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Fred Marion GILREATH Jr.

 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 
 
 
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Parricide
Number of victims: 2
Date of murder: May 11, 1979
Date of arrest: Same day
Date of birth: January 19, 1938
Victims profile: His wife, Linda Gilreath, and her father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen
Method of murder: Shooting
Location: Cobb County, Georgia, USA
Status: Executed by lethal injection in Georgia on November 15, 2001
 
 
 
 
 
 

Summary:

Fred Gilreath was convicted of killing his wife, Linda Gilreath, and her father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, in 1979.

Linda and Fred Gilreath had been married for 11 years, but Linda had moved out a few days before the killings, after an argument.

On May 11, 1979, she and her father came to the house to pick up some of her belongings. Both were shot dead.

On May 11, 1979, Dempsey Wolfenbarger went to the police station and told an officer that he was concerned about the safety of his stepdaughter, Linda Gilreath.

He explained that Linda was in the process of obtaining a divorce from her husband, Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr. Linda's father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, had gone to Linda's home to get her and her personal belongings, and neither had been seen since.

Police went to the home and discovered Linda Gilreath's body in the house with a towel covering her face near a suitcase. Linda had been shot five times along her right side with a .30-30 lever action rifle from approximately two to three feet, and she had been shot in the face from approximately five to six feet away with a .12 gauge shotgun.

The body of her father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, was lying a short distance away with a .30-30 wound to his right thigh, a shotgun wound to his left chest, and two .22 caliber wounds to his head. Gasoline had been poured on and around the victims as well as on the kitchen floor.

Gilreath was located at his brothers home in North Carolina, where he had arrived driving Linda's car intoxicated and took a shower with his clothes on.

Gilreath testified at trial that he did not kill anyone and had intended to return to the house after going to the liquor store, but drove to North Carolina instead. During the guilt phase of trial, Petitioner instructed trial counsel to present no mitigating evidence at sentencing.

 
 

Georgia Department of Corrections

Death Warrant for Fred Marion Gilreath

Atlanta - A Cobb County Superior Court judge has signed a new death warrant for death row inmate Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., 63. As a result, Corrections Commissioner Jim Wetherington has set the execution by lethal injection to occur at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, November 13, 2001, at the Georgia Diagnostic & Classification Prison in Jackson.

Georgia now has execution dates set for three condemned inmates, including today's scheduled lethal injection for Terry Mincey, 41. Next is Jose High whose execution has been scheduled for 7 p.m. on November 6, 2001.

High, 43, was sentenced to death for the murder for an 11 year-old Taliaferro County boy during a convenience store armed robbery. Gilreath, 63, was sentenced to death in 1980 for the 1979 murders of his estranged wife and father-in-law.

November 15th, 2001 - Gilreath Execution Rescheduled for 3:00 p.m. Today.

Jackson - The execution of Fred Marion Gilreath Jr., 63, has been rescheduled for 3:00 p.m. today pending further instruction from the court. Gilreath, who was originally scheduled to be executed November 14th at 7:00 p.m., was given a stay by the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals until 3:00 p.m. today. The execution will proceed once the stay is lifted.

 
 

Department of Law State of Georgia

Friday, November 16, 2001

Information on the Execution of Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr.

Georgia Attorney General Thurbert E. Baker offers the following information on the execution of Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr..

Execution

On October 24, 2001, the Superior Court of Cobb County filed an execution order, setting the seven-day window in which the execution of Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., might occur to begin at 12:00pm on November 13, 2001 and end at 12:00pm on November 20, 2001. The Commissioner of the Department of Corrections scheduled the execution to occur at 7:00pm on November 14, 2001.

On November 14, 2001, while considering a Motion for Stay and Temporary Restraining Order arising out of the State Board of Pardons and Paroles’ denial of Gilreath’s application for clemency, the United State District Court for the Northern District of Georgia granted a stay of execution to consider Gilreath’s motions until 9:00pm on November 14, 2001. Following the District Court’s denial of the Motion for Stay and Temporary Restraining Order, Gilreath appealed to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals issued a stay of execution until 3:00pm on November 15, 2001 during their consideration of Gilreath’s appeal. On November 15, 2001, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals denied Gilreath’s appeal.

The Commissioner of the Department of Corrections scheduled Gilreath’s execution to take place at or after 3:01pm on November 15, 2001. The scheduled execution of Gilreath was carried out at approximately 3:53pm on Thursday, November 15, 2001.

Gilreath’s Crimes

Gilreath was sentenced to death for the murders of his wife, Linda Gilreath, and his father-in-law, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, on or about May 11, 1979.

Linda Gilreath’s stepfather went to Cobb County police on the afternoon of May 11, 1979, with his concern for the safety of his stepdaughter as she was supposed to have picked him up from work that afternoon but did not show up. Linda Gilreath was in the process of obtaining a divorce from Fred Gilreath and had been staying with her mother. Gilreath had threatened Linda’s life, as well as the life of both her mother and stepfather, and he had threatened to burn down their trailer.

Earlier that day, Linda Gilreath had gone with her father to the Gilreath home for some personal items. Linda Gilreath was driving a blue Plymouth Duster that day, while Fred Gilreath ordinarily drove a red truck. Two officers went to the Gilreath residence at approximately 5 p.m. No blue Duster was in sight. Police knocked on the front door and a side door to a screened-in porch but received no answer. Officers saw that a porch door and the sliding glass door inside the screened-in porch were ajar, through which they could hear music and smell gasoline.

From that point one officer saw a man’s body inside the house; when the officer stepped inside the porch, he saw the body of Linda Gilreath. Gasoline had been poured on and around the two bodies, and puddles of gasoline were on the floor near the living room and in the kitchen. A shotgun and a shell were lying on the floor. No signs of forcible entry were found. A green military-type gas can was sitting by the door to the screened-in porch.

Linda Gilreath’s body was found in the living room lying between a coffee table and a love seat, her face covered by a pink towel. A suitcase was near the end table. Linda Gilreath had been shot five times on her right side with a .30-.30 rifle and shot once in the face with a .12 gauge shotgun. Matter was splattered across the love seat, the carpet and walls.

Her father, Gerritt Van Leeuwen, was on the floor nearby and had been shot with three different guns. He had been shot in his right thigh with a .30-.30 rifle, shot in the chest with a shotgun, and shot in the head twice with a .22 caliber weapon. Police found a .22 rifle and a .12 gauge shotgun at the scene. Police also collected shell casings from a shotgun and from .22 and .30-.30 caliber weapons.

Police placed a lookout for Gilreath and the blue Duster. A dispatcher in Hendersonville, North Carolina, contacted Gilreath’s brother who lived nearby and asked the brother to let police know if Gilreath showed up. At approximately 7:30 p.m. that evening, Fred Gilreath came to his brother’s office driving a blue Duster. When police arrived at the office around 8 p.m. in response to the brother’s call, they found Fred Gilreath, who had showered with his clothes on, still wearing his wet cutoffs. Police arrested Gilreath and told him they wanted to question him about a double homicide. In response he asked to call his wife.

A Cobb County detective arrived in North Carolina the next day and found part of a box of .22 caliber bullets in the Duster. He went to a cabin that belonged to Fred Gilreath and found some empty shotgun shell cases, .30/.30 caliber cases and .22 caliber cases lying in the drive. The shotgun and the .22 rifle found at the crime scene were identified as the murder weapons. The firearms examiner also determined that the same .30-.30 gun used to shoot the victims had fired the empty shells found at the North Carolina cabin.

Between 1:30 p.m. and 2:40 p.m. on the afternoon of May 11, the Gilreaths’ next-door neighbor heard muffled gunshots from the direction of the Gilreath home. Three workmen from the Cobb County Water Department were working in the area across from the Gilreath residence that same afternoon between 1:30 p.m. and 1:50 p.m. One workman heard five shots in rapid succession from the Gilreath home but did not see anyone because he was doing paperwork.

Another workman had seen a Volkswagen and a truck at the Gilreath residence when the work crew arrived and later noticed a blue car had arrived and parked in the driveway. He then saw an old man walk around the house, heard five shots and did not see the man again. A third employee saw a blue Duster arrive with two people in it, one of whom was an elderly man. After the elderly man went behind the house, the employee heard five shots. When the work crew left, the blue car was still there, as well as the red truck.

Gilreath testified at trial he had spoken with his father-in-law after he and Linda Gilreath came to the house that day and told the father-in-law he was not ready to speak with his wife until he returned from North Carolina, left in the blue Duster around 1:25 p.m., and bought beer and a fifth of liquor which he drank while he drove to North Carolina. He admitted taking a shower at his brother’s office to sober up. He admitted the .22 caliber rifle, the shotgun and the gas can were his. Gilreath denied killing his wife and father-in-law.

The Trial

At a jury trial which began on February 25, 1980, in the Superior Court of Cobb County, Gilreath was convicted of the malice murders of his wife and father-in-law and sentenced to death for both murders on March 3, 1980. The jury found three O.C.G.A. § 17-10-30 statutory aggravating circumstances to support the two death sentences: each murder was outrageously vile and wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman in that it involved torture, depravity of mind and aggravated battery, § 17-10-30(b)(7); and the murder of Gerrit Van Leeuwen was committed while the offender was engaged in the murder of Linda Gilreath, § 17-10-30(b)(2). The convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal. Gilreath v. State, 247 Ga. 814, 279 S.E.2d 650 (1981), cert. denied, 456 U.S. 984, reh’g denied, 458 U.S. 1116 (1982).

The First State Habeas Corpus Case

In 1983 Gilreath filed his first state habeas corpus petition in the Superior Court of Butts County, alleging constitutional errors occurred at his trial which should cause his convictions and sentences to be set aside. Pursuant to an evidentiary hearing, the state habeas corpus court denied relief on April 23, 1986, in an unpublished order. The Georgia Supreme Court denied Gilreath’s application for certificate of probable cause to appeal that order. The United States Supreme Court declined to review the state habeas corpus court’s decision. Gilreath v. Kemp, 479 U.S. 890, reh’g denied, 479 U.S. 999 (1986).

The First Federal Habeas Corpus Case

On January 8, 1987, Gilreath filed his first federal habeas corpus petition in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division. That petition was ultimately dismissed without prejudice so that Gilreath could return to the state courts to litigate new claims.

The Second Sate Habeas Corpus Case

In August 1987 Gilreath filed a second state habeas corpus petition. That petition was denied on August 23, 1990. On March 1, 1991, the Georgia Supreme Court denied Gilreath’s application for a certificate of probable cause to appeal that ruling. The United States Supreme Court again denied review. Gilreath v. Zant, 502 U.S. 885, reh’g denied, 502 U.S. 1001 (1991).

The Second Fedeal Habeas Corpus Case

On September 23, 1992, Gilreath filed his second federal habeas corpus petition in the Northern District of Georgia. After additional factual development of claims, the district court denied relief on March 29, 1996. On March 7, 1997, the district court denied Gilreath’s motion to alter or amend the judgment and denied his request for reconsideration.

On September 3, 1997, the district court granted Gilreath permission to appeal certain issues. Oral argument was had in the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit on April 29, 1998, and on December 15, 1999. On December 1, 2000, the three judge panel issued its opinion, affirming the district court’s denial of relief on all grounds. Gilreath v. Head, 234 F.3d 547 (11th Cir. 2000). Rehearing was denied on April 17, 2001.

On October 1, 2001, the United States Supreme Court denied Gilreath’s petition for a writ of certiorari to review the Eleventh Circuit’s decision. The mandate of the Eleventh Circuit was issued on October 10, 2001, formally signaling the end of litigation in the second federal habeas case.

 
 

ProDeathPenalty.com

On May 11, 1979, Dempsey Wolfenbarger went to the police station and told an officer that he was concerned about the safety of his stepdaughter, Linda Gilreath.

He explained that Linda was in the process of obtaining a divorce from her husband, Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., and that several days previously she had left her home to stay with her mother and Dempsey.

Linda's mom had told her husband that Linda's father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, had come to her home, where Linda was staying, about 12:30 p.m. on May 11th. He came to get Linda to come home, to talk to her husband, and pick up her personal belongings.

Linda and her father left for the Gilreath residence at about 1:30 p.m. It takes about ten minutes driving time to reach the Gilreath home from the Wolfenbarger home. Linda said she'd be back in time to pick her stepfather up at work at 3:30 p.m.

About 2:30 p.m., Linda's mom began phoning the Gilreath home but got no answer. She asked a friend, to pick her husband up at work. The friend passed the Gilreath residence coming and going; she told the Wolfenbargers that she saw Fred Gilreath's red truck and Linda's father's gold Volkswagen in the driveway, but she did not see Linda's blue Plymouth Duster.

Once he arrived home, Dempsey's wife called Linda's attorney for advice. He suggested that the Wolfenbargers go over to the house but Dempsey decided instead to go to the police station.

He told the officer that he feared there might be "domestic trouble", and that Fred Gilreath had threatened Linda's life as well as the lives of the Wolfenbargers, and had threatened to burn the Wolfenbargers' trailer. Dempsey also told police his tires had been slashed and he believed Gilreath had done it. He said that Linda was driving a blue Plymouth Duster and Gilreath drove a red truck.

After hearing Dempsey's concerns, the officer radioed for a back-up unit; and the two police officers arrived at the Gilreath residence at approximately 5:00 p.m.

The blue Duster was not in sight. They knocked on the front door; no one answered. They then knocked at the side door to a screened-in porch; no one answered. One of the officers peered into the enclosed garage looking for the Duster.

He rejoined the other officer by the side screened porch and they observed that both the porch door and the sliding glass door inside the porch were ajar, that the sound of music could be heard, and that a strong odor of gasoline permeated the area.

The two officers then entered the screened porch (which was described as looking like an enclosed carport) and looked through the sliding glass door. From that vantage point, they saw a man's body. One of the officers then stepped inside the glass door and saw Linda's body.

The two officers could see large puddles of gasoline in the kitchen and toward the living room; they also saw a shotgun and a shell lying on the floor. They then checked the other rooms of the house looking for the Gilreaths' two children.

Finding no one, the officers called the detectives, secured the crime scene after they opened the front door to disperse the gas fumes and went outside to await the detectives.

Dempsey arrived shortly after Davis and Rogers discovered the bodies but was not allowed to enter the house. Dempsey had told police that the Gilreaths had two children. The officers were not aware that Linda Gilreath had taken the children to Seneca, South Carolina, the day before to stay with Linda's sister.

Detectives arrived at about 5:33 p.m. They walked through the house, interviewed Dempsey Wolfenbarger, and then reentered the house to complete the investigation, i.e., locate evidence, take measurements and make drawings.

A detective testified at trial that upon checking he discerned no signs of forcible entry into the house. He found a green army-type gas can sitting by the door to the screened porch.

He entered through the sliding glass doors and found Linda Gilreath's body lying between a coffee table and a love seat in the living room; a pink towel covered her face and a white medium-sized suitcase sat by the end table.

The evidence showed that Linda had been shot five times along her right side with a .30-30 lever action rifle from approximately two to three feet away. She had been shot in the face from approximately five to six feet away with a .12 gauge shotgun.

Gerrit Van Leeuwen was lying a short distance away; he had sustained a .30-30 wound to his right thigh, a shotgun wound to his left chest, and two .22 caliber wounds to his head. Gasoline had been poured on and around the victims as well as on the kitchen floor.

Police seized numerous items which were in plain view, among them a .22 caliber short shell casing, six .30-30 caliber shell casings, two shotgun shell casings, a .22 caliber rifle and a .12 gauge shotgun. Two days later they returned with a search warrant and recovered another .22 caliber shell casing.

Prior to diagramming the crime scene, police had placed a southeastern regional lookout on Fred Gilreath and on the blue Duster. Upon receiving the message, the dispatcher for the sheriff's department in Hendersonville, North Carolina, contacted Mike Gilreath who lived and worked in Hendersonville, told him about the message, and asked him to let the sheriff's department know if he saw or heard from his brother Fred.

Fred Gilreath arrived at his brother's office, driving the blue Duster, at approximately 7:30 p.m. Mike Gilreath immediately asked one of his business associates to go tell the sheriff that his brother had arrived. By the time officers arrived, Fred Gilreath had showered with his clothes on and was wearing only his still wet cut-off shorts.

A forensic serologist from the State Crime Laboratory testified that she examined Gilreath's shorts and found a stain which could have been blood. Because the sample was inadequate, it could not be positively identified.

The officers arrested him, explaining that he was wanted for questioning in relation to a double homicide in Georgia; Gilreath asked if he could call his wife.

Cobb County police arrived in Hendersonville the next day. Pursuant to a warrant they searched the Duster and a partial box of .22 caliber short ammunition was recovered.

The shotgun and the .22 caliber rifle which were found at the scene were identified as the murder weapons by a firearms examiner from the State Crime Laboratory.

The Gilreaths' next door neighbor testified that he heard muffled gunshots coming from the direction of the Gilreaths' home between 1:30 p.m. and 2:40 p.m. on May 11. He paid little attention to them because it was not uncommon to hear gunshots in the neighborhood.

This neighbor also reported having seen water in the street. When police contacted the Cobb County Water Department they found three workmen who had bled a water hydrant directly across the street from the Gilreath residence on May 11th.

The workmen had arrived at approximately 1:30 p.m. and left at approximately 1:50 p.m. One workman testified he heard five rapid-fire shots from what sounded like a high-powered rifle emanate from the Gilreath residence. He also testified that he was busy doing paperwork and didn't see anyone.

Another of the workmen testified that he saw a Volkswagen and a van or truck in back of the garage at the Gilreath residence when he arrived. After he arrived, he noticed that a blue car, probably a Dodge, had driven up and parked in the driveway.

Because he was getting something from the truck, he did not see the blue car arrive. After the blue car arrived, he saw an old man walk around the house, come back, and go back around the house.

He then heard the five shots and did not see the old man again. Shortly thereafter the water crew left; the blue car was still there. The third workman testified that he saw a dark blue over light blue Duster drive up and saw two people get out. One of the two (the passenger) was an elderly man.

He saw the elderly man walking around the yard; about a minute after the elderly man disappeared behind the house, he heard the five shots. The worker was unable to say whether the driver of the blue Duster was a man or a woman.

He did testify that at the time he heard the shots there were four cars at the Gilreath residence: the blue Duster, a gold Volkswagen, an old red pickup truck, and another old car on blocks. The neighbor was able to fix the time because he arrived at home about 1:30 and his stepson came home from school at 2:30 or 2:40. He knew the shots occurred in the interim.

Fred Gilreath testified in his own defense. He stated that he was home on May 11th with his father-in-law. His father-in-law left about 11:30 to go to his ex-wife's home.

He was downstairs in his father-in-law's apartment when he heard his wife and her father come in. He heard his wife in the bedroom; he went upstairs and started out the door, telling his father-in-law he'd be back in a few minutes.

His father-in-law said "Linda's here and she wants to talk to you" but Gilreath responded, "Gary, I told you I am not ready to talk to Linda. I don't want to talk to her until I get back from North Carolina." He then left in the blue Duster at 1:25 p.m., intending to go to the liquor store and come back. He had had two drinks of rum while alone at the house.

At the liquor store he bought a beer and a fifth of vodka. He mixed the two and while drinking decided to go on to Hendersonville. He was wearing cut-off shorts, a tee shirt, a terry cloth hat and sandals.

He continued drinking and was sick as he crossed a bridge connecting South and North Carolina. When he reached Hendersonville, he tried to rent a motel room but the clerk refused to give him a room because he was drunk so he went on to his brother's office.

When he told his brother he needed to go take a shower to sober up, his brother told him there was a shower in the office. He took off his sandals and hat and put them on an end of the tub because there was nowhere else to put them; his shorts he hung on the one hook available.

When he finished showering he discovered his brother had no towels so he put his shorts back on although he was wet, thus accounting for his clothes being wet.

Gilreath identified the .22 caliber rifle and the shotgun as his, as well as the gas can which he said he used for the lawn mower. He denied having killed his wife or his father-in-law. The jury found Gilreath guilty of both murders and sentenced him to death for each.

UPDATE: A federal appeals court Wednesday night delayed the execution of convicted killer Fred Marion Gilreath Jr. by one day while it considered an appeal. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals did not immediately say why it delayed the execution until at least 3 p.m. on Thursday. State officials, who had originally scheduled the execution for 7 p.m. Wednesday, rescheduled it for 7 p.m. Thursday.

Earlier, U.S. District Judge J. Owen Forrester had granted a two-hour stay for Fred Gilreath, pushing to 9 p.m. the time he was scheduled to be put to death at the state prison here. The judge wanted to give the convicted man's lawyers time to make their case that the state Board of Pardons and Paroles cannot make a decision on whether to commute Gilreath's death sentence. He finally rejected their arguments.

Fred Gilreath's lawyers had argued that board member Gene Walker -- who voted on the commutation request Tuesday despite being at a conference in Las Vegas not related to the Board's business -- should have been at the hearing.

The lawyers also argued that the Parole Board has a conflict of interest in making a decision, because commuting Fred Gilreath's death sentence would go against the office investigating two of the Parole Board's members.

The Attorney General's office is investigating allegations that Board Chairman Walter Ray and member Bobby Whitworth lobbied for a change in state law that would benefit a private company that had hired them as consultants.

On Tuesday, the Board of Pardons and Paroles refused to save Fred Gilreath from his scheduled execution for killing his wife and father-in-law, despite pleas from the relatives of the victims of a domestic dispute spawned by anger over a pending divorce.

Fred Gilreath, 63, was sentenced to death for shooting Linda Gilreath and her father, Gerritt Van Leeuwen, in 1979 when the two returned to her Cobb County home to collect her clothes. "If my mother could talk now, she would say she didn't want him to die," said Christopher Kellett, who was age 8 when his father shot his mother. "We've lost enough. ... We don't want to lose any more." Christopher Kellett reconciled with his father a year ago and has since introduced his children to their grandfather.

Christopher Kellett said the Board of Pardons and Paroles meeting was "very emotional." Christopher Kellett, his sister and aunt -- sister to one victim and daughter of the other -- spent 90 minutes with the Board, pleading that the members spare Fred Gilreath, who would be the third person to die by lethal injection in Georgia in less than three weeks.

Cobb County District Attorney Pat Head, who was not in office when Fred Gilreath was prosecuted, met with four members of the Board later in the day -- one individually and then three members later in the afternoon -- to encourage them to deny the request for clemency. Board member Gene Walker was in Las Vegas, where he was attending a conference unrelated to Board of Pardons and Paroles business.

Cobb County District Attorney Pat Head said he told Board members, "I believe this case was an appropriate case for the death penalty." He said victims' wishes should not dictate the punishment. "We are a society of laws, and if we allow emotions to dictate decisions ... we put society at risk," District Attorney Pat Head said after his meetings with the Board. "This was a brutal murder."

In the past, all five Board members have been present for commutation hearings, but Board member Gene Walker said Tuesday the trip to Las Vegas had been planned for a long time. The vote is secret, but at least three votes are needed to commute a sentence.

While not saying how he voted, Board member Gene Walker said he made his decision based on a review of Fred Gilreath's file and Board staff members' reports of the meetings on Tuesday with Fred Gilreath's supporters and the prosecutor. "This is not a typical domestic dispute to me," Gene Walker said. "This goes far beyond that. This is a man who murdered his wife and his wife's father. And he shot them multiple times and at different locations [in the house]. I have to assess all that. Clearly, I feel comfortable with where I am and what I'm doing."

 
 

New Hampshire Coalition Against Death Penalty

Ga., Texas Men Put to Death

JACKSON, Ga. (AP) - A man convicted of killing his wife and father-in-law in 1979 was executed Thursday, the third condemned inmate Georgia has put to death in three weeks.

The Georgia inmate, Fred Marion Gilreath Jr., 63, had received a one-day stay Wednesday for the U.S. Supreme Court to consider his attorney's arguments that his clemency hearing was unfair. The court denied the motion. In his final statement, Gilreath thanked his lawyers "for the good work they did for me, and for the men in blue, and the warden for treating me with respect, dignity and like a human being."

Gilreath's lawyers had contended the clemency hearing was unfair because one member of the five-person state Board of Pardons and Paroles was absent and some board members had conflicts of interest.

Gilreath was convicted of killing his wife, Linda, and his father-in-law, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, in Cobb County in 1979. His family argued he should not be executed because the slayings arose from a heated domestic dispute.

Gilreath was sentenced to death in 1980. The Georgia execution was the third since the state Supreme Court ruled last month that the electric chair was cruel and unusual punishment. All three condemned men were put to death by injection.

 
 

National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty

Fred Gilreath - Scheduled Execution Date and Time: 11/14/01 Time 7:00PM EDT.

The pace of executions is on the increase in Georgia, in the wake of a Georgia Supreme Court ruling that, in effect, replaced the electric chair with death by lethal injection. In spite of an apparent victory at derailing electrocutions, Fred Gilreath is still set to die on November 13th.

Over twenty years ago, Fred Gilreath murdered two individuals, Linda Gilreath and Gerritt Van Leeuwen. Under the influence of alcohol and numerous mental health problems, Fred acted out in violence. However, a sentence of death, reserved for the most heinous and premeditated of murders, is questionable in Fred Gilreath’s case.

Furthermore, at his trial Gilreath demanded that no mitigating evidence be presented in his defense during the sentencing phase. Such circumstances exist that, had they been presented at court, could have been used to spare Gilreath’s life.

Stories of an abusive childhood, lifelong problems with alcohol, and a recurring incidence of mental health problems would have shed more light on the circumstances of this crime and Gilreath’s state of mind. A crime committed in the haze of alcoholism and mental illness is certainly different than premeditated murder

Even for those who support the death penalty, this case should be a questionable application of capital punishment. Please let the State of Georgia know that you oppose the circumvention of the law in Fred Gilreath’s case and capital punishment in general.

 
 

A Dead Issue - Where does it say, "Kill for Jesus"?

By John Sugg - AtlantaCreativeLoafing.com

It's too bad for Fred Gilreath that he didn't live in Yugoslavia. He'd still be alive. Just 10 days before Georgia officials at a state prison in Jackson jabbed needles into Gilreath and injected him with poison, the war-torn, ripped-apart nation of Yugoslavia decreed that it would no longer execute criminals.

The Balkan republic joined almost the entire civilized world, 109 nations including all of Western Europe, in shunning state homicide. The United States hunkers down with the international Neanderthals -- human rights criminals such as China, Cuba, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and, if there any left, the Taliban mullahs -- in petulantly embracing legalized lethal savagery.

Gilreath spent a third of his 63 years awaiting the executioner's arrival -- in itself a gruesome form of punishment any sane society would declare cruel and unusual. The relatives of the Gilreath's victims, who also were the condemned prisoner's kin, didn't howl for his death. They pleaded and prayed for his life. Indeed, by any criteria imaginable, Gilreath was a poor choice for official slaughter.

On May 11, 1979, Fred Gilreath took a shotgun and two rifles and blew away his wife, Linda, and her father. The marriage was breaking up, Gilreath was tanked up, and what went down was bloody carnage. It was also a crime of passion, a status that while certainly not exonerating the killer, usually merits life imprisonment. The tragic couple had two children, Chris and Felicia.

As one of Gilreath's lawyers, Brian Mendelsohn puts it: "When they were 8 and 12, they had one parent violently removed from their lives. Twenty-two years later, the state of Georgia subjected them to the same trauma all over again." Gilreath's son, Chris Kellett, talked to me after his dad's execution. "I had always been an advocate of the death penalty," he said. "But if this is how it is carried out ... I saw things that were horrible and incredible. I can't believe there isn't a higher power that doesn't stop this."

Kellett also noted that who gets the fatal needle is "arbitrary." The state Board of Pardons and Parole "certainly doesn't seem interested in studying the merits of cases and making an informed decision," he said. His words echo a 29-year-old U.S. Supreme Court decision, Furman v. Georgia, in which the death penalty was struck down, igniting a bloodlust race among states to reenact legal homicide. Justice Potter Stewart wrote in Furman that executions were "wantonly and ... freakishly imposed." Which pretty much describes what happened to Gilreath.

Mike Mears, the state-paid (but woefully underfunded) defender of the damned points out how mercurial capital punishment is in Georgia. "You kill someone in DeKalb County, you're likely to get executed. Do the same thing a few yards away in Fulton County, you'll get life. Now that's arbitrary." Any sense of fairness evaporated with Gilreath's execution. "I thought the death penalty was supposed to be for premeditated murder," Kellett said. "Yet, when we went before the board, the first question they asked was about premeditation.

They obviously hadn't taken the time to read the information we had given them. We had addressed that point at length, and what my father did was not premeditated." Kellett thought for a moment, and then added: "But what the state did to him was the epitome of premeditation. They plotted his murder for more than 20 years."

If you should go to the website of the pardons board (www.pap.state.ga.us/overview.html ), the agency's mission statement proclaims that one of its top priorities is to "respond to the needs and concerns of crime victims and their families." It's a lie. Neither of Linda Gilreath's children wanted their father to die for killing their mom.

In fact, all family members opposed his execution. "If the board believed its own mission statement," Kellett said, "this would be a no-brainer. If my father's life couldn't be spared, what case could convince these people to grant clemency?" A good question.

Why did Fred Gilreath die? I thought the state Board of Pardons and Parole, which turned thumbs down on Gilreath two days before his execution, might know. But according to Kellett and others who attended the hearing, the board members were uninterested in the merits of the case.

One of the board members felt a junket to Las Vegas was more important than a man's life -- and somewhere between the slot machines and the showgirls, he faxed in his vote. Of course, one shouldn't expect much of the board. It may well be a high-crime area, with two of its own members under investigation for ethical skullduggery. But being scummy in Georgia doesn't disqualify one from voting on life and death decisions. If not the pardons officials, I mused, Gov. Roy Barnes should be able to supply a clear and convincing rationale for capital punishment. His spokeswoman, Joselyn Butler, wasn't overjoyed at my inquiry. "He (Barnes) supports the death penalty," she said -- and the adverb "tersely" applies. "I don't know why. He's never explained." Maybe I can help. It's really simple. One word: Votes.

 
 

Georgians For Alternatives to the Death Penalty

Updated 11/16/01

Amnesty International - Urgent Action Appeal

Against the Victims' Family's Wishes, the State Killed Fred Gilreath on November 15, 2001.

USA (Georgia): Fred Marion Gilreath, aged 63

Fred Gilreath was executed in Georgia on 15 November after 21 years on death row. He was convicted of killing his wife, Linda Gilreath, and her father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, in 1979.

The execution had been scheduled for 7pm on 14 November, but was delayed by 20 hours by a federal court. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals issued the temporary stay apparently to give it more time to consider a last-minute appeal that his clemency hearing had been not been full, fair or impartial, due to the absence of one board member, and an alleged conflict of interest of two others.

Early on 15 November, the 11th Circuit court refused any further stay. The US Supreme Court then delayed the execution by another 30 minutes. When it too, denied a further stay, the execution went ahead, and Fred Gilreath was pronounced dead at 3.53pm on 15 November.

The state Pardons and Paroles Board had rejected clemency on 13 November. It heard testimony supporting clemency from the family members of the victims and the prisoner (see original EXTRA). Fred Gilreath's son urged the Board to grant clemency: 'If my mother could talk now, she would say she didn't want him to die. We've lost enough... We don't want to lose any more'. After the execution, a spokesperson for the US organization Murder Victims Families for Reconciliation said that the Gilreath family were devastated: 'The state of Georgia made orphans of [Fred Gilreath's children]... despite their pleas to the state of Georgia that their families not be traumatized. Another body is in the coffin'.

Fred Gilreath is the third person to be executed in Georgia in the past three weeks, and the 26th since the USA resumed executions in 1977. Nationwide his was the 743rd execution since 1977 and the 60th this year. No further action by the UA Network is requested. Many thanks to all who sent appeals.

 
 

Convicted Killer Fred Gilreath is Executed

By Rhonda Cook - Atlanta Journal-Constitution

November 16, 2001

JACKSON - A 63-year-old grandfather was executed Thursday for killing his wife and her father in a drunken rage spawned by a pending divorce. After two court stays -- one moving Fred Gilreath's execution from 7 p.m. Wednesday to 9 p.m. and a second putting it at 3 p.m.

Thursday -- the U.S. Supreme Court delayed the execution 30 minutes so it could review his file. Gilreath was pronounced dead at 3:53 p.m. Thursday. His final words were to thank his lawyer, his family and friends as well as prison officials. "My God has forgiven me for all my sins. I have forgiven the people who have done me wrong," Gilreath said just before a chaplain prayed over him and officials began the eight-minute process of executing him.

A Cobb County jury decided in 1980 that Gilreath should be executed for the shootings of his wife, Linda, and his father-in-law Gerritt Van Leeuwen. Fred Gilreath had been drinking when Linda Gilreath and Leeuwen came to the Gilreath's Cobb County home May 11, 1979, to collect some clothes.

Linda Gilreath was planning to file for divorce later that day and had moved into her mother's house. Fred Gilreath shot Linda Gilreath five times and his father-in-law four times before dousing their bodies with gasoline and fleeing to a relative's home in another state.

Gilreath was the third man in three weeks to be executed in Georgia by lethal injection, which became the state's method of capital punishment once electrocution was found unconstitutional in early October.

Gilreath's two adult children waited outside the prison with other death penalty protestors. Gilreath's four young grandchildren, between the ages of 2 and 4, scampered on the prison grounds, batting a yellow tennis ball. Buzzards circled overhead. Gilreath's daughter, Felicia Floyd, turned and hugged an anti-death penalty activist when she learned that the execution had begun.

Her brother, Christopher Kellett, sat at a picnic table a few feet away with his head in his arms. A spokesman for the family, Renny Cushing, executive director of Boston-based Murder Victims Families for Reconciliation, said after the execution that Gilreath's family was devastated. "The state of Georgia made orphans of Felicia Floyd and Chris Kellett ... despite their pleas to the state of Georgia that their families not be traumatized. Anther body is in the coffin," he said. When Gilreath's children realized the execution was complete, they were enveloped by about 20 people who hugged them.

The family was frustrated by confusion over the rescheduled time of Gilreath's execution. The Department of Corrections told the family he would be executed at 7 p.m. Thursday and did not correct this until the family arrived at the prison on Thursday, department spokesman Mike Light said. As a result, Gilreath's family missed one-fourth of their allotted time to visit with him today, getting an hour and a half to visit with him them instead of two. It was "a painful meeting with the family," Cushing said.

Gilreath's children had hoped to bring his grandchildren for a last visit, but because of the confusion over the scheduled execution time, they did not get the chance. Gilreath's sister-in-law, Betty Newlin, who had also forgiven Gilreath for killing her sister and her father, stayed away from the prison to support her mother.

There were no major problems inserting the needles that carried the drugs as there were during last week's execution, when emergency medical technicians abandoned their attempts to insert needles into Jose High's arm after trying for 15 to 20 minutes. EMTs could find a vein in only one of Gilreath's arms, so they inserted one in the back of his left hand as a backup for the primary IV.

Gilreath's crime was unlike the crimes of the two men who preceded him on a gurney in the death chamber at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison and unlike the offenses that landed one woman and 124 other men on Georgia's Death Row, his lawyers argued.

They labeled Gilreath's offense a "domestic" killing, while others, they said, committed murders along with other felonies like rape, armed robbery or kidnapping or for money. Also, the victims of the murdered in the Gilreath case also were the relatives of the condemned.

Floyd, Kellett and Newlin had unsuccessfully pleaded for mercy with the courts and the state Board of Pardons and Paroles, insisting that they had forgiven Gilreath and that their wishes as the victims, that he be spared, should be respected.

The request to the board held up Gilreath's execution. His lawyers argued that Gilreath did not receive a full and impartial hearing before the five-member panel. They had two specific complaints: Board member Gene Walker was not at what was described as an emotionally-charged, closed Parole Board meeting Tuesday when Gilreath's children pleaded for mercy for their father.

Walker was attending a technology convention in Las Vegas, unrelated to his duties on the board. He said he decided on the commutation request based on Gilreath's file and a report of the meeting provided by the board's lawyer.

According to testimony in a hearing Wednesday, Walker declined an offer to listen to a tape of the proceedings and sent his vote to deny Gilreath's request via fax. Gilreath's lawyers also complained that two other board members faced a conflict of interest that might push them to support Gilreath's execution.

Attorney General Thurbert Baker's office is investigating whether Chairman Walter Ray and board member Bobby Whitworth improperly took money from a state vendor. Gilreath's lawyers argued that Ray and Whitworth may try to curry favor with Baker, and influence the investigation against them, by voting against Gilreath's request. Baker's office also is responsible for defending any challenges to death sentences.

The board's vote on such requests, but the votes against commutation by Walker and one other member, Garfield Hammonds, were announced during testimony before a federal judge hearing Gilreath's challenge on Wednesday. There are no other executions pending.

 
 

Fred Gilreath

By Rhonda Cook - Atlanta Journal-Constitution

November 15, 2001

A federal appeals court late Wednesday gave Fred Gilreath another day to live, putting off his scheduled execution until 3 p.m. Thursday.

Without comment, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals granted a temporary stay to Gilreath, the 63-year-old grandfather who was condemned to die for killing both his wife and her father in 1979.

The stay came little more than an hour after a lower court judge ended a five-hour hearing on Gilreath's claim that the state Board of Pardons and Paroles had not given him full, fair and impartial consideration on his request that his death sentence be commuted to life.

If he is executed, Gilreath will be the third person in three weeks to die by lethal injection in Georgia. A gurney and a needle replaced the state's electric chair when the Georgia Supreme Court determined in October that electrocution was unconstitutional.

Turning down Gilreath's request to stop his execution, U.S. District Court Judge J. Owen Forrester said he found "no due process violations at all" based on evidence presented in the hearing that ended just minutes before Gilreath's original time to die, 7 p.m.

Gilreath's lawyers had argued that he did not get fair consideration before the Parole Board on Tuesday because one member was absent and two others could not be impartial because they are under investigation by the state attorney general.

Gilreath was sentenced to die for killing his estranged wife, Linda, and her father. Gilreath had been drinking when his wife and Gerritt Van Leeuwen came to his Cobb County house to collect some clothes. Linda Gilreath was planning to file for divorce. Gilreath shot his wife five times and Leeuwen four times.

In their appeals, Gilreath's attorneys have claimed his case is unlike any other on Georgia's Death Row; Gilreath killed during a domestic dispute and the murder did not involve an armed robbery, kidnapping or rape.

They also point out that Gilreath's children and Linda Gilreath's family, also victims, say they forgive him and they don't want him executed. Their pleas for mercy are the basis for the question now before the federal appeals court. Gilreath's lawyers say the board, though it claims to give weight to the wishes of victims, did not give Gilreath's request for a commutation full and unbiased consideration.

They argued that because one board member, Gene Walker, was out of town on Tuesday, he missed the emotion of the 90-minute meeting with Gilreath's family and that might have swayed him. Walker, in Las Vegas for a technology convention unrelated to board duties, said Tuesday he based his vote to deny Gilreath's request on documents in the board's file and on an account of the meeting with the relatives by the board's lawyer.

Gilreath's lawyers also said that two other board members may have been swayed to vote against Gilreath's commutation request because they want to curry favor with the Attorney General's Office, which is investigating them to determine if they improperly took money from a state vendor. The lawyers with the AG's office also argue against Gilreath's appeals.

Gilreath's attorney, Thomas Dunn, argued that Board Chairman Walter Ray and member Bobby Whitworth have a conflict of interest. Dunn also said Ray's and Whitworth's anxiety over the investigation may be felt by the other three board members and they might also be inclined to vote in a way that would please Attorney General Thurbert Baker. "The investigation of two ... members does taint the board," Dunn argued before Forrester. Garfield Hammonds testified Wednesday said he had taken little notice of the investigation. He said he voted against saving Gilreath because the details of his case supported his death sentence.

 
 

Pardons and Paroles Board Rejects Clemency

Gilreath Can Now Turn Only to Courts

By Rhonda Cook - Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The state Board of Pardons and Paroles refused to save Fred Gilreath from his scheduled execution for killing his wife and father-in-law, despite pleas from the relatives of the victims of a domestic dispute spawned by anger over a pending divorce.

Gilreath, 63, is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 7 p.m. Wednesday for shooting Linda Gilreath and her father, Gerritt Van Leeuwen, in 1979 when the two returned to her Cobb County home to collect her clothes. "If my mother could talk now, she would say she didn't want him to die," said Christopher Kellett, who was 8 when his father shot his mother. "We've lost enough. ... We don't want to lose any more."

Kellett reconciled with his father a year ago and has since introduced his children to their grandfather. Kellett said the board meeting was "very emotional." Kellett, his sister and aunt -- sister to one victim and daughter of the other -- spent 90 minutes with the board, pleading that the members spare Fred Gilreath, who would be the third person to die by lethal injection in Georgia in less than three weeks.

Cobb County District Attorney Pat Head, who was not in office when Gilreath was prosecuted, met with four members of the board later in the day -- one individually and then three later in the afternoon -- to encourage them to deny the request for clemency.

Board member Gene Walker was in Las Vegas, where he was attending a conference unrelated to board business. Head said he told board members, "I believe this case was an appropriate case for the death penalty." He said victims' wishes should not dictate the punishment. "We are a society of laws, and if we allow emotions to dictate decisions ... we put society at risk," Head said after his meetings with the board. "This was a brutal murder."

According to trial testimony, Linda Gilreath planned to file for a divorce from her husband of about 11 years. She had moved in with her mother even though her father continued to live in the house he shared with Linda and Fred Gilreath. Fred Gilreath had been drinking when his wife came home on May 11, 1979, to retrieve some belongings.

Ten minutes after they arrived,, Gilreath, using a shotgun and two rifles, shot Linda Gilreath five times and Leeuwen four times. He doused the bodies with gasoline and fled to another state, to the home of a relative who turned him in to police.

In the past, all five board members have been present for commutation hearings, but Walker said Tuesday the trip to Las Vegas had been planned for a long time. The vote is secret but at least three votes are needed to commute a sentence. While not saying how he voted, Walker said he made his decision based on a review of Gilreath's file and board staff members' reports of the meetings Tuesday with Gilreath's supporters and the prosecutor. "This is not a typical domestic dispute to me," Walker said. "This goes far beyond that. This is a man who murdered his wife and his wife's father. And he shot them multiple times and at different locations [in the house]. I have to assess all that. Clearly, I feel comfortable with where I am and what I'm doing."

Gilreath's only remaining hope lies with the courts, which already have rejected his pleas in previous appeals. A trial court in Butts County, the home of death row and the first step in death penalty challenges, turned down his appeal Monday. "To kill Fred Gilreath will compound this tragedy," David Russell, Gilreath's attorney, said Tuesday. "It was an emotional reaction to his wife leaving him. The victims' relatives are also the relatives of Fred Gilreath. ... And the family of victims does not want this to happen."

 
 

Family Asked That Condemned Killer be Spared

By Rhonda Cook - Atlanta Journal-Constitution

November 13, 2001

The children and the sister-in-law of condemned killer Fred Gilreath pleaded with the state Board of Pardons and Paroles today to commute the Cobb County man's death sentence.

Gilreath is scheduled to die by lethal injection tomorrow evening for killing his wife and father-in-law during a 1979 domestic dispute that centered on Linda Gilreath's plans to divorce him. Among those pleading for Fred Gilreath's life were Linda Gilreath's sister and Fred and Linda Gilreath's two children. "If my mother could talk now, she would say she didn't want him to die," Christopher Kellett, Fred Gilreath's son said after meeting with the board for about 90 minutes. "We've lost enough... We don't want to lose any more."

Cobb County District Attorney Pat Head, who was not in office when Gilreath was prosecuted in 1980, has an appointment with the board this afternoon. Only four of the five members were at the meeting with Gilreath's family and attorneys. Board member Gene Walker was out of town attending a conference. It will take three votes to commute Gilreath's death sentence.

 
 

Death Sentence Decried

By Bill Rankin - Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Saturday, November 10, 2001

Fred Marion Gilreath's capital sentence should be overturned because so many similar murder cases have consistently ended with a sentence less than death, court motions filed Friday said.

Gilreath, convicted of the 1979 killings of his wife and father-in-law, committed "an unplanned, domestic murder that erupted in a heated dispute," the court motion said. And because death sentences are hardly ever imposed in domestic killings, Gilreath's capital sentence is "clearly disproportional" and therefore unconstitutional. "It was a spur-of-the-moment, alcohol-fueled crime of passion by a person who had gone 42 years without a criminal conviction," Gilreath's lawyer, Brian Mendelsohn, said.

The Georgia Supreme Court, when reviewing each death penalty appeal, must determine whether the sentence was excessive or disproportionate to penalties imposed in similar cases.

On the day Gilreath's wife, Linda, filed for divorce and returned home with her father to get her clothes, Gilreath killed both of them. This week, Gilreath's son, Chris Kellett of Newnan, said that he once believed his father deserved the death penalty. But now he wants his father's sentence commuted to life in prison. Kellett said his family, including his 3-year-old son Christian, regularly visits Gilreath on death row. On Tuesday, Kellett and his sister will ask the state Board of Pardons and Paroles to spare their father.

Tom Charron, the former Cobb County district attorney who prosecuted Gilreath, has described the case as an "exceptionally brutal double homicide" during which at least eight shots were fired. "This was not a classic domestic disturbance where the husband fires one shot and later regrets it," Charron said. Still, Mendelsohn's court motion contends Gilreath "is in a class of one." Of the 25 people executed in Georgia since 1976, the motion noted, not one of them committed a crime arising from a domestic dispute.

 
 

Son Hopes Execution Halted

Mother Slain, Now His Father Set to Pay Price

By Bill Rankin - Atlanta Journal Constitution

Thursday, November 8, 2001

Chris Kellett was 8 years old when his father shot his mother five times and also killed his grandfather. As he grew into manhood, Kellett may have had few certainties, but he had this one: He wanted his father dead. He supported the death penalty in general and believed his father had earned every last volt of it. A Cobb County jury agreed and, 22 years ago, sentenced Kellett's father to death. "I felt it was a deserving sentence," the plainspoken Newnan man, now 31 and father himself, said Wednesday. "I believe in the death penalty --- did and still do."

But a year ago, for the first time since he was a teenager, Kellett visited his father, Fred Marion Gilreath, 62, on death row and everything changed. Kellett no longer wants his father executed by the state. He said that next week, he and his sister will ask the state Board of Pardons and Paroles to commute Gilreath's death sentence to life in prison. Gilreath is scheduled to die by lethal injection next Wednesday, a little more than a month after the electric chair was declared unconstitutional.

On May 11, 1979, Gilreath killed his estranged wife, Linda, and her father when they came to the Gilreath house to get her clothes. On that day, Linda was filing for divorce to get away from her husband, described in court as an abusive alcoholic.

Tom Charron, who prosecuted the case as Cobb County district attorney, said Wednesday that he empathizes with the family but believes Gilreath deserves capital punishment. "It was an exceptionally brutal double homicide," he said. "He used three separate weapons to carry out the murders. The amount of viciousness involved was more than enough to warrant the death sentence he got." As for the Board of Pardons and Paroles, he said, "You always want to listen. If anyone should have anything to say on this issue, it should be those children. They are the real victims for having to grow up without a mother for 22 years."

Kellett said that at the time of the shootings, he understood his mother and grandfather had been killed. Afterward, he said, he lived with relatives and then at a boys home before attending college. While meeting with his father last Thanksgiving, Kellett said, Gilreath asked for forgiveness. "I've learned that it's a lot easier to hate someone than to forgive them," Kellett said in an interview at Gilreath's attorney's office. But he said he forgave his father. Almost every other weekend for a year, Kellett said, he has taken his family to visit Gilreath on death row.

He said his 3-year-old son, Christian, loves to see his grandfather. "We tell him we're going to see Poppy, and it's a treat," Kellett said. Kellett admits that his support for the death penalty conflicts with his opposition to his father's execution. "I felt hypocritical at first, like I was contradicting myself," Kellett said. "I know that he took away plenty from us, but he's finally giving something back now. . . If you could see my son's reaction every time he sees his grandfather, I think it would soften anyone's views."

 
 

Georgia man executed for killing wife, father-in-law

Reuter News

JACKSON, Georgia, Nov 15 - A man convicted of killing his wife and father-in-law during a 1979 domestic dispute was put to death in Georgia on Thursday, the third execution in the state in the past three weeks.

Fred Gilreath, 63, was injected with lethal chemicals in the death chamber at the state prison in Jackson, Georgia, after federal courts rejected pleas to stop the execution, Georgia Department of Corrections spokesman Scott Stallings said.

Stallings said Gilreath issued a final statement in which he thanked his attorneys, family and prison staff. "God bless everybody," were his final words. Gilreath died at 3:53 p.m.

Gilreath had originally been scheduled to die on Wednesday night, but the inmate won a temporary reprieve after the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals agreed to review a lawsuit filed by his lawyers against the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles.

The lawsuit claimed that board members acted improperly on Tuesday during a clemency hearing when they voted to reject his request to have the death sentence commuted to life in prison. The lawsuit noted that one of the five members of the board was not present for the hearing. But on Thursday the 11 Circuit Court turned down arguments from Gilreath's lawyers that there was a legal basis for halting the execution. The U.S. Supreme Court also refused to intervene.

Gilreath was sentenced to death for shooting his wife Linda, 28, and her father Gerritt Van Leeuwen, 57, on May 11, 1979. Linda Gilreath had been planning to file for divorce to get away from her husband, later described in court as an abusive alcoholic. Gilreath's wife was shot five times with a rifle and once in the face with a shotgun. Her father was shot several times with a rifle, shotgun and handgun. Police found gasoline on both bodies and in the kitchen of the Gilreath house.

Defense lawyers as well as Gilreath's children had urged state officials to show leniency on the grounds that the killings were a crime of passion fueled by alcohol and intense emotions.

Gilreath became the third inmate to be put to death in Georgia since the state Supreme Court ruled last month that the use of the electric chair to execute inmates was unconstitutional because it inflicted needless suffering. Georgia switched to lethal injection after the ruling.

Alabama and Nebraska are the only states that still rely solely on electrocution to execute inmates. The other 35 states with the death penalty use lethal injection or give the inmate a choice in deciding the method of execution.

There are now 125 prisoners on Georgia's death row.

 
 

Supreme Court of Georgia

247 Ga. 814
279 S.E.2.d 650

GILREATH v. THE STATE

Docket number: 37255

June 30, 1981

This is a death penalty case. Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., appeals his convictions and sentences to death for the murders of his wife and his father-in-law.

On May 11, 1979, Dempsey Wolfenbarger went to the Mableton Precinct of the Cobb County Police where he spoke with Corporal J. E. Davis. Wolfenbarger told Davis he was concerned about the safety of his stepdaughter, Linda Gilreath. He explained that Linda was in the process of obtaining a divorce from her husband, Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., and that several days previously she had left their home to stay with her mother (Wolfenbarger's wife). Earlier on the 11th she had returned with her father to the Gilreath home, indicating that she would pick her stepfather up at work at 3:30 p.m.

When Linda had not returned, her mother asked a friend, Shirley Harrell, to pick Wolfenbarger up at work. Once he arrived home, his wife (Linda's mother) called Linda's attorney for advice. He suggested that the Wolfenbargers go over to the house; Dempsey Wolfenbarger decided instead to go to the police station. He told Corporal Davis that he feared there might be "domestic trouble", and that Fred Gilreath had threatened Linda's life as well as the lives of the Wolfenbargers, and had threatened to burn the Wolfenbargers' trailer. Wolfenbarger also told Davis his tires had been slashed and be believed Gilreath had done it. Finally, he said that Linda was driving a blue Plymouth Duster and Gilreath drove a red truck. [1]

Cpl. Davis radioed for a back-up unit; Officer Roy Rogers responded and the two police officers arrived at the Gilreath residence at approximately 5:00 p.m. The blue Duster was not in sight. Cpl. Davis knocked on the front door; no one answered. Rogers knocked at the side door to a screened-in porch; no one answered.

Davis then peered into the enclosed garage looking for the Duster. He rejoined Rogers by the side screened porch and they observed that both the porch door and the sliding glass door inside the porch were ajar, that the sound of music could be heard, and that a strong odor of gasoline permeated the area. The two officers then entered the screened porch (which Davis described as looking like an enclosed carport) and looked through the sliding glass door. From that vantage point, Rogers saw a man's body. He then stepped inside the glass door and saw Linda's body. Rogers told Davis he had found a second body and Davis entered, too.

The two officers could see large puddles of gasoline in the kitchen and toward the living room; they also saw a shotgun and a shell lying on the floor. They then checked the other rooms of the house looking for the Gilreaths' two children. [2] Finding no one, the officers called the detectives, secured the crime scene (they disturbed nothing except that they opened the front door to disperse the gas fumes) and went outside to await the detectives. Wolfenbarger arrived shortly after Davis and Rogers discovered the bodies but was not allowed to enter the house.

Detective Julian Deal arrived at about 5:33 p.m. He walked through the house, interviewed Dempsey Wolfenbarger, and then reentered the house to complete his investigation, i.e., locate evidence, take measurements and make drawings. [3] Deal testified that upon checking he discerned no signs of forcible entry into the house. He found a green army-type gas can sitting by the door to the screened porch. He entered through the sliding glass doors and found Linda Gilreath's body lying between a coffee table and a love seat in the living room; a pink towel covered her face and a white medium-sized suitcase sat by the end table.

The evidence showed that Linda had been shot five times along her right side with a .30-30 lever action rifle from approximately two to three feet away. She had been shot in the face from approximately five to six feet away with a .12 gauge shotgun. Matter from her face was splattered across the love seat, carpet and walls.

Gerrit Van Leeuwen was lying a short distance away; he had sustained a .30-30 wound to his right thigh, a shotgun wound to his left chest, and two .22 caliber wounds to his head. Gasoline had been poured on and around the victims as well as on the kitchen floor.

Sgt. Deal seized numerous items which were in plain view, among them a .22 caliber short shell casing, six .30-30 caliber shell casings, two shotgun shell casings, a .22 caliber rifle and a .12 gauge shotgun. Two days later he returned with a search warrant and recovered another .22 caliber shell casing.

Prior to diagramming the crime scene, Sgt. Deal had placed a southeastern regional lookout on Fred Gilreath and on the blue Duster. Upon receiving the message, the dispatcher for the sheriff's department in Hendersonville, North Carolina, contacted Mike Gilreath who lived and worked in Hendersonville, told him about the message, and asked him to let the sheriff's department know if he saw or heard from his brother Fred.

Fred Gilreath arrived at his brother's office, driving the blue Duster, at approximately 7:30 p.m. Mike Gilreath immediately asked one of his business associates to go tell the sheriff that his brother had arrived. The business associate, being new in town, went first to the police station from whence he was directed to the sheriff's office. Three officers arrived at Mike Gilreath's office at 8:00 or 8:05 p.m. By then Fred Gilreath had showered with his clothes on and was wearing only his still wet cut-off shorts. [4] The officers arrested him, explaining that he was wanted for questioning in relation to a double homicide in Georgia; Gilreath asked if he could call his wife.

Sgt. Deal arrived in Hendersonville the next day. Pursuant to a warrant he searched the Duster that afternoon and again on May 14th. In the latter search a partial box of .22 caliber short ammunition was recovered. While in North Carolina, Sgt. Deal travelled to a cabin, purportedly belonging to Fred Gilreath, located in a mountainous area. Deal testified that he went to get a description of the property in order to procure a search warrant.

Upon reaching the area, Deal walked down an old road to the cabin. While standing out front, he picked up several shotgun shell cases, .30-30 caliber cartridge cases, and .22 caliber cartridge cases which were lying in the drive. Three shotgun shell cases and eleven .30-30 caliber Browning shell cases which Deal retrieved at this time were later introduced into evidence.

The shotgun and the .22 caliber rifle which were found at the scene were identified as the murder weapons by a firearms examiner from the State Crime Laboratory. The firearms examiner also established that the .30-30 caliber shells which were fired at the victims were fired by the same firearm which had fired the .30-30 shells found in the drive of the cabin in North Carolina.

The Gilreaths' next door neighbor testified that he heard muffled gunshots coming from the direction of the Gilreaths' home between 1:30 p.m. and 2:40 p.m. on May 11. [5] He paid little attention to them because it was not uncommon to hear gunshots in the neighborhood. This neighbor also reported having seen water in the street. When police contacted the Cobb County Water Department they found three workmen who had bled a water hydrant directly across the street from the Gilreath residence on May 11th. The workmen had arrived at approximately 1:30 p.m. and left at approximately 1:50 p.m. One workman testified he heard five rapid-fire shots from what sounded like a high-powered rifle emanate from the Gilreath residence. He also testified that he was busy doing paperwork and didn't see anyone.

Another of the workmen testified that he saw a Volkswagen and a van or truck in back of the garage at the Gilreath residence when he arrived. After he arrived, he noticed that a blue car, probably a Dodge, had driven up and parked in the driveway. Because he was getting something from the truck, he did not see the blue car arrive. After the blue car arrived, he saw an old man walk around the house, come back, and go back around the house. He then heard the five shots and did not see the old man again. Shortly thereafter the water crew left; the blue car was still there.

The third workman testified that he saw a dark blue over light blue Duster drive up and saw two people get out. One of the two (the passenger) was an elderly man. He saw the elderly man walking around the yard; about a minute after the elderly man disappeared behind the house, he heard the five shots. The worker was unable to say whether the driver of the blue Duster was a man or a woman. He did testify that at the time he heard the shots there were four cars at the Gilreath residence: the blue Duster, a gold Volkswagen, an old red pickup truck, and another old car on blocks. [6] From the foregoing, the jury was authorized to find that the murders occurred between 1:30 (or 1:40) and 1:50 and that the blue Duster was at the scene when the shots were fired.

Fred Gilreath testified in his own defense. He stated that he was home on May 11th with his father-in-law. His father-in-law left about 11:30 to go to his ex-wife's home. He was downstairs in his father-in-law's apartment when he heard his wife and her father come in. He heard his wife in the bedroom; he went upstairs and started out the door, telling his father-in-law he'd be back in a few minutes. His father-in-law said "Linda's here and she wants to talk to you" but Gilreath responded, "Gary, I told you I am not ready to talk to Linda. I don't want to talk to her until I get back from North Carolina."

He then left in the blue Duster at 1:25 p.m., intending to go to the liquor store and come back. He had had two drinks of rum while alone at the house. At the liquor store he bought a beer and a fifth of vodka. He mixed the two and while drinking decided to go on to Hendersonville. Before proceeding to North Carolina, he went by Statewide Beverages looking for a friend who owed him money. He did not find that man but did speak with another acquaintance, David Bridges. According to the defendant, when he spoke with Bridges he was not drunk, but he was "intoxicated" and things were a little bit fuzzy." [7]

He was wearing cut-off shorts, a tee shirt, a terry cloth hat and sandals. He continued drinking and was sick as he crossed a bridge connecting South and North Carolina. When he reached Hendersonville, he tried to rent a motel room but the clerk refused to give him a room because he was drunk so he went on to his brother's office. When he told his brother he needed to go take a shower to sober up, his brother told him there was a shower in the office. He took off his sandals and hat and put them on an end of the tub because there was nowhere else to put them; his shorts he hung on the one hook available. When he finished showering he discovered his brother had no towels so he put his shorts back on although he was wet, thus accounting for his clothes being wet.

Gilreath identified the .22 caliber rifle and the shotgun as his, as well as the gas can which he said he used for the lawn mower. He denied having killed his wife or his father-in-law.

The jury found Gilreath guilty of both murders and sentenced him to death for each. This is his appeal.

1. Defendant made a pretrial motion to suppress evidence seized from his home on May 11, 1979, and on May 14, 1979. He argued in his motion that Officers Davis and Rogers had no probable cause to enter the curtilage of his home on May 11, and thus everything subsequently seized was subject to suppression. He further argued that the probable cause supporting the warrant pursuant to which the house was searched on May 14 was tainted by the allegedly illegal search which had occurred on May 11.

The trial court overruled the motion. On appeal, the defendant reiterates his argument that because the officers made a warrantless entry into the yard or curtilage of his home, all evidence seized as a result of that entry must be suppressed. Citing the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Code Ann. 1-804, the Georgia Constitution, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. X (Code Ann. 2-110), Code Ann. 27-303, and Clare v. State, 135 Ga. App. 281 (217 SE2d 638) (1975), he argues that no warrantless entry may ever be made into the curtilage of a residence or the residence itself absent consent of the owners or residents of the property.

We deal here with two separate entries: the entry within the curtilage to knock at the front and side doors, and the entry onto the side porch itself. Defendant argues that notwithstanding Wolfenbarger's request for aid, the police were powerless to set foot on his property absent a warrant or consent by an owner or a resident of the home. We disagree.

The fourth amendment proscribes unreasonable searches and seizures. When police respond to requests to locate missing persons by entering private property only to the extent of knocking on outer doors, the fourth amendment has not been violated. We recognize, of course, that "the Fourth Amendment extends beyond the paradigmatic entry into a private dwelling by a law enforcement officer in search of the fruits or instrumentalities of crime." Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U. S. 499, 504 (98 SC 1942, 56 LE2d 486) (1978). But it does not extend so far as to prevent the police from making any contact with the citizenry-and to hold that the police may not, upon request, although exigent circumstances do not appear, approach the outer doors of a dwelling absent a warrant or consent of an owner or occupant would work that result.

Although defendant relies on a number of Georgia cases, none in fact support his premise. In Clare v. State, supra, a police officer answered a complaint of a loud disturbance and upon arrival was told by a woman visiting her mother in a first floor apartment that the occupants of a second floor apartment had played a stereo loudly for nearly an hour. The officer proceeded to knock at the outside door to the upstairs apartment; when it was opened, without asking permission he walked up the steps and into the defendant's living room.

The objectionable intrusion occurred when he entered the apartment, not when he knocked at the door. Likewise in Brewer v. State, 129 Ga. App. 118 (199 SE2d 109) (1973), police answering a complaint about loudness walked up outside steps to a second story apartment and directly into a room without stopping to knock. The issue the Court of Appeals addressed was whether "the sheriff and his deputy [were] entitled to open the screen door and cross over the threshold into the room without knocking, without identifying themselves, and without asking permission to enter?" Id., 129 Ga. App. at 119. In both Lewis v. State, 126 Ga. App. 123 (190 SE2d 123) (1972), and Black v. State, 119 Ga. App. 855 (168 SE2d 916) (1969), the officers entered the curtilage of homes without warrants in order to investigate property within the curtilage but outside the homes to determine whether it was stolen. None of these cases offer any support to the defendant here. To the contrary, in our view both Clare v. State, supra, and Brewer v. State, supra, proceed from an underlying premise that the officer's approach to the outside door, even though it be within the curtilage, is unobjectionable. Of course this is not to say, as Black v. State, supra, and Lewis v. State, supra, clarify, that a search of the curtilage in investigation of a crime is unobjectionable.

1978), and the Fourth Circuit, when confronted with a police officer's search of a house trailer for a child when he was informed by radio that a young girl had been pronounced dead upon arrival at a hospital and no one knew where her sister was, found no fourth amendment violation. Sallie v. North Carolina, 587 F2d 636 (4th Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 441 U. S. 911 (1979).

We find that none of defendant's fourth amendment rights have been violated. Dempsey Wolfenbarger asked the police to go to the defendant's home because he feared for the safety of his stepdaughter. In responding to his request, the police were authorized to enter the curtilage of the home and knock on the outer doors. It is unnecessary to decide whether the door to the side porch was the threshold to the home or whether the police could legitimately proceed through the porch to the sliding glass doors because in this case that entry was preceded by an awareness of exigent circumstances-the police had become aware of a heavy odor of gasoline emanating from a residence they had some reason to believe was occupied because they could hear music playing although the occupants had not answered the door. Gasoline being readily combustible, the police were authorized to proceed onto the side porch to fulfill their responsibility of ensuring public safety. Once they reached the sliding glass door one of the officers saw Van Leeuwen's body. This further exigent circumstance authorized him to enter the house immediately in search of Linda Gilreath and any other people in the house.

The state's contention that all of the evidence seized as a result of this warrantless entry was in plain view has not been challenged by the defendant. He does not contend that once the officers entered the house the evidence was not subject to seizure under the plain view doctrine; he contends the entry was illegal and that the plain view doctrine could never come into play.

We disagree, and hold that under the facts of this case Officers Davis and Rogers were authorized to enter the porch and the house itself, and Detectives Deal and Tressell were authorized to join them there and seize evidence in plain view. Mincey v. Arizona, supra. Furthermore, even assuming that once Officers Davis and Rogers had determined the victims were dead and no one else was in the house Detective Deal could not enter the premises and seize evidence in plain view absent a warrant (an assumption with which we disagree), in this case exigent circumstances for Deal's entry did exist.

Because of the quantity of gasoline that had been poured inside the house, the fire department had been called and according to Deal arrived about five minutes after he did. See Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U. S. 499, 509-510, supra. Thus it was necessary for the police to record the scene immediately lest a fire or the necessary activity of the firemen disturb it. [8] In sum, we find that the trial court properly overruled the defendant's motion to suppress the evidence seized from his home on May 11, 1979.

2. The defendant also complains of the introduction into evidence of the spent shell casings seized by Detective Deal from the drive in front of defendant's cabin in North Carolina. He concedes he filed no written motion to suppress as required by Code Ann. 27-313 (b) but argues he has not waived his objection because the reason he filed no written motion was that he did not realize the shells had been seized without a warrant until Detective Deal so testified at trial and it was then too late. [9]

The record shows, however, that defense counsel was permitted to inspect the physical evidence prior to trial. Thus, the defense knew that the shell casings had been seized; what the defense claims was not known was that the seizure was made without a warrant. Deal identified the exhibits without objection on February 28 and they were not admitted into evidence until February 29. We find that by failing to comply with Code Ann. 27-313 (b), the defendant waived any objection to the admission of the shells. Yeldell v. State, 240 Ga. 37 (2) (239 SE2d 364) (1977).

Defendant also complains of the introduction of the evidence seized outside the cabin in North Carolina on the ground that the state violated the dictates of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S. 83 (83 SC 1194, 10 LE2d 215) (1963); Giles v. Maryland, 386 U. S. 66 (87 SC 793, 17 LE2d 737) (1967); and Giglio v. United States, 405 U. S. 150 (92 SC 763, 31 LE2d 104) (1972), by not responding to his motion to compel discovery of all exculpatory material and information with a statement that the evidence had been seized without a warrant. In our view, neither Brady nor its progeny contemplates such a disclosure. The Court in Brady stated it applied to "evidence favorable to an accused . . . where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment. . . ." Brady v. Maryland, supra, 373 U. S. at 87.

As has been noted frequently, suppression of evidence is contrary to the truthseeking process. See Stone v. Powell, 428 U. S. 465 , 490 (96 SC 3037, 49 LE2d 1067) (1976). We hold that the absence of a warrant is not "material either to guilt or punishment" within the purview of Brady. Thus this enumeration is without merit.

3. Gilreath contends that the trial court's failure to give an oath to the prospective jurors prior to the voir dire as provided by Code Ann. 59-704.1 (Ga. Laws 1979, p. 1048) mandates reversal. Code Ann. 59-704.1 provides: "Each panel, prior to commencing voir dire, shall take the following oath: 'You shall give true answers to all questions as may be asked by the court or its authority, including all questions asked by parties or their attorneys, concerning your qualifications as jurors in the case of ---------------- (herein state the case). So help you God.' This oath shall be administered by the trial judge." Defendant raised this issue for the first time in his motion for new trial.

The matter having been called to its attention, the state obtained the affidavit of Judge Luther Hames of the Cobb County Superior Court, in which he stated "that as part of my duties on February 25, 1980, I gave the jurors for that week the following oaths: 'You shall well and truly try each cause submitted to you during the present term, and a true verdict give, according to the law as given you in charge, and the opinion you entertain of the evidence produced to you, to the best of your skill and knowledge, without favor or affection to either party, provided you are not discharged from the consideration of the case submitted, and you do further swear that you shall give true answers to all questions as may be asked by the parties or their attorneys, concerning your qualifications as jurors. So help you God." This case was tried before Senior Judge John W. Williford from February 25-29, 1980.

The oath given by Judge Hames tracks Code Ann. 59-706, which provides an oath for petit juries in civil cases. However Judge Harnes added at the end of the oath prescribed by Code Ann. 59-706 language similar to that contained in Code Ann. 59-704.1; that is, he swore the jurors to give true answers during voir dire. Defendant makes much of the absence of the' name of his case and the fact that the oath was not given by the trial judge. These differences do not require reversal. See Slaughter v. State, 155 Ga. App. 97 (2) (270 SE2d 455) (1980), relied on by the defendant, is inapposite because there the voir dire oath was administered by the district attorney. In Gober v. State, 247 Ga. 652 (2) (278 SE2d 386) (1981), we held that where the Code Ann. 59-706 oath was administered but the oath required by Code Ann. 59-704.1 was not administered, reversal was not required where no objection had been made.

Defendant also complains that the voir dire oath was given outside his presence. He argues that he has a right to be present during every stage of the trial and that he did not waive that right as to the voir dire oath. As defendant asserts, "It is the legal right of a person accused of crime in this State to be present at all stages of his trial. . . ." Wilson v. State, 212 Ga. 73, 74 (90 SE2d 557) (1955). Defendant cites numerous cases wherein the defendant's absence required reversal, but all involve either the jury viewing evidence outside the courthouse, Chance v. State, 212 Ga. 73; recharging the jury, Wilson v. State, 111 Ga. App. 22 (3) (140 SE2d 283) (1965); receiving a verdict, Lyons v. State, 155 Ga. App. 97 (2), is misplaced, because there the district attorney administered the oath over defendant's objection. See also Tyson v. State, 157 Ga. App. 569 (278 SE2d 8) (1981). Here no objection was made and hence no reversible error occurred. Altman v. State, 156 Ga. App. 185 (10) (273 SE2d 923) (1980). "A party can not during the trial ignore what he thinks to be an injustice, take his chance on a favorable verdict, and complain later." Joyner v. State, 208 Ga. 435 (2) (67 SE2d 221) (1951).

5. During voir dire, the defendant's attorney asked a potential juror whether he believed "that in the case of the death penalty that some one would intervene and stop the execution?" The juror answered, "That is always possible." Defendant's attorney then asked, "How would that affect you in your decision about whether the life or the death penalty would be given?" The juror answered, "It wouldn't." The state's objection to the latter question as calling for a conclusion was sustained. Defendant's attorney then asked, "Let me ask you this, Mr. Roper. If you, assuming hypothetically that a man got the death penalty, do you believe it is really just a life imprisonment rather than the death penalty, or do you believe that that person is going to be executed?"

The court sustained the state's objection and instructed the jurors as follows: "Well, I'll charge you this, Ladies and Gentlemen. I will charge all you jurors that in the event that you find the Defendant guilty of Count One, Count Two, or both, you would assume that whatever penalty you issued would be carried out. Does everybody understand that?" At that point the transcript states that the prospective jurors nodded their heads affirmatively.

Appellant contends that the court's ruling violated his due process rights and prevented him from making a meaningful examination of the jurors, as contemplated by Code Ann. 59-705. He points out that no executions have occurred in Georgia in some 16 years, and he theorizes that some jurors might assess the death penalty more casually than otherwise because they think it will not be carried out. [11]

In support of his contention he points to the response of a prior juror who when asked "[O]n this death penalty business, you don't doubt for a second that if this Jury found my client guilty and gave him the death sentence, that he would be executed, do you?" responded, "I know that there has been a long time since any have been executed, so it seems that is still kind of up in the air. I don't know if that answers your question or not." This juror, however, when next asked, "You don't feel like if he got the death penalty that he might just sit down there and really have a life imprisonment?", responded, "No, Sir."

We find no error in the trial court's ruling in view of the court's instruction to the jury that they assume whatever punishment they imposed would be carried out. The questions proposed by the defendant are not contemplated by Code Ann. 59-705 and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in disallowing them. See Smith v. State, 238 Ga. 146 (5) (231 SE2d 757) (1977). Nor did the trial court's ruling deprive defendant of due process. We note, in this connection, that while a prosecutor's argument, over objection, that the jury should impose the death penalty and assume it will be set aside if not warranted, absent curative instructions, would require reversal, see Fleming v. State, 240 Ga. 142, 146 (240 SE2d 37) (1977), the defendant may argue to the jury that they should weigh the decision on punishment heavily since if they impose the death penalty the state will exact it. [12]

6. In addition to his complaint that the state did not disclose Detective Deal's visit to his North Carolina cabin, Division 2, supra, the defendant contends that his motion to compel disclosure of all exculpatory material and information was not complied with in several other respects. First he complains that although he specifically asked for all statements made by the defendant as well as for all information which would in any way weaken or tend to weaken the state's case against the defendant, two statements that he had made were not disclosed by the trial court following its in camera inspection, and thus the trial court erred in overruling his motion for mistrial made when the statements were introduced. [13]

The statements he refers to were that when told by a Detective Harris with the Henderson County Sheriff's Department that warrants had been issued in Cobb County for his arrest for the murder of his wife and father-in-law, he responded by saying that couldn't be and asking if he could call his wife; and that when Detective Deal asked in his first encounter with the defendant if he knew what he had been charged with, the defendant responded "Some homicide," and when Deal said "You are charged with the murders of your wife and father-in-law," the defendant said "I was afraid it was that because she didn't call" and "I have got to go back to my cell." When the state sought to introduce these statements, the defendant objected on the ground that they had not been produced. The court overruled the objections.

On appeal, the defendant complains because the statements were not disclosed to him until the witnesses testified and because his motions for mistrial were overruled. Brady v. Maryland, supra, Division 2, applies to exculpatory material unknown to the defendant. United States v. Agurs, 427 U. S. 97, 103 (96 SC 2392, 49 LE2d 342) (1976). Statements made by the defendant are not unknown to him and hence are not discoverable under Brady. Baker v. State, 245 Ga. 657 (3) (266 SE2d 477) (1980).

Moreover, the record shows that at the conclusion of the first day of trial, the trial court informed the defendant that he had completed his in camera inspection of the state's file and orally disclosed the two statements at issue. Detective Harris testified on the second day of trial and Detective Deal testified on the third day. [14] Brady requires that exculpatory evidence not be withheld from the defendant at trial; this requirement was met here. Chafin v. State, 246 Ga. 709 (6) (273 SE2d 147) (1980). Thus the defendant's enumerations of error are without merit.

7. In his motion to compel disclosure of all exculpatory material and information, the defendant also sought disclosure of any evidence or statements which might be used to impeach the credibility of any of the state's witnesses. On appeal, he complains that he was not given a copy of Jerry Roddy's pretrial statement to the police until after the state had rested its case. Jerry Roddy was one of the Cobb County Water Department employees who was working across the street from the Gilreath residence on the afternoon in question.

Defendant contends that his testimony at trial differed materially from this statement and that the state must have been aware of the discrepancies no later than immediately prior to the trial when he was reinterviewed by a detective and the assistant district attorney who worked with the district attorney in trying the case. Once the witness had concluded his testimony on direct examination, the defendant renewed his motion to obtain a copy of his statement.

The motion was overruled and the defendant proceeded to cross examine Roddy. Subsequently, after the state had rested, the trial court provided a copy of Roddy's statement to the defendant and the defendant recalled Roddy and cross examined him with reference to the statement. The cross examination revealed inconsistencies between his statement and his testimony which will be discussed infra, division 14.

Defendant contends that the failure of the district attorney to disclose the statement as soon as it became evident that it was impeaching violated the dictates of Brady v. Maryland, supra, 373 U. S. 83, and Giles v. Maryland, supra, 386 U. S. 66. We cannot agree. Defendant concedes that Roddy's statement did not become impeaching until he contradicted it in his testimony, although he speculates that the state became aware of potential contradictions shortly before trial. But the critical fact in our view is that Roddy's statement was provided to him during the trial and he was allowed to recall Roddy and cross examine him with reference to it. See Chafin v. State, supra. A prior contradictory statement of a witness does not become contradictory or exculpatory until the witness testifies.

Defendant argues that exculpatory materials must be furnished at an appropriate time. See Williams v. Dutton, 400 F2d 797 (5th Cir. 1968), cert. denied, 393 U. S. 1105 (1969). He argues that exculpatory materials must be furnished before trial when the material is such that it cannot be effectively used if disclosure is withheld until trial. See United States v. Thevis, 84 FRD 47 (N. D. Ga. 1979). A statement of a witness which does no more than show that the witness made a prior contradictory statement has its most effective use at trial, in cross examination. We find no violation of Brady and no harm to the defendant. [15]

State, 242 Ga. 34 (1) (247 SE2d 838) (1978). And 18 USCA 3500 is neither constitutionally required nor applicable to state trials. United States v. Augenblick, 393 U. S. 348, 356 (89 SC 528, 21 LE2d 537) (1969); Calley v. Callaway, 519 F2d 184 (5th Cir. 1975), cert. denied 425 U. S. 911 (1976). The trial court did not err in overruling the notice to produce.

9. Defendant complains that five of the state's exhibits were admitted over his complaint that the chain of custody was not established. The five are: (1) Exhibit 30, a blue work shirt which was removed from the body of Gerrit Van Leeuwen; (2) exhibit 35, a pill box containing two .22 caliber lead bullets; (3) exhibit 43, a pill box containing one .30 caliber metal jacketed bullet and one lead core; (4) exhibit 44, a small pill box containing several mutilated buckshot and some wadding; (5) exhibit 45, a small plastic vial with four buckshot. The first four exhibits were identified by Dr. Joseph Burton, the Cobb County Medical Examiner who performed autopsies on the victims' bodies, as having been removed from the victims' bodies, packaged, labeled and sent by him to the State Crime Laboratory. Kelly Fite, a firearms examiner at the State Crime Laboratory, testified that he received them. Contrary to defendant's assertion, this testimony adequately establishes the chain of custody of these exhibits. Murphy v. State, 238 Ga. 725 (3) (234 SE2d 911) (1977).

As for the fifth item, exhibit 45, we have neither been directed to nor been able to locate any place in his testimony where Dr. Burton identifies it. Kelly Fite did identify exhibit 45 as having been sent to the crime lab by Dr. Burton. Assuming without deciding that the chain of custody of exhibit 45 was not properly established, in view of the fact that several other buckshot were retrieved and identified, the introduction of exhibit 45 was not reversible error.

10. Defendant complains that the trial court erred in introducing bank records of the Gilreaths' account to show the defendant had made a large withdrawal a few days before the murders over his objection that they were not properly authenticated under Code Ann. 38-711. A review of the record shows that copies of the bank's microfilms of the Gilreaths' account were identified by Richard Fisher, Assistant Vice President and Custodian of the Records for the National Bank of Cobb County. Mr. Fisher explained the bank's method of making and maintaining these microfilm records. When a witness' testimony shows that records were made in the regular course of business and that it was a regular course of business to make such records within a reasonable time of the act, transaction, occurrence or event, it is unnecessary that the witness use these specific words. Home Finance Co. v. Smith, 116 Ga. App. 76 (1) (156 SE2d 522) (1967). The trial court did not err in admitting these records.

11. Defendant complains that the trial court erred in overruling his objection to color photographs of the victims and their wounds, arguing that they were repetitive and cumulative and that their prejudicial effect outweighed their probative value. Neither in the trial court nor here has the defendant specified which photograph or photographs he contends were repetitive and cumulative of which other photograph. On appeal he does say "There were three separate pictures of the exploded head of one victim."

We have examined all the photographs and determined that they were not unduly repetitive. Since they were accurate and correct representations of material fact, their probative value outweighed their prejudicial effect and the trial court did not err in admitting them. Franklin v. State, 245 Ga. 141 (3) (263 SE2d 666), cert. denied 447 U. S. 930 (1980).

12. When Grace Wolfenbarger testified, she identified state's exhibit 1 as a photograph of the blue Plymouth Duster that her daughter and ex-husband drove when they left her home. Subsequently the photograph was tendered and admitted into evidence without objection.

When the prosecutor attempted to introduce four other photographs of cars, which in addition to state's exhibit 1 had allegedly comprised a photographic lineup shown to certain witnesses, the defendant objected that no foundation had been laid as it had not been shown that they were shown to any witnesses. The trial court sustained this objection. Later in the trial Jerry Roddy testified that these five photographs had been shown to him, but the latter four were never admitted into evidence.

During his closing argument, the district attorney told the jury that the pictures would go out with them and requested the jury to "take a look at that lineup when you go out." At that point, defendant objected on the basis that four of the pictures had not been admitted. The trial court concurred with the defendant, but when the district attorney recollected that they had been admitted, the trial was recessed briefly while the court reporter checked the record. When it became clear that they had never been admitted, the defendant moved for a mistrial.

The trial court overruled the motion and instructed the jurors to disregard the district attorney's comments and the pictures themselves in the event that they had seen them. Defendant now complains that the trial court erred in overruling his motion for mistrial. We cannot agree. The pictures of the four cars used in a photographic array are not prejudicial. Even assuming the defendant was prejudiced by this occurrence, the trial court's instructions were curative and the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion. Roberts v. State, 242 Ga. 634 (4) (250 SE2d 482) (1978); Patterson v. State, 239 Ga. 409 (2) (238 SE2d 2) (1977).

13. Defendant contends that the trial court erred in refusing to give five charges which he requested. We deal with each singly.

First, the trial court did not err in refusing to charge on intoxication. The defendant requested a charge substantially in the language of Pattern Charge 1-32, which reads: "Voluntary intoxication by use of alcohol (drugs or narcotics) is not excuse for crime. The fact that one accused of a crime was under the influence of alcohol (drugs or narcotics) at the time of the alleged crime may be shown as illustrative of his motive in the transaction, but one voluntarily under the influence of alcohol (drugs or narcotics) is presumed to intend the legitimate consequences of his act, and the question is whether he intended to do the act, or whether he intended the consequences of the act. If a person under the influence of alcohol (drugs or narcotics) is sufficiently intelligent to know or understand and intend to do a certain act and to understand that certain consequences are likely to result from it, and does the act, he is criminally liable for the consequences of his act.

However, if because of the influence of alcohol (drugs or narcotics), one's mind becomes so impaired as to render him incapable of forming an intent to do the act charged, or to understand that a certain consequence would likely result from it, he would not be criminally responsible for the act. Whether or not that is true is a question for the jury to determine."

The trial court charged the last sentence of Code Ann. 26-704: "Voluntary intoxication shall not be an excuse for any criminal act or omission." The charge as given correctly stated Georgia law. Code Ann. 26-704; Choice v. State, 105 Ga. App. 754 (125 SE2d 679) (1962). The case before us, as in so many cases, but unlike the cases cited, involves only intoxication; the case before us does not involve any question of sanity. The pattern charge is misleading to the extent that it implies that voluntary intoxication in and of itself may be a defense to a crime, and the trial court did not err in refusing the requested charge.

The trial court did not err in charging on flight, especially since the court charged the jury that it was up to them "to determine if there was flight" as well as to consider whether an explanation other than consciousness of guilt might explain any flight. Harris v. State, 234 Ga. 871, 874 (218 SE2d 583) (1975).

Defendant submitted requests to charge on voluntary manslaughter and on irresistible passion and cooling time, and a request that the trial court charge that the state had the burden of proving that the defendant did not act in the heat of passion, that is, did not commit voluntary manslaughter. The trial court did not err in refusing to charge voluntary manslaughter since there was no evidence of any "sudden, violent and irresistible passion resulting from serious provocation." Code Ann. 26-1102; Bowen v. State, 241 Ga. 492 (2) (246 SE2d 322) (1978).

Separation of husband and wife, including the turmoil associated therewith, and the filing of suit for divorce, without more, do not reduce murder to voluntary manslaughter. Likewise the trial court did not err in refusing to charge on irresistible passion and cooling time. If the defendant is contending that in every murder case the state must disprove the elements of voluntary manslaughter, we disagree. Davis v. State, 245 Ga. 141 (9).

The court then charged: "[M]alice as an element of the crime of murder may not generally be implied. Evidence must be presented by the state of a deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a fellow creature, by the Defendant, which is manifested by external circumstances capable of proof or from other evidence introduced by the state which satisfies your mind beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant acted with malice aforethought." This is the charge defendant requested, except that the trial court added the word "generally." This enumeration of error is without merit.

14. Defendant contends that his conviction must be reversed because the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. He contends that all of the evidence is consistent with his own testimony as to his innocence except that of Jerry Roddy and Steven Stone, the two employees of the Cobb County Water Department who testified that the blue Duster was at the Gilreath house when the shots were fired, and their testimony was so completely impeached as to be of no probative value. Stone testified on direct examination that he had seen a dark blue over light blue Duster arrive, that 2 people got out, one of whom was an elderly man, and that the Duster was still there when the shots were fired.

On cross examination, defendant established that at his first interview, on May 17, 1979, the first mention of the Duster was when Detective Deal asked: "Do you recall a blue Plymouth Duster, light blue, dark blue top, it was a '72, 1972 blue Plymouth Duster?" Stone responded that all he knew was that it was a light colored car, but if Detective Deal showed him a picture he could tell him whether it was the car he saw. He went on to say that about a week later Detective Deal showed him pictures of six or seven cars and he picked the Duster out. The defendant also established that in this initial statement Stone said, "As far as watching who got out of the car and all, I can't remember as to how many got out of the car or who was in the car, anything like that, but I do remember a car pulling in the driveway."

Finally, the defendant established that Stone had signed an affidavit prepared by a private investigator which stated that a man in his late forties or early fifties was already in the yard when the blue car (which he described as either a Duster or a Demon) arrived and that two people got out of the blue car, one of whom was a man about 30 years old. Stone testified that he did not recall ever having said the older man was already in the yard, and that he had made a mistake in not reading the affidavit carefully before he signed it. He admitted that he had said a man about 30 got out of the car, but testified that he really wasn't positive it was a man and it could have been a woman.

Jerry Roddy testified on direct examination that when he was first at the water hydrant the blue Duster was not there, that he went to get a sign to put under the water so it wouldn't tear up the grass and when he came back the blue car, which he described as a Dodge, had arrived, and that at that point he saw an older man in the yard for the first time. On cross examination, defendant established that when Roddy was first interviewed by Detective Deal on May 17, 1979, he stated that: "We was in the truck when we heard the gunshot . . . .", and that when asked what cars he had seen he mentioned the gold Volkswagen, the red truck, and the old green Duster, but he said nothing about a blue car being there or arriving while he was there. On redirect, he testified that at a later date he was shown five pictures of cars and he identified the blue Duster.

Defendant contends that these two witnesses were so thoroughly impeached that their testimony should be disregarded, pursuant to Code Ann. 38-1806. Code Ann. 38-1806 provides: When a witness shall be successfully contradicted as to a material matter, his credit as to other matters shall be for the jury, but if a witness shall swear wilfully and knowingly falsely, his testimony shall be disregarded entirely, unless corroborated by circumstances or other unimpeached evidence.

The credit to be given his testimony where impeached for general bad character or for contradictory statements out of court shall be for the jury to determine." This record does not disclose that the witnesses swore "wilfully and knowingly falsely." The question of credibility of witnesses is for the jury. Davis v. State, 242 Ga. 901 (8) (252 SE2d 443) (1979), vacated and remanded on other grounds, 446 U. S. 961 (1980).

The jury was authorized to find that the defendant was having a domestic dispute with his wife, that the victims arrived at the defendant's home in a blue Duster, that the murders occurred between 1:30 and 1:50 p.m., that Linda Gilreath had time to pack some of her belongings after she arrived and before she was killed, that Gerrit Van Leeuwen was outside when the shooting started, that the victims were killed with weapons belonging to the defendant and kept in his home, that the weapons bore no fingerprints, that the house showed no evidence of forced entry, that the perpetrator poured gasoline on the victims and from there to the kitchen where it could have ignited, that the blue Duster was at the house when the shots were fired, that the defendant was driving the blue Duster when he was arrested in North Carolina, that he had taken a shower with his clothes on, and that there was a possibility that he had had blood on his clothes. Defendant contends that he left the house shortly after his wife and her father arrived. He speculates that the murders were committed by someone who arrived after he left. However, there is no evidence that anyone else arrived before the shots were heard.

Reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury's determination, we find that it was sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to find the defendant guilty of both murders beyond a reasonable doubt. Crawford v. State, 245 Ga. 89 (1) (263 SE2d 131) (1980); Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). This enumeration of error is without merit.

15. Defendant's remaining enumerations of error relate to the sentencing phase of his trial. He contends that because of three instances of improper argument by the district attorney his sentences to death must be reversed. His first complaint concerns the district attorney's argument: "Whether or not we argue or we think that the defendant may or may never get out of jail is not for us to say, but you as jurors have to look at punishment that meets the crime. It is as simple as that."

The defendant moved for a mistrial on the ground that this argument contravened Code Ann. 27-2206, which provides: "No attorney at law in a criminal case shall argue to or in the presence of the jury that a defendant, if convicted, may not be required to suffer the full penalty imposed by the court or jury, because pardon, parole, or clemency of any nature may be granted by the Governor, State Board of Pardons and Paroles, or other proper authority vested with the right to grant clemency. If counsel for either side in a criminal case should so argue to the jury, opposing counsel shall have the right to immediately request the court to declare a mistrial; and in which case, it shall be mandatory upon the court to declare a mistrial; and upon failure so to do, same shall constitute reversible error. This section shall be construed as setting forth regulations in addition to those provided for in section 24-3319 and section 81-1009." The trial court overruled the motion for mistrial.

The purpose of the statute is to prevent prosecutors from arguing in essence that the jury should give a more severe sentence to compensate for possible pardon, parole, or other clemency. Upon objection to argument which contravenes this statute, a mistrial is mandatory. Dicta to the contrary in Spraggins v. State, 243 Ga. 73 (1) (252 SE2d 620) (1979), vacated and remanded on other grounds, 446 U. S. 961 (1980), is contrary to the statute and will not be followed.

At issue, here, however, is whether the district attorney's comment contravened the statute. The district attorney made no reference to pardon, parole or other clemency. We find that his argument does not contravene the statute. Redd v. State, 242 Ga. 876 (4) (252 SE2d 383) (1979); Mason v. State, 236 Ga. 46 (7) (222 SE2d 339), cert. denied, 428 U. S. 910 (1976).

Defendant also complains of two other remarks made by the district attorney in his closing argument. He contends that the district attorney went outside the record in arguing: "[E]very day that I sit down on the third floor and I look at four thousand felons come in, there are those cases that deserve a little bit of mercy, and there are those cases where the element of mercy should be involved, but then there are those cases, Ladies and Gentlemen, where mercy is sought after, and you know in your heart and in your mind that from the evidence that mercy will be thrown back in your face"; and in arguing that capital punishment saves lives and is a "form of self defense." Were this not a death penalty case, these enumerations of error would present nothing for review since no objection to these remarks was made. McAllister v. State, 231 Ga. 368 (1) (202 SE2d 54) (1973); Scott v. State, 229 Ga. 541 (6) (192 SE2d 367) (1972).

Because this is a death penalty case, and the allegedly improper argument occurred in the sentencing phase of the trial, we have reviewed these remarks and determined that they were not so inflammatory and prejudicial as to mandate setting aside the death penalty on the basis that it was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. Code Ann. 27-2537 (c) (1); Potts v. State, 241 Ga. 67 (15) (243 SE2d 510) (1978).

16. Defendant enumerates as error several aspects of the trial court's charge in the sentencing phase of his trial. First, he contends that Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U. S. 420 (100 SC 1759, 64 LE2d 398) (1980), holds that a charge which recites the aggravating circumstance established by Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (7), that the murder was "outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman in that it involved torture, depravity of mind, or an aggravated battery to the victim," without explaining any of these terms, results in "standardless and unchanneled imposition of death sentences in the uncontrolled discretion of a basically uninstructed jury. . . ." Godfrey v. Georgia, supra, 446 U. S. at 429. [17]

While we do not read Godfrey as holding that no death sentence imposed on the basis of this aggravating circumstance may stand absent clarifying instructions by the trial court, we find it unnecessary to decide that question here because there was no request for clarifying instructions. Moreover, all of the terms in Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b)(7) are words of ordinary significance which require no explication, with the exception of "aggravated battery." "Aggravated battery" is a crime defined by statute. Code Ann. 26-1305. In this case, the trial court charged the definition of aggravated battery as provided in that Code section.

Defendant enumerates error on the trial judge's failure to charge without request that the aggravated battery must occur before death. See Hance v. State, 245 Ga. 856 (3) (268 SE2d 339) (1980). Just as we do not agree that the trial court must, at least absent request, clarify the meaning of Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (7), we do not agree that the trial court must charge without request that aggravated battery must occur before death. The jury clearly would understand this from the definition of aggravated battery given in charge.

Defendant also enumerates as error the trial court's submission to the jury of the aggravating circumstance established by Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (2) with reference to the murder of Gerrit Van Leeuwen. That section provides "The offense of murder . . . was committed while the offender was engaged in the commission of another capital felony. . . ." The charge complained of follows: "The murder of Gerritt Willem Van Leeuwen was committed while the offender was engaged in the commission of another capital felony, to wit, the murder of Linda Van Leeuwen Gilreath." Focusing on the words "while . . . engaged in the commission of another capital felony," defendant argues that Code Ann. 27 2534.1 (b) (2) only applies where the accompanying capital felony is a "continuing offense," such as armed robbery. He urges that a murder cannot be accomplished while one is "in the commission" of another murder. [18] We find this construction of Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (2) excessively narrow and decline to adopt it. Strickland v. State, 247 Ga. 219, 230-31 (275 SE2d 29) (1981); Peek v. State, 239 Ga. 422, 431 (238 SE2d 12) (1977), cert. denied, 439 U. S. 882 (1978). This enumeration is without merit, as is the enumeration which asserts that this aggravating circumstance cannot be applied under the evidence here because it is not possible to know which victim was shot first.

17. Defendant's final objection to the charge of the trial court is that the trial court erred in charging as follows: "If there are no aggravating circumstances found to exist unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt, then fix the sentence punishment at life." Defendant contends this statement would have led the jury to believe it was up to the defendant to disprove the aggravating circumstances before a life sentence would be authorized. We cannot agree.

This sentence was excerpted from the last paragraph of the charge, which reads as follows: "Now, go down here to Count Number Two. If you find one or more of the aggravating circumstances do exist unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt, there again then you would determine whether or not you recommend to the mercy of the Court or recommend life imprisonment or whether you recommend the death penalty. Bear in mind that anything and everything this Court has said, under no circumstances conceivable do you have to render a death penalty recommendation. Y'all understand that, so you go out now, consider whether these aggravating circumstances exist, and if they don't, just fix life imprisonment as to Count One and Two. If they exist as to Count One, if aggravating circumstances exist as to Count One, then you determine whether it will be life imprisonment or a death penalty. Come down to count Two. If there are no aggravating circumstances found to exist unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt, then fix the sentence punishment at life. If you find one or more of these aggravating circumstances under Count Two listed as B and C in the notice of aggravating circumstances, then you would determine whether or not you would recommend them to the mercy of the Court or recommend a life sentence or whether you would recommend the death penalty. Do you understand?" Having reviewed the entire charge and the portion objected to in context, we find no merit in this enumeration of error.

18. Defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for mistrial as to the sentencing phase of the trial. Defendant moved for mistrial at the time sentence was imposed on Monday, March 3, 1980, the trial having been concluded on Friday, February 29, 1980. In so moving, defendant's counsel stated: "If it please the Court, on Friday evening at approximately midnight when the Jury brought back the death sentence in this case, I observed, and I state in my place at this time that I observed that at least five and possibly six of the women jurors on this jury were sobbing and seemed to be in great emotional distress. The emotional distress continued while the sentence was read by the clerk of this court and even thereafter in the hallways. . . ."

The trial court overruled the motion, stating, "at the time of the death sentence, each juror was polled and I didn't notice anything in particular. I noticed that some of them obviously may have been crying, but they certainly were not in the jury box, and that was also true when they came out with a verdict of guilty, so I don't think that we had a situation here at all that was real emotional from the standpoint of anything displayed in the courtroom, and I will overrule your motion."

Even assuming that several jurors were crying as and immediately after the death penalty verdict was announced, this does not show, as defendant asserts, that the death penalty was "imposed under the influence of passion [or] prejudice. . . ." Code Ann. 27-2537 (c) (1). Such behavior tends rather to show that the jurors appreciated the enormity of their decision. The jury having been polled, the trial court did not err in overruling the motion for mistrial and the alternative motions that the defendant either be sentenced to life or granted a new trial as to sentencing, or that the jurors be reconvened for a hearing to determine whether the death sentences were rendered under the influence of passion.

19. In four enumerations of error, Gilreath contends that, as to each murder, the evidence does not support the jury's finding that the murders were "outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman in that [they] involved torture, depravity of mind, or an aggravated battery to the victim." Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (7). In support of this contention, he relies on Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U. S. 420, supra. We disagree with his contention that this case is indistinguishable from Godfrey. In Godfrey, each victim was shot only once, except for the shooting the bodies were untouched, and the defendant remained at the scene. Here Linda Gilreath was shot six times; her father was shot four times.

According to the medical examiner, a forensic pathologist, although each of Linda's six wounds was fatal, each would not render her unconscious instantaneously. In fact, as the defendant established on cross examination, depending on which wound was inflicted first, she would have been able to scream after being shot. [19] As for her father, the wound to his leg was not fatal, although it rendered his leg useless; the wound to his chest was fatal, but not necessarily instantaneously; the two wounds to his head were fatal and would have rendered him instantly unconscious. Additionally, gasoline was poured over the bodies and although it was not ignited, since a pilot light was burning in the kitchen the defendant may well have expected it to ignite after he left the scene. Thus the evidence supports the jury's finding of Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (7) as to each murder. Hance v. State, supra, 245 Ga. 856.

20. Defendant contends that because under Code Ann. 26-3102 the trial court must sentence a defendant to death where the jury finds a statutory aggravating circumstance and recommends death, while where a defendant pleads guilty, the trial court may sentence the defendant to life imprisonment or death, Code Ann. 26-3102 unconstitutionally burdens his right to a jury trial. He relies on United States v. Jackson, 390 U. S. 570 (88 SC 1209, 20 LE2d 138) (1968). In Jackson, the Supreme Court held unconstitutional a portion of a federal statute because it provided that "In an interstate kidnapping case where the victim has been liberated unharmed, the defendant's assertion of the right to jury trial may cost him his life, for the federal statute authorizes the jury -- and only the jury -- to return a verdict of death." Id. at 572.

The Georgia statute does not create such a dilemma since a defendant may be sentenced to death by a jury, or by a judge upon a plea of guilty. Code Ann. 26-3102, 27-2528. See Moore v. State, 233 Ga. 861 (213 SE2d 829) (1975), cert. denied, 428 U. S. 910 (1976); Fair v. State, 240 Ga. 142 (7), supra. In sum, we find no merit in this enumeration of error. Likewise we find no merit in the enumeration of error contending that the death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment and is thus proscribed by both the United States and the Georgia constitutions. Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U. S. 153 (96 SC 2909, 49 LE2d 859) (1976).

21. As required by Ga. L. 1973, p. 159, et seq., (Code Ann. 27-2537 (c) (1-3)), we have reviewed the death sentences in this case. We have considered the aggravating circumstances found by the jury and the evidence concerning the crime and the defendant pursuant to the mandate of the statute. We conclude that the sentence of death imposed in this case was not imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice or any arbitrary factor. See Divisions 15 and 18.

The jury found the following aggravating circumstances: (a) the murder of Linda Van Leeuwen Gilreath was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman in that it involved torture, depravity of mind and an aggravated battery to the victim (Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (7)); (b) the murder of Gerrit Willem Van Leeuwen was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman in that it involved torture and depravity of mind, and aggravated battery to the victim (Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (7)), and (c) the murder of Gerrit Willem Van Leeuwen was committed while the offender was engaged in the commission of another capital felony, to wit: the murder of Linda Van Leeuwen Gilreath (Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (2)).

During the guilt-innocence phase of the trial, the jury found the defendant guilty of two counts of murder. The imposition of the death penalty where the evidence as to guilt is circumstantial is not unconstitutional. Nelson v. State, 247 Ga. 172 (15) (274 SE2d 317) (1981); see also the cases cited in the concurring opinion in Nelson. We find that the evidence factually substantiates and supports the findings of guilt and the aggravating circumstances by a rational trier of fact beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, supra; Hance v. State, supra. See Divisions 14 and 19, above.

In reviewing the death penalty in this case, we have considered the cases appealed to this court since January 1, 1970, in which a death or life sentence was imposed. Cases selected for comparison include those involving a death sentence or those involving a life sentence for domestic homicides, that is, where the victim was a girlfriend, spouse or ex-spouse of the perpetrator or a relative of the girlfriend, spouse or ex-spouse. As we noted in Tyler v. State, 247 Ga. 119, 126 (274 SE2d 549) (1981), "although lesser sentences than death are frequently imposed in domestic murder cases, it does not follow that the death penalty would not be authorized for the murder of one spouse by another under any circumstances," citing Dix v. State, 238 Ga. 209 (232 SE2d 47) (1977). Some of the most vicious homicides have been perpetrated by family members against one another. Since January 1, 1970, juries throughout the state have given the death penalty in six domestic murder cases. See Appendix. Thus, domestic murders are not "a capriciously selected group of offenders" within the proscription of Gregg v. Georgia, supra, 428 U. S. at 199. In two such cases in which the death penalty was returned, as in the instant case, the defendants had no prior record.

The nine multiple murder cases selected for comparison likewise illustrate that the death penalty is imposed in such cases. (Two such cases, Smith v. State, 236 Ga. 12 (222 SE2d 308) (1976), and Strickland v. State, 247 Ga. 219 (275 SE2d 29) (1981), were also considered as "domestic" cases.)

In sum, we find that the similar domestic and multiple murder cases listed in the Appendix support the affirmance of the death penalty. The defendant's sentence to death for murder is not excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases considering both the crime and the defendant.

*****

APPENDIX.

Sirmans v. State, 229 Ga. 743 (194 SE2d 476) (1972); Gregg v. State, 233 Ga. 117 (210 SE2d 659) (1974); Floyd v. State, 233 Ga. 280 (210 SE2d 810) (1974); Chenault v. State, 234 Ga. 216 (215 SE2d 223) (1975); Smith v. State, 236 Ga. 12 (222 SE2d 208) (1976); Burt v. State, 236 Ga. 815 (225 SE2d 248) (1976); Dix v. State, 238 Ga. 209 (232 SE2d 47) (1977); Alderman v. State, 242 Ga. 151 (249 SE2d 524) (1978); Mulligan v. State, 245 Ga. 266 (264 SE2d 204) (1980); Addendum -- 245 Ga. 881 (268 SE2d 351) (1980); Fair v. State, 247 Ga. 119 (274 SE2d 549) (1981); Strickland v. State, 247 Ga. 219 (275 SE2d 29) (1981).

CORRECTIONS.

Page 83, line 37: Change "25" to "24."

Page 181, line 12: Change, "302" to "1302."

Page 289, line 2: Change "Wills" to "Willis."

*****

Notes:

1. When Dempsey Wolfenbarger solicited the aid of the police he was acting for the most part on information supplied by his wife. She testified that she had told her husband that Linda's father, Gerrit Van Leeuwen, had come to her home, where Linda was staying, about 12:30 p.m. on May 11th. He came in the blue Duster to get Linda to come home to talk to her husband and pick up her personal belongings. Linda and her father left for the Gilreath residence in the blue Duster at about 1:30 p.m. It takes about ten minutes driving time to reach the Gilreath home from the Wolfenbarger home. Linda said she'd be back in time to pick Dempsey Wolfenbarger up at work at 3:30 p.m. About 2:30 p.m., Mrs. Wolfenbarger began phoning the Gilreath home but got no answer. Mrs. Wolfenbarger asked a friend, Shirley Harrell, to pick Dempsey up at work. Mrs. Harrell passed the Gilreath residence coming and going; she told the Wolfenbargers that she saw Fred Gilreath's red truck and Gerrit Van Leeuwen's gold Volkswagen in the driveway, but she did not see the blue Duster.

2. Mr. Wolfenbarger had told Cpl. Davis the Gilreaths had two children. The officers were not aware that Linda Gilreath and Shirley Harrell had taken the children to Seneca, South Carolina, the day before to stay with Linda's sister.

3. Deal was assisted by Detective Tressell. At least two other officers were at the scene.

4. A forensic serologist from the State Crime Laboratory testified that she examined these shorts and found a stain which could have been blood. Because the sample was inadequate, it could not be positively identified.

5. The neighbor was able to fix the time because he arrived at home about 1:30 and his stepson came home from school at 2:30 or 2:40. He knew the shots occurred in the interim.

6. Officer Davis had testified that, when he arrived at the Gilreath residence on May 11th, in addition to the gold Volkswagen and the red pickup, there was a green or off-green Duster on blocks in the driveway.

7. David Bridges was called as a witness by the state. When asked if the defendant appeared to have been drinking before arriving at the liquor store, he responded "I really couldn't tell you." He then explained that he had previously been with the defendant when he was drinking and he couldn't notice any difference in him when he had a drink or two, adding that he appeared to hold his liquor well.

8. Although we have discussed the entry and activity of Detective Deal and those police officers who arrived after Davis and Rogers had preliminarily secured the scene, we note defendant's sole objection was to the entry by Davis and Rogers.

9. The evidence relating to their seizure is the following testimony by Detective Deal: "This was purported to be Mr. Gilreath's cabin. I went to it for the purposes of obtaining a description of the property so I could get a search warrant for it. On walking to it, we observed it and were standing out. There was an old road that went down to it and we had to walk down it to get to the cabin. We got there. We were standing out front. The front door was open and there were several different shotgun and .30-30 caliber cartridge cases lying out in the road area there, and there was also some .22 caliber cartridge cases laying out there." Detective Deal then identified the exhibits as having been "recovered from that driveway" and "collected in that drive out front."

10. The only case we have found involving the defendant's presence while an oath was administered is Gray v. State, 229 Ga. 808 (194 SE2d 479) (1972). The oath involved there was that given to the jury selected to try the case, and the issue of defendant's right to be present was not reached because he was brought in mid-oath whereupon the trial court interrupted the proceedings and had the jury sworn in the defendant's presence.

11. This is an updated version of the "Private Slovik syndrome" argument. See Ross v. State, 238 Ga. 445 (233 SE2d 381) (1977).

12. The defendant did argue to the jury: "The buck stops right here, Ladies and Gentlemen. The only person who can sentence this man is you. It stops right on this bar. If that situation occurred that I just described to you [another person later confessing], it wouldn't be [the prosecutor's] fault that the wrong man went to the electric chair. He would say 'Oh, the Jury did that,' because you are the only ones who can do it." (In this connection, see division 18 which indicates that some jurors were crying when they returned the death penalty verdict.)

13. This case was tried before the effective date of Ga. L. 1980, p. 1388; Code Ann. 27-1302, providing for production of defendant's statements.

14. The first day of trial was February 26, 1979. February 25 was consumed by voir dire and other pretrial matters.

15. After the defendant filed his motion to compel disclosure of exculpatory material, the trial court conducted an in camera inspection of the district attorney's file and then sealed and transmitted copies of the material inspected to this court. We have reviewed that material and determined that no exculpatory material was withheld from the defendant.

16. Jerry Roddy's statement, which is discussed in division 7, supra, was of course included within the terms of this request.

17. We note that in the case before us the trial court's charge of this aggravating circumstance used "and" instead of "or" throughout. On the other hand, in Godfrey, supra, the district attorney stated to the jury that "torture" and "aggravated battery" were not involved and the jury found only that "the offense of murder was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman."

18. In support of this theory, the defendant cites Godfrey v. Georgia, supra, 446 U. S. at 433, n. 15: "Georgia does not, as do some States, make multiple murders an aggravating circumstance, as such." We do not believe that in making that comment the United States Supreme Court was construing Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (2) as being inapplicable to multiple murders.

19. The medical examiner theorized, in his reconstruction of the scene, that Linda Gilreath was first shot five times by the .30-30 lever action rifle, with the shots moving up her body; her father then walked in and was shot in the leg by the same weapon. Her father was then shot in the chest by the shotgun, following which Linda Gilreath was shot in the face by the shotgun. Finally, her father was shot twice in the head by the .22 caliber rifle.

 
 

234 F.3d 547

Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Frederick J. Head, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 97-8500

Federal Circuits, 11th Cir.

December 13, 2000

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. (No. 92-02253-1-CV-JOF), J. Owen Forrester, Judge.

Before TJOFLAT, EDMONDSON and BLACK, Circuit Judges.

EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner, Fred Marion Gilreath, Jr., was convicted of two murders and sentenced to death by a Georgia court.1 Petitioner brought this habeas petition in federal district court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his convictions and sentence on several grounds. Among other things, Petitioner alleged that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing because his trial counsel failed to present mitigating evidence. The district court rejected Petitioner's claims and denied relief. We affirm.2

I.

A.

In May 1979, after twelve years of marriage, Petitioner and Linda Gilreath separated. After the separation, Petitioner remained in the Gilreaths' home; and Linda stayed in her mother's home. On the afternoon of 11 May 1979, Linda -- accompanied by her father, Gerritt Van Leeuwen3 -- returned to the Gilreaths' home to retrieve some personal belongings. Linda and her father drove to the Gilreaths' home in a blue Plymouth.

Later that afternoon, police officers discovered the bodies of Linda and her father inside the Gilreaths' home. Linda had been shot five times with a .30-30 caliber rifle and once in the face with a .12 gauge shotgun. Linda's father had been shot once with a .30-30 caliber rifle, once with a .12 gauge shotgun, and twice with a .22 caliber rifle. Both bodies were covered in gasoline. When the police officers arrived at the Gilreaths' home, they did not see Petitioner or the blue Plymouth.

That night, police officers located Petitioner in North Carolina and arrested him. Petitioner was driving the blue Plymouth. Inside the car, officers found a box of .22 caliber ammunition. And, at Petitioner's cabin in North Carolina, officers found several shotgun shell cases, .30-30 caliber cartridge cases, and .22 caliber cartridge cases. Ballistics tests later linked the cases found at Petitioner's cabin to the murder weapons.

B.

A grand jury indicted Petitioner for the murders of Linda Gilreath and Gerritt Van Leeuwen. Thereafter, the State filed a notice of intent to seek the death penalty. The State identified three aggravating circumstances to support the death penalty.4

Petitioner retained Atlanta lawyer Tyrus R. Atkinson, Jr. ("trial counsel") as defense counsel. Petitioner told trial counsel that Petitioner was innocent of the two murders. Trial counsel accordingly prepared a vigorous defense for the guilt phase of Petitioner's trial.5

Trial counsel also prepared for the sentencing phase of trial. Trial counsel spoke with Petitioner before trial about capital sentencing and about mitigating evidence. Petitioner identified several potential witnesses -- Petitioner's relatives, friends, and coworkers -- who could testify about Petitioner's character, his past, his problems with alcohol, and his mental condition.6 Trial counsel obtained Petitioner's military service, medical, and mental health records. Trial counsel also retained mental-health professionals to examine Petitioner. And, trial counsel entertained the prospect of calling Petitioner himself to testify at sentencing. Trial counsel, before trial began, anticipated presenting at least some of this mitigating evidence at sentencing.

At some point, however, Petitioner changed his mind about presenting mitigating evidence at sentencing. During the guilt phase of trial, Petitioner instructed trial counsel to present no mitigating evidence at sentencing.

Trial counsel attempted to persuade Petitioner to allow the presentation of mitigating evidence. Trial counsel, from time to time, spoke with Petitioner during trial about mitigating evidence. And, after the jury retired for guilt-phase deliberations, trial counsel met with Petitioner in private to discuss mitigating evidence some more. At this meeting, trial counsel reminded Petitioner that mitigating evidence of Petitioner's mental condition and of Petitioner's alcoholism was available for sentencing. But, Petitioner refused to reconsider his instructions to trial counsel. To confirm Petitioner's wishes, trial counsel had Petitioner sign a document instructing trial counsel to present no mitigating evidence.7

Less than one hour after trial counsel met with Petitioner about mitigating evidence, the jury returned a guilty verdict. The trial court immediately conducted a sentencing hearing. As the sentencing hearing began, trial counsel briefly spoke once again in the courtroom with Petitioner about mitigating evidence. Petitioner continued to desire that trial counsel present no mitigating evidence. Trial counsel accordingly proceeded with the sentencing phase and presented no mitigating evidence.8

II.

Petitioner contends that his trial counsel was ineffective at sentencing for failing to present certain mitigating evidence.9 To succeed on his ineffective assistance claim, Petitioner must show: (1) that trial counsel's performance was objectively unreasonable; and (2) that trial counsel's unreasonable performance actually prejudiced Petitioner. See Chandler v. United States, 218 F.3d 1305, ___ (11th Cir. 2000) (en banc); see also Williams v. Taylor, 120 S. Ct. 1495, 1511 (2000); Darden v. Wainwright, 106 S. Ct. 2464, 2473 (1986); Strickland v. Washington, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 2064 (1984). We can pretty easily conclude that Petitioner has failed to demonstrate prejudice. We accordingly affirm the district court's rejection of Petitioner's ineffective assistance at sentencing claim without deciding the question of reasonable performance.

Petitioner argues that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present mitigating good character evidence at sentencing.10 Petitioner admits that Petitioner instructed trial counsel to present no mitigating evidence. But, Petitioner asserts that trial counsel should not have followed Petitioner's instructions because Petitioner's waiver of his right to present mitigating evidence was not a knowing and intelligent one. Petitioner argues that trial counsel should have done more to facilitate a knowing and intelligent decision by Petitioner. In particular, Petitioner says that trial counsel should have: (1) advised Petitioner more fully about good character evidence for mitigation; and (2) requested that the sentencing hearing be continued overnight so that Petitioner could think about his decision some more. We conclude that the lack of these things did not prejudice Petitioner.11

Petitioner has the burden of proving that Petitioner was prejudiced by trial counsel's performance. See Smith v. Robbins, 120 S. Ct. 746, 764 (2000); see also Thompson v. Nagle, 118 F.3d 1442, 1452 (11th Cir. 1997). The Supreme Court has explained that habeas petitioners must affirmatively prove prejudice because "[a]ttorney errors come in an infinite variety and are as likely to be utterly harmless in a particular case as they are to be prejudicial." Strickland, 104 S. Ct. at 2067.

"[T]hat the error had some conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding" is insufficient to show prejudice. Id.; see also Tompkins v. Moore, 193 F.3d 1327, 1336 (11th Cir. 1999). Instead, 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. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome." Strickland, 104 S. Ct. at 2068; see also Glock v. Moore, 195 F.3d 625, 635-36 (11th Cir. 1999).

In the circumstances of this case, we think that -- to establish prejudice -- Petitioner actually must make two showings. First, Petitioner must show a reasonable probability that -- if Petitioner had been advised more fully about character evidence or if trial counsel had requested a continuance -- Petitioner would have authorized trial counsel to permit such evidence at sentencing. 12 Second, Petitioner must establish that, if such evidence had been presented at sentencing, a reasonable probability exists that the jury "would have concluded that the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death." Strickland, 104 S. Ct. at 2069; see also Mills v. Singletary, 63 F.3d 999, 1026 (11th Cir. 1995); Bolender v. Singletary, 16 F.3d 1547, 1560-61 (11th Cir. 1994); Bush v. Singletary, 988 F.2d 1082, 1090 (11th Cir. 1993).

The district court found that no evidence showed that "Petitioner would have changed his directions to his counsel had he been more fully informed about mitigating evidence." We cannot say that, on this record, the district court's finding of fact is clearly erroneous.13 See United States v. Teague, 953 F.2d 1525, 1534-35 (11th Cir. 1992) (en banc) (noting that "[w]e defer to the district court's findings of fact absent a clearly erroneous determination"). Therefore, Petitioner cannot show that trial counsel's failure to advise Petitioner fully about character evidence prejudiced Petitioner at sentencing.

The record also indicates that trial counsel's failure to seek a continuance prejudiced Petitioner in no way at sentencing. Petitioner himself testified, at the state habeas evidentiary hearing, that a continuance would have left unchanged his decision not to call his mother and his children as character witnesses. But, Petitioner did testify that, if the sentencing hearing had been continued overnight, he probably would have permitted trial counsel to call other character witnesses in mitigation, particularly Petitioner's two former employers. Although the district court made no fact finding that Petitioner would have ever allowed trial counsel to call the other mitigating witnesses, we will accept -- for the sake of our discussion -- Petitioner's testimony as true. We, therefore, will consider whether the other character witnesses probably would have changed the outcome of the sentencing hearing.

We are unconvinced that a reasonable probability exists that the testimony of the other character witnesses would have changed the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances. The State's evidence of aggravating circumstances was strong. During the guilt phase, the State's evidence showed these circumstances: that Linda Gilreath was shot once in the face at close range with a .12 gauge shotgun; that Linda was shot four times with a .30-30 caliber rifle; that Gerritt Van Leeuwen was shot five times with three different firearms; that both victims were killed in their own home; and that both victims' bodies were covered in gasoline after the killings. The jury found that three aggravating circumstances did exist: (1) that the murder of Linda Gilreath was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman; (2) that the murder of Gerritt Van Leeuwen was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman; and (3) that the murder of Gerritt Van Leeuwen was committed while Petitioner was engaged in the commission of another capital felony.

And, the jury -- despite Petitioner's failure to present mitigating evidence at sentencing -- did have several mitigating factors to consider. During the guilt phase and in argument at sentencing, trial counsel brought out that the evidence was not doubtless on guilt, that Petitioner had no criminal record, that Petitioner was the father of two small children, and that Petitioner had problems with alcohol. The testimony of the character witnesses now offered by Petitioner -- witnesses who would have testified that Petitioner was generally a good man when sober, was a good worker, and was a good father -- seems too weak to have likely changed the outcome of the sentencing. Petitioner has failed to show the necessary prejudice.

III.

We conclude that Petitioner, on this record, has failed to establish that he was prejudiced by trial counsel's failure to advise Petitioner about mitigating character evidence and by trial counsel's failure to seek a continuance. The district court accordingly did not err in rejecting Petitioner's ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing claim. All of Petitioner's other claims similarly lack merit. Petitioner is entitled to no habeas relief. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.

*****

FOOTNOTES

[1]

Petitioner's convictions and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal. See Gilreath v. State, 279 S.E.2d 650 (Ga. 1981), cert. denied, 102 S. Ct. 2258, reh'g denied, 102 S. Ct. 3500 (1982). Petitioner twice sought post-conviction relief in state court, but Petitioner's state habeas petitions were rejected. See Gilreath v. Kemp, 107 S. Ct. 292, reh'g denied, 107 S. Ct. 605 (1986) (denying certiorari on first state habeas petition); Gilreath v. Zant, 112 S. Ct. 240, reh'g denied, 112 S. Ct. 629 (1991) (denying certiorari on second state habeas petition).

[2]

Only Petitioner's claim that his trial counsel was ineffective at sentencing for failing to present mitigating evidence warrants discussion. Petitioner does raise several other claims on appeal. In particular, Petitioner raises these other claims: (1) that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on intent and improperly failed to instruct the jury on intoxication, heat of passion, and voluntary manslaughter; (2) that the trial court improperly instructed the jury at sentencing on mitigating circumstances; (3) that Petitioner's trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the trial court's jury instructions at sentencing; (4) that the prosecutor's argument at sentencing was improper and rendered Petitioner's sentencing fundamentally unfair; (5) that Petitioner's trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the prosecutor's argument at sentencing; (6) that Petitioner's trial counsel was ineffective at sentencing for conceding Petitioner's guilt and the existence of one aggravating circumstance; (7) that Petitioner's trial counsel was ineffective at sentencing for failing to object to the trial court's submission of the State's notice of aggravating circumstances to the jury; (8) that Petitioner's Eighth Amendment right to an individualized sentencing hearing was violated by his trial counsel's failure to present mitigating evidence and by the trial court's failure to inquire on the record about the decision to present no mitigating evidence; and (9) that the district court erred at the habeas evidentiary hearing by excluding the depositions of Dr. Barry M. Crown and Dr. Barry F. Scanlon.

Petitioner's other claims on appeal lack merit. The district court dealt with those issues without error. So, we reject Petitioner's other claims without discussion and affirm the judgment of the district court on those claims.

[3]

Linda's father also lived in the Gilreaths' home.

[4]

The State alleged that the murders of both (1) Linda Gilreath and (2) Gerritt Van Leeuwen were outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman. See O.C.G.A. § 17-10-30(b)(7). The State also alleged that the murder of (3) Van Leeuwen was committed while the offender was engaged in the commission of another capital felony. See O.C.G.A. § 17- 10-30(b)(2).

[5]

Among other things, trial counsel interviewed many witnesses, engaged an investigator to interview other witnesses, searched for other persons who might have had a motive to kill the victims, and retained an expert to determine the time of the killings.

[6]

Although trial counsel did speak with most of these potential witnesses before trial, trial counsel did not conduct detailed interviews with all of the witnesses. Trial counsel, at the habeas evidentiary hearing, explained that - because he had known Petitioner, Petitioner's family, and several of Petitioner's friends and coworkers for several years - he already was familiar with the kind of good character testimony that the witnesses might offer. And, trial counsel explained that - because he previously had represented Petitioner when Petitioner was institutionalized on a state lunacy warrant - he already was aware of Petitioner's mental health problems and Petitioner's problem with alcohol.

[7]

The document stated this message:

I hereby direct my attorney, Ty R. Atkinson, Jr., not to call any witnesses or place into evidence any documents in the mitigation phase of my murder trial. I understand that Dr. Julius Ehick, Hubert Helton, and my mother are standing by to testify to my mental condition and past problems with alcohol but I desire they not be called.

[8]

Trial counsel did present argument against the imposition of the death penalty. Among other things, trial counsel argued residual doubt about Petitioner's guilt and that Petitioner had no criminal history. Trial counsel also argued that - if Petitioner killed Linda Gilreath and Gerritt Van Leeuwen - he committed the murders without premeditation, in the heat of passion, and while intoxicated. And, trial counsel pointed to Petitioner's two young children and asked the jury to exercise mercy.

[9]

We review Petitioner's claim of ineffective assistance de novo. Holladay v. Haley, 209 F.3d 1243, 1247 (11th Cir. 2000); Williams v. Head, 185 F.3d 1223, 1226-27 (11th Cir. 1999). We, however, defer to the district court's findings of fact unless clearly erroneous. Holladay, 209 F.3d at 1247; Williams, 185 F.3d at 1226-27.

[10]

Petitioner also raises several other kinds of mitigating evidence that trial counsel did not present at sentencing. First, Petitioner says that trial counsel should have introduced evidence of Petitioner's mental condition and of Petitioner's problems with alcohol at sentencing. But, just before the guilty verdict was announced and the sentencing hearing commenced, trial counsel did meet with Petitioner and did discuss specifically with Petitioner the availability of mitigating evidence about Petitioner's mental condition and about Petitioner's alcohol abuse. Trial counsel had adequate opportunity to advise Petitioner about these kinds of mitigating evidence. Although Petitioner was advised specifically to allow the introduction of such evidence, Petitioner instructed trial counsel to present no such mitigating evidence. We readily conclude that trial counsel - by relying on Petitioner's instruction not to present mitigating mental health and alcohol abuse evidence - did not perform in an unreasonable manner. See United States v. Teague, 953 F.2d 1525, 1533 (11th Cir. 1992) (en banc); see also Alvord v. Wainwright, 725 F.2d 1282, 1288-89 (11th Cir. 1984); Foster v. Strickland, 707 F.2d 1339, 1343-44 (11th Cir. 1983). We accordingly do not consider these kinds of mitigating evidence in our prejudice inquiry.

Second, Petitioner argues that trial counsel should have presented evidence of Petitioner's troubled childhood. Even assuming that trial counsel's performance was unreasonable, Petitioner clearly was not prejudiced by trial counsel's failure to present this kind of evidence. Petitioner was more than forty years old at the time of the murders, and "evidence of an abusive and difficult childhood would have been entitled to little, if any, mitigating weight." Marek v. Singletary, 62 F.3d 1295, 1300-01 (11th Cir. 1995); see also Mills v. Singletary, 63 F.3d 999, 1025 (11th Cir. 1995); Bolender v. Singletary, 16 F.3d 1547, 1561 (11th Cir. 1994).

[11]

About this kind of evidence, because we conclude that Petitioner has failed to show prejudice, we need not and do not reach the issue of performance. See Wright v. Hopper, 169 F.3d 695, 707 (11th Cir. 1999); see also Marek v. Singletary, 62 F.3d 1295, 1299 (11th Cir. 1995); Horsley v. State of Ala., 45 F.3d 1486, 1493 (11th Cir. 1995). Instead, we will just assume for the purposes of this appeal that trial counsel should have advised Petitioner more fully about good character evidence and that trial counsel should have requested a continuance.

[12]

In other words, to show prejudice, Petitioner must show that - but for his counsel's supposedly unreasonable conduct - helpful character evidence actually would have been heard by the jury. If Petitioner would have precluded its admission in any event, Petitioner was not prejudiced by anything that trial counsel did. Cf. Roe v. Flores-Ortega, 120 S. Ct. 1029, 1038 (2000) ("If the defendant cannot demonstrate that, but for counsel's deficient performance, he would have appealed, counsel's deficient performance has not deprived him of anything, and he is not entitled to relief."); Horsley v. State of Ala., 45 F.3d 1486, 1494-95 (11th Cir. 1995) (requiring petitioner to show that witnesses not presented at trial actually were available and willing to testify at time of trial); Gray v. Lucas, 677 F.2d 1086, 1093 (5th Cir. 1982) (noting that "[when] a defendant alleges that his counsel's failure to investigate prevented his counsel from making an informed tactical choice, he must show that knowledge of the uninvestigated evidence would have altered his counsel's decision).

[13]

At the state habeas evidentiary hearing, Petitioner was asked whether additional discussions with trial counsel might have persuaded Petitioner at the pertinent time to permit trial counsel to present character witnesses. Petitioner responded: "I would probably have said no."

 

 

 
 
 
 
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