Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Kenneth MOSLEY
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Bank robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
February 15, 1997
Date of arrest:
Same day (wounded
by police)
Date of birth:
September 7, 1958
Victim profile: Michael
David Moore, 32 (Garland police officer)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Dallas County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on January 7,
2010
The
United States Court of Appeals For the Fifth Circuit
Summary:
Mosley entered a Bank One in Garland dressed in long dark clothing
and a dark toboggan-style cap. Because it was a hot day, this
unusual dress caused several people to notice him. One of the
tellers recognized Mosley from a previous robbery at the bank. A
bank manager pushed the alarm button and called 9-1-1.
Several
witnesses watched as the 32 year old Officer David Moore, who
responded to the alarm, approached Mosley and said, “I would like
to speak with you.” Mosley and Officer Moore began to struggle.
Mosley then pulled a gun from underneath his shirt. Several shots
rang out and Officer Moore shoved Mosley through a nearby window.
They fell to the ground into one of the drive-through lanes.
A witness from across the street saw Mosley pause to look around,
point a gun at Officer Moore and shoot him. Moore was shot five
times. Mosley began to walk away from the bank but was spotted by
another police officer who ordered Mosley to stop, drop the gun,
and get on the ground. Mosley turned as if to shoot. The officer
shot Mosley once in the wrist, and Mosley dropped the gun. Mosley
then complied with the officer’s directive to get on the ground.
Citations:
Mosley v. Quarterman, 306 Fed.Appx. 40 (5th Cir. 2008).
(Habeas).
Final/Special Meal:
An assortment of fried foods, including three pieces of chicken,
two pork chops, a cheeseburger, 10 pieces of bacon, French fries,
okra, green tomatoes and apple cobbler.
Final Words:
None.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Name
TDCJ Number
Date of Birth
Mosley, Kenneth
999243
09/07/58
Date Received
Age (when Received)
Education Level
10/20/97
39
12 years
Date of Offense
Age (at the
Offense)
County
02/15/97
38
Dallas
Race
Gender
Hair Color
Black
Male
Black
Height
Weight
Eye Color
5-10
170
Brown
Native County
Native State
Prior Occupation
Flint
Michigan
Laborer
Prior Prison Record
None
Summary of incident
On February 15, 1997, Mosley
murdered a white male police officer while attempting to rob a
bank in Garland.
Employees called police after noticing Mosley
inside the bank acting suspicious. As one of the first officers
to arrive at the scene, the victim entered the bank in full
uniform and approached Mosley, noticing that the would-be bandit
had his hand stuck in his waistband.
When the officer told
Mosley to show him his hands, a struggle ensued and the two
crashed through a glass window.
Witnesses heard several shots
fired before Mosley re-entered the bank through the broken
window and was shot in the wrist after flashing his pistol at a
second police officer. The victim died the afternoon of the
shooting. He suffered at least four bullet wounds to the torso.
Co-defendants
None
Race and Gender of Victim
White male
Texas Department of Criminal Justice
Mosley, Kenneth
Date of Birth: 9/7/58
DR#: 999243
Date Received: 10/20/97
Education: 12 years
Occupation: Laborer
Date of Offense: 2/15/97
County of Offense: Dallas
Native County: Flint, Michigan
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Black
Eye Color: Brown
Height: 5' 10"
Weight: 170
On February 15, 1997, Mosley murdered a white
male police officer while attempting to rob a bank in Garland.
Employees called police after noticing Mosley inside the bank
acting suspicious. As one of the first officers to arrive at the
scene, the victim entered the bank in full uniform and approached
Mosley, noticing that the would-be bandit had his hand stuck in
his waistband. When the officer told Mosley to show him his hands,
a struggle ensued and the two crashed through a glass window.
Witnesses heard several shots fired before Mosley re-entered the
bank through the broken window and was shot in the wrist after
flashing his pistol at a second police officer. The victim died
the afternoon of the shooting. He suffered at least four bullet
wounds to the torso.
Co-defendants: None.
Prior Prison Record: None.
Texas Attorney General
Monday, January 4, 2010
Media Advisory: Kenneth Mosley scheduled for
execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Kenneth Mosley, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. on January 7, 2010. Mosley
was convicted and sentenced to die for the murder of Garland
police officer Michael David Moore.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On February 15, 1997, Mosley entered a Bank One
in Garland dressed in long dark clothing and a dark toboggan-style
cap. Because it was a hot day, this unusual dress caused several
people to notice him. One of the tellers recognized Mosley from a
previous robbery at the bank. A bank manager pushed the alarm
button and called 9-1-1.
Several witnesses watched as Officer Moore, who
responded to the alarm, approached Mosley and said, “I would like
to speak with you.” Mosley and Officer Moore began to struggle.
Mosley then pulled a gun from underneath his shirt. Several shots
rang out and Officer Moore shoved Mosley through a nearby window.
They fell to the ground into one of the drive-through lanes. A
witness from across the street saw Mosley pause to look around,
point a gun at Officer Moore and shoot him. Moore was shot five
times.
Mosley began to walk away from the bank but was
spotted by another police officer who ordered Mosley to stop, drop
the gun, and get on the ground. Mosley turned as if to shoot. The
officer shot Mosley once in the wrist, and Mosley dropped the gun.
Mosley then complied with the officer’s directive to get on the
ground. Mosley was handcuffed.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
March 18, 1997- a Dallas County grand jury
indicted Kenneth Mosley for capital murder in the death of Officer
Michael Moore.
October 14, 1997- a Dallas County jury found Mosley guilty of
capital murder.
October 16, 1997 - After a separate sentencing hearing, Mosley
sentenced to death.
Mosley appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals, which affirmed the conviction and sentence on May 10,
2000. Mosley filed a motion for rehearing, which was granted. On
rehearing, the appeals court withdrew a portion of its opinion and
substituted another opinion issued on June 25, 2003, which
reaffirmed all points of error. The remainder of the original
opinion was left intact. Mosley then filed a petition for writ of
certiorari with the United States Supreme Court, which was denied
on February 23, 2004.
Concurrent with his direct appeal, Mosley filed
an application for writ of habeas corpus in the trial court on
July 17, 2000. The trial court filed findings of fact and
conclusions of law recommending that Mosley be denied relief, and
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals adopted those findings and
conclusions, with a few noted exceptions, and denied habeas relief
on July 2, 2003.
Mosley filed a federal habeas petition in a
Dallas federal district court on February 22, 2005. On July 23,
2007, a federal magistrate recommended that the district court
deny Mosley’s petition. The district court adopted that
recommendation and denied Mosley habeas relief on March 6, 2008.
Mosley then sought permission to appeal from the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, but the appellate court
denied Mosley permission on December 23, 2008. Mosley filed a
petition for writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court on April 23,
2009, and a motion for stay of execution on June 29, 2009.
On September 23, 2009, the Supreme Court
granted a stay of execution pending its disposition of Mosley’s
petition for a writ of certiorari. The Supreme Court denied
Mosley’s petition for a writ of certiorari on October 20, 2009,
lifting the previously-imposed stay of execution. The trial court
subsequently entered an order rescheduling the execution for its
current date of January 7, 2010.
EVIDENCE OF FUTURE DANGEROUSNESS
During the trial’s punishment phase, the State
presented evidence that Mosley had raped a woman but had not been
convicted for it. The State also introduced evidence of prior
robberies and thefts committed by Mosley, including a previous
robbery of the same bank where Officer Moore’s murder occurred.
Further, the State presented evidence that Mosley was disruptive
in jail and threatened jailers, specifically saying on one
occasion that “it would make my day to kill another cop.” Mosley
testified at his trial that he did not intentionally kill Officer
Moore, even though the officer was shot five times. However,
Mosley concluded his testimony by directing an extremely profane
and graphic comment to the jury, at which point he was removed
from the courtroom.
Garland officer's killer executed in
Huntsville
By Sherry Jacobsen
- Dallas Morning News
Friday, January 8, 2010
HUNTSVILLE, Texas – In the end, Sheila Moore
decided to witness the execution of her husband's killer – just in
case, she said, he wanted to ask for forgiveness.
Mosley was convicted of fatally shooting
Garland police Officer Michael "David" Moore during a failed bank
robbery on Feb. 15, 1997. "While earthly justice was served, it
does not change what happened almost 13 years ago," his widow said
in a statement read by her brother about 15 minutes after Mosley
died. "There will always be an empty place in our hearts for our
husband, father and friend. We pray for healing for everyone
involved."
Moore had been hesitant about the death penalty
since Mosley was convicted and given the punishment. Yet, when the
time came, she stood silently behind Garland Capt. Bill Cortez and
watched as the state executed the 51-year-old Mesquite man.
When Mosley was asked if he wanted to make a
statement to the people gathered to witness his death, he shook
his head and mouthed the word, "No." He never looked at the dozen
or so people standing behind a transparent screen, a few feet from
his face.
Wearing black-framed glasses and with his arms
and chest strapped to a gurney, Mosley remained silent and kept
his eyes mostly closed as he seemed to wait for the drugs to take
effect. It took less than 15 minutes.
Moore's three children also made the trip but
did not witness the execution. The youngest, Zachary, was 9 months
old when his father died at the age of 32. Moore wanted her son,
now 13, to be part of the police vigil outside the prison walls so
he would have a memory related to his father. "At least he'll have
that," she said before the family traveled to Huntsville.
The last time Mosley confronted the Moore
family was at his trial in November 1997. He had lashed out at
them in an expletive-filled rant during the punishment phase of
his trial. From the witness stand, he also chastised the jury for
finding him guilty of capital murder. Mosley, who shot Moore five
times, said that the shooting was accidental and that he was
simply trying to hand over his gun to the officer. "I never knew
that gun had went off," he testified. "The Moore family, all they
wanted is somebody they think slaughtered their loved one to die.
All they wanted was a conviction."
Mosley's legal team spent nearly 13 years going
through the appeals process. His execution was postponed twice
last year. Shortly before 6 p.m. Thursday, his appeals were
declared exhausted, allowing the execution to proceed.
Mosley's last meal, served at 4 p.m., was an
assortment of fried foods, including three pieces of chicken, two
pork chops, a cheeseburger, 10 pieces of bacon, French fries, okra,
green tomatoes and apple cobbler.
He was placed on "death watch" Tuesday, a 72-hour
period during which he was monitored every 15 minutes by prison
guards. Prison officials offered a snapshot of Mosley's activities
during that period, which included sleeping, reading, pacing his
cell and showering. He saw his last visitor, who was not
identified, on Tuesday for a five-hour visit that included lunch.
Cortez said he was surprised that the execution
occurred so quietly and with no expression of pain from Mosley. "It
seemed just too easy, too easy of a punishment," the Garland
officer said. Matt Leigeber said his sister, Sheila Moore, and her
children have gone through "an emotional roller coaster" waiting
for the execution.
They were too emotional to talk Thursday, he
said. "It's been a rough 13 years for everybody involved,"
Leigeber said. "We lost a husband, a father and a friend, but also
a policeman and a Marine."
Dallas-area officer's killer put to death
By Michael Graczyk
- Houston Chronicle
Jan. 7, 2010
HUNTSVILLE — A man convicted of gunning down a
Dallas-area police officer during an attempted bank robbery was
put to death Thursday evening in the first execution of the year
in the nation's busiest death penalty state. Kenneth Mosley, 51,
was condemned for the February 1997 slaying of David Moore, an
officer in the Dallas suburb of Garland. His lethal injection was
carried out after his legal appeals became exhausted.
The punishment had been stalled twice last year
by technical issues and court appeals.
Mosley shook his head once when asked by a
warden if he had any final statement. As the lethal drugs began
taking effect, he snored a few times, then gasped slightly. Nine
minutes later, at 6:16 p.m. CST, he was pronounced dead.
Moore's widow was among the people in the
chamber to watch Mosley die. He did not acknowledge her presence.
Earlier this week, the Texas Board of Pardons
and Paroles denied his request for clemency.
Texas put 24 convicted killers to death last
year, accounting for nearly half of the 52 executions carried out
in the U.S. Another convicted killer was scheduled to be executed
in Texas next week.
Moore, 32, was killed while responding to a 911
call about a bank robbery. The 10-year police veteran and father
of three was shot four times after he approached Mosley, who was
standing in line to get to a teller. A bank employee had called
911 after recognizing Mosley as the man who robbed it more than
month earlier. Mosley resisted Moore's request to speak with him
and opened fire with a 9 mm pistol. One of four bullets to hit the
officer struck over the top edge of his protective vest, killing
him. Mosley was shot in the wrist by an officer outside and was
arrested in the parking lot. Authorities found he was carrying a
holdup note.
His lawyers argued at his capital murder trial
that the shooting was accidental, saying the weapon went off five
times as he was trying to surrender. Prosecutors had witnesses
from inside the bank and a videotape of the attack to show to
jurors.
Mosley declined to speak with reporters as his
execution neared. The Flint, Mich., native who grew up in rural
Arkansas had an extensive criminal record he blamed on drug
addiction. Evidence showed he had a record for sexually assaulting
a woman and arrests for possession of marijuana, illegal knives
and for stealing items from a Home Depot and then returning them
for cash refunds. At the time of the shooting, he was wanted for
robbery at a fast-food restaurant five days earlier in nearby
Mesquite. He had been fired from his last known job at a Coca-Cola
bottler for testing positive for cocaine.
Garland Police Chief Mitch Bates, a lieutenant
in 1997 who was the patrol supervisor and the officer who took
Mosley into custody at the scene, said he had “no doubt that
Mosley would have seriously injured or killed some other citizens
and or police officers during his continued life of violent crime.”
About two dozen officers from the Garland police force stood
outside the Huntsville prison where the execution took place.
Next week, the state is set to execute Gary
Johnson, 59, for the shooting deaths of two men, Peter Sparagana,
23, and James Hazelton, 28, who interrupted his burglary of a
ranch near Huntsville in 1986.
Kenneth Mosley
ProDeathPenalty.com
On February 15, 1997, Kenneth Mosley murdered
Garland, Texas police officer Michael Moore, 32, while attempting
to rob a bank in Garland. Employees called police after noticing
Mosley inside the bank acting suspicious. As one of the first
officers to arrive at the scene, Officer Moore entered the bank in
full uniform and approached Mosley, noticing that the would-be
bandit had his hand stuck in his waistband. When Officer Moore
told Mosley to show him his hands, a struggle ensued and the two
crashed through a glass window. Witnesses heard several shots
fired before Mosley re-entered the bank through the broken window
and was shot in the wrist after flashing his pistol at a second
police officer. Officer Michael Moore died the afternoon of the
shooting. He suffered at least four bullet wounds to the torso.
Mosley claimed at trial that he walked into the
bank unaware that he had a gun in his pocket and then "remembered"
that he had it when the police officer working in the bank asked
him what was in his hand. He claimed that he tried to pull the gun
only to "get rid of it," and in the ensuing struggle, he shot the
officer. However, Mosley pointed his gun at David and shot him
several times while he was on the ground outside the bank after
the struggle took them through the window. Mosley admitted that he
was aware of the risks involved in pulling a gun in a crowded bank
in front of a police officer. David's wife Sheila Moore intends to
witness the execution of Kenneth Mosley.
Kenneth Mosley
Txexecutions.org
Kenneth Mosley, 51, was executed by lethal
injection on 7 January 2010 in Huntsville, Texas for killing a
police officer in a bank.
On 15 February 1997, Mosley, then 38, entered a
bank in Garland. One of the tellers recognized him from a previous
robbery at the bank. The teller informed her manager. After the
manager saw Mosley, he also recognized him from tapes of the other
robbery. The manager returned to her office, pushed the alarm
button, and called bank security and 9-1-1.
The manager then went outside and met police
officer David Moore, who responded to the emergency call, and
described Mosley to him. Moore, who was in uniform, then went
inside, approached Mosley, and asked to speak with him. Moore
struggled with Mosley, who refused to keep his hands still. Mosley
then pulled a 9 mm pistol from underneath his shirt. Several shots
were fired. Officer Moore then shoved Mosley through a window.
Both men fell to the ground into one of the drive-through lanes.
Mosley then stood up and shot Moore while he was still on the
ground.
As Mosley was walking away from the bank, a
second officer spotted him and ordered him to drop his gun and get
on the ground. When Mosley turned toward the officer, the officer
shot him once in the wrist. Mosley dropped the gun, then complied
with the officer's orders. When searching him, authorities found a
holdup note. Paramedics arrived at the scene within minutes, but
Officer Moore was already dead. He had been shot four times. One
bullet struck him over the top edge of his protective vest.
At Mosley's trial, a witnesses testified that
after the two men fell through the window, he saw Mosley pause to
look around, point the gun at Moore, and shoot him. Mosley claimed
that he walked into the bank unaware that he had a gun in his
pocket. When Officer Moore asked him what was in his hand, Mosley
remembered the gun and pulled it out only to "get rid of it". In
the ensuing struggle, he shot the officer. "I wasn't pulling it
out thinking anything would happen," he said.
Mosley had no prior criminal convictions, but
the state presented evidence of prior robberies and thefts he had
committed, including the previous robbery of the same bank. At the
time of the murder, he was wanted for robbing a fast-food
restaurant in Mesquite five days earlier. The state also presented
testimony that while in jail, Mosley once said, "it would make my
day to kill another cop."
As the jury pronounced the death sentence,
Mosley exploded into an obscenity-laced tirade and was forcefully
removed from the courtroom.
A jury convicted Mosley of capital murder in
October 1997 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in May 2000.
Mosley filed a motion for a rehearing, which was granted. The
Court of Criminal Appeals then reaffirmed the conviction and
sentence in June 2003. All of his subsequent appeals in state and
federal court were denied.
Mosley's execution was attended by Sheila Moore
- his victim's widow - and by Garland police captain Bill Cortez.
Mosley did not look at the witnesses during his execution. He
declined to make a last statement. He was pronounced dead at 6:16
p.m.
Ken's story
KennethMosley.org
Kenneth Mosley is a very
ordinary man. He grew up in a small rural community in Arkansas
and when he was 18 he left home for the big city to earn money to
buy a car to go to college. He was never out of work and
eventually finding a very good job he decided it was too good to
give up. He stayed and worked in that job for 16 years. He married
and raised a child, a beautiful little girl. But illness struck
this family. A dreadful illness in the shape of an addiction to
crack cocaine. The word illness is used deliberately because that
is what it is. "Crack cocaine is an extremely powerful drug. Crack
cocaine addiction is inevitable; once an individual has tried
crack they may be unable to predict or control the extent to which
they will continue to use. It is probably the most addictive
substance yet devised."
Ken battled hard to overcome this illness but
as anyone can tell you who has watched a loved one battle such a
disease it takes time and can take several courses of treatment to
finally conquer. Ken worked hard to win but eventually his illness
cost him his job. With his job went his medical insurance. Ken and
his family tried repeatedly to get further help for his addiction
but to no avail. You need money to get help. Alternatively you
need to have committed a crime. Oh yes one clinic told him they
could only take him in if he had broken the law. Would it not have
been better for them to have helped him before he broke the law?
Another clinic said they could take him into re-hab if he stayed
clean for thirty days. Truly a "Catch 22" situation.
So as happens in such circumstances things went
from bad to worse. Addiction like any illness does not simply
disappear in the face of poverty. And when there is nowhere to
turn to for help poor people who are addicted get sucked into
crime. This is how addicts who are poor cope with their situation.
(Rich people with an addiction have fewer social problems.) This
is what happened to Ken. And one day a terrible accident happened
in which Ken was involved and a man died.
Incredibly Ken was charged with murder,
convicted and sentenced to death. And this is the point at which
what is sadly a very ordinary story becomes extraordinary because
in the Unites States less than 5% of people who have in some way
caused someone’s death end up with the death penalty. There have
been approximately 500,000 homicides in the USA since the re-instatement
of the death penalty in 1977 and approximately 900 executions.
There are currently about 3500 men and women on death rows across
the country. Is it possible that any legal system devised by human
beings, who by their very nature are fallible, can be so accurate
as to determine correctly which 5% of people who have caused a
death are the "worst" and which 95% who have also done so are "not
so bad?" Is this possible?
People will tell you that that 5% is the "worst
of the worst." This is a meaningless cliché. Kenneth Mosley is not
the worst of the worst. People who know him would laugh at the
idea. Kenneth Mosley is an ordinary man who at a time of his life
when he was trapped in the direst of circumstances got caught in
an accident. An accident with devastating consequences which
resulted in someone’s death. The truth is that that 5% is
generally made up of the poorest, those who cannot afford good
defense lawyers. Approximately 99% of those on death row could not
afford to hire a lawyer when they were tried. Justice William
O.Douglas is quoted as saying "One searches our chronicles in vain
for the execution of any member of the affluent strata of our
society." Ken is no exception. Whether people like to admit it or
not it was partly his poverty that determined his fate. First he
had no money to get the medical treatment he knew he desperately
needed. Then it seems he could not afford to hire an attorney to
present his case adequately.
There is no denying Ken gave in to weakness and
made rash decisions. He stole to cope with the addiction that was
destroying who he was. He himself accepts that there is a penalty
to be paid for that. But those who know him will tell you he never
could and never will deliberately harm anyone. A death sentence
is excessive in the extreme.
Ken has lived for six years now on Texas death
row. It is a harsh and sterile environment. There is constant
noise, meals are served at strange times, he lives virtually in
solitary confinement 23 hours out of 24. There is one hour of recreation
- really just a different view from a different cage and there is
outdoor rec twice a week - alone in yet another cage, no grass, no
ball games. It is a loveless environment. Prisoners are not even
allowed to hug their kids when they come to visit. Picture a two
year old talking loudly and enthusiastically to his daddy, the
telephone dangling uselessly at his knees, his smiling father
gesticulating at it helplessly through the glass. Yes prison is
punishment. That is what it is designed for. Ken endures in this
environment in the hope of some relief from the appeal courts; and
in the knowledge of many people understanding that there but for
the grace of God.
In the Court of Criminal
Appeals of Texas
No. 73,012
Kenneth Mosley, Appellant v.
The State of Texas
On direct appeal from Dallas
County
The opinion was delivered Per curiam. WOMACK and JOHNSON, JJ.,
concurred in the result.
O P I N I O N
Appellant
was convicted of capital murder. On original submission, we
affirmed the trial court's judgment. In a motion for rehearing,
appellant complained that we erred in resolving point of error
twelve, regarding his request for a lesser-included offense
instruction on deadly conduct. We granted rehearing. We now
withdraw the portion of our opinion discussing point of error
twelve and substitute this opinion. We leave the remainder of our
opinion on original submission intact, and we affirm.
Under Texas
Penal Code §22.05, a person commits deadly conduct if he
recklessly engages in conduct that places another in imminent
danger of serious bodily injury or if "he knowingly discharges a
firearm at or in the direction of . . . one or more individuals."
(1)
Assuming deadly conduct is a lesser-included offense
of capital murder, we turn now to the second step of the inquiry
for determining whether to submit a lesser-included offense:
whether the defendant, if guilty, is guilty only of the offense of
deadly conduct. In Jackson v. State, we held that a
defendant would not be entitled to a lesser-included offense
instruction on aggravated assault in a murder prosecution, because
if the victim dies, the defendant cannot show that if guilty, he
is guilty only of aggravated assault. (2)
The evidence
that appellant claims would show that he was guilty only of deadly
conduct is his claim at trial that he walked into the bank unaware
that he had a gun in his pocket and then "remembered" that he had
it when the police officer working in the bank asked him what was
in his hand. He claimed that he tried to pull the gun only to "get
rid of it," and in the ensuing struggle, he shot the officer. This
testimony, however, would not entitle appellant to an instruction
on deadly conduct. Appellant pointed his gun at the officer and
shot him several times while he was on the ground outside the bank.
(3)
Appellant admitted that he was aware of the risks
involved in pulling a gun in a crowded bank in front of a police
officer. This testimony shows that appellant was at least reckless
as to the risk of causing the victim's death, and appellant does
not deny that he actually caused the victim's death. By his own
testimony, then, appellant was at least guilty of manslaughter,
under Penal Code §19.04. (4)
Under
the rationale of Jackson, appellant was not entitled to a
lesser-included offense instruction on deadly conduct when the
evidence showed him to be guilty of at least some form of homicide.
The trial court did not err in refusing to give such an
instruction. Point of error twelve is overruled.
2. 992 S.W.2d 469, 474-475 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1999)(explaining that a "murder defendant is not
entitled to an instruction on the lesser included offense of
aggravated assault when the evidence showed him to be, at the
least, guilty of a homicide")(citing Forest v. State, 989
S.W.2d 365, 368 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999)(holding that as "there was
no evidence that the appellant was guilty of anything less than
some form of murder[, he] was not entitled to an instruction on
aggravated assault")).
3. The struggle took the
appellant and the officer through the window of the bank.
4. "A person commits [manslaughter]
if he recklessly causes the death of an individual." TEX. PEN.
CODE §19.04(a).
Mosley v. Quarterman, 306 Fed.Appx.
40 (5th Cir. 2008). (Habeas)
Background: After state capital murder
conviction was affirmed, 2003 WL 21467075, state prisoner filed
petition for writ of habeas corpus. The United States District
Court for the Northern District of Texas, David C. Godbey, J.,
2008 WL 656887, denied the petition. Prisoner applied for a
certificate of appealability (COA).
Holdings: The Court of Appeals held that: (1)
it had jurisdiction to consider prisoner's application for a COA;
(2) trial counsel did not render ineffective assistance by
allegedly failing to investigate or present mitigating evidence at
sentencing; (3) trial counsel's failure to object to alleged
victim impact evidence during guilt phase of trial did not
prejudice prisoner; (4) trial counsel's performance in failing to
object to admission of a prior consistent statement given by
witness was not deficient; (5) trial counsel's performance in
failing to obtain a limiting jury instruction when counsel
admitted entirety of prosecution expert's investigation into
evidence was reasonable trial strategy; (6) appellate counsel's
failure to challenge prosecution's cross-examination of defense
witness was not deficient; and (7) prisoner procedurally defaulted
his claim that appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance
by failing to challenge alleged incorrect jury instruction. COA
denied.
Petitioner Kenneth Mosley, a Texas death row
inmate, requests a certificate of appealability to appeal the
district court's denial of several claims in his petition for a
writ of habeas corpus. For the following reasons, his request is
denied.
I. Background
Kenneth Mosley was convicted and sentenced to
death for shooting and killing Officer David Moore during a
botched bank robbery on February 15, 1997, in Garland, Texas. A
complete account of the facts is available in the magistrate
judge's Findings, Conclusions, And Recommendation (the “FC & R”),
which the district court adopted in its Order Adopting Findings,
Conclusions And Recommendation (the “Adopting Order”). The
relevant facts are included in our discussion below. On direct
appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Mosley's
conviction and sentence in Mosley v. State, No. 73,012, 2003 WL
21467075 (Tex.Crim.App. June 25, 2003), and the United States
Supreme Court denied certiorari, Mosley v. Texas, 540 U.S. 1185,
124 S.Ct. 1404, 158 L.Ed.2d 90 (2004).
Mosley then filed a state habeas petition.
After hearing arguments, the state trial court entered findings of
fact and conclusions of law, recommending that the petition be
denied. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals adopted most, but not
all, of the trial court's findings and conclusions in denying
relief. Ex parte Mosley, No. 50,421-01 (Tex.Crim.App. July 2,
2003). Mosley then filed a federal habeas petition in the District
Court for the Northern District of Texas. In its Adopting Order,
the district court overruled Mosley's objections to the magistrate
judge's FC & R, adopted the magistrate judge's reasoning in the FC
& R, and denied Mosley habeas relief. Mosely v. Quarterman, No.
03-CV-1577-N, 2008 WL 656887 (N.D.Tex. Mar.6, 2008). In a separate
order, the district court denied a certificate of appealability (“COA”)
by adopting the reasoning in both its Adopting Order and the FC &
R. Mosley v. Quarterman, No. 3:03-CV-1577-N (N.D.Tex. May 20,
2008). Mosley now argues that we lack jurisdiction to review the
district court's decision because that court failed to adequately
review the FC & R. Alternatively, Mosley seeks a COA for six
ineffective assistance of counsel claims.
II. Jurisdiction
“Before considering the substance of [a
petitioner]'s motion for a COA, we must first address whether the
motion is properly before us.” United States v. Johnston, 258 F.3d
361, 363 (5th Cir.2001). A district court may designate a
magistrate judge to propose findings and recommendations regarding
a habeas petitioner's application for a COA. See 28 U.S.C. §
636(b)(1)(B) & (b)(3); cf. Jones v. Johnson, 134 F.3d 309, 311 n.
3 (5th Cir.1998) (assuming that a magistrate judge's recommending
the grant of a certificate of probable cause is a “permissible
‘additional duty’ under § 636(b)(3)”). However, we do not have
jurisdiction to review the magistrate judge's recommendation
unless that conclusion “is subject to meaningful review by the
district judge.” See Jones, 134 F.3d at 311; see also Donaldson v.
Ducote, 373 F.3d 622, 625 (5th Cir.2004) (“[B]ecause the district
court has not entered a final, appealable order adopting the
magistrate judge's [conclusion], we do not have jurisdiction....”).
Under the heading “Jurisdictional Challenge,” Mosley argues that
the district court failed to meaningfully review the magistrate
judge's recommendation by (1) adopting the magistrate judge's
reasoning and (2) concluding that Mosley failed to specifically
object to-and therefore reviewing for plain error-the magistrate
judge's determination that Mosley was not prejudiced in his claim
that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not
objecting to alleged victim impact evidence.FN1 These claims are
meritless. The district court reviewed the magistrate judge's
conclusions and issued a final, appealable order.FN2 We have
jurisdiction*43 to consider Mosley's application for a COA.
FN1. Mosley attempts to frame these arguments
as violating the Federal Magistrate Judge's Act, 28 U.S.C. § 636;
his due process rights; and his right to an Article III tribunal.
However, all of these arguments center on Mosley's jurisdictional
claim that the district court failed to adequately review the
magistrate judge's determination, and we therefore treat them as
such.
FN2. The district court concluded that Mosley's
conclusory arguments failed to specifically object to a section of
the FC & R and reviewed the unobjected-to section for plain error.
This is not a failure meaningfully to review the FC & R. See
Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140, 150, 106 S.Ct. 466, 88 L.Ed.2d 435
(1985) (“It does not appear that Congress intended to require
district court review of a magistrate's factual or legal
conclusions, under a de novo or any other standard, when neither
party objects to those findings.”); Nettles v. Wainwright, 677
F.2d 404, 410 n. 8 (5th Cir. Unit B 1982) (en banc) (“Frivolous,
conclusive or general objections need not be considered by the
district court.” (emphasis added)), overruled on other grounds by
Douglass v. United Servs. Auto. Ass'n, 79 F.3d 1415 (5th Cir.1996)
(en banc).
III. Standard Of Review
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), a petitioner must obtain a COA in order to
appeal the denial of his habeas petition in district court. 28
U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1). Because the district court denied Mosley's
application for a COA, he now seeks one from this court. See id.
We may issue a COA only if a petitioner makes
“a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.”
Id. § 2253(c)(2). “A petitioner satisfies this standard by
demonstrating that jurists of reason could disagree with the
district court's resolution of his constitutional claims 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, 123 S.Ct. 1029, 154 L.Ed.2d 931 (2003). The COA
determination is a “threshold inquiry” that consists of “an
overview of the claims in the habeas petition and a general
assessment of their merits” but that “does not require full
consideration of the factual or legal bases adduced in support of
the claims.” Id. at 336, 123 S.Ct. 1029. “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.” Johnson
v. Quarterman, 483 F.3d 278, 285 (5th Cir.2007) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Additionally, both the district court and the
magistrate judge evaluated Mosley's claims through AEDPA's
deferential lens. Under AEDPA, habeas relief may not be granted on
any claim adjudicated on the merits in state court unless the
state court's adjudication “resulted in a decision that was
contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly
established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court,” or
“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). In addition, “a
determination of a factual issue made by [the] State court shall
be presumed to be correct” unless rebutted by clear and convincing
evidence. Id. § 2254(e)(1).
IV. Discussion
Mosley seeks a COA on six issues: (1) whether
trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
investigate and present mitigating evidence; (2) whether trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to object to
purported victim impact evidence during the guilt phase of the
proceedings; (3) whether trial counsel rendered ineffective
assistance by failing to object to a witness's prior consistent
statement; (4) whether trial counsel rendered ineffective
assistance by failing to seek a limiting instruction when
admitting the entirety of an expert's investigation to
cross-examine the expert; (5) whether appellate counsel rendered
ineffective assistance by failing to argue that the prosecution
improperly impeached a defense witness; and (6) whether appellate
counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to challenge
the instruction that the jury received regarding Mosley's
eligibility for parole.
In addition to AEDPA's standards of review, all
of Mosley's claims are governed by the familiar two-part standard
set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct.
2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). First, Mosley must show that
counsel's performance was deficient, meaning that “counsel's
performance must be ‘outside the wide range of professionally
competent assistance.’ ” United States v. Drones, 218 F.3d 496,
500 (5th Cir.2000) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690, 104 S.Ct.
2052). Second, Mosley must show that this “deficient performance
prejudiced [his] defense such that ‘there is a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the
result of the proceeding would have been different.’ ” Id. (quoting
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S.Ct. 2052).
A. Failure To Investigate And Present
Mitigation Evidence
Mosley first argues that his counsel rendered
ineffective assistance by failing to investigate or present
mitigating evidence at sentencing. The district court agreed with
the state court's conclusion that Mosley could show neither
deficient performance nor prejudice as required by Strickland.
At sentencing, the prosecution presented
evidence of Mosley's prior criminal conduct and violent behavior.
This included evidence that Mosley sexually assaulted a woman in
1985; that Mosley was arrested in 1985 for possession of marijuana
and possession of Chinese throwing stars, which were classified as
illegal knives; that Mosley was arrested in November 1996 for
stealing merchandise from Home Depot and returning it for cash
refunds; that Mosley robbed a Home Depot at gunpoint on February
9, 1997, six days before the botched bank robbery that resulted in
Mosley's current capital conviction; that, roughly forty days
before commission of the current crime, Mosley robbed the very
same bank; and that, while in the holding area during the course
of the trial, Mosley was generally belligerent and, according to
the guards, made statements to the effect that it would make his
day to kill another cop.
The defense presented evidence that Mosley
showed remorse for his actions and that Mosley was not a future
danger because drug abuse was to blame for his behavior. Defense
counsel showed that Mosley stated that he felt worse about the
officer than he did for himself; that Mosley was a hard worker but
lost his job due to drug abuse; that Mosley had attended drug
abuse programs; and that drug abuse caused Mosley's church to
“disfellowship” him. Mosley additionally testified on his own
behalf, despite his counsel's admonitions, in order to explain
that he made the statements to the guards because he was upset at
the jury's guilty verdict and upset with problems obtaining his
meals and medication.
During the state habeas proceedings, the state
court held that counsel's investigation of Mosley's background and
mental state was reasonable and that Mosley was not prejudiced in
his defense. It found that counsel, with the aid of an
investigator, interviewed Mosley, his family members, his
counselor, and many of his acquaintances. While counsel learned
that Mosley had been whipped by his father, none of those
interviewed revealed that Mosley experienced any injury, trauma,
or disease that indicated Mosley suffered from an altered mental
process. The state court also noted that counsel's investigation
of Mosley's medical records revealed no indication of mental
disease. Mosley's wife indicated that she believed his problems
were due to drug abuse. The psychiatrist hired by Mosley's counsel
further reported no findings inconsistent with drug use. And
finally, the state court found that Mosley had refused to allow
his trial counsel to call his family members as witnesses.
The district court similarly denied habeas
relief to Mosley. There, Mosley argued that his counsel failed to
investigate and present evidence that he had a long history of
depression, which he self-medicated with drugs; that he suffers
from frontal lobe impairment and diffuse brain injury; and that he
was exposed to pesticides while growing up and working on a
plantation in the segregated South. Despite this, the district
court concluded that Mosley failed to overcome by clear and
convincing evidence the presumption of correctness enjoyed by
state court findings. Further, it determined that the state
court's conclusions were not an unreasonable application of
federal law or based on an unreasonable determination of the facts
in light of the presented evidence.
We do not believe that reasonable jurists would
disagree with the district court's resolution. To determine
whether Mosley's counsel was deficient, the focus is “on whether
the investigation supporting counsel's decision not to introduce
mitigation evidence ... was itself reasonable.” Wiggins v. Smith,
539 U.S. 510, 523, 123 S.Ct. 2527, 156 L.Ed.2d 471 (2003). In
Wiggins, the defense counsel's investigation was unreasonable
because counsel consulted only two sources regarding the
defendant's “life history”: a one-page pre-sentence investigation
and a city social services record. Id. Similarly, in Williams v.
Taylor, counsel's investigation was unreasonable because counsel
failed to obtain prison records showing Williams's nonviolent
behavior and failed to obtain other records indicating Williams's
“nightmarish childhood” due to counsel's incorrect belief that
state law barred access to such records. 529 U.S. 362, 395-96, 120
S.Ct. 1495, 146 L.Ed.2d 389 (2000). And in Rompilla v. Beard,
counsel's investigation was unreasonable because counsel failed to
review a prior conviction file used by the prosecution, a file
that would have alerted counsel that further investigation was
necessary. 545 U.S. 374, 390-91, 125 S.Ct. 2456, 162 L.Ed.2d 360
(2005).
Here, Mosley's counsel conducted a reasonable
investigation. Counsel interviewed Mosley, Mosley's family members,
friends, counselor, co-workers, and acquaintances. Counsel
reviewed Mosley's medical records and consulted a psychiatrist.
Nonetheless, Mosley argues that counsel's investigation was
inadequate because it failed to uncover the possibility that
Mosley suffered from brain impairment. According to Mosley, the
investigation would have uncovered this had counsel heeded the
psychiatrist's recommendation that Mosley undergo
neuropsychological testing. However, Mosley's counsel's
recollection of receiving such a recommendation differed from the
psychiatrist's, and the state court found counsel's recollection
more persuasive. Mosley has not controverted this finding with
clear and convincing evidence. The district court's denial of this
claim is therefore not debatable, and we deny a COA for this issue.
B. Failure To Object To Purported Victim
Impact Evidence
Next, Mosley argues that counsel rendered
ineffective assistance by failing to object to alleged victim
impact evidence during the guilt phase of trial. The district
court agreed with the state court's conclusion that no victim
impact evidence was admitted and that, were such evidence admitted,
Mosley failed to show that he was prejudiced.
During the trial's guilt phase, the prosecution
called Sheila Moore, Officer Moore's wife, to the stand. Mrs.
Moore identified the victim's body as her husband's. She also
testified as to her actions that day, both before hearing the news
of her husband's death and after. She stated that she had paged
her husband while out shopping with a friend and that, instead of
her husband calling back, she spoke to another officer and the
police chaplain. Then, her friend drove her to the police station,
where she was informed of her husband's death. On hearing the news,
she testified that she was “numb” and eventually “fell apart.” She
was then taken to the hospital, where she was permitted to see her
husband. Mrs. Mosley stated that she identified her husband at the
hospital and that the nurse permitted her to hold her husband's
hand.
On habeas review, the state court concluded
that no victim impact evidence had been admitted and that,
regardless, Mosley's defense was not prejudiced. FN3 It found that,
“while [Mrs.] Moore testified that she was ‘shaken,’ in a ‘fog,’
and ‘fell apart’ after learning of the victim's death, she never
testified about the effects of the crime on herself or her family.”
The state court further found that the prosecutor never asked Mrs.
Moore how the crime had affected her family. Finally, the state
court concluded that Mosley failed to show how the outcome of the
trial would have differed had counsel objected to the testimony.
FN3. The referenced findings are those that
have been adopted by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Mosley
argues that the fact that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals did
not adopt all of the trial court's findings suggests that
reasonable jurists can disagree that victim impact evidence was
admitted, but this argument fails to address how reasonable
jurists would disagree with the federal district court's
conclusion that the state court reasonably applied federal law.
The district court concluded that the state
court did not unreasonably apply federal law in its determinations
that no victim impact evidence was introduced and, in the
alternative, that Mosley failed to show that his defense was
prejudiced. As to the former, the district court noted that Mrs.
Moore's testimony as to how she learned of her husband's death
appeared to be “contextual evidence” and not victim impact
evidence. As to prejudice, the district court emphasized that the
overwhelming evidence of guilt supported the conclusion that
Mosley was not prejudiced by this testimony. The district court
listed the undisputed evidence of the crime: that Mosley entered
the bank with the intent to rob it; that Mosley drew his
semiautomatic, 9 millimeter handgun when Officer Moore approached;
that Officer Moore and Mosley struggled and fell through a window;
and that during the struggle, Mosley's gun jammed after firing
five rounds, four of which hit Officer Moore and killed him.
Mosley only contested the issue of intent. He did so by claiming
the gun fired by accident in his trial testimony, which the
district court summarized: “in essence, Mosley testified that as
he attempted to surrender his gun to Officer Moore, he
accidentally discharged it five times, hitting Officer Moore four
times and killing him.”
We do not believe reasonable jurists would
dispute the district court's conclusion. First, we note that
Mosley fails to address the state court's and district court's
conclusions that no victim impact testimony was admitted; Mosley's
brief assumes without explanation that Mrs. Moore's testimony was,
in fact, impermissible victim impact testimony. And second, even
assuming that victim impact evidence was improperly admitted,
Mosley *47 fails to explain how Mrs. Moore's testimony prejudiced
his defense in light of the overwhelming evidence of guilt. Thus,
we deny a COA on this issue.
C. Failure To Object To Admission Of A Prior
Consistent Statement
Third, Mosley claims that he received
ineffective assistance because trial counsel failed to object to
the admission of a prior consistent statement given by Brandy
Johnson. The district court agreed with the state court's
conclusion that Mosley's counsel were not ineffective because
Johnson's statement was properly admitted to rebut a charge of
recent fabrication.
Johnson testified for the prosecution. She
stated that, while working across the street from the bank that
Mosley planned to rob on the day of the shooting, she observed a
man meeting Mosley's description standing over another man on the
ground; that she watched the standing man's hand recoil as he
fired a pistol at the man on the ground; and that the standing man
then walked away. On cross-examination, Johnson confirmed that she
did not see Mosley fire any shots back into the bank. Mosley's
counsel then questioned Johnson about a written statement that she
gave police that day. She conceded that the statement indicated
that she saw Mosley fire a shot into the bank and that
representatives of the District Attorney's office came to her
workplace about a week after the shooting. On redirect, Johnson
testified that four days after the offense she told a detective
that she saw a shot fired at a downward angle toward the body on
the ground.
The state court found that Mosley's defense
counsel had implied that Johnson had a motive to fabricate her
story as a result of her meeting with prosecutors from the
District Attorney's office. The court then found that Johnson's
statement to the detective occurred before she came into contact
with the prosecutors and was therefore made before the motive to
fabricate arose. Thus, Mosley's consistent statement was
admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule in order to
challenge the charge of fabrication. The district court agreed,
concluding that the state court did not unreasonably apply federal
law.
Mosley's ineffective assistance claim revolves
around whether his lawyer failed to object to damaging hearsay. A
prior statement by a witness is not hearsay if it is consistent
with the witness's testimony and offered to rebut an implied
charge of recent fabrication, improper influence, or improper
motive. Tex.R. Evid. 801(e)(1)(B). The prior consistent statement,
however, must have been made before the alleged improper influence
occurred. Haughton v. State, 805 S.W.2d 405, 408 (Tex.Crim.App.1990);
see also Tome v. United States, 513 U.S. 150, 167, 115 S.Ct. 696,
130 L.Ed.2d 574 (1995) (interpreting the identical, federal
hearsay exception as requiring the same). Here, Mosley's trial
counsel implied that Johnson had a motive to fabricate her
testimony as a result of her meeting the prosecutors; her prior
consistent statement predated that meeting. Mosley argues that
Johnson's motive to fabricate arose when she met with the
detective, but he offers no clear and convincing evidence to rebut
the state court's finding that Johnson's motive to fabricate arose
when she met with the prosecutors. Therefore, we conclude that
reasonable jurists would not debate the district court's
conclusion that the state court reasonably applied Strickland, and
we deny a COA for this issue.
D. Failure To Obtain A Limiting Instruction
For Expert Investigation
Mosley's fourth argument claims that trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to obtain a
limiting instruction when counsel admitted the entirety of the
expert's investigation into evidence. The district court concluded
that the state court did not unreasonably apply federal law in
determining that Mosley did not show deficient performance or
prejudice.
During the trial, Vicki Hall testified as an
expert for the prosecution. Based on her analysis of the trace
evidence, she concluded that the final gunshot that struck Officer
Moore was fired from more than one foot away. This fact supported
the prosecution's theory that Mosley stepped back in order to fire
a final, coup de grace shot. On cross-examination, Mosley's
counsel admitted into evidence “every scrap of paper” that Hall
produced in her investigation without limiting the use of such
evidence to cross-examination purposes. Counsel utilized this
evidence to elicit testimony from Hall that the only written
report that she issued stated that she could not estimate the
distance of the last shot. Subsequently, Mosley's trial counsel
explained that all of Hall's investigation was admitted without a
limiting instruction because juries do not generally understand a
limiting instruction and, instead, they might believe counsel is
trying to hide something.
The district court, like the state court,
concluded that trial counsel's strategy not to obtain a limiting
instruction was made after some deliberation and was not so ill-chosen
that it permeated Mosley's trial with obvious unfairness. Both
courts noted that the prosecution did not mention Hall's
investigatory materials during its arguments. Additionally, both
court's concluded that Mosley failed to show that this testimony
prejudiced his defense because Hall testified in detail as to what
her investigation included.
Mosley fails to point to any authority or raise
any argument suggesting that trial counsel's determination to
include the facts of Hall's investigation without limitation was
so deficient as to be outside the range of professionally
competent assistance. Instead, Hall asserts that the magistrate
judge, in the FC & R, conceded that trial counsel's explanation
was implausible. The magistrate judge, however, did no such thing:
the FC & R stated that “it has not been shown that the strategy
was so ill-chosen that it permeated [Mosley]'s trial with obvious
unfairness, especially as the prosecutors did not utilize Ms.
Hall's testimony at all during closing statements.” Further, we
are not persuaded that the district court likely erred in
concluding that the state court's determination (that admitting
this evidence without a limiting instruction did not prejudice
Mosley) was a reasonable application of Strickland. Hall's
detailed testimony placed many of the facts from her investigation
before the jury. Mosley argues that failing to limit the use of
the evidence permitted Irving Stone, a subsequent expert for the
prosecution, to read into the record much of Hall's investigation.
This, according to Mosley, provided the scientific basis for the
prosecution's coup de grace theory. But Mosley fails to show a
reasonable probability that-in light of the significant amount of
inculpatory evidence-the outcome of the trial would have been
affected had the evidence been limited to impeaching Hall.
We, therefore, do not believe reasonable
jurists would debate the district court's determination. On this
issue, the COA is denied.
E. Failure To Challenge On Appeal Cross-Examination
Of Witness
Fifth, Mosley argues that his appellate counsel
rendered ineffective assistance by failing to challenge the
prosecution's cross-examination of Jaspar Mallard. Jaspar Mallard
testified as an eyewitness for Mosley's defense. Mallard stated
that Mosley did not fire the final, coup de grace shot described
by Johnson; instead, he asserted that all of the shots were fired
from close range. On cross-examination and over Mosley's trial
counsel's objection, the prosecution questioned Mallard about his
bi-polar condition and what medication he was taking at the time
of the shooting. During redirect examination, Mallard testified
that the medications do not affect his vision or memory.
The state court concluded that Mosley's
appellate counsel was not deficient in failing to raise this claim.
It found that the prosecution's questions were relevant and
admissible because they concerned whether Mallard could accurately
perceive events. Alternatively, the state court concluded that
Mosley failed to show how he was prejudiced by his appellate
counsel's failure to object. The district court, in turn,
determined that the state court reasonably applied Strickland's
standards.
Mosley presses that impeachment was so clearly
improper that the failure to challenge the impeachment on appeal
renders counsel ineffective. But Mosley's categorical assertion is
belied by the support he cites. In Virts v. State, the Texas Court
of Criminal Appeals stated that “[c]ross-examination of a ...
witness to show that the witness has suffered a recent mental
illness or disturbance is proper, provided that such mental
illness or disturbance is such that it might tend to reflect upon
the witness's credibility.” 739 S.W.2d 25, 30 (Tex.Crim.App.1987)
(emphasis added). Mosley fails to demonstrate a debatable issue on
whether the district court was correct in concluding that the
state court reasonably applied Strickland to his claim that his
appellate counsel were deficient, and we deny a COA for this issue.
F. Failure To Challenge On Appeal The Jury's
Parole Instruction
And finally, Mosley claims that his appellate
counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to challenge
the alleged incorrect jury instruction regarding his parole
eligibility had he been sentenced to a life term. This argument,
however, was not made in the state court's habeas proceedings or
in the district court, and Mosley has therefore procedurally
defaulted this claim. See Finley v. Johnson, 243 F.3d 215, 220
(5th Cir.2001) (“If a petitioner fails to exhaust state remedies,
but the court to which he would be required to return to meet the
exhaustion requirement would now find the claim procedurally
barred, then there has been a procedural default for purposes of
federal habeas corpus relief.”). On this issue, the COA is denied.
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Mosley's application
for a COA is DENIED.