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John William ROOK
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Rape
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
May 12,
1980
Date of arrest:
3 days after
Date of birth:
March 17,
1959
Victim profile: Ann Marie
Roche (female, 25)
Method of murder: Run over
with car
Location: Wake County, North Carolina, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in North Carolina on September 19,
1986
In 1980, 25 year old nurse Ann Marie Roche was
kidnapped from the parking lot of Wake Medical Center where she
worked by Rook. Miss Roche was then driven to a vacant field, where
she was raped and then murdered by Rook, who subsequently drove his
vehicle over her body.
783 F.2d 401
John William
Rook, Appellant,
v.
Nathan A. Rice, Warden, Central Prison, Raleigh,
North
Carolina, Appellee.
No. 85-4004
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth
Circuit.
January 31, 1986
Before K.K. HALL and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges,
and HAYNSWORTH, Senior Circuit Judge.
K.K. HALL, Circuit Judge:
John William Rook appeals
from the district court's denial of his petition
for habeas corpus relief, pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
Sec . 2254. In his petition, he asserted
constitutional infirmities in his convictions
for first-degree rape, kidnapping, and first-degree
murder and in his capital murder sentence. We
affirm.
I.
A detailed account of the
facts of this case is set forth in State v. Rook,
304 N.C. 201, 283 S.E.2d 732 (1981), cert.
denied,
455 U.S. 1038 , 102 S.Ct. 1741, 72 L.Ed.2d
155 (1982). The following is a summary of
those facts relevant to this appeal.
On May 12, 1980, Ann Marie
Roche was walking along a public road in or near
the City of Raleigh, North Carolina, when she
was abducted by a white man with long, blond
hair worn in a ponytail. She was kidnapped and
carried away in an automobile to a remote site
several miles away, where she was brutally
beaten, assaulted, raped, and run over by an
automobile as she lay wounded and bleeding to
death. The next day, her body was found.
Witnesses to the abduction
had written down the license plate number of the
car into which Roche was forced and had reported
that license plate number to the Raleigh police.
Upon investigation, the police discovered that
the car had, at the time in question, been on
loan to John William Rook from his neighbor. The
police also determined that Rook matched the
witnesses' description of Roche's assailant.
At approximately 4:00 p.m. on
May 15, 1980, Rook was arrested by Raleigh
police on unrelated misdemeanor charges of
assault on a minor child and failing to appear
in court on a charge of driving under the
influence ("DUI"). He was transported to a
magistrate's office, where he was read the
warrants and informed of his rights.
Rook advised the arresting
officer, Ronnie Holloway, that he understood his
rights and that he would answer questions
without a lawyer being present. He was then
taken before a magistrate, where bond was set at
$1,000 on the charge of failing to appear on the
DUI charge and $50,000 on the charge of assault
on a minor. Thereafter, Rook was transferred to
a jail cell.
Later that evening, at
approximately 8:00 p.m., Rook was taken from his
cell to an interview room. He was provided a
copy of his rights and was again read those
rights. He advised one of the officers in
attendance, Freddie Benson, that he understood
his rights and he did not want a lawyer present.
He then signed a form in which he waived his
rights.
After obtaining some
identifying information from Rook, Officer
Benson proceeded to question him regarding his
whereabouts on May 12, 1980. Rook replied that
he had been involved in a fight with some black
people on that date. Officer Benson then, in a
loud voice, told Rook that he was a liar. He
read Rook a warrant obtained approximately two
hours earlier, which charged Rook with the
murder of Ann Marie Roche, and he advised Rook
that he was being charged with murder.
Subsequently, Officer Benson left the interview
room. The two other officers in attendance,
Officers J.C. Holder and Ted Lanier, remained.
After Officer Benson left the
interview room, Officer Holder reintroduced
himself to Rook and advised him that he was a
Raleigh Police Officer. Holder then went over
the rights form and waiver with Rook a second
time. Rook advised Officer Holder that he
understood his rights and the waiver of his
rights. He told Officer Holder that he could
read, and that he had had his rights read to him
several times before.
Rook talked with Officer
Holder about his drinking problem, a former
girlfriend whom he had beaten up, and about his
wife. He also told the officers that while in
prison he attended AA meetings and thought that
he had his drinking under control, but had
started drinking again and needed help for his
problems.
Holder advised Rook that
neither he nor Officer Lanier could help him and
that the only thing that could help him was to
tell the truth. Holder told the defendant that
it took a strong man to admit that he was wrong.
Rook then told Officer Holder,
"Okay, I did it. I hope you're happy." Holder
asked Rook to tell them about what had happened,
and Rook proceeded to make detailed inculpatory
statements concerning his activities involving
the death of Ann Marie Roche.
Subsequently, Rook was
charged with first-degree rape, kidnapping, and
first-degree murder. Counsel was appointed for
him, and he pleaded not guilty on all three
charges. He was convicted by jury on all counts
charged on October 23, 1980.
Following the verdict, the
trial court convened the sentence determination
phase before the same jury, which recommended
the death sentence for first-degree murder and
consecutive life sentences for kidnapping and
rape. Rook appealed to the Supreme Court of
North Carolina, which affirmed with Justice Exum
concurring in part and dissenting in part. State
v. Rook, 304 N.C. 201, 283 S.E.2d 732 (1981).
The Supreme Court of the United States denied
certiorari. Rook v. North Carolina,
455 U.S. 1038 , 102 S.Ct. 1741, 72 L.Ed.2d
155 (1982).
On July 26, 1982, Rook filed
a motion for appropriate relief, pursuant to
N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 15A-1411 et seq. (1978), in
the Superior Court of Wake County. An amendment
to the motion was filed on October 14, 1982. The
Superior Court dismissed the motion, with leave
to renew. Rook filed a renewed motion for
appropriate relief on December 7, 1982. An
evidentiary hearing was held on August 29--September
2, 1983, and September 19-22, 1983. The Superior
Court denied relief and dismissed the renewed
motion.
Thereafter, Rook filed a
petition for writ of certiorari in the Supreme
Court of North Carolina, seeking review of the
judgment of the Superior Court. That petition
was denied, and the Supreme Court of the United
States denied certiorari. Rook v. North
Carolina, --- U.S. ----, 105 S.Ct. 608, 83 L.Ed.2d
716 (1984), reh'g denied, --- U.S. ----, 105
S.Ct. 1237, 84 L.Ed.2d 373.
On June 4, 1985, Rook filed a
petition for a writ of habeas corpus in United
States district court. Following respondent's
motion to dismiss, the district court entered a
memorandum opinion and order dismissing the
petition. Rook v. Rice, C/A No. 85-848-HC (E.D.N.C.
October 18, 1985). Rook subsequently filed a
motion to alter or amend the judgment, and it
was denied. The district court issued a
certificate of probable cause to appeal, and
this appeal followed.1
II.
On appeal, Rook asserts a
number of contentions. First, he claims that the
district court erred in ruling that his
confession was voluntary and, thus, properly
admitted at trial. Next, he alleges that the
district court erred in holding that the trial
court's instructions on malice did not
unconstitutionally shift the burden of proof to
him. Appellant further contends that the
district court erred in concluding that the
trial court's instructions on mitigating
circumstances did not deprive him of a reliable
sentencing determination.
In addition, Rook maintains
that the district court erred in ruling that his
death sentence was not excessive. He also
asserts that "death-qualification" of the jury
deprived him of his rights to a fair and
impartial jury. Finally, appellant argues that
the district court erred in rejecting his
contention that North Carolina's capital
statutes are being administered in an arbitrary
and racially discriminatory manner. We disagree
with each of appellant's contentions.2
With respect to his first
allegation of error, Rook asserts that his
confession was involuntary because he was not
informed at the time of his arrest that he was a
suspect in the Roche murder. He further claims
that Officer Holder's statement that the only
thing that could help him was to tell the truth
served as a powerful inducement to him to
confess in light of his desire for help with his
alcoholism.
Rook also contends that
because of his low I.Q. of 71, his poor
education (seventh grade), his young age (21),
and his history of deprivation and abuse as a
child, he was highly susceptible to the pressure
put to bear upon him by the interrogating
officers. Thus, appellant concludes, the
statements he gave to Officer Holder were
involuntary and should have been suppressed. We
reject this contention as meritless.
Following an evidentiary
hearing on the issue of voluntariness, the state
court determined that no promises, offers of
reward, or inducements were made to Rook; that
he was not threatened in any way; and, thus,
that his confession was made freely, voluntarily
and knowingly at a time when he, having a full
understanding and appreciation of his
constitutional rights, chose to waive them. The
district court independently evaluated
appellant's confession, and it agreed with the
holding of the state court.
Our review of the facts of
this case leads us to conclude that the district
court did not err in finding that Rook's
confession was voluntary. See Miller v. Fenton,
--- U.S. ----, 106 S.Ct. 445, 88 L.Ed.2d 405
(1985). Regardless of the fact that appellant
was not aware that he was a suspect in the Roche
murder at the time of his arrest, he was
informed of the murder warrant against him
during his interrogation.
At that time, he was also re-advised
of his rights. We find nothing in the
interrogating officers' conduct that could be
considered as bringing undue pressure to bear
upon Rook to confess. To the contrary, we find
that Rook knowingly, intentionally, and
voluntarily consented to the questioning which
elicited his confession.
III.
Appellant's next contention
is that the trial court's instructions on malice
unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof
to him. The jury instruction to which Rook
objects was that given by the trial judge on the
crime of first-degree murder, pursuant to
N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 14-17. The judge instructed
the jury, inter alia, as follows:
Now, if the State proves to
you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
intentionally killed Ann Marie Roche with a
deadly weapon, or that he intentionally
inflicted a wound upon her with a deadly weapon
that proximately caused her death, then the law
implies, first, that the killing was unlawful,
and secondly, that it was done with malice.
(Emphasis added). Appellant
claims that the emphasized portion of the above-quoted
instruction impermissibly shifted the burden of
proof to him. We disagree and conclude that it
merely shifted the burden of production. With
respect to an almost identical instruction in
Davis v. Allsbrooks, 778 F.2d 168, (4th
Cir.1985), we held that "a state may
legitimately shift a burden of production on an
element of the crime to the defendant ... so
long as the presumed fact is rationally
connected to a proven fact." Id. at 172.
In this case, intent was at
issue at trial. Appellant maintained that he
accidentally drove the automobile over Ann Marie
Roche. The question of whether the killing was
intentional was submitted to the jury with clear
instructions that the burden of proof was upon
the state.3
In rendering its verdict of
first-degree murder, the jury found that the act
was intentional and not accidental. Rook did not
contend nor did he produce any evidence that he
acted in self-defense or in the heat of passion.
Thus, the jury's finding that the act was
intentional necessarily included a finding that
the act was malicious. Accordingly, in light of
our holding in Davis, we reject Rook's
contention.
IV.
Rook further claims that the
trial court's instructions with respect to
mitigating circumstances deprived him of a
reliable sentencing determination. During the
sentencing phase of Rook's trial, the jury was
instructed to determine the following: (1)
whether there were aggravating circumstances;
(2) whether the aggravating circumstances were
sufficient to warrant a death sentence; (3)
whether there were mitigating circumstances; and
(4) whether the aggravating circumstances
outweighed the mitigating ones.
Appellant maintains that
because of the order of the questions and the
fact that the last sentencing question posed to
the jury was merely whether aggravating
circumstances outweighed mitigating
circumstances, the jury was never asked to
decide whether death was the appropriate penalty
for him. He notes that subsequent to his
conviction, the Supreme Court of North Carolina
suggested that jury instructions in capital
cases follow a form which specifically asks the
jury:
Do you find beyond a
reasonable doubt that the aggravating
circumstance or circumstances found by you is,
or are, sufficiently substantial to call for the
imposition of the death penalty when considered
with the mitigating circumstance or
circumstances found by you?
State v. McDougall, 308 N.C.
1, 301 S.E.2d 308, 327 (1983) (emphasis added).
Rook further asserts that his case was one of
the very few pre-McDougall North Carolina death
cases in which the jury was not required to
indicate separately in writing whether or not
each mitigating circumstance had been found.
According to appellant, his case was one which
involved substantial mitigating circumstances (e.g.,
low I.Q., deprivation and abuse as a child,
young age, etc.). He contends that if the jury
had been asked to decide whether the aggravating
circumstances "when considered with the
mitigating circumstance[s], " call for a death
sentence, their task would have been much
different, and far harder.
The district court rejected
all of Rook's claims. It noted that the
contention that the jury should have been
required to list the mitigating circumstances
was fully explored by the Supreme Court of North
Carolina in its direct review of petitioner's
conviction. State v. Rook, supra. It further
pointed out that it was that contention that
evoked the dissent of Justice Exum.
Nevertheless, the district
court adopted the reasoning of the majority of
the Supreme Court of North Carolina and found
that the procedure used by the trial judge was
not constitutionally deficient. The district
court determined that under the instructions
given by the trial judge to the jury, the jury
did consider all mitigating circumstances and
weighed those circumstances in deciding that the
death penalty was the appropriate punishment. We
agree that the procedure employed satisfied all
requirements to which Rook was constitutionally
entitled.
At the outset, we find
nothing in the Supreme Court of North Carolina's
decision in McDougall which constitutionally
mandates a particular order or form for the
sentencing instructions in Rook's case. In
McDougall, the court was attempting to establish
uniformity in sentencing based on North
Carolina's applicable statute. It was not
setting forth a federal constitutional standard.
The procedure involved in
imposing the death penalty need not be
structured to favor a defendant but need only
avoid creating a fundamentally unfair trial. See
Barclay v. Florida, 463 U.S. 939, 103 S.Ct.
3418, 77 L.Ed.2d 1134 (1983). The best of all
procedural worlds is not guaranteed by the
United States Constitution. McGautha v.
California, 402 U.S. 183, 91 S.Ct. 1454, 28 L.Ed.2d
711 (1971).
In Zant v. Stephens, 462 U.S.
862, 103 S.Ct. 2733, 77 L.Ed.2d 235 (1983), the
Supreme Court emphasized that in designing a
constitutional capital punishment system, all
that the state is required to provide is a
meaningful basis for distinguishing between
those trials resulting in a penalty of death and
those in which a penalty of life imprisonment is
imposed.
Under Zant, this is
accomplished by simply identifying aggravating
circumstances and requiring that one or more of
them be found. "What is important at the
selection stage is an individualized
determination on the basis of the character of
the individual and the circumstances of the
crime." Zant, 103 S.Ct. at 2743-44. We find that
in the instant case, neither the order of the
instructions nor the language of the
instructions prevented the jury from making an
individualized determination as to whether Rook
should receive a capital sentence.
In addition, we conclude that
the failure of the trial court to require the
jury to list mitigating circumstances does not
rise to the level of a constitutional violation.
All that is required is that the capital
sentencing procedure provide a reliable means of
determining whether an individual defendant
should receive a death sentence. As noted
previously, the procedure employed in this case
did just that.
V.
Appellant also contends that
the death sentence, as applied to him, was
excessive and disproportionate. He bases this
contention primarily on his problems with drugs
and alcohol, his troubled youth, and the failure
of the State of North Carolina to provide him
adequate help. We conclude that the district
court did not err in ruling that Rook's death
sentence was not excessive.
As noted by the district
court, appellant's troubled and neglected youth
as well as his alcohol and drug abuse problems
were presented to the psychiatrist who made the
determination of Rook's mental competence, the
sentencing jury, the Supreme Court of North
Carolina on direct review, and the state judge
on the motion for appropriate relief. The
examining psychiatrist found Rook to be
responsible for his acts and competent to stand
trial. Moreover, the sentencing jury, even when
considering all of the mitigating circumstances,
found that they were outweighed by sufficiently
substantial aggravating circumstances to warrant
the imposition of the death penalty. In light of
the horrendous nature of the crimes perpetrated
upon Ann Marie Roche by appellant, we too find
that the death sentence was not excessive in
this case.
VI.
Pointing to the fact that
seven jurors were successfully challenged by the
state for cause because of their opposition to
the death penalty, Rook next argues that this "death-qualification"
of the jury deprived him of his right to a fair
and impartial jury. We rejected the same
contention in Keeten v. Garrison, 742 F.2d 129
(4th Cir.1984), petition for cert. filed, S.Ct.
No. 84-6187 (October Term 1985). Therefore,
appellant's claim must fail.
VII.
Appellant's final argument is
that North Carolina's capital statutes are being
administered in an arbitrary and racially
discriminatory manner. He asserts that
defendants who have murdered whites are more
likely to receive death sentences than are
defendants who have murdered blacks.
The state court which
considered Rook's motion for appropriate relief
reviewed this contention and rejected it. The
state court reasoned:
The defendant has failed to
prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that
the death penalty in North Carolina is
administered pursuant to a pattern of
discrimination based upon race.... The court
specifically concludes that the testimony and
study by Dr. Samuel Gross [petitioner's expert]
is based upon insufficiently accurate data to
establish a pattern of discrimination in the
application of the death penalty based upon the
race of the victim.
The state court further
concluded that there is no evidence that the
death sentence in Rook's case is the product of
intentional discrimination.
We have reviewed the evidence
and agree with the state court's conclusions.
Consequently, we reject appellant's contention
as meritless.
VIII.
On the basis of the foregoing,
the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
*****
JAMES DICKSON PHILLIPS,
Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
in part:
I concur in the majority's
conclusion that there was no constitutional
error invalidating Rook's state court conviction
and in all portions of the majority opinion
explaining that conclusion save that which in
Part III deals with the burden-shifting
instruction issue. As to that, I concur in the
result, but I write specially to indicate the
basis of my concurrence.
I dissent from that portion
of the opinion that finds no constitutional
error in the procedure by which the death
sentence was imposed. Because I think there was
constitutional error in that phase of the trial,
I would direct the writ to issue conditioned
upon the state's provision of a new sentencing
proceeding.
* I agree that under the
procedural circumstances of this case, the jury
instruction incorporating the presumption of
unlawfulness and malice did not
unconstitutionally shift the burden of
persuasion to Rook. I also agree that the reason
it did not is the same reason that ultimately
saved the comparable instruction recently
considered in Davis v. Allsbrooks, 778 F.2d 168,
(4th Cir.1985).
But the majority opinion
fails to deal with the specific challenge made
to the instruction here, and because the
challenges are different--though equally
unavailing--I do not want to be understood as
considering them identical and identically
controlled by the Davis v. Allsbrooks rationale.
In another case, the specific challenge made
here might not be at all controlled by Davis v.
Allsbrooks, and I think it important to
recognize that in order to keep the lines of
precedent clear. This will almost assuredly not
be the last time the courts of this circuit are
called upon to consider, in a variety of
evidentiary settings, challenges to North
Carolina's presumption of malice and
unlawfulness as embodied in jury instructions
comparable or identical to that given here.
The specific challenge made
here in fact recognizes Davis v. Allsbrooks'
authority, but attempts to distinguish it on the
basis that here--though not in Davis--malice was
in issue. This is said to be so because here
Rook's primary factual defense to the murder
charge was that death was caused by the
automobile's running over the victim, and that
Rook did not intend to run over her, that this
was accidental. There being some evidentiary
support for this, the argument goes, malice was
necessarily in issue, because malice presupposes
intent. This being so, the challenged jury
instruction embodied a mandatory presumption
favoring the prosecution in respect of a
disputed element of the crime charged. Hence it
necessarily violated the constitutional right
recognized in such cases as Mullaney v. Wilbur,
421 U.S. 684, 95 S.Ct. 1881, 44 L.Ed.2d 508
(1975); Sandstrom v. Montana, 442 U.S. 510, 99
S.Ct. 2450, 61 L.Ed.2d 39 (1979); and most
recently in Francis v. Franklin, --- U.S. ----,
105 S.Ct. 1965, 85 L.Ed.2d 344 (1985), because
the jury may reasonably have understood the
instruction as shifting the burden of persuasion
on the disputed malice issue to Rook.
This argument is flawed, and
in the end Davis v. Allsbrooks does control to
defeat it. Here, as in Davis, the defendant had
failed to carry the burden that Davis held was
constitutionally imposed by North Carolina
merely to produce "some" evidence of "heat of
passion" or "self-defense" in order to hold
malice fully in issue in the face of proof
beyond a reasonable doubt that the killing was
done intentionally and with a deadly weapon. See
Davis, 778 F.2d at 182, 183 (Phillips, J.,
concurring). Here, obviously, there was no such
evidence; the production burden was not carried,
and the presumption had only the effect of
confirming that because the burden had not been
carried, "malice" was presumed if the jury first
found beyond a reasonable doubt that the killing
had been done intentionally with a deadly weapon.
Intent, both as a discrete
element of the crime of murder, and as a
predicate for the presumption of malice, was
obviously fully in issue because of Rook's "accident"
defense. The challenged jury instruction did not
embody any presumption of intent, cf. Francis v.
Franklin, --- U.S. ----, 105 S.Ct. 1965. Indeed,
it clearly placed the burden of persuasion of
intent upon the state, and indicated the
relevance of the "accident" defense to its
consideration. And the jury was expressly told
that malice was presumed only if intent (and
deadly weapon use) were first found beyond a
reasonable doubt.
Because the elements of
malice and unlawfulness had constitutionally
been taken out of issue by Rook's failure to
carry the requisite production burden, the
challenged jury instruction embodying a
presumption as to those issues was not
unconstitutional on the authority of Davis v.
Allsbrooks.
II
Dissenting alone on Rook's
direct appeal of his conviction to the Supreme
Court of North Carolina, Justice Exum of that
court voted to remand for re-sentencing because
of the trial court's failure to require the
sentencing jury separately to indicate its
findings on each mitigating circumstance
submitted for its consideration. Though he based
this essentially upon prejudicial error in
failing to follow the state statute, Justice
Exum indicated a belief that the procedure used
might also amount to constitutional error
because of its failure under the particular
circumstances to accord the degree of "individualized
consideration" held to be constitutionally
mandated in Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 98
S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978). The majority
of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, the
district court in this habeas proceeding, and
the panel majority here have of course rejected
this view, but I am persuaded by it, and adopt
it as articulated in detail by Justice Exum.
State v. Rook, 304 N.C. 201, 283 S.E.2d 732,
754-61 (N.C.1981).
I add only that central to
Justice Exum's analysis is the necessary
recognition that requiring the sentencing jury
to give independent attention to each mitigating
circumstance cannot be considered a
constitutional imperative under every state's
procedures. The Supreme Court's upholding of a
variety of state procedures which do not have
that feature makes that obvious. See Gregg v.
Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 96 S.Ct. 2909, 49 L.Ed.2d
859 (1976). But Justice Exum's analysis
convincingly demonstrates to me that because
each state's sentencing procedures will
inevitably develop its own set of dynamics in
providing more or less "individualized
consideration," each must therefore be assessed
independently on that score. See State v. Rook,
283 S.E.2d at 757-58 (Exum, J., dissenting).
Taking this approach, and
supporting his analysis of the peculiar dynamics
of North Carolina's procedure with actual case
studies, Justice Exum's analysis persuades me
that not requiring independent consideration and
response as to mitigating factors while
requiring it as to aggravating factors under the
North Carolina procedure, significantly
undercuts the possibility of the degree of
individualized consideration contemplated by the
Lockett Court as constitutionally required. For
that reason, I believe that Rook's eighth and
fourteenth amendment rights were violated by the
procedure used in his sentencing proceeding. I
would therefore issue the writ conditioned upon
the state's providing a new sentencing
proceeding free of the constitutional infirmity
within a reasonable time.
*****
1
February 14, 1986, has been set as the date for
Rook's execution. The district court denied his
application for a stay on December 3, 1985. By
order dated December 6, 1985, this Court also
denied Rook's application for a stay of
execution
2
The government submits that several of Rook's
contentions are procedurally barred under
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 97 S.Ct. 2497,
53 L.Ed.2d 594 (1977), because they were not
raised on direct appeal in accordance with state
law and may not be excused on grounds of cause
or prejudice. Even if the government is correct,
we conclude that on their merits appellant's
contentions must fail
The State must satisfy you
from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that
the victim's death was not accidental before you
may return a verdict of guilty of first degree
murder on the grounds of malice, premeditation
and deliberation.
The burden of proving malice
is not upon the defendant. The burden remains on
the State to prove that the defendant acted
intentionally with malice, with premeditation
and deliberation.
If the State has failed to do
so, then you cannot find the defendant guilty of
first degree murder on the basis of malice,
premeditation and deliberation.
813 F.2d 402
John William ROOK, Appellant, v.
Nathan A. RICE, Warden, Central Prison, Raleigh, North
Carolina, Appellee.
No. 86-4005.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Submitted Sept. 15, 1986.
Decided Sept. 16, 1986.
Before HALL and PHILLIPS,
Circuit Judges, and HAYNSWORTH, Senior Circuit Judge.
PER CURIAM:
John William Rook petitioned
the district court for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28
U.S.C. Sec. 2254 and for a stay of execution. The principal
basis of Rook's petition was that the death penalty, as imposed
upon him by the state of North Carolina, is unconstitutionally
arbitrary because that punishment is statistically more likely
to be imposed if the homicide victim is white.
The district court concluded
that the identical contention had been advanced and rejected in
an earlier petition for habeas relief. The district court,
therefore, dismissed Rook's present petition as successive
pursuant to Habeas Corpus Rule 9(b), 28 U.S.C. foll. Sec. 2254.
The matter is now before this
Court pursuant to Rook's appeal of the district court's order
and his motion for a stay of execution. In his submissions to
this Court, Rook concedes that his present contention regarding
the alleged constitutional infirmity of the North Carolina death
penalty was presented unsuccessfully in his earlier petition.
He contends, however, this his
successive petition is subject to an "ends of justice" exception
recognized in Sanders v. United States, 373 U.S. 1 (1963),
because new evidence which was not available at the time of his
earlier petition provides substantial support for his position.
We strongly disagree.
In Rook v. Rice, 783 F.2d 401
(4th Cir.1986), this Court affirmed the previous denial of
habeas relief to Rook. In addressing his contention that
defendants who murder whites are more likely to receive the
death penalty than those who murder blacks, we held that Rook's
proffered evidence on this issue was both "insufficiently
accurate" and provided no evidence that his death sentence was
the product of intentional discrimination.
The new evidence that Rook now
seeks to offer consists of a study entitled the Arbitrariness of
the Capital Death Penalty by Professors Nakell and Hardy of the
University of North Carolina. Rook argues that this study
resolves the inadequacies this Court noted in his earlier
petition.
We fail to see that the Nakell
and Hardy study justifies an "ends of justice" exception to the
normal bar on successive habeas petitions. As Rook acknowledges,
the standard for such an exception demands a showing that the
initial evidentiary hearing was not "full and fair" and that the
new evidence "bears on the constitutionality of the applicant's
detention." Townsend v. Sain, 372 U.S. 293 (1963).
Viewing it most favorably to
Rook, the Nakell and Hardy study fails to meet that standard.
The work examines the death penalty in North Carolina between
1977 and 1978. Even conceding that the study is statistically
accurate in all respects, it does not address the time period in
which Rook's punishment was assessed. Nor does the study provide
any evidence that Rook's sentence was a result of intentional
discrimination. We, therefore, can see no indication that Rook
has been denied a full and fair opportunity to challenge the
constitutionality of the North Carolina death penalty.
Accordingly, we affirm the
district court's order denying habeas relief. We also deny
Rook's motion for a stay of execution.
The Clerk is directed to issue
the mandate forthwith.