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Robin Lee
ROW
BOISE -- Exactly 20 years ago, Robin Row set
fire to her Ada County home, killing her husband and two children.
She is the only woman on Idaho's death row.
It was early morning on February 10, 1992 when
Robin Row set her home on fire. The carbon monoxide killed her
husband Randy Row and her two children 10-year-old Joshua and
8-year-old Tabitha.
Row was sentenced to death, and she continues
to appeal that decision. In August 2011, a federal judge dismissed
her entire appeal, but cleared her to ask a higher court to
consider some other issues in her case, including whether her
attorneys were ineffective and whether she was forced to wait too
long to be arraigned.
Randy Row's sister: "I don't think she
deserves to be alive"
Now 20 years after the shocking triple murder,
the victims’ families are waiting to see if Row's death sentence
will be carried out.
"She did get the death penalty, and it's just
being dragged on and on and on at the expense of everybody," Randy
Row's older sister Chris Danielson said. "I could understand them
saying, well, we gotta give her a chance or whatnot, well she
didn't give them a chance. They [the victims] didn't get 20 extra
years on their lives."
Danielson says hearing of each of Robin Row's
appeals makes waiting even more difficult.
"It's almost like pouring salt into your
wounds. Like, is it ever going to get over? Is it ever going to
get over? It's like c'mon, what was all that stuff we went through
when we went to trial and they found her guilty?" Danielson said.
Lead investigator: 'She is an extreme
psychopath'
Current Ada County Sheriff Gary Raney was the
lead investigator on this case in 1992. He was the detective who
made the arrest.
"This was probably the most premeditated, in
some ways, premeditated for gain murders that I've seen," Sheriff
Gary Raney said.
Robin Row had taken out life insurance policies
on her family; there was a quarter million dollars covering her
children. The most recent policy had been taken out just a couple
weeks before their murders.
"For her, it was a matter of would I rather
have this money or would I rather have my husband and my two kids.
She's a sociopath, so she could make the decision, I'd rather have
the money," Raney said.
Sheriff: Robin Row likely killed her two
other children
Raney believes Robin Row also killed her other
two children, but was never caught or charged.
"As I investigated it and learned... I believe,
that she killed a 15-month old daughter in New Hampshire in 1976
and her 6-year-old son in California in 1980," Raney said. "So she
had killed two of her children before, without being caught, and I
was determined that if in fact this was murder, that I was going
to do everything I can to collect the evidence and make sure she
didn't get away with it again."
Raney says the New Hampshire case involved a
daughter who's cause of death was listed as SIDS, but now he says
evidence shows children that age do not die from SIDS. He believes
Robin Row smothered the baby. "She was in a situation where the
child was a burden to her, so she was looking for other
opportunities, again a matter of convenience," Raney said.
In 1980, Raney says Robin Row was staying in a
borrowed cabin with her 6-year-old son Keith when a fire broke out
and killed him. He says forensics suggest the boy's bedroom door
was locked and an electric heater was pushed up against his bed
blankets. Raney says the boy probably tried crawling to the door,
couldn't get out, and died trying to get to the window.
Raney believes Keith's murder is chargeable,
and that Robin Row could have been accused of that murder if the
Boise case hadn't gone forward. He says Robin Row collected
$28,000 in life insurance from Keith's death.
'I think she deserves the death penalty'
"For me understanding her personality and what
she did, I think she deserves the death penalty," Raney said. "But
every day up until that day, she's not able to manipulate other
people, she's not able to get anything out of her web of lies,
she's not going to kill anymore children. So she sits there 23
hours a day on death row and waits for that day to come, then
there's probably some justice alongside that."
Raney says Robin Row has exhausted what could
be considered her significant appeals, though no timeline can be
certain for her case.
"I know that she has lost her final,
significant appeals," Raney said. "She's on the, what might be
classified as 'grasping at straw' appeals, the final
opportunities. I don't expect those to go anywhere. As to what the
timeline would be for those to be exhausted and what ultimately
will be decided about serving the death warrant..."
If Robin Row is ever issued a death warrant,
she would be brought from the Pocatello women's prison to the
maximum security prison in Boise to await execution.
Row is represented by the Federal Defender
Services of Idaho.
The Associated Press
January 25, 2008
Robin Row, convicted of aggravated arson and
three counts of murder in 1993 for setting the fire at her Boise
apartment that killed her husband and two children while they
slept, claimed the state wrongfully withheld information that
could have been helpful to her case.
But in an unanimous ruling today, the high
court said the allegedly withheld evidence did not cast any doubt
on the reliability of her conviction and sentence.
Row already had brought three appeals -- some
of which still were pending in the courts -- when she filed a
fourth petition, claiming a deputy prosecutor committed misconduct
by withholding evidence. The evidence in question was that a law
enforcement officer was present when one of Row's friends recorded
a telephone conversation with Row discussing the night of the
murders.
The fire that killed 32-year-old Randy,
10-year-old Joshua and 8-year-old Tabitha Cornellier happened in
February 1992, and shortly after a detective asked Row's friend
and neighbor, Joan McHugh, to begin recording any phone calls she
received from Row.
In one of those calls, the detective asked
McHugh to lie and tell Row that early on the morning of the fire,
she had woken up and gone downstairs, only to find that Row wasn't
there. Row first told McHugh that she couldn't remember where she
was, according to the recordings, but said in a phone call later
that day that she'd been talking with her psychiatrist in a car
outside the apartment.
When McHugh pointed out that the psychiatrist
could serve as an alibi, proving Row didn't commit the murders,
Row "did not seem enthused about the fact that she would have an
alibi and refused to tell her psychiatrist's name," according to
the detective's report.
In her appeal, Row claimed that the state
wrongfully failed to reveal that the detective was actually
present with McHugh when McHugh recorded the phone calls. But the
Idaho Supreme Court didn't agree, instead finding that at the very
least the detective's report made it clear that he and McHugh were
in close contact during the calls. Besides, the high court found,
such information would not have likely changed the outcome of her
case.
In 1980, another of Row's children, Keith, died
in a California house fire that officials ruled accidental. A
fourth child died of sudden infant death syndrome. Row was
sentenced to death on Dec. 16, 1993, by 4th District Judge Alan
Schwartzman, who called her a pathological liar, citing her
purchase of $276,000 in life insurance on her family in the year
preceding their deaths and her admission that she was having an
affair with a married man. Schwartzman also said the premeditated
arson murders were "the final betrayal of motherhood," and "a
descent into the blackened heart of darkness."
Robin Lee Row v. Thomas J. Beauclair
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER
The merits of the non-dismissed claims in Idaho
state prisoner Robin Lee Row's Second Amended Petition for Writ of
Habeas Corpus are currently before the Court. After considering
the parties' written and oral arguments, and the record herein,
the Court concludes that Row is not entitled to habeas relief, and
this case will be dismissed.
BACKGROUND
1. The Fire
On February 10, 1992, Robin Row's husband,
Randy, and her two children, Joshua and Tabitha, died from carbon
monoxide poisoning while they slept in their upstairs bedrooms
during an early morning fire at their duplex on Seneca Street in
Boise. Investigators would later conclude that the fire had been
intentionally set downstairs with a flammable substance that
likely burned slowly before igniting a much hotter burning
petroleum product. (State's Lodging A-4, pp. 2285-87.) The circuit
breaker for the smoke detector was shut off and the furnace fan
was set to run continuously, feeding the flames and circulating
smoke quickly through the home. (Id. at 2274-75.)
At the time, Row was staying at the home of her
close friend, Joan McHugh, and she was not harmed. (State's
Lodging A-4, pp. 1297-98, 1317-18.) For the previous several
weeks, Row had been telling McHugh and others that Randy was
physically abusing her, which she claimed involved serious
beatings, kidnapping, and rape. (Id. at 1267-1307.) Row also told
her friends that she intended to divorce Randy, and she had
recently moved her possessions out of the family home and into a
storage unit. (Id. at 1568-69.)
On the night of the fire, Row awakened McHugh
around 3:00 a.m. to tell her that she had "a terrible feeling that
there was something wrong at her house." (State's Lodging A-4, p.
1318.) McHugh agreed to check on the house with Row. As they
approached Seneca Street in Row's car and saw the flashing lights
of emergency vehicles, Row told McHugh that there must have been a
fire, even though they could not yet see smoke. (Id. at 1322.)
Once they arrived and saw that the house was burning, paramedics
informed Row that her children and husband had been found dead.
(Id. at 1331-32).
2. The Investigation and Trial
Within days, law enforcement officers learned
that Row had lost two other children under suspicious
circumstances, and the arson investigation began to focus on her.
(State's Lodging C-17, p. 2.) Officers obtained a search warrant
for the burned Seneca Street residence, Row's car, her storage
unit, and McHugh's home. Inside the storage unit, they uncovered
evidence that Row had been embezzling money from the YWCA, where
she had recently worked as the manager of a bingo game. (Id. at
2-3.) Officers also found insurance policies on the lives of
Randy, Joshua, and Tabitha that totaled over $275,000; Robin Row
was the beneficiary of these policies, the last of which had been
purchased by her only a few weeks before the fire. (Id.)
It soon became apparent that Row's claims of
abuse were either largely or entirely fabricated. For instance,
there were no official reports of arrests or charges against
Randy, and state welfare agents had never been to the home to give
Randy tranquilizing shots after domestic disturbances, as Row had
claimed. Investigators later discovered that Row had started a new
sexual relationship with Joan McHugh's adult son, John Blackwell,
in the weeks before the fire. (State's Lodging A-5, p. 2592.)
On February 13, 1992, Row was arrested and
charged with grand theft for stealing from the YWCA. (State's
Lodging C-17, p. 3.) She was not yet charged with any crimes
associated with the suspected arson, but she remained incarcerated
because she could not post a bond on the theft charge. (Id.) An
attorney represented her on that charge.
Row soon began to call Joan McHugh from the
county jail. During this time, McHugh was in contact with Ada
County Sheriff's Detective Gary Raney, and Raney suggested that
she should secretly tape her telephone conversations with Row.
(State's Lodging C-17, p. 3.) She agreed, and the Sheriff's Office
provided the equipment for her to do so. (Id.)
On March 18, Detective Raney suggested to
McHugh that she should lie and tell Row that she woke up early on
the morning of the fire and came downstairs to where Row was
supposedly sleeping, but that she did not see Row. (State's
Lodging C-17, p. 2.) When confronted with this scenario, Row said
that she could not remember what she was doing at that time. Row
v. State, 177 P.3d 382, 386 (Idaho 2008) ("Row III").
By March 20, law enforcement officers believed
that they had sufficient evidence to charge Row with murder. At
about 11:00 a.m. on that date, a deputy prosecuting attorney
signed a criminal complaint charging Row with three counts of
murder and presented the complaint to a magistrate judge, who
issued a warrant for her arrest. (State's Lodging C-17, p. 12.) At
1:00 p.m., the Sheriff and prosecutors held a joint press
conference to announce the filing of these charges. (Id.)
Row had learned that she was being charged with
murder, and she called McHugh at about the same time as the press
conference. (State's Lodging C-17, p. 12.) McHugh repeated the
story about not finding Row in the home on the night of the fire.
This time, Row responded that she had been outside speaking with
her psychiatrist. (Id.) In a call later that day, McHugh pressed
Row about this supposed late night/early morning meeting, but Row
refused to say who the psychiatrist was. Row III, 177 P.3d at 386.
McHugh finally told Row that she was working
with Detective Raney, and their conversations ceased.
Row was arrested on the murder charges the
following Monday, March 23, and she made her initial appearance
before a magistrate judge that day. (State's Lodging A-1, pp.
3-5.) The attorney who had been representing Row on the grand
theft charge continued to represent her on the new charges at the
magistrate court level. (Id. at 22.) After a preliminary hearing,
Row was bound over for trial on three counts of first degree
murder and one count of aggravated arson. (Id. at 36.) The trial
court then appointed the Ada County Public Defender as counsel for
Row, and August Cahill and Amil Myshin of that office were
assigned to the case. (Id. at 36, 48.)
A jury trial was held from late January to
early March of 1993, and the jury returned guilty verdicts on all
charges. (State's Lodging A-5, pp. 3562-63.)
3. Sentencing
The sentencing hearing began on October 19,
1993. (State's Lodging A-6, p. 3672.) The State chose not to offer
any additional evidence in aggravation. (State's Lodging A-6, pp.
3685-86.) Defense counsel Cahill and Myshin presented the
testimony of three witnesses, in addition to letters written in
support of Row, and Row gave an unsworn statement in court. (Id.)
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial
court found that four statutory aggravating circumstances had been
proven by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt:
(1) Row committed multiple murders at the same
time, Idaho Code § 19-2515(g)(2); (2) the murders were committed
during an arson, making them first degree felony murders, and were
accompanied by a specific intent to kill, Idaho Code §
19-2515(g)(7); (3) the murders were committed for remuneration or
the promise of remuneration, Idaho Code § 19-2515(g)(4); and (4)
Row exhibited an "utter disregard for human life," Idaho Code §
19-2515(g)(6).
The trial court also found several facts in
mitigation, including that Row had endured a difficult and abusive
childhood, had shown responsibility in the past, did not have an
extensive record of violent crimes, was involved in a mutually
abusive relationship with Randy, and suffered from various mental,
psychological, and personality problems. (State's Lodging A-2, pp.
423-37.) The court weighed all of the mitigating circumstances
against the multiple murder aggravating factor and concluded that
mitigation did not outweigh that single aggravating circumstance.
(Id. at 428-32.) The court declined to engage in a formal weighing
assessment for each of the other aggravating factors, concluding
that it would be an exercise in futility. (Id. at 432.)
On December 16, 1993, the trial court sentenced
Row to death for the murder convictions and to twenty years fixed
for aggravated arson. (State's Lodging A-2, pp. 413-433.)
4. Post-Conviction and Direct Appeal
Two months after Row was sentenced, Rolf Kehne
and John Adams substituted as conflict counsel for the Ada County
Public Defender in the capital post-conviction and appellate
proceeding. (State's Lodging A-6, p. 4065.) The trial court
ordered the immediate filing of a "tentative or generic"
post-conviction petition, as required by Idaho Code § 19-2719, but
gave counsel a deadline of 42 days after the trial transcripts
were completed to submit a finalized petition. (State's Lodging
A-6, p. 4067; State's Lodging B-10, pp. 51, 56.) Kehne and Adams
lodged an initial Petition for Post-Conviction Relief on March 17,
1994. (State's Lodging B-10, p. 56.)
Six months passed before the transcripts were
finished, but counsel did not file an amended petition by the
previously imposed deadline. (State's Lodging B-10, p. 66.)
Instead, three months later, they requested another extension of
time, which the court granted until June 15, 1995. (Id. at 68,
87.) Kehne and Adams also asked that the court appoint an
independent "money judge" to review all motions for the
appointment of experts. (State's Lodging B-10, p. 73.) The court
denied the request for a money judge but left open the possibility
that certain motions that contained privileged matters could be
reviewed in camera. (State's Lodging B-12, pp. 15-19.)
In March 1995, counsel filed a motion for an
order authorizing $5,000 for a "mitigation specialist," which was
denied. (State's Lodging B-12, pp. 33-34.) The denial was without
prejudice, however, and the court indicated that it was "willing
at a future date to take another look at this if a special showing
can be made to the Court with specificity, again within the
framework and against the backdrop of a UPCPA hearing."
(Id. at 34.)
On June 16, 1995, over one year after they had
been appointed, Kehne and Adams filed an Amended Petition on Row's
behalf, which included claims that Row had been deprived of her
right to the effective assistance of trial counsel. (State's
Lodging B-10, p. 121-34.) Two weeks later, the court granted, in
part, Row's request for limited discovery and set an evidentiary
hearing on the Amended Petition for January 8, 1996, some six
months hence. (Id. at 178-79.)
On the day that the hearing was set to begin,
Kehne and Adams requested another continuance to follow-up on an
earlier CT scan showing that Row's brain may have atrophied.
(State's Lodging B-10, p. 85.) The court denied the continuance,
and the hearing proceeded as scheduled. (Id.)
August Cahill and Amil Myshin testified about
wide-ranging matters related to their representation, with a
particular emphasis on the extent of their investigation into
mitigating evidence. In an unusual twist, Kehne testified as an
"expert" witness, questioned by Adams, and gave his opinion about
the reasonableness of trial counsel's investigation. (State's
Lodging B-12, pp. 133-177.)
In a Memorandum Decision, the trial court
denied all relief. (State's Lodging B-12, pp. 282-297.) On March
18, 1998, the Idaho Supreme Court affirmed Row's convictions,
sentences, and the trial court's order denying post-conviction
relief. State v. Row, 955 P.2d 1082 (Idaho 1989) ("Row I").
5. The Federal Habeas Proceeding
Row filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus
in this Court in 1999. The Court stayed the federal case, at her
request, pending the outcome of a second post-conviction
proceeding. That matter was eventually dismissed. Row v. State,
21 P.3d 895 (Idaho 2001) (Row II).
Row returned to federal court and filed a
Second Amended Petition. (Dkt. 293.) The Court has since dismissed
the following claims as either procedurally defaulted or
Teague-barred: Claim 7 (in part), 13-20, 23-31, 33, 34, 38-41.
(Docket No. 417, p. 41.) The Court later denied, in part, Row's
Motion for an Evidentiary Hearing, but reserved its final ruling
on whether Row would be entitled to a hearing on her claim of
ineffective assistance of counsel at her capital sentencing
hearing. (Dkt. 472.)
The parties submitted final briefing on the
merits of the non-dismissed claims and presented oral argument.
(Dkts. 480, 494, 503.) The Court took the matter under advisement,
but determined that an evidentiary hearing was necessary on the
limited issue of post-conviction counsel's diligence in developing
the record on the ineffective assistance of sentencing counsel
claim. (Dkt. 509.) The Court then intended to take up whether Row
was entitled to a broader evidentiary hearing on the merits of the
ineffective assistance of counsel claim. (Id.) In the interim,
however, the United States Supreme Court decided Cullen v.
Pinholster,
131 S.Ct. 1388
(2011), casting doubt on whether a hearing would be warranted
under these circumstances. The Court ordered the parties to submit
supplemental briefing on the Pinholster issue, and they have now
done so. (Dkts. 538, 539, 542, 543.) For reasons set forth more
fully below, the Court concludes that an evidentiary hearing is
not necessary, and it will move directly to the merits of all
claims.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR HABEAS REVIEW
The provisions of the Anti-terrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) are applicable to this case.
Under AEDPA, the Court cannot grant relief on any federal claim
that the state court adjudicated on the merits, unless the state
court's 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).
Section 2254(d)(1) has two clauses, each with
independent meaning. For a decision to be "contrary to" clearly
established federal law, the petitioner must establish that the
state court applied "a rule of law different from the governing
law set forth in United States Supreme Court precedent, or that
the state court confronted a set of facts that are materially
indistinguishable from a decision of the Supreme Court and
nevertheless arrived at a result different from the Court's
precedent." Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 404-06
(2000).
To satisfy the "unreasonable application"
clause, the petitioner must show that the state court was
"unreasonable in applying the governing legal principle to the
facts of the case." Williams, 529 U.S. at 413. A federal court
cannot grant relief simply because it concludes in its independent
judgment that the decision is incorrect or wrong; the state
court's application of federal law must be objectively
unreasonable. Lockyer v. Andrade, 538 U.S. 63, 75 (2003);
Bell v. Cone,
535 U.S. 685, 694 (2002). Moreover, a
federal habeas court's review under § 2254(d)(1) "is limited to
the record that was before the state court that adjudicated the
claim on the merits." Cullen v. Pinholster, 131 S.Ct. 1388, 1398
(2011).
To be eligible for relief under § 2254(d)(2),
the petitioner must show that the state court's decision was based
upon factual determinations that were "unreasonable in light of
the evidence presented in the State court proceeding." Id.
When the state court has not adjudicated a
federal claim on the merits despite the petitioner's fair
presentation of the claim, AEDPA deference is unwarranted and the
Court's review is de novo. Pirtle v. Morgan, 313 F.3d 1160,
1167 (9th Cir. 2002). Under all circumstances, however, state
court findings of fact are presumed to be correct, and the
petitioner has the burden of rebutting this presumption by clear
and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
GUILT PHASE/POST-CONVICTION CLAIMS
The Massiah Claim (Claim 1)
In her first ground for relief, Row contends
her recorded statements to Joan McHugh should have been suppressed
because they were obtained "despite the commencement of formal
criminal proceedings, the knowledge that [she] was represented by
counsel and [her] request that counsel be present at any further
interviews by the State." (Docket No. 293, p. 12.) The Court
previously determined that this claim was properly exhausted only
to the extent that Row alleged that her right to counsel had been
violated under the Sixth Amendment and Fourteenth Amendments.
(Dkt. 417, p. 9.) The Court now concludes that she is not entitled
to relief on this claim.
1. The Telephone Calls
Row started making calls to McHugh after she
had been arrested on the unrelated theft charge, and McHugh taped
the calls with the encouragement and assistance of law enforcement
officers. See Row I, 955 P.2d at 1085. On March 18, she told Row
the lie suggested by Detective Raney about not seeing Row on the
morning of the fire, and Row initially said that she could not
remember what she was doing at that time. Row I, 955 P.2d at 1085;
Row III, 177 P.3d at 386.
Two days later, on March 20, the criminal
complaint charging Row with three counts of murder was presented
to a magistrate judge, who signed a warrant for Row's arrest. At
1:00 p.m., the prosecuting attorney held a press conference with
the Sheriff to announce the filing of the charges. About that same
time, Row called McHugh, and McHugh repeated the lie. Row
responded that she had been outside speaking with a psychiatrist,
whom she refused to name. Row III, 177 P.3d at 386. Row was
arrested at the jail the following Monday morning, March 23, and
she appeared before a magistrate judge.
Row challenged the admissibility of her
statements to McHugh in a pretrial motion to suppress. The trial
court denied the motion as it pertained to the "psychiatrist
statements," and Row's implausible story that she was outside of
McHugh's home speaking with a psychiatrist, whom she could not
name, early on the morning of the fire was introduced into
evidence against her at trial.
During the post-conviction action, Row claimed
that her trial counsel were constitutionally ineffective, in part,
because they failed to argue that the delay between the issuance
of the arrest warrant on March 20 and Row's initial appearance on
March 23 was unreasonable. The trial court denied the claim, and
the Idaho Supreme Court affirmed on appeal. Row I, 955 P.2d at
1091.
Respondents have since conceded that Row also
fairly presented and properly exhausted a claim that McHugh,
acting as a state agent, elicited incriminating statements from
Row after formal charging in the absence of Row's counsel (a
"Massiah claim"). (Dkt. 409, p. 12; see also Motion Hearing,
January 10, 2007.) Although the Idaho Supreme Court's opinion
focuses mainly on Row's argument of unreasonable delay, Row must
still demonstrate that its denial of relief under any theory is
contrary to or involved an unreasonable application of clearly
established federal law, or was based on an unreasonable
interpretation of the facts in light of the evidence presented in
state court. See Harrington v. Richter,
131 S.Ct. 770, 784-85 (2011)
(holding that AEDPA deference applies even to a state court's
unexplained and summary denial).
2. Clearly Established Federal Law
A criminal defendant has a right under the
Sixth Amendment to the assistance of counsel at all critical
stages of a criminal prosecution. Gideon v. Wainwright, 372
U.S. 335 (1963). The right to counsel does not attach,
however, until the initiation of "adversary judicial proceedings,"
whether by way of formal charge, indictment, information,
arraignment, or preliminary hearing. United States v. Gouveia,
467 U.S. 180, 187-89 (1984). Adversary criminal judicial
proceedings begin only once "the government has committed itself
to prosecute, and ... the adverse positions of government and
defendant have solidified." Kirby v. Illinois, 406 U.S. 682,
689 (1972). This occurs, at the latest, when the defendant is
brought before a judicial officer at an initial appearance and
learns of charges against her. Rothgery v. Gillispie County, Tex.,
554 U.S. 191, 213 (2008). The right
is also "offense specific," meaning that it cannot be invoked for
charges that have not yet been filed, even if the defendant is in
custody and has invoked her right on a different charge. Texas v.
Cobb, 532 U.S. 162, 173 (2001); McNeil v. Wisconsin, 501
U.S. 171, 175 (1991).
Once the right to counsel has attached, it then
applies to all post-charging interviews with law enforcement
officers. Moran v. Burbine, 475 U.S. 412, 428 (1986)
(citations omitted). The police cannot circumvent the defendant's
right after formal charging by using an undercover agent to
deliberately elicit incriminating information from the defendant
in counsel's absence. Massiah v. United States, 377 U.S. 201,
206 (1964).
3. Discussion
It is clear that Row's pre-existing
relationship with an attorney on the unrelated theft charge did
not confer a Sixth Amendment right to counsel as to the murder
investigationand is therefore immaterial to any statements that
she made to McHugh beforeadversary judicial proceedings officially
began in this case. See Cobb, 532 U.S. at 173. Row made her
incriminating "psychiatrist statements" to McHugh, however, a few
hours after the prosecutor had presented a complaint to a
magistrate judge charging her with three counts of murder, but
before she had been arrested and brought before a magistrate judge
for her initial appearance. McHugh was acting as an agent of the
police at that time and she elicited the information from Row at
Detective Raney's prompting.
The critical issue, then, is whether the Idaho
Supreme Court's implicit determination that Row had failed to
establish that her Sixth Amendment right to counsel attached
before the conversation occurred was contrary to or involved an
unreasonable application of clearly established federal law, or
was based on an unreasonable finding of fact in light of the
evidence presented. This Court concludes that it was not.
As an initial matter, the parties appear to
disagree about when a complaint was actually filed against Row.
Respondents contend that although a complaint was presented to a
magistrate judge on March 20, it was not filed with the Clerk of
Court until March 23. In support, they point to a copy of a
complaint that is included in the lodging of the state court
record, which bears a district court file stamp of March 23, 1992
at 10:50 a.m. (State's Lodging A-1, p. 3.) Respondents claim that
Row's right to counsel did not ripen under any theory until March
23 at the earliest, after she had made her statements to McHugh.
(Dkt. 494, pp. 9-12.)
Row counters that the complaint charging her
with murder was filed three days earlier, "at approximately 11:30
a.m. on March 20." (Dkt. 480, p. 59.) The Court finds this
interpretation to be consistent with all other parts of the
record. As one example, at the post-conviction evidentiary hearing
the trial prosecutor admitted into evidence a "probable cause
sheet," which he claimed showed on its face that it "was filed on
March the 20th, which is the date the complaint was filed, 1992,
at 11:29 a.m." (State's Lodging B-11, p. 339)(Emphasis added.)
The state courts also assumed that a complaint
was active and pending by March 20. In denying post-conviction
relief, the trial court noted that Row made her statements to
McHugh "shortly after the time the formal Criminal Complaint
charging her with Murder I had been authorized by a magistrate
judge at the 'probable cause' hearing." (State's Lodging B-11, p.
289.) The court further indicated that prosecutorial officials
held a press conference at "1:00 p.m. that afternoon announcing
the filing of the criminal complaint," and that Row made her calls
"in response to the knowledgethat a complaint had just been
filed." (Id.) The Idaho Supreme Court mirrored the lower court's
assessment that the press conference "announc[ed] the filing of a
criminal complaint" and wrote that Row had earlier learned that
"charges were going to be filedagainst her." Row I, 955 P.2d 1082.
This view is further corroborated by the online register of
actions from Ada County case of State v. Robin Row, Case No.
CR-MD-1992-00002056, or M9202056, which reflects the filing of a
criminal complaint and an arrest warrant on March 20, 1992. See
www.idcourts.us/repository. It is therefore apparent that a
complaint was "filed" in some recognizable form under state law
before noon on March 20.
The greater problem for Row is the absence of
clearly established federal law setting out a rule that the filing
of a complaint in a criminal matter starts formal adversary
judicial proceedings under the Sixth Amendment such that the right
to counsel attaches at that time. Although the Supreme Court has
drawn a bright line at the defendant's initial appearance before a
judicial officer, see, e.g., Rothgery, 554 U.S. at 213, it has
never squarely addressed whether the right to counsel can attach
before then, and the law in the lower courts is not uniform.
On the one hand, the consensus in the federal
courts is that the filing of a criminal complaint in the federal
system does not initiate adversary judicial proceedings. See,
e.g., United States v. Pace, 833 F.2d 1307, 1312 ("[w]e
hold that Pace's sixth amendment right to counsel did not attach
upon the filing of the complaint by the FBI, the issuance of the
warrant of arrest, or Pace's arrest"); see also United States v.
Bostic, 545 F.3d 69, 83 (1st Cir. 2008) (collecting and
citing cases). This is so because a complaint in the federal
system serves almost exclusively as the means of setting out
probable cause to a magistrate judge to secure an arrest warrant.
Bostic, 545 F.3d at 83. All felony prosecutions then proceed by
way of indictment, or, if an indictment is waived, by information.
Fed. R. Crim. P. 7.
On the other hand, criminal complaints often
carry heavier weight in state prosecutions, and some state courts
have concluded that a complaint is a formal charge that triggers
the right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment. See People v.
Viray, 36 Ca.Rptr.3d 693, 708 (Cal. Ct. App. 2005) (holding that
"in this state [a complaint] commits the prosecutor to pursue a
criminal conviction" and that the right to counsel attaches at
that point); see also State v. Forbush,
796 N.W.2d 741, 747 (Wisc. 2011)
(same). Yet other states take a different view. See, e.g.,
Commonwealth v. Holliday,
882 N.E.2d 309, 325 (Mass. 2008)
(reaffirming that "the mere ex parte issuance of a complaint and
arrest warrant by a magistrate does not trigger a defendant's
Sixth Amendment right to counsel").
Given the lack of settled law, the Idaho
Supreme Court was free to chart its own course within the broad
parameters outlined by the United States Supreme Court without
running the risk that its judgment would be overturned on habeas
review. See Anderson v. Alameida, 397 F.3d 1175, 1180 (9th
Cir. 2005) (finding the state court's determination that "a police
inspector filing a complaint seeking an arrest warrant is not a
critical stage that commits the prosecutor to trial" to be a
reasonable one). As a result, Row cannot establish that the state
court's rejection of her constitutional claim was contrary to or
involved an unreasonable application of clearly established
federal law.
But even if Row were able to overcome the
formidable barrier placed in her way by AEDPA, and she could
further show that a Sixth Amendment violation had occurred in this
case, the Court would nonetheless conclude that habeas relief
would be unwarranted because any error did not have a "substantial
and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's
verdict." Brecht v. Abrahamson,
507 U.S. 619,
637 (1993).
The evidence against Row was circumstantial but
very powerful. She was the named beneficiary on life insurance
policies on her husband and children, none of whom were income
producers, with a total payout of over $275,000. The most recent
policy had been purchased a few weeks before Randy, Tabitha, and
Joshua died. Row told her friends and acquaintances elaborate
tales of Randy's physical abuse and deteriorating mental state in
the weeks before the fire, none of which turned out to be true,
generating sympathy for herself while providing an explanation for
her to leave the family home. This cover story had the added
benefit of offering a reason for Randy to engage in suicidal or
irrational conduct. She had conveniently removed most of her own
personal possessions and moved them into a storage unit, and she
had begun a sexual relationship with another man.
Row's actions on the night of the fire were
also incriminating. An early morning driver saw a car that he
later identified as matching Row's car near the Seneca Street
home. Joan McHugh heard someone taking a shower and using the
washing machine in the early morning hours, and Row admitted to
McHugh that she had showered and washed her clothes. Row also
awakened McHugh to tell her that she had a strange premonition or
a "terrible feeling" that something was wrong at the Seneca Street
house, and as they were driving there, she exclaimed that the
house must be on fire before they could see smoke.
Row's statement to McHugh that she was outside
speaking to a psychiatrist on the night of the fire was not a
confession to the crimes and was incriminating only insofar as it
was an admission that Row was not in McHugh's house at an
important time. This statement, while unfavorable, did not add
much weight to the impressive evidence that the State had already
arrayed against her. She has not established that its admission,
if erroneous, had a substantial and injurious effect or influence
on the jury's verdict.
Unreasonable Delay Before Initial Appearance
(Claim 2)
In a related claim, Row alleges that the State
intentionally delayed bringing her before a magistrate judge for
her initial appearance after the arrest warrant was issued on
March 20. The Idaho Supreme Court concluded that the timing of
Row's appearance before the magistrate judge complied with state
and federal law. Row I, 955 P.2d at 1082. In reaching that
conclusion, it found that "there was no conscious effort by the
State to delay charging her as a ruse to entice Row to make
potentially incriminating statements." Id.
Row relies, in part, on McNabb v. United
States, 318 U.S. 332 (1943), and Mallory v. United States,
354 U.S. 449 (1957), to support her argument that the State
failed to take her before a magistrate judge without unnecessary
delay and that her statements taken during that delay should have
been excluded. The so-called McNabb-Mallory rule was adopted by
the Supreme Court "in the exercise of its supervisory authority
over the administration of justice in the federal courts." McNabb,
354 U.S. at 453. It is not of constitutional dimension and will
not serve as the basis of a claim for relief in a habeas corpus
petition. Ahlswede v. Wolff, 720 F.2d 1108, 1110 (9th Cir.
1983).
Row's reliance on Gerstein v. Pugh, 420 U.S.
103 (1975), and County of Riverside v. McLaughlin, 500 U.S.
44 (1991), is equally misplaced. In each of those cases, the
Supreme Court held that a defendant has a right under the Fourth
Amendment to a prompt determination of probable cause by a
judicial officer after a warrantless arrest. Gerstein, 420 U.S. at
125; McLaughlin, 500 U.S. at 58-59. Here, in contrast, a
magistrate judge had found probable cause to support the charges
against Rowbefore she was arrested pursuant to a warrant.
This Court recognizes that an unreasonable
delay between a suspect's arrest and an initial appearance may
still implicate general due process principles, but the record is
clear that Row was taken before a magistrate judge within a few
hours of her arrest on March 23. The delay between the issuance of
an arrest warrant and an initial appearance before a judicial
officer is immaterial; the time is not marked until a defendant
has been arrested and is in custody. At any rate, Row's first
appearance occurred regularly on the next business day following
the presentment of the complaint to a magistrate (Friday to
Monday). And while the decision to charge Row on a Friday without
arresting her while law enforcement officers were aware that
McHugh and Row were still conversing by phone may raise suspicions
about the officers' motives, Row has failed to show that the state
court's factual finding that the State did not intentionally delay
bringing her before a magistrate judge was unreasonable in light
of the evidence presented in state court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).
Finally, for the same reasons expressed related
to Claim 1, any constitutional error related to the admission of
the statements that Row made to McHugh between the signing of an
arrest warrant and her first appearance would not entitle her to
habeas relief because she cannot establish that the error had a
"substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the
jury's verdict." Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 637 (1993).
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Related to
the Motion to Suppress
(Claim 7, ¶ 80(a)(b))
Row also claims that her trial counsel were
ineffective in failing to argue the Massiah or unreasonable delay
issues properly in a motion to suppress filed with the trial
court. The Idaho Supreme Court did not act unreasonably in
rejecting these arguments as lacking in merit for the same reasons
noted with respect to Claims 1 and 2. See, e.g., Wilson v. Henry,
185 F.3d 986, 990 (9th Cir. 1999) (holding that the failure
to file a meritless motion, or a motion that would not have
reasonably changed the outcome, is not ineffective assistance of
counsel). Row is not entitled to relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
The Reasonable Doubt Instruction (Claim 3)
Row next challenges the trial court's
definition of reasonable doubt in its jury instructions. The
Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause requires the State to
prove every essential element of the crimes charged beyond a
reasonable doubt. In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364 (1971).
A jury's instructions will be deemed unconstitutional under the
Fourteenth Amendment only when there is a reasonable likelihood
that the jury actually understood its instructions, reviewed as a
whole, to allow a conviction without proof beyond a reasonable
doubt. Cage v. Louisiana,
498 U.S. 33, 41 (1990); Estelle v.
McGuire,
502 U.S. 62,
72 (1991).
Row takes issue with a portion of Instruction
No. 34:
The effect of the presumption of innocence,
however, is only to place upon the prosecution the burden of
proving the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. It is not
required that the prosecution prove guilt beyond all possible
doubt. A reasonable doubt is a doubt based upon evidence or lack
of evidence and upon reason and common sense -- the kind of doubt
that would make a reasonable person hesitate to act. Proof beyond
a reasonable doubt must, therefore, be proof of such a convincing
character that a reasonable person would not hesitate to rely and
act upon it in the most important of his own affairs.
If you have a reasonable doubt as to the guilt
of the defendant, you must acquit him. But if, after going over in
your minds the entire case, you have an abiding conviction, to a
moral certainty, of the truth of the charge, then you are
convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, and you should render your
verdict accordingly. (State's Lodging A-2, p. 317.)
According to Row, this instruction "diminished
the degree of certainty necessary to convict by equating
reasonable doubt with hesitation to act, decision-making in a
juror's 'most important ... affairs,' and 'moral' rather than
'evidentiary' certainty." (Id. at 81-82.) The Idaho Supreme Court
turned aside this claim after concluding that "[t]aken as a whole,
the reasonable doubt instruction provided in this case, fairly and
accurately conveyed the concept of reasonable doubt ..." (State's
Lodging C-17, p. 9.)
In addressing a similar instruction in Victor
v. Nebraska, 511 U.S. 1 (1994), the United States Supreme
Court noted some concern with the phrase "moral certainty," which
it indicated may not bring the same archaic meaning to a modern
jury (essentially, subjective certitude based on proof beyond a
reasonable doubt). Yet the Court still did not find constitutional
error, as it determined that the rest of the instructions provided
content to that potentially ambiguous phrase. Id. at 14, 21.The
jurors were told that they must have an "abiding conviction" of
the truth of the charge, which, without reference to moral
certainty, correctly states the prosecution's burden of proof and
"does much to alleviate the concerns that the phrase 'moral
certainty' might be misunderstood in the abstract." Id. The Court
further approved of language that equated a reasonable doubt with
a doubt that would cause "a reasonable person to hesitate to act."
Id. at 21.
These same qualifying remarks were included in
the instructions in the present case, and, as in Victor, the
requirement that the State had the burden to prove Row's guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt based on evidentiary proof was a
recurring theme throughout the trial court's instructions. There
is no reasonable likelihood that the jury understood that it could
find Row guilty in the absence of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Denial of Expert Assistance in the
Post-Conviction Matter (Claim 4) and Denial of a Continuance
(Claim 6)
In these two related claims, Row contends that
the state district court's denial of expert assistance during the
post-conviction matter (Claim 4), and the court's denial of her
request for a final continuance of the evidentiary hearing (Claim
6), deprived her of her rights under the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments.
A state must provide an indigent criminal
defendant with the "basic tools of an adequate defense or appeal,
when those tools are available at a price to other prisoners."
Britt v. North Carolina, 404 U.S. 226, 227 (1971). Applying
Britt, the Supreme Court later held that, as a matter of due
process, an indigent defendant facing a possible death sentence is
entitled to the assistance of a psychiatric expert at state
expense when his mental state or future dangerousness will be a
significant issue in the case. Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68,
83 (1985).
Claim 4 fails both because the Supreme Court
has never extended the Britt/Ake principle to state collateral
proceedings and, even if it had, Row has not established that the
state court in fact deprived her of adequate funds to pay for
expert assistance. It is true that the district court denied Row's
request to hire a mitigation expert, but it did so without
prejudice to renewal, and Row actually received funding from an
unknown source and retained a mitigation specialist, who had been
working on the case for several months before the evidentiary
hearing. Row never filed a motion for funds to hire a mental
health expert, and her counsel did not complain about a lack of
funding when he made an offer of proof to the district court in
support of the motion for a continuance of the evidentiary
hearing. He instead focused on the lack of time to complete the
investigation.
Which leads to what appears to be Row's true
complaint, that she was deprived of due process of law because the
district court denied her a final continuance of the evidentiary
hearing to investigate and develop the mental health evidence.
Requests for extensions of time are entrusted to the sound
discretion of the presiding judge and are governed by state rules
and procedures. To rise to a due process violation, the denial of
a continuance must amount to an unreasonable and arbitrary
"insistence upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable
request for delay." Ungar v. Sarafite, 376 U.S. 575, 589
(1964).
The Idaho Supreme Court concluded that the
district court's denial Row's eleventh-hour request for another
continuance was not an abuse of discretion. (State's Lodging C-17,
p. 11.) In reaching that conclusion, the Idaho Supreme Court
emphasized that "from the date Row filed her application for
post-conviction relief on March 17, 1994, to the date of the
district court's decision to deny Row's petition for
post-conviction relief, March 11, 1996, nearly two full years had
passed, and Row had received several extensions of time." (Id.)
This was not an unreasonable application of
Unger or any other clearly established federal law. The district
court ordered the filing of a skeletal petition in March 1994, but
set a deadline of 42 days after the completion of the jury trial
transcripts for Row's counsel to submit a finalized petition. The
transcripts were completed six months later, but counsel ignored
the court's deadline and, after three months had passed, asked for
another extension of an additional five months. (State's Lodging
B-10, p. 72.) The court granted that request and set a new date
for a finalized petition for June 15, 1995, and advised the
parties that it intended to set a court trial within six months
from that date. (State's Lodging B-10, pp. 86-87.)
Counsel filed the petition on June 16, 1995.
Attached to the petition was an affidavit from the mitigation
specialist that counsel had hired, in which she indicated that she
had contacted a neurological expert, and he advised that Row
should undergo a full neurological examination. (State's Lodging
B-10, p. 154.) Kehne attached his own affidavit, in which he
asserted that "we are making arrangements for further testing of
[Row]; we are continuing to investigate the issues surrounding the
petition and [Row's] background; and we need more time for
development of facts." (Id. at 148.) At a subsequent hearing, the
court granted counsel's request for limited discovery, in part,
and set an evidentiary date for January 8, 1996. (State's Lodging
B-13, p. 81.) Kehne did not object and instead told that court
that "we'll be here, Judge." (Id.)
Despite that assurance, on the date that the
evidentiary hearing was set to begin Row's counsel requested
another continuance of three to five months to complete the mental
examination. Kehne admitted that counsel first contacted a
psychological expert only two months before the hearing date, and
they received his recommendations just a few weeks before the
hearing. (State's Lodging B-13, pp. 93-94.) Citing the lengthy
timeline of the case, the court remarked that "it is time to move
forward" and denied the request. (Id. at 111.) At the close of
Row's case, counsel again requested a continuance, which was again
denied. (Id. at 366.)
These facts demonstrate that the district court
did not insist on expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable
request for delay. The court had given counsel considerable
latitude in investigating and developing claims, well beyond the
strict deadlines mandated by Idaho Code § 19-2719, and the
post-conviction case had extended to nearly two years when the
evidentiary hearing commenced. Even if another judge facing the
same facts might have exercised its discretion and permitted yet
another three to five month continuance to follow-up on the mental
health investigation, this Court cannot say that the state court's
decision not to do so was unreasonable.
To the extent that Row relies on the Sixth
Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel to support
this claim, the United States Supreme Court has never held that a
convicted defendant has a federal constitutional right to the
effective assistance of counsel during state collateral
proceedings. Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 752-53
(1991); Murray v. Giarratano, 492 U.S. 1, 7 (1989)
(plurality opinion); Pennsylvania v. Finley, 481 U.S. 551
(1987); see also Leavitt v Arave, 383 F.3d 809, 839 n.39
(9th Cir. 2004); Bonin v. Calderon,
77 F.3d 1155, 1159 (9th Cir. 1996);
Moran v. McDaniel, 80 F.3d 1261, 1271 (9th Cir. 1996).
Consequently, Row has not stated a cognizable claim for relief on
this theory. See also 28 U.S.C. § 2254(i) (ineffective assistance
during state post-conviction matters is not a ground for relief).
In the absence of controlling Supreme Court authority recognizing
a right to the effective counsel in post-conviction matters,
moreover, the state court's rejection of this claim cannot be
contrary to or involve an unreasonable application of clearly
established federal law. Carey v. Musladin, 549 U.S. 70, 77
(2006).
Denial of Ex Parte Procedures (Claim 5)
Row next asserts that the state district
court's refusal to appoint an independent judge (a "money judge")
to review requests for investigative and expert assistance in the
post-conviction matter, and its denial of an ex parte procedure
for submitting such requests, violated her rights under the Fifth,
Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments. In denying relief, the Idaho
Supreme Court noted that although the district court disallowed
Row's requests for a money judge and ex parte procedures, she was
permitted to file a sealed motion for assistance and "in no way
'tipped her hand' to the State" on that motion. (State's Lodging
C-17, p. 10.) In that respect, according to the state court, Row
had shown no prejudice. (Id.)
The United States Supreme Court has not held
that the Constitution demands that a post-conviction petitioner be
permitted to submit all funding requests to a so-called money
judge; the state court was well within the bounds of established
federal law to reject that request. Presumably, nothing in the
Constitution would prohibit a state from using such a procedure.
But nothing requires it, either.
The state court's conclusion that Row had shown
no prejudice was also reasonable. Row was permitted to file her
motion for funding under seal, and she later hired a mitigation
specialist regardless of the district court's ruling on that
motion or the procedures that the court intended to use in
deciding future motions for funding, which were never filed.
Failure to Disclose Exculpatory and
Impeachment Evidence (Claim 35)
In Claim 35, Row contends that the prosecution
withheld exculpatory evidence, in violation of her right to due
process of law under the principles set out in Brady v. Maryland,
363 U.S. 83 (1963). Row asserts that
"the State withheld from [her] critical information concerning the
criminal activities and criminal history of the State's witnesses,
Joan McHugh and Bernard McHugh," and that the State "withheld from
defense counsel information regarding the facts surrounding the
taking and recording of statements made by [Row] to Joan McHugh."
(Dkt. 293, p. 65.)
1. Standard of Law
It is a violation of due process of law for the
prosecution to withhold exculpatory or impeachment evidence from
the defense that is material to guilt or punishment. Brady v.
Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963); United States v. Bagley,
473 U.S. 667, 676 (1985). A Brady claim contains three
essential components: (1) the evidence must be favorable to the
accused, either because it is impeaching or exculpatory; (2) the
prosecution must have withheld the evidence, either intentionally
or inadvertently; and (3) the evidence must be material to guilt
or punishment. Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 281-82
(1999).
Evidence is material to guilt or punishment
when there is a reasonable probability that the outcome would have
been different had the evidence been disclosed. Kyles v. Whitley,
514 U.S. 419, 433-34 (1995); Bagley, 473 U.S. at 676. The
prosecution's suppression of favorable evidence is prejudicial
when it "could reasonably be taken to put the whole case in such a
different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict." Banks
v. Dretke, 540 U.S. 668, 698 (2004). In assessing
materiality, a reviewing court must accumulate all of the withheld
exculpatory evidence to determine the net effect on the
defendant's right to a fair trial. Kyles, 514 U.S. at 436-37.
2. Row was Aware of the McHughs' Criminal
Histories
Regardless how the information was disclosed,
Row's counsel were well aware before trial that Bernard McHugh had
felony convictions for issuing checks with insufficient funds and
that Joan McHugh had been charged with this same offense but that
the charge was later dismissed. These matters were discussed by
the parties on several occasions, and defense counsel
cross-examined Joan McHugh at trial about the incident that led to
the charges. (State's Lodging A-3, pp. 1161-62; State's Lodging
A-4, pp. 1197-98, 1381-82, 1459-60, 1463; State's Lodging A-5, pp.
3087-99.) It is unclear what information Row believes was not
available to her counsel in advance of the trial. While she hints
that the prosecution suppressed evidence of Joan McHugh's more
active involvement in Bernard's fraudulent activities, she has
come forward with nothing concrete to back up that theory. When a
defendant knows the salient facts that comprise the alleged Brady
material such that he could use the information effectively in his
defense, it cannot be said that his due process right to a fair
trial has been violated. Raley v. Ylst, 470 F.3d 792, 804
(9th Cir. 2006) (citations omitted); Lambert v. Blackwell,
387 F.3d 210, 265 (3d Cir. 2005);
Spirko v. Mitchell, 368 F.3d 603, 611 (6th Cir. 2004).
Row also incorrectly claims that Bernard McHugh
was a prosecution witness when he was instead called as a defense
witness. (State's Lodging A-5, p. 3087-99.) Because Row used
Bernard in her case-in-chief, the Court assumes that his testimony
was favorable to her in some way, and she has not explained how a
more detailed exploration of his criminal record would have
created a reasonable probability of a different outcome.
3. Row Knew the Material Facts Regarding the
Taping of the Telephone Calls
The second component of Row's Brady claim is
that the State withheld evidence that Detective Raney and a deputy
prosecutor were present when Joan McHugh taped the calls in which
Row made her most incriminating statements.
Earlier in this habeas matter, the Court
recounted the factual background of this claim and agreed with the
Idaho Supreme Court "that Row cannot establish materiality of the
[allegedly withheld] evidence because there is no reasonable
probability of a different trial or sentencing outcome." (Dkt.
472, p. 10.) This is so because Row and her counsel knew before
trial that Detective Raney had suggested to McHugh (1) that she
tape the telephone calls and (2) that she lie to Row regarding her
whereabouts on the night of the fire, which elicited an
incriminating response. These were the critical facts establishing
the State's use of McHugh as a conduit to get to Row, and whether
Raney offered his suggestions to McHugh in person, and whether he
and a deputy prosecutor were physically present and listening when
McHugh queried Row, add nothing of legal significance beyond the
already known facts. In addition, as the Court previously noted,
it "is unable to find any instance where Raney squarely testified
that he was not present when the calls were made" such that the
new information might have held impeachment value. (Dkt. 472, p.
9.) (Emphasis in original.)
The Court reaffirms its view that the allegedly
undisclosed evidence would not have been material to Row's guilt
or innocence, or to the trial court's decision to impose a death
sentence.
Prosecutorial Misconduct (Claim 36)
Row alleges "egregious" prosecutorial
misconduct because of the prosecutor's "misrepresentations and
silence" about various matters. Her primary complaints are that
the prosecuting attorney downplayed the severity of Joan and
Bernard McHugh's involvement in writing bad checks, failed to
prosecute John Blackwell for perjury based on his misleading
testimony at a magistrate's inquiry about his sexual relationship
with Row, misrepresented the State's involvement in the telephone
taping, and misrepresented evidence about a CT scan showing that
Row has possible brain atrophy. (Dkt. 480, pp. 49-54.) As with the
Claim 35, the Court finds it easier to dispose of this claim on
the merits rather than engage in the difficult parsing that
accompanies a cause and prejudice analysis.
The standard for a claim of prosecutorial
misconduct on habeas review is a "narrow one of due process, and
not the broad exercise of supervisory power." Darden v.
Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 181 (1986) (quoting Donnelly v.
DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637, 642 (1974)). A prosecutor's
comments or actions that may be considered inappropriate under
rules of fair advocacy, or even reversible error on direct review,
will not warrant federal habeas relief unless the alleged
misconduct "so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the
resulting conviction a denial of due process." Donnelly, 416 U.S.
at 643. To the extent that some of these allegations implicate the
prosecutor's duties of disclosure under Brady, Row must establish
that materially favorable evidence was withheld.
Row's allegation that the prosecutor
misrepresented the State's involvement in the taping of he phone
calls is meritless for the same reasons given on Claim 35, and the
Court will not tread that ground a second time. Likewise, Row has
provided no explanation for how the State's discretionary decision
not to prosecute John Blackwell for perjury amounts to
prosecutorial misconduct or violated her due process rights.
The prosecutor's assertion in the
post-conviction matter that "there is nothing to this [brain]
atrophy business," was just that, an assertion. Row has offered no
evidence that the prosecutor's characterization of what a doctor
had told him was prejudicial, particularly because Dr. Craig
Beaver testified about the 1993 CT scan at the post-conviction
hearing and the district court noted in its written findings that
the evidence suggested the lingering possibility of a neurological
problem. (State's Lodging B-11, pp. 295-96.) Row's implicit claim
that the prosecutor's off-hand remark must have carried great
weight with the court is without support in the record.
The one subject about which the Court partially
agrees with Row is that the prosecutor appears to have gone out of
his way to downplay the fraudulent check writing activities of the
McHughs. In his opening statement, he recast the circumstances of
these offenses as the McHughs essentially operating under the
mistaken impression that they had money in a bank account.
(State's Lodging A-4, p. 1211.) After defense counsel
cross-examined Joan McHugh about her involvement, the prosecutor
mocked this line of inquiry, calling her "Ma Barker" and eliciting
testimony from her that the whole thing was a misunderstanding.
(State's Lodging A-4, pp. 1463-65.) A fair interpretation of the
record is that the prosecutor characterized the incident as a
minor episode that was largely the result of an oversight. Yet the
State charged both Joan and Bernard with check fraud, and it
prosecuted Bernard to conviction for knowingly passing two bad
checks.
Even so, the charges against Joan McHugh were
dropped, and her "criminal history" consisted of an arrest and
dismissed charges. Despite the absence of a conviction, defense
counsel was permitted to cross-examine her on the matter to a
certain extent, and the jury was aware that some fraudulent
activity had occurred. Aside from a detective's hearsay opinion in
written documents, Row has pointed to no evidence showing that
Joan McHugh had a more active and dominant role in the incident
than was portrayed, and she has offered nothing that would cast
doubt on the remainder of Joan McHugh's testimony about Row's
actions in the weeks leading up to the arson. Incriminating
evidence against Row came from many sources other than Joan
McHugh, and the State's case was quite strong. Therefore, whatever
else could be said about the prosecutor's decision to spin the
facts on this subject, the Court does not find that it "so
infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting
conviction a denial of due process." Donnelly, 416 U.S. at 643.
Row's other allegations that the McHughs received favorable
treatment from the State as benefits for their assistance are
wholly speculative.
PENALTY PHASE CLAIMS
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel at
Sentencing (Claim 7)
Row contends that she was deprived of her Sixth
Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel during the
capital sentencing proceeding. The Court has dismissed all of
Row's claims of ineffective assistance except allegations that her
counsel failed to conduct a reasonable mitigation investigation,
retain qualified mental health experts, supervise the efforts of
those experts that were retained, or advise Row about giving a
statement to the court at the sentencing hearing. The Court now
concludes that she is not entitled to relief on any of these
remaining allegations.
1. The Mitigation Case
During the penalty phase, defense counsel
presented the testimony of three witnesses, and Row gave an
unsworn statement to the sentencing court. Letters were also
offered in support of Row.
First, Row's sister, Terry Cornellier,
testified about the circumstances of Row's difficult childhood.
Their mother and father fought openly and often in front of the
children, leading to a divorce when Row was in her early teenage
years. (State's Lodging A-6, pp. 3757-59.) Row's father, with whom
she was close, left the family and Row felt abandoned by him. (Id.
at 3762.) She was not close to her mother, whom Cornellier
described as not a loving or nurturing person. (Id.) Cornellier
testified that she had been sexually abused by a step-grandfather
for many years, and that Row had recently admitted to her that she
had also been sexually abused by the same man. (Id. at 3767-69.)
After her sister testified, Row chose to make a
statement to the court. (State's Lodging B-13.) In it, she claimed
that "through many hours of intense interviews and hypnosis" she
had come to realize that she was not "completely innocent," and,
for the first time, she admitted that she was at the Seneca Street
residence on the night of the fire. (Id. at 2.) She asserted that
the fire was intended to cause only minor property damage so that
Randy would move back with his family. (Id. 3.) Row also admitted
that she had been upstairs and had seen Tabitha asleep. (Id.)
Defense counsel next presented testimony from a
psychologist, Dr. Art Norman, and his assistant, Carla Anderson,
regarding Row's mental health and emotional makeup. Dr. Norman
found Row's affect to be fixed, flat, and inappropriate in light
of the circumstances of this case. (State's Lodging A-6, pp.
3838-40.) He concluded that she suffered from "alexithymia," which
he described as a pathological condition that causes a person to
be unable to express their emotions or feelings. (Id. at 3847.)
Dr. Norman delegated much of the interviewing of Row, however, to
his assistant, Carla Anderson. (Id. at 3788.) Anderson testified
that Row eventually came to express remorse about these events,
and that Row had told her that John Blackwell aided or possibly
started the fire.
(Id. at 3791-92.)
In rebuttal, the State offered the opinion of
Dr. Robert Engle, a clinical psychologist, who claimed that
"alexithymia" is nothing more than a description of a person's
emotional state and is not a formal diagnosis of a mental illness.
(State's Lodging A-6, pp. 3925-26.) Dr. Engle interpreted Row's
psychological test results as reflecting a person who had an
antisocial personality disorder with histrionic, impulsive,
dishonest, and manipulative tendencies. (Id. at 3921-23.) He also
believed that the results showed that she suffered from mild
chronic depression. (Id. at 3922.)
In assessing the proper penalty, the trial
court considered the mitigating evidence. In seven numbered
paragraphs in its written decision, it noted the instances of
hardship and abuse that Row had suffered during her developmental
years. (State's Lodging A-2, pp. 423-24.) It also found that Row
did not have a record of violent crimes, possessed some good
qualities, and was involved in a mutually abusive and strained
relationship with Randy. (Id. at 424-25.) With respect to the
mental health evidence, the court remarked that it "has no
difficulty in referring to Robin Row as mentally ill or having a
mental disorder," but not in sense that she was psychotic or could
not understand the difference between right and wrong. (Id. at
426.) The court instead found that she had an antisocial
personality disorder and that she exhibited "alexithymia" as
described by Dr. Norman. (Id. at 426-27.)
The court weighed all of the mitigating facts
against what it determined was the most compelling statutory
aggravating factor - that Row had simultaneously committed three
willful and deliberate murders, Idaho Code § 19-2515(g)(2) - and
concluded that "the murders of Randy, Joshua and Tabitha weigh
like a boulder over against the pebbles of those mitigating
circumstances articulated above." (State's Lodging A-2, p. 430.)
The court declined to weigh each of the remaining aggravating
circumstances against all mitigating factors, because "[s]uch
analysis would amount to nothing more than an exercise in legal
futility as the issue of the penalty has already been decided,"
and it determined that the death penalty was appropriate. (Id. at
432.)
2. The Post-Conviction Evidence
Row's trial counsel, Amil Myshin and August
Cahill, testified extensively at the post-conviction evidentiary
hearing.
Myshin claimed that defense counsel had
received a wealth of discovery from the State, and that they
looked through this material with an eye toward mitigation in the
penalty phase, but "a lot of the people that were involved in her
life had both good and bad things to say about her." (State's
Lodging B-12, pp. 209-11.) Myshin was aware that Row had a "very
difficult childhood," was "quite at odds with her mother," and was
close to her father "but he was in prison and really wasn't
someone you could communicate with." (Id. at 211.)
With respect to counsel's decision to offer Dr.
Norman's diagnosis of alexithymia, Myshin testified that the
defense was searching for any hint of evidence to explain the
troubling lack of emotion that Row had displayed throughout the
proceeding. (State's Lodging B-12, p. 215.) The defense team had
also previously consulted with another mental health expert, Dr.
Craig Beaver, who concluded that Row was a "pathological liar,
probably sociopathic, [and] clearly depressed." (Id. at 220.)
While Dr. Norman did not disagree with Dr. Beaver's general
impression of Row's mental condition, defense counsel believed
that Dr. Norman's finding that Row suffered from alexithymia would
assist them in placing her inappropriate emotional responses in
context for the court at the sentencing hearing. (Id. at 222-23.)
In his testimony, Cahill confirmed that the
defense team had consulted with Dr. Beaver and determined his
opinion about Row would not have been helpful. (State's Lodging
B-12, pp. 298-99.) Cahill also agreed that Dr. Norman's opinion
was not "far off" from Dr. Beaver's opinion, and that counsel
limited the scope of Dr. Norman's sentencing testimony to what
they believed would be the most favorable to their case. (Id.)
Cahill conceded that defense counsel did not direct an
investigator specifically to get records from Row's past or to go
to the many different states that Row had lived. But like Myshin,
he claimed that by the sentencing hearing the defense team had
nonetheless received numerous institutional records and witness
contacts through the discovery process, which included police
reports, Randy Row's Veteran's Administration file, California
Health and Welfare records, presentence investigation reports from
previous criminal cases, and YWCA records. (Id. at 300-02.) Myshin
and Cahill's investigator also testified that the defense team had
received boxes of material on Row, but he admitted that he
received no particular instruction targeted toward compiling
mitigation evidence, and he personally contacted only a few
witnesses from "back east." (Id. at 321, 323.)
Both Myshin and Cahill claimed that they were
aware of the general nature of the statement that Row intended to
give to the court at the sentencing hearing, in which she
admitted, for the first time, to being present at the scene of the
arson. (State's Lodging B-11, pp. 233, 291.)
The trial court allowed one of Row's
post-conviction attorneys, Rolf Kehne, to testify as an "expert"
on representing criminal defendants in a capital prosecution.
Kehne offered his opinion that Myshin and Cahill's mitigation
investigation was deficient because they relied on the discovery
process to obtain information about her, and because they failed
to investigate all aspects of Row's life history from birth until
the present. (State's Lodging B-13, pp. 158-70.) He questioned
trial counsel's decisions to use Dr. Norman as an expert witness
and to allow Row to make an incriminating statement to the trial
court. (Id. at 172-73.)
Dr. Beaver was also called to testify about the
potential significance of a CT scan that had been taken of Row's
brain before the criminal trial in 1993. Dr. Beaver interpreted
the radiologist's report of the scan as indicating "two areas of
mild atrophy" in the brain with evidence of "more diffuse cerebral
cortical atrophy." (State's Lodging B-13, p. 121.) Dr. Beaver
claimed that, assuming these findings were correct, they would be
considered "neurological findings that can effect behavior and
affect." (Id. at 121, 122.) To reach a more definitive answer, he
suggested that a radiological expert should compare the 1993 CT
scan with an earlier, normal scan that was taken of Row's brain in
1991 to determine why the abnormalities appeared in the interim,
and that Row should undergo a complete neuropsychological
examination that included an MRI. (Id. at 122-23.) When asked if
his opinion of Row's personality and mental state had changed in
light of the 1993 CT scan, evidence of which he had previously
been unaware, he claimed that he would need further information to
determine whether Row could have a brain dysfunction that might
have contributed to her aberrant behavior. (Id. at 130-31.) Some
aspects of his opinion might change, but others would probably
not. (Id.)
In addition to presenting the above evidence,
Kehne and Adams requested a continuance of the evidentiary hearing
so that they could develop additional mitigating evidence that
they believed Myshin and Cahill had failed to present, including
the possibility that Row had a brain dysfunction as suggested by
the 1993 CT scan. Kehne explained that counsel needed more time to
consult with an imagining expert to review the brain scan
evidence, and, depending on the outcome of the consultation,
counsel intended to follow-up with an MRI. (Id. at 91.) Kehne
conceded that they first contacted a psychological consultant only
two months before the hearing date. (Id. at 93.) The court denied
the continuance as speculative and because of the significant
delays that had occurred up to that point. (State's Lodging B-13,
p. 93, 366.)
3. The State Court's Decision
The district court, who had served as the trial
and sentencing judge, concluded that Row had not been deprived of
her Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel.
The court noted that it "took into consideration virtually every
facet of background information alluded to by Mr. Kehne in one
form or another on the basis of materials and testimony submitted
to the Court for its review," and no new compelling evidence had
been offered. (State's Lodging B-11, p. 291.) The court found that
trial counsel's choices about the witnesses and evidence to
present generally fell "within the broad range of strategic and
tactical decisions that should not be second-guessed." (Id.) It
further concluded that counsel's decisions to use Dr. Norman and
to allow Row to present here statement to the court were tactical
and based on counsel's desire to humanize Row. (State's Lodging
B-11, p. 294.) Row's incriminating statement, according to the
court, made no difference in its decision to impose a death
sentence. (Id.)
Finally, the court found the neurological
evidence based on the 1993 CT scan and Dr. Beaver's
post-conviction testimony to be speculative, but it "defer[ed] to
higher judicial authority on this issue and le[ft] open the
possibility of filing a successive (second) post-conviction
petition pursuant to Idaho Code Section 19-2719(5)." (State's
Lodging B-11, p. 296.)
On appeal, the Idaho Supreme Court affirmed. In
doing so, it agreed with the lower court's findings and
conclusions:
[C]counsel did go to great lengths to present
evidence from several of Row's friends, Health and Welfare records
from the state of California, letters from friends and family, and
Veteran's Administration records concerning her husband's previous
injuries and the couple's relationship. Counsel was not required
to investigate Row's entire life in order to objectively and
reasonably present Row's mitigation evidence. Trial counsel's
decisions concerning Row's mental health and her allocution
statement were strictly strategic and shall not be second-guessed
by this Court. Finally, we note that Row has failed to provide a
record of any evidence which was not presented by trial counsel,
and thus failing to show prejudice. (State's Lodging C-17, p. 14.)
4. Clearly Established Federal Law
To establish a violation of the Sixth
Amendment, a petitioner must show that her counsel's performance
was unreasonably deficient and the defense was prejudiced as a
result. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 686-87
(1984).
The standard for attorney performance in a
criminal case is that of reasonably effective assistance, measured
under prevailing professional norms. Strickland, 668 U.S. at
687-88. In assessing whether the representation fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness, counsel's conduct must be
viewed under the facts that existed at the time that the
challenged act or omission occurred, rather than through the
benefit of hindsight. Id. at 689. The court must indulge in the
strong presumption that counsel's conduct fell within the wide
range of reasonable professional assistance. Id.
To prove actual prejudice, 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. A reasonable probability is
one that is "sufficient to undermine confidence in the result."
Id.
In a post-AEDPA case, as here, a state court
has significant leeway to apply rules of general applicability,
such as the rule for ineffective assistance of counsel, to the
different fact patterns that come before it. Yarborough v.
Alvarado, 541 U.S. 652, 664 (2004). The Supreme Court has
recently reaffirmed that "[w]hen §2254(d) applies, the question is
not whether counsel's actions were reasonable. The question is
whether there is any reasonable argument that counsel satisfied
Strickland's deferential standard." Harrington v. Richter, 131
S.Ct. 770, 778 (2011).
5. Discussion
The state court did not unreasonably apply
Strickland's first prong when it determined that Row had failed to
establish that her counsel's mitigation investigation and
decision-making at the capital sentencing hearing fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness. The relevant inquiry is not
whether counsel should have presented a certain type of evidence,
but whether the investigation supporting counsel's decisions was
itself reasonable, measured under prevailing professional norms.
Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 523 (2003). A defense
attorney's tactical or strategic choices made after an adequate
inquiry into the facts and law are virtually unchallengeable under
Strickland. Gerlaugh v. Stewart,
129 F.3d 1027, 1033 (9th Cir. 1997).
The record before the state court showed that
Myshin and Cahill received abundant information in discovery about
Row's life history, which was well-documented in the institutional
records from the states in which she had lived, and that they were
familiar with her background. This included her difficult and
impoverished childhood, her estrangement from her mother, and her
close relationship with her father. Counsel believed that much of
this evidence presented a double-edged sword; many witnesses who
had good things to say about Row would also offer damaging
testimony about aspects of her character and record. As but one
example, Row was initially considered a success story at the YWCA
-- rising from homelessness to a position of authority -- but she
lied to those close to her and embezzled money from the bingo
operation. This was a recurring theme throughout her life.
Charting a reasonably straight path through that particular
thicket was a delicate task that required the exercise of
professional judgment, which, under Strickland, is not to be
second-guessed through hindsight. See, e.g., Wong v. Belmontes,
130 S.Ct. 383, 389--90 (2009) (taking into account that
certain mitigating evidence would have exposed the petitioner to
further aggravating evidence).
Regarding the scope of the investigation into
Row's mental health, trial counsel first consulted with Dr.
Beaver, and Dr. Beaver informed counsel that Row was probably a
pathological liar, sociopathic, clearly depressed, competent to
stand trial, and not psychotic. (Id. at 220.) This opinion lined
up fairly well with other mental health opinions and was not
helpful to the defense, so counsel retained Dr. Norman to take
another look at Row. By then, Cahill and Myshin had personally
observed her demeanor throughout the trial and were confounded by
her lack of emotion despite the tragic circumstances of the case.
To offset this, they decided to steer the mitigation case in a
direction that might humanize Row in the eyes of the trial court,
so that the court would have something on which to base a life
sentence. It is within that context that Dr. Norman's opinion
about alexithymia was developed and pursued, and it is immaterial
that counsel's strategy was largely unsuccessful once the State
effectively unmasked Dr. Norman's "diagnosis" as really nothing
more than a description. A defense attorney's actions must be
viewed within the context of the factual situation existing at the
time, and here counsel faced a daunting task of compiling a case
for life in the face of a very aggravated set of facts and a
client who had displayed little emotion.
This holds equally true with respect to trial
counsel's decision to allow Row to admit to the court for the
first time at the sentencing hearing that she was present when the
fire was started, which the state district court noted fell within
the "heart and soul of discretionary strategy." (State's Lodging
B-11, p. 293.) The Idaho Supreme Court agreed. (State's Lodging
C-17, p. 14.) To be sure, this was a risky decision that other
attorneys might not have made, but the state court was operating
well within Strickland in determining that the decision was not an
objectively unreasonable decision in light of the circumstances
that confronted counsel. The state district court aptly summarized
the deficient performance issue by noting, "that counsel could
have done more does not mean that they did not do enough."
(State's Lodging B-11, p. 288.) (Emphasis in original.)
The Idaho Supreme Court alternatively concluded
that Row had not established actual prejudice from any alleged
errors that trial counsel may have committed. (State's Lodging
C-17, p. 14.) This conclusion was likewise reasonable.
In assessing prejudice, a reviewing court must
weigh the evidence in aggravation against the totality of the
available mitigating evidence, including that which was not
presented at the sentencing hearing. Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 534. On
the aggravating side of the balance, the trial court found that
four statutory aggravating circumstances had been proven beyond a
reasonable doubt. Of these, the court detremined that the multiple
murders aggravator to be by far the weightiest. (State's Lodging
A-1, p. 429.)
The court considered several mitigating
circumstances unique to Row, including that she endured a
difficult and violent childhood that included physical and
emotional abuse, that she had some good qualities and traits, that
she was in a mutually abusive relationship with Randy, and that
while she was not psychotic she did suffer from mental instability
and emotional problems. (State's Lodging A-1, pp. 423-27.) The
court was not persuaded that the cumulative weight of these
mitigating factors ("pebbles") came close to outweighing the
multiple murder aggravator (a "boulder"). (State's Lodging A-2, p.
430.)
"[A] penalty phase ineffective assistance claim
depends on the magnitude of the discrepancy between what counsel
did investigate and present and what counsel could have
investigated and presented." Stankewitz v. Woodford, 365 F.3d
706, 716 (9th Cir. 2004). The discrepancy before the state
court was not large. Though post-conviction counsel made much of
the fact that Myshin and Cahill relied largely on the discovery
process to obtain documents and information about Row's
background, post-conviction counsel did not offer anything new or
compelling that trial counsel had missed. The state district court
remarked that it had already considered almost all of the
background information that Row alleged should have been uncovered
when it assessed the appropriate penalty. (State's Lodging B-11,
p. 291.) In a similar vein, it found that Row's statement in
allocution had no effect on its decision to impose a death
sentence. (Id. at 295.)
Admittedly, the CT scan suggesting that Row's
brain may have atrophied caused the district court some concern,
and it appears that trial counsel failed to present this evidence
to Dr. Beaver or Dr. Norman. When Dr. Beaver was questioned about
the evidence, he indicated that aspects of his earlier opinion
might need to be modified depending on the results of a new
neurological evaluation. In denying post-conviction relief, the
court noted Dr. Beaver's testimony but found that the inquiry was
nonetheless "speculative and suppositional" and did not warrant
yet another delay in the case. (State's Lodging B-12, pp. 295-96.)
In affirming the lower court, the Idaho Supreme Court did not
discuss the significance of the evidence. At best, then, the
record before the state court revealed that Row might have mild
brain atrophy, which in turn might have informed Dr. Beaver's
opinion in some respects but not others, and a conclusive opinion
one way or the other was missing. As a result, the state court
acted well within the bounds of Strickland in finding that there
was no reasonable probability of a different outcome even if this
speculative evidence had been added to the mix of mitigating
evidence.
Row has not shown that the state court's
adjudication of this constitutional claim was contrary to or
involved an unreasonable application of Strickland and its
progeny, or that it was based on an unreasonable determination of
the facts in light of the evidence presented in state court. 28
U.S.C. § 2254(d).
6. The Court Will Not Hold an Evidentiary
Hearing
In an attempt to avoid this result, Row asks
the Court to consider new evidence that she has proffered in this
habeas proceeding and she seeks an evidentiary hearing, primarily
to establish that she has a brain dysfunction that her trial
counsel failed to uncover. She also contends that the evidence of
childhood abuse and deprivation, though mentioned at sentencing,
was not fully developed.
The Court reserved its final ruling on whether
it would grant this request. (Dkt. 472, pp. 12-14.) After the
parties submitted oral argument on the merits, the Court decided
to set an evidentiary hearing on the preliminary question of
post-conviction counsel's diligence in pursuing this claim in
state court. (Dkt. 509, p. 1.) At the time, the Court understood
AEDPA, and specifically 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2), as prohibiting an
evidentiary hearings in federal court, absent two narrow
exceptions, unless the petitioner could show that she had
exercised reasonable diligence in developing the claim in state
court. Once diligence was established, the petitioner would be
entitled to an evidentiary hearing if she could show a colorable
claim for relief on the merits.
The United States Supreme Court has recently
clarified this issue and reaffirmed that when a state court has
adjudicated a federal constitutional claim on the merits in a
habeas case that is governed by AEDPA's standards, "review [of the
claim] under § 2254(d)(1) is limited to the record that was before
the state court." Cullen v. Pinholster, 131 S.Ct. 1388, 1398
(2011). New evidence developed in federal court is irrelevant to
that determination, and whether the petitioner exercised
reasonable diligence in state court -- a pertinent question under
§ 2254(e)(2) -- is not a part of the analysis. See Pape v. Thaler,
2011 WL 2476437 at *3 (5th Cir. 2011) (noting that "§ 2254(e)(2)
[is] not applicable to § 2254(d)(1) petitions"); cf. Pinholster,
131 S.Ct. at 1417 (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (interpreting the
majority's rule as creating a "potential bar to federal habeas
relief for diligent petitioners who cannot present evidence to a
state court.").
A federal court's focus when reviewing claims
adjudicated on the merits by the state court must be trained on §
2254(d), not § 2254(e)(2), and is limited in scope to the same
record that was before the state court. Row notes correctly that
Pinholster did not squarely resolve whether district courts are
prohibited from ever choosing to hold an evidentiary hearing
before reaching the § 2254(d) question. But this Court is
convinced that, absent unusual circumstances not present here, it
would be contrary to AEDPA's core purposes of comity and reducing
delay to hold an evidentiary hearing to develop evidence that the
Court is prohibited from considering until a petitioner has either
survived § 2254(d) review, or has shown that the statutory
provision is not applicable. Because Row has not cleared that
hurdle, her request for an evidentiary hearing on the merits is
denied, and a hearing on the preliminary diligence issue is now
moot.
Relying on the Jury's Verdict to Find the
Multiple Murder Aggravator (Claim 8)
In this claim, Row argues that the trial court
unconstitutionally abdicated its duty as sentencing factfinder by
relying on the jury's guilty verdicts on three counts of first
degree murder to find that the multiple murder aggravating
circumstance was proven beyond a reasonable doubt. (Dkt. 293, p.
52.)
As Row indicates, the trial court noted that
the "verdicts themselves" establish the multiple murder aggravator
as "a matter of law," but the court also independently reviewed
the evidence and found that Row had committed more than one murder
at the same time. (State's Lodging A-2, pp. 415-16.) Specifically,
the court wrote that the verdicts "are fully supported by the
evidence beyond all reasonable doubt," and it expressed its "full
agreement" with the jury's view of the evidence and its judgment.
(Id. at 416.) Therefore, Row's claim that the trial court did not
make an independent determination of the facts is incorrect.
Moreover, Row has cited no clearly established
federal law, and this Court is aware of none, that would prohibit
the sentencer from referring to the jury's verdict when that
verdict necessarily included findings beyond a reasonable doubt
that would establish an aggravating circumstance. The cases that
she does cite -- Creech v. Arave, 947 F.2d 873 (9th Cir.
1991), Clemons v. Mississippi, 494 U.S. 738 (1990),
Cartwright v. Maynard,
822 F.2d 1447 (10th Cir. 1987) --
address when a death sentence must be vacated if the weighing
process is corrupted by an invalid aggravating factor and are not
relevant to the question at hand.
Row has not carried her burden to show that the
state court's rejection of this claim was contrary to or involved
an unreasonable application clearly established federal law as
determined by the United States Supreme Court.
The Utter Disregard Aggravator (Claim 9)
Row next contends that the trial court
impermissibly based its finding that she had exhibited an utter
disregard for human life solely on her status as a mother. (Dkt.
293, p. 35.) Again, the Court does not share Row's narrow view of
the trial court's findings. The Idaho Supreme Court has determined
that the "utter disregard" aggravator is meant "to be reflective
of acts or circumstances surrounding the crime which exhibit the
highest, utmost callous disregard for human life, i.e., the
cold-blooded, pitiless slayer." State v. Osborn, 631 P.2d 187, 201
(Idaho 1981). In upholding this construction against a vagueness
challenge, the United States Supreme Court declared that a "cold
blooded, pitiless slayer" is one who kills "without feeling or
sympathy," and that a sentencer can find this fact objectively
based upon the defendant's "attitude toward his conduct and his
victim." Arave v. Creech,
507 U.S. 463, 475 (1993).
Here, the trial court found that Row's "lack of
conscientious scruples against the killing of her natural-born,
pre-adolescent, innocent and helpless children, along with her
husband, catapult this case into the heightened dimension of utter
disregard for human life as defined by the Idaho Supreme Court."
(State's Lodging A-2, p. 423.) The court remarked that "[m]aternal
'pedocide' -- the killing of one's own children -- is the
embodiment of the cold-blooded, pitiless slayer -- a descent into
the blackened heart of darkness." (Id.)
This Court has little doubt that it would be
questionable to impose a death sentence solely because of the
defendant's status as a mother or as a woman, without regard to
whether that status had any nexus to the charged crimes, but that
is not what occurred in this case. Rather, the dispositive facts
for the trial court were that Row, a mother, killed her own young
children in a cold, calculated, and violent manner, seemingly
without feeling or sympathy. It was her attitude toward her
conduct and her victims that established the aggravator, not her
status.
More important, the trial court did not weigh
the mitigating circumstances against this aggravating fact,
choosing instead to rely exclusively on the multiple murder
aggravator. Any error in the utter disregard aggravating factor
had no effect on the outcome, and will not serve as a basis for
habeas relief. Pizzuto v. Arave, 280 F.3d 949, 970-71 (9th
Cir. 2002).
Sufficient Evidence Supported the Utter
Disregard Aggravator (Claim 10)
Row also challenges the sufficiency of the
evidence supporting the utter disregard aggravating factor. This
claim fails for similar reasons.
When a petitioner alleges that an aggravating
factor is unsupported by the evidence, a reviewing court must
decide whether, after viewing the evidence in a light most
favorable to the prosecution, "any rational trier of fact could
have found the aggravating factor beyond a reasonable doubt."
Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S. 764, 781 (1990)
(emphasis in original).
Ample evidence beyond Row's motherhood
supported the trial court's finding. She started the fire in the
early morning hours while Randy, Joshua, and Tabitha slept
upstairs in their bedrooms. The fire was well-planned and executed
to deadly effect. The circuit breaker to the smoke alarm was shut
off or tripped and the exhaust fan was set to run continuously,
feeding the smoke and flames throughout the house without warning.
Row used a quick and hot burning petroleum product. She stood to
gain financially from the deaths of the three victims and had lied
about Randy abusing her in the weeks leading up to the arson.
Collectively, these are the acts of a cold blooded, pitiless
slayer, someone who kills without feeling or sympathy.
Also like the last claim, any error in an
aggravator that was not included in the weighing calculus would be
harmless and would not provide a basis for upsetting Row's death
sentence on habeas review. Pizzuto, 280 F.3d at 970-71.
Weighing of the Aggravating and Mitigating
Circumstances (Claim 11)
Row alleges that the trial court erred when it
chose to discontinue weighing aggravating and mitigating
circumstances after it had concluded that all of the mitigating
evidence did not outweigh the multiple murder aggravating
circumstance. Row argues that state law, specifically Idaho Code §
19-2515(c), required the trial court to weigh all mitigating
circumstances against each aggravating factor individually and
that the court had no discretion to forgo that process.
In State v. Charboneau, 774 P.2d 299 (1989),
the Idaho Supreme Court construed Idaho Code § 19-2515(c) as
requiring district courts to weigh all mitigating evidence
collectively against each aggravating circumstance individually,
rather than weighing all mitigation against all aggravating
factors. Id. at 323. In the present case, however, the Idaho
Supreme Court found no error in the lower court's decision to
weigh all collective mitigation against the single multiple murder
aggravator and to then stop the formal weighing process at that
point, which is a question that was not addressed by Charboneau.
Whether the Idaho Supreme Court correctly interpreted and applied
state law does not present a cognizable claim on which relief may
be granted. Peltier v. Wright, 15 F.3d 860, 861 (9th
Cir.1994); see also Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 67-68 (1991)
("[I]t is not the province of a federal habeas court to re-examine
state-court determinations on state-law questions").
Still, Row argues that the failure of the trial
court to engage in the total weighing process deprived her of her
right to automatic review of a complete record on appeal under
Idaho Code § 19-2827. In support, she cites Parker v. Dugger,
498 U.S. 308 (1991), but that case only addresses whether a
state appellate court may reweigh aggravators and mitigators, when
an aggravating circumstance has been stricken as invalid, to
determine whether the error was harmless. In this case, the Idaho
Supreme Court did not strike any aggravator, and Parker is
inapplicable. Gardner v. Florida, 430 U.S. 349 (1977), also
does not help Row, because there is no indication in this case
that the trial court relied on secret or confidential information
that Row had no opportunity to explain or deny.
The Court also fails to see how Row was
prejudiced or harmed by any alleged technical error. The existence
of a single aggravating circumstance, found beyond a reasonable
doubt, is sufficient to warrant a death sentence under Idaho law
unless the collective weight of the mitigating circumstances
outweighs the single aggravator such that the death penalty would
be unjust. Idaho Code § 19-2515(c),(e). Even if Row were correct
that the trial court erred in failing to weigh all mitigation
against each aggravator that it had found, its decision to impose
a death sentence on the multiple murder aggravating factor would
stand undisturbed.
The Utter Disregard Aggravator is not
Unconstitutionally Vague (Claim 12)
Row next contends that the utter disregard
aggravator should be struck down as unconstitutionally vague.
To minimize the risk of wholly arbitrary and
capricious infliction of a death sentence, states seeking to
impose the death penalty must sufficiently narrow the sentencer's
discretion. See, e.g., Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 189,
206-207 (1976). A state's death penalty "system could have
standards so vague that they would fail adequately to channel the
sentencing decision patterns of juries with the result that a
pattern of arbitrary and capricious sentencing . . . could occur."
Id. at 195 n.46. Claims of vagueness directed at aggravating
circumstances defined in capital punishment statutes assert that
the challenged provision fails adequately to inform sentencers of
what they must find to impose the death penalty. Maynard v.
Cartwright, 486 U.S. 356, 361-62 (1988).
The United States Supreme Court has already
held, in Arave v. Creech, that the Idaho Supreme Court's
interpretative gloss on the unadorned statutory "utter disregard"
aggravating circumstance survives a vagueness challenge.507 U.S.
at 475. Row acknowledges Creech but contends that the Idaho
Supreme Court's later varying applications of this aggravating
circumstance have so muddied the waters as to inject vagueness or
overbreadth back into the calculus. Row's argument is unavailing
because the state trial court applied the precise definition that
the Creech Court affirmed. Even if the utter disregard aggravator
were constitutionally infirm, it had no affect on the outcome in
this case because the trial court found that the death penalty was
supportable on the multiple murder aggravator alone.
Alternatives to the Death Penalty (Claim 21)
Row asserts that the state district court
failed to consider non-capital sentencing alternatives before
imposing a death sentence. Although she has cited United States
Supreme Court cases, none of those cases stand for a
constitutional principle that a state sentencing body must
consider such alternatives. This is either solely a state law
claim that is not reviewable in a federal habeas proceeding, see
Estelle, 502 U.S. at 67-68, or, if cognizable, it does not provide
an entitlement to habeas relief because there is no clearly
established Supreme Court authority that requires the
consideration of sentencing alternatives.
In any case, the trial court did consider
sentencing alternatives short of death, at least implicitly, as
part of its reasoning. The only other realistic possibility was a
sentence of life sentence in prison, but the court found that a
"fixed life sentence would simply not achieve the theoretical
punishment/retribution goals posited above." (State's Lodging A-2,
p. 432.) This language shows that the state court did not believe
that a life sentence, or anything short of that, would be an
appropriate disposition of the case.
Consideration of Row's Mental Condition
(Claim 22)
For her next claim, Row asserts that the trial
court "failed to consider her mental illness as a mitigating
factor under the sentencing guidelines of Idaho Code 19-2523."
(Dkt. 480, p. 75.) She contends that the failure to follow this
statutory provision deprived her of her Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendment rights.
Under Idaho Code § 19-2523, "[e]vidence of
mental condition shall be received, if offered, at the time of
sentencing of any person convicted of a crime." The trial court
must then review a number of factors, including the extent to
which the defendant is mentally ill, the degree of illness or
defect and the level of functional impairment, and the prognosis
for improvement or rehabilitation, among others. Id. The Idaho
Supreme Court has interpreted the statute as not requiring a
sentencing court to recite each of the factors expressly, so long
as the record shows that the court adequately considered the
substance of the factors in arriving at its sentencing decision.
State v. Strand, 50 P.3d 472, 476 (Idaho 2002); Hollon v.
State, 976 P.2d 927 (Idaho 1999).
This issue -- the extent to which the trial
court complied with Idaho Code § 19-2523 -- is govern solely by
state law, and this Court is not persuaded by Row's effort to turn
it into a federal constitutional claim. In attempting to do so,
she relies on Hicks v. Oklahoma, 447 U.S. 343 (1980). That
reliance is misplaced.
In Hicks, the jury was instructed that it was
required to impose a 40-year prison sentence under Oklahoma's
recidivist statute. 447 U.S. at 344-45. The statute was later
struck down as unconstitutional, but the state appellate court
refused to vacate Hicks's sentence. Id. at 345. The Supreme Court
found a due process violation and reversed, holding that the
defendant had "a substantial and legitimate expectation that he
will be deprived of his liberty only to the extent determined by
the jury in the exercise of its statutory discretion." Id. at 346.
According to the Supreme Court, Oklahoma had denied the defendant
"the jury sentence to which he was entitled under state law,
simply on the frail conjecture that a jury might have imposed a
sentence equally as harsh as that mandated by the invalid habitual
offender provision." Id. "Such an arbitrary disregard of the
petitioner's right to liberty," the Court held, "is a denial of
due process of law." Id.
Hicks did not alter the basic rule that a
federal habeas court does not sit as an expositor of state law or
as an appellate court of last resort on state law issues. See,
e.g., Swarthout v. Cooke,
131 S.Ct. 859, 861 (2011). In Hicks,
there was no dispute that the defendant had been sentenced under
an unconstitutional statute; the only issue was whether the state
appellate court's finding that he had suffered no prejudice
implicated his federal due process rights. Id. at 346. The Supreme
Court determined that it did because the defendant was deprived of
his right to have the jury exercise its discretion in sentencing
him and because of the significant possibility that, had it done
so, his sentence could have been short as ten years. Id. at
346-47. Only extreme deprivations of a state created right such as
this, infecting the integrity of the entire proceeding, implicate
a defendant's due process rights. See, e.g., Estelle, 502 U.S. at
72. Unlike Hicks, no state court has found that Row was deprived
of a right to which she was entitled under state law, and her
claim of error does not rise to the level of a federal
constitutional issue.
It is also clear from the trial court's written
decision imposing the death penalty that it thoroughly considered
Row's mental condition when assessing the appropriate sentence.
The court listed, as "facts and circumstances found in
mitigation," Row's "Mental, Psychological and Personality
Problems." (State's Lodging A-2, p. 426.) The court had no
difficulty finding that Row had a "mental disorder" but not in the
sense that she was psychotic or failed to know the difference
between right and wrong. (Id.) It also found that she had an
"antisocial personality disorder, evidenced by poor impulse
control, lack of empathy, manipulative [sic], a pathological liar,
somewhat paranoid with a histrionic personality style, suffering
also from chronic depression. (Id. at 426-27.) According to the
court, Row's mental and emotional make-up caused her to be
unhealthily dependent in relationships, and the court discussed
her "alexithymia," which "may be related to some organic problem
with brain functioning," that was manifested as a severe
disconnection with her feelings. (Id. at 427.)
During the explanation of its weighing process,
the court further noted that Row's alexithymic condition may
explain Row's ability to cope emotionally with her crimes, but
"provides no justification to outweigh the gravity of [the
multiple murder] aggravating circumstance." (State's Lodging A-1,
p. 429.) The court later mused whether Row's ability to block out
her feelings of guilt and remorse would render a life sentence
insufficient to serve the ends of justice. (Id. at 432.)
This Court concludes that Row has not stated a
federal claim on which relief may be granted. In the alternative,
Row was not deprived of any state created liberty interest because
the state trial court considered her mental condition before
imposing sentence.
Consideration of Row's Mental Illness as an
Aggravating Factor (Claim 32)
In a related claim, Row contends that the trial
court used her mental condition as a non-statutory aggravating
factor rather than solely as evidence that mitigated the
punishment, in violation of her rights under the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments.
Row is correct that she had a constitutional
right to have the sentencer consider all relevant evidence that
may call for a sentence less than death, but the Constitution does
not demand that the factfinder place any particular weight on the
evidence that is offered. Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.S. 104,
114-115 (1982). The trial court in this case considered the
evidence that Row put forward, and it listed her mental,
psychological, and personality problems as a mitigating
circumstances. (State's Lodging A-2, pp. 426-28.)
While the court also mused on, among other
things, whether Row's ability to block any feelings of guilt or
remorse would render a sentence of life in prison an insufficient
punishment for her crimes, Row has cited no clearly established
law that prohibited it from considering the evidence in that
manner. True, the court also found that non-statutory aggravating
factors existed in this case, but so long as the sentencer's
discretion is sufficiently guided to comply with the Eighth
Amendment's narrowing requirement, "nothing in the Constitution
limits the consideration of non-statutory aggravating factors."
Babbitt v. Calderon, 151 F.3d 1170, 1178 (9th Cir. 1998)
(citing Barclay v. Forida, 463 U.S. 939, 956 (1983).
Estelle Violation (Claim 37)
For her final non-dismissed claim, Row argues
that her constitutional rights to remain silent, not be compelled
to incriminate herself, and to have legal counsel were violated
during the presentence investigation. This claim lacks merit.
In Estelle v. Smith, 451 U.S. 454
(1981), the United States Supreme Court held that a criminal
defendant, who neither initiates a psychiatric examination nor
attempts to introduce psychiatric evidence, has a right under the
Fifth Amendment not to be compelled to answer a psychiatrist's
questions if his answers may be used against him at trial or
sentencing proceeding. Id. at 468. The Court further held that a
criminal defendant has a Sixth Amendment right to consult with an
attorney before submitting to such an examination. Id. at 469-71.
The Ninth Circuit has extended the reasoning in Estelle to include
a Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, and a
Sixth Amendment right to the advice of counsel, during the
presentence investigation stage of a criminal case. Jones v.
Cardwell, 686 F.2d 754, 756 (9th Cir. 1982) (Fifth
Amendment); Hoffman v. Arave, 236 F.3d 523, 538-40 (9th
Cir. 2001) (Sixth Amendment).
Because Estelle has not been extended by the
Supreme Court beyond psychiatric examinations to include all
presentence investigations, Row is unable to show that the Idaho
Supreme Court's implicit rejection of this claim is contrary to or
involved an unreasonable application of clearly established
federal law as determined by the United States Supreme Court. The
Ninth Circuit's decision to extend Estelle in pre-AEDPA matters is
immaterial.
Furthermore, Row did not make any incriminating
statements about the crimes for which she was prosecuted during
the presentence investigation, and she chose to waive any
privilege that she may have had when she made a statement
concerning that topic at the sentencing hearing. Though Row
submitted a written version of her childhood and life history to
the presentence investigator, the information in that statement
was confirmed by testimony and evidence at the sentencing hearing
and was used by the trial court largely in mitigation of
punishment. The record also shows that Row received the advice of
counsel before being contacted by the presentence investigator. If
any error occurred, then, Row cannot show that it had a
substantial and injurious influence or effect on the trial court's
decision to impose a death sentence in this case. Brecht v.
Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 637 (1993).
CONCLUSION
The Court previously denied or dismissed Claims
7 (in part), 13-20, 23-31, 33, 34, 38-41. (Dkt. 417, p. 41.) In
this Memorandum Decision, the Court now denies relief on Claims
1-6, 7 (remainder), 8-12, 21, 22, 32, 35-37. The Court also
denies, with prejudice, Row's request for new evidentiary
development on the previously non-dismissed allegations of
ineffective assistance of counsel in Claim 7.
There being no claims left to be adjudicated,
the case shall be dismissed.
CERTIFICATE OF APPEALABILITY
As required by Rule 11 of the Rules Governing
Section 2254 Cases, the Court evaluates this case for suitability
of a certificate of appealability ("COA"). See also 28 U.S.C. §
2253(c).
A habeas petitioner cannot appeal unless a COA
has issued. 28 U.S.C. § 2253. A COA may issue only when the
petitioner "has made a substantial showing of the denial of a
constitutional right." 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). This showing can be
established by demonstrating that "reasonable jurists could debate
whether (or, for that matter, agree that) the petition should have
been resolved in a different manner" or that the issues were
"adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further." Slack v.
McDaniel,
529 U.S. 473, 484 (2000) (citing
Barefoot v. Estelle, 463 U.S. 880, 893 & n.4 (1983)).
Mindful that this is a capital case, the Court
will certify an appeal over the Court's resolution of Claims 1, 2,
7 (limited to the allegations ineffective assistance of counsel at
the capital sentencing proceeding addressed herein), 35, and 36 in
the Second Amended Petition, including its decision to deny Row's
requests for discovery, expansion of the record, or an evidentiary
hearing on any of these claims, if applicable. The Court has
reviewed its other decisions and orders in this case, and it does
not find them to be reasonably debatable. The COA shall be limited
to the claims listed above.
Row may seek to broaden the COA in the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals, pursuant to Rule 22 of the Federal Rules
of Appellate Procedure and Local Ninth Circuit Rule 22-1. She is
advised that she must still file a timely notice of appeal in this
Court.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED:
1. The Second Amended Petition for Writ of
Habeas Corpus is DENIED, and this cause of action is DISMISSED
with prejudice.
2. The Court issues a Certificate of
Appealability over the Court's resolution of Claims 1, 2, 7
(limited to the allegations ineffective assistance of counsel at
the capital sentencing proceeding addressed herein), 35, and 36 in
the Second Amended Petition, which shall also include the Court's
decision to deny discovery, expansion of the record, or an
evidentiary hearing on any of these claims, if applicable. The
Court shall not certify any other issue or claim for appeal.
3. Upon the filing of a timely notice of appeal
in this case, and not until such time, the Clerk of Court shall
forward the necessary paperwork to the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit for the docketing of an appeal in a civil case.