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Steven VAN McHONE
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Parricide
Number of victims: 2
Date of murder:
June 3,
1990
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth:
March 23,
1970
Victims profile: Mildred
Johnson Adams, 52 (his mother) and Wesley Dalton Adams Sr.,
52 (his stepfather)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Surry County, North Carolina, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in North Carolina on November
11, 2005
Summary:
Wesley Adams Jr., a Captain in the United States Air Force, and his
family were visiting his father, Wesley Adams Sr., and his
stepmother, Mildred Adams, at their Surry County home.
They went on a fishing trip together and returned to the home, where
Mildred's son, Steven McHone was staying while on probation for some
larceny convictions.
As Wesley Jr. prepared for bed with his wife and 2 year old child,
they overheard a heated agrument between McHone and his parents
about money. A few minutes later, Mildred Adams opened the door to
their bedroom and asked if they had taken the gun from the camper.
As Wesley Jr. got dressed, he heard three gun shots.
When he went into the hallway, he heard Mr. Adams tell Wesley Jr. to
call 911. While he was talking on the telephone with the 911
operator, he turned and saw McHone and Mr. Adams enter the back door.
They were wrestling and McHone had a pistol.
Wesley Jr. immediately
dropped the telephone and disarmed McHone. Wesley Jr. went back to
the telephone and McHone and Mr. Adams began wrestling again. Mr.
Adams and McHone struggled out of the living room and headed down
the hallway, out of Wesley Jr.'s sight.
Approximately a minute later, Mr. Adams reappeared in the kitchen
doorway and said, "Your mother is facedown out back. You have got to
get help for her. Your mother's facedown. I don't know how badly
she's hurt."
As Mr. Adams approached Wesley Jr., McHone came to the doorway
carrying a shotgun. When Mr. Adams realized that McHone was bringing
the gun up into a firing position, aimed at Wesley Jr., he
immediately moved toward McHone, reaching for the gun.
McHone fired
the shotgun into Mr. Adams' chest, and the force of the discharge
threw Mr. Adams into Wesley Jr.'s arms, knocking them both to the
floor and injuring Wesley Jr.'s leg.
After shooting Mr. Adams, McHone raised the gun in the direction of
Wesley Jr. who managed to get up from the floor and take the weapon
from McHone.
When the struggle ended, Wesley Jr. told McHone to stay
down and not to move. McHone began crying and saying, "Oh, my God.
What have I done."
A few minutes later, McHone told Wesley Jr. "Just shoot me. Just get
it over with." "If you don't kill me, I will get out of jail hunt
you down and hunt your family down and finish them off."
Citations:
State v. McHone, 334 N.C. 627, 435 S.E.2d 296 (N.C. 1993) (Direct
Appeal). State v. McHone, 348 N.C. 254, 499 S.E.2d 761 (N.C. 1998) (PCR).
McHone v. Polk, 392 F.3d 691 (4th Cir.) (Habeas)
Final Meal:
Medium-rare Porterhouse steak, steak fries, chocolate cheesecake and
a 20-ounce Mountain Dew.
Final Words:
He issued no last statement, but appeared to say "I'm so sorry" to
half brother Wesley Adams Jr.
ClarkProsecutor.org
North Carolina Department of
Correction
MCHONE, STEVEN V.
DOC Number: 0270047
DOB: 03/23/1970
RACE: WHITE
SEX: MALE
DATE OF SENTENCING: 03/07/1991
COUNTY OF CONVICTION: SURRY COUNTY
FILE#: 90003642
CHARGE: MURDER FIRST DEGREE (PRINCIPAL)
DATE OF CRIME: 06/03/1990
Steven McHone- Chronology of
Events
11/10/2005 - North Carolina Supreme Court vacates
stay of execution.
11/9/2005 - Surry County Superior Court Judge Anderson Cromer stays
the scheduled execution of Steven McHone.
11/9/2005 - Witnesses named for Steven McHone execution.
10/13/2005 - Correction Secretary Theodis Beck sets November 11,
2005 as the execution date for Steven McHone.
10/3/2005 - U.S. Supreme Court denies McHone's petition for a writ
of certiorari.
10/8/1993 - North Carolina Supreme Court confirms McHone's
conviction and sentence of death.
3/7/1991 - Steven McHone sentenced to death in Surry Co. Superior
Court for the murder of Mildred Adams and Wesley Adams Sr.
North Carolina Department of Correction
For Release: IMMEDIATE
Date: November 9, 2005
Witnesses named for Steven Van
McHone execution
RALEIGH - Witnesses have been named for the
execution of Steven Van McHone, scheduled for 2 a.m. on Nov. 11 at
Central Prison
Official Witnesses
Wesley Adams Jr. – Victim's family member
Wendy Adams – Victim's family member
Sara Riddle – Victim's family member
Ivan Johnson – Victim's family member
Jimmy Inman – Surry County sheriff’s deputy (retired)
Ron Perry – SBI district supervisor/special agent (retired)
Media Witnesses
David Ingram – Winston-Salem Journal
Angela Schmoll – Mount Airy News
Estes Thompson – Associated Press, Raleigh
For Release: IMMEDIATE
Contact: Public Affairs Office
Date: Oct 13, 2005
Phone: (919) 716-3700
Execution date set for Steven
Van McHone
RALEIGH - Correction Secretary Theodis Beck has
set Nov. 11, 2005 as the execution date for inmate Steven Van McHone.
The execution is scheduled for 2 a.m. at Central Prison in Raleigh.
McHone, 35, was sentenced to death March 7, 1991
in Surry County Superior Court for the June 1990 murders of Mildred
Johnson Adams and Wesley Dalton Adams Sr.
Central Prison Warden Marvin Polk will explain
the execution procedures during a media tour scheduled for Monday,
November 7 at 10:00 a.m. Interested media representatives should
arrive at Central Prison’s visitor center promptly at 10:00 a.m. on
the tour date. The session will last approximately one hour. The
media tour will be the only opportunity to photograph the execution
chamber and deathwatch area before the execution. Journalists who
plan to attend the tour should contact the Department of Correction
Public Affairs Office at (919) 716-3700 by 5:00 p.m. on Friday, Nov.
4.
ATTENTION EDITORS: A photo of Steven Van McHone
(#0270047) can be obtained by using the "Offender Search" function
on the Department of Correction Web site at www.doc.state.nc.us. For
more information about the death penalty, including selection of
witnesses, click on “The Death Penalty” link.
Stay vacated; killer of 2 is executed
Steven
Van McHone loses final appeals and is put to death for two shootings
By Andrea Weigl - Raleigh News & Observer
Nov 11, 2005
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Steven Van McHone's reprieve
from death by lethal injection lasted a little more than a day. By 4
p.m. Thursday, the N.C. Supreme Court had vacated a stay granted the
day before by a Surry County judge based on the last words of
McHone's mother: "He didn't mean to do it. Don't hurt him."
McHone
had been sentenced to death for the 1990 shootings of his mother and
stepfather. At 9 p.m., the U.S. Supreme Court turned down McHone's
appeal. Gov. Mike Easley denied his clemency petition shortly after
11 p.m.
McHone, 35, was executed at 2 a.m. today at
Raleigh's Central Prison, where death row and the execution chamber
are located.Starting at 10 a.m. Thursday, McHone began having the
first contact visits with his family and friends since he arrived on
death row 14 years ago. At 5 p.m., he sat down to his last meal: a
medium-rare Porterhouse steak, steak fries, chocolate cheesecake and
a 20-ounce Mountain Dew.
At a prayer service at Pullen Memorial Baptist
Church in Raleigh, Rose Clark was among those in attendance before a
candlelit procession down to the prison. Clark's brother Ernest
Basden was executed in December 2002 in a murder-for-hire plot. "I
want to support the family of Steve," Clark said. "They are also the
victims."
Those who had agreed to witness the execution
included McHone's half-brother, Wesley Adams Jr., and sister-in-law,
Wendy Adams, who live outside Dayton, Ohio. The couple had asked
Easley to allow the execution to be carried out. They feared McHone
because, after killing his parents, he threatened to kill the couple
and their 2-year-old son, Alex. In fact, Wesley Adams Jr. disarmed
McHone during a struggle on that June night in 1990.
After a family fishing trip, Mildred Adams, her
husband, Wesley Adams Sr., and other relatives returned to the
couple's Surry County home. Their son, McHone, who was 19 at the
time, was there and started arguing with his mother about money.
McHone had been living at home while on probation for some larceny
convictions.
Mildred Adams told the others a handgun was missing,
and three gunshots were heard a short time later coming from the
back yard. McHone had shot Mildred Adams in the back of the head and
left her face down and injured in the back yard. McHone then found a
shotgun and shot his stepfather, Wesley Adams Sr., inside the house.
The shootings ended when Wesley Adams Jr., took away the gun and
held McHone down until police arrived.
Mildred Adams uttered her last words to a
paramedic who came to her aid after the shootings. The paramedic,
Teresa O. Durham of Sparta, did not mention what was said until the
late 1990s.
McHone's attorneys, Ken Rose and Cynthia Adcock,
convinced Superior Court Judge Anderson Cromer that their client
deserved a hearing based on the newly discovered evidence of his
mother's dying declaration. They say it could have persuaded jurors
to spare his life. Their argument didn't persuade the state Supreme
Court, however, which sided with state prosecutors seeking to have
the death sentence upheld.
Special Deputy Attorney General Valerie B.
Spalding questioned why the paramedic did not note Mildred Adams'
words in her report or tell anyone about the statements for years
after the killings. Spalding also argued that the mother's statement
would have little impact on a jury because she didn't know what
McHone had done after shooting her.
ProDeathPenalty.com
Wesley Adams Jr., a Captain in the United States
Air Force, and his family were visiting in his parents' home in
Surry County, NC. Wendy Adams, Wesley Jr.'s wife and the mother of
two-year-old Alex, testified at trial that on the evening of June 2,
1990, she, Wesley Jr., Alex, and Mr. and Mrs. Adams went on a
fishing trip. Wendy and Wesley Jr. cleaned Mr. Adams' camper prior
to leaving for the trip.
While cleaning the camper they discovered a
handgun. Mrs. Adams explained that the gun was for protection from
animals when camping. The family returned from the fishing trip at
approximately 12:30 a.m. on 3 June 1990.
Steven McHone, who resided with his parents, was
at home when they arrived. Wendy began getting Alex prepared for bed,
and while doing so, she overheard McHone arguing with Mr. and Mrs.
Adams about money.
McHone told them "he wanted his money and he
couldn't go on living like that." Wendy, Wesley Jr., and Alex went
to bed.
Approximately ten or fifteen minutes after they were in bed,
Mrs. Adams opened the door to their room. She asked Wesley Jr. if he
had taken the handgun from the camper. Wesley Jr. said that he had
not moved the gun. Mrs. Adams responded, "then its missing" and she
closed the bedroom door.
Wesley Jr. got up and began to get dressed
so that he could find out why McHone was arguing with his parents.
However, before he left the bedroom, he and Wendy heard three gun
shots.
Wesley Jr. told Wendy "to stay down and keep Alex
covered." He then went out into the hallway to find out what had
happened. Wendy heard someone coming up the basement stairs, then
heard Mr. Adams tell Wesley Jr. to call 911.
Wesley Jr. testified
that while he was talking on the telephone with the 911 operator, he
turned and saw McHone and Mr. Adams enter the back door. They were
wrestling and McHone had a pistol.
Wesley Jr. immediately dropped
the telephone and disarmed McHone. Wesley Jr. went back to the
telephone and McHone and Mr. Adams began wrestling again. Mr. Adams
and McHone struggled out of the living room and headed down the
hallway, out of Wesley Jr.'s sight.
Approximately a minute later, Mr.
Adams reappeared in the kitchen doorway and said, "Your mother is
facedown out back. You have got to get help for her. Your mother's
facedown. I don't know how badly she's hurt."
As Mr. Adams approached Wesley Jr., McHone came
to the doorway carrying a shotgun. When Mr. Adams realized that
McHone was bringing the gun up into a firing position, aimed at
Wesley Jr., he immediately moved toward McHone, reaching for the gun.
McHone fired the shotgun into Mr. Adams' chest, and the force of the
discharge threw Mr. Adams into Wesley Jr.'s arms, knocking them both
to the floor and injuring Wesley Jr.'s leg.
After shooting Mr. Adams, McHone raised the gun
in the direction of Wesley Jr. who managed to get up from the floor
and take the weapon from McHone. When the struggle ended, Wesley Jr.
told McHone to stay down and not to move. McHone began crying and
saying, "Oh, my God. What have I done."
Wesley Jr. turned away from
McHone to see if his wife was safe. McHone then stopped crying and
reached for the shotgun. Wesley Jr. struggled with McHone again, and
was able to keep the weapon from him. McHone suddenly began to curse
Wesley Jr. and told him, "I killed him. Now I want you to kill me,
because I don't want to spend the rest of my life in jail. Just
shoot me. Just get it over with." McHone continued to curse Wesley
Jr. in a very loud voice and stated that Wesley Jr. was gutless and
"if Wesley Jr. didn't kill him and he got out of jail he'd hunt him
down and hunt his family down and finish them off."
A member of the first response team organized by
the volunteer fire service testified that when he arrived at the
Adams residence Mr. Adams was lying on the kitchen floor. He
determined that Mr. Adams had a large chest wound and he did not
have a pulse. Another member of the first response team found Mrs.
Adams on the ground in the backyard. She appeared to have been shot
in the back of the head, but she was still alive. Mrs. Adams later
died from the gunshot wound.
A Deputy Sheriff with the Surry County Sheriff's
Department arrived at the crime scene shortly after 2:00 a.m. When
the officer entered the house, McHone yelled, "Why did I do it? What
have I done?"
McHone was taken outside and placed in the patrol car.
The officer smelled alcohol on defendant's breath. At trial, the
officer testified that a person is drunk when that "person's mental
and physical capabilities are impaired to the point that he cannot
walk, talk, or act in a proper fashion."
In his opinion, McHone was
not drunk on the night the murders occurred. A detective with the
Surry County Sheriff's Department testified that when he entered the
couple's residence, McHone stated, "I know what I've done, and I'll
have to pay for it. Why don't you just shoot me and get it over with."
The detective also testified that although McHone had been drinking,
he did not believe that he was drunk.
A pathologist at North Carolina Baptist Hospital
who performed autopsies on Mr. Adams and Mrs. Adams determined that
Mr. Adams died of a shotgun wound to the chest, and Mrs. Adams died
of a gunshot wound to the head.
The State presented other witnesses
who testified to a stormy relationship between McHone and his mother,
including several threats by McHone to harm or kill her. McHone did
not testify. However, McHone presented witnesses who testified that
McHone had been drinking prior to the murders.
The State told the
jury that McHone may have been intoxicated but he was not drunk to
the point of not being responsible for his actions. The jury heard
evidence that on prior occasions McHone had chased his mother around
the house with a knife, threatening to kill her, that Mildred
reported to her friends that she was afraid to be alone with him
because "he had told her that he was going to kill her," and that
she was "afraid to lay down and go to sleep at night" because she
believed that "sooner or later he was going to kill her."
The jury convicted McHone of two counts of first
degree murder, one each for killing his mother, Mildred, and his
step-father, Wesley, Sr. The jury also convicted McHone of one count
of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, for his attack
on his step-brother, Wesley, Jr.
UPDATE:
Steven Van McHone was executed early
Friday for the shooting deaths of his mother and stepfather. McHone,
35, was pronounced dead by injection at 2:10 a.m., said Pam Walker,
spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections.
He issued no
last statement, but appeared to say "I'm so sorry" to a half-brother
who supported the execution. He lost his last chance to halt the
execution when Gov. Mike Easley denied clemency late Thursday. That
decision was announced after the U.S. Supreme Court turned down
McHone's appeal without comment.
The court rejected the appeal from
McHone's lawyers to stop the execution so that his mother's dying
statement that he didn't intend to shoot her could be considered.
Earlier in the day, the state Supreme Court had overturned a stay
issued by a lower court judge for the Surry County man. McHone was
sentenced to death for the 1990 slayings of his mother and
stepfather. He's the third person executed this year in North
Carolina.
"Given the facts and circumstances of this case,
I find no compelling reasons to invalidate the sentences recommended
by the jury and affirmed by the courts," Easley said in a statement.
Last week, the governor and his legal adviser met with prosecutors,
defense lawyers and members of McHone's family. Two half sisters and
a half brother had asked that McHone not be executed, saying they
forgave him and wanted to forge a relationship with him. But another
half brother, who caught his father after he was hit by a shotgun
blast, told Easley that justice demanded the execution.
Surry County Superior Court Judge Anderson Cromer
on Wednesday ordered the execution stopped to allow a paramedic who
treated Mildred Adams, McHone's mother, to testify about her
patient's dying statement. Paramedic Teresa Durham said in an
affidavit that Adams told her that McHone didn't mean to fatally
shoot her. McHone also killed Adams' husband, Wesley Adams Sr. The
state's high court rejected the defense argument, but didn't say why
in its one-page order vacating the stay. The U.S. Supreme Court then
followed with its decision.
McHone's half brother, Wesley Adams Jr. and wife
Wendy, drove from their home in Dayton, Ohio, to witness the
execution. Wesley Jr. caught his father's body after McHone shot him.
Adams cites threats that McHone made in a letter written to a
girlfriend in September 1990 as part of his reason for not feeling
safe.
The state attorney general's office released the letter last
week. In the letter, McHone wrote that every time he thought of the
way his half-brother was treating him, it "tears me up! I know one
thing, if I ever get out of prison, I'm going off on his ass ... he
won't have a snowball's chance in hell when and if I get out!"
Adams said that he and his wife, Wendy Adams, and
their child still feel threatened. "Wendy and I and my son Alex were
there," Adams said in an interview last week. "Unless you've
experienced this type of terror - and that's exactly what it was -
you're really an outside party. That crosses a threshold where I'm
having difficulty saying 'OK, everything's forgiven here.' I don't
know that I'm ready to say I'm fully comfortable that the state of
North Carolina will incarcerate him for life."
Wendy Adams said she was inside a bedroom with
her young son when the shootings occurred. She specifically rebuts
the comments that Mildred Adams is said to have made to Durham. "She
could not have imagined what he did afterward. None of us can say
how she would have felt if he had killed her only grandson," Wendy
Adams said. "Our family has lived in this shadow for 15 years now."
Wendy Adams said in a telephone interview that the paramedic's
testimony was suspicious. "There was another paramedic with her and
do we have any word from whoever it was that they heard it, too?"
she said. "It was iffy because from all accounts she didn't tell
anybody about it until years afterward."
McHone, who was housed alone in a cell block near
the death chamber, visited with family members who supported his try
for clemency - his half sisters, Tina Walker and Cheryl McMillian,
and a half brother, Randall Adams.
Evidence showed McHone and his 52-year-old mother
argued over money and that he chased her around the yard before
shooting her in the back of the head. Wesley Adams Sr., 52, disarmed
McHone and went to help his wife while McHone found another weapon
and shot his stepfather before being disarmed by Wesley Jr.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Do Not Execute Steven Van McHone!
NORTH CAROLINA - Steven Van McHone - November 11,
2005
Steven Van McHone is scheduled to be executed on
Nov. 11, 2005 for the June 2, 1990 deaths of his mother, Mildred
Johnson Adams, and his stepfather, Wesley Dalton Adams, Sr. in Surry
County. McHone was also found guilty of assault with a deadly weapon
with intent to kill his stepbrother, Wesley Dalton Adams, Jr.
McHone had enjoyed a happy childhood until his
parent’s divorce. According to psychologist Dr. John Frank Warren,
since he was 12 years old McHone has had a “very serious substance
abuse problem.” Though he had had some legal problems in the past
McHone did not have a criminal record for violence. Furthermore
McHone’s father testified that he suffered drinking and gambling
problems and often left McHone home alone late at night when McHone
was young, to go out, drink, and gamble.
McHone’s friends testified that he was under the
influence of a large amount of alcohol and possibly other drugs on
the night of the crimes. According to North Carolina state law,
voluntary intoxication can be a defense for capital murder.
Additionally, McHone’s trial counsel failed to object to
inappropriate statements of the prosecutor and unsatisfactory jury
instruction. McHone was only 20 years old at the time of the crimes
and has shown remorse.
Please write Gov. Michael Easley requesting that
he commute Steven Van McHone’s sentence to life in prison.
Man N.C. inmate executed by injection
By Estes
Thompson - Charlotte Observer
Associated Press - Fri, Nov. 11, 2005
RALEIGH, N.C. - Steven Van McHone was executed
early Friday for the shooting deaths of his mother and stepfather
after he appeared to apologize to the half brother who supported the
execution. McHone, 35, was pronounced dead by injection at 2:10
a.m., said Pam Walker, spokeswoman for the state Department of
Corrections. He was the third person executed in North Carolina this
year.
He issued no last statement, but appeared to say
"I'm so sorry," to half brother Wesley Adams Jr., who supported the
execution and drove from Ohio to witness it. "We have sympathy and
pray for comfort for those who will grieve Steve's passing," Adams
said in a statement. "We do, however, feel that justice was upheld
and that this fate was sealed many years ago."
McHone lost his last chance to halt the execution
when Gov. Mike Easley denied clemency late Thursday. That decision
was announced after the U.S. Supreme Court turned down McHone's
appeal without comment. The court rejected the appeal from McHone's
lawyers to stop the execution so that his mother's dying statement
that he didn't intend to shoot her could be considered.
Last week, the governor and his legal adviser met
with prosecutors, defense lawyers and members of McHone's family.
Two half sisters and a half brother had asked that McHone not be
executed, saying they forgave him and wanted to forge a relationship
with him.
But Wesley Adams Jr., who caught his father after
he was hit by a shotgun blast, told Easley that justice demanded the
execution. Wesley Adams Jr. and wife, Wendy, drove from their home
in Dayton, Ohio, to witness the execution.
Evidence showed McHone and his 52-year-old mother
argued over money and that he chased her around the yard before
shooting her in the back of the head. Wesley Adams Sr., 52, disarmed
McHone and went to help his wife while McHone found another weapon
and shot his stepfather before being disarmed by Wesley Jr.
Killer saved by victim's dying words
McHone's
execution on hold; judge orders new hearing
By Andrea Weigl - The News & Observer
Nov 11, 2005
On Wednesday, Steven Van McHone's mother's dying
words put off his execution for killing her. At a hearing in Surry
County, Superior Court Judge Anderson D. Cromer ruled that Mildred
Adams' newly disclosed request that her son not be harmed warranted
a hearing about whether it would have persuaded a jury not to decide
that he should die. That hearing has not been scheduled.
While McHone's family and lawyers were elated,
the N.C. Attorney General's Office planned to appeal. If the N.C.
Supreme Court disagrees with Cromer, McHone still could be executed
at 2 a.m. Friday. "We're happy," said Cynthia Adcock, one of
McHone's lawyers. "We know that the state is appealing, so we're
cautious." McHone's other lawyer, Ken Rose, director of the Center
for Death Penalty Litigation, said he didn't know of another case in
which a victim's dying words became the basis for a stay of
execution.
Meanwhile, McHone was moved to the death watch
area at Raleigh's Central Prison, a room with four cells adjacent to
the death chamber. Prison officials said they must proceed as though
the execution will occur until they get a final legal decision. Any
decision by the state's high court would be reviewed by the U.S.
Supreme Court.
McHone, 35, was sentenced to death for shooting
his mother and stepfather, Wesley Adams Sr., to death in their Surry
County home in 1990. McHone shot his mother with a handgun and his
stepfather with a shotgun. He also threatened to shoot his
half-brother Wesley Adams Jr., his sister-in-law, Wendy, and his
2-year-old nephew, Alex. Wesley Adams Jr., who at the time was an
Air Force captain, twice disarmed McHone that day. Witnesses
testified that McHone drank 1 1/2 bottles of Jack Daniels whiskey
and a pitcher of beer and might have taken drugs before the
killings.
As police swarmed in to arrest McHone, his mother
lay dying in the back yard, where she had been shot in the back of
the head. A paramedic, Teresa O. Durham of Sparta, described in an
affidavit last month how she went to help Mildred Adams. As Durham
rolled Adams over, Adams grabbed Durham's hand and said, "He didn't
mean to do it. Don't hurt him."
Later, Adams again said to Durham, "Don't
hurt him. He didn't mean to do it," according to the Oct. 27
affidavit. Those were Mildred Adams' last words because a breathing
tube was inserted, leaving her unable to speak, Durham said. Adams
died a short time later. McHone's lawyers, Adcock and Ken Rose,
argue that the jury might have sentenced McHone to life in prison if
it had heard what his mother said.
Some downplay what mother said
But Wendy Adams, who lives outside Dayton, Ohio,
and wants McHone executed, doesn't think it would have had any
effect. "It's a reach that whatever she said makes any difference,"
Wendy Adams said Wednesday.
When Mildred Adams spoke, she didn't
know her son had killed her husband and threatened others, Wendy
Adams said. "She didn't know what else he had done or what else he
intended to do," Wendy Adams said this week.
Valerie B. Spalding, a state prosecutor,
questioned why the paramedic didn't record the victim's last words
in her report and didn't tell anyone about them until she mentioned
them to one of McHone's relatives in the late 1990s.
Even if the
jurors heard those words, Spalding argued, they still would have
sentenced McHone to death. She pointed to McHone's prior threats to
kill his mother, his firing three shots at her back and his finding
another weapon to shoot his stepfather after Wesley Adams Jr. took
his handgun. "No rational juror who heard the paramedic's evidence
of Mildred's alleged dying declaration would have decided the two
cases differently," Spalding wrote.
McHone Executed For Murder Of Mother, Stepfather
Wxii12.com
November 11, 2005
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Steven Van McHone was executed
early Friday for the shooting deaths of his mother and stepfather. A
spokeswoman for the state Corrections Department said the Surry
County man was pronounced dead by injection at 2:10 a.m. He issued
no last statement, but appeared to say "I'm so sorry" to a half-brother
who supported the execution. Other family members had sought
clemency.
McHone lost his last chance to halt the execution
when Gov. Mike Easley denied clemency late Thursday. That decision
was announced after the U.S. Supreme Court turned down McHone's
appeal without comment.
Earlier Thursday, the state Supreme Court
overturned a local judge's order to halt the execution. That judge,
in Surry County, had agreed with defense lawyers who wanted more
time to consider the dying words of McHone's mother. A paramedic
said the woman insisted her son didn't mean to kill her or her
husband. The lawyers said his trial might have had a different
outcome if the jury had heard about his mother's remarks, or known
that he was drunk and on drugs at the time of the killings.
McHone was sentenced to death for the 1990
slayings of his mother and stepfather. He's the third person
executed this year in North Carolina.
Family Split On Steven McHone
Execution
November 1, 2005
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Lawyers and family members on
both sides visited Gov. Mike Easley on Tuesday during clemency
proceedings for condemned murderer Steven Van McHone. McHone was
sentenced to death for the 1990 slayings of his father and mother in
Surry County. The case has split McHone's family.
Wesley Adams Jr. said after visiting the governor
that he was there the night that his parents were gunned down and he
won't feel safe until McHone is executed. On the other side, a
sister and brother told the governor they want McHone to live
because they love him and have forgiven him. They say he's a vital
link to their family history. McHone is scheduled for execution by
injection on Nov. 11 at Central Prison in Raleigh.
McHone dies by lethal injection at 2:10 a.m.,
executed for murder of mother, stepfather
By David Ingram - Winston-Salem Journal
Friday, November 11, 2005
RALEIGH - Steven Van McHone was put to death at
Central Prison early Friday morning, 15 years after he killed his
mother and stepfather at their Surry County home.
McHone entered the execution chamber on a gurney
at 1:50 a.m., and he appeared to say "I'm so sorry" to Wes Adams Jr.,
a half-brother whom McHone almost killed the night of the parents'
deaths. McHone then exchanged smiles and laughter with his attorney
and with two friends, who were among nine people who served as
official witnesses.
At about 2 a.m., executioners added a sedative
to McHone's intravenous lines. He closed his eyes within two minutes
and appeared to be asleep. Two lethal chemicals were added, and at
2:05 McHone's torso shook quickly and his face became pale. He
appeared not to move afterward. "Ladies and gentlemen, the order of
the court has been carried out. He was pronounced dead at 2:10
a.m.," Marvin Polk, the warden of Central Prison, announced to the
witnesses.
Wes Adams Jr. and his wife, Wendy Adams, released
a statement afterward reiterating their support for the execution. "We
have sympathy and pray for comfort for those who will grieve Steve's
passing," they wrote. "We do, however, feel that justice was upheld,
and that this fate was sealed many years ago." Some other relatives
had opposed the execution, saying that they had forgiven McHone and
wanted him to meet their families.
McHone's court appeals ran out late Thursday when
the U.S. Supreme Court declined, for at least the second time, to
intervene in the case. Gov. Mike Easley declined to grant clemency.
"Given the facts and circumstances of this case, I find no
compelling reasons to invalidate the sentences recommended by the
jury and affirmed by the courts," Easley said in a statement.
McHone's last meal at 5 p.m. consisted of
Porterhouse steak, steak fries, chocolate cheese cake and a 20 oz.
Mountain Dew. He did not release a final statement. His body was
taken to the N.C. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Chapel
Hill.
Posted on 11/07 at 08:52 PM
I was the only eye witness to what actions Steve
McHone took that morning. He may have been drinking hours earlier,
but he was not intoxicated when I fought him in hand-to-hand combat
and disarmed him twice that morning. No intoxicated man can put
three rounds into a woman's head (our mom), later fire a shotgun
across the room mortally wounding my dad, and then reload the
shotgun with the intent of killing the remaining lives in the house,
my wife, 2 yr old son, and me. Enough Mr. Rose!
Wes Adams
Governor's Hardest Job: Easley
holds the power of life or death for 3 inmates who are scheduled to
die
By David Ingram.
November 8, 2005
One of the busiest times in the recent history of
North Carolina's death row is scheduled to begin early Friday.
That's when, barring a last-minute reprieve, Steven McHone will be
executed for the June 1990 killings of his mother and stepfather at
their Surry County home. Another inmate, Elias Hanna Syriani of
Mecklenburg County, is scheduled for execution a week later,
followed Dec. 2 by the execution of a third inmate, Kenneth Lee Boyd
of Rockingham County. Only one other time, in 2003, have so many
executions been ordered so close together since North Carolina began
using the death penalty again in 1984.
The schedule is a result of several factors,
including state law and the timing of decisions from the U.S.
Supreme Court. It also presents challenges to defense attorneys,
Gov. Mike Easley and the prison officials who will carry out the
executions. "Clearly, it puts a lot of pressure on the system with
all the work that's involved," said Rich Rosen, a law professor at
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
In the week before an execution, much of that
pressure is focused on last-minute court motions and on the
governor's power to grant clemency. Already seen as a power with
political consequences - affecting whether a politician is seen as
"tough on crime" - clemency decisions are considered by some lawyers
to be even more difficult when several decisions are concentrated in
a short timeframe. "If you're a lawyer working on a death-penalty
case, probably the worst place you want to be is next in line after
a governor grants clemency," Rosen said. "It is difficult for
governors to give clemency politically," he said. "Anyone who thinks
that's not the case doesn't see all the politics swirling around
clemency."
Cari Boyce, a spokeswoman for Easley, said that
politics never affects whether an inmate gets clemency. "That
doesn't in any way affect the governor's decision," she said. "He
looks at every decision individually and makes a decision based on
the merits of each case, not on the cases that came before." Though
the governor usually doesn't decide on clemency until just before a
scheduled execution, the process begins about a month earlier.
That's when a date is set and the governor's legal counsel begins
gathering files on the case. Boyce said that the early review
ensures that Easley has enough time to consider clemency petitions,
even when he has several at the same time. "He takes every case very
seriously and spends a great deal of time on each one," she said. "When
there's three in a row, it means he's spending that much more time."
Multiple executions in the same month, or even on
the same day, were common up through the 1940s. The state executed
five men Oct. 3, 1947, and then four more on Oct. 31. Six men were
put to death in three weeks in December 1949. Executions became less
common in the 1950s and stopped entirely between October 1961 and
March 1984. Since then, the state has executed 36 people.
Until 1996, state law required that a
superior-court judge set the execution date at a hearing to be held
"promptly" after an inmate ran out of appeals in the court system.
The law now requires that prison officials set the execution for not
less than 30 days and not more than 60 days after they are notified
that an inmate's appeals have run out. The laws in other states
vary. Some require the governor to set the execution date and others
require the prison warden to do so.
"There are dangers in making it too inflexible,"
said Richard Dieter, the executive director of the Death Penalty
Information Center, a nonprofit research group in Washington that
has been critical of how the death penalty is applied. "It does need
to be a slow process in order for it to be thorough," Dieter said.
"When you have a few in a row, it can play different ways. What if
two of three deserve clemency? That could be a doubly hard
decision."
For the three inmates scheduled to die in the
next month, the appeals ran out Oct. 3 when the U.S. Supreme Court
declined to hear all three cases. Prison officials were soon
notified, and all three executions had to be scheduled in the same
30-day window. "You add to that the fact that we have a major
holiday and that gave us even fewer options," said Pam Walker, a
spokeswoman for the N.C. Department of Correction.
Central Prison in Raleigh, where the executions
take place, adds extra staff for the night of an execution, though
Walker declined to provide details for security reasons. "It's just
a lot of additional hours and overtime," she said. The only other
recent time when Central Prison had so many executions in so short a
time period was in 2003, when seven people were executed. Three were
executed in the three weeks from Sept. 12 to Oct. 3.
One of those three, Joseph Bates, confessed to
and was convicted of murder in the death of a Yadkin County man who
had been beaten and shot in the neck. Rosemary Godwin, a lawyer in
Raleigh who helped represent Bates, said that the timing of his
execution within weeks of two others did not appear to affect his
request for clemency. "When we sat down and talked with the governor
about it, it was obvious that he had studied our petition thoroughly.
He had tagged certain things and was very well-versed on the issues,"
Godwin said. "It didn't look to me that he had crammed for the
session."
One of McHone's attorneys, Ken Rose, said he
worries how the two other scheduled executions will affect his
client's clemency request. "Three executions in a three-week period
or a month period is too much for any governor to handle," Rose said.
"That's too much pressure."
WRAL.com
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Steven Van McHone smiled and
laughed with friends, then turned serious and apologized to his half
brother for the murders of McHone's mother and stepfather minutes
before he was executed early Friday. "I'm so sorry," McHone, 35,
mouthed through thick glass panes separating the execution chamber
from the witness room to Wesley Adams Jr., who disarmed McHone after
the killings 15 years ago. Strapped to a gurney, he turned his head
to rub a teary eye on the light blue pillowcase.
Shortly afterward, about 2 a.m., McHone stopped
talking and breathed deeply. He looked at the ceiling, then shut his
eyes and never reopened them. There were a few muscle movements and
color drained from his skin before he was declared dead at 2:10 a.m.
McHone made no final statement.
"We have sympathy and pray for comfort for those
who will grieve Steve's passing," Adams said in a statement. "We do,
however, feel that justice was upheld and that this fate was sealed
many years ago. "We feel that the enforcement of duly deliberated
and prescribed sentences send a stronger message, as to the sanctity
of human life, than does the sparing of those who have taken life
willfully and brutally."
McHone lost his last chance to halt the execution
when Gov. Mike Easley denied clemency late Thursday. That decision
was announced after the U.S. Supreme Court turned down McHone's
appeal without comment. Defense lawyers had asked the court to stop
the execution so that his mother's dying statement that he didn't
intend to shoot her could be considered.
Last week, the governor and
his legal adviser met with prosecutors, defense lawyers and members
of McHone's family. Two half sisters and a half brother had asked
that McHone not be executed, saying they forgave him and wanted to
forge a relationship with him.
A Superior Court judge gave McHone a brief
reprieve this week when he stopped the execution to allow a
paramedic who treated Mildred Adams, McHone's mother, to testify
about her patient's dying statement. Paramedic Teresa Durham said in
an affidavit that Adams told her that McHone didn't mean to fatally
shoot her. McHone also killed Adams' husband, Wesley Adams Sr.
Prosecutors said the statement was suspect, largely because Mildred
Adams was in pain and had trouble talking and because it wasn't
recorded in the paramedic's original report. The state Supreme Court
rejected the defense argument and McHone's lawyers sought a last-ditch
stay from the federal high court.
McHone, housed alone in a cell block near the
death chamber since Wednesday afternoon, visited with family members
who supported his try for clemency _ his half sisters, Tina Walker
and Cheryl McMillian, and a half brother, Randall Adams. As they
left the prison about 11 p.m., they expressed disappointment that
Easley didn't change the sentence to life. McHone had a last meal of
medium rare Porterhouse steak, French fries, chocolate cheesecake
and a Mountain Dew soft drink, prison officials said.
Evidence showed McHone and his 52-year-old mother
argued over money and that he chased her around the yard before
shooting her in the back of the head. Wesley Adams Sr., 52, disarmed
McHone and went to help his wife while McHone found another weapon
and shot his stepfather before being disarmed by Wesley Jr.
Two other North Carolina men convicted of murder
are also scheduled for execution over the next several weeks. Elias
Syriani, 67, scheduled for execution Nov. 18, was convicted in June
1991 for the July 1990 death of his wife. Kenneth Boyd, 57, was
sentenced to death in July 1994 for the March 1988 deaths of his
wife and father-in-law. He is scheduled for execution Dec. 2.
Family Split Over Scheduled
Execution
November 1, 2005
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Lawyers and family members on
both sides visited Gov. Mike Easley Tuesday during clemency
proceedings for a man convicted of murder in the deaths of his
mother and father in Surry County. Sentenced to death on March 7,
1991, for the 1990 slayings of Wesley and Mildred Adams, Steven
McHone's case has split his family.
Wesley Adams Jr. said after visiting Easley that
he was at his parents' home the night they were gunned down and he
would not feel safe until McHone, 35, was executed.
On the other side, a sister and brother told
Easley that they wanted McHone to live because they loved him and
had forgiven him. They said he was a vital link to their family
history. "I am truly thankful and blessed to have the time to really
reach out and tell (McHone) that I forgive him," said Tina Walker,
the victims' daughter. "And I found it very easy and very comforting."
McHone is scheduled for execution by injection on
Nov. 11 at Central Prison in Raleigh.
Two other North Carolina men convicted of murder
are also scheduled for execution over the next five weeks. Elias
Syriani, 67, scheduled for execution Nov. 18, was convicted in June
1991 for the July 1990 death of his wife. Kenneth Boyd, 57, was
sentenced to death in July 1994 for the March 1988 deaths of his
wife and father-in-law. He is scheduled for execution Dec. 2.
Easley has commuted just two death sentences in
his five years in office -- one in October 2001, where he pardoned
Robert Bacon because the jury was racially biased. Three months
later, Easley spared Charlie Alston's life because of problems with
evidence collection.
State v. McHone,
334 N.C. 627, 435 S.E.2d 296 (N.C. 1993) (Direct Appeal).
Defendant was convicted of first-degree murder of
his mother and stepfather and assault with deadly weapon with intent
to kill stepbrother and was sentenced to death on each of the first-degree
murder convictions after jury trial in the Superior Court, Surry
County, James M. Long, J. Defendant appealed. The Supreme Court,
Frye, J., held that: (1) conversations between victim and three
witnesses relating to victim's fear of defendant were admissible to
show victim's state of mind at time she made statements; (2)
probative value of testimony of witnesses as to victim's fear of
defendant was not outweighed by any danger of unfair prejudice; (3)
defendant's prior criminal activity was sufficient to preclude
submission of mitigating circumstance of no significant history of
prior criminal activity; and (4) imposition of death penalty was not
disproportionate as matter of law. Affirmed.
FRYE, Justice.
On 4 June 1990 a Surry County grand jury indicted defendant for the
murder of Mildred Johnson Adams and Wesley Dalton Adams, Sr.
Defendant was also indicted on 20 July 1990 for assault with a
deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury on
Wesley Dalton Adams, Jr. In a capital trial, the jury returned
verdicts finding defendant guilty of the first-degree murder of
Mildred Johnson Adams (Mrs. Adams or defendant's mother) and Wesley
Dalton Adams, Sr. (Mr. Adams or defendant's stepfather).
The jury
also found defendant guilty of assault with a deadly weapon with
intent to kill Wesley Dalton Adams, Jr. (Wesley Jr. or defendant's
half-brother). After a sentencing proceeding held pursuant to
N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000, the jury recommended and the trial court
imposed sentences of death for each of the first-degree murder
convictions. On the same date, the trial court imposed a sentence of
ten years imprisonment for the conviction of assault with a deadly
weapon with intent to kill. Defendant gave oral notice of appeal on
7 March 1991. An order staying execution was entered by this Court
on 25 March 1991.
Defendant brings forward seven assignments of
error. After reviewing the record, transcript, briefs, and oral
arguments of counsel, we conclude that the guilt and sentencing
phases of defendant's trial were free from prejudicial error, and
that the sentence of death is not disproportionate.
The State
presented evidence tending to show the following facts and
circumstances. Wesley Jr., a Captain in the United States Air Force,
and his family were visiting in his parents' home in Surry County.
At trial, the first witness called by the State was Wendy Adams,
Wesley Jr.'s wife and the mother of two-year-old Alex. Wendy Adams (Wendy)
testified that on the evening of 2 June 1990, she, Wesley Jr., Alex,
and Mr. and Mrs. Adams went on a fishing trip. Wendy and Wesley Jr.
cleaned Mr. Adams' camper prior to leaving for the trip. While
cleaning the camper they discovered a handgun. Mrs. Adams explained
that the gun was for protection from animals when camping.
The family returned from the fishing trip at
approximately 12:30 a.m. on 3 June 1990. Defendant, who resided with
his parents, was at home when they arrived. Wendy began getting Alex
prepared for bed, and while doing so, she overheard defendant
arguing with Mr. and Mrs. Adams about money. Defendant told them "he
wanted his money and he couldn't go on living like that." Wendy,
Wesley Jr., and Alex went to bed.
Approximately ten or fifteen
minutes after they were in bed, Mrs. Adams opened the door to their
room. She asked Wesley Jr. if he had taken the handgun from the
camper. Wesley Jr. said that he had not moved the gun. Mrs. Adams
responded, "[t]hen its missing" and she closed the bedroom door.
Wesley Jr. got up and began to get dressed so that he could find out
why defendant was arguing with his parents.
However, before he left
the bedroom, he and Wendy heard three gun shots. Wesley Jr. told
Wendy "to stay down and keep Alex covered." He then went out into
the hallway to find out what had happened. Wendy heard someone
coming up the basement stairs, then heard Mr. Adams tell Wesley Jr.
to call 911.
Wesley Jr. testified that while he was talking on
the telephone with the 911 operator, he turned and saw defendant and
Mr. Adams enter the back door. They were wrestling and defendant had
a pistol. Wesley Jr. immediately dropped the telephone and disarmed
the defendant. Wesley Jr. went back to the telephone and defendant
and Mr. Adams began wrestling again. Mr. Adams and defendant
struggled out of the living room and headed down the hallway, out of
Wesley Jr.'s sight.
Approximately a minute later, Mr. Adams
reappeared in the kitchen doorway and said, "Your mother is facedown
out back. You have got to get help for her. Your mother's facedown.
I don't know how badly she's hurt." As Mr. Adams approached Wesley
Jr., defendant came to the doorway carrying a shotgun. When Mr.
Adams realized that defendant was bringing the gun up into a firing
position, aimed at Wesley Jr., he immediately moved toward defendant,
reaching for the gun.
Defendant fired the shotgun into Mr. Adams'
chest, and the force of the discharge threw Mr. Adams into Wesley Jr.'s
arms, knocking them both to the floor. Wesley Jr.'s leg was injured.
After shooting Mr. Adams, defendant raised the gun in the direction
of Wesley Jr. who managed to get up from the floor and take the
weapon from defendant. When the struggle ended, Wesley Jr. told
defendant to stay down and not to move.
Defendant began crying and
saying, "Oh, my God. What have I done." Wesley Jr. turned away from
defendant to see if his wife was safe. Defendant then stopped crying
and reached for the shotgun. Wesley Jr. struggled with defendant
again, and was able to keep the weapon from him. Defendant suddenly
began to curse Wesley Jr. and told him, "I killed him. Now I want
you to kill me, because I don't want to spend the rest of my life in
jail. Just shoot me. Just get it over with."
Defendant continued to
curse Wesley Jr. in a very loud voice and stated that Wesley Jr. was
gutless and "if [Wesley Jr.] didn't kill him and he got out of jail
he'd hunt [Wesley Jr.] down and hunt his family down and finish [them]
off." William Kent Hall, a member of the first response team
organized by the volunteer fire service, testified that when he
arrived at the Adams residence Mr. Adams was lying on the kitchen
floor.
Hall determined that Mr. Adams had a large chest wound and he
did not have a pulse. Tommy Wayne Baker, also a member of the first
response team, found Mrs. Adams on the ground in the backyard. She
appeared to have been shot in the back of the head, but she was
still alive. Mrs. Adams later died from the gunshot wound.
Officer Jimmy Inman, a Deputy Sheriff with the
Surry County Sheriff's Department, arrived at the crime scene
shortly after 2:00 a.m. When Officer Inman entered the house,
defendant yelled, "Why did I do it? What have I done?" Defendant was
taken outside and placed in the patrol car. Officer Inman smelled
alcohol on defendant's breath. At trial, Officer Inman testified
that a person is drunk when that "person's mental and physical
capabilities are impaired to the point that he cannot walk, talk, or
act in a proper fashion."
In his opinion, defendant was not drunk on
the night the murders occurred. Officer Terry Miller, a detective
with the Surry County Sheriff's Department, testified that when he
entered the couple's residence, defendant stated, "I know what I've
done, and I'll have to pay for it. Why don't you just shoot me and
get it over with." Miller also testified that although defendant had
been drinking, he did not believe that defendant was drunk.
Dr. Patrick Eugene Lantz, a pathologist at North
Carolina Baptist Hospital, performed autopsies on Mr. Adams and Mrs.
Adams. Dr. Lantz determined that Mr. Adams died of a shotgun wound
to the chest, and Mrs. Adams died of a gunshot wound to the head.
The State presented other witnesses who testified to a stormy
relationship between defendant and his mother, including several
threats by defendant to harm or kill her.
Defendant did not testify. However, defendant
presented witnesses whose testimony tended to show the following
facts and circumstances. Jimmy McMillian, a social acquaintance of
defendant, testified that on 2 June 1990 he, Tammy Sawyers, and
defendant drove to Mount Airy and purchased a pint of Jack Daniel's.
The group then traveled to a Pizza Hut in Winston-Salem. By the time
they arrived at the Pizza Hut, McMillian and defendant had finished
a pint and a half of Jack Daniel's. McMillian testified that only he
and defendant were drinking and they split the alcohol evenly. While
at Pizza Hut, defendant drank a pitcher of beer, which is the
equivalent of five six-ounce beers. In McMillian's opinion,
defendant's mental and physical faculties were appreciably impaired
because he was staggering and had a "slushy mouth."
Tammy Bryant testified that she had known
defendant for a year. They met at a narcotics anonymous meeting. Two
weeks before defendant's mother and stepfather were killed, Bryant
began seeing defendant romantically. Bryant testified that she saw
defendant on 2 June 1990 at Ronald Speaks' house in Mount Airy.
According to Bryant, when defendant arrived at Speaks' house he was
drunk, his speech was slurred, and he was staggering.
Defendant got
into a fight with Johnny Swaim because Bryant was with Swaim. Once
the fight ended, defendant consumed more alcohol, then walked away
from Speaks' house. Defendant later returned to Speaks' house and
began to cry when Bryant refused to leave with him. Bryant testified
that defendant began "swinging [a] gun around in everyone's face,
threatening everybody, moving real swiftly and quickly."
Bryant also
testified that when she asked defendant several times "what he was
on," he responded, "I have taken a couple hits of acid."
Approximately thirty minutes later, Bryant, Sawyers, and defendant
left the house and went for a ride in Sawyers' car. During the ride,
defendant gave his gun to Bryant. Bryant unloaded the gun and then
gave it back to defendant. Sawyers drove Bryant back to Speaks'
house. Defendant left with Sawyers. Bryant did not see him anymore
that evening.
On rebuttal, the State called Sawyers who
testified that she did not drink any alcohol on the night in
question. She testified that she and defendant had a conversation
while driving to Speaks' house and defendant's speech was fine. She
also testified that defendant walked fine to and from her vehicle.
Sawyers stated that she was never out of defendant's presence for
more than five minutes from about 3:00 p.m. on 2 June until nearly
2:00 a.m. the next morning, and she never saw defendant take any
controlled substances.
The State did not present any additional evidence
during defendant's sentencing proceeding. However, defendant
presented the testimony of several witnesses. Dr. James Groce, a
psychiatrist, testified that in response to questioning defendant
told him about his long history of drug and alcohol abuse.
Based on
his interview with defendant, Dr. Groce made two psychiatric
diagnoses: polysubstance dependence and adjustment disorder with
depressed mood. Dr. Groce defined polysubstance dependence as:
Dependence on a substance, drugs or alcohol ... that is a patterned
behavior that is compulsive use. That means that an individual could
not, without either physical or emotional discomfort, stop the use
of that substance. And by polysubstance I mean that this was not
limited to one particular chemical, but was a series of chemicals,
essentially depending upon availability ... addictive substances, a
series of those. And in his case, it was primarily the alcohol,
marijuana and cocaine.
Dr. John Frank Warren, III, a psychologist,
testified that he was appointed by the court to evaluate defendant.
In his opinion, defendant had a "very serious substance abuse
problem" dating from age twelve.
Bobby McHone, defendant's biological father,
testified that during defendant's early years, "I stayed drunk. I
gambled. I did everything wrong." Mr. McHone also testified that he
did not give defendant's mother any peace. Mr. McHone and his wife
divorced after ten years of marriage and they shared custody of
defendant. Mr. McHone testified that he would leave defendant at
home alone while he worked or went out to drink or gamble. He caught
defendant drinking at age thirteen or fourteen, and he realized that
defendant was taking drugs at age fifteen.
Kathleen Carroll testified that she is a former
neighbor of defendant. Defendant helped her run errands and mow the
yard at various times. After the defendant's family moved, defendant
continued to visit occasionally. Additional evidence will be
discussed as it becomes relevant to a fuller understanding of the
specific issues raised on appeal.
I. In defendant's first assignment of error, he
contends that he is entitled to a new trial "based on the admission
of highly prejudicial statements made by the victim Mildred Adams."
During the guilt-innocence phase of the trial, the prosecutor
offered the testimony of three witnesses, Lydia Adams Logan, Cheryl
Adams McMillian, and Nelda Adams concerning statements allegedly
made by Mrs. Adams to them regarding threats made by defendant to
kill her.
* * *
Cheryl Adams McMillian, defendant's half-sister,
testified that the first time her mother related her fear of
defendant occurred one day while McMillian was at work. Mrs. Adams
called her and said, "You've got to come. He's going to kill me."
McMillian told her mother to calm down and tell her who she was
talking about. Mrs. Adams responded, "Stevie. He's got a knife."
McMillian testified that when she arrived at home shortly after her
telephone conversation with her mother she was told that defendant
had chased her mother around the dining room table and into the
kitchen with a knife. McMillian also testified that the last time
her mother expressed fear of defendant was when she told her, "I am
afraid of him. I am afraid to be alone with him. When Wes is not
around, I have to watch what I say to keep him from getting so upset.
He has told me that he is going to kill me."
Lydia Logan testified that Mrs. Adams had spoken
to her on several occasions regarding defendant's threats. On one
occasion, Mrs. Adams told her "they were afraid to lay down and go
to sleep at night, afraid he might come in and kill them while they
slept. Sooner or later he's going to kill me." Nelda Adams testified
that Mrs. Adams had spoken with her on two occasions regarding
defendant's threats.
On one occasion, Mrs. Adams told her "that she
was afraid for them to go to sleep of [sic] a night and get in a
relaxed state; that they would fall into a deep sleep, because that
[sic] she didn't know what they would do if he came in the room and
they were not expecting it and had no defense." On another occasion,
Mrs. Adams told her that defendant "had threatened to kill them, and
that she was afraid that he would follow through with this."
* * *
We conclude that the testimony of the three
witnesses was relevant to show the relationship between the victim
and defendant.
* * *
The evidence at trial showed that defendant
committed crimes of violence against three of his family members on
3 June 1990. Defendant fired a shotgun point-blank at his half-brother,
injuring his half-brother and killing his stepfather who stepped
between them. This occurred minutes after defendant had shot his own
mother in the head. The evidence clearly supports the jury's finding
of the aggravating circumstance in the first-degree murder of Mrs.
Adams and the aggravating circumstances found in the first-degree
murder of Mr. Adams.
Further there is nothing in the record that
suggests that the sentence of death was imposed under the influence
of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. We thus turn
to our final statutory duty of proportionality review.
* * *
In the present case defendant killed his mother
and his stepfather in their home. For years, the defendant had
threatened to physically harm and kill his mother. Defendant also
assaulted his half-brother with the intent to kill him, and
threatened, if allowed to live, to "hunt down and finish off" his
half-brother's family after being released from jail.
As to the charge of first degree murder of
defendant's mother, the jury found the following mitigating
circumstances: 1) the murder was committed while the defendant was
under the influence of mental or emotional disturbance, 2) the
defendant had a history of long-term substance abuse and on the
night of the offense was under the influence of alcohol, 3) the
defendant had shown remorse for the crime committed, 4) the
defendant enjoyed a normal childhood until the time his parents
separated, and after that, he began abusing drugs and alcohol, 5)
the defendant had previously sought help for his substance abuse
problems, 6) defendant's father abused alcohol and gambled
excessively and defendant, while he was a child, often spent time
with his father in bars while his father drank and gambled, 7)
defendant often witnessed arguments between his father and mother,
8) defendant had not previously been convicted of a violent crime,
9) defendant, while he resided with his father, was often left alone
at night, without supervision, while his father worked third shift,
10) defendant, while he resided with his father, often had to reside
in undesirable places, and 11) any other circumstance(s) arising
from the evidence which one or more of the jurors deemed to have
mitigating value. As to the charge of first degree murder of
defendant's stepfather, the jury found the same mitigating
circumstances as in the murder of his mother with the exception of "the
defendant had shown remorse for the crime committed."
On both charges the jury found that the
aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances
and that the aggravating circumstances were sufficiently substantial
to call for imposition of the death penalty when considered with the
mitigating circumstances found by one or more jurors. After
considering the crime and the defendant, we cannot hold as a matter
of law that the death sentences recommended by the jury in this case
are disproportionate to the penalties imposed in similar cases. As
the majority of this Court observed in a recent case:
This Court has found the death sentence
disproportionate in seven cases. State v. Benson, 323 N.C. 318, 372
S.E.2d 517 (1988); State v. Stokes, 319 N.C. 1, 352 S.E.2d 653
(1987); State v. Rogers, 316 N.C. 203, 341 S.E.2d 713 (1986),
overruled on other grounds, State v. Vandiver, 321 N.C. 570, 364 S.E.2d
373 (1988); State v. Young, 312 N.C. 669, 325 S.E.2d 181 (1985);
State v. Hill, 311 N.C. 465, 319 S.E.2d 163 (1984); State v.
Bondurant, 309 N.C. 674, 309 S.E.2d 170 (1983); and State v. Jackson,
309 N.C. 26, 305 S.E.2d 703 (1983). In none of these cases was the
defendant convicted of more than one murder. State v. McNeil, 324
N.C. 33, 59-60, 375 S.E.2d 909, 925 (1989), sentence vacated, 494
U.S. 1050, 110 S.Ct. 1516, 108 L.Ed.2d 756 (1990), on remand, 327
N.C. 388, 395 S.E.2d 106 (1990), cert. denied, 499 U.S. 942, 111
S.Ct. 1403, 113 L.Ed.2d 459 (1991). In the instant case, defendant
was convicted of two first degree murders--his mother and his
stepfather. As we said in State v. Robbins, 319 N.C. 465, 529, 356
S.E.2d 279, 316 (1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 918, 108 S.Ct. 269,
98 L.Ed.2d 226 (1987), "a heavy factor against [the defendant] is
that he is a multiple killer." This Court has affirmed the death
penalty in several cases involving death or serious injury to one or
more persons other than the murder victim. See Robbins, 319 N.C.
465, 356 S.E.2d 279; State v. Noland, 312 N.C. 1, 320 S.E.2d 642
(1984), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1230, 105 S.Ct. 1232, 84 L.Ed.2d 369
(1985), reh'g denied, 471 U.S. 1050, 105 S.Ct. 2044, 85 L.Ed.2d 342
(1985); State v. McDougall, 308 N.C. 1, 301 S.E.2d 308 (1983), cert.
denied, 464 U.S. 865, 104 S.Ct. 197, 78 L.Ed.2d 173 (1983); State v.
Pinch, 306 N.C. 1, 292 S.E.2d 203 (1982), overruled in part, 323 N.C.
318, 372 S.E.2d 517 (1988); State v. Hutchins, 303 N.C. 321, 279 S.E.2d
788 (1981), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 1065, 104 S.Ct. 750, 79 L.Ed.2d
207 (1984).
We recognize that there are multiple murder cases
in the pool where the jury has returned a life sentence. Some of
them, like the instant case, involved the killing of members of the
defendant's family. For example, the jury recommended a life
sentence in State v. Shytle, 323 N.C. 684, 374 S.E.2d 573 (1989),
where the defendant murdered her husband and her son. She also shot
and injured her daughter, then shot herself in the head.
At trial,
the defendant relied on a defense of insanity and presented expert
testimony that she did not know the difference between right and
wrong in relation to shooting her family members. Id. at 687, 374
S.E.2d at 576-77. Shytle may be distinguished from the instant case
based on the evidence of insanity and attempted suicide by the
defendant.
Another such example is State v. Evangelista, 319
N.C. 152, 353 S.E.2d 375 (1987). There, the defendant held his
sister, nephew and niece hostage; then, he killed his sister and
nephew. At trial, he relied upon a defense of insanity and presented
evidence tending to show that during the siege, he suffered from
paranoia. Id. at 156, 353 S.E.2d at 379.
Several psychologists
testified to the effect that the defendant was under the delusion
that Colombian commandos were trying to kill him and his family. Id.
There was also extensive testimony by expert witnesses that "[the
defendant's] paranoia affected his actions, and he was incapable of
knowing right from wrong in relation to the acts charged." Id. at
162, 353 S.E.2d at 383.
No such evidence of insanity was presented
in the instant case. We are not unmindful of the fact that the
defendant was only twenty years of age at the time of the homicides.
We note first that the age of the defendant was submitted to the
jury as a possible mitigating circumstance, but the jury did not
find defendant's age to be mitigating as to either murder.
This is
understandable in view of defendant's substantial criminal history
over a period of several years. We also observe that while the
General Assembly has limited the circumstances under which persons
of tender years can be sentenced to death, [FN1] several juries have
recommended sentences of death notwithstanding the youthful age of
the defendant. See, e.g., State v. McCollum, 334 N.C. 208, 433 S.E.2d
144 (1993) (defendant age nineteen); State v. Pinch, 306 N.C. 1, 292
S.E.2d 203 (defendant age nineteen); State v. Rook, 304 N.C. 201,
283 S.E.2d 732 (1981) (defendant age twenty-one).
FN1. N.C.G.S. § 14-17 (defendant under seventeen
years of age at time of commission of first-degree murder may not be
sentenced to death unless murder committed while serving or on
escape from serving sentence for previous murder).
After a thorough review of the transcript, record
on appeal, the briefs of both parties, and the oral arguments of
counsel, we find that the record fully supports the jury's written
findings in aggravation in the death of both victims. We further
conclude that the sentences of death were not imposed under the
influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor.
We
hold that defendant received a fair trial and sentencing proceeding,
free of prejudicial error. After comparing this case, where
defendant killed his defenseless mother by shooting her in the back
of the head and also shot and killed his stepfather, to similar
cases in the pool, we cannot hold as a matter of law that the
sentence of death is disproportionate or excessive. Therefore, the
judgments of the trial court must be and are left undisturbed. NO
ERROR.
State v. McHone,
348 N.C. 254, 499 S.E.2d 761 (N.C. 1998) (PCR).
After defendant's convictions of first-degree
murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill and
death sentence were affirmed by the Supreme Court, 334 N.C. 627, 435
S.E.2d 296, defendant filed for postconviction motions for
appropriate relief. The Superior Court, Surry County, Freeman, J.,
denied relief. Defendant filed petition for writ of certiorari. The
Supreme Court, Mitchell, C.J., held that: (1) defendant was not
automatically entitled to hearing and to present evidence simply
because his motion for appropriate relief was based in part upon
asserted denials of his rights under Federal Constitution, but (2)
evidentiary hearing was required to resolve question of fact on
whether state had engaged in improper ex parte contact with court.
Reversed and remanded.
McHone v. Polk,
392 F.3d 691 (4th Cir.) (Habeas)
Background: State prisoner whose capital murder
convictions were affirmed on appeal, 435 S.E.2d 296, petitioned for
writ of habeas corpus. The United States District Court for the
Middle District of North Carolina, James A. Beaty, Jr., J., denied
the petition, and petitioner appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Luttig, Circuit
Judge, held that:
(1) prosecution's failure to disclose several pretrial statements of
prosecution witnesses did not constitute Brady violations, and
(2) petitioner was not denied effective assistance of counsel.
Affirmed.
LUTTIG, Circuit Judge.
Petitioner, Steven Van
McHone, appeals from the district court's denial of his 28 U.S.C. §
2254 habeas petition. In accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c), we
granted McHone a certificate of appealability in order to address
the claims he raises under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct.
1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963) and Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). Because we conclude that
the North Carolina Supreme Court's disposition of these claims was
neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of, established
federal law, we affirm.
I.
The North Carolina Supreme Court and the
district court have thoroughly recounted the facts of Steven
McHone's murders of his mother, Mildred Adams, and his stepfather,
Wesley Adams, Sr., see State of North Carolina v. McHone, 334 N.C.
627, 435 S.E.2d 296, 298-301 (1993); J.A. 817-22. We set forth only
the facts relevant to the issues on appeal, as established by the
witnesses who testified at McHone's trial.
Wendy Adams testified that at 12:30 a.m. on June
3, 1990 she, her husband Wesley Adams, Jr., their son Alex, and
Wesley, Jr.'s parents Mildred Adams and Wesley Adams, Sr., returned
to Mildred and Wesley, Sr.'s home after a day of fishing. Steven
McHone, an occupant of the house, was already there. While getting
Alex ready for bed, Wendy overheard Wesley, Sr. and Mildred arguing
with McHone about money. Thereafter, Mildred came to their room
inquiring about a missing pistol. Subsequently, Wesley, Jr. and
Wendy heard three gunshots. As Wesley, Jr. went out into the hall to
investigate, Wendy heard someone coming up the basement stairs and
then overheard Wesley, Sr. tell Wesley, Jr. to call 911.
Wesley, Jr., a Captain in the United States Air
Force, testified that while he was talking with the 911 operator he
briefly saw McHone wrestling with Wesley, Sr. before they
disappeared from sight. About a minute later, Wesley, Sr. reappeared
and told Wesley, Jr. that his mother was "face down out back." As
Wesley, Sr. approached Wesley, Jr., McHone appeared in the doorway
and shot Wesley, Sr. in the chest with a shotgun. Wesley, Jr., after
a lengthy scuffle, managed to disarm McHone. Thereafter, McHone
cursed at Wesley, Jr. and threatened that if Wesley, Jr. did not
kill him he would hunt Wesley, Jr. and his family down and "finish
them off." McHone, 435 S.E.2d at 299.
McHone did not dispute that he killed Mildred and
Wesley, Sr. and assaulted Wesley, Jr. Rather, he presented a
voluntary intoxication defense, claiming that his consumption of
alcohol and LSD prevented him from forming the requisite mental
state for first degree murder. During sentencing, McHone presented
his impaired mental state in mitigation. McHone attempted to
establish his impairment through the testimony of Jimmy McMillian
and Tammy Bryant.
McMillian testified that over the course of June
2, 1990 he and McHone split one and one-half pints of Jack Daniels
and that, in addition, McHone drank a pitcher of beer. McMillian
testified that McHone's physical and mental faculties were
appreciably impaired because he had a "slushy mouth." Id. at 300.
Bryant, McHone's girlfriend, testified that she saw McHone on the
evening of June 2 at a party at the home of Ronald Speaks. Bryant
testified that, when McHone arrived at the party, his speech was
slurred and that he was staggering. She further testified that
McHone got into a fight while at the party and began "swinging a gun
around in everyone's face, threatening everybody, moving real
swiftly and quickly." When Bryant asked McHone "what he was on,"
McHone responded, "I have taken a couple of hits of acid." Id.
McHone also presented expert testimony from Dr.
James Groce and Dr. John Frank Warren, III. Both testified that
McHone had a serious substance abuse problem. Id. at 301. The state
presented the testimony of Tammy Sawyers to rebut McHone's
intoxication defense. Sawyers, who did not drink any alcohol on June
2, testified that she and McHone had a conversation while driving to
Speaks' house and that McHone's speech was fine and that McHone was
able to walk "fine" to and from her vehicle. She also testified that
she was with McHone from 3:00 p.m. on June 2 until 2:00 a.m. the
next morning, that she was never out of his presence for more than
five minutes, and that she did not observe him take any controlled
substances. Id.
The jury convicted McHone of two counts of first
degree murder, one each for killing his mother, Mildred, and his
step-father, Wesley, Sr. The jury also convicted McHone of one count
of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, for his attack
on his step-brother, Wesley, Jr.
After finding one aggravating
factor and eleven mitigating factors as to the murder of Mildred, id.
at 579-81, and two aggravating factors and ten mitigating factors as
to the murder of Wesley, Sr., id. at 582-85, the jury recommended,
and the trial court imposed, the death penalty for each first degree
murder. McHone, 435 S.E.2d at 298. McHone unsuccessfully sought
direct and post-conviction review in the North Carolina courts, id.;
J.A. 731-775; State of North Carolina v. McHone, 350 N.C. 825, 539
S.E.2d 642 (1999), and his federal habeas petition was denied on the
merits by the district court. J.A. 873. Pursuant to the certificate
of appealability issued by this court, the instant appeal followed.
* * *
Judge Gregory's conclusion that McHone's counsel
was ineffective for failing to present additional mitigating
evidence relating to McHone's childhood is similarly untenable. As
noted above, unlike in Wiggins where counsel did not present any
evidence of mitigation, here counsel submitted ample evidence of the
hardships McHone endured during his childhood and the jury credited
this evidence when it found the related mitigating factors. Judge
Gregory's description of counsels' actions and the purported
prejudice therefrom simply fails to confront this fundamental point.
Judge Gregory suggests that a mitigation investigation "would have
revealed" that "McHone has a history of chronic violence from birth
through the divorce of his parents," that "McHone's childhood was
marked by deprivation," that "McHone's parents agreed to an
unconventional custody arrangement," and that "McHone self-medicated
with drugs and alcohol from age 12." Post at 67-68.
But McHone's
counsel presented this evidence to the jury. Bobby McHone testified
that early in McHone's life that Bobby was continually drunk, "gave
Mildred no peace whatsoever," that McHone witnessed his parents
arguing, and that Mildred and Bobby agreed to an unconventional
custody arrangement. J.A. 532-34. Moreover, as described in detail
above, both Dr. Warren and Bobby McHone testified that McHone used
drugs and alcohol from an early age and suffered various forms of
deprivation.
Despite counsels' introduction of this
substantial mitigating evidence, Judge Gregory maintains that
counsels' mitigation investigation was inadequate because the jury
might have been confused by the mitigating factor that McHone "enjoyed
a normal childhood until the time his parents separated, and after
that, he began using alcohol and drugs." But the phrasing of one
mitigating factor does not bear on the propriety of the scope of
counsels' mitigation investigation.
And, while Judge Gregory
suggests that this mitigating factor could have caused the jury to
conclude that McHone's childhood difficulties did not begin until
his parents' divorce, he does not identify any evidence that rebuts
Bobby McHone's testimony that from the time he quit drinking--when
McHone was five years old--until the time he separated from Mildred--when
McHone was ten years old--that there were "a few arguments" but that
it "wasn't like it was when I was drinking." J.A. 534. V. For the
reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
GREGORY, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and
dissenting in part.
* * *
The testimony at trial regarding McHone's level
of impairment, from alcohol and possible drug use, varied. In
general, the witnesses for the State (with the exception of Wesley,
Jr., who never acknowledged that McHone had been drinking) testified
that while McHone had been drinking, he was not "drunk" or
intoxicated to the point that his actions were impaired. [FN10]
Specifically, these witnesses testified as follows:
• Wendy Adams: Testified that when she first
observed McHone at the house after they returned from the fishing
trip, he walked normally (did not stagger or stumble) and made it up
the steep basement steps. He did not slur his speech but was talking
louder than normal. J.A. 122-23. Testified that she had undergone
several hours of training in the Air Force to recognize whether an
individual is impaired/under the influence. Id. at 151. Testified
that Wesley, Sr. and Mildred did not talk to McHone in her presence
about alcohol or him being drunk when they got home from the fishing
trip. Id. at 159.
• William Kent Hall, First medical responder:
Testified that when he was in the kitchen with Wesley, Sr.'s body,
McHone called out to "Give me a cigarette." Id. at 164.
• Jimmy Inman, Deputy Sheriff, Surry County
Sheriff's Department: Testified that he arrived shortly after 2:00
a.m., arrested McHone, and that McHone started "cussing" the
Sheriff's department and stating "What have I done? Why did I do it?".
Id. at 169-171. Testified that McHone recognized the "Air Care"
helicopter as it flew in to pick up Mildred and that he stated "Oh,
God, it's bad. There's Air Care." Id. at 172. Testified that he was
able to hear and understand McHone's speech and that McHone was able
to respond to his questions. Id. at 172-73. Testified that given his
experience in law enforcement in observing drunk people, that McHone
"was not drunk. He had been drinking." Id. at 179. He "define[d]
drunk as a person's mental and physical capabilities are impaired to
the point that he cannot walk, talk, or act in a proper fashion." Id.
at 178. He stated that he based his opinion "on [McHone's] smell of
alcohol about him, the way he talked to me, and the way he did walk."
Id. at 180.
• Terry Miller, Detective, Surry County Sheriff's
Department: Testified that when he entered the house McHone said, "Terry
Miller, you pussy, I'll kill you too, you son-of-a-bitch ... I know
what I've done, and I'll have to pay for it. Why don't you just
shoot me and get it over with." Id. at 212. Testified that, "Based
on the fact that he was able to identify me spontaneously when I
entered the room, and I was not that personally acquainted with the
man; the fact that I could clearly understand everything that he
said; he was very much aware of everyone in his presence and called
them by name; he was able to negotiate the steps in front of the
house, walk to the patrol car; he was aware of the Air Care
helicopter that came over near the same time that we arrived at the
patrol car; .... Based on everything I observed there the man
obviously had been drinking. In my opinion he was not so drunk he
did not know what he was doing." Id. at 215.
• Larry Norman, Officer, Dobson Police Department:
Testified that he observed McHone when he was brought into jail and
that he did not slur or mumble his speech and could walk. Id. at
220. He testified that, "It was obvious in my opinion that he was
drinking, intoxicated. But, he was not drunk as I would term drunk."
Id. at 221.
• Wesley, Jr.: Testified that McHone was not
slurring his speech during his fight with Mildred and Wesley, Sr.
and was able to walk and negotiate the basement steps. Id. at
241-42. Testified that McHone seemed to be very aware of what was
happening and that his answers to his parents questions were
responsive. Id. at 251. Testified that he had training on several
occasions in the Air Force on detecting alcohol impairment and that,
"I neither heard, saw, or felt any type of impairment on his part,
on the part of the defendant during that entire time." Id. at 282.
He explained that, "By impairment I meant that any dysfunction of
his physical movements; any slow movement, jerking, stumbling,
tripping; any impairment in his voice characteristics by slurring
his speech or not being able to finish a sentence; or not being able
to recognize me. All the attributes that I looked at and dealt with
in extremely close quarters, I did not see any impairment other than
what any other normal person would do." Id. Testified that he did
not notice any odor of alcohol on McHone that night and that "[t]he
only indication that I had, the only mention of drinking at all
during the argument was the fact that my father told him to go to
bed and sleep it off." Id. at 290. Finally, the State presented
witnesses who stated that Mildred told them that McHone threatened
to kill Mildred when he was twelve to thirteen years old.
McHone presented two witnesses, McMillian and
Bryant. McMillian testified to the amount of alcohol that he and
McHone drank and that McHone was "mush-mouthed," and that his eyes
were red and glassy. Id. at 314-27. Bryant testified in more detail.
She stated that McHone was drunk and staggering when he arrived at
the party at Speaks's house; that he was crying and fighting with
people, swinging his gun around; and that McHone was real pale,
sweating, and moving rapidly with wide eyes. Id. at 333-339. Bryant
testified that later at the party she asked McHone what he was on
and, "he told me that he was eating acid." Id. at 340.
The State presented Sawyers as its rebuttal
witness. Sawyers testified to the sequence of events, described
above, from the time she picked up McHone until she brought him back
later that night. She testified that McHone was not slurring his
words "much" when she brought him home that night and that he was
coherent. Id. at 393.
When asked whether McHone was drunk in her
opinion, she said, "I believe he was. I believe he was. I believe he
was sober just a little bit. I mean, he wasn't real drunk, in my
opinion, I've seen people drunker." Id. at 399. Yet, on cross-examination,
Sawyers testified that McHone was steadily getting drunker
throughout the night and was acting the most drunk while at Speaks's
house. Id. at 400-01.
During the jury's deliberations, they twice asked
the judge "to go over the law of murder of Wesley Adams, Sr., and
six qualifying things that we need to prove for first degree murder."
Id. at 474, 479. In response, the judge re-read the instructions.
The jury returned a verdict finding McHone guilty of first-degree
murder in the deaths of both Mildred and Wesley, Sr.
The State did not present any new evidence during
the sentencing phase. The defense presented expert testimony
concerning McHone's history of substance abuse and diagnosis of
adjustment disorder with depressed mood.
Dr. James Groce, the
State's psychiatrist, testified to this diagnosis, but on cross-examination
by the State testified that he had concluded in evaluating McHone
that his "intoxication does not appear to be severe enough to make
Mr. McHone unable to perform specific intent or to meet the standard
for not being responsible for his behavior." Id. at 493.
Dr. John
Warren, McHone's expert, testified that "at the time of the crime [McHone]
was intoxicated or impaired, at least to the extent that people
around him noticed that he smelled of alcohol and he was acting
intoxicated." Id. at 503. However, he stated on cross-examination
that he could not state how impaired McHone was and that "[o]ne
drink will impair a person." Id. at 525.
Bobby McHone also testified as to McHone's
childhood. He related how under a joint custody agreement between
him and Mildred, McHone was exposed to his alcohol use and the
related problems it caused in raising McHone. Id. at 530-546. A
former neighbor of McHone testified that McHone helped her run
errands and mow the lawn. Id. at 526-28.
Finally, a parent of one of
McHone's former co-workers testified that McHone once helped her
with her car. Id. at 528. The jury found fourteen mitigating factors
to exist regarding the killing of Wesley, Sr., and eleven to exist
regarding the killing of Mildred. [FN12]
However, for both murders, they also found that
the aggravating circumstance that the murders were part of a course
of conduct in which McHone engaged and that the course of conduct
included the commission of other crimes of violence against others.
Id. Additionally, they found another aggravating circumstance as to
the murder of Wesley, Sr.-that the murder was committed while McHone
was engaging in an attempt to commit a homicide on a person other
than the deceased. [FN13] Id. They then found the aggravating
circumstances to outweigh the mitigating circumstances and
recommended that McHone be sentenced to death for both murders. Id.