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James Ronald
MEANES
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Million-dollar armored car heist
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
April 21,
1981
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth: June
8,
1956
Victim profile: Oliver Flores, 29 (security guard)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Harris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on December 15,
1998
Date of
Execution:
December 15, 1998
Offender:
James Ronald Meanes #689
Last Statement:
As the ocean always returns to itself, love
always returns to itself. So does consciousness, always returns
to itself. And I do so with love on my lips. May God bless all
mankind.
James Ronald Meanes Age: 42 (24) Executed: Dec. 15, 1998 Education level: High school graduate or GED
Meanes was executed
for his involvement in a million-dollar armored car heist that left
guard Oliver Flores, 29, dead outside a Gulf Freeway discount store on
April 21, 1981. His accomplice, Carlos Santana, was executed in 1993.
James Ronald Meanes was pronounced dead at 6:36 p.m.,
8 minutes after an executioner began the flow of lethal drugs.
"As the ocean always returns to itself, love
always returns to itself," Meanes said in his brief final statement.
"So does consciousness always return to itself. And I do so with
love on my lips. May God bless all mankind."
A medical technician had difficulty finding veins in
Meanes' arms, the usual entry point for the injection, so needles were
inserted in the left side of his neck and in his right hand. Authorities
said they assumed the difficulty was caused by Meanes' past use of
illicit drugs.
As the drugs took effect, Meanes pursed his lips and
sputtered 3 times before he stopped moving.
The victim's 3 grown children - Teresa, Scarlet, and
Oliver Flores - witnessed the execution of their father's killer along
with their aunt and uncle, Maria and Patrick Salinas.
"At least I don't have any more monsters in my
closet," said Teresa Flores, 26. "You know, I have a face with
my monster now and realize it's not a monster, it's an actual person. It
makes it easier to deal with the pain."
Meanes declined to file last-minute appeals, saying he
didn't want to postpone his inevitable fate.
He was 25 when he and co-defendant Sandoval
"Carlos" Santana were convicted and each sentenced to death
for the April 12, 1981 shooting of Purolator Armored Inc. guard Oliver
Flores, 29.
Defense attorney Stanley Schneider said his client is
a man transformed by his 17 years behind bars.
"He's not the person that went out and committed
an armored car robbery," Schneider said. "He's not that same
person."
On that spring day in 1981, Meanes and Santana emptied
their shotguns and pistols, firing into the armored van Flores was
driving as he made a scheduled stop at a Houston department store.
They stole 12 money sacks containing $1.1 million and
fled into a nearby wooded area, where they were caught about an hour
later.
Prosecutors never were able to determine which man's
bullet killed Flores.
Santana, a native of the Dominican Republic, was
executed in 1993. But judicial oversight resulted in an additional 7
years on death row for Meanes after prosecutors lost track of his case
once a federal judge rejected an appeal in 1988.
Prosecutors did nothing until 1995 because they didn't
realize the judge had ruled in the case. The case file had been unopened
for so long it was shipped to an archives office in Fort Worth.
The mistake was discovered when the Harris County
district attorney's office began a review of lingering capital cases.
Sources: Associated Press & Rick Halperin.
James Ronald Meanes - 98-12-15 -
Texas
Dec. 15, 1998
In Huntsville, a 42-year-old man was executed Tuesday for the 1981
slaying of a Houston man during a $1.1 million armored car heist.
James Ronald Meanes was pronounced dead at 6:36 p.m., 8 minutes after an
executioner began the flow of lethal drugs.
"As the ocean always returns to itself, love always returns to itself,"
Meanes said in his brief final statement. "So does consciousness always
return to itself. And I do so with love on my lips. May God bless all
mankind."
A medical technician had difficulty finding veins in Meanes' arms, the
usual entry point for the injection, so needles were inserted in the
left side of his neck and in his right hand. Authorities said they
assumed the difficulty was caused by Meanes' past use of illicit drugs.
As the drugs took effect, Meanes pursed his lips and sputtered 3 times
before he stopped moving.
The victim's 3 grown children - Teresa, Scarlet, and Oliver Flores -
witnessed the execution of their father's killer along with their aunt
and uncle, Maria and Patrick Salinas.
"At least I don't have any more monsters in my closet," said Teresa
Flores, 26. "You know, I have a face with my monster now and realize
it's not a monster, it's an actual person. It makes it easier to deal
with the pain."
Meanes declined to file last-minute appeals, saying he didn't want to
postpone his inevitable fate.
He was 25 when he and co-defendant Sandoval "Carlos" Santana were
convicted and each sentenced to death for the April 12, 1981 shooting of
Purolator Armored Inc. guard Oliver Flores, 29.
Defense attorney Stanley Schneider said his client is a man transformed
by his 17 years behind bars.
"He's not the person that went out and committed an armored car robbery,"
Schneider said. "He's not that same person."
On that spring day in 1981, Meanes and Santana emptied their shotguns
and pistols, firing into the armored van Flores was driving as he made a
scheduled stop at a Houston department store.
They stole 12 money sacks containing $1.1 million and fled into a nearby
wooded area, where they were caught about an hour later.
Prosecutors never were able to determine which man's bullet killed
Flores.
Santana, a native of the Dominican Republic, was executed in 1993. But
judicial oversight resulted in an additional 7 years on death row for
Meanes after prosecutors lost track of his case once a federal judge
rejected an appeal in 1988.
Prosecutors did nothing until 1995 because they didn't realize the judge
had ruled in the case. The case file had been unopened for so long it
was shipped to an archives office in Fort Worth.
The mistake was discovered when the Harris County district attorney's
office began a review of lingering capital cases.
Meanes becomes the 20th condemned inmate to be put to death in Texas
this year, and the 164th overall since the state resumed executions on
Dec. 7, 1982. It is the 2nd highest total of executions in Texas in a
single year, trailing only the 37 condemned men put to death in
Huntsville in 1997.
Meanes becomes the 66th condemned inmate to be put to death in the USA
this year, and the 498th overall since America resumed executions on Jan.
17, 1977.
John Duvall is scheduled to be put to death in Oklahoma at 12:01 a.m.,
Thursday, Dec. 17, and Andrew Smith, who would become the 500th
condemned inmate to be put to death in America since the death penalty
was re-legalized on July 2, 1976, is scheduled to die by lethal
injection in South Carolina at 6 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 18.
James Ronald
MEANES
After he was
sentenced to death for killing a guard during a $1.1 million armored van
heist, James Ronald Meanes’ case was forgotten for seven years, more
than one third of the 17 years he spent on death row.
Stanley Schneider, Meanes’ appeals lawyer, said a judge
rejected a 1988 appeal, but the court order was never sent out. The file
was sent to a Fort Worth archive where it was not discovered until 1995.
By the time he was executed in 1998, Schneider said
Meanes was a different person.
"He's not the person
that went out and committed an armored car robbery," Schneider said.
In 1981, Purolator Armored guard Dorothy Wright presented
a different description of Meanes.
Shaking and crying while testifying, Wright recalled the
murder of her partner, Olivero Flores. She said Flores didn't even reach
for his gun after he was shot.
"Flores looked at
them . . . and fell," Wright said.
After the fatal shooting, witnesses saw Meanes and his
accomplice, Carlos Santana, advance on the van while firing their
weapons. Unable to gain access to the van with gunfire, the two men
shattered the passenger’s window.
"They kept on shooting at it, kept on, kept on . . . The
guy started beating on the door," Wright said. After they gained entry,
Wright said she heard a voice say, "Get up bitch right now or you're
dead." She exited the van and the two men drove away.
No one saw who fired the shot that killed Flores.
The medical examiner testified that the wound was made by
a bullet from a handgun or rifle.
David Hester, a witness, said the man with the pistol
fired the fatal bullet. But he was unable to distinguish between Meanes
and his partner.
Meanes claimed that after Flores was shot, Santana traded
him the pistol for the shotgun because Meanes could not properly fire
the weapon.
Houston detective Hipolito Galano testified in Santana’s trial that when
the two men were arrested, Santana admitted to switching guns with
Meanes. This evidence was not used in Meanes’ trial.
Schneider said the "switching gun theory" is often used
to convince the jury that the facts of the case are unclear.
Assistant District Attorneys Rusty Hardin and Nick
Vincent argued that Meanes should be found guilty even if he didn't fire
the fatal shot because he did nothing to help Flores.
At the time of his conviction Meanes, a married man and
the father of two children, said financial problems led him to commit
the robbery.
“I was threatened by eviction notices . . . the electricity and the
lights cut off,” Meanes said.
Schneider said Meanes' mother, who died of cancer before
the execution, said she was glad she wouldn’t have to see her son die.
Flores’ daughter, Teresa, witnessed the execution. "At
least I don't have any more monsters in my closet. You know, I have a
face with my monster now and realize it's not a monster, it's an actual
person. That makes it easier to deal with the pain," she said.
"As the ocean always returns
to itself, love always returns to itself. So does consciousness, always
returns to itself. And I do so with love on my lips. May God bless all
mankind."
— James Ronald Meanes, executed in Texas on Dec. 15, 1998
138 F.3d 1007
James Ronald Meanes, Petitioner-Appellee,
v.
Gary L. Johnson, Director, Texas Department of
Criminal Justice,
Institutional Division, Respondent-Appellant.
No.
97-20599
Federal
Circuits, 5th Cir.
May 22, 1998
Appeal from the
United States District Court for the Southern
District of Texas.
Before KING, SMITH and BENAVIDES,
Circuit Judges.
BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge:
The respondent-appellant, Gary L.
Johnson, the Director of the Texas Department of
Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, appeals
the district court's grant of a writ of habeas
corpus to James Ronald Meanes, a Texas death row
inmate convicted of capital murder. For the reasons
set forth below, we reverse and render.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On April 21, 1981, around noon,
an armored van driven by Olivero Flores, who was
accompanied by Dorothy Wright, pulled into the Sage
grocery store parking lot on the Gulf Freeway in
Houston, Texas, to pick up a deposit.
As Flores exited the van and
walked around to the front of the store, the
petitioner, Ronald Meanes, who is African-American,
and his co-defendant, Carlos Santana,11
who is Hispanic, exited a car parked near the front
of the store and opened the trunk.
Wright, still in the back of the
van, then heard a "black voice" tell Flores to halt
in a loud, demanding tone. Flores, who was carrying
money bags in his left hand and had a weapon on his
right hip, turned to face the men but made no move
toward his weapon.
As Flores turned, two or three
shots rang out, and Flores fell to the ground, "flopping
like a chicken." Although no one saw who shot
Flores, it was determined that Flores was killed by
a bullet from either a rifle or a pistol.
One of the men, armed with a
pistol, then approached Flores, bent over him, and
began firing shots at the van, about three seconds
after the original shots. The same voice that Wright
heard tell Flores to halt screamed, "bitch, open the
door" at Wright, who was still in the back of the
armored van.
After more shots were fired at
the van, the men broke the glass on the driver's
side of the van, and Meanes entered the van. Meanes
then climbed over the driver's seat to the
passenger's side, looked through the wire screen to
the back of the truck where Wright was lying on the
floor, poked a pistol through the screen, and said,
with the same voice that she had heard before, "Get
up bitch, right now or you're dead."
Wright then opened the back of
the van and walked toward the store with her hands
raised. The two men then left in the van, with the
man with the pistol as the passenger.
Meanes and his co-defendant were
captured soon thereafter in a cane patch a few
blocks from the scene of the robbery. Upon
questioning, Meanes revealed the location of the
weapons used in the robbery.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On July 22, 1981, Meanes was
convicted of capital murder after a jury trial. On
July 23, 1981, after a separate punishment hearing,
the jury answered affirmatively the two special
issues presented to it pursuant to the version of
article 37.071 of the Texas Code of Criminal
Procedure then in effect. In accordance with state
law, the trial court then sentenced Meanes to death.
On September 14, 1983, the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed both Meanes's conviction and
sentence. Meanes v. State, 668 S.W.2d 366 (Tex.Crim.App.1983).
On April 16, 1984, the United States Supreme Court
denied certiorari. Meanes v. Texas,
466 U.S. 945 , 104 S.Ct. 1930, 80 L.Ed.2d 476
(1984).
On August 15, 1984, Meanes filed
his first application for a state writ of habeas
corpus. On November 18, 1985, after an evidentiary
hearing, the trial court entered findings of fact
and conclusions of law, recommending that relief be
denied. On May 7, 1986, the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals accepted the trial court's recommendation
and denied the application.
On August 4, 1986, Meanes filed
his first petition for a federal writ of habeas
corpus. On October 18, 1988, that petition was
dismissed by the district court for failure to
exhaust state court remedies. Specifically, the
district court found that the state judge who had
signed the state habeas findings, the Honorable Sam
Robertson, acted without jurisdiction under state
law, because he was at that time a justice on the
Fourteenth Court of Appeals and therefore ineligible
under state law to hear Meanes's habeas petition.
In addition, the district court
found that Justice Robertson was a potential witness
in the state habeas corpus hearing and that Meanes
was deprived of his right to cross-examine him at
that hearing. Finally, the district court found that
Justice Robertson had engaged in improper ex parte
communications with the State regarding Meanes's
habeas petition.
For reasons unknown to anyone,
neither the State nor Meanes was given notice of the
district court's October 26, 1988 order, and no one
discovered the error until early 1995. By that time,
Justice Robertson had retired from the court of
appeals and was sitting as a visiting state district
judge. Over Meanes's objection, Justice Robertson
was again assigned to preside over Meanes's state
habeas petition.
After two evidentiary hearings,
the trial court entered findings of fact and
conclusions of law recommending that habeas relief
be denied. On August 24, 1995, the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals accepted the district court's
recommendation and denied the application.
On August 25, 1995, Meanes filed
a second petition for federal habeas relief. On May
1, 1997, the district court entered judgment,
granting habeas relief in part. Specifically, the
district court found that Meanes was denied the
effective assistance of counsel at the punishment
stage of his trial and that Meanes's Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when the
trial court incorrectly instructed the venire that
the law of parties2
applied not only to the guilt phase of the trial but
to the punishment stage as well. See Enmund v.
Florida, 458 U.S. 782, 102 S.Ct. 3368, 73 L.Ed.2d
1140 (1982). On July 7, 1997, the district court
denied the Director's motion for reconsideration and
Meanes's motion to alter or amend. On July 15, 1997,
the Director filed a timely notice of appeal. Meanes
has not appealed any of the district court's
findings against him.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing requests for federal
habeas corpus relief, we review the district court's
findings of fact for clear error, but review issues
of law de novo. Dison v. Whitley, 20 F.3d 185, 186
(5th Cir.1994). A finding of fact is clearly
erroneous when, although there is enough evidence to
support it, the reviewing court is left with a firm
and definite conviction that a mistake has been
committed. United States v. United States Gypsum
Co., 333 U.S. 364, 395, 68 S.Ct. 525, 541-42, 92
L.Ed. 746 (1948); Henderson v. Belknap (In re
Henderson), 18 F.3d 1305, 1307 (5th Cir.1994). The
question of whether counsel was constitutionally
ineffective is a mixed question of law and fact,
which we review de novo by independently applying
the law to the facts found by the district court,
unless those factual determinations are clearly
erroneous. See Salazar v. Johnson,
96 F.3d 789, 791 (5th Cir.1996); United
States v. Faubion, 19 F.3d 226, 228 (5th Cir.1994).
ANALYSIS
On appeal, the State contends
that the district court erred in three ways. First,
the State argues that the district court erred in
not considering the procedural bar to Meanes's
Enmund claims. Contained within this discussion is
the State's argument that Meanes was not denied the
effective assistance of counsel. Second, the State
argues that, even assuming that Meanes's claims are
not procedurally barred, the district court erred in
finding that Enmund was violated.
Finally, the State argues that
the district court's factual findings were clearly
erroneous. Because we find that Meanes's Enmund
claims are procedurally barred and that the district
court erred in concluding that Meanes received
ineffective assistance of counsel, we need not
address the State's second and third arguments.3
It is well settled that federal
habeas review of a claim is procedurally barred if
the last state court to consider the claim expressly
and unambiguously based its denial of relief on a
state procedural default. See Coleman v. Thompson,
501 U.S. 722 , 111 S.Ct. 2546, 115 L.Ed.2d 640
(1991); Harris v. Reed, 489 U.S. 255, 109
S.Ct. 1038, 103 L.Ed.2d 308 (1989); Amos v. Scott,
61 F.3d 333 (5th Cir.1995).
In this case, the state habeas
court expressly found that Meanes's Enmund claim was
procedurally barred: "The applicant is procedurally
barred from advancing his habeas claim that the
State and the trial court improperly instructed some
veniremembers during voir dire that the law of the
parties was applicable to the first special issue
because he did not make a timely objection."4
See also Meanes v. State, 668 S.W.2d 366, 372 (Tex.Crim.App.1983)
(direct appeal) ("No objection was made to the
allegedly improper remarks, and nothing was
preserved for review.").
Where a state court has
explicitly relied on a procedural bar, a state
prisoner normally may not obtain federal habeas
relief absent a showing of cause for the default and
actual prejudice. Murray v. Carrier, 477 U.S. 478,
485, 106 S.Ct. 2639, 2644, 91 L.Ed.2d 397 (1986). In
general, to show cause, a petitioner must
demonstrate "that some objective factor external to
the defense impeded counsel's efforts to comply with
the State's procedural rule." Id. at 488, 106 S.Ct.
at 2645. If a petitioner fails to show cause for his
procedural default, the court need not address the
prejudice prong of the test. See Engle v. Isaac, 456
U.S. 107, 134 n. 43, 102 S.Ct. 1558, 1575 n. 43, 71
L.Ed.2d 783 (1982).
In its brief, the State argues
that the only bases upon which Meanes can establish
cause are that Enmund announced a new rule that was
not reasonably available at the time of trial, and
that Meanes's counsel was ineffective for failing to
object to the court's questioning during voir dire.
We agree with the State's characterization of the
issues and, therefore, will address each of these
arguments in turn.
At the time of Meanes's trial,
Texas law provided that the law of parties could
apply to the punishment phase of the trial. See
Wilder v. State, 583 S.W.2d 349, 356-57 (Tex.Crim.App.1979),
vacated and remanded on other grounds,
453 U.S. 902 , 101 S.Ct. 3133, 69 L.Ed.2d 987
(1981). Thus, any objection to the
questioning during voir dire arguably would have
been futile, at least with respect to Texas law. "[T]he
futility of presenting an objection to the state
courts[, however,] cannot alone constitute cause for
a failure to object at trial." Engle, 456 U.S. at
129, 102 S.Ct. at 1573. Instead, the claim must also
be novel. Selvage v. Collins, 975 F.2d 131, 135 (5th
Cir.1992).
Meanes's argument that the
Supreme Court's decisions in Lockett v. Ohio, 438
U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978), and
Woodson v. North Carolina,
428 U.S. 280 , 96 S.Ct. 2978, 49 L.Ed.2d 944
(1976), dictate the result in this case
clearly cuts against finding that the claim was
novel. To the extent that Meanes argues that cause
is shown because Enmund was an intervening decision,
we note that a claim is not novel if "other defense
counsel have perceived and litigated that claim."
Engle, 456 U.S. at 134, 102 S.Ct. at 1575; accord
Smith v. Collins, 977 F.2d 951, 956 (5th Cir.1992) (quoting
Engle ).
In this respect, other defense
counsel had in fact perceived and litigated the
Enmund claim at the time of Meanes's trial, as
evidenced by the fact that counsel in Enmund itself
had raised and litigated this claim in the Florida
state court proceedings. See Enmund v. Florida, 399
So.2d 1362, 1371 (Fla.1981) (rejecting a similar
argument some three months before Meanes's trial),
reversed, 458 U.S. 782, 102 S.Ct. 3368, 73 L.Ed.2d
1140 (1982). Accordingly, Meanes cannot rely on the
intervening decision of Enmund to establish cause.5
We turn next to Meanes's argument
that he received ineffective assistance of counsel
because his counsel failed to object to the court's
questioning and instructions regarding the law of
parties during voir dire. Although ineffective
assistance of counsel can constitute cause, "counsel's
ineffectiveness will constitute cause only if it is
an independent constitutional violation." Coleman,
501 U.S. at 755, 111 S.Ct. at 2567. Counsel is not
constitutionally deficient, however, if, at the time
trial, such an objection would have been futile in
light of existing state law and the right was not
clearly established under federal law. See Nichols
v. Scott, 69 F.3d 1255, 1288 (5th Cir.1995) (finding
that counsel was not ineffective for failing to
request an anti-parties instruction prior to Enmund
because "it was not clearly established Texas or
federal law that such an instruction, if requested,
was required"). Counsel is not required "to
anticipate a state appellate court's willingness to
reconsider a prior holding" or a federal habeas
court's willingness to "repudiate an established
rule." Hill v. Black, 932 F.2d 369, 373 (5th
Cir.1991).
As noted above, at the time of
Meanes's trial, Texas law permitted the law of
parties to be applied to the punishment phase of a
capital case. See Wilder v. State, 583 S.W.2d 349 (Tex.Crim.App.1979),
vacated and remanded on other grounds,
453 U.S. 902 , 101 S.Ct. 3133, 69 L.Ed.2d 987
(1981). The Court of Criminal Appeals did not
reverse this position until three years after
Meanes's trial. See Green v. State, 682 S.W.2d 271,
287 (Tex.Crim.App.1984). Moreover, Enmund was not
decided until over a year after Meanes's trial.6
Recognizing this, Meanes attempts
to shift the focus from Enmund to the Supreme
Court's earlier decisions in Lockett v. Ohio, 438
U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978), and
Woodson v. North Carolina,
428 U.S. 280 , 96 S.Ct. 2978, 49 L.Ed.2d 944
(1976). In both Lockett and Woodson, a
plurality of the Supreme Court held that the Eighth
Amendment requires an individualized sentencing
decision in capital cases.
According to Meanes, Lockett and
Woodson clearly brought into question any argument
that the law of parties can be constitutionally
applied in the sentencing phase of a capital murder
trial. Although we agree with Meanes that there was
a reasonable basis for making the argument that it
was constitutionally impermissible to apply the law
of parties to the punishment phase of a capital
trial at the time of his trial, it does not
necessarily follow that his counsel was
constitutionally deficient for failing to raise this
claim. See Smith, 977 F.2d at 960.
At its core, Meanes's argument
amounts to nothing more than an argument that,
because there was no cause for his procedural
default in the sense that the claim was reasonably
available based on earlier decisions, it must
necessarily follow that his counsel was ineffective
for failing to raise the argument. As we have
previously held, however, "The Supreme Court clearly
rejected such an 'either or' approach in Smith, 477
U.S. at 535, 106 S.Ct. at 2667, and Carrier, 477
U.S. at 485-88, 106 S.Ct. at 2644-45." Smith, 977
F.2d at 960. The inescapable fact remains that
Enmund was not decided until over one year after
Meanes's trial and that, at the time of his trial,
Texas law provided that the law of parties applied
to the punishment phase of a capital case. Given the
state of the law at that time, we cannot say that
counsel's performance fell outside of the "wide
range of professionally competent assistance"
recognized in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 690, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 2066, 80 L.Ed.2d 674
(1984).
Having failed to show cause for
his procedural default, Meanes may nonetheless be
entitled to habeas relief if he can show that
imposition of the procedural bar would constitute a
"miscarriage of justice." Sawyer v. Whitley, 505
U.S. 333, 339, 112 S.Ct. 2514, 2518, 120 L.Ed.2d 269
(1992). "Where, as here, the asserted error ... goes
only to the sentence imposed in a capital case, such
a 'miscarriage of justice' is not established unless
it is shown 'by clear and convincing evidence that
but for' the asserted 'constitutional error, no
reasonable juror would have found the petitioner
eligible for the death penalty under the applicable
state law.' " Hogue v. Johnson, 131 F.3d 466, 497
(5th Cir.1997) (quoting Sawyer, 505 U.S. at 336, 112
S.Ct. at 2517). After an exhaustive review of the
record, we find that Meanes has not met this burden.
The substance of Meanes's
testimony at the punishment phase and in his
confession was that he agreed to participate in the
robbery only after his co-defendant had promised him
that no one would be harmed. He testified that his
co-defendant shot at the victim with the pistol
three times, fired six more shots into the armored
van from the same position, and then traded weapons
with Meanes, who was unable to pump the shotgun, and
fired the shotgun at the van nine more times.
Meanes further contended that he
fired only two pistol shots during the entire
robbery and that these shots were at the driver's
side window of the armored car in an attempt to gain
entry. Meanes also argued that he never pointed the
gun at Wright or told her "Get up bitch, right now
or you're dead." He further testified that Santana
was the only one who approached the victim's body
and that Santana did so only at the end of the
robbery when Santana was wielding the shotgun.
Contrary to Meanes's testimony,
however, a number of eyewitnesses testified at trial
that Meanes was the one holding the pistol, and no
one identified him as holding the shotgun at any
time. Similarly, none of the eyewitnesses testified
that they saw any exchange of weapons. The
eyewitness accounts contradict Meanes's version of
events in many other important respects.
Although Meanes asserted that
only Santana approached the victim's body and only
at the end of the robbery when Meanes alleges that
Santana held the shotgun, Wright testified that she
heard two shots as the victim was shot and that a
man with a pistol then knelt by the victim and fired
more shots at the van. Moreover, wet blood of the
victim's type was found on the ammunition clip
inside the pistol, further indicating that it was
the person with the pistol who had approached the
victim.
In addition, two witnesses
testified that they saw both men shooting toward the
passenger side of the van at the same time at the
beginning of the robbery and before the men even
moved away from their car. One of the men identified
the man shooting the pistol from the trunk of the
car as Meanes, further contradicting Meanes's story
that he only fired the pistol at the driver's side
door of the van. Another witness testified that he
first heard three pistol shots, followed by two
shotgun blasts two to three seconds later, further
contradicting Meanes's claim that Santana fired nine
pistol shots in a row and then switched to the
shotgun.
Given the above evidence
contradicting Meanes's story and the extensive 83-page
cross-examination by the prosecution, in which the
State demonstrated that Meanes lied a number of
times, we conclude that Meanes has fallen well short
of establishing " 'by clear and convincing evidence
that but for' the asserted 'constitutional error, no
reasonable juror would have found the petitioner
eligible for the death penalty under the applicable
state law.' " Hogue, 131 F.3d at 497 (quoting
Sawyer, 505 U.S. at 336, 112 S.Ct. at 2517).
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above,
we find that Meanes is procedurally barred from
raising his Enmund claims in this court. In addition,
to the extent that the district court held that
Meanes received ineffective assistance of counsel,
we find that decision erroneous as a matter of law.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
REVERSED and judgment is RENDERED denying Meanes
habeas corpus relief.
REVERSED; RENDERED.
*****
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
May 22, 1998
This matter is before the court
on appellee's motion for rehearing, filed April 28,
1998. We write to address appellee's argument that
this court erred in rendering judgment against him
rather than remanding to the district court for
further proceedings. Appellee argues that we should
have remanded because the district court's
memorandum opinion and order failed to address his
Issue Number 10, which reads:
Whether Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann.
Art. 37.071 is unconstitutional as applied in this
case because its language indicated that the law of
the parties applies equally to the guilt and
punishment stages of the trial.
Appellee's Pet. for Writ of
Habeas Corpus at 28. Although a reading of this
issue suggests that appellee is challenging the
statute and the instructions actually given at the
punishment phase of his trial, upon reviewing
appellee's habeas petition, it is clear that his as
applied challenge is dependent upon a finding that
the trial court's questioning during voir dire was
unconstitutional. As we held in our opinion in this
case, see Meanes v. Johnson, 138 F.3d 1007, 1011-14
(5th Cir.1998), however, appellee's challenges to
the trial court's questioning during voir dire are
procedurally barred. Accordingly, we find that
judgment was appropriately rendered.
PETITION FOR REHEARING DENIED.
*****
1 Mr.
Santana was executed in 1993 for his role in this
robbery/murder
2 Section
7.02(a)(2) of the penal code sets forth the law of
parties and provides that "[a] person is criminally
responsible for an offense committed by the conduct
of another if .... acting, with intent to promote or
assist the commission of the offense, he solicits,
encourages, directs, aids, or attempts to aid the
other to commit the offense." Tex. Penal Code Ann. §
7.02(a)(2) (Vernon 1989)
3 In his
reply brief, Meanes does not respond in any
structured way to the State's procedural bar
argument. Instead, Meanes attempts to make much of
the fact that the same state court judge who
presided over his first state habeas proceeding
presided over his second state habeas proceeding
despite Judge Hoyt's findings in his first federal
habeas case. In fact, virtually all of Meanes's
reply brief centers on this one issue. Despite our
efforts, we fail to see the significance of Meanes's
argument on this point. Moreover, we note that Judge
Hoyt made no reference to this claimed error in his
memorandum opinion granting Meanes's petition as to
the sentencing phase of his trial. Furthermore, the
overriding concern of Judge Hoyt's in 1988--i.e.,
that Justice Robertson was not authorized under
state law to preside over Meanes's state habeas
proceeding because he was then a Justice on the
Fourteenth Court of Appeals--was no longer present
when Justice Robertson presided over Meanes's state
habeas proceeding in 1995, because Justice Robertson
had retired from the Court of Appeals and was
sitting as a district court judge by designation
4 As noted
above, the state trial court's findings were adopted
by the Court of Criminal Appeals
5 Because of
our disposition of this issue and because the State
has not argued this point, we need not decide
whether Enmund announced a new rule for the purposes
of Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S.Ct. 1060, 103
L.Ed.2d 334 (1989). For a discussion of the
relationship between Teague and establishing cause
based on an intervening decision, see Selvage v.
Collins, 975 F.2d 131 (5th Cir.1992)
6 Meanes
argues that the language relied on by the State in
Wilder was dicta. We disagree. In Wilder, the Court
of Criminal Appeals clearly applied the law of
parties to find the evidence of the wheel man's "deliberateness"
on the basis of his co-defendant's actions. Moreover,
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals apparently
thought enough of this dicta to specifically reverse
Wilder in 1984, stating: "We hold that the law of
parties may not be applied to the three special
issues under Art. 37.071(b). Wilder and Armour v.
State, 583 S.W.2d 349 (Tex.Crim.App.1979) is
overruled as far as it is inconsistent with this
opinion." Green, 682 S.W.2d at 287. Furthermore, we
note that in his first state habeas petition, Meanes
also apparently thought that Wilder held that the
law of parties could apply to the punishment phase
of a capital trial as well. In fact, he submitted
eight (8) affidavits from Texas trial lawyers, each
stating that they thought that Wilder held that the
law of parties could apply to the punishment phase
of a capital trial
Meanes also argues that the
State's argument that Wilder provided that the law
of parties applied to the punishment phase of a
capital trial "flies in the face of the assurance
made by the State of Texas to the Supreme Court of
the United States during oral arguments in Jurek v.
Texas,
428 U.S. 262 , 96 S.Ct. 2950, 49 L.Ed.2d 929
(1976), that the special scheme adopted by
Texas would show a 'real basis for distinguishing
among defendants.' " What the Texas executive branch
argued before the Supreme Court in Jurek, however,
casts no helpful light on the fact that the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals, which has the ultimate
responsibility for determining what the State
criminal law is, held that the law of parties
applied to the punishment phase of a capital trial.