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Flint Gregory HUNT
5 days after
Flint Gregory Hunt (c.
1958 – July 2, 1997) was a convicted murderer
executed by the State of Maryland in 1997.
Hunt shot Baltimore police
officer Vincent Adolpho twice in an East Baltimore
alley on November 18, 1985 after Adolpho spotted him
running from a stolen Cadillac. He was captured five
days later at a bus station in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
In June 1986, a Baltimore jury
convicted Hunt of first degree murder, and he was
sentenced to death the following month. Eleven years
later, Hunt was executed by lethal injection at the
Maryland State Penitentiary, at the age of 38.
June 11, 1996
The case of Flint Gregory Hunt is not just a lost
cause; it's also a bad cause.
Hunt, a car thief who turned cop killer when
cornered in a Baltimore alley 11 years ago, has spent the past 10
years on Maryland's death row. Until recently, his date with the
executioner was sidetracked by an appeals process that mocks the
notion of any meaningful relationship between crime and punishment.
Hunt's most recent date with the executioner -
set for an undisclosed day this week - was put off by a state
appeals court's decision to consider anew questions of possible
errors in his trial. If, as expected, this last-ditch effort to
avoid his court-ordered fate fails, Hunt likely will end up in the
gas chamber before the year ends.
This reality has made the 36-year-old murderer
the most recent cause celebre for death penalty opponents, who argue
that Hunt's sentence is proof of the disparate way the criminal
justice system treats blacks and whites in capital murder cases.
Hunt is black. Vincent Adolfo, the cop he admits
killing, was white. There are 17 men on death row in Maryland. Three
of them are white. Fourteen are black, including 12 whose victims
were white. In a state where the vast majority of murders are black-on-black
crimes, these numbers are prima facie evidence to some of the
disparate treatment blacks get in capital murder cases.
But as individual examples go, Flint Gregory
Hunt's case is a lousy one. Maryland has 24 elected state's
attorneys, one for each of its 23 counties and the city of
Baltimore, where Hunt was twice tried, convicted and sentenced to
death. Then as now, Baltimore was a majority-black city with a black
chief prosecutor and a jury system dominated by blacks. To argue
disparate treatment in Hunt's case is to complain that a black-dominated
criminal justice system, in a black-dominated city, was unfair to a
black man accused of killing a white cop.
Sure, black juries are tough on black killers.
You only need to spend some time in the courtrooms of majority-black
cities like Detroit, Atlanta, Memphis, Richmond, Washington, D.C.,
and Baltimore to know this. But it hardly follows that they are
lenient on white murderers - the necessary finding to support a
legal argument of disparate treatment.
Since Maryland enacted its death penalty law in
1978, four cops - three whites and one black - have been killed in
Baltimore. Two of the white officers were killed by blacks, one by
someone white. The lone black cop killed in Baltimore in the past 18
years was gunned down by a black drug dealer. In each case,
prosecutors sought the death penalty.
But only in Hunt's trial did a jury return the
verdict prosecutors wanted. Maryland's death penalty law allows
juries to consider mitigating circumstances in deciding whether to
give a convicted first-degree murderer the death sentence or life in
prison. If there is an injustice in his case, it is that Flint
Gregory Hunt is still alive.
In principle, I support the death penalty in
first-degree murder cases. But in practice, I think the criminal
justice system's handling of them often leaves much to be desired.
I'm convinced there is compelling evidence to support the charge
that some jurisdictions treat blacks who kill whites more harshly
than they do others convicted of murders. But not in Baltimore,
where largely black juries twice ordered Hunt to die in the gas
chamber.
If the disparate treatment argument is to work
anywhere, it cannot be used everywhere. On this point, Flint Gregory
Hunt's case has no merit. It was the two bullets he pumped into
Vincent Adolfo that landed him on death row, not the racial
imbalances that persist in our criminal justice system.
The Race to Kill in Maryland
By Michael Stark
June 1998
Volume 35 Number 5
On July 2, 1997, the State of Maryland executed
Flint Gregory Hunt—the State’s first non-consensual execution in
over 35 years. The execution went forward despite defense lawyers’
efforts to convince the courts and Governor Parris Glendening to
spare Hunt’s life. The event shocked many local residents, some of
whom did not realize Maryland had a death penalty.
Hunt’s death was a grim reminder that Maryland is
not exempt from a nationwide trend towards increased use of the
death penalty. In fact, 1997 saw a record 74 executions in the
United States: the highest number since the death penalty was
reinstated in 1976. Now, 3,387 people sit on death row in this
country, a larger number than at any other time in history.
The execution caused great concern among many
religious and community leaders, who were disturbed by evidence of
racism and bias in Maryland’s death penalty. They hoped this
attention would move Governor Glendening to stop the execution; it
was Glendening, after all, who in 1996 had instituted a Governor’s
taskforce to investigate the issue of racism in Maryland’s death
penalty.
However, a closer look at Glendening shows he is
completely committed to the “tough on crime” program of more police,
increased prison construction, longer sentences, and accelerated
executions that raised public concern in the first place. It was
Glendening who moved the death row population to the Super-Max
prison—the high-tech, $21 million facility that was the subject of a
1996 Department of Justice investigation for civil rights violations.
In fact, the Governor’s task force turned out be
little more than a political whitewash of the issue. While the
appointed panel found that racism in Maryland’s death penalty “was a
matter of legitimate concern,” it did not recommend a moratorium on
executions. Instead, it simply suggested further study of the issue.
Hunt’s execution galvanized the anti-death
penalty community. Abolitionists turned in thousands of signatures
and organized a number of protests to draw attention to the issue.
These efforts culminated in a demonstration on the Saturday before
the execution as well as a gathering of over 200 people outside the
Super-Max on the night of the execution.
Now, one year later, as Maryland prepares to
execute Tyrone X Gilliam, those concerned by racism and Maryland’s
death penalty are again confronted with the same disturbing patterns.
Gilliam sits on death row accused of the 1989 Baltimore County
murder of Christine Doerfler. But no physical evidence proves that
Gilliam is the one who pulled the trigger of the gun that killed the
victim. Half of the State’s case against Gilliam at his trial rests
on the “confession” that he is claimed to have made at the time of
his arrest. However, the arresting officer at the scene testified
that Gilliam, who was suffering from massive head injuries caused by
a car accident and who was high on phencyclidine hydrochloride (PCP),
did not know who or where he was at the time of arrest.
The other half of the case against Gilliam was
the testimony of his two partners. One of the men received a deal
from the prosecution in exchange for fingering Gilliam. Now both men
claim that Gilliam was not the triggerman and that he never even
handled the gun that killed the victim. The prosecution knew about
the contradictory testimony supplied by the arresting officer and
other witnesses at the time of trial, but did not furnish this
evidence to the defense, as required by law.
Throughout the trial, Gilliam’s attorney failed
him again and again. Following his lawyer’s advice, Gilliam waived
his right to a trial by jury; virtually all death penalty attorneys
recommend a trial by jury in cases like Gilliam’s. A trial by a jury
is certain to be a longer and more expensive process, something the
lawyer wanted to avoid. Further, Gilliam’s lawyer never interviewed
two of the prosecution’s key witnesses or even followed up on
promising leads.
During the penalty phase of the trial, the lawyer
did not present as mitigating evidence the extreme poverty under
which the defendant grew up, his history as a victim of sexual,
physical, and emotional abuse, nor his family’s history of
alcoholism and drug addiction. Gilliam’s legal aid was so bad, in
fact, that a federal district judge determined Gilliam had received
ineffective assistance at the penalty phase of his trial and struck
down his death sentence. That decision was subsequently overruled.
The shocking truth is that the poor
representation Gilliam received at trial is typical of most cases in
which a defendant gets the death penalty [See “UN Report Calls for
Halt to U.S. Executions,” Peace Letter, May 1998]. Nationally, over
90 percent of defendants charged with capital crimes are indigent
and cannot afford to hire an experienced criminal defense attorney
to represent them. They are forced to use inexperienced, underpaid
court-appointed attorneys.
Gilliam’s case also falls under the pattern of
extreme racism in Maryland’s death row. Twelve of the fourteen men
on Maryland’s death row are black. Ten of the black prisoners,
including Gilliam, were convicted of killing a white person. And
over 70 percent of those on Maryland’s death row, also including
Gilliam, are convicted of crimes committed in Baltimore County-Baltimore
City’s affluent, mostly white suburb.
Racism in Maryland’s death row is cause for alarm,
and this state is not alone in exhibiting these patterns. Blacks
comprise only 12 percent of the U.S. population but 40 percent of
the prisoners on death row. And although Blacks constitute 50
percent of all murder victims, 85 percent of the victims in crimes
tried as death penalty cases are white. In addition, a comprehensive
Georgia study found that killers of whites are 4.3 times more likely
to receive a death sentence than killers of Blacks.
Despite all the evidence, appeals courts have
rejected Gilliam’s arguments that he did not receive a fair trial.
Now only the U.S. Supreme Court and a petition to Governor
Glendening stand between Gilliam and the State’s death chamber.
Far from being an unfortunate side effect of the
death penalty, racism has always been at the heart of this
institution. Much like the lynchings in the Old South, modern-day
executions rely on the same stereotypes and hatred. In order to gain
public approval for executions, politicians attempt to dehumanize
the people who are on death row. They dredge up racist and anti-poor
stereotypes and portray prisoners as subhumans who represent a
constant danger to the public. Repeated over and over is the
sentiment that these men and woman are not worthy of sympathy and
deserve to die.
In this context, it is easy to understand why the
young, ambitious prosecutor in Greg Hunt’s trial, Kurt Schmoke (now
Mayor of Baltimore), referred to those proceedings as “the perfect
case.” Hunt, a poor black man accused of killing a white police
officer, was an easy target.
The 1972 Furman v. Georgia Supreme Court case
decision abolished the death penalty for four years, on the grounds
that capital punishment was rife with racial disparities. Twenty
years later, those disparities are as glaring as ever. The death
penalty in Maryland is racist, and it cannot be fixed. It is time to
stand up and, in the words of Tyrone X Gilliam’s appeals lawyer Jay
Nickerson, “Tell Governor Glendening that at the end of the 20th
century, here on the richest nation on the earth, it is time for
rich, educated, white politicians to stop telling poor black men
when to die.”
Michael Stark is D.C. Coordinator of the
Campaign to End the Death Penalty and Member of the International
Socialist Organization (ISO). Contact the Campaign at (301) 587-1469
or cedp_dc@hotmail.com. The phone number for the ISO is (202)
387-0960. Also, there is a Tyrone X Gilliam hotline number in
Baltimore: (410) 574-7775.
57 F.3d 1327
FlintGregoryHunt,
Petitioner-appellant, v.
Eugene M. Nuth, Maryland Correctional Adjustment Center And Maryland
Penitentiary; J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Attorney General of the
State Of Maryland, Respondents-appellees(two Cases)
No. 94-4006
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued: March 8, 1995
Decided: June 27, 1995
OPINION
RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:
Flint Gregory Hunt, a death row inmate awaiting
execution in Maryland, appeals a number of issues arising from the
district court's denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus,
which contested his capital conviction and sentence for murdering a
Baltimore City policeman. Hunt also appeals the court's denial of
his motion to vacate the judgment and to amend his habeas petition
under Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. We affirm.
I.
In this proceeding Hunt seeks collateral federal
relief from the first degree murder conviction and sentence of death
he received in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City in Maryland.
The facts surrounding the murder are fully set
forth in opinions by the Court of Appeals of Maryland. See Hunt
v. State , 540 A.2d 1125, 1126-27 (Md. 1988) ( Hunt I );
Hunt v. State , 583 A.2d 218, 225 (Md. 1990) ( Hunt II
), cert. denied , (1991). For background, we summarize the
facts and procedural history pertinent to this appeal.
On November 18, 1985, Officer Vincent Adolfo, a
Baltimore City policeman, noticed a Cadillac with a missing window
covered with plastic. The car contained four occupants. He made a
routine inquiry and learned that the car had been stolen. Two
officers in separate patrol cars responded to his request for
back-up and blocked the path of the on-coming Cadillac. Upon nearing
the roadblock, the driver, later identified as Hunt, jumped out of
the car while it was still moving and ran up a nearby alley.
Officer Adolfo pursued Hunt into the alley. The
officer apprehended Hunt, positioned him against a wall, and tried
to handcuff him. Hunt pushed away, knocking the officer off balance.
Hunt then pulled a single-action .357 Magnum revolver from his
jacket and shot Officer Adolfo in the chest at close range. Within
seconds, as the officer reeled from the first shot, Hunt shot him
again, this time in the back. Hunt fled the scene of the crime.
Officer Adolfo was pronounced dead at the hospital.
Hunt's sister testified at trial that Hunt had
seemed fine that night, although his girlfriend, Deborah Powell,
said that Hunt had been taking drugs earlier that afternoon and
appeared "high" when he had left her. Hunt was apprehended in a
Tulsa, Oklahoma, bus station five days later.
In June 1986, a jury convicted Hunt of first
degree murder, using a handgun in the commission of a crime of
violence, and unlawfully carrying a handgun.
In July 1986, the same jury imposed a sentence of
death on Hunt for the murder conviction. The trial judge imposed
consecutive punishments of twenty years imprisonment for the charge
of using a handgun and three years imprisonment for the charge of
carrying a handgun.
In Hunt I , the Court of Appeals of
Maryland affirmed the convictions and the twenty-year sentence for
the use of a handgun charge.
The court, however, vacated the death sentence
and ordered a new sentencing hearing because victim impact evidence
admitted during the sentencing hearing violated Booth v. Maryland
, (1987).
The court also vacated the conviction for
carrying a handgun because the charge merged with the other handgun
charge.
The state circuit court conducted a second
capital sentencing hearing before another jury between November 29
and December 21, 1988. This jury also sentenced Hunt to death.
The Court of Appeals of Maryland affirmed the
death sentence in Hunt II , and the United States Supreme
Court denied Hunt's petition for certiorari review, (1991).
On June 1, 1992, Hunt filed in the state circuit
court a petition for post-conviction relief, which the court denied
on April 13, 1993. Hunt next applied to the Court of Appeals of
Maryland for discretionary review of the circuit court's denial of
postconviction relief. The Court of Appeals denied Hunt's
application and his motion for reconsideration.
On February 28, 1994, the Supreme Court denied
Hunt's petition for certiorari review of the denial of state
post-conviction relief. Hunt v. Maryland , 114 S. Ct. 1206
(1994).
On May 13, 1994, Hunt filed a federal habeas
corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the United States District
Court for the District of Maryland. The district court denied Hunt's
amended habeas petition on June 27, 1994. Hunt v. Smith , 856
F. Supp. 251 (D. Md. 1994) ( Hunt III ).
In September 1994, the Office of the Federal
Public Defender for the District of Maryland, appointed by this
Court on July 29, 1994 as a consultant for Hunt in the pending
appeal, filed in the district court a motion to vacate judgment
pursuant to Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The
State agreed, at Hunt's request, not to file a response unless the
district court asked for one.
The district court denied Hunt's Rule 60(b)
motion on September 9, 1994. This Court consolidated Hunt's appeal
from that decision with his appeal from the district court's
original judgment denying habeas relief.
II.
We first
address the claims that the district court
denied in Hunt's
habeas petition. Hunt
contends that several errors by his trial
and resentencing counsel deprived him of his
Sixth Amendment right to effective
assistance of counsel. In order to prevail,
Hunt must satisfy
both the performance and prejudice prongs of
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
687-96, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 2064-65, 80 L.Ed.2d
674 (1984). First, he must establish that
his counsel's performance fell below an
objective standard of "reasonableness under
prevailing professional norms." Id. at
687-88, 104 S.Ct. at 2065. Second, he must
demonstrate that he was prejudiced by his
counsel's deficient performance such 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." Id. at 694, 104 S.Ct. at 2068.
Strickland
instructs us to review counsel's
representation "on the facts of the
particular case, viewed as of the time of
counsel's conduct." Id. at 690, 104 S.Ct. at
2066. Furthermore, "counsel is strongly
presumed to have rendered adequate
assistance and made all significant
decisions in the exercise of reasonable
professional judgment." Id. Determinations
of historical facts by the state court are
presumptively correct, and the district
court's factual findings are reviewed for
clear error, but "both the performance and
prejudice components of the ineffectiveness
inquiry are mixed questions of law and fact"
subject to de novo review. Id. at 698, 104
S.Ct. at 2070; Fields v. Attorney General of
Md., 956 F.2d 1290, 1297 n. 18 (4th Cir.),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 113 S.Ct. 243,
121 L.Ed.2d 176 (1992).
Hunt contends that
with competent representation at trial he
could have been convicted of second degree
murder instead of first degree murder and
thus would have been ineligible for the
death penalty under Maryland law. See
Md.Ann.Code art. 27, Sec. 412(b)-(c).
Hunt first argues
that his trial counsel erred by reserving
opening statement until the close of the
State's case. Hunt's
experts on trial strategy testified at the
post-conviction hearing that reserving
opening statement is uncommon and highly
criticized by experts in trial advocacy.
Nonetheless, we agree with the district
court that such a decision is fundamentally
tactical and "within the range of reasonably
competent representation."
Hunt III, 856 F.Supp. at 257
Hunt next faults
his trial counsel for failing to develop a
single cohesive defense theory.2Hunt argues that
because the evidence that he had shot
Officer Adolfo was overwhelming, his trial
counsel only confused or distracted the jury
by challenging the criminal agency aspect of
the State's case and, instead, should have
focused on whether he was guilty of first or
second degree murder. Hunt's
experts testified that his trial counsel
should have conceded that
Hunt committed the crime and should
have argued that the murder was not willful,
deliberate, or premeditated and that
Hunt was
voluntarily intoxicated when he shot the
officer. Trial counsel's decisions regarding
the selection of the best defense plan,
however, involved tactics well within
professionally reasonable conduct that
should not be second-guessed by this Court
under Strickland.
More
specifically, Hunt
challenges the performance of his trial
counsel during the cross-examination of
State witnesses who had testified as to the
timing of the two gun shots.
Hunt argues that
his trial counsel should have attempted to
discredit Aaron McNair, who provided
unfavorable testimony that
Hunt ran behind Officer Adolfo
between shots, and should not have impeached
Donna McGuigan,3
who provided favorable testimony that the
shots occurred in rapid succession. Our
review of the record, however, indicates
that trial counsel did attempt to impeach
McNair regarding criminal charges pending
against him and the assistance he had
received from the prosecution. Joint
Appendix (J.A.) 60-62. Furthermore,
McGuigan's testimony at trial contradicted
her earlier statement to the police and was
inconsistent with the evidence regarding the
location of the officer's body. Therefore,
we agree with the post-conviction court that
these criticisms by Hunt's
experts "constitute a grading of the quality
of counsel's cross-examination. None of the
suggested errors or omissions is of such
magnitude as to place the conduct outside of
prevailing professional norms." J.A. 731-32.4
Hunt also contends
that his trial counsel failed to marshal
favorable evidence corroborating
Hunt's intoxication
from his drug use at the time of the
shooting. Hunt
claims that his trial counsel failed to
introduce the testimony of Cynthia Stokes, a
passenger in the Cadillac who told police
that Hunt was "flighty
as from cocaine." J.A. 747. However, trial
counsel reasonably could have considered
Stokes an unreliable witness because she
barely knew Hunt
and because she had been convicted of many
crimes involving dishonesty. Moreover,
because Deborah Powell and Angelo Williams
testified that Hunt
had used a variety of drugs on the day of
the shooting, Stokes' additional testimony
would have been merely cumulative. Thus,
trial counsel's tactical decision not to
develop Stokes' testimony was reasonable and
did not prejudice him.
Hunt also claims
that his trial counsel failed to investigate
and introduce into evidence a hand rolled
cigarette butt containing plant material
found in the ashtray of the Cadillac. A
police lab report identified the material as
marijuana, but the state's chemist did not
test for the presence of phencyclidine (PCP).5
The post-conviction court found that, at
best, the presence of PCP in the cigarette
butt could not be shown. J.A. 734-35. In any
event, given the abundance of testimony
pertaining to Hunt's
drug use on the day of the shooting,
Hunt cannot
demonstrate the requisite prejudice to
satisfy Strickland.6
Although
Hunt persuasively
argues that he did not receive the best
possible representation at trial, Strickland
only requires adequate counsel judged by a
standard of reasonableness in light of the
prevailing norms of practice. Strickland,
466 U.S. at 687-88, 104 S.Ct. at 2064-65.
Thus, we affirm the district court's ruling
that trial counsel's decisions, although
readily assailable by experts in trial
advocacy equipped with twenty-twenty
hindsight, were essentially tactical choices
within the realm of reasonable assistance of
counsel. Furthermore, we conclude that
Hunt also has
failed to demonstrate that he was prejudiced
by trial counsel's conduct to the extent of
undermining confidence in the outcome of the
trial.
B.
We now
turn to Hunt's
claim that errors by his resentencing
counsel constituted ineffective assistance
under Strickland. First,
Hunt argues that resentencing counsel
failed to introduce relevant mitigating
evidence that could have swayed the jury
from imposing a death sentence. The jury
knew that Hunt had
been convicted of a handgun offense, but
resentencing counsel neglected to inform the
jury of the twenty-year sentence
Hunt received for
the offense. See Harris v. State, 312 Md.
225, 539 A.2d 637, 649-50 (1988) (holding
that a jury could consider other sentences
imposed on a defendant for offenses related
to the capital crime as mitigating
circumstances). Resentencing counsel clearly
had no strategic or tactical reason to omit
this evidence. In fact,
Hunt's counsel attempted to correct
the mistake after the close of evidence, but
the court refused to instruct the jury on
the sentence Hunt
received or reopen the evidence so counsel
could do so.7
Hunt contends that
this error prejudiced him in two ways. First,
he speculates that members of the jury may
not have imposed the death sentence if they
had known that he already had received a
twenty-year sentence that could be served
consecutively to a life sentence imposed for
the murder charge. Although this could have
been a consideration for the jury regarding
Hunt's future
dangerousness, the jury would not have known
whether the twenty-year sentence would run
consecutively or concurrently to the life
sentence because the judge would make that
determination after the jury determined
Hunt's sentence for
the murder charge. See
Hunt II, 583 A.2d at 226. The Court
of Appeals of Maryland calculated that an
additional twenty-year sentence, if served
concurrently with the life sentence, would
have delayed Hunt's
eligibility for parole by only one year. See
id. at 227. Therefore, we agree with the
district court that Hunt
was not prejudiced by resentencing counsel's
error because the negligible difference in
parole eligibility did not establish a
reasonable probability of a different
outcome. Cf. Simmons v. South Carolina, ---
U.S. ----, ---- - ----, 114 S.Ct. 2187,
2193-94, 129 L.Ed.2d 133 (1994) (plurality
opinion) (noting that the crucial
significance of parole ineligibility in a
capital sentencing is its relationship to
future dangerousness and the ultimate
objective of incapacitating the offender
from inflicting future harm on society).
Hunt's second claim
of prejudice derives from his related
contention that the jury may have punished
him for both the murder and the handgun
charge because they were unaware of any
sentence imposed for the handgun charge. See
Harris, 539 A.2d at 650. Although the
district court did not address this
particular argument, our review of the
record indicates that Hunt
has not demonstrated a reasonable
probability that he was prejudiced in this
manner. Because the severity of
Hunt's capital
crime, murdering a police officer, eclipses
that of a handgun offense, we find it highly
unlikely that the existence of the handgun
offense caused the jury to impose a sentence
of death that it would not have imposed
otherwise. Therefore, we find no reasonable
probability that the jury improperly imposed
a death sentence in part to punish
Hunt for the
handgun offense.8
Hunt also contends
that resentencing counsel failed to present
alternatives less onerous and prejudicial
than leg-iron shackling to ensure public
safety during the resentencing proceedings.
The court had responded to the concerns of
Judge Edward Angeletti, the chair of the
court's security committee, about
Hunt's ability to
escape from a street-level courtroom with
windows by ordering him shackled midway
through the resentencing hearing.9
Resentencing counsel cross-examined Judge
Angeletti and vigorously objected to the
shackling, but Hunt
faults his counsel for not suggesting an
alternative such as moving to a windowless
courtroom on an upper level of the
courthouse. Given resentencing counsel's
efforts to protest the shackling and Judge
Angeletti's reasonable safety concerns, we
agree with the district court that counsel's
failure to suggest an alternative did not
violate the performance prong of Strickland.
Hunt next claims
that the state court violated his
constitutional rights by refusing to charge
the resentencing jury that they had the
option of sentencing him to life without
parole under Md.Ann.Code art. 27, Sec. 412.
The district court swiftly dismissed this
argument as bordering on frivolous because
the Court of Appeals of Maryland has
determined as a matter of Maryland law that
the life without parole sentence cannot be
imposed retroactively on persons convicted
before July 1, 1987, the effective date of
the governing statute.
Hunt III, 856 F.Supp. at 256 (citing
Collins v. State, 318 Md. 269, 568 A.2d 1,
15(Md.), cert. denied, 497 U.S. 1031, 110
S.Ct. 3296, 111 L.Ed.2d 805 (1990)).
Hunt challenges the
ruling in Collins by attempting to raise
constitutional claims that a federal court
can review.
Hunt first suggests
that the Maryland legislature gave him the
right to the instruction for a life without
parole sentencing option by enacting the
statute creating that option in 1987, and
that the Maryland courts deprived him of
this liberty interest in violation of due
process by not construing the statute to
apply retroactively. However, when the Court
of Appeals of Maryland held in Collins that
the statute did not apply retroactively, a
holding to which this Court is bound, see
Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 67-68, 112
S.Ct. 475, 479-80, 116 L.Ed.2d 385 (1991),
it implicitly held that the Maryland
legislature did not create the liberty
interest for those defendants convicted
before the effective date of the statute.
Therefore, Hunt
cannot claim that the Maryland courts
deprived him of a liberty interest without
due process.
Hunt also
challenges the statute on equal protection
grounds. He argues that the statute, if it
applies only prospectively, creates an
irrational distinction between unsentenced
defendants who committed crimes before the
statute's effective date and those who
committed crimes after the effective date.
However, we conclude that a rational basis
exists for the distinction. The Maryland
legislature could have been concerned with
avoiding ex post facto claims. For example,
if the statute applied retroactively, a
defendant who committed a crime before the
statute's effective date and received a
sentence of life without parole could argue
that he received a greater sentence than if
he had received only a life sentence with
the possibility of parole.
Although
Hunt would not have
been disadvantaged by retroactive
application because life without parole
clearly is a lesser penalty than a death
sentence, the legislature could have
rationally been concerned about defendants
who did not receive a death sentence and
could raise an ex post facto claim. The
Court of Appeals of Maryland also has ruled
that a defendant cannot waive the ex post
facto defense to insulate his sentence from
appeal or collateral attack. White v.
Maryland, 322 Md. 738, 589 A.2d 969, 974
(1991). Therefore, because the Maryland
legislature had a rational basis for not
enacting the statute to apply retroactively,
we reject Hunt's
claim that Maryland's life without parole
sentencing statute violates the Equal
Protection Clause.
We next
turn to Hunt's
claim involving Maryland's system of
appellate review. In particular, he argues
that Maryland's discretionary review of
post-conviction proceedings10
violates his Eighth Amendment rights and his
rights to due process and equal protection
under the Fourteenth Amendment. The district
court rejected these arguments, primarily
because there is no basis for requiring
state courts to afford plenary appellate
review in post-conviction cases.
Hunt III, 856
F.Supp. at 255-56 (citing Jones v. Barnes,
463 U.S. 745, 751, 103 S.Ct. 3308, 3312, 77
L.Ed.2d 987 (1983) (noting that the federal
constitution does not confer a right to a
direct appeal from a criminal conviction)).
Furthermore, because federal habeas review
is largely de novo, the district court
reasoned that additional state court
proceedings probably would add little to the
review of post-conviction claims. Id. at
256.
Although
the Constitution does not require states to
provide a system of appellate review, such
systems that states choose to provide must
comport with due process requirements.
Evitts v. Lucey, 469 U.S. 387, 400-01, 105
S.Ct. 830, 838-39, 83 L.Ed.2d 821 (1985);
Billotti v. Legursky, 975 F.2d 113, 115 (4th
Cir.1992), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 113
S.Ct. 1578, 123 L.Ed.2d 146 (1993). In
Billotti, we ruled that West Virginia's
discretionary appellate review of
convictions did not offend notions of due
process because defendants received an
adequate opportunity to challenge errors
occurring during trial. Billotti, 975 F.2d
at 116. We reasoned that "[t]he Fourteenth
Amendment does not authorize the federal
courts to micromanage state criminal justice
systems.... It is enough that they serve the
needs of the state which adopted them, and
that they afford an ample measure of
procedural fairness to criminal defendants
seeking an appeal." Id. (citations omitted).
Although
Billotti involved a defendant sentenced to
life imprisonment who challenged West
Virginia's system of direct appeals, we find
its reasoning equally persuasive when
applied to a capital defendant's challenge
of Maryland's discretionary post-conviction
system. Maryland provides considerable
procedural protections for criminal
defendants who pursue post-conviction relief
including the right to appointed counsel,
the right to file briefs, and the right to
have the application considered on a formal
appellate record. See Md.Rule 8-204.11
In addition, Hunt
does not explain how an appeal of right
would have improved the post-conviction
court's determinations of his claims. See
Billotti, 975 F.2d at 118. He complains that
the court refused to review only his
ineffective assistance of counsel claim, but,
as the district court observed, he could
raise this claim in a federal habeas
petition. Therefore, we affirm the district
court's rejection of Hunt's
claim that discretionary post-conviction
review in Maryland violates the Due Process
Clause.12
Hunt also raises an
equal protection challenge to Maryland's
system of post-conviction review. He
contends that Maryland improperly
distinguishes between defendants with
constitutional claims cognizable on direct
review, and those with claims that are only
cognizable on post-conviction review. He
claims that this unequal access to appellate
review lacks a rational basis and violates
equal protection guarantees. Thus,
Hunt creates two
classes of claims, rather than two classes
of persons, and argues that these types of
claims must be treated equally by Maryland.
The State, however, has a legitimate
interest in conserving judicial resources
and need not provide the same review for
each type of claim, particularly when
Maryland already provides defendants with
more than the constitutional minimum of
opportunities for review. Therefore, we
reject Hunt's claim
that Maryland's discretionary post-conviction
review system violates the Equal Protection
Clause.
Hunt also appeals
issues concerning the constitutionality of
the methods of execution in Maryland. On
March 25, 1994, Maryland changed its method
of execution from lethal gas to lethal
injection. Md.Ann.Code art. 27, Sec. 71.
Death row inmates, such as
Hunt, who were sentenced to death
before the effective date of the statute
could elect to be executed by lethal gas.
1994 Md.Laws ch. 5, Sec. 2. The refusal to
choose would result in death by lethal
injection. On May 24, 1994, the last day of
the election period, Hunt
chose to be executed by lethal gas.
Hunt first argues
that the Maryland choice provision violates
the Eighth Amendment because forcing a
person to choose the method of his execution
is cruelly inhumane. The Ninth Circuit
recently addressed this issue in Campbell v.
Wood, 18 F.3d 662 (9th Cir.) (en banc), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 114 S.Ct. 2125, 128
L.Ed.2d 682 (1994). In Campbell, the
defendant challenged the Washington death
penalty statute as cruel and unusual because
it allowed him to elect lethal injection
instead of death by hanging. The Ninth
Circuit upheld the statute and concluded
that:
We cannot say the State
descends to inhuman depths by allowing the
condemned to exercise such an election. We
believe that benefits to prisoners who may
choose to exercise the option and who may
feel relieved that they can elect lethal
injection outweigh the emotional costs to
those who find the mere existence of an
option objectionable.
Id. at
688. We find the reasoning of the Campbell
court persuasive, and we therefore hold that
the Maryland choice provision does not
violate the Eighth Amendment.
Hunt next argues
that Maryland's death penalty statute is
unconstitutional because it requires a
choice between two methods of execution that
are inherently cruel and unusual.13Hunt first claims
that executions by lethal gas violate the
Eighth Amendment. For support, he cites
Fierro v. Gomez, 865 F.Supp. 1387 (N.D.Cal.1994).
In Fierro, the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
declared California Penal Code Sec. 3604
unconstitutional to the extent that it
requires or permits execution by lethal gas14
because evidence strongly suggested that
pain experienced by those executed by this
method was cruel and unusual and because
society had overwhelmingly rejected this
method of execution. Id. at 1413-15.15
Despite
the court's thorough opinion, we decline
Hunt's invitation
to become the first court to follow the
reasoning in Fierro. Lethal gas currently
may not be the most humane method of
execution--assuming that there could be a
humane method of execution--but the
existence and adoption of more humane
methods does not automatically render a
contested method cruel and unusual. Before
Fierro, a number of courts had held that
execution by lethal gas did not violate the
Eighth Amendment. See, e.g., Gray v. Lucas,
710 F.2d 1048, 1060-61 (5th Cir.), cert.
denied, 463 U.S. 1237, 104 S.Ct. 211, 77
L.Ed.2d 1453 (1983); State v. Lopez, 175
Ariz. 407, 857 P.2d 1261, 1271 (1993), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 114 S.Ct. 1578, 128
L.Ed.2d 221 (1994); Calhoun v. State, 297 Md.
563, 468 A.2d 45, 68-70 (1983), cert. denied,
466 U.S. 993, 104 S.Ct. 2374, 80 L.Ed.2d 846
(1984); Billiot v. State, 454 So.2d 445, 464
(Miss.1984), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1230,
105 S.Ct. 1232, 84 L.Ed.2d 369 (1985).
Furthermore, we agree with the district
court in Hunt's
case that "graphic descriptions of the death
throes of inmates executed by gas are full
of prose calculated to invoke sympathy, but
insufficient to demonstrate that execution
by the administration of gas involves the
wanton and unnecessary infliction of pain."
Hunt III, 856
F.Supp. at 260; see also Campbell, 18 F.3d
at 683.
Hunt also
challenges, for the first time in his reply
brief to this Court, executions by lethal
injection. He claims that such executions
violate federal drug statutes and could
inflict cruel and inhumane treatment as a
result of botched executions.
Hunt's selection of
execution by lethal gas and our
determination that this method is
constitutional, however, renders these
arguments moot. Furthermore, appellate
courts generally will not address new
arguments raised in a reply brief because it
would be unfair to the appellee and would
risk an improvident or ill-advised opinion
on the legal issues raised. United States v.
Caicedo-Llanos, 960 F.2d 158, 164 (D.C.Cir.1992);
see also United States v. Vogt, 910 F.2d
1184, 1198 (4th Cir.1990) (noting, but not
invoking, procedural waiver of issue raised
for first time in defendant's reply brief),
cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1083, 111 S.Ct. 955,
112 L.Ed.2d 1043 (1991). Therefore, we
decline to reach Hunt's
challenges to execution by lethal injection.16
Finally,
we turn to Hunt's
appeal of the district court's denial of his
Rule 60(b) motion, which attempted to
correct his habeas counsel's failure to
include several cognizable claims in his
initial habeas petition. After the district
court denied Hunt's
petition, this Court appointed the Office of
the Federal Public Defender to serve as
Hunt's "consultant."
Upon reviewing Hunt's
case, it was discovered that his habeas
counsel had neglected to raise certain
direct appeal claims in his petition.
Hunt's habeas
counsel clearly did not omit these claims
for strategic purposes,17
and the State concedes that the mistake
resulted from an honest, unintentional
omission. Hunt's
counsel promptly notified the state and
filed a Rule 60(b) motion to vacate the
judgment and to amend the habeas petition.
The
district court denied the motion because
Hunt had not shown
cause for his counsel's failure to include
the claims in the original habeas petition.
The court found that Hunt
had been "represented by competent counsel
on habeas corpus [who had] filed an almost
100 page petition." J.A. 765. The court also
noted that errors by counsel short of
ineffective assistance do not constitute
cause for considering claims omitted from
petitions for collateral relief. Id. (citing
Murray v. Carrier, 477 U.S. 478, 487-88, 106
S.Ct. 2639, 2644-45, 91 L.Ed.2d 397 (1986)).
The court concluded that
Hunt could not show a violation of
the Sixth Amendment because the guarantee
against ineffective assistance does not
apply to post-conviction proceedings,
including federal habeas petitions. Id. (citing
Crowe v. United States,
175 F.2d 799,
801 (4th Cir.1949), cert. denied, 338 U.S.
950, 70 S.Ct. 478, 94 L.Ed. 586 (1950)).
Hunt challenges the
district court's decision to apply the cause
and prejudice abuse of writ standard for
successive habeas petitions under Rule 9(b)
of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in
the United States District Courts18
instead of the more equitable standards of
timeliness, prejudice, and likelihood of
success on the merits under Rule 60(b) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.19
In Jones v. Murray, 976 F.2d 169, 172 (4th
Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 113 S.Ct.
27, 120 L.Ed.2d 951 (1992), this Court
analyzed a Rule 60(b) motion raising
identical grounds for relief as an earlier
habeas petition both as a successive habeas
petition and under traditional Rule 60(b)
principles. However, Jones and other cases
cited by Hunt did
not determine whether a district court could
properly consider a Rule 60(b) motion only
as an abusive successive habeas petition.
See, e.g., Giarratano v. Procunier, 891 F.2d
483, 487 (4th Cir.1989), cert. denied, 498
U.S. 881, 111 S.Ct. 222, 112 L.Ed.2d 178
(1990); Waye v. Townley, 884 F.2d 762, 764
(4th Cir.), cert. denied, 492 U.S. 937, 110
S.Ct. 29, 106 L.Ed.2d 634 (1989); Williams
v. McKenzie, 576 F.2d 566, 570 (4th
Cir.1978).
The Eighth
Circuit addressed this issue in Blair v.
Armontrout, 976 F.2d 1130 (8th Cir.1992),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 113 S.Ct. 2357,
124 L.Ed.2d 265 (1993). In Blair, the
district court had ruled that new claims
raised by the defendant in his Rule 60(b)
motion constituted an abusive habeas
petition because the defendant had not
established cause and prejudice to excuse
their absence from his first habeas petition.
The Eighth Circuit held that the district
court did not err in treating the Rule 60(b)
motion as a second habeas petition. Id. at
1134 (citing Lindsey v. Thigpen, 875 F.2d
1509, 1511-12, 1515 (11th Cir.1989)).
We agree
with the Eighth Circuit's reasoning and hold
that a district court may properly treat a
Rule 60(b) motion as a successive habeas
petition and require that the defendant show
cause and prejudice for the failure to raise
the claims in an earlier petition.
Hunt's habeas
counsel omitted claims that would have been
cognizable on federal habeas review. The new
claims raised in Hunt's
Rule 60(b) motion were equivalent to
additional habeas claims. Therefore,
Hunt's Rule 60(b)
motion constituted a successive habeas
petition, which the district court properly
analyzed under habeas Rule 9(b).20
Hunt argues in the
alternative that even if the district court
applied the proper standard to his Rule
60(b) motion, he established cause and
prejudice. We review dismissals under habeas
Rule 9(b) for abuse of discretion by the
district court. See Miller v. Bordenkircher,
764 F.2d 245, 248-49 (4th Cir.1985).
Hunt claims that he
satisfies the cause requirement because the
omission of claims by his habeas counsel
amounted to ineffective assistance of
counsel. The Supreme Court has held that "[a]ttorney
error that constitutes ineffective
assistance of counsel is cause." Coleman v.
Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 753-54, 111 S.Ct.
2546, 2567, 115 L.Ed.2d 640 (1991).21
The Court further held that a defendant does
not have a constitutional right to counsel
in state post-conviction proceedings and
cannot allege constitutionally ineffective
assistance in those proceedings. Id. at
755-57, 111 S.Ct. at 2567-69. Although the
Coleman Court did not determine whether a
defendant has a constitutional right to
counsel in federal habeas proceedings, this
Court has held that the Constitution does
not require counsel for defendants who
attack their judgments under 28 U.S.C. Sec.
2255. Crowe,
175 F.2d at 799. This Court also has
noted that "attorney error in an initial
habeas proceeding cannot serve as cause to
review subsequent petitions." United States
v. MacDonald, 966 F.2d 854, 859 n. 9 (4th
Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 113 S.Ct.
606, 121 L.Ed.2d 542 (1992). Because
Hunt had no
constitutional right to an attorney during
his federal habeas proceeding, we find that
the district court correctly ruled that he
could not establish constitutional
ineffective assistance of counsel as cause
excusing his failure to raise claims in his
first habeas petition.22
We note
that Hunt also
fails to demonstrate that he was prejudiced
by the omitted claims. To establish
prejudice, Hunt
must show "not merely that the errors at his
trial created a possibility of prejudice,
but that they worked to his actual and
substantial disadvantage, infecting his
entire trial with error of constitutional
dimensions." United States v. Frady, 456
U.S. 152, 170, 102 S.Ct. 1584, 1596, 71 L.Ed.2d
816 (1982). We have carefully reviewed the
claims that were omitted from
Hunt's habeas
petition and find that none of them
establishes the requisite prejudice.
Therefore,
because Hunt has
not demonstrated cause or prejudice, we hold
that the district court did not abuse its
discretion by denying Hunt's
Rule 60(b) motion.
For the
foregoing reasons, we affirm the district
court's denial of both
Hunt's habeas petition and his Rule
60(b) motion.
In Payne v. Tennessee,
501 U.S. 808, 111 S.Ct. 2597, 115 L.Ed.2d
720 (1991), the Supreme Court overruled
Booth 's exclusion of victim impact
statements
Hunt's
trial counsel argued that the State could
not prove that Hunt
shot Officer Adolfo and, in the alternative,
if Hunt did, he
could not be guilty of first degree murder
because he lacked the required deliberation
or was intoxicated. This Court has held,
however, that the presentation of
inconsistent defenses does not necessarily
constitute ineffective assistance. See Brown
v. Dixon, 891 F.2d 490, 494-95 (4th
Cir.1989) (presenting inconsistent defenses
that the defendant did not commit murders or
that he did them while drunk did not amount
to ineffective assistance), cert. denied,
495 U.S. 953, 110 S.Ct. 2220, 109 L.Ed.2d
545 (1990)
Hunt
also blames his trial counsel for failing to
interview McGuigan before trial. McGuigan,
however, stated that she would not have
spoken with defense counsel. Given
McGuigan's inconsistent statements at trial
and trial counsel's treatment of the witness,
we find that Hunt
has not demonstrated that trial counsel's
failure to try to interview McGuigan was
unreasonable or that it prejudiced him
Hunt
also challenges his trial counsel's cross-examination
of State witnesses Kent Franklin and Officer
Joseph Madden, which elicited unfavorable
testimony regarding Hunt's
previous jail term and his attempted escape
from an officer who apprehended him in
Tulsa. However, as the post-conviction court
observed, most attorneys make some mistakes
during cross-examination. See J.A. 732. We
agree with the post-conviction court that
mistakes made during the cross-examination
of Franklin and Madden did not amount to
ineffective assistance of counsel
For this reason, we also
reject Hunt's claim
of ineffective assistance regarding his
resentencing counsel's failure to
investigate and introduce into evidence the
marijuana cigarette butt as a mitigating
circumstance for sentencing purposes
The court declined to
read resentencing counsel's hastily written
instruction to the jury because the
instruction did not make clear whether the
twenty-year sentence would be served
concurrently or consecutively to the
punishment for first degree murder, a
decision that the judge would make after the
jury determined Hunt's
sentence for the murder charge. See
Hunt II, 583 A.2d
at 226
We note that Harris is
distinguishable because that case involved
the reversal of the sentencing court's
ruling that allowed the State to enter the
presentence report into evidence with the
sentences for related offenses redacted, not
an ineffective counsel claim. Thus, Harris
faced a lower burden of proof than
Hunt, who must
demonstrate a reasonable probability of a
different outcome under Strickland.
Additionally, Harris was convicted for armed
robberies, which were statutory aggravating
factors under Md.Ann.Code art. 27, Sec.
413(d)(10). Therefore, Harris' jury would
have been more likely to consider his
sentences as mitigating circumstances than
Hunt's jury would
have been for the handgun sentence. Finally,
because Harris had a number of other
convictions, including two for armed robbery,
and Hunt only had
one, Harris' jury was much more likely than
Hunt's to sentence
the defendant for both the capital and
related offenses
Judge Angeletti's
concerns were well-founded. As the Court of
Appeals of Maryland concluded, "Hunt
was a significant escape risk. He fled the
scene and left the State after murdering
Officer Adolfo. While in prison, he feigned
an illness so that he would be sent to the
hospital to 'see what my chances were for
freedom.' ... He was twice cited for
possession of weapons [in prison while
awaiting sentencing]."
Hunt II, 583 A.2d at 229
In Maryland, appellate
review of a circuit court's grant or denial
of post-conviction relief requires an
application for leave to appeal. Md.Ann.Code
art. 27, Sec. 645-I; Md.Rules 8-204,
8-306(e); see Williams v. State, 292 Md.
201, 438 A.2d 1301, 1303 (1981)
Maryland also provides an
automatic and mandatory direct appeal in
capital cases. Md.Ann.Code art. 27, Sec.
414; Md.Rule 8-306; see Thanos v. State, 332
Md. 511, 632 A.2d 768, 774 (1993)
Likewise, we reject
Hunt's contention
that the Eighth Amendment requires automatic
appellate review of all claims arising out
of a capital proceeding. We recognize the
need to ensure the reliability in the
imposition of a death sentence, see Ford v.
Wainwright, 477 U.S. 399, 411, 106 S.Ct.
2595, 2602, 91 L.Ed.2d 335 (1986), but we
conclude that Maryland's discretionary
review of postconviction claims does not
impermissibly weaken the reliability in
Hunt's death
sentence
The district court held
that, because Hunt
did not raise this claim during any of the
state court proceedings and did not show
cause or prejudice to excuse his default, he
could not raise the claim on habeas.
Hunt III, 856
F.Supp. at 260. Hunt,
however, contends that he could not have
raised this claim earlier because it
involved a challenge to the Maryland death
penalty statute that was amended after the
state court proceedings. We address the
merits of his argument because we find that
this claim is intertwined with his challenge
to Maryland's choice provision
In 1992, the California
legislature amended Sec. 3604, which
previously had provided for execution only
by lethal gas, to allow executions by lethal
gas or lethal injection. Cal.Penal Code Sec.
3604(a). Persons sentenced to death and
awaiting execution before the operative date
of the amendment could select either method,
with lethal gas as the default method for
those who refused to choose. Id. Sec.
3604(d)
The defendants in Fierro
did not challenge the constitutionality of
execution by lethal injection. Therefore,
the court did not rule on Sec. 3604(d),
which provided that if either method of
execution were held invalid, then death
sentences would be imposed by the
alternative method
Even if we were to
address Hunt's
claims involving lethal injection, we note
that no court thus far has found execution
by this method unconstitutional or in
violation of federal drug statutes. Moreover,
many states have switched to this method
because it is perceived to be a more humane
method of execution
During state
post-conviction proceedings
Hunt was
represented by two private attorneys who
took his case as assigned public defenders.
Although these attorneys had never filed a
habeas petition before, they reluctantly
filed Hunt's
petition. See J.A. 763. They had not handled
Hunt's trial,
sentencing, or direct appeal in state court.
Because the claims raised on direct appeal
of Hunt's
conviction and sentence could not be
challenged during state post-litigation
proceedings, habeas counsel did not deal
with claims that had been litigated on
direct appeal
A second or successive
petition may be dismissed if the judge finds
that it fails to allege new or different
grounds for relief and the prior
determination was on the merits or, if new
and different grounds are alleged, the judge
finds that the failure of the petitioner to
assert those grounds in a prior petition
constituted an abuse of the writ.
On motion and upon such
terms as are just, the court may relieve a
party or a party's legal representation from
a final judgment, order, or proceedings for
the following reasons: (1) mistake,
inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect;
... or (6) any other reason justifying
relief from the operation of the judgment.
Hunt
also makes the procedural argument that
because the government never affirmatively
pleaded abuse of the writ, his Rule 60(b)
claims should not have been analyzed under
the cause and prejudice standard. See
McCleskey v. Zant, 499 U.S. 467, 494, 111
S.Ct. 1454, 1470, 113 L.Ed.2d 517 (1991)
(holding that the government satisfies its
burden of alleging abuse of the writ by
notifying the court that the petitioner has
filed a previous petition, identifying
claims in the successive petition that were
not raised before, and alleging abuse of the
writ). Hunt further
complains that the district court denied his
Rule 60(b) motion sua sponte without notice
or a hearing on the issues of cause and
prejudice
Hunt's
Rule 60(b) motion, however, apprised the
court of all the relevant information to
determine abuse and indicated that
Hunt was aware of
the abuse issue and thus had an opportunity
to respond. Therefore, the district court
could address abuse of the writ without an
affirmative pleading by the State. Cf.
United States v. Oliver, 865 F.2d 600,
603-605 (4th Cir.) (holding that notice and
opportunity to respond requirements do not
apply to motions under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2255
when the district court is already familiar
with the record), cert. denied, 493 U.S.
830, 110 S.Ct. 98, 107 L.Ed.2d 62 (1989).
In Murray v. Carrier, 477
U.S. 478, 486-87, 106 S.Ct. 2639, 2644, 91
L.Ed.2d 397 (1986), the Supreme Court noted
that, absent ineffective assistance of
counsel, "the mere fact that counsel failed
to recognize the factual or legal basis for
a claim, or failed to raise the claim
despite recognizing it, does not constitute
cause for procedural default."
Although
Hunt correctly
claims that he has a statutory right to
counsel in habeas proceedings under 21
U.S.C. Sec. 848, the Supreme Court has held
that "[i]n the absence of a constitutional
violation, the petitioner bears the risk in
federal habeas for all attorney error made
in the course of the representation...."
Coleman, 501 U.S. at 754, 111 S.Ct. at 2567
(emphasis added)