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William
Gerald MITCHELL
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Rape
Number of victims: 2
Date of murder:
February 22, 1974 / November 21,
1995
Method of murder:
Stabbing with knife / Repeatedly run
over by a vehicle
Location: Harrison County, Mississippi, USA
Status: Sentenced to life imprisonment in 1975. Paroled in
1994. Sentenced to death in 1998. Executed by lethal injection in
Mississippi on March 22, 2012
United States Court of Appeals For the Fifth Circuit
William Gerald Mitchell, 61, was sentenced
to death in 1998 in Harrison County Circuit Court for the murder of
Patty Milliken, whom he killed while on parole for a previous murder.
On Nov. 21, 1995, Mitchell had been seen visiting
Milliken several times at the Biloxi Majik Mart, where she worked.
Toward the end of her shift, she stepped outside with Mitchell to
smoke a cigarette, leaving her personal items behind. She never
returned.
Her body was found under a bridge the next morning.
She had been raped, strangled, beaten, mutilated and crushed by a car.
Milliken’s blood and hair were found on and under
Mitchell’s car.
At the time of the murder, he was out serving
parole on a life sentence for the 1974 murder of Irene Edwards, also
in Harrison County.
Then a student at Mississippi Valley State
University, Mitchell went home for the weekend, and while there, on
February 22, 1974, he stabbed Edwards to death using two butcher
knives.
Miss. puts inmate to death for 1995 sex-slaying
of convenience store clerk on the Gulf Coast
By Jack Elliott Jr. - Associated Press
March 22, 2012
PARCHMAN, Miss. — A Mississippi man was executed
Thursday for the 1995 slaying of a woman who disappeared from
convenience store where she worked in Biloxi.
William Mitchell, 61, was pronounced dead at 6:20
p.m. Thursday after a lethal injection.
Asked whether he wanted to say anything before the
chemicals were pumped into his veins, Mitchell emphatically said,
"No."
Dressed in a red jumpsuit, wearing black-and-white
sneakers, Mitchell appeared to lick his lips, took a deep breath and
exhaled and then yawned. Moments later he closed his eyes and
officials pronounced him dead.
Mitchell was convicted in the Nov. 21, 1995,
slaying of 38-year-old Patty Milliken, who disappeared after walking
out of the Majik Mart convenience store where she worked to have a
cigarette with Mitchell.
Her body was found the next day under a bridge. She
had been "strangled, beaten, sexually assaulted and repeatedly run
over by a vehicle," according to court records.
Mitchell was convicted of capital murder in
Harrison County in 1998.
Two members of Milliken's family — son, Williams
Burns; and a sister, Rosemary Riley — witnessed the execution.
"We are so glad this day has come and justice is
being served on Patty's behalf. Mitchell cannot cause harm to anyone
else ever again," Riley said.
Burns, his voice breaking several times, said he
grew up without a father and his mother played dual roles.
"She and I shared so many great times. In this
moment I am very angry ... at the system, at this man and at the fact
that the process took close to 17 years to come to fruition.
"So do I feel justice was served? I would have to
say only slightly. Sure the state of Mississippi took his life, he
lived in a cage like an animal for the last 17 years ... but to lie
down and just go to sleep, that is the way we all pray that we go.
"For my mother it wasn't nearly as easy as it has
been for this man, so for that I am disappointed. And that a beautiful
lady's name will forever be tied to a disgusting man," Burns said.
There was no statement from Mitchell's family.
Mitchell wanted none of them present for the execution. His body was
collected by his sister and driven from the penitentiary.
Biloxi Police Chief John Miller, who was a
narcotics investigator when Milliken was killed, said he had hoped
Mitchell would have said something more.
"Something to cleanse his soul," Miller said.
Corrections Commissioner Chris Epps said Mitchell,
who was visited by a brother and two sisters, was talkative earlier in
the day.
"Just small talk ... nothing about what he was on
death row for," Epps said.
The U.S. Supreme Court earlier Thursday declined to
stop Mitchell's execution.
Gov. Phil Bryant issued a statement that he would
not halt the execution.
"After reviewing the case of William Mitchell and
the crime he committed, I will not stand in the way of the scheduled
execution. My thoughts and prayers are with the family and friends of
Patty Milliken, who fell victim to this horrible act of violence,"
Bryant said in the statement.
Court records show Mitchell, had been out of prison
on parole for less than a year for a 1974 murder when he was charged
with raping and killing Milliken.
According to court records, Mitchell, as a young
adult, served in the Army but by the 1990s, he had a long criminal
record and had spent much of his adult life behind bars. He was
charged twice with beating women in 1973. In 1974, he was charged with
killing a family friend and stabbing her daughter.
In his petition to the Supreme Court, Mitchell had
argued the Mississippi courts denied his right to due process by
failing to address his challenge that was based on his lawyers'
inadequate representation. He said the courts just ignored the issue
by saying it had already been adjudicated elsewhere.
Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood in his brief
to the Supreme Court said the issues raised by Mitchell were nothing
new and were rejected by other courts.
Mississippi executes killer
ClarionLedger.com
March 23, 2012
PARCHMAN
— A Mississippi man was executed Thursday for the 1995 slaying of a
woman who disappeared from convenience store where she worked in
Biloxi.
William Mitchell, 61, was pronounced dead at 6:20
p.m. after a lethal injection.
He is the second inmate executed this week for also
killing a woman in 1995.
Asked whether he wanted to say anything before the
chemicals were pumped into his veins, Mitchell emphatically said,
"No."
Dressed in a red jumpsuit, wearing black-and-white
sneakers, Mitchell appeared to lick his lips, took a deep breath and
exhaled and then yawned. Moments later he closed his eyes and
officials pronounced him dead.
Mitchell was convicted in the Nov. 21, 1995,
slaying of 38-year-old Patty Milliken, who disappeared after walking
out of the Majik Mart convenience to have a cigarette with Mitchell.
Her body was found the next day under a bridge. She
had been "strangled, beaten, sexually assaulted and repeatedly run
over by a vehicle," according to court records.
Mitchell was convicted of capital murder in
Harrison County in 1998.
Two members of Milliken's family - son Williams
Burns and a sister, Rosemary Riley, - witnessed the execution.
Corrections Commissioner Chris Epps said Mitchell
didn't want any of his own relatives to witness it, but noted that
Mitchell's lawyers were present. Earlier Thursday, Mitchell was
visited by a brother and two sisters.
Epps said Mitchell was talkative earlier in the
day.
"Just small talk ... nothing about what he was on
death row for," Epps said.
Mitchell's last meal request was for fried shrimp
and oysters, ranch dressing, two fried chicken breasts, a strawberry
shake and a soft drink. Epps said Mitchell ate very little of the
meal, but asked for a sedative.
The Mississippi Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme
Court earlier Thursday declined to stop Mitchell's execution.
Gov. Phil Bryant said in a statement that he would
not halt the execution.
"After reviewing the case of William Mitchell and
the crime he committed, I will not stand in the way of the scheduled
execution. My thoughts and prayers are with the family and friends of
Patty Milliken, who fell victim to this horrible act of violence,"
Bryant said in the statement.
Mitchell's body will be turned over to his sister,
Gerolyn Mitchell, and Brinson Funeral Home in Cleveland.
Court records show Mitchell had been out of prison
on parole for less than a year for a 1974 murder when he was charged
with raping and killing Milliken.
According to court records, Mitchell, as a young
adult, served in the Army but by the 1990s, he had a long criminal
record and had spent much of his adult life behind bars. He was
charged twice with beating women in 1973. In 1974, he was charged with
killing a family friend and stabbing her daughter.
In his petition to the Supreme Court, Mitchell had
argued the Mississippi courts denied his right to due process by
failing to address his challenge that was based on his lawyers'
inadequate representation. He said the courts just ignored the issue
by saying it had already been adjudicated elsewhere.
Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood in his brief
to the Supreme Court said the issues raised by Mitchell were nothing
new and were rejected by other courts.
On Tuesday, Larry Matthew Puckett, was executed for
the 1995 sexual assault and slaying of the wife of his former boss.
Puckett, 35, was convicted of the Oct. 14, 1995,
killing of Rhonda Hatten Griffis, a 28-year-old mother of two who
lived northeast of Hattiesburg in Petal.
Like Mitchell, Puckett said "no" when asked if he had a last
statement.
United States Court of Appeals For the Fifth Circuit
WILLIAM GERALD MITCHELL, Petitioner—Appellant
v.
CHRISTOPHER B EPPS, COMMISSIONER, MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS, Respondent—Appellee
No. 10–70006
May 16, 2011
Before JOLLY, CLEMENT, and ELROD, Circuit Judges.
In July 1998, William Gerald Mitchell was convicted
and sentenced to death for the November 1995 capital murder of Patty
Milliken. The Mississippi Supreme Court denied post-conviction
relief, and the federal district court denied habeas relief and denied
a certificate of appealability (“COA”). Mitchell has requested a COA
from this court authorizing him to appeal the denial of relief on his
claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that he
is mentally retarded and ineligible for execution. Because the
district court's decision denying relief on these claims is not
debatable among reasonable jurists and Mitchell's claims are not
adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further, we DENY his
request for a COA.
I.
On the evening of November 21, 1995, near the end
of her shift, Patty Milliken told her co-worker at a Biloxi
convenience store that she was going to go outside with Mitchell to
smoke a cigarette and talk. She left her purse and car keys in the
convenience store. When she did not return, her co-worker reported
to the police that she was missing. Milliken had written Mitchell's
telephone number on a piece of paper that the police found in her
purse. The police cross-referenced the telephone number to an
address. When they arrived at that address, Mitchell, who was in the
yard, ran from them. The police later spotted Mitchell at a gas
station, and pursued him when he fled from the gas station in his car.
He was arrested for traffic violations.
Milliken's body was found the following morning
under a bridge. She had been beaten, strangled, sexually assaulted,
and crushed after having been run over by a car. After the police
searched Mitchell's car, he was charged with Milliken's murder. At
the time of Milliken's murder, Mitchell was under a sentence of life
imprisonment for a previous murder, and had been on parole for
approximately eleven months.
The jury found Mitchell guilty of capital murder.
At the punishment phase, Mitchell called four witnesses. His wife,
Mary Louise Mitchell, testified that she met Mitchell at the
penitentiary. The last time he lived with her was in 1990 or 1991.
She told the jury that they had adopted her son's child. She stated
that Mitchell had a wonderful relationship with her adult daughters,
and that he worked and took care of her children, allowing her to use
some of his earnings to support them. She stated that he worked as a
roofer, then as a direct care worker at the Mississippi State
Hospital, and then went to truck driving school and became a truck
driver. She said that Mitchell had never been violent to or around
her.
Mitchell's stepfather, Albert Reed, Jr., testified
that he married Mitchell's mother when Mitchell was four years old.
According to Reed, Mitchell was a normal youngster and everybody loved
him. Mitchell never had any problems with the law and worked for his
grandfather's lawn business. He testified that Mitchell served in
the Army, and something happened to change Mitchell when he got back
from Korea.
Mitchell's sister, Marie Cornelia Mitchell Dunn,
testified that during their childhood, they did what normal children
do, playing and going to school. She said that Mitchell worked “all
the time” when he was young. She also testified about Mitchell's
military service. She admitted that she was aware that he had been
convicted of murder in 1975. She stated that her brother reads the
Bible, and that is what has saved him: “A person who has committed
two murders reads the Bible and that's what he does everyday.” 1
Rosemary Reed, Mitchell's mother, testified that
Mitchell had normal boyhood activities, and was “just a typical boy.”
He was a Boy Scout and did normal things that Scouts do, such as
camping. She testified about his military service. According to
her, Korea was a bad place for him to be. She testified about his
conviction for murder in 1975 and his sentence of life imprisonment.
The jury did not find Mitchell's mitigating
evidence to be persuasive, and he was sentenced to death. The
Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed his conviction and sentence on
March 29, 2001, and denied rehearing on August 23, 2001. Mitchell v.
State, 792 So.2d 192 (Miss.2001). The Supreme Court denied
certiorari. Mitchell v. Mississippi, 535 U.S. 933 (2002).
The Mississippi Supreme Court denied
post-conviction relief on August 19, 2004, and denied rehearing on
December 2, 2004. Mitchell v. State, 886 So.2d 704 (Miss.2004). The
Supreme Court denied certiorari. Mitchell v. Mississippi, 544 U.S.
1022 (2005).
Mitchell filed his federal habeas petition on June
15, 2005. On March 19, 2010, in a thorough and well-reasoned
opinion, the district court denied relief and denied Mitchell's
request for a COA. Mitchell v. Epps, No. 1:04–cv–865, 2010 WL 1141126
(S.D.Miss. Mar. 19, 2010).
II.
Mitchell requests a COA from this court authorizing
him to appeal the denial of habeas relief on two issues: (1) whether
he was denied the effective assistance of counsel during the guilt 2
and sentencing phases of trial; and (2) whether he is mentally
retarded and entitled to an evidentiary hearing on that issue. We
address the ineffective assistance claim first, and then turn to the
mental retardation claim.
A.
Because Mitchell's ineffective assistance of
counsel claim was adjudicated on the merits by the Mississippi Supreme
Court, the district court's consideration of Mitchell's claim was
governed by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). That section provides:
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).
For the district court, “[t]he pivotal question
[was] whether the state court's application of the Strickland [v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 688 (1984),] standard was unreasonable. This is
different from asking whether defense counsel's performance fell below
Strickland 's standard.” Harrington v. Richter, 131 S.Ct. 770, 785
(2011). “When § 2254(d) applies, the question is not whether
counsel's actions were reasonable. The question is whether there is
any reasonable argument that counsel satisfied Strickland 's
deferential standard.” Id. at 788. “A state court's determination
that a claim lacks merit precludes federal habeas relief so long as
fairminded jurists could disagree on the correctness of the state
court's decision.” Id. at 786 (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted).
The district court held that Mitchell's ineffective
assistance claim was not exhausted in state court and consequently is
procedurally barred from review, except for his claim that counsel
failed to discover and present evidence of mental retardation at
sentencing. It held that the Mississippi Supreme Court's denial of
relief on Mitchell's Strickland claim was not unreasonable because
Mitchell failed to show that he met the standard for mental
retardation defined by state law and, therefore, his counsel could not
be faulted for failing to present evidence of mental retardation.
Assuming Mitchell's claim that his trial counsel should have offered
evidence of other mental disorders were not barred, the district court
held that Mitchell was not prejudiced, because the evidence Mitchell
claimed should have been presented was not of such persuasive
character that it would have influenced the jury's appraisal of his
moral culpability.
Mitchell has requested a COA from this court
authorizing him to appeal the district court's denial of relief. To
obtain a COA, Mitchell must make “a substantial showing of the denial
of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). “When the
district court denies a habeas petition on procedural grounds without
reaching the prisoner's underlying constitutional claim, a COA should
issue when the prisoner shows, at least, that jurists of reason would
find it debatable whether the petition states a valid claim of the
denial of a constitutional right and that jurists of reason would find
it debatable whether the district court was correct in its procedural
ruling.” Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 484 (2000). “Where a
district court has rejected the constitutional claims on the merits, ․
[t]he petitioner must demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find
the district court's assessment of the constitutional claims debatable
or wrong,” id., “or that jurists could conclude the issues presented
are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further.” Miller–El
v. Cockrell, 537 U.S. 322, 327 (2003) (citation omitted). “[A] claim
can be debatable even though every jurist of reason might agree, after
the COA has been granted and the case has received full consideration,
that petitioner will not prevail.” Id. at 338. In making the
decision whether to grant a COA, this court's examination is limited
to a “threshold inquiry,” which consists of “an overview of the claims
in the habeas petition and a general assessment of their merits.” Id.
at 327, 336. The court cannot deny a COA because it believes the
petitioner ultimately will not prevail on the merits of his claims.
Id. at 337. On the other hand, however, “issuance of a COA must not
be pro forma or a matter of course.” Id. “While the nature of a
capital case is not of itself sufficient to warrant the issuance of a
COA, in a death penalty case any doubts as to whether a COA should
issue must be resolved in the petitioner's favor.” Ramirez v. Dretke,
398 F.3d 691, 694 (5th Cir.2005) (brackets, internal quotation marks,
and citations omitted).
In his COA request, Mitchell argues that his trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to investigate,
discover, and introduce readily available mitigating evidence
concerning his background and mental condition.
As the Mississippi Supreme Court recognized,
Mitchell's ineffective assistance of counsel claim is governed by the
clearly established law set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466
U.S. 668 (1984). See Mitchell v. State, 886 So.2d at 708. To have
been entitled to relief from the Mississippi Supreme Court, Mitchell
had to
show that counsel's performance was deficient.
This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel
was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the
Sixth Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient
performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that
counsel's errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair
trial, a trial whose result is reliable. Unless a defendant makes
both showings, it cannot be said that the conviction or death sentence
resulted from a breakdown in the adversary process that renders the
result unreliable.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687.
“[T]he proper standard for attorney performance is
that of reasonably effective assistance.” Id. “[T]he defendant must
show that counsel's representation fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness.” Id. at 688.
Judicial scrutiny of counsel's performance must be
highly deferential. It is all too tempting for a defendant to
second-guess counsel's assistance after conviction or adverse
sentence, and it is all too easy for a court, examining counsel's
defense after it has proved unsuccessful, to conclude that a
particular act or omission of counsel was unreasonable. A fair
assessment of attorney performance requires that every effort be made
to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the
circumstances of counsel's challenged conduct, and to evaluate the
conduct from counsel's perspective at the time. Because of the
difficulties inherent in making the evaluation, a court must indulge a
strong presumption that counsel's conduct falls within the wide range
of reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must
overcome the presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged
action might be considered sound trial strategy. There are countless
ways to provide effective assistance in any given case. Even the
best criminal defense attorneys would not defend a particular client
in the same way.
Id. at 689 (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted).
With respect to the duty to investigate, which was
at issue in Strickland and is the focus of Mitchell's claim,
strategic choices made after thorough investigation
of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
unchallengeable; and strategic choices made after less than complete
investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable
professional judgments support the limitations on investigation. In
other words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or
to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
unnecessary. In any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not
to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the
circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel's
judgments.
Id. at 690–91. See also Williams v. Taylor, 529
U.S. 362 (2000); Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510 (2003); Rompilla v.
Beard, 545 U.S. 374 (2005). The Supreme Court recently stated that
these three post-Strickland cases, each of which granted relief on
ineffective assistance claims, did not establish “strict rules” for
counsel's conduct “[b]eyond the general requirement of
reasonableness.” Cullen v. Pinholster, 131 S.Ct. 1388, 1406–07
(2011). “An attorney need not pursue an investigation that would be
fruitless, much less one that might be harmful to the defense.”
Richter, 131 S.Ct. at 789–90. Mitchell's counsel were “entitled to
formulate a strategy that was reasonable at the time and to balance
limited resources in accord with effective trial tactics and
strategies.” Id. at 789.
To demonstrate prejudice, Mitchell must show that
there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. “The likelihood of a
different result must be substantial, not just conceivable.” Richter,
131 S.Ct. at 792 (citation omitted).
“When a defendant challenges a death sentence, ․
the question is whether there is a reasonable probability that, absent
the errors, the sentencer—including an appellate court, to the extent
it independently reweighs the evidence—would have concluded that the
balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant
death.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695. “In making this determination,
a court hearing an ineffectiveness claim must consider the totality of
the evidence before the judge or jury.” Id.
The Mississippi Supreme Court interpreted
Mitchell's claim as one of ineffective assistance for failing to
develop and present evidence of mental retardation at sentencing.
Mitchell, 886 So.2d at 708. The Court stated that there is no
evidence in the record to suggest that Mitchell is mentally retarded.
Id. The Court observed that the record showed that Mitchell had
served four years in the military and had attended college, and that
Dr. Matherne, who interviewed Mitchell for two hours after his arrest
for murder in 1974, found that “it was obvious that [Mitchell] had at
least average intellectual functioning and a significant deficit in
cognitive functioning was not noted during the interview.” Id. at
708–09. The Court concluded that, consequently, trial counsel could
not “be faulted for failing to present mitigating evidence which did
not exist.” Id. at 709.
In federal court, Mitchell attempted to expand his
claim to include counsel's failure to investigate and present evidence
of mental illness. He alleged in his federal habeas petition that
“[t]rial counsel breached his duty to investigate and present
mitigating evidence and failed to investigate and present evidence of
mental retardation and mental illness to the sentencing jury.” In
his brief in support of his federal habeas petition, Mitchell alleged
that counsel unreasonably decided to forego any meaningful
investigation and presentation of mitigating evidence in the following
respects:
(1) Although Mitchell's first lawyer, Keith Roberts
(“Roberts”), employed an investigator early in the pretrial period, he
conducted no investigation of mitigating evidence;
(2) Mitchell's trial counsel, Keith Pisarich
(“Pisarich”) and Thomas Musselman (“Musselman”), failed to investigate
and present any mitigating evidence to the jury during the sentencing
phase except calling as witnesses four relatives in essentially naked
pleas for mercy;
(3) trial counsel failed to use (or seek funds for)
a mitigation expert to prepare a social history or otherwise evaluate
Mitchell;
(4) trial counsel failed to conduct even a cursory
investigation into Mitchell's personal background, including his
records of military service, employment, prior penitentiary sentence,
academic performance, and social history.
Mitchell alleged that, as a result of counsel's
errors, the jury was not presented with evidence of his mental illness
and mental retardation.
The district court concluded that, as presented to
the state court, Mitchell's ineffective assistance of counsel claim
based on trial counsel's failure to develop and present mitigating
evidence at the penalty phase of the trial concerning Mitchell's
mental condition was limited to evidence of mental retardation and did
not encompass a claim that counsel rendered ineffective assistance by
failing to present mitigating evidence of his diminished mental
capacity and mental illness. Accordingly, the district court held
that Mitchell's ineffective assistance claim was exhausted in state
court only insofar as he claimed that counsel failed to discover and
present evidence of mental retardation at sentencing. It held that
the Mississippi Supreme Court reasonably concluded that Mitchell
failed to show that he met the standard for mental retardation defined
by state law and, consequently, his counsel could not be faulted for
failing to present evidence of mental retardation. Assuming
Mitchell's claim that his trial counsel should have offered evidence
of other mental disorders were not barred, the district court held
that Mitchell was not prejudiced because the evidence Mitchell claimed
should have been presented was not of such persuasive character that
it would have influenced the jury's appraisal of his moral
culpability.
1.
Mitchell argues that the issues he raised in state
court encompassed mental health mitigating evidence, as well as mental
retardation mitigating evidence. Mitchell asserts that his claim
that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
gather records, locate witnesses, ensure that Mitchell received an
adequate mental health evaluation, and investigate all mitigating
evidence concerning his mental condition, family life and personal
circumstances, was fairly presented to the state court and thus
exhausted.
A thorough review of Mitchell's state court filings
convinces us that reasonable jurists would not find debatable the
district court's conclusion that Mitchell failed to exhaust his
ineffective assistance claim with respect to evidence other than
evidence of mental retardation.
In his state post-conviction application, under the
heading “Grounds for Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim,”
Mitchell described the issue as “Failure to Investigate and Present
Evidence of Mental Retardation to Sentencing Jury.” On page three,
under the heading “Preservation of Issues,” the application states
that “trial counsel failed to properly investigate and present
mitigating evidence at trial concerning Mitchell's mental health
problems. Mitchell would submit that he is mentally retarded as
contemplated in the United States Supreme Court case of Atkins v.
Virginia.” On page 15, Mitchell alleged that “[c]ounsel's performance
fell below the effective standard since they failed to investigate the
defendant's mental health background, which may have shown that he was
‘borderline mentally retarded’ or other significant mental health
illnesses.” The petition alleges that “[e]ven a cursory examination
of Mitchell's childhood school records, military records, the findings
of prior mental evaluations, employment records together with other
psychiatric and psychological records would have readily revealed
potent mitigation matters for the trial jury's consideration.”
Specifically, “[t]he records would have revealed to trial counsel that
Mitchell had been previously diagnosed on more than one occasion as
being mildly mentally retarded.” The petition goes on to describe
how the referenced documents demonstrate that Mitchell's intelligence
is in the range covered by Atkins, and that he has adaptive deficits.
On page 18, he alleged that “[t]rial counsel had a duty to
investigate his mental illnesses and mental retardation. Trial
counsel was neglectful and they failed to do so and as a result, the
trial jury never had an opportunity to consider evidence of mental
retardation as mitigation.”
Mitchell also alleged in his state post-conviction
petition that “[t]here was an abundance of relevant, significant and
material mitigating evidence to have been obtained from Mitchell's
family members and official records but defense counsel failed to take
the time to investigate or interview or offer any of them.” He
claimed that “[p]roper investigation and presentation of the testimony
of the relevant family members and the testimony of just one mental
health expert could easily have persuaded the trial jury to return a
life sentence.”
In his reply brief filed in the post-conviction
proceedings before the Mississippi Supreme Court, Mitchell argued
again that “trial counsel failed to properly investigate and present
mitigating evidence ․ concerning Mitchell's mental health problems.”
He argued that his propensity to become involved in physical
altercations, his undependability as a worker, and his discharge from
the Army due to unsuitability were indicia of mental retardation and
adaptive skills deficits.
As noted, the Mississippi Supreme Court interpreted
Mitchell's claim as one of ineffective assistance for failing to
develop and present evidence of mental retardation at sentencing.
Mitchell, 886 So.2d at 708. In his motion for rehearing of the
denial of post-conviction relief filed in the Mississippi Supreme
Court, Mitchell did not claim that the Mississippi Supreme Court had
misunderstood or misinterpreted his claim by limiting it to the
failure to present evidence of mental retardation. He asserted that
“counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate and present
mitigating evidence concerning his mental health history in support of
his mental retardation claim.” On page 27, he stated that
“[c]ounsel's performance fell below the effective standard since they
failed to investigate the defendant's mental health background, which
may have shown that he was ‘borderline mentally retarded’ or other
significant mental health illness.” On page 30, he alleged, in a
conclusory fashion, that counsel's “failure to investigate and
interview family members, as well as other witnesses, expert and lay,
does not equate to sound trial strategy.” On page 31, he stated that
“trial counsel had a duty to investigate his mental illnesses and
mental retardation. Trial counsel was neglectful and ․ they failed
to do so and as a result, the trial jury never had an opportunity to
consider evidence of mental retardation in mitigation.” He also
alleged, again conclusorily, that there was “an abundance of relevant,
significant and material mitigating evidence to have been obtained
from his family members and official records, but defense counsel
failed to take the time to investigate or interview or offer any of
them.” He did not offer any description of the evidence that
supposedly could have been obtained from the family members.
Based on the foregoing, the district court's
conclusion that Mitchell's claim in state court centered on the
failure to investigate and present mitigating evidence of mental
retardation, and was not a claim of a general failure to investigate
and present any mitigating evidence, is not reasonably debatable.
Although Mitchell mentioned mental illness and made reference to the
documents attached as exhibits to his state post-conviction petition,
he made no argument with respect to the contents of those documents
other than as proof of mental retardation. Further, although he
complained about counsel's failure to interview family members, he did
not provide any details about what they could have testified to if
interviewed and called as witnesses.
Even assuming, however, that Mitchell's ineffective
assistance claim regarding evidence of mental illness is not barred,
the district court's alternative conclusion that Mitchell was not
prejudiced by counsel's failure to present evidence of mental illness
is not reasonably debatable. We now turn to discuss the evidence of
mental retardation and mental illness that Mitchell claims should have
been presented at trial.
2.
Mitchell was initially represented by Roberts and
Musselman. After Roberts withdrew, Pisarich replaced him. Pisarich
and Musselman represented Mitchell at trial. On March 18, 1998,
prior to trial, Mitchell's counsel filed a motion to have him examined
by a psychiatrist. Attached to that motion were copies of Mitchell's
prior mental evaluations by various mental health professionals. The
trial court granted the motion and the evaluation was conducted by Dr.
Maggio on March 20, 1998. Dr. Maggio concluded that Mitchell was not
schizophrenic, psychotic, or mentally retarded.
Mitchell contends that this psychiatric evaluation
was inadequate because it was done solely to determine whether he knew
right from wrong and was competent to assist in his defense.
Further, the evaluation relied heavily on Mitchell's self-reporting
during a two-hour interview. Dr. Maggio noted that Mitchell reported
that he had previously been in drug rehabilitation, had abused drugs
while in the military, and was under the influence of drugs on the
night of Milliken's murder. Mitchell asserts that Dr. Maggio's
reliance on Mitchell's self-account of his life history, without
probing into specifics in his personal background and without access
to previous psychological evaluations, including those from Mitchell's
previous penitentiary stay, was inadequate to discover mitigating
evidence.
Mitchell asserts that the only mitigating evidence
offered at the punishment phase of his trial was testimony from some
family members who asked for mercy. He complains that his counsel
did not present to the jury any substantive evidence or insight into
his psychological problems, his history of failures at school, with
his relationships, and during his military service and employment
history. According to Mitchell, the key to his ineffective
assistance claim is that trial counsel never investigated any aspect
of his mental condition, either for retardation or mental illness and,
therefore, no such evidence was available to present in mitigation at
the penalty phase of his trial.
Mitchell contends that a proper mitigation
investigation would have revealed numerous records, including grade
school records, college records, employment records, records from the
Mississippi State Hospital, and other psychological records, including
those from the Mississippi Department of Corrections and a drug and
alcohol rehabilitation facility. A description of the documents
Mitchell claims his counsel should have discovered and presented to
the jury follows:
Dr. Bass: Mitchell was seen by Dr. Bass on April
10, 1974, for a psychiatric evaluation after he had been charged with
the murder of a family friend and the assault with the intent to
murder the victim's daughter. Dr. Bass stated that Mitchell “is
coherent, he is aware of the consequences of his actions, he is
intellectually able to stand trial; however, I consider him to be a
borderline schizophrenic, potential for decompensation into a
psychotic state, under stress.” Dr. Bass stated that the paranoid
feelings that Mitchell described on returning to school and the
circumstances of Mitchell's situation led him to believe that Mitchell
was probably psychotic at the time of the murder and was not able to
distinguish between right and wrong.
Dr. Matherne: In a June 26, 1974, report of
psychological evaluation, Dr. Matherne stated that Mitchell's
intellectual functioning appears to be in at least the average range
of intelligence. Dr. Matherne stated that a formal intellectual
evaluation was not conducted because it was obvious that Mitchell had
at least average intellectual functioning and a significant deficit in
cognitive functioning was not noted during the interview. The fact
that Mitchell had attended college also supported Dr. Matherne's
impression that Mitchell has at least average intellectual ability.
Mitchell had been referred to Dr. Matherne to determine whether
Mitchell was then or had at any time in the past functioned on a
psychotic level. Dr. Matherne's report noted that Mitchell had been
charged with murder and assault with intent to murder for stabbing to
death a woman in his neighborhood and assaulting the woman's daughter.
Dr. Matherne stated that Mitchell may have functioned on a psychotic
level in the past and that he appears to have a borderline
schizophrenic process which, when precipitated under stress, results
in his inability to engage in appropriate reality testing and that he
may experience a loss of memory for his actions.
Mississippi State Hospital Records: Mitchell was
admitted to the Mississippi State Hospital on February 11, 1975, on
order of the Harrison County Circuit Court. He was facing charges of
murder and assault and battery. Mitchell's diagnosis following the
1975 psychological evaluation at the Mississippi State Hospital was
“mild mental retardation” and schizophrenia, latent type. In a
report dated March 20, 1975, Dr. Stanley, a staff psychologist, stated
that Mitchell may be borderline psychotic. Dr. Stanley noted that on
the Wechsler, Mitchell obtained a full scale IQ score of 79, which he
characterized as representing “borderline mental retardation.” Dr.
Stanley's report states that Mitchell's drawings “suggest a
considerable amount of hostility, especially where women are
concerned.”
These records also contain additional information
of questionable mitigating value, some of which could have been
damaging to Mitchell at the penalty phase of his trial. They contain
details about his arrests for assault and battery on July 23, 1973,
and November 11, 1973. In both of the prior assaults, the female
victims were beaten; one apparently suffered a broken jaw and wrist.
Mitchell is described in these records as “arrogant” and “quite
hostile, belligerent and very evasive.” The records contain
information about Mitchell and another inmate collaborating on a
possible damage suit and being confined because of a disturbance that
could have been quite violent. In addition, the records contain
damaging information about the 1974 stabbing murder of a female family
friend and the stabbing of her daughter. The notes reflect that, at
some point during the stabbing, the knife that Mitchell was using
broke, and he got another one. The notes indicate that the stabbing
victim was “cut, cut, cut to pieces.” The records also contain a
report that Mitchell's own grandmother said that she had become afraid
of him during the last few years.
Mississippi State Penitentiary Records: Staff
psychiatrist Dr. Croce interviewed Mitchell in 1977 and stated that he
seemed to function in the dull-normal level of intelligence, but that
his fund of general knowledge was not in keeping with his college
education. He noted that tests showed that Mitchell was reading at
grade level 7.9, spelling at grade level 8.7, and arithmetic was 4.9.
Dr. Croce stated that Mitchell should be watched carefully for
sudden changes in his behavior, as he can become extremely aggressive
and destructive, especially toward others if he feels threatened in
his insecurity. Dr. Croce's report also mentions that Mitchell has
had problems fighting with other inmates and had been disciplined
several times for assaultive behavior. He described Mitchell as
“unusual and bizarre.”
Dr. McGlynn, a psychologist, reported that
Mitchell's full-scale IQ on the short form Wechsler Adult Intelligence
Scale is 83 (Verbal, 76, Performance, 94). He stated further that
the results of testing suggested the presence of major psychiatric
involvement and that Mitchell may be “clinically psychotic with a
picture of schizophrenia, paranoid type.”
Military Records: Mitchell served in the Army from
1969 until 1973 as a supply clerk and a welder. While in the Army,
he earned the National Defense Service Medal, the Expert Rifle Medal,
and the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal. Mitchell received
“excellent” ratings for conduct and efficiency from February 1969
until May 1969. Thereafter, he received “satisfactory,” “excellent,”
or “good” ratings in conduct and efficiency through February 1971,
with one “fair” rating for conduct. After February 1971, his
performance deteriorated. Mitchell was discharged from the Army for
“unsuitability” on December 12, 1972. Sergeant First Class Dunham
found that Mitchell “overall was not a competent soldier,” and
described his disrespectful behavior to others. Staff Sergeant
Rodgers noted that Mitchell's behavior further declined when his wife
left him, and mentioned Mitchell's “personal problems,” for which
Sergeant Rodgers gave him time off. Sergeant Rodgers observed that
Mitchell was a “daily problem for me” and that his “adaptability,
attitude, initiative and responsibility are way below average.”
Major Orendas provided a statement indicating that Mitchell had
separated from his wife for infidelity. Major Orendas cited
disciplinary problems, including involvement in physical altercations
with other soldiers (kicking one soldier and hitting a different one
in the face with his fists) and disrespect for officers. Major
Orendas characterized Mitchell as “an arrogant individual in complete
dissidence to the discipline required of members of a uniformed
service and ․ completely incorrigible.” Major Orendas noted that
Mitchell had not reformed his behavior after opportunities for
rehabilitation and that the unsatisfactory behavior had occurred in
previous assignments in Europe and Korea.
Mitchell complains that, instead of exploiting the
evidence of subnormal intelligence and performance documented in his
military records, counsel favorably cited to Mitchell's Army service,
without access to the records themselves. However, if Mitchell's
military service records had been presented to the jury, the jury
would have learned that his discharge was for refusal to obey orders,
attacking other soldiers, and dereliction of duty. The records also
reflect that he was trained as a welder, which some jurors might have
considered to cast doubt on a claim of mental retardation.
School Records: Mitchell's school records,
obtained by his post-conviction counsel and attached to his state
post-conviction petition, reflect that he attended school through the
eleventh grade without failing a grade until the second semester of
the tenth grade. He was not in any special education classes. His
grades were in the 70s, with some 80s in the sixth grade. He
participated in football, basketball, and choir. He earned his GED
while in the Army. Mitchell was accepted at Mississippi Valley State
University in January 1974, where he enrolled in biology, art,
history, and psychology classes. He attended classes for only about
a month before he withdrew after he was arrested for aggravated
assault and murder.
Employment Records: After his discharge from the
Army, Mitchell worked at Manpower as a welder. He also worked at
Ingalls shipyard as a shipfitter and then as a tacker apprentice for
two or three months. He resigned because he was dissatisfied with
working conditions. On his job application, he indicated that he had
attended welding school at a local community college. When Mitchell
was on parole in 1989, he worked for the Mississippi State Hospital as
a Direct Care Trainee and then as a Direct Care Worker. He also
worked as a truck driver for J.B. Hunt in 1990, which the State claims
presumably would have required him to obtain a commercial driver's
license.
In support of his state post-conviction
application, Mitchell submitted the affidavits of Dr. Sarah DeLand,
Dr. Gwendolyn Catchings–Costello, and Dr. W. Criss Lott. Dr. DeLand
stated that, based on her review of the materials obtained by
Mitchell's post-conviction counsel, there were “a number of areas that
suggest the presence of mitigating factors and require further
exploration.” She concluded that Mitchell “may suffer from a
neurological dysfunction,” and that a “thorough forensic psychiatric
evaluation is necessary.” Dr. Catchings–Costello, a family friend,
stated that Mitchell was a poor student and had no realization of the
consequences of his actions. Dr. Lott's affidavit stated that Dr.
Maggio did not perform a full forensic evaluation to assess for
mitigating circumstances, and that such an evaluation, including
neuropsychological and intelligence testing, is necessary.
Mitchell also submitted to the state court the
affidavits of his trial counsel, Pisarich and Musselman. In his
affidavit, Pisarich stated that he did not use the services of an
investigator, but he noted that Mitchell's former attorney, Keith
Roberts, had used an investigator. Pisarich said that he did not
have the services of a mitigation specialist or a social worker to
look into Mitchell's background and that he did not obtain Mitchell's
school records or military service records. He was, however, aware
of Mitchell's psychiatric problems and said that, in hindsight, he
should have looked into it more closely. He stated that he
interviewed witnesses called to testify in mitigation at trial, but
that no investigation was made as to people who may have known
Mitchell during his incarceration at Parchman on his former
conviction.3
He stated that he had no information as to Mitchell's family
background except for what he learned in discussions he had with
Mitchell, his mother, and the other mitigation witnesses.
Pisarich's co-counsel, Musselman, submitted an
affidavit in which he stated that they performed no investigation into
any mitigating circumstances; they did not seek any mental health
records, school records, or military records; and no time was set
aside to prepare Mitchell's family members for the testimony in the
penalty phase. Musselman indicated that, as a result of this lack of
preparation, Mitchell's sister, during her testimony at the punishment
phase, blurted out that he had committed a prior murder. As we have
already noted, however, the fact that Mitchell had been sentenced to
life imprisonment and was on parole at the time he murdered Milliken
was already in evidence before the sister testified.
Although Mitchell alleges that his trial counsel
failed to investigate and discover these records, it is clear that
trial counsel had at least some of them, because they were attached to
the motion for a psychiatric examination.4
Specifically, attached to that motion were Dr. Matherne's reports of
June 26, 1974 and August 14, 1974; the June 26, 1974 report of Dr.
Bass; and the April 30, 1975 report from the Mississippi State
Hospital which mentions a diagnosis of “mild mental retardation.”
Further, those records were summarized in Dr. Maggio's report issued
following that examination. Dr. Maggio's report summarized most of
Mitchell's prior mental health evaluations, his criminal history, and
his drug use. Dr. Maggio concluded that Mitchell was not
schizophrenic, psychotic, or mentally retarded. If Mitchell's
counsel had presented the records that Mitchell contends they should
have presented, the State would have been able to rebut with Dr.
Maggio's testimony.
Although courts may not indulge post hoc
rationalization for counsel's decisionmaking that contradicts the
available evidence of counsel's actions, neither may they insist
counsel confirm every aspect of the strategic basis for his or her
actions. There is a strong presumption that counsel's attention to
certain issues to the exclusion of others reflects trial tactics
rather than sheer neglect. After an adverse verdict at trial even
the most experienced counsel may find it difficult to resist asking
whether a different strategy might have been better, and, in the
course of that reflection, to magnify their own responsibility for an
unfavorable outcome. Strickland, however, calls for an inquiry into
the objective reasonableness of counsel's performance, not counsel's
subjective state of mind.
Richter, 131 S.Ct. at 790 (internal quotation marks
and citations omitted). See also Pinholster, 131 S.Ct. at 1407
(citing with approval Chief Judge Kozinski's dissenting opinion below
in which he stated that the court of appeals was required “to
affirmatively entertain the range of possible reasons” that counsel
may have had for proceeding as they did).
The record shows that Mitchell's counsel's failure
to pursue the investigation that, in hindsight, they seem to think
they should have done, is consistent with their overall strategy of
trying to keep from the jury the damaging details of Mitchell's prior
assaults against women. Counsel were defending their client against
the death penalty for the brutal murder of a woman, committed less
than a year after he was released on parole for the brutal stabbing
murder of another woman who was a family friend. His criminal record
also included violent assaults against three other women. The record
shows that counsel were aware of Mitchell's prior psychological
evaluations, including the fact that those records contained details
of the prior murder and assaults that could have been damaging to
their effort to save Mitchell's life. They were also aware that Dr.
Maggio had examined Mitchell and found that he was not schizophrenic,
psychotic, or mentally retarded. Under these circumstances, they
reasonably could have decided that it was best to emphasize the
positive aspects of Mitchell's military service and to prevent the
jury from learning anything more than the bare fact that he previously
had been convicted of murder and assault. Mitchell's evidence of
mental retardation is so weak, and is contradicted by so much other
evidence, that his counsel reasonably could have decided that the jury
simply would not believe it. Counsel might also reasonably have
concluded that the evidence of mental illness contained damaging
information that a jury might have relied on to conclude that Mitchell
was incapable of rehabilitation.
Even assuming that Mitchell's counsel performed
deficiently, reasonable jurists would not find debatable the district
court's conclusion that Mitchell was not prejudiced by his counsel's
failure to present this information, and the other evidence that
Mitchell claims they should have presented from his school, military,
and employment records, to the jury. As the district court pointed
out, some of those documents contained damaging information that would
not have been helpful in attempting to persuade the jury to spare his
life. Those records show that Mitchell was involved in physical
altercations while at the Mississippi State Hospital and while in the
Army. He was not a dependable worker because of repeated absences from
his employment. He had a history of drug abuse. He is described in
these documents as arrogant, hostile to women, evasive, incorrigible,
negative, defiant, manipulative, aggressive, and destructive. He was
discharged from the Army as unsuitable, because of misconduct such as
refusing to obey orders, disrespecting officers, and beating and
kicking other soldiers. The documents also contain details about the
first murder Mitchell committed in 1974, in which he used two butcher
knives to kill the victim, because the first knife broke. The murder
victim was described as having been “cut, cut, cut to pieces.”
During that same incident, Mitchell also stabbed the victim's
daughter. Furthermore, the reports describe two earlier assaults
Mitchell committed against women. Although Mitchell's school records
do not contain any damaging information, the district court reasonably
concluded that there is nothing in those records that establishes any
sort of disorder that might have persuaded jurors to impose life
imprisonment rather than the death penalty.
The district court reasonably rejected Mitchell's
claim that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
properly investigate the information known by the testifying family
members and by failing to elicit such mitigating testimony from them
by ineffectively questioning them. Mitchell has not presented any
affidavits of any family members who state that he is mentally
retarded or describe testimony they could have presented that was
different from what they testified to at trial. In the state
post-conviction proceedings, Mitchell stated that he had attempted to
obtain affidavits from the witnesses called at trial in mitigation,
but was only able to obtain an affidavit from Mary Mitchell, his
ex-wife. Mitchell argues that her affidavit shows a complete lack of
trial preparation for mitigation. However, one portion of her
affidavit undercuts his claim of mental retardation: she stated that
she still has and uses Mitchell's Bible. She stated that as she
“read some of the passages he wrote in the margins of the Bible, I
really believed that he was serious and that he could have become a
minister.” Mitchell argued that if his daughter-in-law, Andrea
Mitchell, had been contacted, she would have testified about
Mitchell's “many good traits.” However, Andrea Mitchell did not
submit an affidavit, and the only support for her purported testimony
is the hearsay affidavit of post-conviction counsel's investigator,
Tomika Harris.5
In sum, reasonable jurists would not find debatable
the district court's denial of relief on Mitchell's ineffective
assistance of counsel claim, and Mitchell has not shown that this
claim is adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further. We
therefore deny his request for a COA on his ineffective assistance of
counsel claim. We now turn to consider whether Mitchell is entitled
to a COA for his claim that he is mentally retarded and thus
ineligible for execution.
B.
The Mississippi Supreme Court held that there is no
evidence in the record to suggest that Mitchell is mentally retarded.
886 So.2d at 712. Furthermore, the Court held that Mitchell had
not made the showing required by Chase v. State, 873 So.2d 1013, 1029
(Miss.2004), to be entitled to an evidentiary hearing: he did not
produce an affidavit from any expert stating that he had an IQ of 75
or below and that in the expert's opinion further testing would show
him to be mentally retarded. Mitchell, 886 So.2d at 712.
The district court held that the Mississippi
Supreme Court's decision that Mitchell had not established that he is
mentally retarded and had not made the showing necessary under state
law for an evidentiary hearing is not contrary to, or an unreasonable
application of, clearly established federal law. A thorough review
of the entire record convinces us that reasonable jurists would not
find the district court's decision to be debatable.
Mitchell did not present an affidavit from an
expert stating that he had an IQ of 75 or below and that further
testing would show that he is mentally retarded. Mitchell relies on
the diagnosis of mild mental retardation that he received from
Mississippi State Hospital in 1975. Although a summary sheet from
the Mississippi State Hospital indicates that Mitchell was diagnosed
with “Mild Mental Retardation,” the case notes state that “all members
of the staff agreed on a diagnosis of Borderline Mental Retardation.”
Mitchell's IQ score of 79, however, does not support a diagnosis of
mental retardation. Instead, according to the DSM–IV–TR, the term
“borderline intellectual functioning” is used to describe an IQ range
of 71–84, which is higher than that for Mental Retardation (an IQ of
70 or below). American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 42, 740 (4th ed.2000).
Mitchell claims that Biloxi Public School records
show that he registered IQ scores of 71, 74, 76, and 65. The State
contends that these were merely sub-test scores rather than full scale
IQ scores. The district court found the records inconclusive because
the scores were unexplained. Our review of those records supports
the district court's conclusion. Moreover, the Biloxi Public School
records show that at age nine Mitchell scored 77 on an IQ test.
Further, in 1977, when Mitchell was twenty-seven years old and serving
his sentence for his first murder conviction, he obtained an IQ score
of 83.
The record also contains very little evidence of
deficits in adaptive functioning. Mitchell's stepfather testified
that he was a “normal” youngster, who went to school and was loved by
everyone. His mother testified that he was a Boy Scout and had been
“just a typical boy.” Family members testified that he was in the
Job Corps and also worked for his grandfather's lawn service.
Mitchell has not presented any affidavits from any family members who
state that they would have testified that Mitchell is mentally
retarded.
The Biloxi Public School records show that Mitchell
passed Personal Development with grades of 90 and 95, and also passed
classes such as Spanish, Speech, Algebra, and Shop. In high school,
Mitchell played football and basketball and sang in the choir.
Mitchell's family reported that he completed his tests early in the
fifth and seventh grades. In 1974, Dr. Bass reported that Mitchell
had “no trouble learning” in high school. Mitchell obtained a GED
while serving in the Army.
The Mississippi State Hospital case notes indicate
that Mitchell interacted well with the other patients there and that
he played basketball and participated in recreational activities.
While at the Mississippi State Penitentiary, Mitchell boxed and played
football and basketball.
The record also contains evidence that Mitchell
maintained adult relationships. He had girlfriends; he was married
while in the Army and fathered a child before divorcing after three
years of marriage; and he later married another woman and adopted a
child.
Mitchell submitted handwritten requests for medical
attention at the Mississippi State Penitentiary. On one request, he
stated that his eyes had “deteriorated.” On another, he correctly
spelled “hemorrhoid.”
Our review of the entire record reveals much more
evidence that undermines Mitchell's claim that he is mentally
retarded.
The state court record contains numerous
handwritten letters and pleadings from Mitchell. In addition, his
trial counsel essentially re-filed all of the pro se motions that
Mitchell had previously filed, and incorporated and attached his pro
se filings to the motions that they filed on his behalf. At a
hearing in October 1996, the trial judge asked Mitchell why he had
filed a pro se speedy trial motion. Mitchell responded, “I thought I
had a right to file, Your Honor.” When the court asked who helped
him file the motion, Mitchell replied, “I did it myself, Your Honor.”
The trial judge asked Mitchell if he had read Barker v. Wingo, and
Mitchell replied that it was a speedy trial case and that he had read
some of it.
Mitchell testified at the suppression hearing,
before Pisarich replaced Roberts as his lead counsel. At the
conclusion of the hearing, he asked the judge if his taped statement
was going to be admitted into evidence. He stated that if the tape
was going to be submitted to the jury, the portion of the tape in
which he says that he is a parole violator should be taken out. He
cited in support the Mississippi Supreme Court case of Taylor v.
State. After Pisarich was appointed, he took up this identical
argument, citing the very same authority that Mitchell had cited.
At a speedy trial motion hearing in July 1998, the
Court asked Mitchell about his speedy trial motion and the motion to
dismiss Roberts as his counsel, and Mitchell replied, “It wasn't a
written motion, I did it ore tenus.” When testifying at that
hearing, Mitchell indicated his understanding that if he testified
about matters covered by the attorney-client privilege between him and
his former attorney, Roberts, the prosecutor could cross-examine him
about it. In response to the court's question about whether he had
ever asked in open court for a speedy trial, Mitchell replied: “No,
sir. And the reason I didn't do that is because the little case law
that I read concerning speedy trial, the Mississippi Supreme Court and
the United States Supreme Court and the federal courts said that once
the defendant makes a demand for a speedy trial you don't need to
bring it up anymore. And then it's not—and the law also says that
it's not the defendant who's to bring it to trial, it's the State to
bring the defendant to trial.”
At the conclusion of the State's case in chief at
the guilt phase of the trial, the court addressed Mitchell about his
decision not to testify. During that colloquy, the court asked
Mitchell if anyone had helped him file his pro se motions, and
Mitchell said no, that he did it himself, using resources from the law
library at the detention center. Pisarich stated that he had visited
with Mitchell at the Harrison County Jail approximately 25 to 30 times
since he had been appointed and that they discussed trial strategy, as
well as many other things. He stated that Mitchell's decision not to
testify was not made on the spur of the moment and had been
well-discussed.
In a January 11, 2000 motion for leave to file an
amended brief, Mitchell's counsel stated that Mitchell had called
counsel about the contents of his brief on direct appeal. Apparently
Mitchell was very dissatisfied with the contents of the brief and had
specifically requested that his counsel add certain additional
matters. The motion goes on to state that, after consideration,
counsel believes that the additional matters should be added to the
appellant's brief.
In a handwritten letter to the district court,
Mitchell asked for the name of the attorney who had been appointed to
represent him in federal habeas proceedings. The letter includes the
docket number of his case and states that he needs to know the name
and address of his attorney because his federal habeas petition is due
on April 18, 2005, and he has not heard from his attorney.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that reasonable
jurists would not find debatable the district court's conclusion that
the Mississippi Supreme Court's decision that Mitchell had not
established that he is mentally retarded and had not made the showing
necessary under state law for an evidentiary hearing is not contrary
to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal
law. We therefore deny Mitchell's request for a COA authorizing him
to appeal the denial of relief on his mental retardation claim.
III.
For the reasons stated above, we DENY Mitchell's
request for a COA.
COA DENIED.
FOOTNOTES
1. FN1. Mitchell
argues that Dunn “blurted out” her testimony regarding the earlier
murder because his trial counsel failed to prepare her for her
testimony. However, the fact that he was serving a life sentence and
was out on parole at the time of Milliken's murder was already in
evidence before Dunn testified.
2. FN2. Although
Mitchell mentions the guilt phase in his COA request, his brief is
focused solely on the punishment phase of the trial. Accordingly, he
has abandoned his request for a COA as to ineffective assistance of
counsel at the guilt phase of the trial. See Hernandez v. Thaler,
630 F.3d 420, 426 n.24 (5th Cir.2011) (stating that petitioner
abandoned issue not briefed in COA request).
3. FN3. Apparently
there are no people who knew Mitchell during his incarceration at
Parchman on his prior murder conviction who could have provided
mitigating evidence; at least, his post-conviction counsel did not
identify any such individuals or describe what they might have said
had they been called to testify.
4. FN4. There
is additional evidence that Mitchell's counsel were aware of the
contents of Mitchell's records of prior mental health examinations.
At a motion hearing in 1998 after Pisarich was appointed, the trial
court and Pisarich were talking about Mitchell's prior convictions and
the court mentioned Mitchell's examination by the Gulf Coast Mental
Health Center. Pisarich replied, “Yes, Your Honor. We have gone
over all that, and I have a complete copy of those files.” The Court
then asked Pisarich about Mitchell going to the Mississippi State
Hospital, and Pisarich indicated his familiarity with Mitchell's
examinations by Dr. Bass and Dr. Matherne prior to going to the
Mississippi State Hospital.
5. FN5. Mitchell's
alternative claim of ineffective post-conviction counsel was not
presented to the state court or to the district court and is barred in
any event by Stevens v. Epps, 618 F.3d 489, 502–04 (5th Cir.2010),
cert. denied, _ S.Ct. _, 2011 WL 1225748 (Apr. 4, 2011).