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Karl HAMMOND
Rape - Robbery
Double-meat cheeseburger, french fries, chocolate milk and cake or
pie.
Last words:
"Don't let it hurt me; pray
for me."
The New York Times
June 22, 1995
Yesterday, Karl Hammond was put to death by injection in Huntsville,
Tex., for the 1986 rape and murder of an F.B.I. secretary.
"I just want to say that I know it's so hard for
people to lose someone they love so much," Mr. Hammond, 30, told
witnesses. "I think it's best for me to just say nothing at all."
Mr. Hammond was executed for the 1986 murder of
Donna Lynn Vetter, 21, a secretary in the San Antonio office of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Mr. Hammond, who had been released under
mandatory supervision after a rape and burglary conviction, broke
into Ms. Vetter's apartment and raped and stabbed her. She was found
alive but died before reaching a hospital.
"It's too quick," Ms. Vetter's mother, Virginia,
said before the execution. "He would need to suffer a little bit
more according to what he gave Donna, which was a lot of suffering."
Mr. Hammond's lawyer, Jordan Steiker, said his
client had not received a fair trial. He said the trial lawyer had
not told the jury that Mr. Hammond had been denied access to anti-psychotic
medication after leaving prison and that could have contributed to
his behavior. He also contended that Mr. Hammond had suffered
physical and sexual abuse as a child.
498 U.S. 1301
111 S.Ct. 902
112 L.Ed.2d 1026
Robert MADDEN, Applicant,
v.TEXAS.
David Wayne DeBLANC, Applicant, v. TEXAS.
Alvin Urial
GOODWIN, Applicant, v. TEXAS.
Karl HAMMOND, Applicant, v. TEXAS.
Nos. A-626 to A-628, and A-635.
Feb. 20, 1991.
Justice SCALIA, Circuit Justice.
In each of these four cases, a
lawyer affiliated with the Texas Resource Center, on behalf of
an applicant convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death,
has requested a 60day extension of time in which to file a
petition for a writ of certiorari to the Court of Criminal
Appeals of Texas.
In No. A-626, the Texas court
issued an opinion affirming the conviction and sentence of
Robert Madden on September 12, 1990, 799 S.W.2d 683, and denied
a petition for rehearing on November 28, 1990. The stated reason
for the present extension request is that Madden's appellate
counsel "has never before prepared a certiorari petition on a
capital case" and requires the assistance of the Resource Center
"to assist him and provide him with sufficient guidance to
ensure that the important constitutional issues in [the] case
are properly researched and presented to this Court." Madden is
scheduled to be executed on February 28, 1991.
In No. A-627, the Texas court
issued an opinion affirming the conviction and sentence of David
Wayne DeBlanc on October 24, 1990, 799 S.W.2d 701 and denied a
petition for rehearing on November 28, 1990. The stated reason
for the present extension request is that "[f]ollowing the
affirmance of [applicant's] conviction and sentence on appeal,
Eden E. Harrington of the Texas Resource Center learned that [applicant's]
appellate counsel, Craig Washington, would no longer represent
Mr. DeBlanc because Mr. Washington is now a member of the United
States Congress. The Texas Resource Center has tried to locate
new volunteer counsel for [applicant] since November, 1990, but
no new counsel has yet been located." DeBlanc's execution has
not yet been scheduled.
In No. A-628, the Texas court
issued an opinion affirming the conviction and sentence of Alvin
Urial Goodwin on October 24, 1990, 799 S.W.2d 719 and denied a
petition for rehearing on November 28, 1990. The stated reason
for the present extension request is that "[f]ollowing the
affirmance of [applicant's] conviction and sentence on appeal, [applicant's]
appellate counsel, John D. McDonald, notified Eden E. Harrington
of the Texas Resource Center that he could no longer represent
Mr. Goodwin due to conflicting employment. The Texas Resource
Center has tried to locate new volunteer counsel for [applicant]
since learning of Mr. McDonald's withdrawal, but no new counsel
has yet been located." Goodwin's execution has not yet been
scheduled.
In No. A-635, the Texas court
issued an opinion affirming the conviction and sentence of Karl
Hammond on October 31, 1990, 799 S.W.2d 741 and denied a
petition for rehearing on November 28, 1990. The stated reason
for the present extension request is that "[i]n November, 1990
the Texas Resource Center received notice that [applicant's]
appellate attorney, David Weiner, was withdrawing from Mr.
Hammond's case and could not prepare his petition for certiorari.
Since that time, the Texas Resource Center has attempted to
recruit new counsel for Mr. Hammond but has been unsuccessful.
Therefore, undersigned counsel intends to prepare a petition for
writ of certiorari on [applicant's] behalf and the Texas
Resource Center will continue to try to locate new counsel to
assist petitioner with his future appeals. Undersigned counsel,
however, cannot prepare the petition for writ of certiorari . .
. because of his father's recent death." Hammond's execution has
not yet been scheduled.
The law states that "[t]he
time for appeal or application for a writ of certiorari to
review the judgment of a State court in a criminal case shall be
as prescribed by rules of the Supreme Court." 28 U.S.C. §
2101(d). Those rules provide that "[a] petition for a writ of
certiorari to review a judgment in any case, civil or criminal,
entered by a state court of last resort . . . shall be deemed in
time when it is filed with the Clerk of this Court within 90
days after the entry of judgment," Rule 13.1. This period may be
extended by a Justice of this Court "for good cause shown" for a
period not to exceed 60 days, Rule 13.2, but an application for
such an extension "is not favored," Rule 13.6. Any such
application "must be submitted at least 10 days before the
specified final filing date," Rule 30.2; applications "received
less than 10 days before the final filing date" will not be
granted "except in the most extraordinary circumstances,"
ibid (emphasis added).
The 90-day period for filing a
petition for a writ of certiorari in each of these cases expires
on February 26, 1991. Each of the present extension applications
was sent via overnight courier on February 15, 1991 (the Friday
preceding a three-day holiday weekend), and received by the
police officer on duty on Saturday, February 16, the last
possible day under the 10-day rule.
In my view, none of these
applications, as an original matter, would meet the standard of
"good cause shown" for the granting of an extension. In No.
A-626, the desire of Madden's appellate counsel for the
assistance of the Texas Resource Center is entirely unremarkable;
all petitioners can honestly claim that they would
benefit from additional advice and consultation. Nor does the
excuse put forward in the other three cases, namely, withdrawal
of appellate counsel, automatically justify an extension of
time. There is no indication in any of them that the withdrawal
was a reasonablyunforeseeable occurrence.
Indeed, in DeBlanc's case, No.
A-627, the factor requiring withdrawal (membership in the United
States Congress) was of such a nature that it must have been
anticipated before November 28, the date rehearing was denied.
The application in Hammond's case, No. A-635, sets forth as
additional justification the death of counsel's father—which
would in some circumstances qualify as "good cause shown." The
counsel in question, however, is not one who has been working
diligently on the petition and has been prevented by the death
from completing his work, but rather an attorney affiliated with
the Resource Center who now, because no other counsel has been
found since the unexplained withdrawal of appellate counsel, "intends
to prepare" applicant's petition. There is no indication why
some other attorney at the Resource Center could not have
undertaken this last-minute task, nor why the task has been left
to the last minute.
All of these are capital
cases. That class of case has not, however, been made a generic
exception to our 90-day time limit, and I do not think I have
authority to create such an exception through the power
conferred upon me to grant case-by-case extensions for "good
cause shown." As I have stated above, moreover, I do not
consider that the withdrawal of appellate counsel automatically
constitutes "good cause," without regard to its basis or
predictability. There is even greater need to reject such an
automatic rule in capital cases than there is elsewhere, since
no lawyer should be burdened with the knowledge that, if he were
only to withdraw from the case, his client's appeal could be
lengthened and the execution of sentence, in all likelihood,
deferred.
I became Circuit Justice for
the Fifth Circuit at the beginning of the current Term. Because
I have not previously had an opportunity in this capacity to set
forth my views on application of the "good cause" standard of
Rule 13.2; because it is possible that those views are more
restrictive of extensions than what the Fifth Circuit bar has
been accustomed to; and because these are capital cases; I find
good cause to grant 30-day extensions in Nos. A-627, A-628, and
A-635. I shall not grant extensions in similar circumstances
again. I find inadequate cause to extend the filing period in
No. A-626. In that case, Madden's execution date has been set
for February 28, 1991, two days after the end of the regular 90-day
filing period. Extending the period in which to file a petition
for a writ of certiorari to a point after an established
execution date is either futile or will disrupt the State's
orderly administration of justice. I do not consider it
appropriate for me to take such action as a Circuit Justice.