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.
Shortly before midnight on December 30, 1975, 18-year-old
Sandy Spencer finished work at a fast food restaurant and began
hitchhiking home.
Smith picked her up and drove her to a desert
location north and west of Phoenix. There he bound her, forced dirt into
her mouth and nostrils, and taped her mouth closed.
Ms. Spencer died of asphyxiation, but to satisfy
himself that she was actually dead, Smith stabbed her numerous times and
embedded a 2-inch long sewing needle in her breast. Ms. Spencer's nude
body was found on January 1, 1976.
In late January of 1976, Smith picked up another
hitchhiker, 14-year-old Neva Lee. Smith took the girl to another desert
location and killed her by forcing dirt into her mouth and nostrils and
taping her mouth closed.
Ms. Lee also died of asphyxiation, was stabbed
several times, and had been jabbed in the breasts with needles. Her nude
body was discovered on February 2, 1976.
Smith was first tried and convicted for the murder of
Neva Lee. Several days into the trial for the murder of Sandy Spencer,
Smith entered a plea of guilty to the charge.
PROCEEDINGS
Presiding Judge: Robert J. Corcoran
Prosecutors: Lawrence Turoff (Neva Lee) Rudolph J. Gerber (Sandy
Spencer)
Start of Trial: May 24, 1977 (Neva Lee) June 28, 1977 (Sandy Spencer)
Verdict: June 17, 1977 (Neva Lee)
Guilty Plea: July 7, 1977 (Sandy Spencer)
Sentencing: August 31, 1977 (both murders)
Resentencing: November 7, 1979 (both murders)
Aggravating Circumstances:
Prior convictions punishable by life imprisonment
Prior conviction involving violence
Especially heinous/cruel/depraved
Mitigating Circumstances:
None
PUBLISHED OPINIONS
State v. Smith (J. C.), 123 Ariz. 231, 599 P.2d 187 (1979).
State v. Smith (J. C), 131 Ariz. 29, 638 P.2d 696 (1981).
Court rejects appeal by 30-year death row inmate
By James Vicini - Reuters.com
Oct 15, 2007
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected an
appeal by an Arizona prisoner who said his execution would violate
the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment because he
has been on death row for more than 30 years.
Over the dissent of one justice, the high court
turned down the appeal by Joe Clarence Smith, who contended that
standards of decency in the United States make it unconstitutional
to execute an individual held on death row for such a long time.
Smith's attorneys said he is one of the longest
serving death row inmates in the country, after awaiting execution
for almost three times as long as the average death row inmate.
The authors of the U.S. Constitution did not
envision imprisoning someone for three decades before they were put
to death, they argued.
"Nor would Smith's execution after such an
outrageous delay additionally serve the societal interest of
retribution and deterrence," they said.
Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard opposed
the appeal.
The fact that Smith first received death
sentences for two murders some 30 years ago does not violate the
constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment, Goddard said.
The delay stemmed from Smith litigating claims related to his case
in state and federal courts.
Smith was first sentenced to death in 1977. After
successfully appealing and being allowed to present new evidence at
another sentencing hearing two years later, he again received the
death penalty.
In 1999, a U.S. appeals court overturned Smith's
death sentence on the grounds that his lawyer had been ineffective
during the second sentencing hearing. The third sentencing
proceeding took place in 2004, when Smith got the death penalty.
Justice Stephen Breyer dissented.
"In my view, Smith can reasonably claim that his
execution at this late date would be 'unusual,'" Breyer wrote. "I am
unaware of other executions that have taken place after so long a
delay, particularly when much of the delay at issue seems due to
constitutionally defective sentencing proceedings."
Breyer also said the issue of whether it is cruel
to keep an individual on death row for decades, under threat of
imminent execution, raises a serious constitutional question.
Joe ClarenceSmith, Jr., Petitioner-appellant, v.
Terry L. Stewart, Respondent-appellee
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH
CIRCUIT
Argued and Submitted January 28, 1999--Pasadena,
California
Decided August 31, 1999
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
Arizona Paul G.Rosenblatt, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No.
CV-91-01577-PGR.
Before: Warren J. Ferguson, Stephen Reinhardt, and Ferdinand F.
Fernandez, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Ferguson; Partial Concurrence and Partial
Dissent by Judge Fernandez
FERGUSON, Circuit Judge:
*****
Smith does not appeal
all 34 claims. The claims which he does appeal and which the
district court denied or found procedurally barred include the
following: (1) ineffective assistance of counsel at trial; (2)
Smith's guilty plea in the Spencer murder
was taken in violation of Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238 (1969);
(3) Smith's guilty plea was coerced by
threats; (4) Smith's guilty plea lacked a
factual basis; (5) Smith was improperly
tried for murder by torture in the Lee homicide; (6) the murder by
torture instruction did not set out the elements of the offense; (7)
Smith was denied a unanimous jury on the
elements of murder by torture; (8) Smith's
arrest in this case was pre-textual; (9) the Arizona courts failed
to consider mitigating evidence fully in ordering the death penalty;
(10) the trial court used unconstitutional convictions to establish
aggravating circumstances; (11) the trial court improperly
considered victim impact evidence during sentencing; (12) the trial
judge improperly applied Smith's prior
convictions to establish two aggravating factors; (13) the trial
court improperly used the Spencer conviction to establish
aggravating factors in the Lee conviction; (14) the trial court
impermissibly duplicated an aggravating factor; (15) one aggravating
factor was unconstitutionally vague; (16) the prosecution failed to
disclose Brady material relevant to sentencing; and (17) the
sentencing judge unconstitutionally refused to appoint a psychiatric
expert. We reject these claims for the same reasons discussed by the
district court. 2 In July 1978, the Arizona Supreme Court held that
A.R.S. S 14-454(F) was unconstitutional because it restricted a
defendant's right to present relevant mitigating evidence other than
the statutory factors. State v. Watson, 586 P.2d 1253 (Ariz. 1978).
Accordingly, the legislature revised the death penalty statute, now
A.R.S. S 13-703. A.R.S.S 13-703(G) allows a defendant to present any
relevant mitigating circumstance.
In July 1978, the Arizona Supreme Court held that
A.R.S. 13-454(F) was unconstitutional because it restricted a
defendant's right to present relevant mitigating evidence other than
the statutory factors. State v. Watson, 120 Ariz. 441, 586 P.2d 1253
(1978). Accordingly, the legislature revised the death penalty
statue, now A.R.S. 13-703(G) allows a defendant to present any
relevant mitigating circumstance.
Despite the dissent's skepticism, it is clear
that the failure to find further information about the defendant's
psychiatric problems was due in large part to the fact that his
lawyer had never tried a capital case, and did not understand the
concept of mitigating evidence. Even the prosecutor, on the record,
had doubts about Smith's mental state.
Moreover, while the dissent describes the results of psychological
evaluations to determine the defendant's competency to stand trial,
ability to assist counsel, and mental capacity for purposes of the
insanity defense, the dissent neglects to mention that a
psychologist charged with the responsibility of determining whether
or not Smith suffered mental problems for
the purpose of deter- mining if it was relevant mitigating evidence
concluded that Smith did in fact have a
split personality. Rather than presenting evidence that the same
judge already had rejected, Smith's counsel
should have presented new mitigating evidence that was available.
His failure to do so constituted ineffective assistance.