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Kevin Dean
YOUNG
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
-
To buy cocaine
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
August 31,
1988
Date
of arrest:
September
1988
Date of birth: 1968
Victim profile: Dennis Ray Hepler,
35 (principal of an elementary school)
Method of murder: Shooting (.25 caliber pistol)
Location: Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in South Carolina on November 3, 2000
The United States Court
of Appeals For the Fourth Circuit
Kevin Dean Young was sentenced to death twice, first in 1989 and
second in 1993 for the robbery and shooting death of 35-year-old
Dennis Ray Hepler on August 31, 1988.
Helper had just begun his first year as the
principal of an elementary school and was working late. As he was
leaving the school, he was robbed by Young and three accomplices. He
was shot twice, even after giving up his wallet containing $67.
Young fired the first and fatal shot, then William Bell shot Dennis
in the head while he was on the ground.
Young had a long criminal history and was on
parole at the time of Dennis's murder. Bell also received a death
sentence in this murder.
Kevin Dean Young
ProDeathPenalty.com
Kevin Dean Young was sentenced to death twice,
first in 1989 and second in 1993 for the robbery and shooting death
of 35-year-old Dennis Ray Hepler on August 31, 1988.
Dennis had just
begun his first year as the principal of an elementary school in
Anderson, SC. He was leaving the school at night when he was robbed
by Young and three accomplices. He was shot twice, even after giving
up his wallet containing $67.
Young fired the first and fatal shot,
then William Bell shot Dennis in the head while he was on the ground.
Young had a long criminal history and was on parole at the time of
Dennis's murder. Bell also received a death sentence in this murder.
UPDATE:
After 12 years on South Carolina's death
row for killing an Anderson County school principal, Kevin Dean
Young died Friday at 6:18 p.m. from lethal injection.
Young along with 2 other men were convicted for
the robbery and killing of Dennis Hepler, a 35-year-old principal of
West Franklin Elementary School near downtown Anderson on Aug. 31,
1988.
Hepler had stayed late at the school to get it
ready for opening for the school year. After Hepler handed over his
wallet, he was fatally shot. Marilyn Alexander remembers the
Wednesday night, 12 years ago, when she learned by phone her only
brother, an elementary school principal, had been shot to death
outside his Anderson school. Robbers took $67 from him and fired 2
shots, 1 into his head, another into his back.
Alexander, a church secretary, was at the prison,
but did not want to see the execution as it occurred Friday. "I will
feel that justice has been done," she said in an interview earlier
this week.
Through the years, Alexander has awakened crying in the
night, she said. Nightmares of her brother's murder track her sleep.
Alone, she cared for their dying mother. "But the hardest part," she
said, "remains dealing with those Wednesday night fears that
something bad is going to happen to another family member."
The South Carolina Supreme Court on Wednesday
denied the latest of Young's appeals, which raised questions about
the qualifications and potential conflicts of interest of some of
his appeals lawyers. Young's request for clemency from Gov. Jim
Hodges was rejected. Young is the 1st inmate executed since David
Rocheville of Duncan was put to death last December. Daniel
Westbrook, one of Young's lawyers, read a brief statement in which
Young asked God, Allah to forgive him.
Also convicted in connection with Hepler's death
were William Henry Bell, who is on death row with appeals still
pending; John Glenn, convicted of armed robbery and accessory and
sentenced to 35 years and Arthur Ray Jones, who drove the 3 men away
from the shooting scene.
Jones pleaded guilty to an accessory charge
and was sentenced to 10 years, with all but 7 1/2 months suspended.
Glenn told police the 3 men were searching for someone to rob. He
later testified before a jury that they were drunk but never planned
anything.
Whatever their intentions, Bell and Young surprised Hepler
as he left the West Franklin Elementary School about 10 p.m., court
testimony shows. They demanded his wallet. Hepler flipped it to the
men, police said, and the men shot him. The men used the money later
to buy cocaine, police said.
Hepler left behind a wife, and 3 young daughters,
who are now teen-agers. Mrs. Hepler died in 1993 from breast cancer.
"In effect, he orphaned those girls," Doug Kessel, Hepler's brother-in-law,
said of Young. "They've had to grow up without parents."
Kessel, who
lives in Montgomery, Ala. and is married to the sister of Hepler's
wife, was among the witnesses to the execution. Kessel said Hepler's
daughters, who are being raised by an aunt and grandmother, have
mixed feelings. "They really kind of wanted to be there but didn't,"
he said.
But Kessel had no such qualms. For years, the 42-year-old
auto repairman has traveled back and forth to attend Young's 2
trials and many court hearings. "I'm ready for it to be over with,"
he said.
Shortly after 6 p.m., the 2 executioners sent 3
drugs into Young's arms. The 1st, Pentothal, rendered Young
unconscious. A dose of procuronium bromide, a muscle relaxer,
followed, causing Young to stop breathing. Finally, potassium
chloride was injected, stopping his heart.
In Anderson, the school
where Hepler was shot has since been closed and turned into a
community center. City officials wrote about Hepler's death and how
the community came together to create the center in their successful
application for designation as an All-American City. Hepler has not
been forgotten.
A park was named in his honor in 1992. His memory
also lives in the hearts of his former church softball teammates,
who wore his name and number on their sleeves for years after his
death and begin each season by remembering him in prayer.
Kevin Dean Young
Law.emory.edu.com
Not long after nightfall on August 31, 1988,
Young and two cohorts, William Bell and John Glenn, accosted Dennis
Hepler on the grounds of the West Franklin Street Elementary School
in Anderson, South Carolina.
Hepler, the school's principal, was working late
that evening. During this encounter, Hepler was fatally shot in the
back with a .25 caliber pistol.
Young and the others fled the scene with Hepler's
wallet, which contained less than seventy dollars.
Young was soon apprehended and charged with
murder, of which he was convicted by a jury on May 18, 1989.
That same jury subsequently found Young to have
murdered Hepler in the commission of an armed robbery, and it
recommended that Young be sentenced to death.
The trial court
sentenced Young in accordance with the jury's recommendation, but
that sentence was vacated on appeal because of numerous evidentiary
errors infecting the sentencing phase. See State v. Young, 409 S.E.2d
352 (S.C. 1991) (affirming murder conviction but remanding for
resentencing).
In June 1993, the question of Young's sentence
was presented to a second jury. At the conclusion of those
proceedings, Young was again sentenced to death based on the jury's
finding that Young had murdered Hepler in the course of an armed
robbery.
The Supreme Court of South Carolina affirmed
Young's sentence, State v. Young, 459 S.E.2d 84 (S.C. 1995) ("Young
II"), and the Supreme Court of the United States denied review,
Young v. South Carolina, 516 U.S. 1051 (1996).
Kevin Dean Young
Fight the Death Penalty USA
A man twice sentenced to die for robbing and
killing a principal on the steps of an elementary school was
executed by lethal injection Friday after the governor and the U.S.
Supreme Court turned down last-ditch appeals.
Kevin Dean Young, 32, and 2 other men were
convicted of taking $67 from Dennis Hepler, 35, as he walked out of
school in August 1988.
Young's lawyers conceded he shot Helper, but said
another man may have fired the fatal shot. Young said he fell
backward and shot Hepler after the principal threw his wallet and
swung at him.
Gov. Jim Hodges refused Friday to commute the
death sentence. Later in the day, the Supreme Court, unanimously and
without comment, denied a stay of execution. Young's attorney read a
final statement: "If I said I was sorry, few if any would believe
me, so I am not going dwell on that issue. I asked God, Allah, to
forgive me, not man."
Young was convicted in 1989 and sentenced to
death, but the state Supreme Court returned the case to trial court
for new sentencing. In 1993, another jury sentenced him to die. In
his latest appeal, Young said among other things that his lawyers
should have challenged the makeup of the 2nd jury pool, which was
91% white. Young is black; Hepler was white.
Co-defendant William Henry Bell, who also faces
execution, has an appeal pending before the state Supreme Court. The
3rd man, John Glenn, was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to
25 years in prison. He was denied parole last month.
Young becomes
the 1st condemned inmate to be executed this year in South Carolina,
and the 25th overall since the state resumed capital punishment in
1985. Young becomes the 72nd condemned inmate to be put to death
this year in the USA and the 670th overall since America resumed
executions on January 17, 1977. (sources: Associated Press & Rick
Halperin)
After 12 years on South Carolina's death row for
killing an Anderson County school principal, Kevin Dean Young died
Friday at 6:18 p.m. from lethal injection. It was the 1st execution
in the Palmetto State this year. His attorney read a brief statement
before the execution occurred.
Young along with 2 other men were
convicted for the robbery and killing of Dennis Hepler, a 35-year-old
principal of West Franklin Elementary School near downtown Anderson
on Aug. 31, 1988. Hepler had stayed late at the school to get it
ready for opening for the school year.
After Hepler handed over his
wallet, he was fatally shot. Marilyn Alexander remembers the
Wednesday night, 12 years ago, when she learned by phone her only
brother, an elementary school principal, had been shot to death
outside his Anderson school. Robbers took $67 from him and fired 2
shots, 1 into his head, another into his back.
Alexander, a church secretary, was at the prison,
but did not want to see the execution as it occurred Friday. "I will
feel that justice has been done," she said in an interview earlier
this week.
Through the years, Alexander has awakened crying in the
night, she said. Nightmares of her brother's murder track her sleep.
Alone, she cared for their dying mother. "But the hardest part," she
said, "remains dealing with those Wednesday night fears that
something bad is going to happen to another family member."
The
South Carolina Supreme Court on Wednesday denied the latest of
Young's appeals, which raised questions about the qualifications and
potential conflicts of interest of some of his appeals lawyers.
Young's request for clemency from Gov. Jim Hodges was rejected.
Young is the 1st inmate executed since David Rocheville of Duncan
was put to death last December. Daniel Westbrook, one of Young's
lawyers, read a brief statement in which Young asked God, Allah to
forgive him.
Also convicted in connection with Hepler's death
were William Henry Bell, who is on death row with appeals still
pending; John Glenn, convicted of armed robbery and accessory and
sentenced to 35 years and Arthur Ray Jones, who drove the 3 men away
from the shooting scene.
Jones pleaded guilty to an accessory charge
and was sentenced to 10 years, with all but 7 1/2 months suspended.
Glenn told police the 3 men were searching for someone to rob. He
later testified before a jury that they were drunk but never planned
anything.
Whatever their intentions, Bell and Young
surprised Hepler as he left the West Franklin Elementary School
about 10 p.m., court testimony shows. They demanded his wallet.
Hepler flipped it to the men, police said, and the men shot him.
The
men used the money later to buy cocaine, police said. Hepler left
behind a wife, and 3 young daughters, who are now teen- agers. Mrs.
Hepler died in 1993 from breast cancer. "In effect, he orphaned
those girls," Doug Kessel, Hepler's brother-in-law, said of Young. "They've
had to grow up without parents." Kessel, who lives in Montgomery,
Ala. and is married to the sister of Hepler's wife, was among the
witnesses to the execution. Kessel said Hepler's daughters, who are
being raised by an aunt and grandmother, have mixed feelings. "They
really kind of wanted to be there but didn't," he said.
But Kessel
had no such qualms. For years, the 42-year-old auto repairman has
traveled back and forth to attend Young's 2 trials and many court
hearings. "I'm ready for it to be over with," he said.
Shortly after 6 p.m., the 2 executioners sent 3
drugs into Young's arms. The 1st, Pentothal, rendered Young
unconscious. A dose of procuronium bromide, a muscle relaxer,
followed, causing Young to stop breathing.
Finally, potassium
chloride was injected, stopping his heart. In Anderson, the school
where Hepler was shot has since been closed and turned into a
community center. City officials wrote about Hepler's death and how
the community came together to create the center in their successful
application for designation as an All-American City.
Hepler has not
been forgotten. A park was named in his honor in 1992. His memory
also lives in the hearts of his former church softball teammates,
who wore his name and number on their sleeves for years after his
death and begin each season by remembering him in prayer. (source:
The Greenville News)
South Carolina Attorney General
Condon Announces Execution Date for Kevin Dean
Young
October 13, 2000
(Columbia, S.C.) Attorney General Charlie Condon
announced today that the South Carolina Supreme Court has set Friday
November 3, 2000 as the execution date for Kevin Dean Young.
Young was convicted and sentenced to death on May
23, 1989 for the August 31, 1988 shooting of West Franklin
Elementary School Principal Dennis Hepler in Anderson County.
He was sentenced to death again in June of 1993
after the SC Supreme Court overturned the sentence in August of
1991. He has now exhausted all State and Federal appeals. His co-defendant
William Henry Bell, currently has an appeal pending before the SC
Supreme Court.
Another co-defendant John Glenn was convicted of
armed robbery and sentenced to 25 years in prison in 1988. He will
be up for parole at a hearing on Wednesday October 18 in Columbia.
Young and Bell shot Hepler to death on the school steps, robbing him
of 67 dollars which was used to buy cocaine. His wife, Brenda died
of cancer in 1995. They had three children.
"This was a brutal execution-style murder of a
beloved Principal in the shadow of the schoolhouse door. Mr. Hepler
was slain over 67 dollars to buy drugs. It is time to make it clear
that South Carolina treasures Mr. Hepler's life and that his life
cannot be snuffed out for a line of cocaine," Condon said.
NCADP National Execution Alert
Kevin Dean Young (SC) B/W
November 3, 2000
James Mann was a former prosecutor who claimed to
have sent more defendants to the electric chair than any other
prosecutor in the United States. He was also the attorney of Kevin
Dean Young during his murder trial in 1989 and his task was to
defend Kevin against the murder charge and attempt to avoid a death
sentence.
Kevin’s case is another example of both ineffective legal
representation for poor defendants and the racial disparities in the
implementation of the death penalty.
Kevin was charged with the 1988 murder of Dennis
Hepler. During the trial process James Mann did not coordinate his
strategy with Kevin.
Like a good prosecutor, Mann started his
opening statement with the clear argument that the defendant was
“technically” and “morally” guilty of murder. This concession of
guilt was issued without the consent of Young and despite the
uncertainty which remained about the question if Kevin or co-defendant
William Bell fired the fatal shot. The District Court later stated
that during the guilt phase James Mann “abandoned his role as a
‘defense’ attorney and reverted to his long role as a prosecuting
attorney.”
Even after the trial Kevin’s chances were reduced
by ineffective assistance of counsel. His post-conviction lawyers
Christopher Olsen and Douglas Patrick did not met the the statutory
qualifications.
Neither met the mandatory criteria of the South
Carolina Uniform Post-Conviction Procedure Act, which requires that,
in capital state post-conviction relief actions, “at least one of
the attorneys appointed to represent applicant must have previously
represented a death row inmate.”
It was a black-on-white crime and African-Americans
were underrepresented on jury. A June 1998 study of the Death
Penalty Information Center shows that of the Chief District
Attorneys in all U.S. counties, 98 percent are white. Between 1983
and 1993 the rate at which eligible black defendants were sentenced
to death was nearly 40 percent higher than the rate for other
eligible defendants.
Execution Date Set for Murderer
Augusta Chronicle
COLUMBIA - The man convicted of shooting an
Anderson principal on the school steps and robbing him of $67 will
be executed next month, the state Supreme Court says. Kevin Dean
Young is scheduled to be put to death Nov. 3.
Mr. Young shot West Franklin Elementary School
Principal Dennis Hepler outside the school Aug. 31, 1988, said state
Attorney General Charlie Condon. He robbed Mr. Hepler and used the
money to buy cocaine, Mr. Condon said.
Mr. Young first was convicted
in 1989 and sentenced to death, but the South Carolina Supreme Court,
citing errors in the sentencing phase, sent the case back to the
trial court. In 1993, another jury sentenced him to die, and that
was upheld by the state's high court. Mr. Young has exhausted all
state and federal appeals, Mr. Condon said.
Mr. Young's co-defendant, William Henry Bell, has
an appeal pending before the state Supreme Court. Another co-defendant,
John Glenn, was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to 25 years
in prison in 1988. He will be up for parole at a hearing Wednesday.
U.S. Court
of Appeals, Fourth Circuit
KEVIN DEAN YOUNG, PETITIONER - APPELLANT, V.
WILLIAM D. CATOE, DIRECTOR, SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS;
CHARLES M. CONDON, ATTORNEY GENERAL, STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
RESPONDENTS - APPELLEES.
KEVIN DEAN YOUNG, PETITIONER - APPELLEE, V.
WILLIAM D. CATOE, DIRECTOR, SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS;
CHARLES M. CONDON, ATTORNEY GENERAL, STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
RESPONDENTS - APPELLANTS.
February 29, 2000
Appeal from the United States District Court for
the District of South Carolina, at Charleston. Matthew J. Perry Jr.,
Senior District Judge. (CA-98-1742-2-10)
Before Williams, Michael, and King, Circuit Judges.
The opinion of the court was delivered by: King,
Circuit Judge
PUBLISHED
Argued: December 1, 1999
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge King wrote the
opinion, in which Judge Williams and Judge Michael joined.
Kevin Dean Young, imprisoned in South Carolina
under a sentence of death, appeals the district court's denial of his
application for a writ of habeas corpus. The lower court rejected
Young's claims that (1) his lawyer rendered ineffective assistance
during the guilt phase of Young's murder trial; and (2) his death
sentence was arbitrarily and capriciously imposed because the
sentencing court declined to instruct the jury that the alternative of
life imprisonment would ensure that Young served a minimum of thirty
years. We agree with the district court that Young is not in custody
in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, and we
therefore affirm the judgment below.
I.
A.
Not long after nightfall on August 31, 1988, Young
and two cohorts -- William Bell and John Glenn -- accosted Dennis
Hepler on the grounds of the West Franklin Street Elementary School in
Anderson, South Carolina. Hepler, the school's principal, was working
late that evening. During this encounter, Hepler was fatally shot in
the back with a .25 caliber pistol. Young and the others fled the
scene with Hepler's wallet, which contained less than seventy dollars.
Young was soon apprehended and charged with murder,
of which he was convicted by a jury on May 18, 1989. That same jury
subsequently found Young to have murdered Hepler in the commission of
an armed robbery, and it recommended that Young be sentenced to death.
See S.C. Code Ann. § 16-3-20(C)(a)(1)(d) (formerly (1)(e)) (West Supp.
1999) (specifying "robbery while armed with a deadly weapon" as a
statutory aggravating circumstance justifying imposition of the death
penalty upon conviction of murder). The trial court sentenced Young in
accordance with the jury's recommendation, but that sentence was
vacated on appeal because of numerous evidentiary errors infecting the
sentencing phase. See State v. Young, 409 S.E.2d 352 (S.C. 1991) (affirming
murder conviction but remanding for resentencing).
In June 1993, the question of Young's sentence was
presented to a second jury. At the conclusion of those proceedings,
Young was again sentenced to death based on the jury's finding that
Young had murdered Hepler in the course of an armed robbery. The
Supreme Court of South Carolina affirmed Young's sentence, State v.
Young, 459 S.E.2d 84 (S.C. 1995) ("Young II"), and the Supreme Court
of the United States denied review, Young v. South Carolina, 516 U.S.
1051 (1996).
B.
On May 22, 1996, Young filed an Application for
PostConviction Relief in the Court of Common Pleas of Anderson County,
South Carolina (the "PCR Court"). Young later amended the Application,
with regard to which the PCR Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on
January 16 and April 9, 1997. On July 31, 1997, the PCR Court entered
a lengthy "Order of Dismissal" denying the Application with prejudice.
Young petitioned for review of the PCR Court's order, but the Supreme
Court of South Carolina denied certiorari on May 15, 1998.
With the possibility of state relief thus
foreclosed, Young filed this application for a federal writ of habeas
corpus in the district court on July 29, 1998. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a)
(conferring jurisdiction on the federal courts to consider the claims
of those in state custody that their confinement is "in violation of
the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States"). In reply,
the Director of the South Carolina Department of Corrections
*fn1
and the state's Attorney General ("the respondents") moved for summary
judgment, submitting a number of exhibits in support thereof.
The respondents' motion was referred to a magistrate judge for
initial consideration, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B). In his
Report and Recommendation filed October 28, 1998, the magistrate judge
concluded that Young's application should be denied. Young timely
filed written objections to the Report and Recommendation, requiring
that the district court review de novo the disputed findings and
conclusions. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1).
By order dated March 2, 1999, and judgment entered thereon, the
district court denied Young's application for habeas relief. The court
issued an expanded order ten days later, more fully explaining the
reasons for its decision. On April 30, 1999, in response to Young's
motions for reconsideration and to alter or amend the judgment, the
district court amended its earlier explanatory order to correct
certain misstatements of fact contained within. The court's judgment
in favor of the respondents, however, remained unchanged. From the
adverse judgment of the district court and its final amended order of
April 30, 1999, Young appeals.
II.
During the multitude of state and federal judicial proceedings that
have culminated in our review, Young's claims of constitutional error
have been whittled to two: (1) his lawyer's trial performance in
several particulars fell short of the competence demanded by the Sixth
Amendment; and (2) the court's refusal at resentencing to instruct the
jury so as to correct its misapprehension of the term "life
imprisonment" violated Young's Fourteenth Amendment right to due
process, with the result that the jury's decision to recommend a death
sentence was not sufficiently reliable to assure his Eighth Amendment
protection against cruel and unusual punishment. Both claims were
considered and rejected at the state level, the first by the PCR Court
and the second by the Supreme Court of South Carolina.
Regarding the ineffective assistance claim, the PCR Court concluded
that Young's lawyer had competently pursued a trial strategy designed
to maximize the possibility that his client would eventually escape a
death sentence. The court opined that, even had counsel's performance
been deficient, Young had suffered no attendant prejudice because his
own trial testimony virtually assured that the jury would convict him.
With respect to the refused-instruction claim, the Supreme Court of
South Carolina declared that Young's eligibility for parole in the
event of a life sentence was irrelevant to the sentencing
determination. See Young II, 459 S.E.2d at 87 (citing, inter alia,
State v. Davis, 411 S.E.2d 220 (1991), for the proposition that "parole
ineligibility is not relevant to a jury's sentencing considerations,"
absent the defendant's future dangerousness being placed at issue). To
the extent that Young's parole status might have been relevant under
the circumstances, the court characterized as "untenable" Young's
contention that the jury's knowledge thereof may have resulted in a
more lenient sentence. Young II, 459 S.E.2d at 87.
In the wake of the amendments to federal habeas law occasioned by
the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), our
review of South Carolina's disposition of Young's constitutional
claims is considerably limited:
An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in
custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted
with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State
court proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim-
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable
determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the
State court proceeding. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
*fn2
If, as is generally true, no Supreme Court case is controlling as to
law and fact, habeas relief is warranted "only if the state court's
resolution of a question of pure law rests upon an objectively
unreasonable derivation of legal principles from the relevant Supreme
Court precedents, or if its decision rests upon an objectively
unreasonable application of established principles to new facts."
Green v. French, 143 F.3d 865, 870 (4th Cir. 1998), cert. denied, 119
S. Ct. 844 (1999).
There is little dispute concerning the facts, detailed below,
underlying South Carolina's determination that Young's claims lacked
merit; our focus instead is on the state's application of the relevant
Supreme Court authorities to those facts. We are charged with deciding
whether the South Carolina courts resolved in a reasonable fashion the
questions of "pure law" presented here.
III.
A.
Young was represented at trial by James Robert Mann, a former
prosecutor of considerable experience who had been retained by Young's
family. Mann soon discovered that the prospects for his client's
acquittal seemed bleak. Following his arrest for Hepler's murder,
Young had given an oral statement to the police admitting: "I shot him.
I'm the one who shot him. I pulled the trigger. William Bell shot him,
too."
Mann examined the autopsy report, which revealed that Hepler had
been shot twice, once in the back and once behind the right ear. The
latter bullet exited to the right of Hepler's nose, resulting in
nothing more than soft-tissue damage. The wound to the back, however,
proved lethal; that bullet pierced Hepler's aorta, causing him to
bleed to death.
Mann interviewed Young a number of times concerning the
circumstances surrounding Hepler's death. On each occasion, Young
related that he had fired the first, fatal shot into Hepler's back.
*fn3
Thereafter, according to Young, Bell seized the pistol and shot Hepler
in the head.
In South Carolina, murder is defined as "the killing of any person
with malice aforethought, either express or implied." S.C. Code Ann. §
16-3-10 (Law. Co-op. 1985). "Malice," in turn, is "the wrongful intent
to injure another and indicates a wicked or depraved spirit intent on
doing wrong." State v. Johnson, 352 S.E.2d 480, 481 (S.C. 1987) (citations
omitted).
In light of the apparent facts and the applicable law, Mann decided
that the best course of action was to concentrate his efforts -not on
Young's acquittal -- but on avoiding the imposition of the death
penalty. At the PCR hearing, Mann described his thinking:
Q: What was your assessment of the strength of the state's case
against your client?
A: Well, I thought it was overwhelming. As I indicated earlier, my
-- I construed my job would be to save his life. J.A. 1219.
Toward his goal of saving Young's life, Mann decided to pursue a
strategy of being straightforward with the jury during the guilt phase,
attempting to thereby enhance his credibility and that of his client.
Mann hoped that this approach would pay dividends at the sentencing
phase, persuading the jury to accept his primary argument -that
Young's conduct, though reprehensible, was not so egregious as to
merit a sentence of death. A key component of Mann's strategy was to
demonstrate to the jury that Young was not evil, and that he was
remorseful for the consequences of his actions. Mann therefore thought
it necessary that Young testify in his own defense, a decision in
which Young fully concurred. Armed with his strategy of conciliation,
Mann addressed the jury at the commencement of trial:
Mr. Foreman, ladies and gentlemen, this case is going to be
different. You're going to find that the defense is just as interested
in getting at the truth as the State is . . . . You're going to find
in this case that this is a . . . situational development that
resulted in the unfortunate death of Dennis Hepler. No planning. No
malice aforethought . . . . The co-defendant [sic] fired what is
somewhat admittedly an intentional shot, intended to kill. But it will
be our contention that the shot fired by this defendant, admittedly
the fatal shot, was very questionable in its intent for various
reasons which you'll hear. J.A. 666-67 (emphasis added).
Later on, Mann returned to the question of Young's intent:
Now, when I use the language to you of a situational killing, we're
talking about a situation where there was no malice aforethought . . .
. The law requires him to plead not guilty. He's guilty. He
acknowledges his guilt. Technically he's guilty. Morally he's guilty.
Because in a situation like that, you're presumed to intend the
consequences of your act. The hand of one tends to be hand of all . .
. . The use of a deadly weapon causes an implication of malice just by
the fact that it's a weapon. You don't have to say I'm mean and I've
got malice in my heart . . . . [I]t's implied that you have malice if
a gun was used. So, that element is supplied. J.A. 670 (emphasis added).
Mann then continued:
But when we look at murder . . . we think of planning, malicious
intent. The fellow that goes in and robs a 24-hour store, he attempts
to do what he's doing. It's not forced on him by circumstances. It's
not contributed to by other people. It's not contributed to by three
boys drinking and wandering around engaged in minor degrees of
devilness.
We don't dispute the basic circumstances which the State found. We
congratulate the law enforcement officers for doing a good job in that
connection. It's just our position that this is not the type of case
where we need to take another life in order for justice to be done.
J.A. 670-71.
Unfortunately, Mann's opening presentation contained two stark
misstatements of South Carolina law. To begin with, any defendant
accused of a crime may enter a valid plea of guilty and forgo trial;
the state statute permitting conviction by guilty plea admits of no
exception for capital murder. See S.C. Code Ann. § 17-23-80 (Law. Coop.
1985); see also S.C. Code § 16-3-20(A) ("A person who is convicted of
or pleads guilty to murder must be punished by death, by imprisonment
for life, or by a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment for thirty
years.") (West Supp. 1999) (emphasis added).
Secondly, Mann's suggestion that the element of malice could be
presumed from Young's use of a deadly weapon was directly contrary to
the rule announced nearly six years earlier in State v. Elmore, 308
S.E.2d 781 (S.C. 1983), overruled on other grounds by State v.
Torrence, 406 S.E.2d 315, 328 n.5 (S.C. 1991) (concurring opinion of
Justice Toal, joined by a majority of the court). In Elmore, the
Supreme Court of South Carolina abolished the state's long-standing
practice of instructing juries in murder cases that the use of a
deadly weapon mandated a presumption of malice. Id. at 784.
*fn4
After Elmore, a jury could be instructed only that malice "may" be
implied from the use of such a weapon. See id.
The state's case-in-chief proceeded rapidly through eleven witnesses,
just six of whom Mann chose to cross-examine at all, and those but
briefly. After the state rested, Mann called Young to the witness
stand. Young described the encounter with Hepler as a chance meeting,
which degenerated into a confrontation when Bell grabbed the necklace
that Hepler wore and snatched it from his neck. As Hepler started
toward Bell, Young raised the pistol that he was carrying and pointed
it toward the principal. Bell then demanded Hepler's money; Hepler
produced his wallet, and tossed it near Bell's feet. According to
Young, the critical moment arrived as Bell attempted to retrieve the
wallet:
A: Okay. So, he tossed the wallet towards Bell. Bell turned, he had
to walk to get the wallet. So, as Bell, he turned to get the wallet,
so I turned all my attention towards Bell, which I still had the gun
aimed, you know. I was paying attention to Bell. Before I knew it, the
guy had swung. So, I kind of stumbled back on the steps and I fell
backwards, and the gun just went off . . . . So, my friend Bell came
and got the gun out of my hand.
I said, "John, let's get out of here, man." So, we started to run.
John [Glenn] then asked me, he said, "Kevin, where's Bell at?" So we
both stopped and turned around. We saw Bell aim the gun and fire the
gun also.
Q: Where was the man at that point?
A: He was laying down.
Q: All right. Could you see what part of him Bell fired at?
A: He shot towards his head. J.A. 798-99.
After the prosecutor cross-examined Young, Mann summoned John Glenn
to the witness stand. Glenn, however, invoked his Fifth Amendment
privilege against self-incrimination and offered little useful
testimony. The defense then rested.
In his closing argument, Mann returned to the theme that had
dominated his opening statement. In essence, Mann admitted that Young
was technically guilty of murder, but that he never planned to kill
Hepler. Mann implored the jury to consider that the crime that Young
had committed was "not the type of murder that society is going to
determine should forfeit one's life."
B.
1.
A petitioner seeking to obtain relief from his conviction or
sentence on the ground that his counsel rendered ineffective
assistance must make two showings. First, he must demonstrate that
counsel's performance was indeed deficient, i.e., that his lawyer
failed in some respect to fulfill the role of adversary envisioned by
the Sixth Amendment. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687-88
(1984). Second, it must be shown that the petitioner suffered
prejudice attributable to counsel's deficiencies, i.e., that "counsel's
errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a
trial whose result is reliable." Id.
Counsel's performance is evaluated with regard to whether it "fell
below an objective standard of reasonableness" under the circumstances.
Id. at 688-90. The test is rigorous: "[A] court must indulge a strong
presumption that counsel's conduct falls within the wide range of
reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must
overcome the presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged
action might be considered sound trial strategy." Id. at 689 (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted).
With respect to the prejudice requirement, the petitioner "must show
that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different." Id. at 694. The level of certainty is something less than
a preponderance; it need not be proved that counsel's performance more
likely than not affected the outcome. Id. at 693. Instead, the
petitioner need only demonstrate "a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome." Id. at 694.
2.
The crux of Young's ineffective assistance claim is that Mann,
during his opening statement, abdicated his role as advocate for the
defense by conceding: (1) that Young was guilty of the charge of
murder, including the essential element of malice; and (2) that Young
fired the shot that killed Hepler. Young contends that, had Mann
contested the state's evidence tooth and nail, there was a reasonable
probability that the jury would have convicted him of manslaughter
instead of murder.
*fn5
a.
i.
Our precedents plainly illustrate that counsel's concession of a
client's guilt does not automatically constitute deficient performance.
Rather, we must heed Strickland's admonition to consider the totality
of the circumstances confronting the lawyer in order to accurately
evaluate the reasonableness of the conduct at issue.
In Clozza v. Murray, 913 F.2d 1092 (4th Cir. 1990), a capital habeas
proceeding, we addressed the petitioner's claim that defense counsel
had rendered ineffective assistance at trial by making a number of
remarks intended to put distance between counsel and the petitioner,
with the result that the jury may have perceived counsel to have
effectively conceded the petitioner's guilt. We acknowledged that,
under Strickland, a trial strategy designed to maintain counsel's
credibility with the jury could be reasonable, notwithstanding the
possibility of short-term harm to the defendant. The lawyer in Clozza,
faced with "overpowering" proof against his client, id. at 1101, was
left with the sole hope of convincing the jury to accept his
characterization of the evidence and ignore those portions of the
defendant's trial testimony inconsistent with an intoxication defense.
We observed that the remarks at issue
indicated to the jury that defense counsel understood the gravity of
the crimes as well as their horrible nature. Had counsel attempted to
pass the crimes off as anything other than the atrocities that they
were, his credibility with the jury would most certainly become
suspect. Thus, we conclude that counsel's remarks were consistent with
his trial strategy. Id. at 1099.
Our subsequent decision in Bell v. Evatt, 72 F.3d 421 (4th Cir.
1995), makes the point more precisely. In that case, the petitioner's
lawyer, attempting to secure a guilty-but-mentally-ill verdict for his
client on charges of murder and kidnaping, explicitly told the jury
during his closing argument that his client was guilty of the latter.
We rejected the petitioner's claim that counsel had represented him
ineffectively, noting that the evidence supporting the kidnaping
charge was "overwhelming," id. at 429, and that
[i]t was important for the defense to retain some credibility so
that the jury would be sympathetic to the defense witnesses testifying
that Bell deserved mercy . . . . [T]he decision to pursue a GBMI
verdict was a strategic one that Bell and his trial counsel agreed to
. . . . All indications lead us to conclude that the decision to
concede his guilt was a rational one . . . . Id. at 428 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
*fn6
Clozza and Bell stand for the proposition that, on occasion, it is
best to risk losing the battle in the hope of winning the war. "There
is a distinction which can and must be drawn between a statement or
remark which amounts to a tactical retreat and one which has been
called a complete surrender." Clozza, 913 F.2d at 1099. As we
thereafter recognized, "[s]ome remarks of complete concession may
constitute ineffective assistance of counsel, but tactical retreats
may be reasonable and necessary within the context of the entire trial,
particularly when there is overwhelming evidence of the defendant's
guilt." Bell, 72 F.3d at 429.
In Clozza, it was necessary for counsel to retreat from being
identified too closely with the cause of his client, if the latter
were to stand any chance of benefiting from the former's credibility.
In Bell, it was necessary for counsel to retreat from pursuing
acquittal on the charge of kidnaping, in order to increase the
likelihood that the jury would return a verdict of something less than
unequivocal guilt of murder. And, in the case now before us, it was
necessary for counsel to retreat from an unlikely acquittal of a
patently guilty client, so that he might attain the more realistic
goal of saving the client's life.
That was, at least, the reasoning of the PCR Court, which found that,
in the face of "an overwhelmingly strong case" against Young,
*fn7
counsel felt that the best way to save [Young's] life was if he gave
the jury the appearance that he was willing for the truth to come out
concerning the murder and was remorseful for his role in it . . . .
Obviously, counsel's concession is consistent with the overall
strategy of conceding that [Young] was technically guilty of murder
but did not deserve the death penalty. J.A. 1738-39. The court
concluded that "counsel's strategic decision -made only after
investigation and with [Young's] express approval
*fn8
-- was reasonable." J.A. 1726.
With regard to the Sixth Amendment's requirement that trial counsel
render competent assistance, the PCR Court's interpretation of the
applicable Supreme Court precedents is largely in accord with our own,
as evidenced by the similarities in circumstances, analysis, and
result between this case on one hand, and Clozza and Bell on the other.
Insofar as one could argue, however, that the PCR Court's decision is
an extension of Strickland and its progeny beyond the limits of what
we have previously sanctioned, it nevertheless does not represent an
unreasonable application of clearly established federal law.
Consequently, paying strict heed to the standard of review set forth
in § 2254(d)(1), we must uphold the PCR Court's conclusion that Mann's
concession of Young's guilt did not constitute deficient performance.
*fn9
ii.
We likewise sustain the PCR Court's ruling that Mann acted
reasonably in admitting that Young had fired the fatal shot, even
though the state's evidence ultimately proved inconclusive on this
point. Given the defense theory that Young had more or less
accidentally discharged the pistol, Mann needed to associate Young's
actions with the shot to Hepler's back, rather than the execution-style
coup de grace administered afterward. The basis for Mann's argument
was, of course, what Young had repeatedly told him during their
interviews, which was later confirmed by Young's trial testimony that
Bell had fired toward Hepler's head.
Moreover, putting the state to its proof regarding who fired which
shot would have served little purpose, inasmuch as Young's conviction
did not rest on his having actually inflicted the fatal wound. The
trial court instructed the jury consistently with South Carolina's "hand
of one, hand of all" doctrine: "[W]hen two or more persons aid,
encourage, and abet each other in the commission of a crime, all being
present, all are principals and equally guilty." State v. Hicks, 185
S.E.2d 746, 748 (S.C. 1971) (citation omitted).
*fn10
The jury was not instructed that, to convict Young, it had to first
rule out Bell as the deliverer of the mortal wound.
*fn11
In essence, then, Young had much to gain and little to lose from
Mann's "concession."
b.
Even were we persuaded that the PCR Court unreasonably applied
clearly established federal law in concluding that Mann's trial
performance was adequate, we would still be constrained to deny relief
in this case because we can find no fault with the PCR Court's
alternative holding that Young suffered no prejudice as the result of
Mann's allegedly defective representation. Put simply, Young's own
statements admitted all of the facts required for a conviction, and
those statements were unaffected by the performance of his lawyer.
Young's statements were introduced through two sources: (1) the
arresting officer; and (2) Young himself. At trial, the officer
testified that the following exchange took place between himself and
Young after the arrest:
[Officer]: [H]e said that he and John Glenn and William Bell, Jr.
were together on the night of Wednesday, August 31st; he says that
they all walked around to the West Franklin Street School and they saw
a car parked outside and they went through the car. At that time Kevin
Young said, "I shot him. I'm the one who shot him. I pulled the
trigger. William Bell shot him too."
At that time I asked, "Why did you shoot him?"
And Kevin Young replied, "I don't know, man. I just shot him. Bell
shot him, too." J.A. 774.
Between the statement to the officer and Young's in-court testimony
(summarized supra at 14-15), Young admitted that: (1) he had fired a
shot against Hepler and hit him in the back; and (2) he shot Hepler
during the course of an armed robbery in which he was an active and
willing participant. Young's own testimony therefore established that
he shot Hepler while intentionally and wrongfully holding the
principal at bay so that Bell could rob him.
*fn12
Thus, from Young's undisputed statements alone, there was direct
evidence that Young killed the victim in the course of an armed
robbery -- an "aggravating circumstance" justifying the death penalty
under South Carolina law. We are convinced that there was no
reasonable probability that the jury in this case would have returned
a verdict of manslaughter absent the purported errors of counsel.
We decline Young's invitation to presume prejudice from his
counsel's trial performance. In an extraordinary situation, a
petitioner may be relieved of making a specific showing of prejudice
in support of his ineffective assistance claim. That approach, however,
is appropriately limited to those rare cases where the petitioner has
been denied counsel at a critical stage of the court proceedings, or
where counsel "entirely fails to subject the prosecution's case to
meaningful adversarial testing[.]" United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S.
648, 658-60 & n.25 (1984). Young was in no way denied counsel, and the
latter situation is not present here.
IV.
Young also contends that the resentencing court erred in refusing to
instruct the jury that, if the jury sentenced him to life imprisonment
in lieu of imposing a sentence of death, Young would not be parole
eligible for thirty years. In this regard, Young argues: (1) that his
proposed instruction was mandated by Simmons v. South Carolina, 512
U.S. 154 (1994); and (2) that the absence of such an instruction
violated due process, inasmuch as several of the jurors expressed
confusion during voir dire about the meaning of "life imprisonment."
Young's first argument -- that his proposed instruction was mandated
by Simmons -- is grounded in the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The
Eighth Amendment, by incorporation through the Fourteenth, prohibits
the states from limiting the sentencer's consideration of any relevant
fact that might cause it to decline to impose the death penalty. Payne
v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 824 (1991) (citation omitted). More
particularly, in Simmons, the Supreme Court held that the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a sentencer to be informed
as to the probable duration of a "life" sentence before it may decide
on the alternative of death based on the defendant's future
dangerousness.
Simmons stands for the proposition that "where the State seeks to
show that the defendant will be a future danger to society, the
presentation of the fact that the defendant will never be paroled and
released into the general public will often be the only way in which a
violent criminal can successfully meet the State's case." Roach v.
Angelone, 176 F.3d 210, 220 (4th Cir. 1999). Because due process
requires that a criminal defendant "be allowed to meet the State's
case against him, . . . where the defendant is truly ineligible for
parole, the Due Process Clause entitles the defendant to inform the
jury of that fact." Id. at 219-20.
We recently rejected the application of Simmons where the defendant
would be parole eligible, however, noting that, "In a State in which
parole is available, the Constitution does not require (or preclude)
jury consideration of that fact." Roach, 176 F.3d at 220 (quoting
Simmons, 512 U.S. at 176). In evaluating Young's claim of error, the
Supreme Court of South Carolina similarly noted that it is up to the
states to determine which sentencing considerations are "relevant" for
Eighth Amendment purposes. Young II at 87 (citing California v. Ramos,
463 U.S. 992, 1001 (1983)). The court then reaffirmed its rulings in
previous cases that a defendant's eligibility for parole was not a
relevant factor that a jury ought to consider, holding that "Simmons
is inapposite as it involves a defendant's ineligibility for parole
and not, as here, information that the defendant would one day be
released from prison." Young II at 87 n.6.
We agree with Young that the State did, in fact, refer to Young's
future dangerousness at the resentencing phase (although the State did
so without specifically relying upon his future dangerousness as a
basis for seeking the death penalty),
*fn13
and that these references were sufficient to place Young's future
dangerousness at issue. Nonetheless, because there is no dispute that
Young would have been parole eligible in thirty years, we do not
believe that the Supreme Court of South Carolina's conclusion was
unreasonable or that Young's claim entitles him to habeas relief.
Young's second argument -- that juror confusion necessitated his
proposed instruction -- also fails under the facts present here. When
asked on voir dire about the likely duration of a life sentence, one
juror responded that the defendant would serve "about twenty years." A
second juror answered that a person so sentenced would not necessarily
spend the rest of his life in prison. All but two of the remaining
jurors also expressed an opinion on the matter; each believed that a
life sentence foreclosed the possibility of parole.
Although the district court subsequently refused Young's request to
inform the jury of the thirty-year minimum, the court did instruct the
jury that "the terms `life imprisonment' and `death sentence' should
be understood in their ordinary and plain meaning." J.A. 1929. In
other words, the district court -- by instructing the jury that life
imprisonment means "life imprisonment" -- effectively gave Young more
than he asked for, and any uncertainty on the part of the jury in this
regard should have been obviated by the court's instruction. Juries
are presumed to follow the court's instructions, see United States v.
Francisco, 35 F.3d 116, 120 (4th Cir. 1994), and we do not believe
that the Supreme Court of South Carolina's rejection of this claim was
unreasonable. Consequently, Young's petition for habeas relief on this
basis fails.
V.
Upon reviewing the parties' briefs and the arguments of counsel, we
cannot say that the Supreme Court of South Carolina unreasonably
applied clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme
Court of the United States. Hence, § 2254(d)(1) admits of no ground
upon which relief may be granted Young.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that Young is not entitled to a
writ of habeas corpus. The judgment of the district court is therefore
affirmed.
On November 3, 1999, William D. Catoe, the current Director of the
South Carolina Department of Corrections, was substituted for the
former Director as a party to this appeal.
Young maintains that the standard of review mandated by the AEDPA
amendments should not govern his ineffective assistance claim,
inasmuch as the PCR Court's Order of Dismissal adopted almost
verbatim the state's legal memorandum in opposition to his
Application for PostConviction Relief. According to Young, the PCR
Court's adoption in toto of the state's position evidences the lack
of a considered "decision" within the meaning of Paragraphs (1) and
(2) of § 2254(d), the existence of such decision being a
prerequisite to the operation of the statute. See Black's Law
Dictionary 407 (6th ed. 1990) ("decision" defined as "[a]
determination arrived at after consideration of facts, and, in legal
context, law"). It is true that, with regard to opinions and orders
rendered by the district courts within this circuit, "[t]he adoption
of one party's proposed findings and conclusions is a practice with
which we have expressed disapproval on a number of occasions." Shaw
v. Martin, 733 F.2d 304, 309 n.7 (4th Cir. 1984) (citing examples).
Nonetheless, the disposition of a petitioner's constitutional claims
in such a manner is unquestionably an "adjudication" by the state
court. If that court addresses the merits of the petitioner's claim,
then § 2254(d) must be applied. Thomas v. Davis, 192 F.3d 445, 455
(4th Cir. 1999) (standard of review set forth in § 2254(d) applies
to all claims "adjudicated on the merits," i.e., "those claims
substantively reviewed and finally determined as evidenced by the
state court's issuance of a formal judgment or decree") (citing
Cardwell v. Greene, 152 F.3d 331, 339 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 119
S. Ct. 587 (1998)); see also Correll v. Thompson, 63 F.3d 1279, 1293
n.11 (4th Cir. 1995) (rejecting petitioner's argument that habeas
court's factual findings were not entitled to presumption of
correctness where court adopted state's version verbatim).
See J.A. 1216 (state post-conviction testimony of James R. Mann). At
the PCR hearing, Young's recollection of these interviews stood in
stark contrast to Mann's. Young testified that he was unaware
whether he had inflicted the mortal wound (or even whether the
bullet from his weapon had struck Hepler), and he steadfastly denied
having told Mann anything to the contrary. The PCR Court, however,
concluded that Mann was a truthful witness, while finding that
Young's testimony lacked credence; the court therefore adopted
Mann's version of the events germaine to the formulation of his
trial strategy. Because the PCR Court's factual determination in
this regard was not unreasonable, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), and
has not been rebutted by clear and convincing evidence, see §
2254(e)(1), we must accept Mann's testimony as true.
In Gilbert v. Moore, 134 F.3d 642, 647 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 119
S. Ct. 103 (1998), we observed that the "presumed malice"
instruction unconstitutionally shifted the burden to the defendant
with regard to an essential element of the crime of murder.
See also United States v. Leifried, 732 F.2d 388, 390 (4th Cir.
1984) (counsel not ineffective for admitting defendant's guilt of
individual drug offenses where evidence was overwhelming and
concession's purpose was to persuade the jury that defendant was
innocent of operating a continuing criminal enterprise).
In addition to Young's confession, detailed supra at 10, witnesses
placed Young in the vicinity of the school near the time of the
shooting, the murder weapon had been hidden just outside the front
door of Young's residence, and Young had told his mother that
investigators were accusing him of a "shooting at the school," when
the officers had not yet revealed the purpose of their visit to the
family's home.
At the PCR hearing, Young denied having discussed with Mann any
trial strategy. As we observed supra in note 3, however, we are
bound to accept the PCR Court's contrary finding. Nonetheless, Young
points out that Mann's own testimony acknowledged that they
discussed the decision to "concede guilt" only to the extent that
Mann promised Young that his arguments to the jury would be crafted
to Young's anticipated testimony. Young's testimony, of course,
established that he was guilty of murder. See supra at 15. Hence,
the PCR Court's finding of consent has not been rebutted by clear
and convincing evidence, and is not unreasonable.
It is of little moment that Mann also conceded the presence of
malice. As we noted supra at 11, malice is an essential element of
the crime of murder in South Carolina. By conceding Young's guilt of
murder, Mann necessarily conceded that Young acted with malice
aforethought. In the event that the jury might have ascribed
unintended meaning to counsel's concession, i.e., viewed Young as a
malicious person within the lay definition of the term, Mann
effectively negated that possibility by portraying his client in a
positive light during the balance of his opening. Further, to the
extent that the prosecution's burden of proof was in danger of being
ameliorated as the result of Mann's misstatements concerning implied
malice, that danger was avoided as the result of the trial judge
giving a proper malice instruction prior to the jury commencing its
deliberations. We close our discussion of this section by noting
finally Young's remaining colorable claims of deficient performance,
specifically that: (1) during the hearing on the admissibility of
Young's confession, Mann failed to call a witness that would have
corroborated Young's testimony that he was intoxicated; (2) Mann
engaged in little meaningful crossexamination of the state's
witnesses; and (3) Mann's closing argument compounded the errors
that he purportedly made during his opening statement, and was
otherwise ineffective. We have fully considered the PCR Court's
disposition of all of these claims, and we conclude that no relief
is warranted under § 2254(d)(1).
In State v. Chavis, 290 S.E.2d 412 (S.C. 1982), the Supreme Court of
South Carolina stated: When several people pursue a common design to
commit an unlawful act and each takes the part agreed upon or
assigned to him in an effort to insure the success of the common
undertaking, the act of one is the act of all and all are presumed
to be present and guilty. Id. at 412-13 (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). Young contends that the language in Chavis
referring to a common design or undertaking engrafted a
premeditation requirement onto the "hand of one" doctrine, an
ingredient that he asserts is missing from the relatively
spontaneous acts at issue here. We disagree with Young's premise. We
read Chavis to simply stand for the notion that, where a criminal
act is in fact perpetrated as the result of a deliberate plan or
scheme, the "presence" requirement of Hicks may be foregone and
liability as a principal imposed on those conspirators absent during
the actual execution of the crime.
Indeed, prior to Young's trial, Bell was convicted of capital murder
arising out of the same incident, notwithstanding that the evidence
in that proceeding indicated that Young had fired the shot that
killed Hepler. The trial judge in that case also gave the "hand of
one" instruction. See State v. Bell, 406 S.E.2d 165, 169-70 (S.C.
1991).
The respondents, via the unnecessary vehicle of cross-appeal, assert
that the district court's judgment with respect to Young's
ineffective assistance claim should be affirmed on the alternative
ground of procedural default. The respondents argued below that
Whetsell v. State, 277 S.E.2d 891 (S.C. 1981), and related
authorities barred federal collateral review of state convictions
where the petitioner had admitted guilt at trial. The Supreme Court
of South Carolina has since rejected that view of Whetsell. See
Johnson v. Catoe, 520 S.E.2d 617 (S.C. 1999). Undaunted, the
respondents now maintain that federal merits review is foreclosed
because Young's state petition for certiorari from the PCR Court's
denial of relief did not, within its broad allegations setting forth
the gist of the ineffective assistance claims, specifically argue
that the lower court's invocation of Whetsell was in error. However,
when the state filed its return to the petition listing the
procedural bar ruling as an additional sustaining ground, Young
submitted a reply in opposition. The district court ruled that,
under the circumstances, Young's claim of ineffective assistance was
properly exhausted before the state courts. We agree.
The Supreme Court of South Carolina noted that "[e]vidence was
presented concerning Young's character and his prior criminal
record." Young II, 459 S.E.2d at 87 n.4.