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.
Gerald Wayne
TIGNER Jr.
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Drugs
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: 1992 / 1993
Date
of arrest:
September 1,
1993
Date of birth:
December 27,
1972
Victims profile: Bobby Ray Harris (former boyfriend of Tigner's mother) / Michael Watkins, 32, and
James Williams, 22
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: McLennan County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on March 7,
2002
Summary:
On Aug. 31, 1993, while out on bail for a separate murder indictment,
Tigner was driving with friends, when they came upon a car being
driven by Michael Watkins and James Williams.
Tigner signaled to make a loop around the block, and when they did,
Tigner got out of the vehicle and approached Watkins and Williams.
The conversation turned for the worse and Tigner started yelling at
them and then began firing a gun into the car.
As the car rolled away, Tigner walked alongside and continued to
fire his gun at Watkins and Williams. Having run out of ammunition,
Tigner then went back to the truck, retrieved another gun and
returned to the car.
On the way back to the car, Tigner stopped by Watkins, who had
fallen out of the car and was attempting to crawl away. Tigner
straddled him and shot him in the head. Both Watkins and Williams
died from the gunshot wounds.
Watkins suffered 10 gunshot wounds, including two to the head, and
Williams received seven gunshot wounds, including four to the head.
Tigner confessed to the murders and two eyewitnesses identified him
as being the person who shot William and Watkins.
The prosecution described the murders as a drug-related robbery
attempt. Tigner claimed he killed the two men in self defense.
Tigner also confessed to the killing of his mother's boyfriend,
Bobby Ray Harris, a crime for which he was out on bond, but claimed
that it also was self-defense.
Tigner's first death sentence was vacated on appeal due to the
failure of prosecutors to give Tigner a copy of his taped confession
in the time prescribed by law. He was retried, convicted, and again
sentenced to death in 1997.
Final Meal:
Fried chicken, French fries with ketchup, two cheeseburgers (all the
way), bag of potato chips, apple cobbler, white cake with white
icing, pitcher of lemonade, pitcher of Sprite.
Final Words:
"I got convicted on a false confession because I never admitted to
it, but my lawyer did not put this out to the jury. I did not kill
those drug dealers."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Wednesday, March 6,
2002
Gerald Wayne Tigner Scheduled to
be Executed.
AUSTIN - Texas Attorney General John Cornyn offers the following information on
Gerald Wayne Tigner, who is scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. on
Thursday, March 7, 2002.
On March 5, 1997, Gerald Wayne Tigner was
sentenced to death for the capital murders of Michael Watkins and
James Williams in Waco, Texas, on Aug. 31, 1993. A summary of the
evidence presented at trial follows:
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On Aug. 31, 1993, while out on bail for a
separate murder indictment, Gerald Wayne Tigner shot and killed two
men on a suburban street in Waco, Texas.
The facts indicate that at
about 5:00 p.m., Tigner was driving with his friend Guan Scott and
Guan's brother, Timothy Scott. They came upon a car being driven by
Michael Watkins and James Williams.
Tigner signaled them to make a
loop around the block, and when they did, Tigner and Guan got out of
the vehicle and approached Watkins and Williams.
When the conversation turned for the worse,
Tigner started yelling at them and then began firing a gun into the
car.
As the car rolled away, Tigner walked alongside and continued
to fire his gun at Watkins and Williams. Having run out of
ammunition, Tigner then went back to the truck, retrieved another
gun and returned to the car.
On the way back to the car, Tigner
stopped by Watkins, who had fallen out of the car and was attempting
to crawl away. Tigner straddled him and shot him in the head.
Both Watkins and Williams died from the gunshot
wounds. Watkins suffered 10 gunshot wounds, including two to the
head, and Williams received seven gunshot wounds, including four to
the head. After the shooting, Tigner returned to the truck and drove
away.
Tigner was arrested the next day. Two days after
his arrest, Sept. 3, 1993, Tigner signed a five-page written
statement regarding the double murder. On Sept. 8, 1993, while still
in custody, Tigner gave a tape recorded statement.
At trial, in addition to Tigner's confessions,
the State presented two eyewitnesses, Roy Darden and Timothy Scott,
who identified Tigner as being the person who shot William and
Watkins.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Tigner was twice convicted and sentenced to death
for the 1993 murders of Michael Watkins and James Williams.
On Sept. 29, 1993, Tigner was indicted for the
offense of capital murder. Tigner's 1994 trial resulted in a
conviction for capital murder and a sentence of death, but was
overturned on direct appeal on a procedural violation--the State
failed to provide the defense a copy of Tigner's audio-taped
confession at least 20 days before trial.
On retrial in 1997, Tigner was again found guilty
of capital murder and sentenced to death. Tigner's conviction and
sentence were automatically appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals, which upheld the judgment and sentence in an unpublished
opinion dated April 28, 1999. Tigner did not file a petition for
writ of certiorari in the United States Supreme Court.
Tigner filed an application for state writ of
habeas corpus on Aug. 24, 1999. The state habeas court issued
findings of fact and conclusions of law recommending that relief be
denied. After determining that the findings were supported by the
record, the Court of Criminal Appeals denied habeas relief on Sept.
29, 1999.
Tigner initiated habeas corpus proceedings in
federal district court on Feb. 9, 2000. The district court entered
final judgment denying habeas relief on Feb. 28, 2001. Appeal to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit followed.
On Aug. 28, 2001, the Fifth Circuit upheld the
district court's judgment denying Tigner habeas relief. Tigner's
subsequent motion for rehearing was denied on Sept. 28, 2001.
On Dec. 20, 2001, Tigner filed a petition for
certiorari review in the Supreme Court challenging the Fifth
Circuit's denial of relief, which was denied on Feb. 25, 2002.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
Tigner's criminal history is documented with crimes of increasing
severity ranging from a 1989 burglary when he was 16 years of age;
to convictions for criminal mischief, terroristic threats and
evading the police at age 18; to committing murder at age 19, and
ultimately committing capital murder at age 20.
In January 1990, Tigner was granted probation in
a juvenile hearing for a burglary offense that occurred in August
1989, when Tigner was 16 years old.
In January 1992, Tigner was convicted on a charge
of criminal mischief and given a suspended sentence plus probation.
Tigner's record also reflects a January 1992
conviction for making a terroristic threat, which resulted in a
suspended sentence and probation.
Another January 1992 conviction for evading
detention resulted in a suspended sentence and probation.
On Dec. 5, 1992, Tigner confessed to the murder
of Bobby Harris. Tigner shot Harris three times on the front lawn of
Tigner's house.
Texas Execution Information
Center by David Carson
Txexecutions.org
Gerald Wayne Tigner Jr., 29, was executed by
lethal injection on 7 March in Huntsville, Texas for murdering two
men during a robbery.
In August 1993, Tigner, then 20, and two other
men were driving in a Waco suburb in Tigner's truck. With Tigner
were his friend, Guan Scott, 21, and Scott's brother, Timothy, who
was behind the wheel.
When Tigner saw Michael Watkins, 32, and James
Williams, 22, driving in another car, he and Guan Scott got out of
the vehicle and approached them.
The men got into an argument, and Tigner fired
shots from two guns into the car. When he ran out of ammunition,
Tigner went back to his truck, got another gun, and returned to
Watkins and Williams' car. As he returned, he passed by Watkins, who
had fallen out of the car and was attempting to crawl away.
According to witnesses, Tigner straddled him and
shot him in the head. Tigner then returned to his truck and drove
away. Michael Watkins suffered ten gunshot wounds, including two to
the head. James Williams suffered seven gunshot wounds, including
four to the head. Both died at the scene. Police found cocaine in
the car.
Tigner was arrested the next day. He signed a 5-page
written confession, then later gave a tape-recorded confession.
In his confessions, Tigner described the weapons
he used, which were three pistols of different calibers -- 9 mm,
.38, and .22. These calibers were later confirmed by ballistics
investigation. Guan Scott, who had a previous conviction for
delivery of cocaine and was on parole at the time of the killings,
was killed in an unrelated shooting before Tigner's trial.
At Tigner's trial, Timothy Scott testified that
Tigner was the shooter. The state also presented an eyewitness, Roy
Darden, who identified Tigner as the shooter. The prosecution
described the murders as a drug-related robbery attempt.
Tigner
claimed he killed the two men in self defense. Tigner had a criminal
history dating to at least 1989, when he was 16 and was charged with
burglary. He was convicted as a juvenile and given probation.
In
1992, he was convicted of three more offenses, for which he received
suspended sentences and probation. Tigner also used the aliases
Gerald Tigmon, Jerry Lewis, and Tony Simmons.
In December 1992, Tigner confessed to the murder
of Bobby Ray Harris, a former boyfriend of Tigner's mother. Tigner
shot Harris three times on the front lawn of Tigner's house. Tigner
confessed to killing Harris, but said he shot him in self-defense
after Harris burst into his house. Tigner was indicted for Harris's
murder and was free on bond when Michael Watkins and James Williams
were killed.
Tigner was convicted by a jury of capital murder
and sentenced to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals vacated
the conviction because the state had failed to provide the defense
with a copy of Tigner's taped confession within the time prescribed
by law.
Tigner was retried in 1997 and was again convicted by a jury
and sentenced to death. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed his
conviction and sentence in April 1999. All of his other appeals in
state and federal court were denied.
Tigner later claimed that his confessions were
false and that he was not even at the crime scene when the murders
happened. "I was not there. I was at home with my family," he said
in a death-row interview. He said that Guan Scott was the killer.
Tigner's attorneys had asked the courts for DNA
testing of blood found on Tigner's shoes, contending that if the
blood was not from the victims, it would prove Tigner was not at the
scene.
The courts were not persuaded of this reasoning and did not
authorize DNA testing. "I was wrongfully convicted of this crime,"
Tigner said in his final statement. "I got convicted on a false
confession because I never admitted to it, but my lawyer did not
point this out to the jury. I did not kill those drug dealers."
Tigner then expressed love to his family and friends.
The lethal injection was then administered, and
Tigner was pronounced dead at 6:21 p.m.
ProDeathPenalty.com
Gerald Wayne Tigner, once described by a
prosecutor as having a "heart full of scorpions," twice was
convicted and sentenced to die in the August 1993 shooting deaths of
James Williams, 22, and Michael Watkins, 32 in Waco.
Tigner confessed to the slayings, but claimed he
acted in self-defense. With guns blazing in both hands, Tigner shot
Williams 7 times and Watkins 6 times in what prosecutors described
as a drug-related robbery attempt.
At the time of the shootings, Tigner was free on
bond in the December 1992 shooting death of Bobby Ray Harris, a
former boyfriend of Tigner's mother. Tigner also confessed to
killing Harris, saying he shot him in self-defense after Harris
burst into his house and said he was looking for Tigner.
Tigner was convicted in the deaths of Williams
and Watkins in 1994 and spent 2 years on death row before the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals threw out his conviction and awarded him a
new trial.
In overturning his conviction, the Austin court
ruled that prosecutors did not give a copy of Tigner's taped
confession to defense attorneys in the time prescribed by law.
He was retried and convicted again in March 1997.
"Gerald Tigner is a vicious criminal who was a threat and danger to
society and murdered on several occasions, and with the fact that
one more step in the process has now been completed, he is now
closer to the sentence that 2 McLennan County juries believed was
proper," said McLennan County First Assistant District Attorney
Crawford Long, who prosecuted Tigner.
The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Tigner's
2nd conviction in April 1999 in a unanimous decision.
CCADP - Gerald Tigner Homepage
Hello there, My name is Gerald Wayne Tigner and
I'm a death row prisoner on the Polunsky Unit in Livingston, Texas.
I've been on death row struggling for 6 years trying to keep the
hope alive in my heart while I fight the American Justice System,
after my first trial being wrongfully convicted of this crime.
Upon my arrival on death row, just a year and a
half later, my precious mom passed away. Then six months after my
mom, the woman who raise me when I was a little baby, my beautiful
grandmother passed away and ever since then my heart has been broken
and the pain and misery just won't go away. These two family members
was my only support I had in my corner but now they are gone. I feel
lost at times sitting in this death row cell but I know in my mind I
must stay stronmg and keep fighting for my freedom. I am lonely and
I need some friends that would be interested in
writing me so I can share my life and case with them on an
openminded, truthful, down to earth level. My date of birth is
12/27/72 and right now I'm 26 years old, 6'2" tall and 202 lbs.,
slim built with light brown eyes and black hair. Also, I'm a light
skin male African American and my home town is Waco, Texas. My
hobbies are reading, basketball, football, etc. I've been tried
twice and wrongfully convicted both times on the same inadmissable
evidence in Waco trial court.
WHERE IS THE JUSTICE ! ?
Now, I'm on death row wrongfully accused of
killing two black male drug dealers in Waco, Texas. I did not kill
these two drug dealers for the simple fact I was at my grandmother's
house most of the day and during the time these two drug dealers got
killed. My defense at trial was mistaken identity and alibi. My
grandmother testified in my favor that I was with her, at her
residence, during the time of the killings.
In addition, my
grandmother's neighbor Gloria testified in my favor that at the time
of the killings, she too was at my grandmother's residence where she
was introduced to me. And a man at the crime scene testified also in
my favor that he saw another man, "not Gerald Wayne Tigner", do the
shooting.
The Waco District Attorneys use this unbelievable,
inadmissable statement to confuse the jury in my first trial and in
my second trial. That's how I got convicted twice. The erroneous
admission of the statement at trial was damaging because the Waco
District Attorney prosecutors case against Gerald Wayne Tigner was
not otherwise overwhelming and on top of that this erroneously
admitted statement was in violation of Texas Code of Criminal
Procedure, Article 38.22 in the lawbook.
"I'M TOTALLY INNOCENT OF THIS CHARGE!"
Even though I'm forced to face all this
physiological torture mentally and physically on death row, I'm
determined to stay strong and keep my head up. And I thank the good
Lord above for making me this way. It's sad when a poor young man
out of the ghetto has to go to trial with a court appointed lawyer
knowing he's not going to do his best job on a Capital Murder Case.
That's why I am reaching out to the world expressing my true
feelings, my thoughts and this Capital Case they wrongfully accuse
me of in Waco. All I can do is hope and pray your interested in
being my pen-pal friend. So please do not hesitate to write me. Here
is my address below.
Yours Truly, MR GERALD W TIGNER #999099, Polunsky
Unit.
Gerald Wayne Tigner
Waco Tribune-Herald
TEXAS: Gerald Wayne Tigner, once described by a
prosecutor as having a "heart full of scorpions," is one step closer
to the death chamber. U.S. District Judge Walter S. Smith Jr. of
Waco rejected Tigner's application for federal writ of habeas corpus
and denied his motion for an evidentiary hearing.
The judge's ruling puts the appeal of Tigner's
capital murder conviction and death sentence in the hands of the 5th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. If the court denies
his appeal, Tigner will be eligible to have an execution date set by
54th State District Judge George Allen, who presided over his
capital murder trials in Waco. Tigner twice was convicted and
sentenced to die in the August 1993 shooting deaths of James
Williams, 22, and Michael Watkins, 32 in Waco.
Tigner confessed to the slayings, but claimed he
acted in self-defense. With guns blazing in both hands, Tigner shot
Williams 7 times and Watkins 6 times in what prosecutors described
as a drug-related robbery attempt.
At the time of the shootings, Tigner was free on
bond in the December 1992 shooting death of Bobby Ray Harris, a
former boyfriend of Tigner's mother. Tigner also confessed to
killing Harris, saying he shot him in self-defense after Harris
burst into his house and said he was looking for Tigner.
Tigner was convicted in the deaths of Williams
and Watkins in 1994 and spent 2 years on death row before the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals threw out his conviction and awarded him a
new trial. In overturning his conviction, the Austin court ruled
that prosecutors did not give a copy of Tigner's taped confession to
defense attorneys in the time prescribed by law. He was retried and
convicted again in March 1997.
"Gerald Tigner is a vicious criminal who was a
threat and danger to society and murdered on several occasions, and
with the fact that one more step in the process has now been
completed, he is now closer to the sentence that 2 McLennan County
juries believed was proper," said McLennan County First Assistant
District Attorney Crawford Long, who prosecuted Tigner. The Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed Tigner's 2nd conviction in April 1999 in a
unanimous decision.
United States Court of Appeals For the Fifth
Circuit
GERALD WAYNE TIGNER, Petitioner
- Appellant, v.
JANIE COCKRELL, DIRECTOR, TEXAS
DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
INSTITUTIONAL
DIVISION, Respondent - Appellee.
August 28, 2001
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Western
District of Texas
Before EMILIO M. GARZA, STEWART, and
PARKER, Circuit Judges.
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:
Gerald Wayne
Tigner ("Tigner"), a death row inmate, seeks a
certificate of appealability ("COA") to challenge
the district court's denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254
habeas corpus petition. Tigner has failed to make a
substantial showing of the denial of his
constitutional rights because Supreme Court and
Fifth Circuit precedents foreclose all of his
arguments. We deny the COA.
The case arises
from a violent and fatal altercation on a suburban
street in Waco, Texas. While on bail for a separate
murder indictment, Tigner was driving a truck with
his friend Guan Scott ("Guan") and his brother,
Timothy Scott. As Tigner drove down the street, he
came upon a car being driven by Michael Watkins ("Watkins")
and James Williams ("Williams").
Tigner signaled
for Watkins and Williams to turn around the block,
which they did. Tigner and Guan got out of the truck
and approached the car to talk to its occupants. For
reasons unclear from the appellate record, the
conversation turned for the worse. Tigner started
yelling at Williams and then began shooting his gun
into the car. As the car rolled away, Tigner walked
alongside it and continued to fire his gun at
Watkins and Williams.
When Tigner ran
out of bullets, he went back to his truck to
retrieve another gun and returned to the car. At
this point, Watkins had fallen out of the car and
was crawling away. As Watkins lay on the ground,
Tigner shot him in the head. Tigner then fled the
scene. Both Watkins and Williams died from the
gunshot wounds. Watkins suffered ten gun shot wounds,
including two to the head, while Williams had seven
gun shot wounds, including four head wounds.
The next day, law
enforcement officials arrested Tigner, who later
confessed to the shootings. At trial, two
eyewitnesses testified that Tigner was the gunman
who shot Williams and Watkins. A jury convicted
Tigner of murder.
At the punishment
phase of the trial, the state presented numerous
witnesses, including a Special Crimes Unit officer
who testified that Tigner had a "dangerous and
violent" reputation, and a municipal court judge who
said that Tigner had threatened to "get even with
him later."
Another state
witness was Dr. James Grigson, a psychiatrist who
testified that Tigner had an anti-social personality
disorder and represented a continuing danger in the
future. Tigner introduced his own witnesses as well,
offering statements from his mother and grandmother.
Ultimately, the
jury sentenced Tigner to death, finding that he
posed a future threat to society. Tigner
unsuccessfully sought post-conviction relief from
the state courts. He then filed a petition for a
writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, which
the federal district court denied.
A prisoner seeking
review of a district court's denial of his habeas
petition must first obtain a COA. In his petition
for a COA, Tigner makes two arguments. First, he
claims that the state trial court violated his
Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by refusing
to tell the jury that he would have been ineligible
for parole for 35 years had he been given a life
sentence. Second, he argues that Dr. Grigson's
testimony that he would pose as a future threat to
society deprived him of due process.
The Anti-Terrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act ("AEDPA") governs
this case because Tigner filed his COA after AEDPA's
effective date of April 24, 1996. See Green v.
Johnson, 116 F.3d 1115, 1119-1120 (5th Cir. 1997).
In determining whether to grant a COA, we must see
if the prisoner has made a "substantial showing of
the denial of a constitutional right." 28 U.S.C. §
2253(c)(2); see Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473,
554,120 S. Ct. 1595, 1603, 146 L. Ed. 2d 542 (2000).
To demonstrate a substantial showing of the denial
of a constitutional right, a prisoner must show that
the "issues are debatable among jurists of reason."
Hill v. Johnson, 210 F.3d 481, 484 (5th Cir. 2000).
* A
Tigner argues that
the state trial court violated his Fourteenth
Amendment due process rights by failing to instruct
the jury that, if given a life sentence, he would
not be eligible for parole for 35 years. At the time
of the his trial, Texas law barred judges from
instructing juries on parole possibility in capital
cases, but allowed such instructions in non-capital
felony cases.
Tigner claims that
the information regarding his 35-year parole
ineligibility was relevant to the jury's calculus of
his potential future dangerousness: had the jurors
known that he would remain incarcerated for at least
35 years, they might have opted to give him a life
sentence instead of the death penalty.
Both the United
States Supreme Court and the Fifth Circuit have
already considered and rejected such a Fourteenth
Amendment due process challenge. As a general rule,
states have the freedom to formulate the type of
jury instructions given in state trials. See
California v. Ramos, 463 U.S. 992, 1000, 103 S. Ct.
3446,3452-3453, 77 L. Ed. 2d 1171 (1983) ("The
deference we owe to the decisions of the state
legislatures under our federal system . . . is
enhanced where the specification of punishments is
concerned, for 'these are peculiarly questions of
legislative policy.'") (internal citations omitted).
The Supreme Court,
however, has carved a narrow exception to the
presumption that states have wide discretion in the
realm of jury instructions. See Simmons v. South
Carolina, 512 U.S. 154, 114 S. Ct. 2187, 129 L. Ed.
2d. 133 (1994). A state must give a jury instruction
regarding parole ineligibility if (1) the state
introduces the defendant's future dangerousness in
asking for the death penalty, and (2) the
alternative sentence to death is life without the
possibility of parole. See id. at 168, 114 S. Ct. at
2196.
Contrary to
Tigner's assertions, Simmons provides no support for
his due process argument. In Simmons, the Supreme
Court expressly held that its ruling does not apply
to Texas, because it does not have a life-without-parole
alternative to capital punishment. See id. at 168
n.8, 114 S. Ct. at 2196 (noting that Texas and North
Carolina do not give juries information about parole
status but explaining that they do not have life-without-parole
alternatives). The harshest alternative to capital
punishment in Texas is a life sentence without the
possibility of parole for 40 years.1
In other words,
Tigner was not entitled to a jury instruction
regarding his 35-year parole ineligibility, because
only prisoners who face life sentence without any
possibility of parole can demand a Simmons
instruction. The Supreme Court recently reiterated
this point: "The parole-ineligibility instruction is
required only when, assuming the jury fixes the
sentence at life, the defendant is ineligible for
parole under state law." Ramdass v. Angelone, 530
U.S. 156, 167, 120 S. Ct. 2113, 2120, 147 L. Ed. 2d
125 (2000) (emphasis added).
Our Circuit has
consistently emphasized that a defendant can receive
a jury instruction regarding parole ineligibility
only if there exists a life-without-possibility-of-parole
alternative to the death penalty an option not
available under Texas law. See, e.g., Wheat v.
Johnson, 238 F.3d 357 (5th Cir. 2001) (holding that
a defendant was not entitled to a Simmons
instruction because he faced an alternative sentence
with the possibility of parole 40 years later).
To the extent that
Tigner claims that this court should nevertheless
rule that he was entitled to a Simmons instruction,
such an argument is barred by the Teague non-retroactivity
principle. See Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S.
Ct. 1060, 103 L.Ed. 2d 334 (1989) (holding that new
rules of constitutional criminal law will not be
announced or applied on collateral review). We have
repeatedly held that an extension of the scope of
Simmons will constitute a "new" rule under Teague.
See, e.g., Wheat, 238 F.3d at 361-62.
B
Tigner also claims
that the failure to give the jury instruction
violated the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against
cruel and unusual punishment. He correctly points
out that the Supreme Court in Simmons declined to
state whether the Eighth Amendment might compel a
different result. See Simmons, 512 U.S. at 162, n.4,
114 S. Ct. at 2193. But the Fifth Circuit has held
that neither the due process clause nor the Eighth
Amendment requires a state court to give jury
instructions regarding parole ineligibility in
Texas. See, e.g., Johnson v. Scott, 68 F.3d 106, 112
(5th Cir. 1995).
C
Finally, Tigner
maintains that Texas' sentencing scheme at the time
of his conviction violated the Fourteenth
Amendment's guarantee of equal protection, because
it treated capital crime defendants differently from
non-capital ones. Specifically, he contends that
Texas law irrationally allowed non-capital
defendants to receive jury instructions regarding
parole ineligibility, while capital defendants could
not demand such an instruction.2
We have previously
considered and rejected this equal protection
argument. We apply a rational basis test in this
case because it does not implicate a suspect
classification or a fundamental right. See Green v.
Johnson, 160 F.3d 1029, 1044 (5th Cir. 1998)
(holding that Texas law does not confer a
fundamental right to parole). Thus, under a rational
basis test, we must uphold a governmental
classification if it rationally promotes a
legitimate government objective. Id.
We have held that
a state could rationally conclude that juries should
not consider parole ineligibility in capital cases
only:
Instructions on
parole eligibility at the punishment phase of
capital murder trials might tempt capital sentence
juries to consider such transitory, but public,
issues as prison overcrowding, the identities of the
membership of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles,
or the recent track record of that Board in
releasing violent offenders, as factors which should
be weighed in reaching their verdict at punishment.
. . . The Texas legislature could rationally
conclude that injection of parole issues at the
punishment phase of capital murder trial would
invite consideration of factors unrelated to the
defendant's blameworthiness. . . .
Id. at 1044 (internal
citations omitted). Tigner acknowledges that our
Circuit has rejected an equal protection challenge
to Texas' sentencing scheme, but he requests that we
reconsider our decision. One circuit panel cannot
overrule another panel's decision. See, e.g., Tucker
v. Johnson, 242 F.3d 617, 621 n.6 (5th Cir. 2001).
II
Tigner
constitutionally challenges the admission of Dr.
James Grigson's expert testimony that he would be a
future threat to society with little hope of
rehabilitation. Dr. Grigson came to this conclusion
without personally interviewing Tigner. This
argument is procedurally barred for the failure to
exhaust state remedies. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b).
At his state trial,
Tigner objected to Dr. Grigson's testimony on
evidentiary grounds only, and not on constitutional
grounds. We will not consider this constitutional
challenge because it was not presented to the Texas
Criminal Court of Criminal Appeals. See Richardson
v. Procunier, 762 F.2d 429 (5th Cir. 1985) (requiring
exhaustion at the highest state court).3
Even if Tigner had
exhausted his state remedies, his constitutional
objection to the admission of Dr. Grigson's
testimony would fail because of Teague's non-retroactivity
principle. Tigner concedes that the Supreme Court
has allowed the admission of expert psychiatric
testimony even in a death penalty case, see Barefoot
v. Estelle, 463 U.S. 880, 904, 103 S. Ct. 3383,
3401, 77 L.Ed. 2d. 1090 (1983), but he responds that
the Court implicitly overruled Barefoot when it
later issued its Daubert standard for the admission
of scientific evidence. See Daubert v. Merrell Dow
Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S. Ct. 2786, 125
L.Ed. 2d 469 (1993). We decline Tigner's invitation
to undercut Barefoot, because to do so on collateral
review would constitute a new rule in violation of
Teague's non-retroactivity principle.4
Tigner's
application for a certificate of appealability is
DENIED.
Texas has now amended the
statute to allow a capital crime defendant to
receive a jury instruction regarding his parole
possibility. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art.
37.071(e)(2)(b) (2001).
The federal district court
noted that Tigner had failed to exhaust his
state remedies, but nevertheless addressed and
rejected the argument on its merits. Although
the district court considered this argument, we
can sua sponte refuse to hear it for the lack of
exhaustion. See Graham v. Johnson, 94 F.3d 958,
970 (5th Cir. 1996).
Judge Garza only reiterates
his belief, as expressed in his special
concurrence in Flores v. Johnson, that a
psychiatrist who predicts a murderer's future
dangerousness without examining him likely runs
afoul of all five Daubert factors. See Flores v.
Johnson, 210 F.3d 456, 464-70 (5th Cir. 2000) (specially
concurring, Garza, J.) (recognizing the "statutory
right to impose death as an appropriate
punishment" but also cautioning that "what
separates the executioner from the murderer is
the legal process by which the state ascertains
and condemns those guilty of heinous crimes.").