
A. Claim of
Factual
Innocence
Applicant
contends that he
is factually
innocent of
capital murder
because a
different jury
found Sammy
Butler guilty
only of felony-murder.[6]
He argues that
his accomplice
liability for
the robbery-murder
of Mr. Rahim
hinges upon
Butler's
conviction in a
separate trial
rather than the
evidence of his
and Butler's
conduct and
mental states in
applicant's own
trial. Applicant
argues that Ait
is the intent of
the killer which
determines
whether the
offense is a
capital murder
or a
felony-murder.
If the actual
killer intended
the death, it is
a capital
murder. If he
did not, it was
not capital
murder.
Applicant
misinterprets
the law.
Under Section
7.02(a), a
person is
criminally
responsible for
a capital-murder
offense
committed by
another person's
conduct, if
(1) acting with
the kind of
culpability
required for the
offense, he
causes or aids
an innocent or
nonresponsible
person to engage
in conduct
prohibited by
the definition
of the offense;
[or]
(2) acting with
intent to
promote or
assist the
commission of
theoffense, he
solicits,
encourages,
directs, aids,
or attempts to
aid theother
person to commit
the offense[.]
Thus, applicant
could be found
guilty of
capital murder
under Section
7.02(a) if he
had the intent
to kill someone
during this
aggravated
robbery, and (1)
he caused or
aided a totally
innocent person
to shoot and
kill Mr. Rahim,
or (2) he
solicited,
encouraged,
directed, or
aided Sammy
Butler to commit
capital murder.[7]
Furthermore,
under Section
7.02(b), a
person may be
found guilty of
capital murder
if the following
conditions are
met:
[I]f, in the
attempt to carry
out a conspiracy
to commit one
felony, another
felony is
committed by one
of the
conspirators,
all conspirators
are guilty of
the felony
actually
committed,
though having no
intent to commit
it, if the
offense was
committed in
furtherance of
the unlawful
purpose and was
one that should
have been
anticipated as a
result of the
carrying out of
the conspiracy.
The jury in this
case was
instructed that
it could find
applicant guilty
of capital
murder in any of
three different
ways: as the
actual
triggerman; as a
party to Sammy
Butler's
shooting of Mr.
Rahim under
Section
7.02(a)(2); or
as a co-conspirator
to the
aggravated
robbery under
Section 7.02(b).
Under the first
two theories,
the jury was
required to find
that applicant
himself intended
the death of Mr.
Rahim; under the
third theory the
jury was
required to find
that applicant
should have
anticipated Mr.
Rahim's death as
a consequence of
his and Butler's
agreement to
commit
aggravated
robbery and Mr.
Rahim's death
occurred in
furtherance of
that crime.
If the jury
found that
applicant and
Sammy Butler
conspired to
commit an
aggravated
robbery, and
either one of
them shot and
killed Mr. Rahim
(intentionally
or
unintentionally),
either or both
of them may be
convicted of
capital murder
if Mr. Rahim was
killed in
furtherance of
the aggravated
robbery and his
murder was one
that should have
been anticipated
as a part of
this aggravated
robbery.
There is nothing
in Texas law
that limits
applicant's
criminal
responsibility
for the conduct
of his
accomplice,
Sammy Butler, to
only those
specific crimes
for which a jury
has convicted
Butler. In fact,
Texas law is
exactly the
opposite.
Section 7.03(2)
of the Penal
Code states that
it is no defense
that the person
for whose
conduct the
actor is
criminally
responsible has
been acquitted,
has not been
prosecuted or
convicted, has
been convicted
of a different
offense or of a
different type
or class of
offense, or is
immune from
prosecution.[8]
It is well-established
that one
accomplice may
be found guilty
of a different,
more serious
offense than
other
accomplices.[9]
Indeed, the
acquittal of the
principal does
not prevent
conviction of
his accomplice.[10]
And it does not
matter whether
the acquittal of
the principal
occurs before or
after the
accomplice's
trial.[11]
What matters
under Section
7.02(a) is the
criminal mens
rea of each
accomplice; each
may be convicted
only of those
crimes for which
he had the
requisite mental
state. As
Professor LaFave
notes:
The notion that
the accomplice
may be convicted,
on an accomplice
liability theory,
only for those
crimes as to
which he
personally has
the requisite
mental state, is
applicable in a
variety of
circumstances.
It means, for
example, that
one may not be
held as an
accomplice to
the crime of
assault with
intent to kill
if that intent
was not shared
by the
accomplice. But
this limitation
has proved most
significant in
the homicide
area, where the
precise state of
mind of the
defendant has
great
significance in
determining the
degree of the
offense. To
determine the
kind of homicide
of which the
accomplice is
guilty, it is
necessary to
look to his
state of mind;
it may have been
different from
the state of
mind of the
principal and
they thus may be
guilty of
different
offenses. Thus,
because first
degree murder
requires a
deliberate and
premeditated
killing, an
accomplice is
not guilty of
this degree of
murder unless he
acted with
premeditation
and deliberation.
And, because a
killing in a
heat of passion
is manslaughter
and not murder,
an accomplice
who aids while
in such a state
is guilty only
of manslaughter
even though the
killer is
himself guilty
of murder.
Likewise, it is
equally possible
that the killer
is guilty only
of manslaughter
because of his
heat of passion
but that the
accomplice,
aiding in a
state of cool
blood, is guilty
of murder.[12]
Thus, what is
essential to
applicant's
conviction of
capital murder
as a party under
Section
7.02(a)(2)[13]
is evidence that
supports a
finding, beyond
a reasonable
doubt, that he
intended the
death of Mr.
Rahim and that
he assisted
Sammy Butler in
causing that
death.[14]
The evidence of
applicant's
intent to kill
is not merely
sufficient, it
is overwhelming:
*Applicant came
to the
convenience
store armed with
a semiautomatic
pistol;
*Applicant knew
that Butler came
to the
convenience
store armed with
a .38 revolver;
*Applicant
intentionally
pointed his
pistol at Mr.
Meredia and
demanded money;
*Applicant
intentionally
shot Mr. Meredia
in the abdomen;
*Applicant
intentionally
shot Mr. Meredia
three more times
as he lay on the
ground;
*Applicant
intentionally
shot at Mr.
Rahim who was
fleeing to the
back of the
store;
*Applicant
intentionally
put his
semiautomatic
pistol against
Mr. Meredia=s
neck and pulled
the trigger; the
only reason Mr.
Meredia did not
die from that
intentional act
was because
applicant=s
revolver was out
of bullets;
*Applicant
intentionally
hit Mr. Meredia
over the head
with the butt of
his revolver;
*Applicant
intentionally
struck Mr.
Meredia with the
cash register
drawer.
From this
evidence of
applicant's
obvious intent
to kill Mr.
Meredia and his
repeated
attempts to do
so, any
reasonable juror
could conclude
that applicant
also intended
that his
accomplice,
Sammy Butler,
kill Mr. Rahim.
Applicant argues
that, even
though he may
have acted with
malice aplenty
and attempted to
kill and
intended to kill,
the offense of
capital murder
was never
committed by
anyone because a
different jury
found that
Butler did not
intentionally
kill Mr. Rahim.
He relies upon
the first
sentence of
Section 7.03
which reads:
In a prosecution
in which an
actor's
criminal
responsibility
is based on the
conduct of
another, the
actor may be
convicted on
proof of
commission of
the offense
and that he was
a party to its
commission . . .
.
Applicant argues
that Butler's
subsequent
acquittal of
capital murder
proves that,
under Section
7.03, no capital
murder was ever
committed.
Applicant
misreads Section
7.03. That
provision
applies to the
proof offered at
applicant's
trial, not the
evidence offered
in some other
trial. It was in
applicant's
trial that the
State bore the
burden of
offering a proof
of commission of
the offense of
capital murder.
And indeed it
did. There is
evidence aplenty
that Sammy
Butler, as well
as applicant,
intended to
cause Mr.
Rahim's death:
*Butler came to
the convenience
store armed with
a .38 revolver;
*Butler knew
that applicant
came to the
convenience
store armed with
a semiautomatic
pistol;
*Butler knew
that applicant
shot Mr. Meredia
several times;
*Butler shot at
Mr. Rahim and
another customer
while applicant
was shooting at
Mr. Meredia;
*Butler
threatened to
shoot other
customers while
applicant was
grabbing the
money from the
cash register;
*Butler did
shoot in the
direction of Mr.
Rahim a second
time while both
robbers were
still in the
store;
*After applicant
and Butler got
into their
getaway car,
Butler rolled
down the
passenger-side
window and shot
Mr. Rahim who
had run to the
door of the
store;
*Butler shot at
Mr. Rahim twice;
*One of those
shots hit Mr.
Rahim in the
chest and killed
him.
*Applicant told
police during
his oral
confession that
Butler
Akept
shooting.� He
unloaded and I
unloaded.[16]
It might be
possible to
conclude that
Butler did not
aim at Mr. Rahim
or intend to
shoot him in the
chest. But
applicant's jury
was certainly
entitled to
believe that
Butler's two
shots were not a
sheer accident,
and that Mr.
Rahim's death
was not the
result of a
wayward bullet
that
fortuitously
ended up
striking the
unlucky man.[17]
It was entitled
to conclude that
Butler intended
precisely what
occurred Mr.
Rahim's death.[18]
And it was also
entitled to
conclude that
applicant
intended that
Butler shoot and
kill Mr. Rahim
just as
applicant surely
would have
killed Mr.
Meredia if only
he had not first
run out of
bullets.
In sum, there
was ample
evidence offered
at applicant=s
trial that Sammy
Butler committed
the offense of
capital murder
and that
applicant
assisted or
encouraged him
in that endeavor
by his own acts
of attempting to
commit the
capital murder
of Mr. Meredia.
The fact that
the jury in
Butler's trial
declined to
convict him of
capital murder
does not affect
the validity of
applicant's
capital murder
conviction.
Thus, although
the verdict in
Butler's trial
may be Anewly
available
evidence, it is
not evidence
that shows (or
even tends to
show)
applicant's
innocence of
capital murder.
Therefore, we
adopt the trial
court's findings
of fact and
conclusions of
law concerning
applicant's
claim of factual
innocence.
B. Claim of
Ineffective
Assistance of
Counsel
Applicant also
contends that
his trial
counsel provided
constitutionally
deficient
assistance
because he
failed to
request an
instruction on
the lesser-included
offense of
felony-murder.[20]
Applicant
further contends
that his
counsel's
deficient
performance
probably caused
the jury to
return a verdict
of capital
murder rather
than
felony-murder.
Applicant raised
this ineffective
assistance claim
on direct
appeal, arguing
that trial
counsel should
have Arequest[ed]
a lesser-included
offense charge
as it would
apply to the
offense of
murder.[21]
This Court
rejected that
claim because
the record did
not contain
sufficient
information
concerning trial
counsel's
strategy. It
does now.
In his affidavit,
applicant's
trial counsel
stated that the
defense strategy
that he and his
co-counsel
decided upon was
that applicant
did not
anticipate
Butler's murder
of Mr. Rahim:
The basis of our
cross-examination,
and defensive
strategy was
that Mr.
Thompson knew of
and intended to
participate in
an aggravated
robbery, but in
no way did he
either know or
anticipate that
someone would be
killed,
especially under
the
circumstances of
the complaining
witness' death.
. . . This was
the argument
that I made to
the jury during
the guilt phase
of the trial.
However, based
on the
confessions, and
the actions of
Mr. Thompson
while inside the
store, i.e. Mr.
Thompson shot
someone, who did
not die, Mr.
Williams and I
concluded that a
request for a
lesser included
instruction of
felony murder
was not shown by
the evidence.[22]
Thus, trial
counsel made the
reasoned
strategic
decision that
their strongest
argument was
that applicant
did not and
could not have
anticipated that
Butler would
shoot Mr. Rahim
as the two
departed from
the convenience
store. That
argument was at
least as
strongBif not
strongerB than
the argument
that Butler did
not intend to
kill Mr. Rahim
and that his act
of shooting at
him twice was an
unforeseeable
accident, albeit
an act clearly
dangerous to
human life.
Applicant's
attorney noted
that this
defensive
position was
carried through
to the
punishment phase
concerning the
Aanti-parties
special issue:[23]
With regard to
Special Issue 2,
the argument was
centered on 1.
The fact that Mr.
Thompson was not
the shooter. 2.
That the manner
in which the
complainant was
killed, i.e. as
they drove away,
Mr. Butler shot
in the dark and
the complainant
was standing at
the door. Mr.
Thompson was in
no way
responsible for
the death of Mr.
Rahim, and could
not have
anticipated that
Butler would
shoot as they
were driving
away and it was
dark. 3. That Mr.
Thompson's
intent was to
commit an
aggravated
robbery and
nothing more,
which he did.
As applicant's
counsel noted,
this strategy
was ultimately
unsuccessful,
perhaps because
of the evidence
of applicant's
two other
capital murders.
But counsel did
not create those
facts. Applicant
now argues that
he was not
entitled to any
charge on the
lesser-included
offense of
aggravated
robbery, but he
was entitled to
a charge on
felony-murder.
He states that,
Agiven those
undisputed facts
[of applicant's
attempts to kill
Mr. Meredia and
shoot Mr. Rahim]
no one could
plausibly argue
that Applicant
should not have
reasonably
anticipated that
Butler might
engage in
violence,
including
shooting a
person. Such a
strategy, argues
applicant, is
Alaughable.
Applicant notes
that in Solomon
v. State,[24]
this Court held
that a person
charged with
capital murder
is not entitled
to a lesser-included
instruction on
aggravated
robbery unless
there is
evidence showing
one of three
things: (1)
there was no
murder; (2) the
murder was not
committed in
furtherance of a
conspiracy; or
(3) the murder
should not have
been anticipated.[25]
In this case, as
applicant
candidly admits,
there is ample
evidence that
(1) there was a
murder; (2) the
murder was
committed in
furtherance of a
conspiracy; and
(3) the murder
should have been
anticipated.
Thus, he argues,
it was error to
charge the jury
on this lesser
included
offense. Perhaps
so, but it
certainly did
not harm
applicant, and
at least it gave
the defense
attorneys
something solid
to argue during
closing
arguments.
Applicant then
turns around and
contends that
counsel should
have requested a
lesser-included
instruction on
felony-murder.
But submission
of felony-murder
is not warranted
unless there is
evidence that
shows:
(1) for purposes
of party
liability under
Section
7.02(a)(2),
applicant
himself did not
intend the death
of Mr. Rahim or
another;
(2) for purposes
of conspiracy
liability under
Section 7.02(b),
Butler=s
act of shooting
Mr. Rahim was
not committed in
furtherance of a
conspiracy; or
(3) for purposes
of conspiracy
liability under
Section 7.02(b),
applicant should
not have
anticipated that
Butler would
shoot Mr. Rahim.
In arguing that
he was not
entitled to a
charge on
aggravated
robbery,
applicant agrees
that there is no
evidence
supporting prong
(2) or (3). And
he fails to
point to any
evidence that
affirmatively
shows that
applicant
himself did not
intend the death
of Mr. Rahim or
another.
Applicant relies,
instead, upon
his oral
confession to
the police in
which he
describes
Butler's action
and surmises
about Butler's
intent:
Well, he [Butler]
shootsBAnd,
the man was
coming up and
was going back.
He just shot
basically at the
window just to
make the man go
run back in the
store as we got
away.
This description
of Butler's
actions and
intent, however,
is not evidence
that
affirmatively
shows that
applicant had no
intent to kill.[26]
And, under the
law of parties,
it is
applicant's
intent that is
determinative of
his guilt for
either capital
murder or
felony-murder.
The evidence was
clearly
sufficient to
establish that
applicant
participated in
the murder of Mr.
Rahim and
intended his
death. The
question
concerning an
entitlement to
the lesser-included
of felony-murder
is whether the
evidence would
permit a
rational jury to
make a contrary
finding: that is,
based upon the
evidence, could
a rational jury
conclude that
Butler acted
entirely alone
in the shooting
death of Mr.
Rahim, and that
applicant did
not intend or
anticipate this
murder?
That evidence
need be only
more than a mere
scintilla, and
it may be
impeached or
contradicted,
but it must be
sufficient, if
believed, to at
least permit a
rational jury to
return a verdict
on the lesser-included
offense.[28]
Under this
standard,
applicant was
not entitled to
a charge on
felony-murder
and therefore
his counsel was
not ineffective
for failing to
request such a
charge.[29]
Applicant argues
that there was
no downside to
asking for an
instruction on
the lesser-included
offense of
felony-murder.
But there might
well have been a
very serious
downside had
applicant
offered any
evidence of lack
of intent or had
he engaged in
any cross-examination
that might raise
an issue
concerning his
lack of intent
to kill. Once
applicant opens
the door to the
issue of
murderous intent,
the State would
presumably walk
right through
that door with
the evidence of
the two
extraneous
capital murders
that applicant
himself
committed to
prove that he
had a murderous
intent on this
occasion just as
he had on those
two other
occasions.[30]
When judging an
attorney's
conduct in
retrospect, we
cannot assume
that only his
conduct might
have been
different. We
must assume that,
as in a chess
game, if a
defendant
hypothesizes a
different
strategy or move
by his pawn or
queen, the State
would have
altered its
strategy and
made a different
move with its
chess pieces as
well. In this
case,
applicant's case
at the guilt
phase might have
been
considerably
worsened had he
attempted to
raise an issue
concerning his
intent to kill.
Therefore, we
cannot conclude
that his
counsel's chosen
strategyBto
forego an attack
upon the State's
case concerning
his own intent
to kill and
instead
concentrate on a
plausible
argument (albeit
largely
unsupported by
evidence) that
applicant could
not have
anticipated
Butler's act of
shooting Mr.
RahimBwas a
constitutionally
ineffective one.
We therefore
adopt the trial
court's findings
of fact and
conclusions of
law, and based
upon those
findings and our
own independent
review, we deny
relief on all
claims.
*****
[1]
Tex. Code
Crim. Proc.
art.
37.071(b) &
(e)(1).
[2]Thompson
v. State,
No. 73,128 (Tex.
Crim. App.
June 26,
2003) (not
designated
for
publication).
[4]
At Butler's
trial, the
State
offered
evidence
that Butler
pulled out
his .38
revolver,
also shot at
Mr. Rahim,
and
threatened
several
other
customers
during this
time.
According to
applicant,
Butler's
conviction
of the
lesser-included
offense of
felony-murder
Ais a
jury finding
after a full
trial, a
finding
binding upon
the State
under the
principles
of
collateral
estoppel.
Both
Butler's
acquittal of
capital
murder and
his
availability
to testify
are facts
which were
unavailable
at the time
of
Applicant's
trial.
[7]
Put another
way, the
evidence
must show
that, at the
time of the
offense, the
parties were
acting
together,
each
contributing
some part
toward the
execution of
their common
purpose.
Ransom v.
State,
920 S.W.2d
288, 302 (Tex.
Crim. App.
1994).
[8]
Tex. Pen.
Code
'
7.03(2);
see, e.g.,
Singletary
v. State,
509 S.W.2d
572, 578 (Tex.
Crim. App.
1974) (noting
that
Aan
accomplice
is not
entitled to
a new trial
or reversal
just because
a
subsequently
tried
principal
has been
acquitted.
The fact
that another
jury
acquitted
the
principal in
a subsequent
trial does
not by
itself
entitle an
accomplice
to the same
offense to a
new trial.
In many
instances
different
juries reach
opposite
results on
the same
evidence.) (citations
omitted);
Reece v.
State,
521 S.W.2d
633, 634-35
(Tex. Crim.
App. 1975) (either
of two co-defendants
could be
convicted of
aggravated
robbery
although one
of them was
convicted
only of
a
simple
robbery; the
evidence was
sufficient
to support a
conviction
of
aggravated
robbery for
either
defendant);
see
generally,
Donald
M. Zupanec,
Acquittal
of
Principal,
or His
Conviction
of Lesser
Degree of
Offense, as
Affecting
Prosecution
of Accessory,
or Aider and
Abettor,
9 A.L.R. 4th
972 (1981 &
2005 Supp.).
[9]See
generally,
1
Charles E.
Torcia,
Wharton's
Criminal Law
'
34 (15th ed.
& 2004 Supp.);
Rollin M.
Perkins &
Ronald N.
Boyce,
Criminal Law,
582 (1957);
see, e.g.,
People v.
Garcia,
52 P.3d 648,
652 (Cal. Ct.
App. 2002) (noting
that
A[b]ecause
an aider and
abettor may
potentially
be guilty of
a more
serious
offense than
the shooter
. . . the
absence of a
shooter's
conviction
is not
dispositive
of the aider
and abettor=s
exposure to
liability);
State v.
Kaplan,
469 A.2d
1354, 1355 (N.H.
1983) (conviction
of wife who
pleaded
guilty to
accomplice
role in
murder of
husband
would not be
reversed
even though
principal,
an alleged
contract
killer, was
acquitted,
and noting
that
A>conviction
of an
accomplice
is thus
premised
upon proof
of the
commission
of the
criminal act,
rather than
on the guilt
of the
principal')
(citation
omitted);
Jeter v.
State,
274 A.2d
337, 338-39
(Md. 1971) (collecting
cases and
concluding
that
virtually
all American
jurisdictions
hold that
the
subsequent
acquittal of
a principal
does not
affect the
trial or
conviction
of an
accomplice).
The North
Carolina
Supreme
Court has
traced this
principle
back three
hundred
years to
Wallis=
Case,
1 Salk. 334.
See State
v. Whitt,
18 S.E. 715,
716 (N.C.
1893). The
Model Penal
Code also
adopts this
position.
�See
Model Penal
Code
'
2.06(7)
(2001) (accomplice
can be
convicted
Athough
the person
claimed to
have
committed
the offense
. . . has
been
acquitted).
[10]
The
controlling
case on this
issue is
Standefer v.
United
States,
447 U.S. 10
(1980), in
which
Standefer
was accused
of aiding
and abetting
a revenue
official,
Cyril
Niederberger,
in accepting
compensation
beyond that
authorized
by law.
Niederberger
was
acquitted of
accepting
unlawful
payments.
After
Niederberger's
trial and
before his
own trial,
Standefer
moved to
dismiss the
charges and
argued that
he could not
be convicted
of aiding
and abetting
the
principal
when the
principal
had been
acquitted.
His motion
was denied,
he was
convicted,
the court of
appeals
affirmed,
and the
Supreme
Court
granted
certiorari.
Standefer
raised two
issues
before the
Supreme
Court: (1)
the federal
aiding and
abetting
statute was
not intended
to authorize
prosecution
of an aider
and abettor
after the
principal
had been
acquitted;
and (2) the
doctrine of
nonmutual
collateral
estoppel
barred the
government
from
prosecuting
him after
Niederberger=s
acquittal.
The Supreme
Court traced
the origins
of aiding
and abetting
back to
English
common law
and noted
that at
early common
law all
parties to a
felony
received the
death
penalty;
therefore,
certain
procedural
rules were
developed to
shield
accessories
from such
severe
punishment.
447 U.S. at
15. Among
them was the
rule that an
accessory
could not be
convicted
without the
prior
conviction
of the
principal
offender: In
every way,
an accessory
[followed],
like a
shadow, his
principal.
Id. (quoting
1
J. Bishop,
Criminal Law
'
666 (8th ed.
1892)). This
procedural
bar applied
only to the
prosecution
of
accessories
in felony
cases, not
in
misdemeanor
cases where
an accessory
could be
prosecuted
after the
principal
was
acquitted.
Id.
at 15-16. In
1848,
Parliament
enacted a
statute
which
permitted an
accessory to
be convicted
even though
the
principal
was
acquitted.
Id.
at 16.
Congress
followed in
1899 by
enacting the
first
statute in
this country
which
provided
that
Aall
persons
concerned in
the
commission
of a crime,
whether it
be felony or
misdemeanor,
and whether
they
directly
commit the
act
constituting
the crime or
aid and abet
in its
commission,
though not
present, are
principals,
and to be
tried and
punished as
such. Id.
at 17-18.
The Supreme
Court, in
its
discussion
of the
historical
law on
aiding and
abetting,
stated,
ARead
against its
common-law
background,
the
provision
evinces a
clear intent
to permit
the
conviction
of
accessories
to federal
criminal
offenses
despite the
prior
acquittal of
the actual
perpetrator
of the
offense.
Id. at
19. Thus,
all
participants
in a crime
Aare
punishable
for their
criminal
conduct; the
fate of
other
participants
is
irrelevant.
Id.
at 20.
Moving to
the issue of
collateral
estoppel,
the Court
noted that
several
aspects of
criminal law
make
nonmutual
estoppel
against the
government
when a
principal is
acquitted
inappropriate.
Id.
at 21-22.
These
include
limited
discovery
rights, a
prohibition
against a
directed
verdict on
behalf of
the
government,
a bar
against the
government
seeking
appellate
review of an
acquittal,
and a jury's
unfettered
right to
acquit out
of
compassion
or
compromise.
Id.
at 22.
Furthermore,
A[t]he
application
of nonmutual
estoppel in
criminal
cases is
also
complicated
by the
existence of
rules of
evidence and
exclusion
unique to
our criminal
law. Id.
at 23. Thus,
evidence
that is
admissible
against one
accomplice
may be
inadmissible
against
others,
preventing
the
government
from
presenting
all of its
possible
proof
against some
of the
participants
in the
crime. Id.
at
23-24.
Although
Asymmetry
of results
may be
intellectually
satisfying,
it is not
required@;
thus, the
acquittal of
a principal
does not bar
the
conviction
of an
accomplice.
Id.
at 25.
[11]See Owens
v. State,
867 A.2d
334, 340 (Md.
Ct. Spec.
App. 2005) (noting
that the
Aclear
answer given
by other
courts and
treatise
writers is
that even
after a
principal
has been
acquitted of
a crime,
another
person can
be convicted
for his role
in aiding
and abetting
the
commission
of that same
crime).
[12]
2
Wayne R.
LaFave,
Substantive
Criminal Law
'
13.2(c) at
346-47 (2d
ed. 2003).
Because of
our
disposition
of this
first claim
under
Section
7.02(a)(2),
we need not
address the
applicability
of
applicant's
conspiracy
liability
under
Section
7.02(b)
which does
not require
proof of
applicant's
intent to
cause Mr.
Rahim's
death.
[14]
The jury was
not
instructed,
during the
guilt stage,
on the law
of
transferred
intent under
Section
6.04(b).
Thus, the
charge
required the
jury to find
that
applicant
intended the
death of Mr.
Rahim,
rather than
some other
person under
Section
7.02(a)(2).
[16]
Applicant's
confession
was
admissible
at his own
trial but
not at
Butler's
trial.
[17]
As a part of
this claim,
applicant
contends
that he has
Anewly
available
evidence
from Butler
who would
testify that
he did not
intend to
kill Mr.
Rahim. But
this is not
newly
availableB
Butler, like
applicant,
gave a
written
confession
shortly
after his
arrest.
Applicant's
trial
counsel
stated that
he was
familiar
with the
confession
in which
Butler
admitted his
participation
in the
robbery at
the 7-Evenings
store and
that he shot
and killed
Mr. Rahim.
Butler
stated then
(and
presumably
would state
now) that he
did not
intend to
kill Mr.
Rahim.
Applicant's
trial
counsel was
aware of
Butler's
confession
at the time
of trial and
Butler's
assertion
that he did
not intend
to kill Mr.
Rahim
matched
applicant's
same
assertion
about
Butler's
conduct in
his
confession.
Applicant's
counsel
stated that
there was
nothing in
Butler's
confession
that caused
him to
changeBor
want to
changeBhis
overall
trial
strategy.
The jury in
Butler's
trial
apparently
believed
that
statement,
while the
jury in
applicant's
trial did
not believe
that Butler
unintentionally
killed Mr.
Rahim. We
cannot
dispute the
right of two
different
juries in
two
different
trials to
reach two
different
verdicts
concerning
two
different
defendants
based upon
two
different
sets of
admissible
evidence.
[18]
It is both a
common-sense
inference
and an
appellate
presumption
that a
person
intends the
natural
consequences
of his acts,
Whitlock
v. State,
146 Tex.
Crim. 594,
600, 177 S.W.2d
205, 208
(1943), and
that the act
of pointing
a loaded gun
at someone
and shooting
it toward
that person
at close
range
demonstrates
an intent to
kill.
Jones v.
State,
944 S.W.2d
642, 647 (Tex.
Crim. App.
1996);
Flannagan v.
State,
675 S.W.2d
734, 744-45
(Tex. Crim.
App. 1984) (op.
on reh'g);
Womble v.
State,
618 S.W.2d
59, 64 (Tex.
Crim. App.
1981).
[19]
Applicants
argues that
his
Afactual
innocence
claim is
cognizable
under
Schlup v.
Delo,
513 U.S. 298
(1995), as
one
involving
both a
constitutional
violation
and a
gateway
innocence
claim. But
it is not.
Applicant
makes no
showing that
he is
innocent of
capital
murder or
that the
State
violated his
constitutional
rights by
trying him
before his
accomplice,
Sammy Butler.
[20]
Applicant
asserts this
claim under
both the
Sixth
Amendment to
the United
States
Constitution
and under
the Texas
Constitution,
article I,
'
10. Because
he provides
no separate
analysis
under the
Texas
Constitution,
we will
presume that
applicant=s
position is
that the two
provisions
are
identical
for purposes
of his claim.
See
Heitman v.
State,
815 S.W.2d
681, 690
n.22 (Tex.
Crim. App.
1991).
[21]
On direct
appeal,
applicant
contended
that trial
counsel
should have
requested an
instruction
on simple
murder
because the
jury might
have
believed
that
applicant
only
knowingly
caused the
death of the
victim.
At the time
defense
counsel was
appointed,
applicant
had three
pending
capital
murder
charges and
three
aggravated
robbery
charges.
Applicant
had given
oral
confessions
admitting
his
involvement
in all of
those
pending
cases.
Concern
about the
admissibility
of
extraneous
offenses
would surely
have been at
the
forefront of
defense
counsel's
mind as he
planned his
strategy for
the guilt
phase of
this trial.
Do you find
from the
evidence
beyond a
reasonable
doubt that
Robert Lee
Thompson,
the
defendant
himself,
actually
caused the
death of
Mansor Bhai
Rahim
Mohammed, on
the occasion
in question,
or if he did
not actually
cause the
death of
Mansor Bhai
Rahim
Mohammed,
that he
intended to
kill Mansor
Bhai Rahim
Mohammed or
another, or
that he
anticipated
that a human
life would
be taken?
This charge,
unlike the
one at the
guilt stage,
did
incorporate
the doctrine
of
transferred
intent.
[26]See
Salinas v.
State,
163 S.W.3d
734, 741-42
(Tex. Crim.
App. 2005).�
In
Salinas,
another
capital
murder case
involving
the law of
parties, we
rejected the
contention
that defense
counsel was
ineffective
for failing
to request
an
instruction
on
felony-murder.
Id.
There, as
here,
A[t]he
critical
question is
whether the
evidence
showed that
appellant
(as a
principal or
party) had
the intent
only to rob
or to kidnap,
and he did
not have the
intent to
kill. Id.
at 742. We
noted in
Salinas
that
A[w]hether
appellant
was the
actual actor
or
criminally
responsible
for the acts
of his
cohorts by
virtue of
the law of
parties, the
evidence
shows not
only an
intent to
commit
robbery or a
lesser
included
offense, but
also
the intent
to kill.
Id. (emphasis
in
original).
The same is
true in the
present
case;
applicant
points to no
evidence
that
affirmatively
demonstrates
his lack of
intent to
kill.
[27]See
Aguilar v.
Dretke,
___ F.3d
___, __,
2005 U.S.
App. LEXIS
22031 *9-11
(5th
Cir., Oct.
12, 2005)
(holding
that Texas
capital
murder
defendant
was not
entitled to
charge on
lesser-included
offense of
murder when
co-defendant
caused death
of second
victim but
defendant
had motive
to kill
victim or
his family
members). As
the Fifth
Circuit
explained:
The
evidence was
clearly
sufficient
to establish
that Aguilar
participated
in the
murder of
Leo, Sr. The
question is
whether the
evidence
would permit
a reasonable
jury to make
a contrary
finding:
that Quiroz
acted alone
in Leo's
murder
without
encouragement
or other
participation
by Aguilar.
After
reviewing
the record,
we are
satisfied it
would not
permit a
rational
jury to find
that if
Aguilar is
guilty, he
is only
guilty of
murdering
Annette. As
the district
court
pointed out,
Aguilar-and
not Quiroz-had
the motive
to kill
Esparza or
his family
members. The
evidence
established
that Aguilar
had been to
the trailer
home on
several
earlier
occasions,
threatening
Esparza, and
had
previously
discussed
with Annette
Chavez the
whereabouts
of Esparza.
Aguilar
entered the
Esparzas'
trailer with
his eighteen-year-old
nephew
(Quiroz),
who had no
connection
to the
Chavezes or
Esparza or
with
Aguilar's
marijuana
trafficking.
The two
entered the
trailer with
a firearm
and
proceeded to
severely
beat the
Chavezes.
Then, the
couple was
shot
Aexecution
style
within
minutes of
each other.
There is no
evidence in
the record
supporting
Aguilar's
contention
that he did
not have
intent to
kill both
Leo and
Annette when
he and
Quiroz
entered the
residence. A
reasonable
jury, who
would find
that Aguilar
was the
second
shooter in
this double
murder,
could not
find that he
did not
encourage or
otherwise
participate
in the
shooting of
Leo, Sr. We
therefore
conclude
that the
district
court did
not err in
rejecting
Aguilar's
Beck
claim.
Id.
at *9-11.
[28]Rousseau
v. State,
855 S.W.2d
666, 672-73
(Tex. Crim.
App. 1993) (Asome
evidence
must exist
in the
record
that would
permit a
jury
rationally
to find
that if the
defendant is
guilty, he
is guilty
only of the
lesser
offense) (emphasis
in
original);
see also
Cordova v.
Lynaugh,
838 F.2d
764, 767 (5th
Cir. 1988)
(holding
that a
lesser
included
offense
instruction
should be
given
if the
evidence
would permit
a jury
rationally
to find [a
defendant]
guilty of
the lesser
offense and
acquit him
of the
greater).
[29]Id.
at 742; see
also
Fuentes v.
State,
991 S.W.2d
267, 272-73
(Tex. Crim.
App. 1999) (counsel
in capital
murder trial
not
ineffective
for failing
to request
lesser-included
offense of
felony-murder
instruction
because
Athere
is no
evidence
upon which a
jury could
rationally
have found
that
appellant
did not
intend to
kill when he
shot the
deceased.).
See, e.g.,
Navarro v.
State,
154 S.W.3d
795, 797-98
(Tex. App.BHouston
[14th Dist.]
2004, pet.
ref'd) (evidence
of other
violent acts
toward his
intended
victim
admissible
under Rule
404(b) in
capital
murder trial
to prove
both
defendant's
intent to
kill and
absence of
mistake in
attempting
to kill his
intended
victim);
Johnson v.
State,
932 S.W.2d
296, 302-04
(Tex. App.BAustin
1996, pet.
ref'd) (in
capital
murder trial,
evidence of
extraneous
offense was
admissible
to prove the
culpable
mental state
of intent to
kill when
the accused
presented
evidence to
dispute that
intent).
Thompson v.
Quarterman, 292 Fed.Appx. 277
(5th Cir. 2008). (Habeas)
Background: Following appellate
affirmance, 2003 WL 21466925, of his conviction of
capital murder and sentence of death, and of his state
court petition for post-conviction relief, 179 S.W.3d
549, petitioner sought federal habeas relief. The United
States District Court for the Southern District of Texas
denied petition and, sua sponte, denied certificate of
appealability (COA). Petitioner filed motion to amend
judgment or for issuance of COA. The district court
denied motion, and petitioner sought COA from the Court
of Appeals.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals held
that: (1) district court did not abuse its discretion in
denying petitioner's motion to expand the record; (2)
district court did not abuse its discretion in denying
petitioner's motion for discovery; (3) petitioner's
conviction and sentence did not violate due process or
equal protection; (4) petitioner did not receive
ineffective assistance of trial counsel; (5) district
court did not abuse its discretion in denying
petitioner's request for stay to permit him to exhaust
one IAC claim in state court; and (6) it lacked
jurisdiction to consider COA request based upon
cumulative IAC claim not presented in COA request in
district court. Certificate of appealability denied.
PER CURIAM: Robert Lee Thompson was
sentenced to death in Texas state court for capital
murder. Pursuant to the Antiterrorism and Effective
Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), he seeks a
certificate of appealability (COA) for each of the 15
issues on which the district court denied federal-habeas
relief. Along that line, he also requests remand for
discovery and for a hearing on one of those issues.
Because he fails to make the requisite showing, a COA is
DENIED.
I.
In December 1996, Thompson and Butler
robbed a convenience store while armed with handguns.
See Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d 549, 551 (Tex.Crim.App.2005).
During the robbery, Thompson approached the cash
register, pointed his gun at the clerk (first clerk)
behind the counter, and demanded money. Id. He shot that
first clerk in the stomach when he did not move quickly
enough. Id. Then he shot at, but missed, a second clerk
(ultimately, the victim) who was running toward the back
of the store. Id. Turning his attention back to the
first clerk, who was lying on the floor, he shot him
three more times before demanding he get up and give him
the money. Id. That first clerk did so, after which
Thompson put his handgun to the first clerk's neck and
pulled the trigger. Id. Upon discovering he already had
fired all of the bullets in that weapon, he hit that
first clerk over the head with the cash register drawer.
Id. He then fled with Butler. Id. As Thompson drove away,
Butler fired his handgun from the passenger window and
fatally shot the second clerk/victim (at whom Thompson
had previously, unsuccessfully shot). Id. The first
clerk survived and testified at Thompson's trial.
Thompson's indictment charged he
caused the victim's death during the robbery by shooting
him with a firearm. At the time of his trial in March
1998, Thompson had three capital murder, and several
aggravated robbery, charges pending against him,
including the one at hand, stemming from similar
robberies. Id. at 551 n. 5. Regarding all of those
charges, by the time his counsel was appointed, he had
made statements to the police confessing his involvement
in all of them.
The jury was instructed it could find
Thompson guilty of capital murder if he: (1)
specifically intended to kill, and did kill, the victim;
(2) intended to kill the victim by “soliciti[ing],
encourag[ing], direct[ing], aid[ing], or attempt[ing] to
aid” Butler's shooting him during the robbery; or (3)
conspired with Butler to commit the robbery and Butler's
shooting the victim “was committed in furtherance of the
conspiracy and was an offense that [Thompson] should
have ... anticipated”. See id. at 552. The jury found
him guilty. Id. at 551. In response to the jury's
answers to the special issues, Thompson was sentenced to
death. Id.
Thompson filed a motion for new trial
on 15 August 2001. (This motion is not in the direct-appeal
record. It is in the state-habeas record because it was
filed by Thompson in those proceedings.) The motion
relied upon Butler's affidavit (attached to the motion),
which stated he (Butler) did not intend to kill the
victim, and upon Butler's conviction for the lesser
offense of felony (unintentional) murder (for which
judicial notice was requested). Thompson did not receive
a new trial.
On direct appeal, Thompson raised
procedural-error and ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
claims (his issues 6-13 & 15 here). The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals (TCCA) affirmed his conviction, and the
Supreme Court of the United States denied review.
Thompson v. State, No. 73128, 2003 WL 21466925 (Tex.Crim.App.25
Jun.2003) (en banc) (unpublished), cert. denied 540 U.S.
1091, 124 S.Ct. 960, 157 L.Ed.2d 797 (2003).
While his direct appeal was pending,
Thompson requested state post-conviction relief. He
claimed that he was factually innocent of capital murder
and that his conviction violated the Constitution (his
issues 1-2 & 4 here). As he had in his motion for new
trial, he relied upon Butler's “I did not intend to kill”
statement and his felony-murder conviction; he attached
Butler's affidavit and trial transcript. He contended
the State violated his due process rights under Brady by
suppressing the statement Butler made to investigators
that Butler did not intend to kill the victim (his issue
3 here). He also claimed ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
on several grounds (including his issues 7, 10, 14, &
arguably 5 here). Thompson attached affidavits from his
appellate counsel and another local attorney who had
reviewed his trial record, opining he received
ineffective assistance. The State responded on 29
November 2000 with, inter alia, a 28 November 2000
affidavit from Thompson's trial counsel, explaining his
trial preparation and strategy. On 22 December 2004,
Thompson filed his proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law, attaching trial counsel's: (1)
affidavit (again); (2) letter to appellate counsel; and
(3) file from Thompson's trial.
The state-habeas trial court adopted
the State's proposed findings of fact and conclusions of
law on 25 January 2005, and recommended denying relief.
On 13 April 2005, the TCCA ordered supplemental briefing
on Thompson's claims for factual innocence and
ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to request
a felony-murder instruction. State-habeas relief was
denied by the TCCA in an opinion that, inter alia,
adopted the state-habeas trial court's findings and
conclusions. Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d 549.
Thompson then requested federal
habeas relief on 15 issues. In an extremely
comprehensive, detailed, and well-reasoned 62-page
opinion, relief was denied, as were his motions for
expansion of the record, discovery, an evidentiary
hearing, and a stay (in order to develop a record
regarding his claims). Thompson v. State, No.
4:06-CV-148 (S.D. Tex. 30 Nov. 2007) (unpublished). In
that opinion, a COA was also denied, sua sponte. Id.
Thompson moved to amend the judgment,
seeking relief or a COA on all claims. The district
court denied reconsideration. Thompson v. State, No.
4:06-CV-148 (S.D. Tex. 21 Dec. 2007) (unpublished).
II.
Thompson seeks a COA on each of the
15 issues raised in his federal petition. He also
maintains the district court erred in denying his
motions to expand the record with certain unspecified
documents, and for discovery, an evidentiary hearing,
and a stay.
Thompson's 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas
application is subject to AEDPA. E.g., Penry v. Johnson,
532 U.S. 782, 792, 121 S.Ct. 1910, 150 L.Ed.2d 9 (2001).
Under AEDPA, Thompson may not appeal the denial of
habeas relief unless he first obtains a COA from either
the district, or this, court. 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c);
Miller v. Dretke, 404 F.3d 908, 912 (5th Cir.2005) (citations
omitted). The district court must first decide whether
to grant a COA; only if it is denied by that court may a
COA on that issue be requested here. Fed. R.App. P.
22(b)(1). Having been denied a COA by the district court,
Thompson requests one from this court on each of his 15
issues.
To
obtain a COA, Thompson must make “a substantial showing
of the denial of a constitutional right”. 28 U.S.C. §
2253(c)(2); see Miller-El v. Cockrell, 537 U.S. 322,
336, 123 S.Ct. 1029, 154 L.Ed.2d 931 (2003); Slack v.
McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 483, 120 S.Ct. 1595, 146 L.Ed.2d
542 (2000). To make such a showing when the district
court's habeas denial is on the merits of an issue,
Thompson must demonstrate “reasonable jurists could
debate whether (or, for that matter, agree that) the
petition should have been resolved in a different manner
or that the issues presented were adequate to deserve
encouragement to proceed further” (reasonable-jurists
standard). Miller-El, 537 U.S. at 336, 123 S.Ct. 1029 (quoting
Slack, 529 U.S. at 484, 120 S.Ct. 1595) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
When the district court's denial of
relief for a claim is based on a procedural ruling, such
as the claim's being unexhausted, the requisite showing
is expanded. See Foster v. Quarterman, 466 F.3d 359, 364
(5th Cir.2006) (citing Hall v. Cain, 216 F.3d 518, 521
(5th Cir.2000)), cert. denied --- U.S. ----, 127 S.Ct.
2099, 167 L.Ed.2d 817 (2007). “In that situation, the
applicant must show jurists of reason would find
debatable whether: the habeas petition states a valid
claim of the denial of a constitutional right; and the
district court's procedural ruling was correct.” Id. (citation
omitted) (emphasis added) (reasonable-jurists/procedural
standard).
In deciding whether to grant a COA,
we can make only a threshold inquiry into the district
court's application of AEDPA to Thompson's
constitutional claims; we may not consider the factual
or legal merits in support of the claims. Miller-El, 537
U.S. at 336, 123 S.Ct. 1029. “When a court of appeals
sidesteps this process by first deciding the merits of
an appeal, and then justifying its denial of a COA based
on its adjudication of the actual merits, it is in
essence deciding an appeal without jurisdiction.” Id. at
336-37, 123 S.Ct. 1029.
For purposes of our threshold inquiry,
we are cognizant that, under AEDPA, the district court
was required, with limited exceptions described below,
to defer to the state court's resolution of Thompson's
claims. Those exceptions turn on the character of the
state-court's ruling. Foster, 466 F.3d at 365.
First, on questions of law, as well
as mixed questions of law and fact, the district court
was required to defer to the state-court's decision
unless it “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable
application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court”. 28 U.S.C. §
2254(d)(1); see Miller, 404 F.3d at 913. The state-court's
decision is considered contrary to clearly established
federal law if it “reaches a legal conclusion in direct
conflict with a prior decision of the Supreme Court or
if it reaches a different conclusion than the Supreme
Court based on materially indistinguishable facts”.
Miller, 404 F.3d at 913 (quoting Miniel v. Cockrell, 339
F.3d 331, 337 (5th Cir.2003)) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
Second, our threshold inquiry must
recognize the district court's obligation to defer to
the state-court's factual findings, unless they
“resulted in a decision that was based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the
evidence presented in the State court proceeding”. 28
U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). Along that line, the district court
was required to presume the state-court's factual
findings were correct; Thompson had to rebut that
presumption by clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(e)(1).
Moreover, our threshold inquiry
requires consideration of a COA request against the
backdrop of the elements of Thompson's underlying
constitutional claim. See Miller, 404 F.3d at 913.
Needless to say, meaningful review of the district
court's ruling, for COA purposes, on whether Thompson
made the requisite 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2) “substantial
showing of the denial of a constitutional right”
requires our considering these elements.
In the light of the district court's
well-reasoned and thorough opinion, and essentially for
the reasons stated in it, reasonable jurists could not
debate the district court's rulings-for either the
reasonable-jurists or the reasonable-jurists/procedural
standards. This is especially true in the light of
Thompson's conclusory briefing for most of the 15
requested COAs. Nevertheless, we address each claim.
A.
As a threshold matter, Thompson
complains that the district court erred in denying his
motions for factual development of the record. He seeks
remand or a stay to develop the factual basis for
several of his 15 claims. The district court denied his
motions for expansion of the record, discovery, and an
evidentiary hearing “because he failed to identify the
evidence he wanted to produce, he did not show good
cause for discovery, and did not show that he had
diligently attempted to develop the record in state
court”. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (21 Dec. 2007) (discussing
Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007) (denying
motions)). Such denials are reviewed for abuse of
discretion. See, e.g., In re Liljeberg Enters., Inc.,
304 F.3d 410, 433 n. 43 (5th Cir.2002) (expansion of the
record) (citation omitted); Clark v. Johnson, 202 F.3d
760, 766 (5th Cir.2000) (discovery and evidentiary
hearing).
At issue are only Thompson's COA
requests. These alleged procedural errors are not
phrased as COA requests, but they bear upon his requests.
We consider them here for purposes of ruling on those
COA requests. See Reyes v. Quarterman, 195 Fed.Appx.
272, 278-79 & n. 2 (5th Cir.2006) (per curiam) (unpublished)
(considering procedural issues before addressing COA
requests); Clark, 202 F.3d at 765-68 (considering
procedural issues in context of COA requests). Most of
those requests are inadequately briefed; nevertheless,
we will address each request.
1.
First, Thompson sought expansion of
the record with “the following materials, including but
not limited to ... (1) Letters predating the filing of
the petition in district court; (2) Documents; (3)
Exhibits; (4) Answers under oath; [and] (5) Written
Interrogatories propounded/approved by the judge (if so
directed)”. Thompson's motion identifies no specific
documents. As the district court found: “Thompson's
motion makes no effort to show what omissions exist in
the record, ... specific material he wants to include,
or why that material is necessary.... [It] is, in
essence, a general discovery request”. Thompson, No.
4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007).
As noted, as well as discussed below,
Thompson also sought discovery. The district court
considered the motions together, and denied them for
“lack of specificity”. Id. Accordingly, the district
court did not abuse its discretion in denying expansion
of the record.
2.
Second, Thompson sought discovery to
obtain unspecified documents from an assistant district
attorney and serve interrogatories on the jurors,
defense counsel, assistant district attorney, and
bailiff for his trial, as well as “others as necessary”.
As noted, this motion, too, was denied for “lack of
specificity”. Id. “A party shall be entitled to invoke
the processes of discovery available under the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure if, and to the extent that, the
judge in the exercise of his discretion and for good
cause shown grants leave to do so, but not otherwise.”
Bracy v. Gramley, 520 U.S. 899, 904, 117 S.Ct. 1793, 138
L.Ed.2d 97 (1997) (quoting R. Governing § 2254 Cases
6(a)). “ ‘[W]here specific allegations before the court
show reason to believe that the petitioner may, if the
facts are fully developed, be able to demonstrate that
he is ... entitled to relief, it is the duty of the
court to provide the necessary facilities and procedures
for an adequate inquiry’ ”. Id. at 908-09, 117 S.Ct.
1793 (quoting Harris v. Nelson, 394 U.S. 286, 300, 89
S.Ct. 1082, 22 L.Ed.2d 281 (1969)). On the other hand,
“[c]onclusionary allegations are not enough to warrant
discovery under Rule 6 of the Federal Rules Governing
Section 2254 Petitions; the petitioner must set forth
specific allegations of fact. Rule 6 ... does not
authorize fishing expeditions”. Ward v. Whitley, 21 F.3d
1355, 1367 (5th Cir.1994) (citations omitted); see also
Murphy v. Johnson, 205 F.3d 809, 814 (5th Cir.2000) (finding
no abuse of discretion).
As discussed, the district court
ruled the motions “lack[ed] the necessary specificity”.
Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007). As such,
Thompson did not “point to specific evidence that once
existed and may continue to exist that holds the
potential to exonerate him.... [And he] has not shown
any likelihood that physical evidence exists that would
render his request for information ... more than a
‘fishing expedition’ ”. Reed v. Quarterman, 504 F.3d
465, 477 (5th Cir.2007) (citation omitted). Accordingly,
it was not an abuse of discretion to deny discovery. See
id. (finding no abuse of discretion); United States v.
Webster, 392 F.3d 787, 802 (5th Cir.2004) (denying COA
on denial of discovery because petitioner “failed to
identify, with specific allegations, any dispositive
factual disputes”).
3.
Third, Thompson sought an evidentiary
hearing. His motion maintained: he did not receive a
full, fair evidentiary hearing in state court; and
“[t]he facts in dispute from the state trial court are
the effective assistance of the trial counsel[,] the
failure to disclose relevant Brady v. Maryland
information ... [, and] the failure of the trial court
to conduct a hearing on a potentially racist comment by
a jury member”. The district court ruled the motion
“lack[ed] specificity and fail[ed] to make the necessary
showing that such development is permitted by [AEDPA] or
necessary for the proper adjudication of the claims”.
Thompson now asserts the lack-of-specificity
denial of his motion is erroneous because the state
court did not hold a “true hearing” and specificity “is
impossible to provide” without discovery. He does not
challenge the district court's ruling he failed to show
such factual development would be permitted by AEDPA or
to provide sufficient specificity. Under 28 U.S.C. §
2254(e)(2), an evidentiary hearing is only appropriate
when “(A) the claim relies on-(i) a new rule of
constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on
collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was
previously unavailable; or (ii) a factual predicate that
could not have been previously discovered through the
exercise of due diligence; and (B) the facts underlying
the claim would be sufficient to establish by clear and
convincing evidence that but for constitutional error,
no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant
guilty of the underlying offense”. Comeaux v. Cain, 204
Fed.Appx. 471, 474 n. 4 (5th Cir.2006) (holding district
court erred in granting hearing where petitioner
“clearly cannot meet these requirements”) (quoting 28
U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2)) (emphasis added).
As Thompson does not show, or attempt
to show, that he meets § 2254(e)(2)(A)'s requirements,
the denial of an evidentiary hearing was not an abuse of
discretion.
B.
As stated, Thompson seeks a COA on 15
issues. They relate to: whether his capital-murder
conviction or death sentence violates the Constitution (his
issues 1, 2, & 4); whether the State suppressed
exculpatory evidence in violation of his due-process
rights (his issue 3); whether the trial court's
procedural and evidentiary errors violated his
Constitutional rights (his issues 6, 9, & 15); and
whether his counsel's assistance was ineffective, in
violation of his Sixth Amendment right (his issues 5,
7-8, & 10-14). As stated above and discussed below, none
satisfies the above-defined reasonable-jurists or
reasonable-jurists/procedural standards for obtaining a
COA.
1.
Initially, Thompson seeks a COA for
his three claims that his conviction and sentence
violate the Constitution.
a.
First, Thompson seeks a COA on
whether he is factually innocent of capital murder, so
that his conviction violates due process. Relying on
Butler's conviction for only felony murder and citing
Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137, 107 S.Ct. 1676, 95 L.Ed.2d
127 (1987), he asserts he cannot be held liable for
capital murder because: “The state ... cannot hold the
vicarious liability of a party to a higher standard than
the actual liability of the true perpetrator”; and he
did not shoot the victim and was not responsible for
Butler's actions. (Emphasis in original.)
Tison, however, holds the imposition
of the death penalty upon a major participant in a
felony who showed reckless indifference to human life is
not a violation of the due-process clause. 481 U.S. at
158, 107 S.Ct. 1676. Instead, the Constitution requires
that a death sentence “be tailored to [a defendant's]
personal responsibility and moral guilt”. Enmund v.
Florida, 458 U.S. 782, 801, 102 S.Ct. 3368, 73 L.Ed.2d
1140 (1982). And, under Texas law, Thompson can be
criminally responsible for capital murder even if Butler,
who fired the fatal shot, is not. See Tex. Penal Code §
7.02(a) (defendant intended to kill someone during the
aggravated robbery and solicited, encouraged, directed,
or aided his accomplice, who also had that intent, to do
so), (b) (defendant conspired to commit aggravated
robbery and the death was a consequence he should have
anticipated); Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 552-54.
The state-habeas trial court ruled
Thompson's factual-innocence claim was a sufficiency-of-the-evidence
claim, which is not reviewable in state-habeas
proceedings. Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 551 (adopting
state-habeas trial court's findings of fact and
conclusions of law). On the other hand, the TCCA ordered
supplemental briefing on this issue. Ultimately, the
TCCA held the jury could have convicted Thompson under
any of three theories and had sufficient evidence to
find him guilty of capital murder, and also adopted the
state-habeas trial court's ruling. Id. at 551-57.
The district court held: Thompson did
not show any of those three theories violates due
process as described in Enmund, 458 U.S. 782, 102 S.Ct.
3368, and Tison, 481 U.S. 137, 107 S.Ct. 1676; and “the
Constitution does not require that Thompson's conviction
and sentence be less severe than Butler's”. Thompson,
No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007).
b.
Next, Thompson seeks a COA on whether
his capital-murder conviction or resulting death
sentence, in the light of Butler's felony murder
conviction and less-than-death sentence, violates due
process or equal protection. He asserts the Constitution
is violated because Butler was convicted of only felony
murder and was not sentenced to death. As support, he
cites Hopkins v. Reeves, 524 U.S. 88, 94, 118 S.Ct.
1895, 141 L.Ed.2d 76 (1998) (stating death penalty
cannot be imposed where defendant “was a minor
participant in the crime and neither intended to kill
nor had shown reckless indifference to human life” (citations
omitted)), and Enmund, 458 U.S. at 797, 102 S.Ct. 3368
(holding Eighth Amendment does not allow imposition of
the death penalty on one who does not kill, attempt to
kill, or intend or contemplate that a killing would
occur). Thompson relies, however, on Butler's felony
murder conviction. He does not contend that he was a
minor participant who did not attempt to kill, intend
that a killing occur, or show reckless indifference to
human life.
As discussed above, the Constitution
is not violated where, as here, the focus was on the
defendant's actions and intent. See Enmund, 458 U.S.
782, 102 S.Ct. 3368; Tison, 481 U.S. 137, 107 S.Ct.
1676. In that regard, the TCCA ruled Thompson's
conviction and sentence did not violate the Constitution
because sufficient evidence showed he was a major
participant in, and showed reckless indifference to
human life during, the aggravated robbery. Ex parte
Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 551 (adopting state-habeas trial
court's findings of fact and conclusions of law).
Similarly, the district court ruled Thompson's
Constitutional rights were not violated because “his
conviction was based on his own criminal culpability”.
Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007).
2.
Thompson requests a COA for his claim
that the State's suppression of evidence-Butler's
statement to investigators that he (Butler) did not
intend to kill the victim-violated Thompson's due-process
rights under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct.
1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963).
Brady held: “[T]he suppression by the
prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon
request violates due process where the evidence is
material either to guilt or to punishment”. Id. at 87,
83 S.Ct. 1194. Our court has made clear, however, that,
“when information is fully available to a defendant at
the time of trial and his only reason for not obtaining
and presenting the evidence to the Court is his lack of
reasonable diligence, the defendant has no Brady claim”.
United States v. Brown, 628 F.2d 471, 473 (5th Cir.1980)
(citations omitted); see also United States v. Runyan,
290 F.3d 223, 246 (5th Cir.2002) (citation omitted).
The TCCA held Thompson failed to show
the State violated Brady by withholding Butler's
statement because Thompson's trial counsel testified (via
affidavit attached to the State's response in state-habeas
proceedings) that he reviewed Butler's statement and
spoke with him in preparation for Thompson's trial. Ex
parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 551 (adopting state-habeas
trial court's findings of fact and conclusions of law).
In fact, as the district court noted, Thompson
apparently waived this claim in his state-habeas
proceedings, after the State introduced his counsel's
affidavit, by conceding the claim was “without merit in
that [Thompson's] trial counsel had access to Butler's
custodial statement”.
Thompson does not contest the
affidavit, access to the statement, or waiver of the
claim. (Moreover, Thompson also abandoned this claim by
failing to brief it.)
3.
Thompson seeks a COA for his claims
that three procedural and evidentiary rulings violated
his Constitutional rights.
a.
Thompson requests a COA on whether
the trial court's failure to investigate a juror's
alleged statement resulted in Thompson's being tried by
a biased jury, in violation of his due-process rights
under Morgan v. Illinois, 504 U.S. 719, 112 S.Ct. 2222,
119 L.Ed.2d 492 (1992). During the punishment phase of
Thompson's trial, a defense witness reported that, as he
stepped down after testifying about Thompson, he
overheard a male juror say “poor little black boy”. The
trial court held a hearing, and the witness testified he
interpreted it as a racist comment. The trial court,
however, denied defense counsel's request to ask each
male juror if he made the comment, and, if so, whether
he harbored any racial prejudice.
Citing Remmer v. United States, 347
U.S. 227, 74 S.Ct. 450, 98 L.Ed. 654 (1954), Thompson
maintains no hearing was held, and complains that his
counsel should have been permitted to interrogate the
male jurors. Remmer, a jury-tampering case, holds: “The
trial court ... should determine the circumstances, the
impact thereof upon the juror, and whether or not it was
prejudicial, in a hearing with all interested parties
permitted to participate”. Id. at 229-30, 74 S.Ct. 450.
“[D]eterminations made in Remmer-type hearings will
frequently turn upon testimony of the juror in question”.
Smith v. Phillips, 455 U.S. 209, 217 n. 7, 102 S.Ct.
940, 71 L.Ed.2d 78 (1982).
On the other hand, trial courts have
wide discretion to control the flow of trial, and are
not required to conduct a hearing on juror misconduct-as
opposed to jury tampering. See, e.g., United States v.
Webster, 750 F.2d 307, 338 (5th Cir.1984). “In
determining whether to conduct a hearing in [a jury
misconduct case,] the court must balance the probable
harm” from emphasizing the misconduct against the likely
prejudice from the misconduct. Id. (quoting United
States v. Chiantese, 582 F.2d 974, 980 (5th Cir.1978)) (alteration
in original). The ultimate inquiry is whether “the
intrusion affect[ed] the jury's deliberations and
thereby its verdict”. United States v. Olano, 507 U.S.
725, 739, 113 S.Ct. 1770, 123 L.Ed.2d 508 (1993).
On direct appeal, the TCCA found “the
statement that the witness heard is not a clear
manifestation of racial bias”. Thompson, 2003 WL
21466925, at *2. It noted the statement could have been
referring to the witness, or even if not, its underlying
basis could have been sincerity or irony. Id. It denied
the claim, ruling: “Because defense counsel did not
diligently question the jurors about racial bias during
voir dire, an alleged bias manifested later does not
constitute juror misconduct”. Id. “ [V]oir dire
examination is the time to uncover potential prejudice
or bias in prospective jurors ... and ... a defendant
who begins the inquiry in the middle of the trial is not
acting timely”. Id. at *1.
Under Texas law, as recognized by the
district court, “if a defendant later ‘wishe[s] to show
bias on the part of a juror, [the] proper remedy [is] a
motion for new trial with an accompanying affidavit by a
juror showing such bias' ”. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148
(30 Nov. 2007) (quoting Norman v. State, 588 S.W.2d 340,
347 (Tex.Crim.App.1979)) (alteration in original).
Thompson's new-trial motion (from his trial, but, as
noted, found only in his state-habeas record), however,
does not mention juror bias. The district court noted:
Thompson's claim speculates that further inquiry would
have revealed harmful, racial prejudice; and the state
trial court implicitly found no jury bias threatened the
fairness of Thompson's punishment-phase. Id.
The district court held Thompson had
not met his burden to show the TCCA's denial of this
claim was unreasonable under AEDPA. Id. Thompson does
not challenge these rulings, urging only that the trial
court's denying a hearing was “harmful”.
b.
Second, Thompson seeks a COA for his
claim that the trial court lowered the State's burden of
proof on the second special issue during sentencing (in
violation of his Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment
rights), by stating, during voir dire, that the jurors
would be asked if Thompson “ should have anticipated
that a human life would be taken”. (Emphasis added.)
There was no contemporaneous objection made to the
court's statement. The second special issue submitted to
the jury asked if Thompson “actually caused the death[,]
... intended to kill [the victim] or another, or that he
anticipated that a human life would be taken”.
On direct appeal, the TCCA denied
relief because “[Thompson] failed to object to the trial
court's voir dire of the jury, therefore failing to
preserve this error for review”. Thompson, 2003 WL
21466925, at *7 (citations omitted). The district court
ruled it could not consider this claim because it was
procedurally barred; and that, even if it were not, the
claim failed because the trial court's special-issue
instructions during the punishment-phase did not include
the contested “should have” language. Thompson, No.
4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007).
Here, Thompson failed to brief this
claim; therefore, it is abandoned.
c.
Third, Thompson seeks a COA for
whether the state trial court violated his Sixth
Amendment right to a fair trial by admitting an
officer's testimony.
During the punishment phase of trial,
the jury heard a recording of Thompson's statements to
officers following his arrest, explaining, inter alia,
the robbery (and others he admitted committing) as God's
punishment of members of certain ethnic groups operating
businesses in his community. Following the recording,
one of those officers was asked: “Did you have a feeling,
sir, that he was telling the truth about this philosophy
of his?” The officer responded, “Yes”. Thompson's
counsel's objection to this testimony as speculative was
overruled.
On direct appeal, Thompson asserted
that the officer's opinion about Thompson's truthfulness
was inadmissible expert testimony. The TCCA held this
issue was not preserved for appeal because Thompson's
objection at trial was made on different grounds.
Thompson, 2003 WL 21466925, at *1.
The district court held this claim
was procedurally barred, because Texas' rule requiring
Thompson to have made the same objection at trial as
raised on appeal, in order to preserve the issue for
appeal, is “an adequate and independent state ground
that procedurally bars federal habeas review of [this
claim]”. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007) (quoting
Fisher v. State, 169 F.3d 295, 300 (5th Cir.1999)).
Although Thompson maintains his objection at trial was
sufficient to preserve it for appeal, the district court
stated: “Federal courts generally do not assess whether
a state court improperly applied its own procedural law”.
Id. (citing Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 68, 112
S.Ct. 475, 116 L.Ed.2d 385 (1991)). The district court
held, alternatively, that, even if the merits were
reached, Thompson had not shown the testimony made his
trial unfair so as to entitle him to habeas relief. Id.
(citing Little v. Johnson, 162 F.3d 855, 862 (5th
Cir.1998) (“In habeas actions, this court does not sit
to review the mere admissibility of evidence under state
law.”); Shaw v. Estelle, 686 F.2d 273, 275 (5th
Cir.1982)).
4.
Last, Thompson seeks a COA for each
of the following eight contentions that he received
ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC) under the Sixth
Amendment from his trial counsel: (1) consenting to the
dismissal of a prospective juror; (2) being absent
during the voir dire of a prospective juror; (3)
ignoring available defensive strategies, including
failing to obtain and introduce favorable expert
testimony or introduce Butler's “I had no intent to kill”
statement; (4) failing to request a lesser-included-offense
instruction; (5) failing to investigate and present
mitigating evidence; (6) failing to object to good-character-of-the-victim
evidence; (7) discussing Thompson's extraneous offenses
in closing argument; and (8) misstating the jury's
sentencing duty in his punishment-phase closing argument.
In addition, he seeks a COA on the claim that these
errors cumulatively amount to IAC.
In state court, to make a substantial
IAC showing, Thompson was required to establish both:
(1) his counsel's deficient performance; and (2)
resulting prejudice. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 689, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). Of
course, for habeas review under AEDPA, the state court's
performance and/or prejudice rulings are generally
reviewed only to determine whether the state-court
decision is unreasonable, not whether, in federal court,
petitioner has shown each IAC prong. E.g., Schaetzle v.
Cockrell, 343 F.3d 440, 443-44 (5th Cir.2003). Generally,
as stated, that task must be accomplished in state court.
Id.
In state court, to establish
deficient performance, Thompson had to “show that
counsel's representation fell below an objective
standard of reasonableness”. Strickland, 466 U.S. at
687-88, 104 S.Ct. 2052. Judicial scrutiny of counsel's
performance must be “highly deferential”, and courts
must make every effort “to eliminate the distorting
effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances
of counsel's challenged conduct, and to evaluate the
conduct from counsel's perspective at the time”. Id. at
689, 104 S.Ct. 2052. There is a “strong presumption that
counsel's conduct falls within the wide range of
reasonable professional assistance.” Id. Indeed, “[a]
conscious and informed decision on trial tactics and
strategy cannot be the basis for constitutionally
ineffective assistance of counsel unless it is so ill
chosen that it permeates the entire trial with obvious
unfairness”. Crane v. Johnson, 178 F.3d 309, 314 (5th
Cir.1999) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
In state court, to establish
prejudice, Thompson had to “show that there is a
reasonable probability that, but for counsel's
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
would have been different. A reasonable probability is a
probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome”. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S.Ct. 2052.
a.
First, Thompson seeks a COA for his
claim that his counsel's failure to object to the
dismissal of a prospective juror was IAC. After the
State and defense counsel agreed to dismiss this
potential juror, who would have had to withdraw from her
college classes in order to serve on the jury, Thompson
told the trial court he agreed with the potential
juror's dismissal.
On direct appeal, the TCCA ruled: in
the light of Thompson's consenting to the potential
juror's dismissal, Thompson failed to show his counsel's
agreement was “deficient performance, much less
prejudicial performance”. Thompson, 2003 WL 21466925, at
*3. The district court denied relief, noting Thompson
did not contest his consent to the dismissal. Thompson,
No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007).
b.
Second, Thompson seeks a COA for his
claim that his counsel's absence during the State's voir
dire of a prospective juror constituted IAC. As evidence
of his counsel's absence, he cites the State's saying,
“You met Mr. Greenlee [defense counsel] and Connie [defense
co-counsel] and Casey [co-prosecutor] yesterday. They're
out right now, but they'll be back in”. Defense counsel
conducted his voir dire of that juror immediately
following the State's.
On direct appeal, the TCCA denied
this claim because “the record does not support the
contention that both defense counsel missed [the] voir
dire ”. Thompson, 2003 WL 21466925, at *3. It declared
the State's statement ambiguous and cited the lack of
other evidence indicating their absence. Id.
In denying relief, the district court
found Thompson “made no effort to substantiate his claim
that trial counsel ‘abandoned’ him during jury selection”.
Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007). Thus, Thompson
failed to refute the state court's findings by the
requisite clear and convincing evidence. In addition, he
makes no attempt to do so here.
c.
Third, Thompson seeks a COA for his
IAC claim that his right to counsel was violated by his
trial counsel's failure to investigate, prepare, or
employ a successful strategy, as reflected by his
failure to: (1) obtain or introduce favorable
psychiatric testimony; or (2) introduce Butler's
statement that he (Butler) did not intend to kill the
victim and urge Thompson's innocence due to Butler's
lacking that intent.
At trial, counsel chose not to
present expert testimony on Thompson's future
dangerousness, explaining to the trial court that the
appointed expert's opinion, based on Thompson's
statements to her, was unfavorable. During state-habeas
proceedings, Thompson's trial counsel submitted an
affidavit to that effect (“the psychiatric evaluation
... was anything but mitigating”). That affidavit also
explained that the failure to introduce Butler's
statement at trial was also a strategic decision (“nothing
in [Butler's] statement caused me to change my overall
defensive strategy, because they planned the robberies
and brought guns”).
i.
For the failure to introduce expert
testimony, raised in the state-habeas proceedings, the
TCCA found: [T]he trial court granted defense counsels'
... motion for an independent psychiatric evaluation of
[Thompson].... [That expert] evaluated [Thompson] ...
and [Thompson] admitted to [her] that he committed
robberies and that he would continue the same course of
action if he were given a gun.... [The expert]
considered [Thompson] a sociopath who cared only for his
aunt and had no respect for others' lives.... [D]efense
counsel elected not to present the testimony of [that
expert] because her testimony was not beneficial to the
defense.... [D]efense counsels' punishment strategy was
to demonstrate ... that [Thompson's] age and lack of
criminal record was sufficiently mitigating to warrant
an affirmative answer to the third special issue. Ex
parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 551 (adopting state-habeas
trial court's findings of fact and conclusions of law).
The TCCA ruled this performance was not deficient or
prejudicial, noting “counsels' voir dire and trial
strategy were not premised on the results of [Thompson's]
psychiatric evaluation”. Id.
Thompson contends counsel should have
learned the expert's opinion before the eve of trial, in
order for a different expert to be retained. The
district court denied relief, finding: “The record
defeats any inference that, even if trial counsel had [the
expert's] opinion before trial, it would have changed
the defensive strategy”. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30
Nov. 2007). Thompson provides no evidence that another
expert's opinion would have differed. He challenges
these rulings by urging only: the court cannot know
counsel's strategy would have remained the same if the
expert's unfavorable opinion had been learned sooner.
There is no support in the record for this proposition,
which is, in fact, rebutted by trial counsel's affidavit.
Nor does the record support that the expert's opinion
was not learned until the eve of trial.
ii.
Trial counsel's failure to introduce
Butler's statement (that Butler did not intend to kill
the victim) was raised in Thompson's state-habeas
petition. As discussed above, Thompson could have been
found guilty even if Butler did not intend to kill the
victim. See Tex. Penal Code § 7.02(a)(1) (if he intended
to kill and aided Butler's shooting), (b) (if he
conspired to commit aggravated robbery and the death was
a consequence he should have anticipated); Ex parte
Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 552-54.
Based on trial counsel's affidavit,
the TCCA found: “[Trial counsel] made a strategic choice
not to argue that the shooting ... was unintentional,
even though he had reviewed co-defendant Butler's
statement, because counsel found the stronger course of
action was to argue that [Thompson] should not have
anticipated Butler's shooting”. Ex parte Thompson, 179
S.W.3d at 551 (adopting state-habeas trial court's
findings of fact and conclusions of law). It held
Thompson failed to show deficient performance or
prejudice, stating: “[T]hat another attorney might have
pursued [a] different strategy will not support a
finding of ineffective assistance of counsel”. Id.
The district court ruled: “The
evidence strongly supported the conclusion that Thompson
intended to kill, regardless of Butler's intent.
Thompson has not shown that the state court's conclusion
that trial counsel did not provide ineffective
assistance was contrary to, or an unreasonable
application of, federal law”. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148
(30 Nov. 2007).
Thompson contests that his counsel
chose not to introduce the statement because it
reinforced that the men planned the robberies and
supported an inference that they intended to kill, as
trial counsel stated in his affidavit. Thompson contends
that counsel “failed to understand the significance of [Butler's]
statement or simply failed to pursue it in a timely way”.
Thompson also urges that discovery should have been
permitted by the district court “[t]o resolve a
potential dispute over the use of [Butler's] statement”.
As explained above, Thompson's motions for factual
development failed to, inter alia, convey what
“potential dispute” exists that could entitle him to
relief; and the denial of discovery was not an abuse of
discretion.
d.
Fourth, Thompson seeks a COA for his
claim that his trial counsel's failure to object to
evidence of the victim's good character deprived him of
his Sixth Amendment right to effective counsel. During
the guilt-innocence phase of his trial, witnesses
testified that both store clerks were nice, good people;
and that the victim had shielded a bystander from
bullets during the robbery.
On direct appeal, the TCCA noted the
failure to object “may have been strategic”. Thompson,
2003 WL 21466925, at *6. In denying the claim, it ruled
Thompson had not shown the evidence was inadmissible or
that a successful objection would have affected his
trial's outcome. Id.
The district court held: although
Thompson cited Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 111
S.Ct. 2597, 115 L.Ed.2d 720 (1991), for the proposition
that “a victim's general character should not be an
issue in a trial, especially in guilt innocence”,
Thompson had not shown how his counsel could have
excluded this testimony. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30
Nov. 2007).
Thompson asserts the evidence is
inadmissible under Payne because this is an
extraordinary circumstance where his character should
not be compared to the victim's, because he did not
shoot the victim. Payne dealt, however, with character
evidence introduced during the sentencing phase of a
trial, and held such evidence may be relevant and
admissible as to the jury's decision. Payne, 501 U.S. at
827, 111 S.Ct. 2597. It also states: “In the event that
evidence is introduced that is so unduly prejudicial
that it renders the trial fundamentally unfair, the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides a
mechanism for relief”. Id. at 825, 111 S.Ct. 2597.
Thompson has made no showing that this testimony
rendered his trial fundamentally unfair.
e.
Fifth, Thompson seeks a COA for his
claim that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing
to request an instruction on felony murder, forcing the
jury to convict him of an offense more serious than he
committed or set him free, in violation of his due-process
rights under Beck v. Alabama, 447 U.S. 625, 100 S.Ct.
2382, 65 L.Ed.2d 392 (1980) (holding death penalty is
unconstitutional where evidence supported a lesser-included
offense on which the jury was not instructed). Thompson
makes no effort, however, to show the jury could have
found he was guilty of felony, rather than capital,
murder. As noted, the jury was instructed it could find
Thompson guilty of capital murder if he: (1)
specifically intended to kill, and did kill, the victim
during the robbery; (2) intended to kill the victim by “soliciti[ing],
encourag[ing], direct[ing], aid[ing], or attempt[ing] to
aid” Butler's shooting him; or (3) conspired with Butler
to commit the robbery and Butler's shooting the victim
“was committed in furtherance of the conspiracy and was
an offense that [Thompson] should have [ ] anticipated”.
See Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d at 552.
This claim was denied on direct
appeal, the TCCA ruling that Thompson had not shown a
reasonable probability of a different outcome, had the
lesser-offense instruction been requested. Thompson,
2003 WL 21466925, at *4-5. It expressed no opinion on
whether counsel's performance was deficient (noting the
absence of an affidavit from him) or whether the
evidence at trial entitled Thompson to such an
instruction. Id. at *5.
On state-habeas review, the State
introduced Thompson's trial counsel's earlier-discussed
affidavit stating that, in the light of the evidence of
Thompson's conduct and confessions, counsel decided not
to challenge the State's evidence of Thompson's intent
to kill or to request an instruction on unintentional
murder because such an instruction was not supported by
the evidence. The TCCA ordered supplemental briefing on
this claim.
In its subsequent opinion, the TCCA
noted that the claim was denied on direct appeal because
the direct-appeal record did not contain “sufficient
information concerning trial counsel's strategy”, but
that the state-habeas record did. Ex parte Thompson, 179
S.W.3d at 557. The TCCA held Thompson's counsel was not
ineffective because, considering the evidence at trial,
Thompson was not entitled to a felony-murder instruction.
Id. at 558-60. It ruled: Thompson “fails to point to any
evidence that affirmatively shows [Thompson] did not
intend the death of [the victim] or another”; and the
evidence of his “intent to kill is not merely sufficient,
it is overwhelming”. Id. at 559. It also noted that, if
Thompson's counsel had challenged the evidence of his
intent to kill, “the State would presumably walk right
through that door with the evidence of two extraneous
capital murders [Thompson] committed to prove that he
had a murderous intent on this occasion just as he had
on those two other occasions”. Id. at 560.
The district court, after reviewing
Texas law, trial counsel's affidavit, and the TCCA's
decision, agreed. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov.
2007). It ruled: “Trial counsel made a strategic
decision not to seek a felony murder instruction. The [TCCA's]
affirming of that decision is amply supported. There is
no basis for relief....” Id. Here, Thompson fails to
point to evidence that could show he lacked the intent
to kill, or otherwise demonstrate his entitlement to
such an instruction.
f.
Sixth, Thompson seeks a COA on his
IAC claim that his counsel's failure to investigate and
present mitigating evidence for the punishment phase of
trial violated his Sixth Amendment right under Wiggins
v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 123 S.Ct. 2527, 156 L.Ed.2d 471
(2003). Two affidavits attached to his federal habeas
petition (from his mother and grandmother) and four
filed with his subsequent request for a stay (from
family and friends) attest to his difficult childhood
and good character. Thompson asserts this claim was
presented to the state courts, without the six
affidavits, as part of his IAC-for-failure-to-investigate
claim in state-habeas proceedings. This claim also
appears to have been included on direct appeal, as part
of his IAC-in-the-punishment-phase claim (discussed in
the next subpart).
In the alternative, he contends the
district court erred by denying his request for a stay
so that he could exhaust this claim in state court.
Again, a denial of such a stay is reviewed for abuse of
discretion. Brewer v. Johnson, 139 F.3d 491, 492-93 (5th
Cir.1998) (citations omitted). A stay should only be
granted if: (1) the petitioner had good cause for his
failure to exhaust; (2) his claim is not plainly
meritless; and (3) he has not engaged in an intentional
delay. See, e.g., Rhines v. Weber, 544 U.S. 269, 277-78,
125 S.Ct. 1528, 161 L.Ed.2d 440 (2005). The district
court noted Thompson made none of those showings.
Thompson does not explain why he did not file his motion
for a stay until several months after filing his federal
habeas petition. Thus, the district court did not abuse
its discretion in denying a stay.
The state-habeas trial court made the
following, above-quoted findings with regard to his IAC-for-failure-to-investigate
claim: [T]he trial court granted defense counsels' ...
motion for an independent psychiatric evaluation of [Thompson]....
[That doctor] evaluated [Thompson] ... and [Thompson]
admitted to [her] that he committed robberies and that
he would continue the same course of action if he were
given a gun.... [The doctor] considered [Thompson] a
sociopath who cared only for his aunt and had no respect
for others' lives.... [D]efense counsel elected not to
present the testimony of [that doctor] because her
testimony was not beneficial to the defense.... [D]efense
counsels' punishment strategy was to demonstrate ...
that [Thompson's] age and lack of criminal record was
sufficiently mitigating to warrant an affirmative answer
to the third special issue. Ex parte Thompson, 179 S.W.3d
at 551 (adopting state-habeas trial court's findings of
fact and conclusions of law).
The district court noted Thompson:
“never presented this claim in state court” and
“concedes that ‘any subsequent state-habeas writ would
likely be dismissed [as successive] under the state's
... abuse of the writ doctrine’ ”. Thompson, No.
4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007). Thus, the claim is
unexhausted and would be procedurally barred. Id.; see
also Hughes v. Quarterman, 530 F.3d 336, 342 (5th
Cir.2008) (explaining claim must be first considered by
state courts, and its dismissal under the abuse of the
writ doctrine is an independent and adequate state
ground for denial that procedurally bars it from federal
habeas review) (citations omitted).
Nevertheless, the district court
proceeded to consider the merits of the claim. Thompson,
No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007). It found that trial
counsel was familiar with Thompson's background, and
that three defense witnesses testified to Thompson's
good character and living with relatives while his
parents were incarcerated. Id. It also noted that trial
counsel's affidavit, presented by the State during state-habeas
proceedings, stated: “there simply was not much in the
way of mitigation to provide” and “Mr. Thompson did not
want [his attorneys] to present any evidence in the way
of mitigation”. Id. It noted Thompson did not contradict
his trial counsel's statement that he did not want his
attorneys to introduce mitigating evidence, and, thus,
could not show deficient performance. Id. Further, in
the light of the earlier-described six new affidavits,
it held Thompson had not shown “a reasonable probability
of a different result had counsel adopted [Thompson's]
proposed punishment phase strategy”. Id.
As in district court, Thompson makes
no effort to overcome the procedural bar or contest his
trial counsel's affidavit. He instead urges the district
court erred in ruling he did not show a reasonable
probability that his mitigation evidence would have
affected his sentence.
g.
Seventh, Thompson requests a COA on
whether his trial counsel's failure to object to the
admission of “the many extraneous offenses that the
State was intent on introducing at [the] punishment”
phase constituted IAC. The State's punishment-phase
evidence showed Thompson confessed to committing two
other murders during four similar aggravated robberies (with
Butler, during the week preceding the victim's death).
Thompson's counsel objected,
initially and unsuccessfully, to the admission of
Thompson's confessions on the basis that they were not
voluntary. Thompson maintained on direct appeal that the
confessions were admitted without objection, because
counsel's original objections (voluntary intoxication)
were abandoned at the pre-trial hearing on admissibility.
During the punishment-phase of trial, counsel did not
dispute the truthfulness of Thompson's confessions,
instead characterizing Thompson's conduct as an
aberration in an otherwise law-abiding life. The jury
was instructed to consider the other offenses “only if
the extraneous crime or bad act has been shown by the
State beyond a reasonable doubt to have been committed
by [Thompson]”.
This issue was raised on direct
appeal and in state-habeas proceedings, in the context
of whether this failure, coupled with counsel's stating
that the jury could consider the extraneous offenses,
lowered the State's burden of proof so as to constitute
IAC. See Thompson, 2003 WL 21466925, at *6-7. The TCCA
ruled, on direct appeal: Thompson failed to establish
either deficient or prejudicial performance. Id. at *7.
The district court determined that,
under AEDPA, the state-court decision was not
unreasonable because Thompson confessed to the
extraneous offenses and provided no basis to challenge
the admission of evidence to prove his involvement in
them. Thompson, No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007). Thompson
urges: even though he admitted to committing these
offenses, his counsel should have requested a hearing to
determine beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed
them and minimize or factually challenge them during the
punishment phase. He cites no authority for this
proposition.
h.
Eighth, Thompson seeks a COA on his
IAC claim that his co-counsel's closing during the
punishment phase lowered the State's burden of proof on
the second special issue. That issue required the jury
to find Thompson “actually caused the death ... [or]
intended to kill [the victim] or another or that he
anticipated that a human life would be taken”. His co-counsel,
in closing, rephrased it this way: “that he's
responsible for this killing in some kind of way”.
The TCCA denied relief on this claim
on direct appeal, ruling: co-counsel's statement was not
deficient performance because, “[a]bsent evidence to the
contrary, we must presume that counsel strategically
decided to avert attention from the second special issue”.
Thompson, 2003 WL 21466925, at *7. It noted the jury was
instructed according to Texas law.
On state-habeas, the TCCA noted this
issue “need not be considered” because it had been
decided on direct appeal, and held, in any event, that
Thompson failed to show “deficient performance, much
less harm”, from the alleged error. Ex parte Thompson,
179 S.W.3d at 551 (adopting state-habeas trial court's
findings of fact and conclusions of law).
The district court found: co-counsel's
statement would not have lowered the burden of proof or
changed the jury's special-issues verdict because the
jury's instructions properly tracked Texas law. Thompson,
No. 4:06-CV-148 (30 Nov. 2007).
i.
Finally, Thompson requests a COA on
whether these eight claimed errors constitute IAC if
considered cumulatively. He also relies on one of his
trial counsel's “extensive disciplinary history”, as
presented in his state-habeas petition.
Thompson did not present this
cumulative-error issue in his COA request in district
court. Along that line, as discussed supra, before this
court can consider a COA request ( i.e., determine
whether reasonable jurists could debate the district
court's decision), a COA for that issue must have been
denied by the district court. See, e.g., Brewer v.
Quarterman, 466 F.3d 344, 346 (5th Cir.2006), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 128 S.Ct. 63, 169 L.Ed.2d 52
(2007); Whitehead v. Johnson, 157 F.3d 384, 388 (5th
Cir.1998). In other words, “lack of a ruling on a COA in
the district court causes this court to be without
jurisdiction to consider” a COA belatedly requested here.
Sonnier v. Johnson, 161 F.3d 941, 946 (5th Cir.1998) (citation
omitted).