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Jeffrey
MOTTS
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Robbery - Argument
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: April 3, 1995 / December 5, 2005
Date of birth: May 5, 1975
Victims profile: His great-aunt Etta Osteen, 73, and
Clyde Camby, 79 / Charles "Chuck" Martin (his cellmate)
Method of murder: Shooting / Strangulation
Location: Greenville County, South Carolina, USA
Status: Executed by lethal injection in South Carolina on May 6, 2011
Summary:
Motts and Charles "Chuck" Martin had ended up in the same cell at
Perry Correctional Institution together despite asking to be kept
apart because of a dispute over a stolen radio and a shank found in
another inmate's cell.
After an early morning argument, Motts said he went
into a rage, knocked his cellmate unconscious and tied him up. When
Martin came to, begging for his life, Motts said he choked him for
five minutes. When the cell doors opened for breakfast, Motts smoked a
cigarette, ate, then came back to his cell, dragged Martin's body to a
common area and kicked him in the head, saying "this is what snitches
get."
He confessed to strangling Martin just hours after
telling guards at Perry Correctional Institution in Greenville County
where to find his body in a prison common area. During that confession,
he also asked investigators to tell prosecutors he was serving two
life sentences and a third wasn't going to make a difference. Soon
after his conviction, Motts waived all appeals and asked to be put to
death.
Motts was already serving a life sentence for a
1995 double murder of 79-year-old Clyde Camby and his 73-year-old
great-aunt Etta Osteen. Martin was three weeks away from completing a
five-year sentence for assault and battery of a high and aggravated
nature and trespassing.
Citations:
State v. Motts, --- S.E.2d ----, 2011 WL 979731 (S.C. 2011). (Waiver
of Appeals)
Final Meal:
Pizza, fried fish, popcorn shrimp, french fries, sweet tea and cherry
cheesecake.
Final Words:
His attorney read a last statement from Motts as he lay on the gurney.
"To my mom and grandma, Happy Mother's Day. I know this is a sad one
but let us remember the good times. I am finally free and at peace in
heaven." He apologized to his victims' families, his own family and
anyone he hurt along the way. “I want to warn kids of the dangers of
drugs. I was the child everyone wanted their children around until I
got on drugs. Drugs will destroy your life.”
ClarkProsecutor.org
South Carolina Department of Corrections
Inmate: Motts, Jeffery
DOC#: 6026
DOB: 05/05/75
County: Greenville
Date Received: 12/04/07
Race: White
Trial Judge: G. Clary
South Carolina executes man who strangled prison
inmate
Reuters.com
May 6, 2011
CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - South
Carolina executed by lethal injection on Friday a man convicted of
murdering his cellmate in 2005 while serving two life sentences for
earlier murders of two relatives. Jeffrey Motts, 36, was pronounced
dead at 6:17 p.m. local time at Broad River Correctional Institution
in the state capital of Columbia, said John Barkley, spokesman for the
South Carolina Department of Corrections.
Motts was sentenced to death in 2007 for strangling
inmate Charles Martin after a verbal altercation in their cell at
Perry Correctional Institution in upstate Greenville County, South
Carolina. Motts pushed Martin's body under the bed, ate breakfast,
watched television and smoked cigarettes, and then dragged the body to
a common room, kicked it and said "this is what snitches get,"
according to court records.
Soon after his conviction, Motts began writing to
the South Carolina Supreme Court asking to forgo all appeals and be
put to death. In April, the state Supreme Court, having found him
mentally competent to make the decision to die, granted his wish.
Motts had been convicted in 1997 of the robbery and
murders of his great-aunt and another relative in South Carolina.
He was the first person to be executed in South
Carolina in two years and the first to be put to death using a new
drug, pentobarbital, in the three-drug execution protocol. In several
states, pentobarbital has replaced sodium thiopental, a drug that has
become scarce in the United States, for lethal injection executions.
Oklahoma and Ohio have switched to the new drug. On Tuesday, Texas put
an inmate to death using pentobarbital.
Motts chose to have a spiritual advisor, who is a
volunteer for Death Row inmates at the prison, with him in his final
hours, Barkley said. Between 3:30 and 4 on Friday afternoon, Motts was
served his last meal of pizza, fried fish, popcorn shrimp, french
fries, cherry cheesecake and sweet tea, he said.
In his last words, he apologized to the families of
his three victims and his own family and warned children away from
drugs. "I was the child everyone wanted their children around until I
got on drugs," Motts said. "Drugs will destroy your life."
Motts was the 14th person executed in the United
States so far this year, according to the Death Penalty Information
Center. In 2010, 46 people were executed in the United States, six
fewer than the previous year.
Inmate first to die in SC with new combo of
drugs
Chronicle.augusta.com
Associated Press - May 6, 2011
COLUMBIA, S.C. - South Carolina on Friday executed
a man who strangled his cellmate, using a new combination of lethal
injection drugs for the first time. Jeffrey Motts, 36, was declared
dead at 6:17 p.m. He was given the sedative pentobarbital instead of
sodium thiopental as part of the lethal three drug combination because
federal agents seized the state's supply as part of a nationwide
investigation into whether prisons obtained the drugs legally from
England.
Motts was sentenced to death for killing his
cellmate at a state prison in Greenville County in 2005. He was
already serving a life sentence for killing two elderly people during
a Spartanburg County robbery in 1995.
Motts, strapped to a gurney in a green jumpsuit,
never looked at the witnesses. It took him about 90 seconds to stop
breathing after the lethal drugs began flowing through an IV. He took
several heavy breaths, blinked and his head jerked slightly for about
a minute before his breaths became shallow and eventually stopped. His
eyes slowly closed, never to open again.
His attorney read a last statement before he died:
"To my mom and grandma, happy Mother's Day. I know this is a sad one
but let us remember the good times. I am finally free and at peace in
heaven." He apologized to his victims' families, his own family and
anyone he hurt along the way.
Motts abandoned all his appeals and volunteered for
the death chamber
He confessed to strangling Charles "Chuck" Martin
just hours after telling guards at Perry Correctional Institution in
Greenville County where to find his body in a prison common area.
During that confession, he also asked investigators to tell
prosecutors he was serving two life sentences and a third wasn't going
to make a difference.
He told his attorneys he wanted to die, saying he
only went to trial so his parents wouldn't think he was giving up. His
push to enter the death chamber wavered briefly when his lawyers
suggested he might be able to donate a kidney to his ailing sister,
but he reaffirmed his wish to die after the two turned out not to be a
match.
Motts and Martin had ended up in the same cell
together in November 2005 despite asking to be kept apart because of a
dispute over a stolen radio and a shank found in another inmate's cell.
After an early morning argument on Dec. 5, Motts said he went into a
rage, knocked his cellmate unconscious and tied him up. When Martin
came to, begging for his life, Motts said he choked him for five
minutes. When the cell doors opened for breakfast, Motts smoked a
cigarette, ate, then came back to his cell, dragged Martin's body to a
common area and kicked him in the head, saying "this is what snitches
get."
Motts was already serving a life sentence for a
1995 double murder in Spartanburg County in the northwest part of the
state. He tied up 79-year-old Clyde Camby and shot him at close range
in the cheek at a home in Pacolet, then shot his 73-year-old great-aunt
Etta Osteen in the back as she tried to get away, investigators said.
Camby was found with his pockets turned inside out.
Authorities said Motts killed the pair to get money to buy crack. He
mentioned his drug addiction in his last statement. "I want to warn
kids of the dangers of drugs. I was the child everyone wanted their
children around until I got on drugs. Drugs will destroy your life."
Jeffrey Motts becomes 1st S.C. inmate executed
with new lethal mix
By Rudolph Bell - GreenvilleOnline.com
May 06. 2011
In South Carolina's first execution in almost 2
years, Jeffrey Motts became the first inmate to die using a new
combination of lethal drugs. His execution was the state's first use
of a certain three-drug combination for the death penalty, said John
Barkley, spokesman for the state Department of Corrections.State
officials replaced sodium thiopental with pentobarbital for the
injection after delivering their supply of sodium thiopental to the
Drug Enforcement Administration, Barkley said. Several states have
stopped using sodium thiopental out of concern they had acquired it
illegally from England, which bars export of the drug for executions.
Jeffrey Motts, 36, was serving a life sentence for
killing two elderly people in Pacolet in 1995 when he strangled his
cellmate a decade later in a Pelzer prison and received the death
penalty. Motts told the state Supreme Court that he wanted to die for
the strangling of cellmate Charles Martin in 2005 at the Perry
Correctional Institution.
Motts testified that he bound Martin with a bed
sheet and choked him to death to settle a dispute. Martin was three
weeks away from completing a five-year sentence for assault and
battery of a high and aggravated nature and trespassing. Motts had
earlier been convicted in the shooting death of the two elderly people,
one of whom was his great-aunt.
Motts is the first prisoner executed in South
Carolina since Thomas Ivey was put to death in May 2009 for a double
murder, Barkley said.
S.C. inmate put to death with new drug combo
AikenStandard.com
May 7, 2011
COLUMBIA -- South Carolina on Friday executed a man
who strangled his cellmate, using a new combination of lethal
injection drugs for the first time. Jeffrey Motts, 36, was declared
dead at 6:17 p.m. He was given the sedative pentobarbital instead of
sodium thiopental as part of the lethal three-drug combination because
federal agents seized the state's supply as part of a nationwide
investigation into whether prisons obtained the drugs legally from
England.
Motts was sentenced to death for killing his
cellmate at a state prison in Greenville County in 2005. He was
already serving a life sentence for killing two elderly people during
a Spartanburg County robbery in 1995.
Motts, strapped to a gurney in a green jumpsuit,
never looked at the witnesses. It took him about 90 seconds to stop
breathing after the lethal drugs began flowing through an IV. He took
several heavy breaths, blinked and his head jerked slightly for about
a minute before his breaths became shallow and eventually stopped. His
eyes slowly closed, never to open again.
His attorney read a last statement before he died:
"To my mom and grandma, happy Mother's Day. I know this is a sad one
but let us remember the good times. I am finally free and at peace in
heaven." He apologized to his victims' families, his own family and
anyone he hurt along the way.
Motts abandoned all his appeals and volunteered for
the death chamber. He confessed to strangling Charles "Chuck" Martin
just hours after telling guards at Perry Correctional Institution in
Greenville County where to find his body in a prison common area.
During that confession, he also asked investigators to tell
prosecutors he was serving two life sentences and a third wasn't going
to make a difference.
He told his attorneys he wanted to die, saying he
only went to trial so his parents wouldn't think he was giving up. His
push to enter the death chamber wavered briefly when his lawyers
suggested he might be able to donate a kidney to his ailing sister,
but he reaffirmed his wish to die after the two turned out not to be a
match.
Motts and Martin had ended up in the same cell
together in November 2005 despite asking to be kept apart because of a
dispute over a stolen radio and a shank found in another inmate's cell.
After an early morning argument on Dec. 5, Motts said he went into a
rage, knocked his cellmate unconscious and tied him up. When Martin
came to, begging for his life, Motts said he choked him for five
minutes. When the cell doors opened for breakfast, Motts smoked a
cigarette, ate, then came back to his cell, dragged Martin's body to a
common area and kicked him in the head, saying "this is what snitches
get."
Motts was already serving a life sentence for a
1995 double murder in Spartanburg County in the northwest part of the
state. He tied up 79-year-old Clyde Camby and shot him at close range
in the cheek at a home in Pacolet, then shot his 73-year-old great-aunt
Etta Osteen in the back as she tried to get away, investigators said.
Camby was found with his pockets turned inside out.
Authorities said Motts killed the pair to get money to buy crack. He
mentioned his drug addiction in his last statement. "I want to warn
kids of the dangers of drugs. I was the child everyone wanted their
children around until I got on drugs. Drugs will destroy your life."
Inmate Jeffrey Motts first to die in SC with new
combo of drugs
By Jeffrey Collins - Postandcourier.com
May 6, 2011
COLUMBIA — South Carolina inmate Jeffrey Motts
wished a happy Mother’s Day to his mother and grandmother, warned
children to stay off drugs and apologized to his own family and the
families of his victims before he was executed Friday for strangling
his cellmate.
Motts, who turned 36 the day before he died, was
the first inmate in South Carolina to be killed using a new
combination of lethal drugs. It appeared to take him longer to die,
but otherwise the execution was similar to several other lethal
injections the state has carried out. The state had to switch the
sedative used as the first drug in the three drug combination from
sodium thiopental to pentobarbital because federal agents seized the
state’s supply as part of a nationwide investigation into whether
prisons obtained the drugs legally from England. The remaining two
drugs remained the same.
Motts was sentenced to death for killing his
cellmate at a state prison in Greenville County in 2005. He was
already serving a life sentence for killing two elderly people during
a Spartanburg County robbery in 1995.
Motts, strapped to a gurney in a green jumpsuit,
never looked at the witnesses and stared at the ceiling as his lawyer
read his final statement: “To my mom and grandma, happy Mother’s Day.
I know this is a sad one but let us remember the good times. I am
finally free and at peace in heaven.”
After his lawyer left the room, the IV tubes
twitched as it appeared the lethal drugs began to flow. He took
several heavy breaths, blinked and his head jerked slightly for about
a minute before his breaths became shallow and eventually stopped
about 90 seconds later. His eyes slowly closed, never to open again,
but it would be 14 more minutes before a doctor officially declared
him dead with a nod toward the warden at 6:17 p.m.
Motts abandoned all his appeals and volunteered for
the death chamber
He confessed to strangling Charles “Chuck” Martin
just hours after telling guards at Perry Correctional Institution in
Greenville County where to find his body in a prison common area.
During that confession, he also asked investigators to tell
prosecutors he was serving two life sentences and a third wasn’t going
to make a difference. He told his attorneys he wanted to die, saying
he only went to trial so his parents wouldn’t think he was giving up.
His push to enter the death chamber wavered briefly when his lawyers
suggested he might be able to donate a kidney to his ailing sister,
but he reaffirmed his wish to die after the two turned out not to be a
match.
Motts and Martin had ended up in the same cell
together in November 2005 despite asking to be kept apart because of a
dispute over a stolen radio and a shank found in another inmate’s cell.
After an early morning argument on Dec. 5, Motts said he went into a
rage, knocked his cellmate unconscious and tied him up. When Martin
came to, begging for his life, Motts said he choked him for five
minutes. When the cell doors opened for breakfast, Motts smoked a
cigarette, ate, then came back to his cell, dragged Martin’s body to a
common area and kicked him in the head, saying “this is what snitches
get.”
Motts was already serving a life sentence for a
1995 double murder in Spartanburg County in the northwest part of the
state. He tied up 79-year-old Clyde Camby and shot him at close range
in the cheek at a home in Pacolet, then shot his 73-year-old great-aunt
Etta Osteen in the back as she tried to get away, investigators said.
Camby was found with his pockets turned inside out. Authorities said
Motts killed the pair to get money to buy crack.
He mentioned his drug addiction in his last
statement. “I want to warn kids of the dangers of drugs. I was the
child everyone wanted their children around until I got on drugs.
Drugs will destroy your life.” Motts ate a final meal of pizza, fried
fish, popcorn shrimp, french fries, sweet tea and cherry cheesecake.
Jeffrey Motts
ProDeathPenalty.com
In 1997, a Spartanburg County jury convicted
Jeffrey Brian Motts of the armed robbery and murder of his great-aunt
and great-uncle. Motts' great aunt, 73-year-old Louise Etta Olsteen,
and of 79-year-old Clyde Lloyd Camby, were killed on April 3, 1995.
Motts, at the time 19 years old, had cut the telephone cord in the
house, tied the legs of the couple with a shirt and shot Olsteen in
the back and shot Camby in the face. He wanted money to buy crack
cocaine. The trial judge sentenced Motts to life imprisonment for each
murder conviction and twenty-five years' imprisonment for the armed
robbery conviction.
While Motts was serving his sentences at Perry
Correctional Institution in Greenville County, his cell-mate, Charles
Martin, was found dead on December 8, 2005. Motts confessed to the
killing. Subsequently, a Greenville County grand jury indicted Motts
for Martin's murder. Based on Motts's prior murder convictions, the
State sought the death penalty.
Several witnesses at trial, including Motts,
testified regarding the events surrounding Martin's murder. Angered
that Martin had lied to another inmate about Motts's involvement in "planting"
a knife in the inmate's cell, Motts confronted Martin during the early
morning hours of December 8, 2005. According to Motts, the verbal
exchange escalated to a physical altercation with Motts hitting Martin
in the head. Martin fell against the wall and started shaking. Motts
then picked up Martin and bound his hands and feet using strips of
cloth from his bed sheets. When Martin regained consciousness, he
begged Motts not to hurt him. Motts responded by choking Martin to
death. Because Martin continued to make what Motts described as a "death
rattle," Motts proceeded to tie some sheets around Martin's neck to
stop this noise. Martin died as the result of asphyxia due to
strangulation. Motts then pushed the body under his bed in the cell.
After killing Martin, Motts smoked a cigarette, ate
breakfast, smoked another cigarette, and watched television. Motts
then dragged Martin's body to a common area known as "the rock."
Before placing Martin's body on "the rock," he kicked Martin and
stated "this is what snitches get." Motts then reported to prison
guards that he had killed Martin.
After the guards found Martin's lifeless body,
officers with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division initiated an
investigation by questioning Motts. During the questioning, Motts
waived his Miranda rights and then confessed to the murder. After the
jury found Motts guilty of murder, the State sought to establish the
statutory aggravating circumstance that "the murder was committed by a
person with a prior conviction for murder." Accordingly, the State
presented evidence regarding Motts's 1997 convictions for the murder
of his great-aunt and great-uncle. Ultimately, the jury found beyond a
reasonable doubt that the murder of Martin was committed by a person
with a prior conviction for murder.
As a result, the jury recommended that Motts be put
to death. The trial judge denied all of Motts's post-trial motions and
ordered on June 4, 2008 that Motts be put to death as a result of the
conviction. In March of 2011, the state Supreme Court ruled that Motts
can drop his appeals.
State v. Motts, --- S.E.2d ----, 2011 WL
979731(S.C. 2011) (Waiver of Appeals).
Background: After defendant was convicted of
capital murder, defendant wrote to Supreme Court asking to abandon his
direct appeal and to waive all appellate review of his conviction and
death sentence. On remand for competency hearing, the Circuit Court,
Greenville County, Larry R. Patterson and D. Garrison Hill, JJ., found
defendant competent to waive his appeals.
Holdings: After directing defendant's appellate
counsel to file brief addressing issue of defendant's competency, the
Supreme Court, Beatty, J., held that: (1) evidence supported finding
that defendant was competent to waive his right to direct appeal and
that waiver was made knowingly and voluntarily; (2) a convicted
capital defendant cannot waive Supreme Court's statutorily-imposed
duty to review his capital sentence, abrogating State v. Torrence, 322
S.C. 475, 473 S.E.2d 703; (3) death penalty was not disproportionate
sentence; and (4) neither circuit court nor Supreme Court was required
to order that a court-appointed psychiatrist interview defendant
immediately prior to his execution in the absence of some indicia of
incompetency. Affirmed.
Justice BEATTY.
In this capital case, a jury convicted Jeffrey
Brian Motts of murdering his cell-mate at Perry Correctional
Institution. Shortly after his appellate counsel filed a notice of
appeal, Motts wrote to this Court indicating his desire to abandon his
direct appeal and to waive all appellate review of his conviction and
death sentence. In response, this Court remanded the case to the
circuit court to conduct a competency hearing. Following a hearing,
the circuit court found Motts competent to waive his appeals.
After conducting an extensive review of the record
in this case and thoroughly questioning Motts during oral arguments
before this Court, we conclude Motts is competent to waive his right
to a direct appeal and that his waiver is knowing and voluntary.
Additionally, we find that Motts's sentence of death is neither
excessive nor disproportionate with his crime. Finally, we hold that
neither the circuit court nor this Court is required to issue an order
for a court-appointed psychiatrist to interview Motts, in the absence
of some indicia of incompetency, immediately prior to his execution to
assure that he has remained competent.
I. Factual/Procedural Background
In 1997, a Spartanburg County jury convicted Motts
of the armed robbery and murder of his great-aunt and great-uncle. The
trial judge sentenced Motts to life imprisonment for each murder
conviction and twenty-five years' imprisonment for the armed robbery
conviction.
While Motts was serving his sentences at Perry
Correctional Institution in Greenville County, his cell-mate, Charles
Martin, was found dead on December 8, 2005. Motts confessed to the
killing. Subsequently, a Greenville County grand jury indicted Motts
for Martin's murder. Based on Motts's prior murder convictions, the
State sought the death penalty.
Several witnesses at trial, including Motts,
testified regarding the events surrounding Martin's murder. Angered
that Martin had lied to another inmate about Motts's involvement in
“planting” a knife in the inmate's cell, Motts confronted Martin
during the early morning hours of December 8, 2005. According to Motts,
the verbal exchange escalated to a physical altercation with Motts
hitting Martin in the head. Martin fell against the wall and started
shaking. Motts then picked up Martin and bound his hands and feet
using strips of cloth from his bed sheets. When Martin regained
consciousness, he begged Motts not to hurt him. Motts responded by
choking Martin to death. Because Martin continued to make what Motts
described as a “death rattle,” Motts proceeded to tie some sheets
around Martin's neck to stop this noise. Martin died as the result of
asphyxia due to strangulation. Motts then pushed the body under his
bed in the cell.
After killing Martin, Motts smoked a cigarette, ate
breakfast, smoked another cigarette, and watched television. Motts
then dragged Martin's body to a common area known as “the rock.”
Before placing Martin's body on “the rock,” he kicked Martin and
stated “this is what snitches get.”
Motts then reported to prison guards that he had
killed Martin. After the guards found Martin's lifeless body, officers
with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division initiated an
investigation by questioning Motts. During the questioning, Motts
waived his MirandaFN1 rights and then confessed to the murder.
After the jury found Motts guilty of murder, the
State sought to establish the statutory aggravating circumstance that
“[t]he murder was committed by a person with a prior conviction for
murder.” S.C.Code Ann. § 16–3–20(C)(a)(2) (2003). Accordingly, the
State presented evidence regarding Motts's 1997 convictions for the
murder of his great-aunt and great-uncle. Ultimately, the jury found
beyond a reasonable doubt that the murder of Martin was committed by a
person with a prior conviction for murder. As a result, the jury
recommended that Motts be put to death. The trial judge denied all of
Motts's post-trial motions and ordered on June 4, 2008 that Motts be
put to death as a result of the conviction.
The day after sentencing, Motts's trial counsel
filed a notice of intent to appeal Motts's conviction and sentence.
Before any briefs were filed, Motts personally wrote to this Court
requesting that his execution proceed as scheduled. Specifically,
Motts expressed his desire to relieve his appellate defender,
represent himself, and waive his direct appeal.
Subsequently, this Court issued an order remanding
the matter to the trial judge, Circuit Court Judge Larry R. Patterson,
and directing him to conduct a full hearing to determine whether Motts
was competent to waive his direct appeal and whether his decision to
waive his right to direct appeal was knowing and voluntary. Judge
Patterson ordered that Motts be examined by two qualified examiners
designated by the South Carolina Department of Mental Health. Pursuant
to the order, the examiners were to determine whether Motts was
competent under the standard enunciated in Singleton v. State, 313 S.C.
75, 437 S.E.2d 53 (1993),FN2 and followed in State v. Torrence, 317
S.C. 45, 451 S.E.2d 883 (1994).FN3 The court-appointed examiners
included: Dr. Richard Frierson, a Professor of Clinical Psychiatry for
the University of South Carolina School of Medicine (USCSM); Dr.
Amanda (Gowans) Salas, Fellow in Forensic Psychiatry for the USCSM;
and Dr. Michael Gassen, Chief Psychologist for the Department of
Mental Health. The examiners evaluated thirty-four-year old Motts on
October 8, 2009, November 12, 2009, and December 16, 2009.
On January 5, 2010, the court-appointed examiners
submitted a joint, fifteen-page report explaining their ultimate
conclusion that Motts was competent to waive his direct appeal under
the standard set forth in Singleton and followed in Torrence. On April
29, 2010, Circuit Court Judge D. Garrison Hill FN4 held an evidentiary
hearing. During the hearing, Judge Hill heard testimony from two court-appointed
psychiatrists,FN5 the two trial attorneys who represented Motts in his
2007 capital trial, and Motts.
According to Dr. Frierson, the examiners reviewed
the following documents: Motts's medical records dating from his
childhood, transcripts from Motts's criminal trials, Motts's
employment records, and Motts's records from the South Carolina
Department of Corrections. In addition, the examiners compiled a
“social history” by interviewing Motts, his mother, and an individual
with a prison ministry who had visited Motts on death row. The
examiners definitively concluded that Motts was competent to waive his
right to appeal and to be executed as required under Singleton.
Motts's counsel called the two attorneys who
represented Motts in his 2007 capital trial. Christopher Scalzo
testified that Motts expressed “early on” that he did not wish for the
jury to return a life sentence. In fact, Scalzo had Motts evaluated to
determine whether he was competent to stand trial “because of [Motts's]
initial desire to get the death penalty.” However, Scalzo acknowledged
that there were times when Motts was “supportive of the idea of a life
sentence.” Scalzo recounted Motts's closing statement to the jury in
which Motts asked “the jury to give him life for his family.”
Stephen Henry, the lead counsel appointed to Motts,
testified Motts was cooperative “to the point where he thought that we
might have a chance of getting a life sentence.” Henry stated that
Motts's “decision to die was made early and never waivered.” As to
Motts's closing statement to the jury, Henry claimed Motts was “asking
for his life to be spared for his parents['] sake, not for his own.”
According to Henry, Motts expressed that “he deserved the death
penalty for what he did.”
Finally, Judge Hill personally questioned Motts.
During this colloquy, Motts answered questions regarding his
understanding of the competency proceedings, the appellate proceedings,
post-conviction relief proceedings, and the death sentence. Motts also
stated that he deserved the death penalty and did not want to remain
incarcerated for another thirty to forty years. Motts explained that
he was “100 percent” firm in his commitment to waive his appeals and
that no one had threatened or coerced him to reach this decision.
On June 8, 2010, Judge Hill issued a lengthy
written order in which he concluded that Motts's “decision to waive
his rights to direct appeal meets the standards set forth in Singleton
v. State and that his decision is one that has been knowingly,
voluntarily, and intelligently made after careful and thoughtful
consideration.”
Upon receipt of Judge Hill's order, this Court
directed Motts's appellate counsel to file a brief addressing the
issue of whether Motts is competent to waive his right to direct
appeal and whether his waiver is knowing and intelligent. After the
parties filed their briefs, Motts wrote to this Court again expressing
his “desire to waive all of [his] appeals, and sentence review, and
not delay this any further.”
II. Discussion
A.
Our review of this case involves a three-part
analysis. Initially, we must assess whether Motts is competent to
waive his direct appeal and whether this decision is knowing and
voluntary. If these questions are answered in the affirmative, the
question becomes whether Motts's waiver includes this Court's
proportionality review of his sentence of death. Finally, we must
determine whether the circuit court or this Court has a continuing
duty to assure that Motts is competent to be executed. Specifically,
we must consider whether Motts should be evaluated by a court-appointed
psychiatrist immediately prior to his execution.
B.
“This Court is charged with the responsibility of
issuing a notice authorizing the execution of a person who has been
duly convicted in a court of law and sentenced to death.” Hill v.
State, 377 S.C. 462, 467, 661 S.E.2d 92, 95 (2008). “We will issue an
execution notice after the defendant has exhausted all appeals and
other avenues of PCR in state and federal courts, or after that person,
who is determined by this Court to be mentally competent, knowingly
and voluntarily waives such appeals.” Id.
“When considering a request by an appellant who has
been sentenced to death to waive the right to appeal or pursue PCR,
and to be executed forthwith, it has been our practice to remand the
matter to circuit court for a hearing and ruling on whether the
appellant is mentally competent to make such a waiver, and whether any
waiver of appellate or PCR rights is knowing and voluntary.” Hughes v.
State, 367 S.C. 389, 395, 626 S.E.2d 805, 808 (2006). “We remand such
a matter when we deem it necessary to further develop or explore the
facts of a case.” Id. “Following that competency hearing, the parties
are required by this Court to file briefs and an appendix containing
the testimony and evidence considered by the circuit court.” Id. “The
appellant is required, when directed by the Court, to appear at oral
argument and personally respond to questions regarding the waiver of
his appellate or PCR rights.” Id.
“In making a determination on the competency of a
convicted defendant to waive his appellate or PCR rights, we are not
bound by the circuit court's findings or rulings, although we
recognize the circuit court judge, who saw and heard the witnesses, is
in a better position to evaluate their credibility and assign
comparative weight to their testimony.” State v. Downs, 369 S.C. 55,
66, 631 S.E.2d 79, 84 (2006).
In deciding the issue of a capital defendant's
competency, this Court carefully and thoroughly reviews the following:
the defendant's history of mental competency; the existence and
present status of mental illness or disease suffered by the defendant,
if any, as shown in the record of previous proceedings and in the
competency hearing; the testimony and opinions of mental health
experts who have examined the defendant; the findings of the circuit
court that conducted a competency hearing; the arguments of counsel;
and the capital defendant's demeanor and personal responses to the
Court's questions at oral argument regarding the waiver of appellate
or PCR rights. Reed v. Ozmint, 374 S.C. 19, 24, 647 S.E.2d 209, 211–12
(2007). “We necessarily decide each case on an individual basis, and
it is within our discretion whether to allow an appellant to waive his
appellate or PCR rights.” Hughes, 367 S.C. at 397, 626 S.E.2d at 809.
The standard for determining whether an appellant
or PCR applicant is mentally competent to waive the right to a direct
appeal or PCR is set forth in Singleton v. State, 313 S.C. 75, 437 S.E.2d
53 (1993). Singleton provides in relevant part: The first prong is the
cognitive prong which can be defined as: whether a convicted defendant
can understand the nature of the proceedings, what he or she was tried
for, the reason for the punishment, or the nature of the punishment.
The second prong is the assistance prong which can be defined as:
whether the convicted defendant possesses sufficient capacity or
ability to rationally communicate with counsel. Id. at 84, 437 S.E.2d
at 58. “This standard of competency is the same standard required
before a convicted defendant may be executed.” Hughes, 367 S.C. at
397–98, 626 S.E.2d at 809. “The failure of either prong is sufficient
to warrant a stay of execution and a denial of the convicted
defendant's motion to waive his right to appeal or pursue PCR.” Id. at
398, 626 S.E.2d at 809.
Applying the foregoing to the facts of the instant
case, we conclude the evidence in the record fully supports Judge
Hill's decision finding that Motts is competent to waive his right to
direct appeal and this waiver has been made knowingly and voluntarily.
Notably, the three court-appointed examiners unanimously agreed that
Motts met the Singleton standard. In their written report, the experts
found Motts understood that a jury had convicted him for the death of
Martin and that a judge had sentenced him to death. According to the
experts, Motts also “verbalized a basic understanding” of the
appellate process and PCR. The experts further opined that Motts
“possesses sufficient capacity or ability to rationally communicate
with counsel.”
Despite Motts's lifelong mental health issues, the
experts concluded that “Motts is not evidencing current symptoms of
mental illness or other deficits that would significantly compromise
his present capacity to understand the nature of the proceedings, the
reason or nature of the punishment, or his ability to rationally
communicate with counsel.” Although Motts experienced bouts of major
depression, Dr. Frierson found that he was currently in “full
remission.” Neither Dr. Frierson nor Dr. Salas believed that Motts's
decision to waive his direct appeal was a product of depression or
that it constituted a desire to commit suicide.
At the competency hearing, Drs. Frierson and Salas
testified that their opinion regarding Motts's competency had not
changed even after interviewing Motts the day of the hearing. Drs.
Frierson and Salas also informed Judge Hill that the medications Motts
was currently taking did not affect his cognitive abilities.
Judge Hill and this Court also thoroughly
questioned Motts. In response to these questions, Motts was able to
articulate his understanding of his murder conviction and death
sentence, the competency proceedings, the appellate proceedings, and
the PCR proceedings. Motts also stated that he deserved the death
penalty and explained that he did not want to remain incarcerated for
the next thirty to forty years. Finally, Motts explained that he was
firm in his commitment to waive his appeals and that no one had
threatened or coerced him to reach this decision.
C.
Having affirmed Judge Hill's ruling, the next step
in our analysis is to review Motts's sentence of death. Because there
is a conflict in our jurisprudence as to whether a capital defendant
may waive this Court's review of his sentence, we take this
opportunity to definitively resolve this issue.
In State v. Torrence, 322 S.C. 475, 473 S.E.2d 703
(1996) ( Torrence III), this Court found Torrence was competent and
his decision to waive his direct appeal of a capital re-sentencing was
knowing and voluntary.FN6 The Court then considered the question of
“whether the [sentence] review provisions of S.C.Code Ann. § 16–3–25
(1985)” could also be waived by Torrence. Id. at 479, 473 S.E.2d at
706. Recognizing that both constitutional and statutory rights may be
waived, the Court concluded that Torrence could waive the review
provisions of section 16–3–25. Id.
Six years after Torrence III, this Court reached a
different conclusion. In State v. Passaro, 350 S.C. 499, 567 S.E.2d
862 (2002), the defendant pleaded guilty to capital murder and was
sentenced to death. Subsequently, Passaro sought to waive his appeal.
After concluding that Passaro could waive his right to general
appellate review, this Court proceeded to review his sentence under
section 16–3–25(C). In a footnote, the Court stated “[w]e have never
directly addressed whether a defendant may waive sentence review under
section 16–3–25(C) (1976).” Id. at 508 n. 11, 567 S.E.2d at 867 n. 11.
The Court, however, declined to address this issue as it was neither
raised nor briefed by either party. Id.
Section 16–3–25, the provision that addresses
capital-sentencing proceedings, provides in pertinent part: “The
sentence review shall be in addition to direct appeal, if taken, and
the review and appeal shall be consolidated for consideration. The
court shall render its decision on all legal errors, the factual
substantiation of the verdict, and the validity of the sentence.”
S.C.Code Ann. § 16–3–25(F) (2003) (emphasis added).
As we interpret section 16–3–25, the General
Assembly contemplated a defendant's waiver of a direct appeal; however,
it made no such provision as to this Court's mandatory sentence review.
Although Motts is entitled to waive his personal right to a direct
appeal, we hold that he cannot waive this Court's statutorily-imposed
duty to review his capital sentence. See State v. Shaw, 273 S.C. 194,
209, 255 S.E.2d 799, 806 (1979) (holding South Carolina's statutory
death-penalty procedure is constitutional and recognizing that “[t]he
duty falls to this Court” to ensure that a sentence of death must
conform to the statutory requirements), overruled on other grounds by
State v. Torrence, 305 S.C. 45, 406 S.E.2d 315 (1991).
Based on our conclusion that it is this Court's
statutorily-imposed duty to conduct a proportionality review of a
capital sentence, we turn now to a review of Motts's sentence.FN7
“The United States Constitution prohibits the
imposition of the death penalty when it is either excessive or
disproportionate in light of the crime and the defendant.” State v.
Wise, 359 S.C. 14, 28, 596 S.E.2d 475, 482 (2004). In conducting a
proportionality review, we search for similar cases in which the
sentence of death has been upheld. Id.; S.C.Code Ann. § 16–3–25(E)
(2003) (providing that in conducting a sentence review the Supreme
Court “shall include in its decision a reference to those similar
cases which it took into consideration”).
After reviewing the entire record, we find the
sentence of death was not the result of passion, prejudice, or any
other arbitrary factor, and the jury's finding of a statutory
aggravating circumstance for the murder is supported by the evidence.
As evidenced by Motts's own testimony and confession, Motts violently
murdered Martin and appeared to have little remorse for his actions.
Despite Martin's pleas for his life, Motts strangled Martin to death.
Seemingly unaffected by the heinousness of his actions, Motts smoked
cigarettes, ate breakfast, and watched television after he killed
Martin. Motts then callously displayed Martin's lifeless body in a
common area in order to send a message to the other inmates.
Furthermore, a review of prior cases establishes
that the death sentence in this case is proportionate to that in
similar cases and is neither excessive nor disproportionate to the
crime. See State v. Lindsey, 372 S.C. 185, 642 S.E.2d 557 (2007)
(holding death sentence based on single aggravating circumstance and
single victim was not disproportionate to penalty imposed in other
death penalty cases); State v. Atkins, 303 S.C. 214, 399 S.E.2d 760
(1990) (affirming defendant's murder convictions and sentence of death
where jury found sole statutory aggravating circumstance that victim's
murder was committed by a person with a prior conviction of murder).
D.
Finally, we consider the issues raised by Motts's
appellate counsel. In his brief, Motts's counsel argues that the
circuit court and this Court have a continuing duty to assure that
Motts remains competent once Motts is served with a notice of
execution. Because Motts has suffered from major depression, counsel
contends that Motts's competency is not static. If Motts's mental
health issues return, counsel is concerned that Motts will no longer
maintain an attorney-client relationship. In the event that scenario
occurs, counsel asserts he will not be able to assess whether Motts
has remained competent prior to execution. Given the claimed fluidity
of Motts's competency, counsel argues that Judge Hill erred in ruling
he did not have authority to order that a court-appointed psychiatrist
examine Motts prior to his execution. In the alternative, counsel
claims this Court should order the evaluation.
At the competency hearing, Motts's counsel raised
this issue through his arguments to the court and questioning of Drs.
Frierson and Salas. During cross-examination, Dr. Frierson
acknowledged that “competency can change over time.” He explained that
he could not guarantee that Motts's depressive symptoms would not
return within a few months and believed that such a change was “always
possible.” Dr. Frierson admitted that Motts should be evaluated by a
psychiatrist prior to his execution in order to ensure that Motts
remained competent.
Dr. Salas agreed with Dr. Frierson's opinion. She
also believed it would be a “good idea” for a psychiatrist to evaluate
Motts after the notice of execution because “competency can change and
there are some factors that we know have an impact over competency
such as a mood component where ... major depressive disorder ... can
come back in time.” She further stated that “it would be important for
competency to be [evaluated] as close to the time” of execution.
In his order, Judge Hill denied Motts's counsel's
request to have Motts re-evaluated immediately prior to his execution.
Judge Hill explained that the request was “beyond the scope of the
matter this court was directed to address by the Supreme Court in the
remand order.” However, he noted that counsel could present this
request to this Court. After careful consideration, we find that
neither the circuit court nor this Court is required to issue an order
for a court-appointed psychiatrist to interview Motts, in the absence
of some indicia of incompetency, immediately prior to his execution to
assure that he has remained competent.
Initially, we find that Judge Hill did not err in
declining to order the requested evaluation as this was clearly
outside the parameters of our remand order. As will be discussed, we
find this Court's competency proceedings and the general procedural
avenue of section 17–27–20 of the South Carolina Code should
effectively alleviate Motts's counsel's concern that an incompetent
inmate will be executed.
The Eighth Amendment prohibits the State from
executing an incompetent individual. Ford v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 399,
106 S.Ct. 2595, 91 L.Ed.2d 335 (1986); Council v. Catoe, 359 S.C. 120,
597 S.E.2d 782 (2004); Singleton, 313 S.C. at 79, 437 S.E.2d at 56. In
Panetti v. Quarterman, 551 U.S. 930, 127 S.Ct. 2842, 168 L.Ed.2d 662
(2007), the United States Supreme Court reiterated the holding in Ford
and explained: The prohibition applies despite a prisoner's earlier
competency to be held responsible for committing a crime and to be
tried for it. Prior findings of competency do not foreclose a prisoner
from proving he is incompetent to be executed because of his present
mental condition. Under Ford, once a prisoner makes the requisite
preliminary showing that his current mental state would bar his
execution, the Eighth Amendment, applicable to the States under the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, entitles him to an
adjudication to determine his condition. These determinations are
governed by the substantive federal baseline for competency set down
in Ford. Id. at 934–35, 127 S.Ct. 2842.
In assessing a defendant's competency, this Court
has recognized that there is a presumption of continued competency
once a judicial determination of a defendant's competency has been
established. See State v. Drayton, 270 S.C. 582, 243 S.E.2d 458 (1978)
(holding failure of trial judge to order further examination and a
hearing to determine defendant's competency to stand trial did not
violate statute authorizing trial judge to order such examinations nor
deprive defendant of due process where previous presiding judge had
found, about two and a half months prior, that defendant was fit to
stand trial and there were no additional facts to warrant further
examination or hearing). FN8
Although Drayton involved a determination of a
defendant's competency to stand trial, we believe it provides guidance
in the instant case regarding Motts's competency to be executed. Cf.
State v. Finklea, 388 S.C. 379, 384 n. 2, 697 S.E.2d 543, 546 n. 2
(2010) (distinguishing Singleton standard for competency from standard
required to stand trial; stating Singleton standard “requires only
that a party understand they have been sentenced to death for murder
and be able to communicate rationally with counsel” (emphasis added) (citation
omitted)); Lonchar v. Thomas, 58 F.3d 588, 589 (11th Cir.1995) (concluding
“next friend” lacked standing to bring petition for habeas corpus on
behalf of prisoner facing execution and recognizing that “a
presumption of continued competency arises from a prior finding of
competency”).
Because this Court is responsible for the final
determination of an inmate's competency to be executed, it has
consistently questioned each inmate personally with respect to their
continued competency and decision to waive any further appellate
proceedings regarding their conviction and capital sentence. Hill v.
State, 377 S.C. 462, 661 S.E.2d 92 (2008); Reed v. Ozmint, 374 S.C.
19, 647 S.E.2d 209 (2007); Hughes v. State, 367 S.C. 389, 626 S.E.2d
805 (2006); State v. Passaro, 350 S.C. 499, 567 S.E.2d 862 (2002);
State v. Torrence, 317 S.C. 45, 451 S.E.2d 883 (1994).
If the Court determines that the inmate is
competent, it can affirm the circuit court's ruling and order that the
inmate's execution be carried out in accordance with section 17–25–370
of the South Carolina Code, which provides that a death sentence be
carried out on the fourth Friday after the Commissioner of the prison
system is notified of the final disposition. S.C.Code Ann. § 17–25–370
(2003). Thus, there is a relatively short delay between the Court's
determination that an inmate is competent to be executed and the
actual date of execution.
In the event an inmate alleges he is incompetent
after an order of execution is issued by this Court, the inmate may
apply for PCR on the basis of competency, pursuant to section
17–27–20(a)(6) of the South Carolina Code. FN9 Subsequently, an
evidentiary hearing would be held at which the inmate would be
required to show by a preponderance of the evidence that he lacks the
requisite competency for execution. If the PCR court finds the
applicant incompetent, and this Court agrees, a stay of execution
would be issued. If the inmate becomes competent, then the State would
have to move for a hearing before the PCR judge in order to lift the
stay of execution.
Additionally, if the Court has reason to believe
that the inmate is incompetent, it can then issue a stay of execution
pursuant to a “ Singleton writ.” See Singleton, 313 S.C. at 84, 437
S.E.2d at 58 (finding failure of either prong of the two-part
competency test is sufficient to warrant a stay of execution).
As a final note, if Motts's counsel's argument is
taken to its logical extreme, it would mean that a defendant's
competency must continue to be evaluated up to the moment of execution.
Not only is an application of this interpretation impractical, it has
been rejected by a few jurisdictions. See John E. Theuman, Annotation,
Propriety of Carrying Out Death Sentences Against Mentally Ill
Individuals, 111 A.L.R.5th 491, § 5 (2003 & Supp.2010) (discussing
cases that have adjudicated whether the Federal Constitution's Eighth
Amendment rule prohibiting execution of the insane requires a
determination of sanity at the exact time of execution).
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has provided a
well-reasoned explanation for rejecting this interpretation. In Coe v.
Bell, 209 F.3d 815 (6th Cir.2000), the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals
assessed whether the procedures followed by Tennessee state courts in
determining whether a capital defendant's competency to be executed
satisfied due process. In that case, Coe's murder conviction and
sentence of death were affirmed on direct appeal. Subsequently, the
Tennessee Supreme Court upheld a determination that Coe was competent
to be executed. In his habeas corpus petition, Coe argued that “the
Tennessee courts erred in deciding his competency to be executed
because they evaluated his present competency rather than determining
his future competency at the moment of execution.” Id. at 824. Because
Coe suffered from Dissociative Identity Disorder, which caused him to
dissociate under stress, he claimed he would dissociate as his
execution approached and would not have the requisite competency at
the time of his execution. Id.
In rejecting Coe's argument, the Sixth Circuit
reiterated the United States Supreme Court's holding in Ford and
stated: We do not believe that the Supreme Court in Ford meant to
require a state to determine a prisoner's competency at the exact time
of his execution. It would be impossible to follow the procedural
protections identified in the opinions of Justice Marshall and Justice
Powell in a meaningful way in the moments before execution; a state
could not make a sound decision in accordance with due process
regarding a prisoner's competency to be executed at this time.
Nevertheless, a state must make its determination when execution is
imminent. See Stewart v. Martinez–Villareal, 523 U.S. 637, 644–45, 118
S.Ct. 1618, 140 L.Ed.2d 849 (1998). Whether the competency
determination is made in the week or the month before the prisoner's
scheduled execution, the state is entitled to exercise discretion in
creating its own procedures “[a]s long as basic fairness is observed.”
Ford, 477 U.S. at 427, 106 S.Ct. 2595 (Powell, J., concurring). Id. at
824–25.
Based on the foregoing, we believe this Court's
procedures concerning an inmate's competency to be executed comply
with the intent of Ford. By remanding to the circuit court for a
competency hearing, this Court acquires an extensive evidentiary
record regarding an inmate's mental health history as well as a
judicial determination as to an inmate's competency. If the Court then
personally questions an inmate, it is able to evaluate an inmate's
competency shortly before the execution date. In the event an inmate
becomes incompetent prior to execution, there is a PCR avenue
available that could potentially result in a stay of execution.
III. Conclusion
In conclusion, we affirm the circuit court's
decision finding Motts competent to waive his direct appeal and that
this waiver is knowing and voluntary. After conducting our statutorily-imposed
duty to review Motts's capital sentence, we also affirm the sentence
of death. Finally, given this Court's procedures and the PCR avenues
available to Motts, we conclude that neither the circuit court nor
this Court is required to order that a court-appointed psychiatrist
interview Motts immediately prior to his execution in the absence of
some indicia of incompetency.
AFFIRMED.TOAL, C.J., PLEICONES, KITTREDGE and HEARN,
JJ., concur.
FN1. Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct.
1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966).
FN2. See Singleton v. State, 313 S.C. 75, 437 S.E.2d
53 (1993) (adopting two-prong analysis for determining a defendant's
competency to be executed).
FN3. See State v. Torrence, 317 S.C. 45, 451 S.E.2d
883 (1994) (recognizing that the Singleton test was to be applied to a
determination of whether a capital defendant was competent to waive
appellate proceedings).
FN4. While the examination was being conducted,
Judge Patterson retired from the bench. Pursuant to the State's
request, this Court issued an order naming Circuit Court Judge D.
Garrison Hill as the replacement judge and granted him the authority
to perform those duties specified in the original remand order.
FN5. Neither the State nor Motts's counsel called
Dr. Michael Gassen. The written report and the testimony, however,
established that Dr. Gassen concurred with the opinions of the two
testifying examiners.
FN6. Torrence was the third opinion in a series of
appeals. In State v. Torrence, 305 S.C. 45, 406 S.E.2d 315 (1991) (
Torrence I), this Court affirmed Torrence's convictions but reversed
his sentence of death and remanded for a new sentencing proceeding.
After Torrence was re-sentenced to death, he sought to waive his
appeal. Subsequently, this Court remanded to the circuit court for a
competency hearing and development of a full record. State v. Torrence,
317 S.C. 45, 451 S.E.2d 883 (1994) ( Torrence II). Torrence then moved
to dismiss the appeal of the circuit court's decision finding him
competent to waive his appeal.
FN7. See S.C.Code Ann. § 16–3–25(C) (2003) (providing
that Supreme Court shall determine whether: (1) the sentence of death
was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other
arbitrary factor; (2) the evidence supports the jury's or judge's
finding of a statutory aggravating circumstance; and (3) the sentence
of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in
similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant).
FN8. In his brief, Motts's counsel cites Drope v.
Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 95 S.Ct. 896, 43 L.Ed.2d 103 (1975) and Pate
v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375, 86 S.Ct. 836, 15 L.Ed.2d 815 (1966), for
the proposition that the circuit court “had the inherent authority to
order any steps it found necessary to assure [Motts] was competent
prior to his execution.” The Court in Drayton found Drope and Pate
were inapposite given the defendants in those cases had never received
a mental examination to determine competency. Drayton, 270 S.C. at
585, 243 S.E.2d at 459. Here, as in Drayton, Motts has received a
judicial determination of competency. Thus, we find that neither Drope
nor Pate support counsel's argument.
FN9. S.C.Code Ann. § 17–27–20(a)(6) (2003) (“Any
person who has been convicted of, or sentenced for, a crime and who
claims ... [t]hat the conviction or sentence is otherwise subject to
collateral attack upon any ground of alleged error heretofore
available under any common law, statutory or other writ, motion,
petition, proceeding or remedy; may institute, without paying a filing
fee, a proceeding under this chapter to secure relief. Provided,
however, that this section shall not be construed to permit collateral
attack on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support a
conviction.”); Singleton, 313 S.C. at 87, 437 S.E.2d at 60.