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.
Michael Hampton SONNER
Profile in Leadership: Letters to Maryland judge illuminate death
By Steve Lash - The Daily Record
October 27, 2008
It was the Nevada death-row inmate's name -- Michael
Sonner -- that first drew the attention of the prosecutor-turned-judge
about seven years ago.
Thinking the convicted cop killer could be a relative,
Judge Andrew L. Sonner said he contacted the Nevada anti-death-penalty
group mentioned in the news article, seeking more information. After
conducting his own research, Sonner concluded that the man was related
to him, if at all, very distantly.
That winter, Sonner received a Christmas card from
his condemned namesake, who was presumably told of the Marylander's
interest by the anti-capital-punishment group.
And so began a continuing exchange of letters between
the convict and the man who spent a quarter-century as Montgomery County
state's attorney before being named to the Court of Special Appeals in
1996.
Sonner, now retired, said he was touched by one of
the man's letters: a condolence card he sent after Sonner's wife of 47
years, Sandra, died of colon cancer on July 1, 2005.
"It was very nice," Sonner said of the gesture.
The letters contain small talk mostly, with the
former prosecutor and judge inquiring of the convict's health and the
prisoner replying that nothing has changed. Sonner said he received the
most recent letter about a month ago.
"He really doesn't have much to say and I really
don't have very much to say to him," Sonner said.
Sonner added that this long-distance correspondence
should not be regarded as him "making pen pals out of vicious criminals"
and is unrelated to his long-held opposition to capital punishment.
Michael Sonner's slaying of the Nevada officer was "a terrible crime,"
he added.
But Sonner said his namesake's death-row experience
provides "a working example of just how much resources we're putting
into" imposing the ultimate punishment.
Michael Sonner, who has been on death row since Oct.
28, 1994, has attorneys pursuing habeas appeals in federal court, and
Nevada has lawyers arrayed against him in an effort to ensure he is put
to death, even as he remains in prison, said Sonner.
"Why is it that we are the only country in the
industrialized world" with the death penalty, Sonner said. "I think it
is a relic of the 19th century."
Sonner, 74, has been outspoken of late in his
opposition to the death penalty, both in testifying Aug. 19 before a
Maryland commission examining capital punishment's future in the state
and in an Oct. 3 editorial in The Daily Record.
In contrast to Sonner, capital-punishment supporters
have argued before the Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment that
death is an appropriate penalty for serial killers and those who murder
children, police officers or during the commission of another violent
crime, such as rape.
Sonner, a father of six and grandfather of eight,
retired from the Court of Special Appeals in July 2004, upon reaching
the mandatory retirement age of 70. He occasionally presides over cases
by special assignment on the Montgomery County Circuit Court.
The courthouse is just a short walk from his
Rockville home, which he shares with his dog, Buddy, a black, eight-year-old,
mixed- breed Dalmatian and Weimaraner.
Speaking from his experience as prosecutor and judge,
Sonner said the decision as to which murders are so heinous that the
killers deserve the death penalty is too subjective to be made
consistently statewide and in compliance with the constitutional
requirement of due process of law.
Society has no way to "grade murderers," said Sonner,
a Daily Record 2002 Leadership in Law honoree. "There's no calculus in
society for determining who are the very worst."
Michael Sonner killed rookie Nevada Highway Patrol
trooper Carlos J. Borland, 25, with a single shot to the head from a .38
caliber revolver at about 9 p.m. on Nov. 30, 1993, according to news
reports. The officer had just pulled Sonner over near Lovelock, Nev., on
suspicion of having bolted from a gas station without paying for $22
worth of fuel, the reports stated.
Sonner was captured after a 25-hour manhunt,
convicted of the murder and sentenced to death.
Andrew Sonner said his namesake is depressed and
considering abandoning his appeals. In a letter last year, Michael
Sonner wrote that "nothing in here has changed and the same goes for
me," Sonner read.
"I think we should be tough on criminals," Sonner
said. "But we ought to do it in a cost-effective way."
The NHP Family Mourns a Hero
by Trooper Greg Roehm
Nevada Trooper Magazine - May 1994
Michael SONNER
Reno Gazette-Journal
An appeal from a North Carolina jail escapee
convicted of killing a Nevada Highway Patrol trooper was rejected by the
Nevada Supreme Court.
The high court modified its earlier ruling against
Michael Sonner, 30, convicted of killing Trooper Carlos Borland -- but
said that does not change his sentence of death by lethal injection.
Sonner was convicted of shooting Borland in the head
when stopped in Interstate 80 just east of Lovelock in November 1993 for
failing to pay for gasoline at a truck stop.
After escaping from a Lexington, N.C. jail, Sonner
stole a car and began a cross-country crime spree that included 2 truck
stop killings in Vega, Texas, a few days before he left Borland dying
along the interstate.
Sonner had appealed even though he had insisted
earlier that his execution take place as soon as possible. He said
death would be a cure for psychological problems that have tortured him
most of his life.
Besides the death penalty, Sonner was sentenced to
life in prison without parole for being a habitual criminal and to 6
years each on his convictision of being an ex-felon in possession of a
firearm and for resisting an officer.
The high court was asked by Sonner's public defender
to review its earlier ruling that held he abandoned some appeal rights
involving the nonmurder counts.
The 2nd time around, the court said that was wrong
and Sonner did not abandon those rights -- but "none of Sonner's claims
relevant to the nonmurder counts have merit."
Supreme Court of Nevada
SONNER v. STATE
Michael Hampton SONNER, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Nevada, Respondent.
No. 26485.
April 02, 1998
Steven G. McGuire, State Public Defender, and James
P. Logan, Appellate Deputy State Public Defender, Carson City, for
Appellant.Frankie Sue Del Papa, Attorney General, Carson City; Belinda
Quilici, District Attorney, and David K. Neidert, Assistant District
Attorney, Pershing County, for Respondent.
OPINION ON REHEARING
Appellant Michael Hampton Sonner was convicted of
first-degree murder and other offenses and sentenced to death. This
court affirmed his judgment of conviction and sentence. Sonner v. State,
112 Nev. 1328, 930 P.2d 707 (1996). Sonner seeks rehearing on a number
of issues. We conclude that rehearing is warranted in part, but we
reaffirm Sonner's judgment of conviction and sentence.
FACTS
On the evening of November 30, 1993, Sonner pumped
$22.00 worth of gasoline into his vehicle at a truck stop on Interstate
80 twenty-three miles west of Lovelock and drove away without paying.
Sonner shot Nevada State Highway Patrol Trooper Carlos Borland to death
after Borland stopped Sonner's vehicle near Lovelock.
Sonner was tried in September 1994. The jury found
him guilty of one count each of first-degree murder with use of a deadly
weapon, ex-felon in possession of a firearm, possession of a stolen
vehicle, and resisting a public officer. At the penalty hearing, the
state presented evidence that Sonner had been convicted of robbery and
assault with a deadly weapon on a peace officer in North Carolina, was a
fugitive from North Carolina, had robbed and raped a woman in Virginia,
and had shot to death two people in Texas. His presentence report
showed that he had eleven prior felony convictions.
The jury found that the murder was committed under
five aggravating circumstances: Sonner was under sentence of
imprisonment; Sonner had previously been convicted of two felonies
involving the use or threat of violence (each prior conviction was
listed as a separate aggravating circumstance); the murder was
committed to avoid or prevent a lawful arrest or to effect an escape
from custody; and the victim was a peace officer, which Sonner knew or
reasonably should have known, killed while engaged in the performance of
his official duty. The jury found four mitigating circumstances: the
murder was committed while Sonner was under the influence of extreme
mental or emotional disturbance; he was subject to neglect as a child;
he was subject to abuse as a child; and he had never denied
culpability for his criminal conduct. The jury returned a sentence of
death. The district court also adjudicated Sonner a habitual criminal.
On October 28, 1994, the district court entered a
judgment of conviction and sentenced Sonner to death for the murder, a
consecutive prison term of six years for ex-felon in possession of a
firearm, a consecutive term of life in prison without possibility of
parole for possession of a stolen vehicle and habitual criminality, and
a consecutive prison term of six years for resisting a public officer.
DISCUSSION
NRAP 40(a) requires a petition for rehearing to
“state with particularity the points of law or fact which in the opinion
of the petitioner the court has overlooked or misapprehended.” “Matters
presented in the briefs and oral arguments may not be reargued in the
petition for rehearing, and no point may be raised for the first time on
rehearing.” NRAP 40(c)(1). This court may consider a rehearing if “it
appears that the court has overlooked or misapprehended a material
matter in the record or otherwise” or in “such other circumstances as
will promote substantial justice.” NRAP 40(c)(2).
Appeal of the nonmurder counts
In footnote one of our prior opinion in this case, we
concluded that Sonner failed to address on appeal the counts of ex-felon
in possession of a firearm, possession of a stolen vehicle, and
resisting a public officer and had therefore abandoned any issues on
appeal relating to these counts. Sonner, 112 Nev. at 1332 n. 1, 930
P.2d at 710 n. 1. In his petition for rehearing, Sonner points out that
several of his claims on appeal applied to the lesser counts as well as
the murder count, e.g., the denial of his motion for change of venue and
alleged prosecutorial misconduct. The state concedes that some of the
claims applied to all the counts. We consequently retract the
conclusion reached in footnote one of Sonner. Nevertheless, we
reiterate that none of Sonner's claims relevant to the nonmurder counts
have merit.
Jury instruction on the authority of the Pardons
Board to modify sentences
During the penalty phase, the jury was instructed:
Life imprisonment with the possibility of parole is a
sentence to life imprisonment which provides that the defendant would be
eligible for parole after a period of 10 years. This does not mean
that he would be paroled after ten years but only that he would be
eligible after that period of time.[[[[1]
Life imprisonment without the possibility of parole
means exactly what it says, that the defendant shall not be eligible for
parole.
If you sentence the defendant to death you must
assume that the sentence will be carried out.
Although under certain circumstances and conditions
the State Board of Pardons Commissioners has the power to modify
sentences, you are instructed that you may not speculate as to whether
the sentence you impose may or may not be changed at a later date.
Sonner, 112 Nev. at 1333 n. 2, 930 P.2d at 711 n. 2.
This instruction was first set forth in Petrocelli v. State, 101 Nev.
46, 56, 692 P.2d 503, 511 (1985).
Sonner contends that in his case the Petrocelli
instruction implied that if he received a sentence of life imprisonment
without possibility of parole, it could be modified to a life sentence
with the possibility of parole. He argues that this was misleading
because NRS 213.1099(4) prevents him from receiving parole even if he
received a sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of parole
and it was modified to a life sentence with the possibility of parole.
Our prior opinion did not address NRS 213.1099(4).2
Sonner therefore asserts that the court misapprehended a material point
of law.
Sonner bases this assertion on Geary v. State, 112
Nev. 1434, 1439-44, 930 P.2d 719, 723-26 (1996), reh'g granted on other
grounds, 114 Nev. 100, 952 P.2d 431, (1998). In Geary, we vacated a
death sentence, concluding that “under the unique circumstances of this
case” the Petrocelli instruction was unconstitutional. Id. at 1440-41,
930 P.2d at 724. The circumstances which rendered the instruction
prejudicial in Geary are not present in Sonner's case. In Geary, “even
though Geary could not qualify for parole, counsel for both sides based
their arguments on a presumption that he could qualify for parole.” Id.
at 1442, 930 P.2d at 724. Further, Geary had previously received a
sentence of life without possibility of parole, the State Board of
Pardons Commissioners (Pardons Board) had commuted that sentence to a
life term with the possibility of parole, and Geary had in fact been
released on parole. Id., 930 P.2d at 724-25. “Because these facts were
so heavily emphasized before the jury, the jury may have speculated that
a sentence of death was the only way to prevent Geary's eventual release
from prison.” Id., 930 P.2d at 725. Finally, in closing argument the
prosecutor emphasized Geary's future dangerousness in asking the jury to
impose the death penalty. Id. at 1442-43, 930 P.2d at 725.
The facts in this case contrast with those in Geary:
neither the prosecutor nor defense counsel assumed or implied that
Sonner would ever be eligible for parole if sentenced to life in prison
without possibility of parole; the jury did not hear any evidence that
Sonner had ever gained parole after receiving a sentence of life without
possibility of parole; and the prosecutor did not argue to the jury
that Sonner posed a future danger. Given these factual distinctions,
we conclude that our holding in Geary does not apply here and that the
Petrocelli instruction did not mislead the jury and prejudice Sonner.
Sonner also cites a recent decision by the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals, Gallego v. McDaniel, 124 F.3d 1065, 1074-76,
1079 (9th Cir.1997): In that case, a sentencing jury in Nevada was
specifically instructed “that executive clemency might be available to
Gallego if the jury decided to sentence him to life without the
possibility of parole.” Id. at 1074. The jury was also told that
“[e]xecutive clemency involves a decision ․ to commute or reduce a
defendant's sentence from life without possibility of parole to life
with possibility of parole.” The instructions inadequately stated the
law because, when sentenced in Nevada, Gallego was under sentence of
death in California and NRS 213.1099(4) made it unlikely that he would
ever receive parole. Id. at 1076. The Court of Appeals concluded
that Gallego must be resentenced. Id. at 1079.
The jurors who sentenced Sonner did not receive the
executive clemency instructions deemed misleading in Gallego. Rather,
they were instructed that life imprisonment without possibility of
parole “means exactly what it says, that the defendant shall not be
eligible for parole” and that they were not to “speculate as to whether
the sentence you impose may or may not be changed at a later date.”
Geary and Gallego both cite Simmons v. South
Carolina, 512 U.S. 154, 114 S.Ct. 2187, 129 L.Ed.2d 133 (1994), in which
a majority of the United States Supreme Court concluded-in a plurality
opinion and a concurring opinion-that where the prosecution argued
future dangerousness, a state could not preclude a jury from considering
parole if such preclusion presented the jury with a false choice between
sentencing a person to death or sentencing him to a limited period of
incarceration.3
We conclude that Simmons is inapposite to Sonner's case because the
prosecutor did not argue future dangerousness and the jury was not
presented with a false choice between a death sentence or a limited term
of incarceration.
We conclude that the Petrocelli instruction did not
mislead the jury and did not prejudice Sonner.
Revising the Petrocelli instruction
In regard to offenses committed on or after July 1,
1995, the Pardons Board no longer has the power to commute a sentence of
death or of life imprisonment without possibility of parole to a
sentence allowing parole. Nev. Const. art. 5, § 14(2); NRS 213.085; Miller
v. Warden, 112 Nev. 930, 921 P.2d 882 (1996); California Dept. of
Corrections v. Morales, 514 U.S. 499, 505, 115 S.Ct. 1597, 1601, 131
L.Ed.2d 588 (1995). Given this definite limit on the Pardons Board's
power and the possibility that a jury can occasionally be misled in
circumstances like those in Geary, we conclude that it is best to
eliminate all language in the Petrocelli instruction which discusses
modification of sentences by the Pardons Board. Therefore, we direct
the district courts to no longer give the final paragraph of the
Petrocelli instruction to juries in capital penalty phases.
Henceforth, unless and until statutory amendment
requires otherwise, when a defendant is charged with murder and the
death penalty is sought, district courts are to give the following jury
instruction explaining possible penalties.
A prison term of fifty years with eligibility for
parole beginning when a minimum of twenty years has been served does not
mean that the defendant would be paroled after twenty years but only
that he or she would be eligible for parole after that period of time.
Life imprisonment with the possibility of parole is a
sentence to life imprisonment which provides that the defendant would be
eligible for parole after a period of twenty years. This does not mean
that he or she would be paroled after twenty years but only that he or
she would be eligible for parole after that period of time.[4]
Life imprisonment without the possibility of parole
means exactly what it says, that the defendant shall not be eligible for
parole.
If you sentence the defendant to death, you must
assume that the sentence will be carried out.
Other issues raised in the petition for rehearing
Sonner claims that the jury instructions
unconstitutionally failed to instruct the jury to find each aggravating
circumstance unanimously and that the jury instruction on reasonable
doubt was improper. Sonner improperly raises these issues for the
first time in his petition for rehearing. NRAP 40(c)(1). We also
conclude that these claims lack merit; therefore, their consideration
on rehearing would not promote substantial justice. NRAP 40(c)(2).
Sonner also contends that this court overlooked precedent in determining
that the district judge did not err when he refused to recuse himself.
We conclude that Sonner has failed to show that this court
misapprehended a material matter in deciding this issue. Id.
CONCLUSION
The jury instruction on the power of the Pardons
Board to modify sentences did not mislead the jury or prejudice Sonner.
We therefore deny rehearing on this issue.
Rehearing is warranted in two matters. First,
contrary to our statement in Sonner, we recognize that Sonner did not
abandon certain issues on appeal relating to the nonmurder counts of his
conviction; nevertheless, none of Sonner's claims relevant to the
nonmurder counts have merit. Second, in light of NRS 213.085, we
direct the district courts to no longer instruct juries on the matter of
sentence modification by the Pardons Board. In all other respects,
rehearing is denied, and we reaffirm Sonner's judgment of conviction and
sentence.5
FOOTNOTES
1. The
penalties for first-degree murder were amended in 1995 so this
instruction is no longer correct for offenses committed on or after July
1, 1995. See 1995 Nev. Stat., ch. 443, § 44, at 1181-82, and § 393, at
1340. NRS 200.030(4) now provides that first-degree murder is
punishable by death, life in prison without possibility of parole, life
in prison with the possibility of parole after serving a minimum of
twenty years, or fifty years in prison with eligibility for parole after
serving a minimum of twenty years.
2. NRS
213.1099(4) provides: Except as otherwise provided in NRS 213.1215, the
[State Board of Parole Commissioners] may not release on parole a
prisoner whose sentence to death or to life without possibility of
parole has been commuted to a lesser penalty unless it finds that the
prisoner has served at least 20 consecutive years in the state prison,
is not under an order to be detained to answer for a crime or violation
of parole or probation in another jurisdiction, and that he does not
have a history of:(a) Recent misconduct in the institution, and that he
has been recommended for parole by the director of the department of
prisons;(b) Repetitive criminal conduct;(c) Criminal conduct related to
the use of alcohol or drugs;(d) Repetitive sexual deviance, violence or
aggression; or(e) Failure in parole, probation, work release or similar
programs.The statute has been amended slightly since Sonner's sentencing,
but in substance read the same at that time. 1995 Nev. Stat., ch. 443,
§ 234, at 1259, and ch. 584, § 9, at 2071.
3. The
Supreme Court has concluded that Simmons announced a new rule and does
not apply retroactively in federal habeas proceedings. O'Dell v.
Netherland, 521 U.S. 151, 117 S.Ct. 1969, 138 L.Ed.2d 351 (1997).
4. These
first two paragraphs do not apply to murders committed before July 1,
1995. See footnote one above.
5. On
February 24, 1997, September 17, 1997, and February 20, 1998, Sonner
filed motions to supplement his petition for rehearing. Cause
appearing, we grant Sonner's motions.
Trooper Carlos J. Borland
End of Watch: December 1st, 1993.