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Jones and Giles were convicted for the Nov. 10, 1978, attack in
which Willene and Carl Nelson were shot and stabbed to death in the
pre-dawn hours. Three children, ages 10, 13 and 21, were critically
wounded, but survived. The children's 85-year-old grandmother also
survived.
Giles had worked for Carl Nelson picking
vegetables, and after a night of drinking went with Jones to the
Nelson house, intending to rob them.
The oldest of the children, Tony, who was 21 at
the time, testified that he was awakened just after 3 a.m. when
Giles turned on the light in the bedroom Tony shared with his 10-year-old
brother, Charlie.
Carl Nelson confronted Giles and told him to
leave, but minutes later Tony Nelson found Giles at the house's back
door, and Giles shot him twice. Jones and Giles then made their way
through the house, shooting and stabbing its occupants.
After a wounded Tony got to his feet and made his
way to his parents' bedroom, he found Charlie and 13-year-old
Brenda, stabbed, shot and bloody, but alive at the foot of their
parents' bed. Jones and Giles were tried separately, both receiving
a death sentence.
Citations:
Jones v. State, 520 So.2d 543 (Ala.Cr.App. 1984) (Direct
Appeal). Jones v. Campbell, 436 F.3d 1285 (11th Cir. Ala. 2006)
(Habeas).
Final/Special Meal:
Black-eyed peas, pepper steak and an orange-flavored drink. Earlier
in the day he had a cheeseburger and a Pepsi from a prison vending
machine.
Final Words:
None.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Alabama Department of Corrections
00Z393 Holman CF (Death Row) Inmate: JONES, AARON
DOC#: 00Z393
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Date of Birth: 4/23/1952
Location: Holman CF (Death Row)
Assigned to Death Row: 8/18/1979
County of Conviction: Blount County
Jones put to death for '78 Oneonta murders
By Stan Diel - Birmingham News
Friday, May 04, 2007
ATMORE - Aaron Jones was put to death Thursday by
lethal injection for the 1978 double murder of a couple on their
farm near Oneonta.
The 55-year-old Jones, who was pronounced dead at
6:29 p.m., had been the third-longest-serving inmate on Alabama's
Death Row. His accomplice in the murders, Arthur Lee Giles, remains
on Death Row at Holman Correctional Facility.
Jones had no final words and fixed his eyes on
the ceiling of the execution chamber as a lethal cocktail of
chemicals was delivered through an IV tube into his left arm just
after 6 p.m. Prison Chaplain Chris Summers kneeled to pray, and
placed his hand on the inmate's left hand.
In the witness room separated by a glass window,
the four adult children of the slain victims watched silently. "I
feel like they ought to have got the electric chair," said Larry
Nelson, one of the children. "If we had a guillotine or gallows we
would have a lot less crying. I hope and pray things will get better."
For his last meal Jones requested black-eyed
peas, pepper steak and an orange-flavored drink. Earlier in the day
he had a cheeseburger and a Pepsi from a prison vending machine.
In the hours before his execution he was visited
by his two sisters, Glenn Johnson and Phyllis Favors, and his
brother, Henry Irby. Irby and a representative of Kairos Prison
Ministries witnessed the execution. Jones left all of his belongings,
including a Magnavox television, Timex watch, Sony radio and
headphones, tobacco, a Bible and a check for $130.85, to another
brother, Johnny Wright.
Jones and Giles were convicted for the Nov. 10,
1978, attack in which Willene and Carl Nelson were shot and stabbed
to death in the pre-dawn hours. Three children, ages 10, 13 and 21,
were critically wounded, but survived. The children's 85-year-old
grandmother also survived.
In testimony at Jones' trial, the survivors said
Giles had worked for Carl Nelson picking vegetables and hauling
watermelons to a farmers market. Jones and Giles had been drinking
beer and rum the night of the murders, and entered the Nelsons' home
intending to rob them, according to testimony.
The oldest of the couple's children, Tony, who
was 21 at the time, testified that he was awakened just after 3 a.m.
when Giles turned on the light in the bedroom Tony shared with his
10-year-old brother, Charlie. Carl Nelson confronted Giles and told
him to leave, but minutes later Tony Nelson found Giles at the
house's back door, and Giles shot him twice. Jones and Giles then
made their way through the house, shooting and stabbing its
occupants, Tony Nelson testified.
After a wounded Tony got to his feet and made his
way to his parents' bedroom, he found Charlie and 13-year-old
Brenda, stabbed, shot and bloody, but alive at the foot of their
parents' bed. "My momma and daddy's dead," Brenda said, according to
Tony Nelson's testimony.
Jones and Giles were tried separately, with Jones'
trial held in the spring and summer of 1979.
27 years on Death Row:
While the jury took just an hour and 45 minutes to declare him
guilty, Jones has been on Death Row for 27 years.
Jones' attorney had tried unsuccessfully to block
the execution, most recently arguing before the 11th Circuit Court
of Appeals that lethal injection poses too high a risk of extreme
pain.
Alabama Attorney General Troy King asked the
court not to block the execution, arguing that Jones was too late to
challenge the use of lethal injection. He could have made that
argument years ago without requesting a stay, King said.
Alabama, Indiana execute death row inmates
By Peggy Gargis - Reuters News
May 4, 2007
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (Reuters) - The U.S. state of
Alabama executed a death row inmate, Aaron Lee Jones, by lethal
injection Thursday, the state's first execution of the year and its
36th since capital punishment was reinstated in 1976.
Jones, 55, was convicted in 1979 of the November
10, 1978, murders of Carl and Willene Nelson in Blount County,
northeast of Birmingham, during a home robbery. Jones and an
accomplice also shot and stabbed the couple's three children and the
children's grandmother. The children and the grandmother survived
the attacks.
Alabama Department of Corrections spokesman Brian
Corbett said Jones died at 7:29 EDT (1129 GMT), and that he had a
pepper steak and black-eyed peas as a last meal. "He had no last
words," Corbett said, adding the lethal injection had been carried
out in a routine manner from the authorities' point of view.
Woods, 42, was convicted in the
stabbing death of 77-year-old Juan Placencia in
1984. In a final statement, Woods apologized to
Placencia's family and said he felt remorse for his
crime.
Appeals panel denies Jones' stay of execution
The Daily Report
Associatted Press
A 3-judge federal panel Friday denied a stay of execution for
Alabama death row inmate Aaron Jones, who is scheduled to die May 3
by lethal injection for 2 killings more than 28 years ago. His
attorneys had asked the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in
Atlanta to block the execution until a lower court hears another
prisoner's challenge to lethal injection.
But the 11th Circuit panel refused: "The state and the surviving
victims have waited long enough for some closure to these heinous
crimes. We will not interfere with the state's strong interest in
enforcing its judgment in this case." An attorney for Jones said an
appeal would be filed with the U.S. Supreme Court.
Jones, 54, one of the longest-serving death row inmates in
Alabama, is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 6 p.m. (CDT)
Thursday at Holman Prison for the gruesome slayings of a Blount
County couple and attacks on other family members during a home
robbery in 1978.
The 11th Circuit panel agreed with the state's attorneys'
argument that Jones had waited too long to challenge the
constitutionality of lethal injection, saying Jones could have done
that years ago when the state adopted that type of execution. By
waiting until November 2006 to challenge the state's lethal
injection procedure, Jones' purpose was to delay the execution, not
fight the method, the court concluded.
Opposing any execution delay, state prosecutors said that while
Jones and another death row inmate have separate appeals with
identical lethal injection claims, each case must be settled on its
own merits and Jones should be executed. The appeals panel agreed,
saying the "mere possibility of a trial date in another case does
not affect the balancing of the equities in this case."
Jones, who lived in Birmingham, has filed many appeals over the
last 27 years, the latest challenging lethal injection as a method
of execution. He was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to
death -- 1st in 1979 and then in a retrial in 1982.
Jones' pro-bono attorney, Heather K. McDevitt of the New York,
had argued in a brief before the 11th Circuit that Jones should be
granted a stay of execution until a Montgomery federal judge hears a
challenge to lethal injection from another death row inmate, Darrell
Grayson, who has a July 26 execution date. Attorneys from the
Atlanta-based Southern Center for Human Rights, representing Grayson,
are expected to request a stay of execution on Monday.
Alabama Attorney General Troy King, in a brief filed Friday in
the 11th Circuit, said there's no guarantee Grayson will be given a
trial on the constitutionality of lethal injection.
U.S. District Judge Keith Watkins has indicated a June 26 trial
is a possibility and gave attorneys a timetable to submit briefs.
The constitutionality of Alabama's method of execution by lethal
injection has never been decided by the courts. A half-dozen inmates
have filed lethal injection challenges in the Montgomery federal
court. State's attorneys say each claim is "virtually identical,"
and they expect more will be filed as the clock ticks down toward an
execution date.
Jones' attorney told the 11th Circuit that a stay of execution in
his case should be granted until there's a ruling on Grayson's
challenge to Alabama's execution procedures. McDevitt said the state
"can point to no legitimate interest in rushing" to execute Jones
next week as opposed to 2 months from now when the matter is decided
in the same court in which Jones' challenge was pending. "To proceed
otherwise is unjust and tends to create an appearance that the
system is arbitrary and capricious in matters of such grave
importance," McDevitt argues.
She said at least eight states have recently suspended execution
by lethal injection over concerns about the execution process,
saying it has come "under heavy scrutiny in the past year and is a
matter of serious, national concern."
In a response, the attorney general's brief says death row
inmates "will certainly argue any doctrine available to prevent re-litigation
of the same issues, but every death row inmate will inevitably claim
that his case is somehow 'different' and that he is entitled to a
trial."
However, the state argues, the 11th Circuit has denied stays of
execution when inmates could have brought claims in time to permit
full consideration without any need to stay their executions. In
Jones' case, U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson in Montgomery
earlier denied a bid to block the execution. Thompson said Jones'
challenge "is dilatory."
Jones and cohort Arthur Lee Giles, also on death row, shot and
stabbed 3 children, their parents and their grandmother in rural
Blount County, a farming area northeast of Birmingham. The parents,
Willene and Carl Nelson, died as a result of injuries in the Nov.
10, 1978 attack.
Jones, and Giles, 47, are among the longest-serving inmates on
Alabama's death row. Only 2 out of the 199 inmates on death row have
been there longer, according to Department of Corrections records.
Alabama death row inmate Aaron Jones executed
By Garry
Mitchell - Florida Times-Union
AP - May 3, 2007
ATMORE, Ala. - Aaron Lee Jones was executed Thursday by lethal
injection for the gruesome 1978 slaying of a Blount County couple, a
crime that made him one of the state's longest death row residents.
Jones, 55, showed no emotion and had no final words, never
looking toward the witnesses that included his victims' four adult
children. Jones kept his eyes fixed on the ceiling and lifted his
head only once when the deadly drugs entered his body. Prison
chaplain Chris Summers knelt beside Jones, placed his hand on the
inmate's left hand and prayed. Jones was pronounced dead at 6:29
p.m.
David Nelson, the couple's son who still lives in Blount County,
said Jones should have died in the electric chair. "He don't deserve
no more than what he dished out," Nelson said at a post-execution
news conference with two other brothers, Larry Nelson and Charlie
Nelson. The three witnessed the execution with their sister, Brenda
Albright. Another brother, Tony Nelson, who was in the house during
the murders and survived the attack, is deceased.
Billy Irwin, of Blountsville, who was a sheriff's investigator at
the time of the slayings, said he and the Nelsons had been watching
the case for 28 years. He said, "Justice has finally been carried
out."
The state Supreme Court on Wednesday refused Jones' request to
vacate the execution date. His appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court was
rejected Thursday afternoon. Jones, of Birmingham, has filed many
appeals over the last 27 years, the latest challenging lethal
injection as a method of execution.
He was convicted of capital murder in the deaths of Willene and
Carl Nelson, and sentenced to death - first in 1979 and then in a
retrial in 1982. The Nelsons, who lived in the Rosa community of
Blount County, a farming area northeast of Birmingham, were attacked
about 3:30 a.m.
Besides the murders, Jones and cohort Arthur Lee Giles, also on
death row, shot and stabbed the Nelsons' three children and their
grandmother. They survived the attacks.
Jones left his few possessions to his brother Johnny Wright.
Another brother, Henry Irby, witnessed the execution. Jones' final
visitors included his two lawyers, two sisters and a brother. His
last meal request was for pepper steak, black-eyed peas and an
orange drink.
Jones' attorneys had appealed a decision by the 11th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Atlanta that denied a stay of execution until a
lower court could hear another Alabama prisoner's constitutional
challenge to use of lethal injection.
A three-judge 11th Circuit panel ruled that Jones' lethal-injection
challenge should have been filed much sooner and his purpose in
delaying the filing was to postpone his execution. "The state and
the surviving victims have waited long enough for some closure to
these heinous crimes," the 11th Circuit stated. "We will not
interfere with the state's strong interest in enforcing its judgment
in this case."
A hearing on a separate challenge to the state's lethal injection
procedures is to be held in June, and attorneys for Jones had argued
his execution should be stayed pending the outcome of that
proceeding. After the execution, Jones' pro-bono attorney, Heather
K. McDevitt, said, "What has just happened in Atmore will be a gross
injustice if Alabama's lethal injection protocol is found to be
unconstitutional in less than two months, as we believe it should."
Department of Corrections spokesman Brian Corbett said Jones
visited with friends and religious volunteers on Monday, had no
visitation Tuesday, but met with friends and family again Wednesday.
Corbett described Jones as "very calm." He said Jones requested to
send a Bible to his mother, but made no other requests.
In a confession, Jones admitted that he and Giles, after drinking
rum and beer, went to the home to rob the Nelsons, although they
never found any money.
Jones, and Giles, now 47, had been on Alabama's death row longer
than all but two of the 199 inmates facing execution in the state,
according to Department of Corrections records.
ProDeathPenalty.com
In November 1978, Aaron Lee Jones and a co-defendant brutally
murdered a mother and father, and severely wounded a grandmother and
three children, all in the same family.
Two of the wounded children who witnessed the horror of these crimes
testified at Jones’s trial. Tony Nelson testified that on the
morning of November 10, 1978, he was sleeping with his ten-year-old
brother, Charlie, in one of the bedrooms of his parents’ home in the
Rosa community in rural Blount County, Alabama.
His thirteen-year-old sister, Brenda, was sleeping with their
parents, Willene and Carl Nelson, in another bedroom. Tony’s
grandmother was sleeping by herself in a third bedroom of the home.
At 3:27 a.m. Tony was awakened by a disturbance inside the home.
When the light in his bedroom was turned on, he saw Arthur Lee Giles,
a former employee of his father, standing in the doorway of Tony’s
bedroom.
Tony’s father appeared and asked Giles to leave. Tony got out of bed
and followed Giles to make sure Giles left as directed. As Tony
stepped out the back door of the home Giles shouted “here,” and shot
him twice, once in the neck and once in the chest.
Giles, then, re-entered the Nelsons’ home. Tony made an effort to go
and get a gun, but was unable to do so due to his injuries. Instead,
he crawled to and hid under his father’s truck.
Shortly, thereafter, he heard Giles and another man exit his parents’
home. He saw the men only from the waist down. He heard one of them
say that they needed to find Tony and that the other man should “get
the money.”
After they left, Tony went back inside. In his parents’ bedroom he
found his mother, his father, his sister, and his brother. All four
had been severely wounded and there was blood all over them.
Charlie and Brenda responded when Tony asked if anyone was still
alive. His parents were dead. Tony rushed Brenda and Charlie to the
hospital where all three, including Tony, were treated for their
wounds.
Charlie Nelson testified that he saw Giles when his father, Carl
Nelson, asked Giles to leave the home. He saw Tony leave and heard
two gunshots. Giles then reappeared and shot Charlie’s grandmother,
who was standing in the doorway to Charlie’s bedroom.
Giles proceeded to Charlie’s parents’ bedroom from where Charlie
heard more gunshots. Charlie ran to his parents’ bedroom, where he
saw Giles and another man, whom he positively identified at trial as
Aaron Jones. He realized that his mother, his father and his sister
had all been shot.
He jumped on top of his sister to protect her from further harm. As
he lay there, he saw Aaron Jones stab his mother and father with a
knife. His mother and father were both moaning as Jones repeatedly
stabbed them.
Then Jones turned and stabbed Charlie’s sister Brenda, who had
already been shot above one eye. Charlie was hit in the head several
times, after which Jones stabbed him twice in the back. Brenda
Nelson stated that Giles was the one that shot her, Brenda, in the
head.
Dr. Joseph Embry of the Alabama Department of Forensic Science
testified that Willene Nelson died from multiple stab wounds that
damaged her heart, lungs, and kidneys. Her body received 29 knife
wounds (17 stab wounds and 12 slash wounds), numerous lacerations
and abrasions about the head from a blunt instrument, and one
gunshot wound to the left shoulder.
Dr. Embry testified that Carl Nelson died from a combination of
gunshot wounds and stab wounds. He was shot once through the heart
and once in the left arm. He was stabbed, approximately, eight
times, including a stab wound in the neck which severed his spinal
cord. He also received numerous blunt instrument abrasions about the
head.
Dr. Embry testified that Carl Nelson was alive when he was stabbed
in the neck. Billy Irvin, an investigator with the Blount County
Sheriff’s Department, testified that he interviewed Jones at 8:15
a.m. on November 11, 1978.
During this interrogation Jones confessed to his participation in
the events at the Nelsons’ home the previous night. Jones’s
confession was tape recorded and transcribed. In the statement, he
admitted participating in the activities that resulted in the deaths
of Willene and Carl Nelson.
According to Jones, although they never found any money, he and
Giles went to the Nelsons’ home to rob Carl Nelson. Giles had told
Jones that Carl Nelson had not sufficiently paid Giles for work
Giles had done for Nelson in the past.
Giles and Jones had been drinking rum and beer prior to their trip
to the Nelson’s home. They were both armed with .32 caliber pistols,
but Jones’s pistol would not fire at the Nelsons’ home because he
lost the firing pin.
Jones’s statement confirmed the gruesome details of the attack on
the Nelson family. He stated that by the time he entered the back
bedroom, Giles had already shot and stabbed “everyone.”
In his own words Jones stated: “I goes off in the other room where
he [Giles] at . . . shot and stabbed them all there, you know, the
kids and . . . he looks at me and tells me, you know, that I had to
do something and I told him that I didn’t have a knife so he gave me
one and I cut the mother and another man and cut the boy and that’s
all I did.”
Jones further stated that he used a butcher knife that Giles had,
apparently, obtained from inside the Nelsons’ home. He also said
that the “little girl” at one point begged him not to do it, and
that the “woman” moved right before he stabbed her. Jones explained
that when he stabbed the “woman” he “really was just so gone, I just
closed my eyes” and stabbed wildly.
The jury found Jones “guilty as charged in the indictment” and the
trial court, in accordance with the jury’s recommendation, sentenced
the appellant to death by electrocution in 1979. The Alabama Court
of Criminal Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment and ordered
a new trial.
Following a retrial in 1982, a jury again found Jones guilty of
capital murder and recommended that he be sentenced to death. The
trial court followed the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Jones
to death.
On appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals remanded Jones’s
case for the trial court to clarify its sentencing order regarding
the mitigating and aggravating circumstances. Following this limited
remand, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Jones’s
conviction and death sentence.
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 04-11911
D. C. Docket No. 00-03608-CV-J-S
AARON LEE JONES, Petitioner-Appellant, versus
DONAL CAMPBELL, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for
the Northern District of Alabama
(January 20, 2006)
Before ANDERSON, BIRCH and DUBINA, Circuit
Judges.
DUBINA, Circuit Judge:
An Alabama jury found petitioner Aaron Lee Jones (“Jones”) guilty of
capital murder and recommended that he be sentenced to death. After
exhausting his state court remedies, Jones filed a federal habeas
corpus petition pursuant to 28U.S.C. § 2254.
The district court denied Jones’s habeas petition,
but granted a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on several claims
of ineffective assistance of counsel. After a thorough review of the
record, and having the benefit of oral argument and the parties’
briefs, we affirm the district court’s judgment denying Jones habeas
relief.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts
The facts are recited verbatim from the opinion
of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals on direct appeal from
Jones’s conviction and sentence. Tony Nelson testified that on the
morning of November 10, 1978, he was sleeping with his ten-year-old
brother, Charlie, in one of the bedrooms of his parents’ home in the
Rosa community in rural Blount County, Alabama. His thirteen-year-old
sister, Brenda, was sleeping with their parents, Willene and Carl
Nelson, in another bedroom. Tony’s grandmother was sleeping by
herself in a third bedroom of the home.
At 3:27 a.m. Tony was awakened by a disturbance
inside the home. When the light in his
bedroom was turned on, he saw Arthur Lee Giles, a former employee of
his father, standing in the doorway of Tony’s bedroom. Tony’s father
appeared and asked Giles to leave. Tony got out
of bed and followed Giles to make sure Giles left asdirected. As
Tony stepped out the back door of the home Giles shouted “here,” and
shot him twice, once in the neck and once in thechest.
Giles, then, re-entered the Nelsons’ home. Tony
made aneffort to go and get a gun, but was unable to do so due to
his injuries. Instead, he crawled to, and hid under, his father’s
truck. Shortly, thereafter, he heard Giles and another man exit his
parents’ home.
He saw the men only from the waist down. He heard
one of them saythat they needed to find Tony and that the other man
should “get the money.”
After they left, Tony went back inside. In his
parents’ bedroom he found his mother, his father, his sister, and
his brother. All four had been severely wounded and there was blood
all overthem.
Charlie and Brenda responded when Tony asked if anyone was still
alive. His parents were dead.
Tony rushed Brenda and Charlie to the hospital
where all three, including Tony, were treated for their wounds.
Charlie Nelson testified that he saw Giles when his father, Carl
Nelson, asked Giles to leave the home. He saw Tony leave and heard
two gunshots. Giles, then, reappeared and shot
Charlie’s grandmother, who was standing in the doorway to Charlie’s
bedroom. Giles proceeded to Charlie’s parents’ bedroom from where
Charlie heard more gunshots.
Charlie ran to his parents’ bedroom, where hesaw
Giles and another man, whom he positively identified at trial asthe
appellant. He realized that his mother, his father and his sister
had all been shot. He jumped on top of his sister to protect her
from further harm. As he lay there, he saw the appellant stab his
mother and father with a knife.
His mother and father were both moaning asthe
appellant repeatedly stabbed them. The appellant turned and stabbed
Charlie’s sister Brenda, who had already been shot above one eye.
Charlie was hit in the head several times, after which the appellant
stabbed him twice in the back.
On cross-examination Charlie admitted that during
appellant’s first trial Charlie had stated that Giles and the
appellant appeared to be drunk. He also stated that Giles “ordered
the appellant around” and directed the appellant to stab his
victims.
Brenda Nelson confirmed those parts of Tony’s and
Charlie’s testimony as to things she had witnessed. She identified
the appellantat trial as the man she saw repeatedly stabbing her
mother. She stated that Giles was the one that shot her, Brenda, in
the head.
Dr. Joseph Embry of the Alabama Department of
Forensic Science testified that Willene Nelson died from multiple
stab wounds that damaged her heart, lungs, and kidneys. Her body
received 29 knife wounds (17 stab wounds and 12 slash wounds),
numerous lacerations and abrasions about the head from a blunt
instrument, and one gunshot wound to the left shoulder.
Dr. Embry testified that CarlNelson died from a
combination of gunshot wounds and stab wounds. He was shot once
through the heart and once in the left arm. He was stabbed,
approximately, eight times, including a stab wound in the neck which
severed his spinal cord. He also received numerous blunt instrument
abrasions about the head. Dr. Embry testified that Carl Nelson was
alive when he was stabbed in the neck.
Billy Irvin, an investigator with the Blount
County Sheriff’s Department, testified that he
interviewed the appellant at 8:15 a.m. on November 11, 1978. During
this interrogation the appellant confessed to his participation in
the events at the Nelsons’ home the previous night. Appellant’s
confession was tape recorded and transcribed. The appellant reviewed
the transcript of his confession and signed it, voluntarily.
After the trial court conducted a hearing and
determined that appellant’s confession was, indeed, voluntary, Irvin
was permitted to read it to the jury. In appellant’s statement, he
admitted participating in the activities that resulted in the deaths
of Willene and Carl Nelson.
According to the appellant, although they never
found any money, he and Giles went to the Nelsons’ home to rob Carl
Nelson. Giles had told the appellant that Carl Nelson had not
sufficiently paid Giles for workGiles had done for Nelson in the
past.
Giles and the appellant had been drinking rum and
beer prior to their trip to the Nelson’s home. They were both armed
with .32 caliber pistols, but appellant’s pistol would not fire at
the
Nelsons’ home because he lost the firing pin.
The appellant’s statement confirmed the gruesome
details of the attack on the Nelson family. He stated that by the
time he entered the back bedroom, Giles had already shot and stabbed
“everyone.”
In his own words the appellant stated: “I goes
off in the other room where he [Giles] at . . . shot and stabbed
them all there, you know, the kids and . . . he looks at me and
tells me, you know, that I had to do something and I told him that I
didn’t have a knife so hegave me one and I cut the mother and
another man and cut the boy and that’s all I did.”
The appellant further stated that he used a
butcher knife that Giles had, apparently, obtained from inside the
Nelsons’ home. He also said that the “little girl” at one point
begged him not to
do it, and that the “woman” moved right before he stabbed her.
The appellant explained that when he stabbed the
“woman” he “really was just sog one, I just closed my eyes” and
stabbed wildly. Although his confession was admitted into evidence,
the appellant did not testify in his own behalf at trial, except
during the suppression hearing on the issue of the voluntariness of
his confession.
Indefense, he presented excerpts of the
transcribed testimony, from his first trial, of several state’s
witnesses for impeachment purposes. He also presented his alleged
accomplice, Arthur Lee Giles, who invoked his Fifth Amendment rights,
and refused to testify. Appellant’s theory in defense was that his
participation in the double murder fell short of capital murder
because Giles
did all the actual killing and he, the appellant, only did what
Giles instructed him to do.
The jury found the appellant “guilty as charged
in the indictment” and the trial court, in accordance with the
jury’s recommendation, sentenced the appellant to death by
electrocution.
Jones v. State, 520 So. 2d 543, 545-46 (App. Crim. App. 1984).
B. Procedural History
In 1979, an Alabama jury found Jones guilty of
murder made capital because two or more human beings were
intentionally killed by one or a series o facts. See Ala. Code §
13-11-2(a)(10) (1979) (repealed in 1981). The jury recommended a
death sentence, and the judge agreed with the jury’s recommendation.
The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reversed
the trial court’s judgment and ordered a new
trial pursuant to Beck v. Alabama, 447 U.S.625, 100 S. Ct. 2382
(1980), and Ritter v. State, 403 So. 2d 154 (Ala. 1981). See Jones
v. State, 403 So. 2d 1 (Ala. Crim. App. 1981).
Following a retrial in 1982, a jury again found
Jones guilty of capital murder and recommended that he be sentenced
to death. The trial court followed the jury’s recommendation and
sentenced Jones to death. On appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal
Appeals remanded Jones’s case for the trial court to clarify its
sentencing order regarding the mitigating and aggravating
circumstances.
Following this limited remand, the Alabama Court
of Criminal Appeals affirmed Jones’s conviction and death sentence.
See Jones v. State, 520 So. 2d 543 (Ala. Crim. App. 1984). The
Alabama Supreme Court affirmed, see Ex parte Jones, 520 So. 2d 553
(Ala. 1988),and the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari
review. See Jones v.Alabama, 488 U.S. 871, 109 S. Ct. 182
(1988).
In March 1990, Jones filed a petition for post-conviction
relief pursuant to Rule 32, Ala. R. Crim. P., challenging his 1982
conviction and sentence. In May 1994, Jones filed an amended Rule 32
petition, reiterating numerous claims of ineffective assistance of
counsel alleged in his original Rule 32 petition, and raising
numerous other claims for relief.
In November 1995, the trial court conducted an
evidentiary hearing on Jones’s allegations of ineffective assistance
of counsel. In March 1996, Jones submitted several documents to
support the allegations in his Rule 32 motion; namely, affidavits or
depositions from Dr. B. E. Blankenship, Dr. Richard Cooksey, and Dr.
James C. Thompson, who testified regarding Jones’s mental health and
childhood.
In June 1996, the trial court entered an order
denying Jones post-conviction relief. In January 1997, Jones
petitioned the trial court to supplement the record on appeal with
an affidavit of Dr. Dave Davis, and the deposition of Dr. Scott
Joseph.
Jones stated that he filed courtesy copies of
these two documents with the trial courtin March 1996, but these
documents were not part of the clerk’s record. Dr. Davis, a
psychiatrist, diagnosed Jones as suffering from paranoid
schizophrenia. He also opined that Jones was in a state of toxic
psychosis on the night of the murders, and due to this, Jones would
have been unable to form the necessary intent to commit the crimes.
R.Supp.Vol.3,p.616-18.
Dr.Joseph, a psychiatrist, stated in his
deposition that Jones had a history of psychosis and was taking
Haldol to control his psychotic symptoms. R. Supp. Vol. 2, p. 384.
However, Dr. Joseph admitted that at the time he evaluated Jones,
Jones had no active psychotic features. Id. at 390. Dr. Joseph also
acknowledged that he relied on Jones’s prison medical charts to form
his opinion. Id. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the
trial court’s order denying Jones post-conviction relief, see Jones
v. State, 753 So. 2d 1174 (Ala. Crim.App. 1999), and the Alabama
Supreme Court denied Jones’s petition for writ of certiorari.
On December 15, 2000, Jones filed the present
federal habeas petition. In his§ 2254 petition, Jones alleged
numerous claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate
counsel.
In addition, Jones asserted that (1) the state
trial and appellate courts failed to consider adequately both
statutory and non-statutory mitigating circumstances; (2) the trial
court erredin failing to hold a competency hearing; (3) the evidence
at trial was insufficient to show that he intended to kill anyone;
(4) his conviction and death sentence were racially tainted; (5) the
practice of Alabama appellate courts of limiting death penalty
proportionality review to other death-sentenced cases results in an
arbitrary application of the death penalty; (6) electrocution
violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments; (7) he was deprived
of a fair and impartial jury because a particular juror failed to
disclose during voir dire that he knew the sheriff, the deputies
involved in the investigation, and the victims; and (8) he was
deprived of a fair trial because a juror injected improper
information into the jury deliberations.
The district court denied Jones relief. The
district court also denied Jones’s motion to alter or amend the
judgment, but did grant Jones a COA on four claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel.
II. ISSUES
1. Whether Jones was deprived of his Sixth
Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel with respect to
sentencing counsels’ alleged failure to investigate thoroughly and
present properly mitigating evidence of Jones’s abusive childhood,
mental health problems, and intoxication.
2. Whether Jones was deprived of his Sixth
Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel because of
counsels’ failure to object to the trial court’s juryinstructions
relating to the burden of proving malice.
3. Whether Jones was deprived of his Sixth
Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel on appeal because
of counsel’s failure to raise and argue on appeal issues related to
the jury instructions on proving malice.
4. Whether Jones was deprived of his Sixth
Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel because of
counsel’s alleged racial bias against him.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews for clear error the district
court’s findings of fact and reviews de novo both questions of law
and mixed questions of law and fact. Nylandv. Moore, 216 F.3d 1264,
1266 (11th Cir.2000). An ineffective assistance of counsel claim is
a mixed question of law and fact that the court reviews de novo. See
Dobbsv. Turpin, 142 F.3d 1383, 1386 (11th Cir. 1998).
Since Jones’s petition was filed after the
effective date of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
(“AEDPA”), we, in essence, review the decisions of the state courts.
Pursuant to AEDPA,(d) An application for a writ of habeas corpus on
behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State
court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was
adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the
adjudication of the claim –(1) resulted in a decision that was
contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly
established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the
United States; or(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented in the State court proceeding.28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), (2).
Furthermore, a state court’s factual findings are
presumed correct, unless rebutted by the petitioner with clear and
convincing evidence. Id. at 2254(e)(1). A state court decision is
“contrary to” clearly established federal law if either (1) the
state court applied a rule that contradicts the governing law set
forth by Supreme Court case law, or (2) when faced with materially
indistinguishable facts, the state court arrived at a result
different from that reached in a Supreme Court case. See Bottoson
v.Moore, 234 F.3d 526, 531 (11th Cir. 2000).
A state court conducts an “unreasonable
application” of clearly established federal law if it identifies the
correct legal rule from Supreme Court case law but unreasonably
applies that rule to the facts of the petitioner’s case. Seeid.
An unreasonable application may also occur if a
state courtun reasonably extends, or unreasonably declines to extend,
a legal principle from Supreme Court case law to a new context. See
id. Notably, an “unreasonable application” is an “objectively
unreasonable ”application.” See Williams [v. Taylor], 529 U.S.
[362], 412, 120 S. Ct.[1495], 1523 [(2000)]. Putman v.Head, 268 F.3d
1223, 1240-41 (11th Cir. 2001).
Lastly, clearly established federal law “refers
to the holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the Supreme Court’s]
decisions as of the time of the relevant state-court decision.”
Williams v. Taylor, 529U.S. 362, 412, 120 S. Ct. 1495, 1523 (2000).
IV. DISCUSSION
The petitioner’s burden to prove, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that counsel’s performance was
unreasonable is a heavy one. See Chandler v. United States, 218 F.3d
1305, 1313 (11th Cir.2000) (enbanc). In order to establish deficient
performance, the petitioner must show that, in ligh to fall the
circumstances, counsel’s performance was outside the wide range of
professional competence. See Stricklandv. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
690, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 2066 (1984).
The court’s review of counsel’s performance
should focus on “not what is possible or what is prudent or
appropriate, but only [on] what is constitutionally compelled.”
Chandler, 218 F.3d at 1313 (quoting Burger v. Kemp, 483 U.S. 776,
107 S. Ct. 3114, 3126 (1987).
The court’s review of counsel’s performance must
be highly deferential, and the court must avoid second-guessing
counsel’s performance. See Strickland,466 U.S. at 689,104 S. Ct. at
2065. If the record is not complete regarding counsel’s actions,
then the courts should presume “that what the particular defense
lawyer did at trial – for example, what witnesses he presented or
did not present – were acts that some reasonable lawyer might do.”
Chandler, 218 F.3d at 1314-15 n. 15.
Moreover, the courts make an objective inquiry
into the reasonableness of counsel’s performance. Id. at 1315. For a
petitioner to show deficient performance, he “must establish that no
competent counsel would have taken the action that his counsel did
take.” Id.
Lastly, there are no absolute rules dictating
what is reasonable performance because absolute rules would restrict
the wide latitude counsel have in making tactical decisions. See id.
at 1317. “As such, at a sentencing proceeding, counsel isnot
required to present all mitigation evidence, even if additional
mitigation evidence would have been compatible with counsel’s
strategy.” Putman, 268 F.3d at 1244. “Counsel’s complete failure to
present mitigation evidence does not necessarily constitute
deficient performance, even if mitigation evidence is available.”
Id.
In light of these precepts, we will consider each
of Jones’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel.
A. Investigation and presentation of mitigating
evidence
Jones posits that his trial counsel, Jack G.
Davis (“Davis”), who represented Jones at both trials, and George M.
Boles (“Boles”) were ineffective at sentencing for failing to
present evidence of his mental illness, his abusive and deprived
childhood, and his
substance abuse and intoxication on the night of the murders.
Jones claims that this mitigation evidence would
have established the existence of three statutory mitigating factors
and negated two of the aggravating factors argued by the
State, and the evidence would have cast substantial doubt on whether
Jones had the specific intent required under Alabama’s capital
murder statute.
Jones asserts that his counsel did no mitigation
investigation: they did not speak with his family,friends or
neighbors; they did not follow up on clear evidence of his mental
illness;and they did not request his medical, educational,
employment, or correctional records.
Jones contends that this total failure to
investigate available mitigation evidence was unreasonable in light
of local professional standards. Therefore, Jones asserts that he
did not receive the effective assistance of counsel guaranteed by
the Sixth Amendment.
1. mental illness
Jones claims that he is, and was at the time of
the crime, psychotic, that he suffers from organic brain damage, and
that he is a dependent personality and easily coerced. Jones asserts
that numerous psychiatrists, psychologists and physicians have
diagnosed him as psychotic.
Jones contends that because his counsel failed to
investigate his mental health history, the jury did not know about
his psychosis. With regard to this claim, the trial court made
findings of fact following the Rule 32 evidentiary hearing. The
trial court noted that Jones
presented the testimony of Dr. Brad Fisher, an expert in clinical
forensic psychology.
Dr. Fisher testified that Jones suffered at the
time of the crime and continues to suffer from significant mental
conditions, such as dependency, multi-substance abuse, organic
impairment, and major thought disorder.
In reaching this opinion, Dr. Fisher reviewed
Jones’s prior court records, family members’ affidavits, medical
records, and prison records, which consisted of depositions from Dr.
Thomas L. Smith and Dr. James C. Thompson in 1979, and the 1979
evaluation by Drs. Thompson and Smith done at Bryce Hospital for the
Lunacy Commission.
Dr. Fisher also personally evaluated Jones and
interviewed family members, such as Maritha Erby (mother), Glen
Jones (sister), Henry Erby (half-brother), Phyllis Faevers (half-sister),
Johnny Wright (uncle), and Barbara Jones (niece).
The trial court then made the following factual
findings: The record reflects that counsel for petitioner
investigated and pursued a mental health defense for the first trial.
Petitioner had been evaluated by the Lunacy Commission. Previous
counsel, during the first trial, had filed appropriate motions for
mental evaluations and had conducted depositions of the mental
health experts who evaluated petitioner.
Thetrial court subsequently denied the motion for
private psychiatric examination and testing and funds for an expert
witness in the field of mental health to perform intelligence and
personality tests on the petitioner. Thereafter, petitioner was
granted his right to refile his motion for psychiatric examination
and said motion was granted.
Subsequently, in preparation for the second trial,
Jack Davis filed a motion for expert witnesses including mental
health experts and filed a motion for private psychiatric
examination and testing. That was denied by the Court on December 7,
1982.
This Court finds that counsel in the1982 trial
filed the appropriate motions requesting mental health experts and
the appropriate evaluations and tests to be performed upon
petitioner and was denied relief by the Court. Petitioner claims
thatDavis and Boles did not adequately present the testimony
available to them as to the mental health of the petitioner and had
they presented the available information, they would have been
allowed to present the testimony before the jury.
This Court, after having reviewed the records
that were reviewed by Dr.Fisher, the testimony of witnesses and the
depositions submitted by both parties of the prison physicians that
treated the petitioner, finds that the basis for Dr. Fisher’s
opinion is questionable. The first area of doubt is the diagnosis of
psychosis. It appears that the original diagnosis was made by Dr.
Richard Cooksey, a general practitioner for inmates in the prison
system.
On October 17, 1991, he examined the petitioner
for weight loss. Petitioner had a weight-loss problem and Dr.Cooksey,
not finding a physical reason for the problem, doubted an organic
basis for weight loss and felt that the weight loss was a result of
the petitioner just not eating. Petitioner told him that he would
not eat anything on his tray if the tray came in contact with
anything “unclean.”
Although in his records he wrote that petitioner admitted
auditory hallucinations, the doctor admitted that they were poorly
described at the time. The doctor could remember nothing aboutthe
nature of the hallucinations. Admitting that he was not a
psychiatrist, the doctor stated, “If he is not eating, he’s
psychotic. That’s pretty much normal day-to-day functioning, eating.”...
He made notes reflecting his diagnosis of petitioner in the
medical records of petitioner and recommended that petitioner would
be best served at Kilby Correctional Institution where he would get
treatment for his mental health... Therefore, even though the
medical records indicate some sort of mental health history,
including earlier records of the Lunacy Commission, this Court
concludes that there has been no reasonable dependable diagnosis of
psychosis to support the opinion of Dr. Fisher,and indeed it appears
to this Court that there is no evidence of psychosis.
Although Dr. Fisher states that his testing showed that there is
some organicity in the psychosis and other mental problems of the
petitioner, there is no evidence to support this opinion... This
Court notes that it allowed the petitioner to be tested for any
organic basis for mental health problems. Petitioner was transported
to a facility which
could perform the tests, but no test results or testimony was
presented to this Court as to the result of those tests.
Therefore, this Court concludes that there is no evidence of an
organic basis for any mental health problems the petitioner might
have. The diagnosis of low intelligence is rebutted by testimony of
family members who stated the petitioner did well in school and no
evidence was presented to contradict that. Although the petitioner
quit school before he graduated, he did later obtain his GED, which
rebuts any evidence of low intelligence to the point where it would
have an effecton the outcome of his trial or sentencing...
All the testimony as to drug use reflects that the drug use was
voluntary and there was no evidence or organic effects of his
long-term drug use. Voluntary drug use has never excused or
mitigated a crime of this nature in the State of Alabama nor does it
in this case.
After considering the testimony of Dr. Fisher and examining the
basis from which he formed his opinion, this Court is of the opinion
that there is no credible evidence of significant mental health
problems in petitioner.
On appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals agreed with the
trial court’s findings. We agree with the trial court that the
evidence presented by Jones insupport of this claim, including the
testimony of Dr. Fisher and the depositions and affidavit of other
expert witnesses, was not adequate evidence of a mitigating
circumstance and was refuted by other testimony and evidence
admitted at the hearing and at trial. Jones v. State, 753 So. 2d at
1194.
The court also found it significant that the trial court provided
Jones with an opportunity to be tested to determine an organic basis
for the alleged mental health problems, but Jones admitted no test
results at his Rule 32 hearing and relied instead on opinion
evidence. Id. The court also found significant the finding of the
Lunacy Commission that Jones was not suffering from a mental illness
at the time of the acts charged that would have prevented him from
distinguishing right from wrong. Id. at 1194-95.
The court concluded that Jones hadfailed to establish his burden
with respect to this claim of ineffectiveness. Id.at 1195. The state
courts’determination that Jones did not
meet his burden on the claimof ineffective assistance of counsel
with regard to the presentation of mental illness mitigation
evidence is not an unreasonable application of clearlyestablished
law and Jones’s other counsel, Jack Davis, did not testify at the
post-conviction hearing because he is deceased.
As the district court noted, “[m]uch of the evidentiary basis for
petitioner’s current claim of mental illness arose after his trial,
during his imprisonment. Certainly, it was not objectively
unreasonable for the state courts to discount this evidence that did
not exist at the time the trial occurred.” District Court Record
Vol. 2, Tab 27, p. 49.
The information counsel had before them at the 1982 trial was the
1979 Lunacy Commission Report which indicated that Jones did not
suffer from a mental illness. Furthermore, Boles testified at
Jones’s Rule 32 hearing that Jones did not have any problems
communicating with him and Davis during trial.Id. at 167. Boles
stated that he and Davis talked to Jones extensively about the
sentencing, and they apparently concluded not to present any
psychological or psychiatric testimony at sentencing. Id. at 105,
146.
Boles emphasized that he relied heavily upon Davis’s knowledge of
the case because Davis represented Jones at his 1979 trial. Id. at
68. The factual determination made by the state courts is presumed
to be correct unless the petitioner can rebut the presumption by
clear and convincing evidence. 28U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1); see also
Robinson v. Moore, 300 F.3d 1320, 1342 (11th Cir. 2002), cert.
denied, Robinson v. Crosby, 540 U.S. 1171, 124 S. Ct. 1196 (2004).
Jones presents no evidence to rebut the state courts’ finding
that Boles
and Davis were not ineffective for failing to present at sentencing
any evidence
of Jones’s alleged mental illness. At the time of trial, they did not
have any
evidence to indicate any potential mental illness, and instead, had a
Lunacy Commission Report that stated to the contrary. Boles also
stated that Jones
had no problems communicating with him and Davis during trial, and
he and Davis
discussed whether to present mental health testimony at sentencing
and concluded
not to present such testimony.
In light of this, we cannot say that the state courts’ finding
that Jones’s counsels’ performance was not deficient was an
unreasonable determination of the facts.
2. abusive childhood
Jones contends that his counsel were ineffective because they did
not present in mitigation any evidence of his abusive childhood.
Jones asserts that the state courts’
determination that the evidence of abuse was negligible was an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented in the state court proceedings.
The trial court found as follows concerning Jones’s alleged
abuse: Petitioner’s sister, Glen Jones, testified to abuse by their
father. She testified that her father was rarely around but when he
did come that he would make petitioner and Glen take off their
clothes, would tie them to a door knob and beat them with a cord.
She testified that the beatings with a cord were so severe that
wire from the extension cord was embedded in their flesh. The Court
concludes that this is an exaggeration and that had this abuse
occurred there would be some obvious scarring from where such young
children were beaten to the point where the insulation of an
extension cord was torn off and wirewas embedded in their skin.
The other evidence of abuse is negligible. The opinion of Dr.
Fisher as to the effects upon petitioner of this “abusive childhood”
is rebutted by other family members that testified, including Glen
Jones. Their testimony suggests that, although petitioner had to
live with relatives and was beaten by his father and had other
problems with family
members, he adjusted well.
Petitioner made goodgrades in school and had no trouble with
teachers. He was helpful to people and was polite and well behaved.
He was able to maintain employment and although he had a few
problems with attendance, was generally considered to be a good
worker. Petitioner attended church and played in the school band. He
was not a violent person growing up.
The trial court further noted that seven of Jones’s family
members testified at the Rule 32 hearing regarding Jones’s childhood
and upbringing. The trial court concluded that the evidence
presented by the family members did not establish any mitigating
circumstances that would have changed the outcome of Jones’s
sentence.
In so concluding, the trial court noted that it was “easy to see
why counsel would be reluctant to call Glen Jones for the second
trial after hearing her testimony from the first trial.” R. Vol. 9,
p. 1059. The petitioner was at her house the night of the murders.
The sister testified that prior to leaving with Giles to go to the
Nelsons, Jones was shooting drugs in her house. She did not question
or object to the useof drugs by her brother in her house with her
children present.
She also testified as to the extent that everybody was
intoxicated or high, which was inconsistent with her testimony that
she allowed no one but her brother to use drugs in her home. Her
testimony as to how Giles talked Jones, the petitioner, into going
to the
Nelsons, shows that there was not much coercion utilized by Giles.
He simply asked Jones more than once to go and Jones agreed.
This testimony would have seriously prejudiced the petitioner in
the trial of this case and since petitioner was convicted in his
1979 trial, trial counsel in the 1982 trial had good reason to avoid
using Glen Jones as a witness. Id. at 1059-60.
The court provided further assessment of the family members’
testimony: The mitigating evidence presented bythe petitioner shows
no more than a child of a broken family that had positive and
negative influences in his life but chose to follow the friends that
he grew up with that were taking drugs.
From the testimony of these witnesses it is apparent
thatpetitioner had the ability to do well in school, had people in
whom he could confide and by whom he could be advised, was involved
in church activities such as choir and other extracurricular
activities such asplaying in the school band.
The petitioner’s temperament was peaceful and the only negative
influence appears to be the influence of his friends who used drugs.
Aaron Jones had the abilities and the opportunities to make the
choices that everyone has to make in life and made the incorrect
choice.
When Aaron Jones started using drugs his life changed. His
mitigation is that the drugs made him commit the crime. Frequently
this has been interposed as a defense and as mitigation but it has
never been accepted as an excuse to mitigate this type of crime. The
testimony of these witnesses is unconvincing. Had it been presented
to the jury it would not establish mitigation for the acts of the
petitioner. Id. at 1062.
After reviewing the testimony of Jones’s family members and
friends, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals agreed with the trial
court’s
finding. The court concluded that “none of their testimony supported
a finding of
a mitigating circumstance recognized by § 13A-5-51, Ala. Code 1975,
and would not
have changed the balance of the mitigating and aggravating
circumstances in Jones’s
case.”Jones v. State, 753 So.2d at 1196-97.
The court further noted
that because
there was no error in the trial court’s determination that the
evidence would not
have changed the outcome of Jones’s trial, it could not say that
Jones’s trial
counsel were ineffective for failing to present the testimony of
Jones’s
family members and friends. Id. at 1197. “Jones has not established
a reasonable
probability that but for his counsel’s failure to call these
witnesses and
present the alleged mitigating evidence during the sentencing phase
of his trial
that the outcome of the sentencing proceeding would have been
different.” Id. Thus,
the appellate court agreed with the trial court’s ruling that Jones’s
counsel were not ineffective in failing to call these family members
to testify at sentencing. Id.
Based upon our review of the entire record, we conclude that the
Alabama courts properly found that Jones’s attorneys were not
ineffective in failing to present evidence at sentencing about his
abusive childhood and upbringing. The testimony at the Rule 32
hearing indicates that other than Glenn Jones’s testimony, the
evidence of abuse was negligible.
Additionally, Glen Jones’s testimony was contradictory and
potentially more harmful than helpful. Furthermore, Boles testified
that he recalled that Davis talked to family members and mentioned
that there was some problem or estrangement within the family. R.
Vol. 1, p. 102.
In light of this, we cannot say that the Alabama courts’
determination
is contrary to or involves an unreasonable application of federal law
as
determined by the Supreme Court. Nor can we say that the state courts’
decision
is based on an unreasonable determination of the facts that were
presented during
the state court proceedings.
3. substance and alcohol abuse
Jones
asserts that
his attorneys were ineffective because they failed to
present evidence that he
was suffering from a toxic psychosis on the night of the murders
and was not able
to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his
conduct to the
requirements of the law.
The trial court noted Glen Jones’s
testimony that Jones
had been drinking and doing drugs the night of the murder in its
consideration of the possible mitigation evidence counsel should
have presented at
sentencing. The trial court, however, did not single out this
issue as one ofin effectiveness, nor did the Alabama Court of Criminal
Appeals. The portion of the state court opinion that Jones
attacks deals with counsels’ failure to present intoxication as a
defense
during the guilt phase of the trial. See Jones v. State, 753 So.2d at
1190-91.
The district court considered this issue and found that counsel were
not ineffective for failing to present evidence of Jones’s
intoxication in
mitigation. The district court noted that evidence of Jones’s drug
use was
presented to the jury during the guilt stage. Witnesses testified at the
1982 trial
that Jones appeared drunk, and Jones admitted in his confession that
he had been
drinking heavily the day of themurder, and that he was “so far gone”
that he
stabbed wildly.
The district court concluded that there was no reason
to believe
that the jury failed to consider this guilt stage testimony for
whatever mitigating
power it had during the sentencing stage. Because Jones did not raise this specific claim of
ineffective
assistance of counsel in state court, the claim is procedurally
barred. See
Johnston v. Singletary,162 F.3d 630,634-35 (11th Cir.1998).
Assuming
arguendo
that Jones raised in state court the specific claim that counsel were
ineffective
for failing to present evidence of his toxic psychosis in mitigation,
the claim
lacks merit. The only evidence Jones proffers to support his claim is
the
affidavit of Dr. Davis. Dr. Davis opined that Jones was suffering
from toxic
psychosis on the night of the murders; however, Dr. Davis’s affidavit
was
submitted after the Rule 32 hearing, and the State had no
opportunity
to cross-examine him. Because Jones fails to present any credible
evidence
to support his claim of toxic psychosis, he can not show that his counsel were
ineffective for failing to present this alleged evidence in
mitigation.
4.
prejudice
Jones cannot demonstrate that his counsels’ performance at
sentencing
was deficient. Nor can Jones demonstrate that he was prejudiced by
counsels’
failure to present the mitigating evidence of Jones’s alleged mental
illness, his
abusive childhood, and his alleged toxic psychosis. As
noted earlier, the Alabama
state courts correctly found that the evidence submitted by Jones during
his state
post-conviction proceeding was not mitigation evidence that would
have changed
the outcome of his sentencing.
The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
applied the
proper prejudice standard under Strickland and found that Jones did
not establish
“a reasonable probability that but for his counsel[s’] failure to
call these
witnesses and present the alleged mitigating evidence during the
sentencing phase
of his trial that the outcome of the sentencing proceeding would have
been
different.” Jones v. State, 753 So.2dat 1197.
The court considered
the totality
of the alleged mitigation evidence and concluded that “because we
have determined
that evidence of Jones’s alleged
mental illness, the forensic evidence, and the
testimony of family and friends would not have
established a mitigating circumstance, we cannot hold that Jones’s
trial
counsel[were] ineffective for failing to present this evidence.”
Id.
Given the
heinousness of the crime and the overwhelming evidence of
Jones’s guilt, there
simply is no reasonable probability that counsels’ failure to
present evidence of
Jones’s alleged mental health problems, his abusive childhood, and
his excessive
drinking on the night of the murders prejudiced Jones.
Jones, armed
with a gun,
went with Giles to rob the Nelsons. Once inside the house, Jones
stabbed three of
the four victims, two of whom died from these injuries. Moreover,
Jones
stabbed the victims in front of their two children, while one child
begged him to
stop. Jones also stabbed one of the children in the back.
In light of
this
evidence, there is no reasonable probability that the outcome of the
sentencing
proceeding would have been different had counsel presented this
mitigation
evidence. Accordingly, Jones is not entitled to relief on these
claims of
ineffective assistance of counsel.
B. Objection to malice
instruction
Jones
contends that his counsel were ineffective for failing to object to
an improper
burden-shifting charge on malice. Jones asserts that the jury
instruction on the
element of malice created a mandatory presumption that relieved the
State of
its burden of persuasion and shifted the burden to him. The trial
court
instructed the jury as follows:
Now, we have [a] statute which defines murder in the first degree.
This statute
says that every willful, deliberate, malicious and
premeditated killing of a
human being is murder in the first degree. Now I will undertake to
define these
four terms for you in order that you may better understand them, and
in doing so,
will use the language used by the Supreme Court many years
ago. Willful means
governed by the will without yielding to reason. Deliberate means
formed with
deliberation in contradistinction to a sudden and rash act. Malice
means done
with a fixed hate or wicked intention or a motive, not the result of
a sudden
passion.
That is the definition of actual malice. But the word malice,
as used in
this statute which defines murder, has a broader meaning than that.
It includes,
not only actual malice, but includes what we call legal or implied
malice. And in
the broader sense, it means the state or condition of the mindwhich
prompted a
person to do an unlawful act without legal justification or
extenuation. Now every
intentional and unlawful killing of a human being ispresumed to be
done with
malice afore thought unless the circumstances that surround the
killing rebut the
idea of malice. Every intentional an dunlawful killing of a human
being with a
deadly weapon, such as a pistol or with a knife, is presumed to be
done with
malice unless the evidence that proved the killing rebuts the
presumption of malice.
On appeal from the trial court’s denial
of
post-conviction relief, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
concluded that the
instruction did not require the jury to infer or presume the element
of malice
afore thought in the absence of evidence from Jones that such a
presumption was
unwarranted. See Jones v. State, 753 So.2d at1189. In so concluding,
the court
noted that “the predicate fact supporting the
presumption is Jones’s intentional and unlawful killings of the
victims with a
deadly weapon, i.e., a knife.” Id. at 1188. The jury was to presume
from the
proof of the killings that Jones committed the murders with malice
aforethought.
“However, inorder for the jurors to reach that conclusion, the State
had to
prove that Jones killed the victims intentionally and that the
circumstances of
the killings evidenced that Jones acted with malice afore thought.”
Id.
The court found that the instruction did not shift the State’s
burden to establish the element of malice. Id. at 1188-89 (relyingon
Francis v. Franklin, 471 U.S. 307, 314, 105 S. Ct. 1965, 1971
(1985)).
The court further noted that the trial court also gave a charge
concerning Jones’s presumption of innocence and the State’s burden
of proof. Thus, the court found that inconsidering the jury charge
in its entirety, any error was cured by the additionalcharges. Jones,753
So.2d at 1189.
Accordingly, the court concluded that “[b]ecauseJones ha[d]
failed to establish that the trial court’s instruction on malice
constituted error, he ha[d] failed to show that his trial counsel
w[ere] ineffective for failing to challenge this instruction.” Id.
The district court agreed with the Alabama Court of Criminal
Appeals that the instruction on malice did not relieve the State of
its burden of proving every element of capital murder. However, the
district court expressed some concern with the state appellate
court’s reasoning in addressing this issue.
In a footnote, the district court stated that the state appellate
court concluded that the instruction in this case involved merely a
permissive inference, not a mandatory presumption. In Sandstrom v.
Montana, 442 U.S. 510, 99 S. Ct. 2450 (1979), and Francis v.
Franklin, 471 U.S.307, 105 S. Ct. 1965 (1985), the Supreme Court
cautioned that the words “presume”or “presumption” imply a mandatory
finding, not merely a permissive inference thejury may or may not
draw. Francis, 471 U.S. at 316. Thus, the district court found it
difficult to say that the conclusion reached by the state appellate
court was not“contrary to” Francis. District Court Record Vol. 2,
Tab 27, p. 83-84 n. 14.
Likewise, the district court noted that the state appellate court
concluded that the general instruction about the defendant’s
presumption of innocence and the State’s burden of proof cured any
defect in this particular instruction on malice. The district court
noted that both Sandstrom and Francis rejected the notion that such
general instructions are adequate to cure a specific burden-shifting
instruction. Thus, the district court found that the state appellate
court’s reasoning was “contrary to”Francis. See id.
However, the district court agreed that Jones did not receive
ineffective assistance due
to counsels’ failure to object to the malice instruction. The
district court concluded that the instruction did not really relieve
the State of the burden of proving all elements of the offense of
capital murder; and second, if the instruction was error, it was
harmless error in light of the overwhelming evidence against Jones.
Thus, under either rationale, counsels’ failure to object to the
instruction did not prejudice Jones. The district court
concluded: Alabama law
defines malice in this context as “the state or condition ofthe mind
which
prompted a person to do an unlawful act without legal justification
or
extenuation.”
Under the court’s instruction, the jury “presumed”
malice, that is,
that the murders were done with are cognition that they were “without
legal
justification or extenuation,”only after finding first that the
killings were
“intentional and unlawful.”
The state always retained the burden of
proving both
that the killings were intentionally done by petitioner and that
they were
unlawfully done by him. The jury’s finding that the killings were
intentional
and unlawful was, in effect, a finding of malice, not with standing
the presumption
contained in the instruction.
Finally, coupling the explicit
placement of the
burden of proving intentional and unlawful killings on
the state with the concluding phrase of the instruction that malice is
presumed
“unless the evidence thatproved the killing rebuts the presumption
of malice,”
it becomes apparent that the instruction always required the State’s
evidence
to prove malice. If the “evidence that proved the killing,” that is,
the State’s
evidence, failed to show malice, then the presumption was rebutted.
The
instruction never required the petitioner to offer anyrebutting
evidence;
rather, it lay entirely in the State’s burden of proof. Thus, the
instruction did
not shift the burden to the petitioner and, therefore, was not
objectionable. Even
if the instruction can be regarded as a burden-shifting
instruction in violation
of Sandstrom and Francis, the error in this case washarmless. See
Rose v. Clark,
478 U.S. 570, 106 S. Ct. 3101 (1986).
The overwhelming evidence against petitioner showed that he went
to theNelson home with Giles for the purpose of robbing them. He was
armed with a gun and, when the gun proved unusable, he stabbed the
Nelsons multiple times with a butcher knife retrieved from their
kitchen.
There can be no reasonable doubt that petitioner acted with the
requisite malice, that is, recognition that he acted without legal
justification or extenuation. As the malice instruction constituted
harmless error, counsel’s failure to object to it does not undermine
confidence in the outcome of petitioner’s trial; his trial remained
fundamentally fair, despite this error.
Thus, without prejudice, there was no ineffective assistance of
counsel, and petitioner is not entitled to relief on this claim.
District Court Record Vol. 2, Tab 27, p. 85-87. We agree with the
district court that trial counsel did not render ineffective
assistance by failing to object to the jury charge on malice.
The trial court’s charge on malice meant an intentional killing.
As the state appellate court noted, “the predicate fact supporting
the presumption is Jones’s intentional and unlawful killings of the
victims.” Jones, 753 So. 2d at 1188. Furthermore, even if the
instruction was error, any error was harmless in light of the
overwhelming evidence of Jones’s guilt.See Rose v. Clark, 478 U.S.
570, 106 S. Ct. 3101 (1986).
In Yates v. Evatt, 500 U.S. 391, 111 S. Ct. 1884, 1892 (1991),
the Supreme Court described the nature of the harmless error
analysis which must be applied to Sandstrom errors:To say that an
error did not contribute to the verdict is ... to find that error
unimportant in relation to everything else the jury considered on
the issue in question, as revealed in the record.
Thus, to say that an instruction to apply an unconstitutional
presumption did not
contribute to the verdict is to make a judgment about the
significance of the presumption to reasonable jurors, when measured
against the other evidence considered by those jurors independently
of the presumption. 111 S. Ct. at 1893.
The Court then set forth two distinct steps for the reviewing
court to follow in performing this analysis: first, the court must
analyze the jury instructions, applying the customary presumption
that jurors follow instructions; second, the court must weigh the
probative force of the evidence actually consideredby the jury
against the probative force of the presumption standing alone. Id.
The Court then noted that conclusions of harmless error are not
appropriate simply because there is overwhelming evidence of the
defendant’s guilt. This overwhelming evidence must have been
considered by the jury.
Thus, a reviewing court must determine “whether the force of the
evidence presumably considered by the jury in accordance with the
instructions is so overwhelming as to leave it beyond reasonable
doubt that the verdict resting on that evidence would have been the
same in the absence of the presumption.” Id. at 1893-94.
Weighing the probative force of the evidence of guilt against the
probative force of the presumption standing alone, there is no doubt
in our minds that the verdict resting on that evidence would have
been the same in the absence of the presumption. See id.
The jury considered the testimony of the surviving victims, and
Jones’s confession to his participation in the crimes. Jones
acknowledged that hewent to the Nelsons’ home armed with a gun with
the intent to rob the victims. Jones admitted that he stabbed the
victims multiple times with a butcher knife.
Jones also acknowledged that one of the children begged him to
stop, and that the female victim moved before he stabbed her. There
can be no doubt that “the verdict resting on [this]evidence would
have been the same in the absence of the presumption.” Id. at
405,111 S. Ct. at 1893-94.
Therefore, we conclude that Jones cannot establish that his
counsel were deficient for failing to object to the trial court’s
instruction or that counsels’ failureto object to the instruction
undermined confidence in the outcome of his trial. Accordingly,
Jones is not entitled to relief on this claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel.
C. Appellate counsel
The district court included within the COA the issue of whether
Jones received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel because
counsel failed to raise on appeal a challenge to trial counsels’
failure to object to the trial court’s malice instruction. Neither
Jones nor the State briefed this issue or argued it before the court.
Thus, wedeem the argument abandoned. See Marek v. Singletary, 62
F.3d 1295, 1298 n.2 (11th Cir. 1995) (“Issues not clearlyraised in
the briefs are considered abandoned.”); see also Access Now, Inc. v.
Southwest Airlines, Co., 385 F.3d 1324, 1330 (11th Cir.2004) (“If an
argument is not fully briefed (let alone not presented at all) to
the Circuit Court, evaluating its merits would be improper both
because the appellants may control the issues they raise on appeal
and because the appellee would have no opportunity to respond to it.”).
However, even if we considered the issue, we would not grant
Jones relief onthis claim. As we stated previously, Jones’s trial
counsel were not ineffective infailing to object to the malice jury
instruction. Thus, it is a fortiori that Jones’s appellate counsel
was not ineffective in failing to raise the issue on appeal.
D. Racial animus
Jones contends that Boles harbored racial animosity toward him
that infected his entire representation of Jones and deprived Jones
of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. Our
review of the record indicates that Jones did not raise this claim
as a specific, enumerated claim of ineffective assistance of counsel
in his federal habeas petition.
Instead, he referenced the issue in the introductory portion of
his federal habeas petition. Additionally, Jones did not raise this
as an enumerated claim of ineffectiveness in state court in his Rule
32 petition.
Rather, during the Rule 32 hearing, Jones presented testimony
from Ann Graham, the legal secretary for Jones’s post-conviction
counsel, that Boles told her in a phone conversation something to
the effect of “that nigger is going to fry.” R. Vol. 2, p.378.
In his “Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Laws” filed
on May 14,1996, after the trial court conducted the Rule 32 hearing,
Jones stated that “[i]naddition, attorney Boles’ general racial
attitudes and, specifically, his racial attitudes as to his client,
the Petitioner, fatally impaired his ability to provide effective
assistance of counsel.” R. Vol. 4, p. 233.
On appeal of the trial court’s denial of his motion for post-conviction
relief, Jones asserted that “the root of his ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
claims is what he says are Boles’s racist views.” See Jones,753So.
2d at 1182. These general references to a “claim” of ineffectiveness
based on Boles’s alleged racial animosity do not fairly present the
claim to the courts.
Although Jones presented limited testimony on this allegation in
his Rule 32 proceeding, mentionedit briefly in his post-Rule 32
filings, and noted the allegation in his introductory and conclusory
portions of his state appellate brief, there is absolutely no
discussion by any state court of the allegation.
The state trial court did not address it in its Rule 32 order
because Jones did not raise the allegation in his Rule 32 petition.
Nor did the state appellate court review the merits of this “claim”
because Jones did not raise itas a discrete claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel on appeal from the trial court’s denial of his
Rule 32 petition.
Rather, the state appellate court made one statement mentioning
Jones’s assertion that the root of his ineffectiveness claims was
Boles’s racial animosity. Because this “claim” was not fairly
presented to the state courts, itis procedurally defaulted, see
Picard v. Connor,404 U.S.270,275,92 S. Ct. 509, 512(1971), and we
will not consider it. See Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 297-98,
109S. Ct. 1060, 1068-69 (1989).
A petitioner may obtain federal review of a procedurally
defaulted claim if he can show both cause for the default and actual
prejudice resulting from the default. Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S.
72, 97 S. Ct. 2497 (1977).
Additionally, in extraordinary cases, a federal court may grant a
habeas petition without a showing of cause and prejudice to correct
a fundamental miscarriage of justice. See Murray v.Carrier, 477 U.S.478,
106 S.Ct. 2639 (1986). Jones has not attempted to meet either
exception.
Furthermore, we decline to consider the merits of this claim
because Jones did not clearly present this issue to the district
court as a specific, enumerated claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel. As a general rule, we will not address issues or arguments
on appeal that were not fairly presented to the district court.
Depree v.Thomas, 946 F.2d 784, 793 (11th
Cir. 1991).
We note that in addition to his request for relief from his
conviction and sentence, Jones urges this court to remand his case
with directions that the district court conduct an evidentiary
hearing on his mental health claims. Jones is not entitled to an
evidentiary hearing because he had ample opportunity to develop the
factual basis of this claim in state court. See 28 U.S.C.
§2254(e)(2); see also Kelley v. Sec’y Dep’t of Corr., 377 F.3d 1317,
1337 (11th Cir. 2004).37
Assuming the issue was properly before us for consideration, we
would conclude that the claim is without merit. Boles’s alleged
racial remarks occurred almost 13 years after Jones’s trial. Jones
did not present any evidence that Boles made any racist statements
to Jones during his representation. There is no evidence that Boles
ever made a derogatory racial remark to Jones.
The alleged racial remarkwas made to a legal secretary, not to
Jones, and the alleged comment was made after Boles’s representation
of Jones. There is no evidence to support Jones’s allegation that
Boles’s alleged racist attitude toward him affected Boles’s
representation to the extent that Jones was denied the right to
counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. Accordingly, Jones is not
entitled to relief on this claim.
V. CONCLUSION.
Jones has not shown that his counsel rendered ineffective
assistance to him at either his trial or sentencing. Jones cannot
establish that in light of all the circumstances, his counsels’
performance was outside the wide range of professional competence.
Jones also cannot establish that his counsels’ alleged deficient
performance prejudiced the outcome of his trial or sentencing.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s judgment denying
Jones habeas relief. AFFIRMED.