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Jason Scott
BYRAM
Robbery
Same day
April 23, 2004
(Columbia) - Jason Scott Byram was executed at
6:15pm on Friday by lethal injection. A final appeal to stay the
scheduled execution was denied by the South Carolina Supreme Court
on Thursday. Byram's attorneys had appealed to the court to stop the
execution because the jury who sentenced him to death never got a
chance to hear specific evidence about abuse during Byram's
childhood. That follow's the United States Supreme Court's decision
last month not to hear his case on appeal.
Byram, 38, was convicted in 1995 of stabbing 36-year-old
Julie Johnson to death with her own kitchen knife as she slept on a
sofa in her Columbia home in 1993. Her husband and three children
were asleep.
Johnson's mother, Peggy Ferrell, said she wanted
at least some compassion from Byram, even if it was his final words.
She says Byram was always very cold and never changed his expression.
In a statement read just before his execution, Byram said he was
innocent, but offered condolences to Johnson's family that read in
part, "I understand they only seek justice for their daughter."
Johnson's mother held her brother's hand as the lethal chemicals
were injected into Byram.
Earlier this month, Byram changed his mind
shortly after asking to be put to death in the electric chair, which
he thought would be less painful, saying he did not want to put
witnesses through the stress of watching him die in the electric
chair.
The victim's husband, Jeff Johnson, spoke after
the execution and says justice was served, "And so what's happened
here today is justice was done for the citizens of South Carolina.
Not for me and not for my family. It was done for everybody out
there that goes to bed at night." Peggy Ferrell says she felt she
had to witness the execution, "I have no feelings of vindictiveness,
just profound sorrow that I will probably carry for the rest of my
life. But today I followed through with this to fulfill something
that I needed to fulfill for Julia."
Byram was convicted in 1995. He told authorities
there was another man with him who struck the fatal blows, but
prosecutors found his fingerprint inside the home and a DNA analysis
found Johnson's blood on a shirt in Byram's apartment. Prosecutor
Barney Giese was confident the jury convicted the right man and has
said there was no evidence another man was involved.
Byram was the 31th inmate sent to the death
chamber since capital punishment was reinstated in the Palmetto
State in 1976. Last Friday, the state put to death 51-year-old Jerry
Bridwell McWee, an Aiken County man convicted of killing a
convenience store clerk in July 1991. David Clayton, convicted of
the 1994 killing a Georgetown police officer, died by lethal
injection in March.
April 24, 3004
Strapped to a gurney and with a needle in his
outstretched, tattooed arm, Jason Byram, in the last seconds of his
life, looked at Peggy Ferrell and mouthed some words to her. Ferrell,
mother of slain schoolteacher Julie Johnson, had a front row seat
Friday to Byram’s execution. She surmised what Byram said was an
apology, an expression of regret for stabbing her daughter with a
butcher knife nearly 11 years ago. “I just nodded my head and
thanked him,” Ferrell said.
Prison officials pronounced Byram dead at 6:15
p.m. He was executed for fatally stabbing the Harbison West
Elementary teacher at her Rosewood home in May 1993. Johnson, 36,
was married and the mother of three.
Inside the death chamber, Byram’s attorney Jay
Elliott read a statement attributed to Byram: “While I maintain my
innocence, I do want to express my condolences to the family of Mrs.
Johnson, and I fully understand they only seek justice for their
daughter.” In the statement, Byram also expressed his appreciation
to the S.C. Department of Corrections concerning his treatment. It
concluded with a reading of John 3:16 and the words, “I believe.”
Byram then turned his head to the left and mouthed a few words to
the witnesses. He then looked up, blinked sleepily, and began to
breathe through his slightly closed mouth. Within 30 seconds, about
five minutes after 6 p.m., he stopped blinking and stared at the
ceiling.
“Justice was done for the citizens of South
Carolina, not for me, not for my family,” said Johnson’s husband,
Jeff Johnson. “Due process was done here, and everybody should be
proud that 11 years of due process was done.” About a dozen death
penalty protesters gathered outside the department’s administrative
offices on Broad River Road before the execution. Byram’s friend,
Cindy Macias, described Byram as a “very gentle, loving person.” “He
admits to being there, having been at the house,” she said. “He’s
convinced somebody else did the crime.”
Prosecutors said Johnson was dozing on her couch
early one morning when Byram broke her kitchen window, took her
purse and stole her van. Hours later, Byram came back to steal a TV
and VCR. When Johnson awoke, Byram stabbed her with a butcher knife.
Nearly two years later, it took just over an hour for a jury to
recommend a death sentence for the Beaufort native. Just before the
jury made its decision, his attorneys said Byram bounced from home
to home as a baby and later developed emotional problems.
Friday’s execution came one day after the state
Supreme Court denied Byram’s request to stay his execution and
review his death sentence. Byram was the third S.C. inmate put to
death this year and the 31st since the state resumed executions in
1985. Of the more than 65 inmates on death row, none were convicted
in Richland County.
AP April 24, 2004
COLUMBIA--Convicted killer Jason Scott Byram
maintained his innocence in his final statement before he was
executed at 6:15 p.m. Friday for the death of a Columbia
schoolteacher. Through his attorney Jay Elliott, he sent his
condolences to the family of Julie Johnson. Johnson's mother held
her brother's hand as the lethal chemicals were given to Byram.
Byram, 38, was convicted of killing the 36-year-old
teacher with her own kitchen knife in May 1993 as she slept on the
sofa. Her husband and three children also were asleep but didn't
wake up until after Johnson had been stabbed several times. Byram
was convicted in 1995. He told authorities there was another man
with him who struck the fatal blows, but prosecutors found his
fingerprint inside the home and a DNA analysis found Johnson's blood
on a shirt in Byram's apartment.
Prosecutor Barney Giese was confident the jury
convicted the right man, and has said there was no evidence another
man was involved. Byram lost a final appeal to the state Supreme
Court earlier this week. He is the 31st inmate put to death in South
Carolina since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.
AP April 24, 2004
Jason Scott Byram maintained his innocence up
until his execution Friday, but the mother of the schoolteacher
Byram was convicted of killing says she was thankful he expressed
sympathy. Byram, 38, died by lethal injection at 6:15 p.m. for the
death of Julie Johnson, who was fatally stabbed with her own kitchen
knife in May 1993 as she slept on her sofa. Johnson's husband and
three children also were asleep in the home when the 36-year-old
woman was killed.
Johnson's mother, Peggy Ferrell, said after
witnessing the execution that she thought Byram expressed remorse as
he lay on the gurney with his arms outstretched. "I will go to my
grave knowing he was looking at me. It was the first time I had eye
contact with him and I felt like he was trying to say something,"
said Ferrell, a 70-year-old registered nurse from Spartanburg. "The
second or third time that he did that, I just nodded my head and
thanked him because I knew in my heart that there was an apology
there."
Byram, dressed in a green jumpsuit, briefly
looked through the glass window into the witness room before his
attorney Jay Elliott read his final statement. "While I maintain my
innocence, I do want to express my condolences to the family of Mrs.
Johnson, and I fully understand they only seek justice for their
daughter," the statement said. He also bid farewell to his family,
friends and loved ones and his attorney read a Bible verse followed
by the words, "I believe." As the statement was read, Ferrell
reached out and held her brother's hand. Byram again looked into the
witness room and mouthed something. His eyes began to blink slower,
finally closing for good as he looked to the ceiling.
Byram maintained during his trial in 1995 that
there was another man with him who fatally stabbed Johnson, but
authorities never found any evidence of that. Authorities did find
his fingerprint inside the home and a DNA analysis found Johnson's
blood on a shirt in Byram's apartment. He also told his wife at the
time that he had stabbed someone the day of the killing, prosecutors
have said. "He admitted stabbing her. He admitted cutting her. He
just said he didn't kill her, that the invisible man he said was
with him gave the final blows," Ferrell said. "There was never
another person. It was him and he was not innocent. The DNA proved
that without a doubt."
Attorneys for Byram said he was abused by his
foster mother from the time he was 6 months old and was mentally and
emotionally impaired. They argued a jury never got to hear that
evidence before they sentenced him to death, but the state Supreme
Court denied that final appeal Thursday.
Johnson had been an elementary school teacher for
about 12 years here. She taught students with emotional disturbances
or behavior problems, her mother said. Those symptoms could have put
a student like Byram in Johnson's class, her mother said. "Julie
would've been the first to reach out and help him," she said.
Johnson's husband, Jeff, joined the family after
the execution and expressed his thanks for the community's support.
He was at his wife's side during her final moments as she lay
bleeding on the family's front yard. "As far as myself and my
children, 11 years later and how we're doing? We're doing very, very
well," he said. "So what's happened here today was justice was done
for the citizens of South Carolina, not for me and not for my family."
About a dozen protesters gathered in front of the
Corrections Department administration building. Jeff Johnson said he
respected the protesters, but he said the laws in this state "are
very clear." Sal Macias, 50, was one of the protesters. The
University of South Carolina Sumter professor said he and his wife
met with Byram often, and he saw him the night before he was
executed. Macias said Byram expressed many times he wished the
incident did not occur, but he never admitted killing Johnson.
Byram was the 31st inmate put to death in South
Carolina since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.
Byram scheduled to die today after judge denies
final appeal
By Jacob Jordan -
The Associated Press April 23, 2004
Peggy Ferrell says she wants at least some
compassion from the condemned man who fatally stabbed her daughter
more than 10 years ago - even if it's his final words. Ferrell's
daughter, Julie Johnson, was killed in May 1993 with her own kitchen
knife as she slept on a sofa in her downtown Columbia home. Her
husband and three children also were asleep but didn't wake up until
after Johnson had been stabbed several times.
Jason Scott Byram, 38, is scheduled to die for
the killing today. His final appeal was denied by the state Supreme
Court on Thursday.
Ferrell, of Spartanburg, said she wanted to
witness the execution for her daughter. She said Byram's actions
have made the execution a little easier. She said she will never
forget the end of the two-week trial when Circuit Judge Gary Clary
said, "May God have mercy on your soul," and Byram quipped back, "Yours,
too." "He was so surly and unrepentive," said Ferrell, a 70-year-old
registered nurse who still works part-time. "This guy was cold,
cold, cold. People that look at his picture say, 'He just looks like
evil.' ... He never changed his expression the two weeks we sat in
that courtroom."
Asked if his client has ever shown any remorse,
attorney Jay Elliot would not comment, citing the attorney-client
privilege. He didn't know if he would talk to Byram before Friday or
if his client would have a final statement. But Elliott said his
client is not evil. Byram was abandoned as a child and abused by his
foster mother, Elliott said, though he said none of that justifies
the crime. "There are certainly degrees of human frailty and Jason
Byram is a human being," Elliot said.
Though Ferrell doesn't expect Byram to show any
remorse before he dies, she's not angry at him. "I don't wish
vengeance or hell fire for him, I just want him to be punished for
what he did and I want it to be over," Ferrell said.
The killing in 1993 shook Johnson's quiet
neighborhood, prompting front-page headlines in the local newspaper.
No one has ever explained to Ferrell why Byram broke into the home,
stole the keys to the Johnson's van and drove away - only to come
back apparently to steal a TV and VCR. Upon his return, he woke
Johnson and confronted her with a knife. After she was stabbed,
Johnson made it to the front yard where her husband and a police
officer heard her final words. She died on the way to the hospital.
Prosecutor Barney Giese said he'll always
remember this case. It wasn't his first death penalty trial, but it
is the first one in which the execution will be carried out. "I
still remember the case very vividly even over all those years, and
I think the reason I remember it was because the facts were so
horrific," Giese said. Many people were affected by Johnson's death,
including her family and her students. "She was a special needs
teacher who was beloved by her students," Giese said.
State v. Byram, 485 S.E.2d 360 (S.C.
1997) (Direct Appeal).
Defendant was convicted upon jury verdict in the
Circuit Court, Richland County, Gary E. Clary, J., of murder, first-degree
burglary, attempted armed robbery, and grand larceny of motor
vehicle and was sentenced, respectively, to death, life imprisonment,
20 years' imprisonment, and 10 years imprisonment. Defendant
appealed. The Supreme Court, Burnett, J., held that: (1) trial court
properly excluded evidence that "Jim Doe" was accomplice referred to
in defendant's statement; (2) defendant was not entitled to jury
instruction on parole eligibility; (3) trial judge did not allow
excessive victim impact evidence; and (4) defendant was not
prejudiced by presence of television cameras in courtroom during
sentencing phase of trial, notwithstanding court's erroneous
conclusion that it lacked discretion to exclude television media
without excluding other forms of media. Affirmed.
BURNETT, Justice.
Appellant was convicted of murder, first degree burglary, attempted
armed robbery, and grand larceny of a motor vehicle. He was
sentenced, respectively, to death, life imprisonment, twenty years'
imprisonment, and ten years' imprisonment. [FN1] This appeal
consolidates his direct appeal with the mandatory review provisions
of S.C.Code Ann. § 16-3- 25 (1985). We affirm. FN1. The jury found
the statutory aggravating circumstances of burglary and robbery
while armed with a deadly weapon.
ISSUES
I. Did the trial court err by excluding evidence
that Jim Doe was the accomplice referred to in appellant's statement?
II. Did the trial judge err by refusing to instruct the jury on
parole eligibility?
III. Did the trial judge err by allowing excessive victim impact
evidence?
IV. Did the trial judge err by allowing television cameras in the
courtroom during the sentencing phase of trial?
Appellant argues the trial judge erred by
prohibiting him from introducing evidence that "Jim Doe" was the
accomplice referred to in his statement. [FN2] He claims this
evidence was not introduced to prove his innocence, but rather in
mitigation of punishment. Appellant contends the trial judge's
exclusion of this evidence violated the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution.We disagree. FN2. At
trial, appellant named a specific individual as his accomplice. We
will refer to this individual as "Jim Doe."
During the guilt phase of trial, the evidence
revealed that on Sunday, May 23, 1993, at approximately 3:00 a.m.
the victim's home was broken into, her handbag and white van were
stolen, and she was stabbed to death with her own butcher knife.
Appellant was arrested later that afternoon. He gave a statement to
the police in which he admitted entering the victim's home and
stabbing her to keep her quiet. Appellant stated he had an
accomplice named "Jim" whom he described as 5'7" tall, 180 pounds,
bald-headed, and in his thirties. He stated he met Jim on May 22,
1993, outside of a particular gay bar. In his statement, appellant
suggested Jim was the principal of the crimes and stated Jim
repeatedly stabbed the victim.
According to testimony, the police attempted to
locate "Jim," but found no one who matched the description and had
been at the named gay bar or in the area on the evening of May 22,
1993. The manager of the bar testified the club is private and a
person must either be a member or be with a member and fill out
documentation to enter. He testified appellant was not a member of
the club and did not enter the club on May 22, 1993.
The manager
further testified he patrols the parking lot of the club for vandals
and saw no vans in the parking lot on the evening of May 22 or early
on May 23. The manager stated he knew of no club member named "Jim"
who was in his thirties, 5'7" tall, 180 pounds, and bald-headed. The
victim's husband and a police officer testified the victim's
statements before she died indicated only one person was involved in
the assault.
An individual who rented a room in the same
boarding house as appellant, and who was mentioned in appellant's
statement, testified he saw appellant around 12:00 a.m. on May 23,
1993, in a white van. He stated appellant had blood on his shirt.
The witness asked appellant who owned the van, and was told it
belonged to a friend and not to tell anyone about it. The witness
testified he did not see anyone else in the van.
At the close of the State's case, appellant
stated he was prepared to introduce testimony regarding the identity
of "Jim." The solicitor objected and the trial judge allowed
appellant to proffer evidence regarding the identity of "Jim."
Appellant explained the purpose of the proffered evidence was to
bolster the statement he had given to the police. Noting the
proffered evidence only speculated the "Jim" in appellant's
statement was Jim Doe and the evidence was not inconsistent with
appellant's guilt, the trial judge denied appellant's motion to
admit evidence that "Jim" was Jim Doe.
The trial judge relied on a
line of cases which hold evidence offered by an accused as to
another's commission of the crime charged must be limited to facts
inconsistent with the accused's guilt and raise a reasonable
inference or presumption of his innocence. Evidence which merely
casts bare suspicion on another or raises conjectural inference as
to his commission of crime is inadmissible.
As noted above, appellant now argues the
proffered evidence was offered in mitigation of punishment, not to
prove his innocence. The trial judge did not rule on this issue.
Accordingly, the issue is not preserved for appeal. State v. McWee,
322 S.C. 387, 472 S.E.2d 235 (1996) (a constitutional argument is
not preserved for appeal where appellant failed to argue the
constitutional basis for his request at trial); State v. Tucker, 319
S.C. 425, 462 S.E.2d 263 (1995) (a party cannot argue one ground
below and then argue another ground on appeal).
In any event, even if appellant had offered the
testimony for the purpose of mitigating his sentence, the proffered
evidence would still not have been admissible. While the Eighth
Amendment prohibits the sentencer in capital cases from being
precluded from considering as a mitigating factor any circumstance
of the offense, such as the defendant's minor participation, for the
purpose of imposing a sentence less than death, [FN5] the evidence
offered must still be properly admissible.
Here, appellant proffered the testimony of four
witnesses. One witness ("the bartender") testified his memory of May
22, 1993, was very weak, but he thought he was probably working as a
bartender at a gay club on that evening. (The bartender did not work
in the same club mentioned in appellant's statement). The bartender
stated he thought on that evening a patron came into the club and
later spoke with Jim Doe. The bartender described Jim Doe as 5'6" to
5'8" tall, possibly taller, 185 pounds, with medium brown hair,
thinning on top. The bartender testified he could not recall whether
he had ever seen appellant at the club or whether Jim Doe and
appellant ever met at the club.
The patron testified he went with appellant to
the club mentioned by the bartender between April and May 23, 1993,
where he "set up" appellant with a very tall man (taller than 6'0")
who weighed between 190 and 200 pounds and had a receding hairline.
The patron testified he was sure the "set up" was not on May 22,
1993, and stated he did not know the man's name.
The patron
testified he knew one man named "Jim" who was very short, thin, and
had a harelip. The former manager of this same club testified two
days before appellant's trial an investigator from the Public
Defender's Office asked him if he knew Jim Doe. The manager stated
he knew Jim Doe and described him as 5'10" tall, 210 pounds, with a
receding hairline. The manager offered no testimony indicating he
had ever seen Jim Doe with appellant.
Over the solicitor's objection
and contrary to the bartender's testimony, an investigator with the
Public Defender's Office testified the bartender had told him he
believed "Jim" was Jim Doe and he had seen appellant leave the club
on May 22, 1993, with Doe. The investigator stated Doe contacted him.
The investigator met with Doe and described him as a white male,
approximately 40 years old, about 5'8" tall, 175-180 pounds, with
brown hair, balding in the front. The investigator testified Doe
denied knowing appellant. Appellant did not call Doe as a witness.
Appellant did not testify.
The only proffered evidence which places
appellant with Jim Doe at any time was the testimony from the
investigator. [FN6] However, this testimony impeached that of
appellant's other witness, the bartender, and was, therefore,
inadmissible. State v. Anderson, 304 S.C. 551, 406 S.E.2d 152 (1991)
(a party must vouch for its own witness and may not impeach its
witness unless the witness is declared hostile upon a showing of
actual surprise and harm). [FN7]
Accordingly, while appellant was
entitled to offer in mitigation evidence that he was only a minor
participant in the murder, he produced no relevant, admissible
evidence which indicated Jim Doe was with him on the morning of the
murder and was the accomplice referred to in his statement. [FN8]
FN6. Appellant's identification of a male with
the common name "Jim" and with ordinary characteristics which fit
the description of "Jim" in appellant's statement is, alone, not
relevant evidence in mitigation. At issue was whether appellant
actually knew Jim Doe and whether Jim Doe could have been the
accomplice to the murder. State v. McWee, supra (evidence is
relevant if it tends to make a fact in issue more or less probable).
FN7. Under Rule 607, SCRE, which became effective
approximately six months after appellant's trial, a party may attack
the credibility of its own witness.
FN8. Based on appellant's statement to the police,
the court instructed the jury on mere presence, accomplice liability,
and "the hand of one is the hand of all" during the guilt phase of
trial. During the sentencing phase, the trial judge instructed the
jury it must focus on appellant's own personal culpability in
determining the appropriate sentence and could not impose the death
penalty unless the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt appellant
personally killed the victim or else personally intended that a
killing take place or lethal force be used.
Further, the trial judge
instructed the jury it could consider in mitigation circumstances
such as the defendant was an accomplice in the murder committed by
another and his participation was relatively minor, and the
defendant acted under duress or the domination of another person.
See, S.C.Code Ann. § 16-3-20(C)(b)(4) and (5) (Supp.1995).
* * * *
After reviewing the entire record, we conclude
the death sentence was not the result of passion, prejudice, or any
other arbitrary factor, and the jury's finding of statutory
aggravating circumstances is supported by the evidence. See S.C.Code
Ann. § 16-3-25 (1985). Further, we hold the death penalty is neither
excessive nor disproportionate to that imposed in similar cases.
339 F.3d 203
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued February 27, 2003
Decided August 6, 2003
Affirmed by published opinion.
Judge Wilkinson wrote the opinion, in which
Judge Widener and Judge Niemeyer joined.
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:
Appellant
Jason Scott Byram was convicted by a South
Carolina jury of murder, first degree
burglary, attempted armed robbery, and grand
larceny of a motor vehicle. He was sentenced
to death for the murder, as well as to life,
twenty, and ten year terms of imprisonment
for his other crimes. After exhausting state
remedies, Byram petitioned the United States
District Court for the District of South
Carolina for a writ of habeas corpus under
28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court
rejected his claims, but issued a
certificate of appealability pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 2253(c). Byram now appeals the
district court's dismissal of his petition.
We affirm.
On Sunday,
May 23, 1993, at approximately 3:00 a.m.,
Julie Johnson, a school teacher and mother
of three, was robbed and murdered in her
home. The assailant broke into Johnson's
home, stole her handbag and van, and stabbed
her to death with her own butcher knife.
Before dying, Mrs. Johnson indicated to her
husband and the police that she was attacked
by an individual acting alone.
Police
investigating the murder found Jason Scott
Byram's fingerprint at the crime scene and
arrested Byram the afternoon of May 23.
After being informed of his rights and
signing a written waiver, Byram gave a
statement to the police in which he admitted
entering the victim's home and stabbing her
to keep her quiet. The trial court held a
hearing on the admissibility of Byram's
confession and held that the statements were
freely, knowingly, and voluntarily made.
Byram told the police that he had an
accomplice named "Jim" whom he had met the
previous evening outside a bar in the area.
The police investigated this claim but found
no evidence that anyone matching Jim's
description had been in the area that night.
At trial,
an individual who rented a room in the same
boarding house as Byram testified that he
saw Byram in a white van on May 23. The
witness stated that Byram had blood on his
shirt and that when asked about the van,
Byram said it belonged to a friend and not
to tell anyone about it. The witness also
testified that no one was in the van with
Byram.
Byram was
represented at trial by Douglas Strickler as
lead counsel and public defender Lee
Coggiola as second counsel. Strickler had
previously tried more than ten non-capital
murder cases and participated in two death
penalty cases. He had also represented a
death row petitioner for post-conviction
relief (PCR). Coggiola had tried several
major felony cases before being appointed to
represent Byram. In addition, she had work
experience at the Death Penalty Resource
Center. Strickler's time records show that
he spent approximately 623.5 hours preparing
Byram's case. Although Coggiola did not
document the amount of time she devoted to
preparation, she testified that she met with
Byram at least thirty times before trial.
On March
7, 1995, Byram was convicted by a jury in
Columbia, South Carolina of murder, first-degree
burglary, attempted armed robbery, and grand
larceny of a motor vehicle. During the
sentencing phase of the trial, the defense
presented mitigating evidence. Trial counsel
retained forensic psychiatrist Dr. Donald
Morgan and forensic psychologist Dr. Geoff
McKee to evaluate Byram and to determine if
Byram possibly suffered from any brain
damage.
Evelyn
Califf, a social worker, and investigator
Patti Rickborn also assisted Coggiola in
preparing the mitigation evidence. Califf
testified that she met with Byram five times
and that she reviewed Byram's school records
and a summary of his foster care placements.
Rickborn contacted several of Byram's
natural and adoptive family members and
helped Strickler obtain records pertaining
to Byram's adoption in Alabama.
The trial
court qualified Califf as an expert in the
area of adoptions and learning disabilities.
During the sentencing phase of the trial,
Califf testified about Byram's troubled
childhood and adolescence. She related
details of his early family life in an
abusive home and the fact that he was slow
to develop as a young child. Califf also
reported that Byram had difficulties in
school and that his intelligence was in the
"dull normal" range.
Despite
the mitigation evidence presented by defense
counsel, the jury recommended imposition of
the death penalty. The trial judge reviewed
this recommendation and determined that the
evidence justified the punishment in this
case and that the recommendation was not the
result of prejudice, passion or any other
arbitrary factor. The trial court therefore
sentenced Byram to death.
The South
Carolina Supreme Court affirmed Byram's
conviction and sentence on April 28, 1997.
State v. Byram, 326 S.C. 107, 485 S.E.2d
360 (1997), rehearing denied (May 21,
1997). Byram then filed for state post-conviction
relief. After a hearing, the South Carolina
Circuit Court denied Byram's request for
relief. Byram then filed a petition with the
South Carolina Supreme Court, which the
court denied on January 11, 2002.
Byram next
filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus
with the United States District Court for
the District of South Carolina. Respondents
filed a motion for summary judgment on March
22, 2002, and the matter was referred to a
United States magistrate judge. The
magistrate judge recommended dismissal. On
October 2, 2002, the district court entered
an order granting summary judgement in favor
of the State, but the district court issued
a certificate of appealability concerning
his claims on January 10, 2003. Byram now
appeals the district court's decision.
If a state
court has already resolved the merits of a
claim for post-conviction relief, a federal
court may not grant a writ of habeas corpus
unless the state court's decision was "contrary
to, or involved an unreasonable application
of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the
United States." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)
(2000). A state court decision is contrary
to clearly established federal law if the
state court "applies a rule that contradicts
the governing law set forth in [the Supreme
Court's] cases." Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. 362, 405, 120 S.Ct. 1495, 146 L.Ed.2d
389 (2000).
A state
court decision is contrary to clearly
established Supreme Court precedent "if the
state court confronts a set of facts that
are materially indistinguishable from a
decision of [the Supreme Court] and
nevertheless arrives at a result different
from [that] precedent." Id. at 406,
120 S.Ct. 1495. Lastly, a state court
decision involves an unreasonable
application of clearly established federal
law if it "correctly identifies the
governing legal rule but applies it
unreasonably to the facts of a particular
prisoner's case." Id. at 407-08, 120
S.Ct. 1495.
In this
case, Byram argues (1) that he was deprived
of effective assistance of counsel during
the jury selection process because his
defense team used peremptory challenges to
strike potential jurors for reasons of race;
and (2) that he was deprived of effective
assistance of counsel during the sentencing
phase of trial because his lawyers failed to
present a sufficient case in mitigation of
his sentence. The district court found that
it was not unreasonable for the state PCR
court to deny these federal claims.
Byram
argues that he received ineffective
assistance of counsel because his own
defense counsel improperly selected jurors
in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. At
trial, defense counsel exercised nine out of
ten peremptory strikes to exclude white
jurors from the venire and an additional
four challenges to remove white jury
alternates. Byram contends that these
strikes were based on the improper
consideration of race in jury selection.
In
Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106
S.Ct. 1712, 90 L.Ed.2d 69 (1986), and
Georgia v. McCollum, 505 U.S. 42, 112
S.Ct. 2348, 120 L.Ed.2d 33 (1992), the
Supreme Court held that it was
constitutionally impermissible for either
the prosecution or the defense to use race-based
peremptory strikes. The Court set out a
three step framework for determining when a
Batson violation has occurred. First,
the opponent of the strike must make a prima
facie showing that a strike was exercised on
the basis of a juror's race. Miller-El,
123 S.Ct. at 1040. Once this threshold
showing has been made, the burden shifts to
the proponent of the strike to articulate a
race-neutral explanation for removing the
juror in question. Id. If such a race-neutral
reason is articulated, the trial court must
then determine whether the opponent of the
strike has sufficiently rebutted this
explanation and proven purposeful
discrimination on the part of the individual
exercising the peremptory strike. Id.
Trial
counsel Strickler testified at the PCR
hearing that he was aware of statistical
studies that show African American jurors
tend to vote for the death penalty less
often than jurors of other races. When asked
whether he had a personal opinion as to
whether African American jurors are actually
more lenient than white jurors, Strickler
replied:
I have an
opinion based on voir dire examinations in a
number of capital cases which is far and
away African American jurors exclude
themselves from even being able to
participate in the process at a far higher
rate. In other words, my opinion is that
African American jurors — that those
African American jurors who have a sincere
opposition to capital punishment will
express it and will not participate as
opposed to white jurors who have or any
juror actually who has a sincere belief in
the appropriateness of capital punishment in
all cases, being unwilling to state that and
thereby disqualify themselves.
Additionally, Byram contends that
Strickler's trial notes specifically
indicate whether certain members of the
venire were black or white. We review this
claim on the merits under the deferential
AEDPA standard.
In
Batson inquiries, "the decisive question
will be whether counsel's race-neutral
explanation for a peremptory challenge
should be believed." Miller-El, 123
S.Ct. at 1041. Because there is rarely any
direct evidence of the attorney's state of
mind when he made the challenge, "the best
evidence often will be the demeanor of the
attorney who exercises the challenge." Id.
This type of credibility assessment lies "peculiarly
within a trial judge's province." Id.
(internal citations omitted).
At Byram's
trial, the State requested a Batson
hearing to determine the reasons for defense
counsel's peremptory challenges of white
jurors. During the hearing, Strickler denied
that the challenges were racially motivated
and stated that jury selection was based on
defense counsel's impressions of the
responses given by potential jurors.
Strickler explained that defense counsel
used a rating system for each juror and
attempted to seat those jurors who scored
higher on the scale. The Solicitor was
dissatisfied with this explanation, and the
trial judge accordingly asked Strickler to
give the reason for each individual strike.
Strickler
stated that he struck juror Page because she
responded strongly when the trial court
asked about her willingness to impose the
death penalty and because she had children
in school where the victim had been a
teacher. Strickler asserted that he struck
juror Pregnall because he answered the
question about his ability to impose the
death penalty quickly but hesitated when
responding to the question of whether he
would be able to impose a life sentence.
Similarly, Strickler stated that he struck
juror Neely because he did not hesitate when
asked about his willingness to impose a
death sentence, but seemed hesitant to
impose a life sentence or to consider
mitigating circumstances. And juror Walker
was removed from the pool because he did not
hesitate when asked whether he could impose
a death sentence but responded less quickly
when asked about his ability to return a
life sentence.
Juror
Dansby was struck, according to Strickler,
because he had never before served on a jury,
because he lived near the family of the
victim, and because trial counsel perceived
him as more likely to vote for the death
penalty. Juror Amidon was struck because he
knew the Solicitor's father, and juror Head
was struck because he worked with the
victim's husband. Strickler stated that he
struck juror Roof because it appeared that
she had trouble understanding the questions
at voir dire and that he struck juror Brown
because he was "strong" on death.
The trial
judge ultimately ruled that there was not
sufficient indication of a racial motivation
to quash the panel. Based on his first hand
observations of defense counsel, the trial
court decided to credit Strickler's
explanations for the peremptory strikes. A
court reviewing such a decision from a
sterile record must give great deference to
the trial court's determination and may
grant habeas relief only if the trial
court's determination was objectively
unreasonable. Miller-El, 123 S.Ct. at
1041.
We find
that the state court in this case did not
unreasonably apply Batson to the
facts presented. A juror's inclination to
impose the death penalty is a legitimate
consideration in counsel's exercise of
peremptory challenges. United States v.
Barnette, 211 F.3d 803, 811 (4th
Cir.2000). And the trial court's ruling that
this proper consideration was the basis of a
strategic decision by defense counsel will
not be disturbed without evidence to the
contrary. Accordingly, we affirm the
district court's determination that Byram
was not denied effective assistance of
counsel with respect to this claim. The
trial court's application of Batson
was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable
application of, clearly established federal
law.
Byram
additionally argues that his trial counsel's
performance at sentencing was ineffective
because counsel did not have a coherent
strategy for developing all available
mitigation evidence. Byram contends that the
absence of a strategy resulted in counsel's
failure to present factual evidence about
his childhood that would have alerted the
jury to the traumatic circumstances of his
youth, including evidence that he suffered
brain damage as a result of fetal alcohol
syndrome (FAS) and evidence that he suffered
abuse and neglect as a child. According to
Byram, this failure deprived him of his
Sixth Amendment right to effective
representation during the penalty phase of
his trial, undermining confidence in the
outcome of that phase of the proceedings.
In
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984), the
Supreme Court set out a two-part test for
evaluating ineffective assistance of counsel
claims. First, the defendant "must show that
counsel's performance was deficient."
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687, 104 S.Ct.
2052. In order to show this deficiency, the
defendant must produce evidence that "counsel's
representation fell below an objective
standard of reasonableness." Id. at
688, 104 S.Ct. 2052. Less than complete
investigations may form the basis for
strategic choices, so long as "`reasonable
professional judgments support the
limitations on investigation.'" Wiggins
v. Smith, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 123 S.Ct.
2527, 2541, 156 L.Ed.2d 471 (2003)(quoting
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690-91, 104
S.Ct. 2052).
Second,
the defendant must show that the deficient
performance resulted in actual prejudice to
his case. A showing of prejudice requires
the defendant to prove that "counsel's
errors were so serious as to deprive the
defendant of a fair trial." Strickland,
466 U.S. at 687, 104 S.Ct. 2052. In the
context of a capital sentencing proceeding,
the question is whether "`but for counsel's
unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different.'"
Wiggins, ___ U.S. at ___, 123 S.Ct. at
2542 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at
694, 104 S.Ct. 2052). Assessing prejudice
requires this Court to "reweigh the evidence
in aggravation against the totality of
available mitigating evidence." Wiggins,
___ U.S. at ___, 123 S.Ct. at 2542. In order
to determine whether South Carolina state
courts applied federal law concerning the
ineffective performance of counsel in an
unreasonable way, we undertake a preliminary
consideration of this two part test. See
Miller-El, 123 S.Ct. at 1040.
It is the
responsibility of counsel to adequately
investigate and present evidence in
mitigation of guilt. Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. at 395, 120 S.Ct. 1495. However,
counsel is only required to make a
reasonable investigation for possible
mitigating evidence. Matthews v. Evatt,
105 F.3d 907, 919 (4th Cir.1997). Moreover,
review of counsel's strategic decisions as
to which evidence to present at trial is "highly
deferential," and there is a presumption
that "counsel's conduct falls within the
wide range of reasonable professional
assistance." Strickland, 466 U.S. at
689, 104 S.Ct. 2052.
Byram has
not shown that his counsel's performance
fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness. In fact, the record shows
that both Strickler and Coggiola spent a
substantial amount of time preparing Byram's
case. Strickler logged 623.5 hours of pre-trial
preparation and Coggiola testified that she
met with Byram at least thirty times before
trial. As part of their pre-trial
preparation, they retained a forensic
psychologist and a forensic psychiatrist,
Drs. Morgan and McKee. The experts conducted
EEG and MRI tests on Byram to determine
whether he suffered from any organic brain
damage. Coggiola testified that she
carefully reviewed the psychiatric findings
with Strickler, and that the lawyers decided
that the suggestions of antisocial behavior
that McKee and Morgan found could have been
harmful to Byram's defense.
Based upon
the information and evaluations, counsel
decided not to present the experts'
testimony. This strategic decision not to
present psychological evidence was a
reasonable one because such evidence "is a
double-edged sword that might as easily have
condemned [defendant] to death as excused
his actions." Truesdale v. Moore, 142
F.3d 749, 755 (4th Cir.1998). And a failure
to "shop around" for a favorable expert
opinion after an evaluation yields little in
mitigating evidence does not constitute
ineffective assistance. Poyner v. Murray,
964 F.2d 1404, 1419 (4th Cir.1992).
Unlike in
Wiggins, ___ U.S. at ___, ___, 123
S.Ct. at 2537, 2538, where counsel fell far
short of "well-defined norms" requiring the
discovery of "all reasonably available
mitigating evidence" and "chose to abandon
their investigation at an unreasonable
juncture," counsel here spent considerable
time developing a picture of Byram's life.
Trial counsel retained social worker Evelyn
Califf to present a psychosocial assessment
of Byram during the sentencing phase of the
trial and hired private investigator Patti
Rickborn to help develop the mitigation
case.
Califf
testified that she met with Byram five times
before trial, reviewed Byram's adoption and
school records from Alabama, and interviewed
Byram's adoptive family members. Rickborn
contacted several of Byram's natural and
adoptive family members, including Byram's
birth mother, Olae Mae Chandler. In order to
investigate Byram's claim of FAS, Rickborn
asked Chandler about possible alcohol abuse
during her pregnancy, which she denied. The
EEG and MRI tests showed no evidence of FAS,
and nothing in the birth mother's medical
records indicated alcohol consumption during
pregnancy. Based upon Rickborn's
investigation and the absence of any
evidence of organic brain dysfunction, trial
counsel concluded that they did not have a
sufficient factual basis to present FAS as
evidence in mitigation.
Despite
this thorough investigation, Byram faults
trial counsel for failing to obtain his
adoption records, which might have provided
more evidence that he suffered from FAS and
more evidence of early childhood trauma. A
failure to obtain available records, however,
does not show that counsel's investigation
was inadequate. Jones v. Murray, 947
F.2d 1106, 1114 (4th Cir.1991). Attorneys
will not be found ineffective unless they
fail to "make a reasonable
investigation for possible mitigating
evidence." Matthews v. Evatt, 105
F.3d at 919 (emphasis added). And "the
reasonableness of an investigation, or a
decision by counsel that forecloses the need
for an investigation, must be considered in
light of the scarcity of counsel's time and
resources in preparing for a sentencing
hearing and the reality that counsel must
concentrate his efforts on the strongest
arguments in favor of mitigation." McWee
v. Weldon, 283 F.3d 179, 188 (4th
Cir.2002).
Rickborn
did obtain some records concerning Byram's
adoption and made reasonable efforts to
obtain his actual adoption records.
Strickler also attempted to obtain the
records. He traveled to Alabama to try to
get social worker files concerning Byram's
early years in foster care and in adoption,
but was unsuccessful. Although PCR counsel
did eventually manage to obtain the records,
the PCR hearing had to be continued several
times because PCR counsel could not obtain
the records. The state PCR court found that
trial counsel had "devoted extraordinary
time and effort in developing the case in
mitigation" and "articulated credible
explanations for their strategic decisions
for developing the mitigation case that they
ultimately presented." The PCR court
determined that "counsel's assistance was
reasonable under prevailing norms of
professional conduct" and that the decision
to stop pursuing FAS evidence was a matter
of sound trial strategy.
Moreover,
even if additional information or records on
Byram's childhood could have been obtained,
this is "not a case where counsel's failure
to thoroughly investigate kept the jury
completely in the dark as to [defendant's]
alleged mental problems." McWee v. Weldon,
283 F.3d at 189. This situation is different
from that in Wiggins where counsel,
during the penalty phase of trial, focused
on contesting guilt rather than presenting
evidence in mitigation. Wiggins, ___
U.S. at ___, 123 S.Ct. at 2538.
Counsel in
Wiggins presented "a halfhearted
mitigation case," id. at 2538, while
in the present case the jury heard extensive
testimony and arguments regarding Byram's
troubled childhood and adolescence. Califf
testified that Byram weighed only three
pounds at birth and was developmentally
delayed as a baby. She presented evidence
that Byram's records reflected at least six
changes in custody before he was adopted at
age four, that Byram's actions suggested
that he was physically abused in his past,
and that Byram's adoptive parents suffered
marital difficulties. She specifically noted
that Byram had emotional difficulties as a
young child and that his multiple foster
care placements might have made it difficult
for him to form bonds. Califf further
testified that Byram possibly suffered from
attention deficit disorder or hyperactivity
as a child, and that Byram tested in the
dull normal range for intelligence.
In light
of the wealth of information presented by
trial counsel, additional information about
Byram's childhood would have added little.
There was no "reasonable probability" that
the outcome would have been different had
trial counsel conducted an even more
exhaustive investigation into Byram's
background. Indeed, the evidence presented
before the PCR court was largely cumulative.
And Byram offers no evidence to support his
claim that greater supervision of Califf or
better communication between the members of
his defense team would have produced a
different result in his case. Therefore,
Byram has failed to show that the state
courts of South Carolina applied clearly
established federal law concerning the
ineffective performance of counsel in an
unreasonable way.
We
therefore affirm the district court's
dismissal of Byram's petition.