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William Henry
SMITH
Rape
2 days after
STATE OF OHIO
ADULT PAROLE AUTHORITY
COLUMBUS, OHIO
Date of Meeting: February 8, 2005 - Date of
Executive Session: February 14, 2005
Minutes of the SPECIAL MEETING of the Adult
Parole Authority held at 1030 Alum Creek Drive, Columbus, Ohio
43205.
IN RE: WILLIAM H. SMITH, MANCI #202-636
SUBJECT: Death Sentence Clemency
CRIME, CONVICTION: Aggravated Murder w/
specification – Principal Offender during a Rape Offense cc/w
Aggravated Murder w/ specification – Principal Offender during an
Aggravated Robbery cs/w Rape cs/w Aggravated Robbery.
DATE, PLACE OF CRIME: September 26, 1987;
Cincinnati, Ohio
COUNTY: Hamilton
CASE NUMBER: B-874498
VICTIM: Mary Bradford
INDICTMENT: Counts 1: Aggravated Murder with
specification - Principal Offender during a Rape Offense; Count 2:
Aggravated Murder with specification - Principal Offender during an
Aggravated Robbery Offense; Count 3: Rape; Count 4: Aggravated
Robbery.
VERDICT: Found guilty by Three Judge Panel as charged in Counts 1,
2, 3 and 4, and both specifications in Counts 1 and 2.
SENTENCE: Count 1 – Death; Count 2 – Death; Count 3 – 10-25 years
CRC, with 10 years actual incarceration time; Count 4 – 10-25 years
CRC, with 10 years actual incarceration time; Count 1 and 2,
concurrent; Counts 3 and 4, consecutive, and consecutive with Counts
1 and 2.
ADMITTED TO INSTITUTION: April 15, 1988
TIME SERVED: 16 years, 10 months
AGE AT ADMISSION: 30 years old, (D.O.B. - 10/28/57)
CURRENT AGE: 47
JAIL TIME CREDIT: 200 Days
PRESIDING JUDGES: Honorable Norbert Nadel; Honorable Ralph Winkler;
Honorable Robert Kraft.
PROSECUTING ATTORNEY: Arthur M. Ney, Jr.
FOREWORD:
Clemency in the case of William H. Smith #202-636 was initiated by
The Honorable Bob Taft, Governor of the State of Ohio, and the Ohio
Parole Board, pursuant to Sections 2967.03 and 2967.07 of the Ohio
Revised Code and the Parole Board Policy #105-PBD-05. A previous
Clemency Report was sent to The Honorable George V. Voinovich, then
Governor of the State of Ohio, on April 24, 1995. That report
contained a unanimous Parole Board recommendation against clemency.
On January 26, 2005, the inmate’s counsel,
Jennifer Kinsley, declined on behalf of Mr. Smith an opportunity to
be interviewed by a representative of the Parole Board at Mansfield
Correctional Institution. The Parole Board subsequently met on
February 8, 2005 to hear the case of William H. Smith. The case was
considered upon application by the inmate’s counsel, H. Louis Sirkin,
Jennifer M. Kinsley & Laurence E. Komp. Testimony in support of
clemency was presented by Mr. Smith’s counsel, Ms. Kinsley and Mr.
Komp and by Mr. Smith’s cousin, Mr. Gary Dorsey representing the
Smith, Dorsey, Reid, Carter, Butts & Ward families.
Testimony in
opposition to clemency was presented by Assistant Hamilton County
Prosecutor Ronald W. Springman and by Assistant Attorneys General
Henry Appel and Greg Perry. During the course of the hearing, it was
determined that Mr. Smith had, in fact, desired to be interviewed by
the Parole Board. At the conclusion of all testimony and rebuttal
presentations, the Board adjourned to deliberate and discuss the
case. It was promptly determined that Mr. Smith should be afforded
an opportunity to be interviewed by the Board. As a result, an
interview was rescheduled and held on February 9, 2005 with Parole
Board Member Peter Davis interviewing Mr. Smith at the Mansfield
Correctional Institution.
On February 14, 2005 the Board reconvened
to discuss the case. The Board gave careful review, consideration
and discussion to all testimony, to Mr. Smith’s interview, to all
available facts pertaining to the crime including voluminous
supplemental materials submitted by counsel and family for Mr. Smith,
by the Hamilton County Prosecutor, and by the Office of the Attorney
General. Considerable discussion was had as to all credible evidence
offered or adduced in mitigation. The Board deliberated extensively
upon the propriety of clemency in the form of commutation and in the
form of reprieve.
With eight (8) members participating, the Board
voted unanimously to provide an UNFAVORABLE recommendation to the
Honorable Bob Taft, Governor of the State of Ohio.
DETAILS OF THE INSTANT OFFENSE:
According to the Clemency Investigation, who sited their source as
the Hamilton County Prosecutors Office, the following is known
concerning the instant offense:
During the evening of 9/26/87, William H. Smith
met Ms. Janice Echols and her friend Ms. Mary Bradford (age 47) at
the Race Inn located at 1606 Race Street in Cincinnati, Ohio. After
several hours of socializing and drinking, they left this location
and drove to the Queen Anne Café located at 2141 Central Avenue in
Cincinnati, Ohio. At approximately 1:30 am on 9/27/87, the group
left this location and the subject dropped Ms. Echols off at another
bar. Mr. Smith then roceeded to the victim’s residence with her.
Mr. Smith and the victim then had sexual
intercourse after drinking and allegedly using cocaine that belonged
to him. The subject eventually left the victim’s apartment, but
returned when he discovered that some of his cocaine was missing.
Upon returning, he confronted the victim, but she denied taking any
of the cocaine. He then proceeded to stab the victim approximately
10 times in the neck, right breast, and right chest. While the
victim was laying on the bed bleeding to death, Mr. Smith proceeded
to have intercourse with her again.
He then stole 2 televisions and a stereo system
belonging to the victim, and left the apartment. At approximately
4:00 pm that same day, a friend of the victim went to her apartment,
and entered after finding the door unlocked. He then found the
victim lying in a pool of blood on her bed, and contacted police.
The victim’s death was ruled a homicide due to
multiple stab wounds to the heart, aorta, and lungs. A rape
examination was also conducted that showed that the victim had
vaginal intercourse. Through investigation, homicide detectives
determined that William H. Smith was the last person to be seen with
the victim. He was subsequently arrested at 1:30 pm on 9/28/87.
The subject initially denied any involvement in
the offense, but later admitted to stabbing the victim in the neck
and having sex with her after stabbing her 8 more times. At the
time, he claimed that this was the result of an argument over
missing cigarettes and cocaine. During the argument, he claimed that
the victim actually retrieved the knife, and he took it from her
after striking her in the stomach.
APPLICANTS STATEMENT:
Mr. Smith was interviewed by Board Member Peter
Davis on February 9, 2005 at the Mansfield Correctional Institution.
Also present were Mr. Smith’s counsel Jennifer M. Kinsley and Parole
Board Quality Assurance Case Analyst Matt Morris. The interview was
witnessed via teleconference at Parole Board Central Office in
Columbus by Mr. Smith’s counsel Laurence Komp, by Assistant
Attorneys General Henry Appel and Greg Perry and by Parole Board
Executive Assistant Judy Coakley.
With regard to culpability and aggravating
circumstances Mr. Smith’s version of the instant offense does not
differ in substantial detail from the above referenced official
version as obtained from the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s office.
He admits to meeting Ms. Bradford in a bar; accompanying her home;
ingesting beer, vodka, marijuana and cocaine; arguing with Ms.
Bradford [although not recalling the nature or subject of the
argument]; wrestling the knife away from Ms. Bradford and stabbing
her four (4) times; watching her lay bleeding in the living room
chair; carrying her to the bedroom; removing her underpants and
engaging in vaginal sex as she lay bleeding from multiple stab
wounds; leaving Ms. Bradford in the bedroom [still not knowing
whether she was dead or alive] as he made three (3) trips to his car
to steal Ms. Bradford’s stereo and two (2) televisions; and finally
leaving the apartment still not knowing whether Ms. Bradford was
dead or alive.
In detailing his account of the offense, Mr. Smith
tearfully stated that he takes full responsibility for his
inexcusable, unjustifiable and inexplicable behavior. He repeatedly
remarked that he could have and should have left Ms. Bradford’s
apartment at any number of times during the escalation of their
verbal argument and even after he wrestled the knife from her hand.
He stated that he cannot explain to himself nor to this Board why he
did not leave prior to the stabbing, or immediately after the
stabbing. He cannot explain to himself nor to this Board how he
could or why he would rape Ms. Bradford after the stabbing, stating
that he had never forced sexual conduct on any woman before that
night. He cannot explain why he decided to steal Ms. Bradford’s
stereo and televisions and take them to his mother’s house.
He offered no excuses or rationalization for his offense behavior other
than being “stupid and dumb”. He also characterized as “stupid and
dumb” his sending a fabricated letter to Ms. Bradford’s daughter
during his first year of incarceration, falsely asserting his
innocence and falsely accusing a “Ricky Johnson” as Ms. Bradford’s
killer. He stated that it was after Death Row was moved from
Lucasville to Mansfield in late 1994 that he finally “came clean”
and began to tell the truth to himself and to others about his sole
responsibility for Ms. Bradford’s murder, rape and robbery.
PRIOR RECORD:
JUVENILE:
1/26/73 Robbery Juvenile Court Official probation; (Age 15)
7/29/1973 Breaking & Juvenile Court Official probation, restitution,
(Age 15)
12/27/73 Burglary Juvenile Court Restitution, (Age 16) referred to
Job Corps.
7/2/74 Unauthorized Use of Vehicle Juvenile Court Official probation,
(Age 16) $20 fine and court costs.
OTHER ADJUDICATIONS: In 1973, the subject was arrested for being
incorrigible. In 1974, he was arrested for being unruly and
questionable conduct. All of these convictions resulted in court
costs being remitted or a continuance of probation.
ADULT:
11/14/75 Breaking & Entering, Cincinnati, Ohio
8/19/76; 6 months to 5 years (Age 18) Suspended; fines, costs,
(B753893) restitution and 2 years probation, concurrent with date of
arrest for 5/5/76.
8/7/78: Guilty of probation violation, restored and continued on
probation for an additional 3 years.
3/26/79; Declared an Absconder due to whereabouts being unknown.
7/29/80; Guilty of probation violation, sentenced to 6 months to 5
years, OSR.
8/20/80: Admitted to OSR #112-988; Paroled.
3/21/82; Details: District One Police observed the subject and an
accomplice removing copper pipe from a building at 1332 Race Street.
This building belonged to the Estate of Vincent Westerdorf.
3/17/76 Theft Cincinnati Ohio 4/19/76; 10 days workhouse (Age 18) (Under
$150) and court costs. Details: Subject removed copper pipes from a
building at 1625 Republic Street.
5/5/76 Breaking & Entering, Cincinnati, Ohio 8/19/76: 6 months–5
years, (Age 18) Entering suspended, 2 years probation (B761494)
concurrent with date of arrest of 11/14/75.
8/7/78: Guilty of probation violation, restored and continued on
probation for an additional 3 years.
3/26/79: Entry declaring subject an absconder from probation due to
whereabouts unknown. 7/31/80: Details: Subject broke into an
apartment of Fred Wright, 1614 Elm Street, Cincinnati, Ohio.
5/18/77 Assault Cincinnati, Ohio 6/17/77; 180 days workhouse (Age
19) 15 days suspended. Details: Subject followed Charles Bishop to
his residence, at 1216 Race Street. Subject asked the victim for ten
(10) cents. When the victim said that he had no money, subject began
beating the victim on the left side of his face.
8/26/85 Breaking & Entering, Cincinnati, Ohio 10/28/85: 1 year Ohio
Penitentiary; (Age 27) 6/27/86: Released. Details: Subject broke
into a residence at 3248 Glendora Avenue, and removed two (2)
stained glass windows.
Subject has four (4) other convictions. In 1979,
he was arrested for Engaging in Gambling, which resulted in fines
and being ordered to pay court costs. In 1984, he was charged with
No Driver’s License on two (2) occasions for which he was fined and
ordered to pay court costs. In 1987, the subject was arrested for
Possession of a Dangerous Drug, which resulted in five (5) days at
the Hamilton County Criminal Justice Center and costs remitted.
In 1978, the subject was arrested in Hamilton
County for Aggravated Burglary, a charge which was ignored by the
Grand Jury. In 1984, he was arrested for Criminal Damaging, which
was dismissed. In 1985, the subject was arrested by the Fulton
County Police Department in Atlanta, Georgia, on two (2) charges of
Simple Battery and Disturbing a Lawful Gathering. Both of these
charges were subsequently dismissed.
INSTITUTIONAL ADJUSTMENT:
Mr. Smith has spent approximately 17 years on
Death Row. He has demonstrated good institutional conduct with only
two (2) relatively minor disciplinary tickets, and none during the
past ten (10) years. He also has maintained good job evaluations and
enjoys a good rapport with correctional officers and other
institutional staff. His institutional adjustment has been exemplary.
COUNSEL’S ARGUMENTS FOR CLEMENCY:
Counsel for Mr. Smith assert six (6) arguments in
support of mitigation against the imposition of the death penalty in
this case.
1. Poor Representation of Trial Counsel During
Penalty Hearing
We note that many of the alleged deficient actions of Mr. Smith’s
trial counsel were within their proper discretion as matters of
defense trial strategy. The Board defers to the substantive findings
of the Federal District Court and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals
in their rejection of Mr. Smith’s claim that he received ineffective
assistance of trial counsel.
2. Organic Brain Damage
Mr. Smith has never been diagnosed with a major mental illness, nor
with a serious mental defect, nor with an organic brain disease.
There is clear and convincing evidence that at the time of the
offense Mr. Smith suffered from a personality disorder characterized
by poor impulse control. There is credible evidence that he was
diagnosed [post conviction in 1992] with “mild static diffuse
cerebral dysfunction”, occasioned by either “chronic alcohol abuse”
or “traumatic brain damage”. It is noted that the diagnosing
clinical psychologist [Dr. Kathleen J. Burch] did not identify any
major head injuries to Mr. Smith & effectively corroborated the
finding in Dr. Nancy Schmidtgoessling’s mitigation report that Mr.
Smith’s primary mental deficit was poor impulse control. Moreover,
during the February 9, 2005 interview, Mr. Smith stated that he has
not suffered any head trauma since his sister hit him in the top of
his head with a “coke bottle” during a weekend home visit from
Longview State Hospital [sometime between the ages of 9 & 14].
Counsel asserts that Mr. Smith’s recent cranial
CAT scan [one of a battery of physiological exams occasioned by Mr.
Smith’s treatment for heart attack symptoms] indicates the presence
of an abnormality or mass in his brain [specifically between his
seventh and eighth cranial nerve]. Reportedly the treating physician
at Mansfield General Hospital & a neuroradiologist consulted by Mr.
Smith’s attorneys [Dr. Clifford Pleatman] recommend a follow-up MRI
to obtain a more complete diagnosis. This is the basis for counsel’s
alternate request for clemency in the form of a reprieve. It should
be noted that Mr. Smith’s medical records in this regard were not
made available to State’s counsel nor to this Board at the time of
the February 8, 2005 hearing. Absent a copy of any medical report,
State’s counsel presented a compelling affidavit from Dr. Richard
Lederman, [Cleveland Clinic Department of Neurology] stating in
pertinent part: “The seventh cranial nerve primarily controls the
function of facial muscles and taste from the tongue. The eighth
cranial nerve primarily relays sound and balance information from
the inner and middle ear to the brain.”
“If Dr. Pleatman is suggesting that the seventh
and eighth cranial nerves are in Mr. Smith’s brain, he is mistaken.
The seventh and eighth cranial nerves are, by definition, not part
of the brain, although these nerve fibers originate and terminate in
the brain.” “Assuming that the abnormality in the seventh and eight
cranial nerves is very severe, Mr. Smith would likely suffer facial
paralysis on one side of his face and total deafness in one ear.”
“It is my opinion that any such an abnormality --- no matter how
severe --- would not affect an individuals ability to tell right
from wrong. Nor would such an abnormality affect an individual’s
ability to conform his conduct to the requirement of the law. “ A
copy of Mr. Smith’s Emergency Department Reports from Mansfield
General Hospital dated December 9, 2004 and December 29, 2004 were
given to this Board by counsel after the interview of Mr. Smith on
February 9, 2005. An actual copy of the CAT scan was not included.
Relevant portions of the December 29, 2004 report CAT scan summary
include the following: “The ventricles are symmetric in size,
position and configuration. There is no convincing evidence of
intracranial mass or hemorrhage. There are small areas of increased
attenuation demonstrated in the basal ganglia bilaterally which
likely represent calcifications within the basal ganglion as they
are symmetric. There is no evidence of midline shift. There is no
evidence of extra-axial collection. Bone windows reveal no evidence
of fracture. There is mucosal sinus disease evident within the left
frontal and bilateral ethmoid sinuses.”
“IMPRESSION: 1. No evidence of intracranial mass
or hemorrhage. 2. Areas of increased attenuation within the
bilateral basal ganglia which likely represent physiologic
calcifications. 3. Bilateral ethmoid and left frontal mucosal sinus
disease. “ “I recommend further evaluation of this patient with an
MRI examination of the brain.” This Board holds the view that any
necessary follow-up MRI examination for Mr. Smith is strictly a
medical decision, properly and exclusively within the discretionary
authority of the Medical Director at the Mansfield Correctional
Institution in consultation with the Medical Director for the
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. The Board recognizes
that credible evidence of Mr. Smith’s diagnoses of poor impulse
control and “mild static diffuse cerebral dysfunction” is a proper
consideration to be weighed in the pursuit of a claim for mercy.
3. Deprived Childhood
This Board concurs with the findings of the Supreme Court of Ohio in
recognizing that Mr. Smith’s “history, character, and background do
offer mitigating features. Smith clearly had an arduous childhood,
and his early life shaped a personality with serious character
defects. His limited mental capacity, childhood deprivation, and
alcohol and drug dependency all reflect mitigating features.” Mr.
Smith’s abysmal childhood, as comprehensively detailed in the
penalty phase mitigation report compiled by Dr. Nancy
Schmidtgoessling, Ph.D., is a significant consideration to be
weighed in the pursuit of a claim for mercy.
4. Good Institutional Adjustment
As previously noted, this Board finds Mr. Smith’s overall
institutional adjustment to be exemplary and a proper consideration
to be weighed in the pursuit of a claim for mercy.
5. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals Dissenting
Opinion
In Mr. Smith’s claim for federal habeas relief, Judge Guy Cole
rendered a dissenting opinion on the narrow grounds that Mr. Smith
was denied the full benefit of expert psychiatric assistance during
the sentencing phase, noting that Dr. Nancy Schmidtgoessling was
appointed by the court as an amicus “neutral” expert rather than as
a “defense” expert. This Board offers no comment on the legal merits
of Judge Cole’s argument as to the applicability of prior case law
in support of his dissenting opinion. The Board does take note,
however, that Judge Cole did not dissent from the majority’s finding
that Mr. Smith received effective assistance of trial counsel. We
concur with the following argument advanced by the Attorney General:
“In concurring with the District Court that Smith’s trial counsel
effectively represented him, the Sixth Circuit found that extensive
mitigation was presented via Dr. Schmidtgoessling’s testimony and
her mitigation report presented into evidence by the defense
described in greater detail Smith’s family background, developmental
history, his commitment, and his later functioning as a young adult.
Finally, the Sixth Circuit concluded that Smith failed to identify
any significant evidence that was overlooked by counsel and not
presented to the trial court.”
6. Racial Discrimination in Grand Jury Process
This Board was presented with insufficient credible evidence with
which to form an opinion as to whether the Hamilton County Grand
Jury process was unconstitutionally deficient at the time of Mr.
Smith’s offense, due to an alleged pattern or practice of racial
discrimination in the selection of the Grand Jury forepersons. We
defer to the unanimous opinion of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals
who rejected this claim on the merits.
CONCLUSION:
The Board acknowledges the following mitigating factors: 1. Mr.
Smith suffered an abysmal childhood of deprivation and abuse. 2. Mr.
Smith’s sincere, genuine and strong expression of remorse. 3. At the
time of the offense, Mr. Smith suffered from a personality disorder
that may have manifested in a loss of impulse control with regard to
the killing of Ms. Bradford. 4. Mr. Smith has demonstrated exemplary
conduct and adjustment within a structured prison setting.
After careful, extensive deliberation and
discussion, the Board finds that the aforementioned mitigating
factors do not outweigh the non-impulsive aggravating circumstances
of Mr. Smith’s prolonged victimization of Ms. Bradford: raping her
as she lay bleeding and near death from multiple stab wounds and
then making multiple trips from her apartment to his car to steal
her stereo and televisions. This callous victimization continued
even into the first year of Mr. Smith’s incarceration by his
deceitful, self-serving letter to one of Ms. Bradford’s daughters.
The only relevant mental defect is “poor impulse control”. But
impulsivity alone does not explain the aggravating circumstances of
this brutal crime. A wretched childhood, an impulsive character
defect, good prison conduct and belated but sincere expression of
remorse are simply not sufficient to overcome the magnitude of
aggravating circumstances in this case. A sufficient justifiable
basis for mercy cannot be found. There is no manifest miscarriage of
justice in the imposition of sentence. The Board deliberated
extensively upon the propriety of clemency in the form of
commutation and in the form of reprieve.
With eight (8) members participating, the Board
voted unanimously to provide an UNFAVORABLE recommendation, both as
to commutation and as to reprieve, to the Honorable Bob Taft,
Governor of the State of Ohio.
On 9/26/87, William Smith murdered 47-year-old
Mary Bradford in her Cincinnati apartment. Ms. Bradford had met
Smith that evening at a local bar. Smith stabbed Ms. Bradford in the
stomach, raped her and then fatally stabbed her nine more times.
Smith then made four separate trips to take Ms. Bradford's property
from her house to his car. Smith later confessed to police.
March 8, 2005
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A man who claims he has a
brain abnormality lost a request to a federal appeals court seeking
to delay his execution scheduled for today for raping and killing a
woman he met at a bar.
An appeal filed Monday to the U.S. Supreme Court
for William H. Smith was the defense's last attempt to escape the
sentence. Smith, 47, claims the abnormality detected during a brain
scan after he fainted in prison may have affected his behavior in
1987 when he stabbed a woman, raped her as she lay dying and then
made three trips to his car to steal her stereo and two television
sets.
Thirteen judges from the 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals agreed Monday with a three-judge panel that lifted a stay
of execution, saying that two brain tests did not prove Smith has an
abnormality. The appeals court said the defense introduced no new
issues that warrant reconsideration of the sentence and rejected the
argument that Smith's trial lawyers failed to develop evidence that
he had brain damage.
William Henry Smith - Ohio - March 8, 2005
The state of Ohio is set to execute William H.
Smith, a 47 year old African American man on March 8 for the 1987
rape and murder of Mary Virginia Bradford in Hamilton County.
On the evening of Sept. 26, 1987, Ms. Bradford
went to a bar near her apartment in Cincinnati. Two days later, her
boyfriend found her dead in her home of apparent stab wounds. Police
tracked the murder to Smith, who met Ms. Bradford at the bar on the
night of the 26th. Smith admitted that he drove Ms. Bradford home,
returning later to retrieve some drugs he accidentally left in her
possession.
When he inquired of Ms. Bradford where he could find the
cocaine he left in her apartment, she stated that her boyfriend took
it. Angry at the idea of losing several thousand dollars worth of
drugs, Smith lashed out at Ms. Bradford. He was convicted in October
of 1987 for her murder and rape and sentenced to death.
Smith experienced what court psychiatrist Dr.
Schmidtgoessling characterized as a “bizarre” childhood. His mother
had a history of mental illness, and she and his stepfather abused
Smith and his siblings. As a child, Smith lived in foster care and
spent several years at a state mental facility where he was
diagnosed with an emotionally unstable personality and borderline
intellectual functioning levels. Smith was given antipsychotic drugs
and electric shock therapy as treatment. His deviant lifestyle
continued into his teens; Smith began smoking marijuana at age 11
and started drinking alcohol at age 15. His IQ has been tested at
78, and he has organic brain damage, a fact not known at his
original trial.
One of the biggest concerns in this case is the
lack of a defense psychiatry expert at Smith’s trial. In October of
2003, Smith’s request for a writ of habeas corpus was denied by a
2-1 vote by the U.S. Court of Appeals Sixth Circuit. Appeals Judge
R. Guy Cole, Jr., in his dissenting opinion, voiced his concern that
if Smith had the mental health expert to which he was legally
entitled, his sentence would not have resulted in death.
Previous courts have decided that the defense is
entitled to a psychiatric expert in cases of questionable mental
health. However, Smith’s trial included testimony by Dr.
Schmidtgoessling, who functioned as a “friend of the court.” This
had serious legal consequences for Smith’s case. Because Dr.
Schmidtgoessling was not acting as an advocate for Smith, her
evaluation did not look for mitigating factors to spare his life
during the sentencing portion of the trial. Judge Cole noted that
defendants like Smith are entitled access to a competent psychiatric
expert who will assist in the evaluation, preparation, and
presentation of the defense. By her own accord, Dr. Schmidtgoessling
acknowledged that she did not do this. Judge Cole concludes that had
Smith been given a defense rather than neutral expert, there would
have been sufficient mitigating evidence presented to spare his life.
William Smith was denied his constitutional right
to a fair trial. His trial attorneys and the court system failed him
in not securing a defense psychiatric expert to attest to his
horrific childhood and mental illness. During his 17 years on death
row, Smith has been a model prisoner and continues to suffer from
his mental illness and brain damage. The state of Ohio must not
execute this man.
Overview
Crime: Sentenced in April of 1988 by a 3 judge
panel for the death of Mary Bradford in Sept of 1987.
The Case: The record notes, Mr. Smith and Ms Bradford met at a bar [the
Race Inn in OTR Cincinnati] She was found the next day having been
stabbed to death. After waiving his Miranda rights, the police
record has Smith [in an unsworn statement] admitting to the crime
saying: they say he had left her apt when her boyfriend arrived and
forgot a small amount of cocaine – when he returned the boyfriend
had taken the cocaine so they discussed “restitution.” [Which
involved sex and electronics] At one point an argument began and Ms
Bradford got a knife from the kitchen, she was stabbed during a
struggle.
Mitigation / Talking Points
MR. SMITH’S MENTAL HEALTH SHOULD DISQUALIFY HIM
FROM THE DEATH PENALTY.
Background on Mr. Smith’s life
Mr. Smith grew up in various foster homes from when he was 11 months
until 10 years. He spent 3 years in Longview State Hospital [while
there he was prescribed antipsychotic medication and remembers being
given shock treatment.]. His IQ is 78 and he is prone to depression.
He was diagnosed with emotional unstable personality and borderline
intellectual functioning. His mother had a history of mental illness
and was diagnosed with schizophrenia. She was abusive to her
children – often beating them or hiding food. His stepfather was
also hospitalized for psychiatric problems and was incarcerated for
rape.
Legal Concerns
MR. SMITH SHOULD HAVE HAD HIS OWN PSYCHIATRIST IN
COURT.
Smith’s initial plea was not guilty by reason of
insanity. In Federal 6th Circuit Judge R. Guy Cole, Jr., dissent he
notes, “I believe that the trial court failed to provide Smith with
a mental health expert for the defense.” [As required by Ake, and as
interpreted by Powell v. Collins, 328 F. 3d 268 (6th Cir 2003)]
IF THE STATE IS GOING TO TRY POOR PEOPLE, IT MUST
PROVIDE ADEQUTE DEFENSE. Other Court references in Cole’s dissent:
Criminal trials are fundamentally unfair “if a state proceeds
against an indigent defendant without making certain that he has
access to the raw materials integral to building a defense.” [Terry,
985 F.2d at 284] “When the state has made the defendant’s mental
condition relevant to his criminal culpability and to the punishment
he might suffer, the assistance of a psychiatrist may well be
crucial to the defendants ability to marshal his defense.” [Ake, 470
US 68 (1985)] Ake “does not mean the right to place the report of a
‘neutral’ psychiatrist before the court; rather it means the right
to use the services of a psychiatrist in whatever capacity defense
counsel deems appropriate.” [US v. Sloan, 776 F.2d 926, 929 (10th
Cir. 1985)]
Mr. Smith’s defense team argues:
IN CASES OF LIFE AND DEATH, DEFENSE COUNSEL MUST BE ADEQUATE AND
EFFECTIVE – SMITH’S WERE NEITHER. Ineffective assistance of trial
counsel Trial counsel were ineffective in working with the
mitigation specialist from the Ohio Public Defenders Office, working
with the psychiatrist, investigating Smith’s background, developing
strategy and requesting full psychiatric exam. Additionally, they
allowed his mother and pastor to present damaging information to the
court.
IF THE PROSECUTOR’S CHOOSE LIFE AND DEATH
PUNISHMENTS – THEY SHOULD PLAY FAIR. Prosecutorial Misconduct Race
pervading the charging decision: “Smith, who is African American,
argues that the ad hoc policies adopted by the Hamilton County
Prosecutor’s Office reflects a racial bias in charging and
prosecuting capital offenses. Since Ohio’s current death penalty law
became effective in 1981, roughly 62% of the death sentences in
Hamilton County have been imposed upon African-Americans even though
they consist of only 20% of the county’s population.” Misconduct
during Culpability phase and mitigation phase” “Smith contends that
during the guilt phase, the prosecutor introduced victim-impact
evidence, engaged in improper argument, failed to disclose favorable
impeachment evidence ….. Smith objects to the prosecutor’s statement
during mitigation that Smith lacked remorse and that he could not
meet the insanity standard and therefore no mitigating factors were
present.
March 8, 2005
LUCASVILLE, Ohio - A murderer who said a brain
abnormality may have affected his behavior when he stabbed then
raped a bleeding woman was executed Tuesday after courts decided
tests did not prove brain damage. William H. Smith, 47, died by
injection at 10:19 a.m. at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility
for the death of Mary Bradford, whom he met at a bar in 1987.
The defense did not challenge Smith's conviction
but said a brain lesion detected after he fainted in prison could
have spared him from the death sentence at his 1988 trial.
In a final statement that lasted four minutes,
Smith took responsibility for the crime and said he had given
himself to the Lord. "I hope you have the capacity to forgive," he
said, addressing the victim's grandson, Timmy Bradford, who watched
with his hands clutched in front of his face. "I cannot control
anything from this day. Find the right way. Be a better person than
I was," Smith said. Smith was upbeat before the execution, visiting
family, chatting about Cincinnati sports with the execution team and
sharing a cherry cake recipe with them, a prisons spokeswoman said.
Smith and Bradford drank together at the bar for
several hours before going to her Cincinnati apartment, where they
used cocaine and had sex, police said. The two argued when Smith
accused Bradford of owing him money for cocaine. Smith, also of
Cincinnati, told police he grabbed a knife away from Bradford, and
she was stabbed during the struggle. Bradford, 47, had 10 stab
wounds in the neck and chest, and Smith had sex with her again as
she lay on her bed bleeding, police said. He then made three trips
to his car to steal her stereo and two television sets, police said.
Tue Mar 8, 2005
CINCINNATI (Reuters) - The state of Ohio on
Tuesday executed a 47-year-old man convicted of killing a woman in
1987, after a court rejected a claim that he suffered from brain
damage. William Smith was pronounced dead at 10:19 a.m. EST
following an injection of lethal drugs at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville, according to Kim Norris, a
spokeswoman for the attorney general of Ohio.
Smith was convicted of the stabbing murder of
Mary Bradford, 47, whom he also raped and robbed in her Cincinnati
apartment after they had met in a bar. The execution was the seventh
in the United States this year and the 951st since the country
brought back the death penalty in 1976. Smith admitted that he
stabbed Bradford about 10 times during an argument over cocaine and
cigarettes, which he claimed she took from him. Prosecutors alleged
that he raped her after the knife attack and then stole two
television sets and a stereo from her apartment.
The Ohio Parole Board unanimously upheld his
sentence, but a federal district judge in Cincinnati had stayed his
execution on grounds that the state did not thoroughly investigate
his claim that his behavior was affected by brain damage. An
appellate court overturned the stay earlier in the week, saying a
scan failed to confirm such damage.
Smith was offered a special meal on the evening
before his execution. He chose a large bag of cheese-flavored corn
chips and a soft drink.
March 8, 2005
CINCINNATI -- The man who raped, robbed and
killed her mother 17 years ago was executed Tuesday, bringing up
both horrifying and happy memories for Glenda Bradford. Happy
because Bradford, now a mother of five herself, holds her mother,
Mary, tightly in her heart. "I miss her. She was beautiful to me,"
Bradford said in her only local interview with News 5's Juliette
Vara.
Bradford treasures a small, aged photo, about the
only picture she has of her mother. "The most wonderful person I
ever met, not because she was my mother, but because of her heart.
She has left me with that," Bradford said. Horrifying because of the
circumstances of her mother's death.
On Sunday, Sept. 27, 1987, Bradford was expecting
her mother for dinner when there was a knock on the door. It was the
police with news that her mother had been raped and murdered inside
her Over-the-Rhine apartment. William Smith stabbed Mary Bradford
about 10 times, then raped her as she lay in a pool of blood
bleeding to death.
"I'm trying to live it, to be there, to imagine
how she felt and what was on her mind," Bradford said. But it's too
hard. "It was about what he wanted. He saw money and he saw that he
could have something more," Bradford said. Bradford said Smith has
never made contact with her family or apologized for what he did.
Today, after numerous failed appeals, Smith died
at 10:19 a.m. by lethal injection. Bradford fights back tears, yet
admits Smith's execution will not bring closure or justice. Nothing
ever will. Her nephew planned to drive up to Lucasville to represent
the family at the execution. Bradford didn't go. It wasn't in her
heart.
March 8, 2005
LUCASVILLE — A murderer who said a brain
abnormality may have affected his behavior when he stabbed then
raped a bleeding woman was executed Tuesday after courts decided
tests did not prove brain damage. William H. Smith, 47, died by
injection at 10:19 a.m. at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility
for the death of Mary Bradford, whom he met at a bar in 1987. The
defense did not challenge Smith’s conviction but said a brain lesion
detected after he fainted in prison could have spared him from the
death sentence at his 1988 trial.
In a final statement that lasted four minutes,
Smith took responsibility for the crime and said he had given
himself to the Lord. “I hope you have the capacity to forgive,” he
said, addressing the victim’s grandson, Timmy Bradford, who watched
with his hands clutched in front of his face. “I cannot control
anything from this day. Find the right way. Be a better person than
I was,” Smith said. Smith was upbeat before the execution, visiting
family, chatting about Cincinnati sports with the execution team and
sharing a cherry cake recipe with them, a prisons spokeswoman said.
Smith and Bradford drank together at the bar for
several hours before going to her Cincinnati apartment, where they
used cocaine and had sex, police said. The two argued when Smith
accused Bradford of owing him money for cocaine. Smith, also of
Cincinnati, told police he grabbed a knife away from Bradford, and
she was stabbed during the struggle. Bradford, 47, had 10 stab
wounds in the neck and chest, and Smith had sex with her again as
she lay on her bed bleeding, police said. He then made three trips
to his car to steal her stereo and two television sets, police said.
March 8, 2005
A murderer who said a brain abnormality may have
affected his behavior when he stabbed then raped a bleeding woman
was executed Tuesday after courts decided tests did not prove brain
damage. William H. Smith, 47, died by injection at 10:19 a.m. at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility for the death of Mary Bradford,
whom he met at a bar in 1987.
The defense did not challenge Smith's conviction
but said a brain lesion detected after he fainted in prison could
have spared him from the death sentence at his 1988 trial. In a
final statement that lasted four minutes, Smith took responsibility
for the crime and said he had given himself to the Lord. "I hope you
have the capacity to forgive," he said, addressing the victim's
grandson, Timmy Bradford, who watched with his hands clutched in
front of his face. "I cannot control anything from this day. Find
the right way. Be a better person than I was," Smith said. Smith was
upbeat before the execution, visiting family, chatting about
Cincinnati sports with the execution team and sharing a cherry cake
recipe with them, a prisons spokeswoman said.
Smith and Bradford drank together at the bar for
several hours before going to her Cincinnati apartment, where they
used cocaine and had sex, police said. The two argued when Smith
accused Bradford of owing him money for cocaine. Smith, also of
Cincinnati, told police he grabbed a knife away from Bradford, and
she was stabbed during the struggle. Bradford, 47, had 10 stab
wounds in the neck and chest, and Smith had sex with her again as
she lay on her bed bleeding, police said. He then made three trips
to his car to steal her stereo and two television sets, police said.
State v. Smith Ohio,1991.
Defendant was convicted in the Court of Common
Pleas, Hamilton County, of two counts of aggravated murder and was
sentenced to death. Defendant appealed. The Court of Appeals
affirmed. Appeal was taken. The Supreme Court, Alice Robie Resnick,
J., held that: (1) evidence indicated that defendant's confession
was voluntary; (2) defendant's confession and physical evidence
supported finding that defendant raped, robbed, and murdered victim;
and (3) aggravating circumstances of rape and robbery of helpless
woman in her own home outweighed any mitigating factors in
defendant's upbringing. Affirmed.
On Saturday afternoon, September 26, 1987, Mary
Virginia Bradford, age forty-seven, visited the Race Inn, a
neighborhood bar in Cincinnati, Ohio. While at the Race Inn, she had
several beers and met, talked, and danced with William H. Smith,
appellant, a regular bar patron. She left the Race Inn around 11:45
p.m.
Around 4:00 p.m., on September 27, Marvin Rhodes, Bradford's
boyfriend, stopped by her apartment because he had not seen her
since Friday, September 25. No one answered the doorbell, but Rhodes
found the door unlocked and went in. Rhodes saw blood near the front
door and found Bradford in the bedroom. Feeling her face, he found
no life in her body and called the police.
Responding police officers found Bradford lying
stabbed to death on her bed, nude from the waist down. On the floor,
near her bed, police found a woman's pants and panties, bloodstained
and turned inside out, and, on the bed, an oxygen machine used by
asthmatics. Forensic examination disclosed a .13 percent blood-alcohol
level and revealed sperm in her vagina and on her abdomen.
Near the front door of the apartment, police
found a chair, with a pool of blood in it, and, on the floor, blood
smears including a bare bloody footprint leading to the bedroom. The
apartment was otherwise exceptionally neat and clean, with no signs
of disorder, disarray, or a struggle, and police found no murder
weapon in the apartment. One color television, one black and white
television, and a stack stereo with two speakers were missing from
Bradford's apartment.
Dr. Harry J. Bonnell, Chief Deputy Coroner,
testified that Bradford died as a result of ten stab wounds to her
upper body and consequent loss of blood. She was five feet, three
inches tall, weighed one hundred sixteen pounds, and a portion of
her lungs was missing, which explained her asthmatic condition.
Bonnell numbered the wounds one to ten for descriptive purposes (but
not indicative of the order in which inflicted).
The most lethal
wounds, causing incapacitation within five minutes, were wound eight,
a four-inch wound into Bradford's right lung and heart, and wound
nine, a four-inch wound into the sternum and the heart's right
ventricle. Wound seven, a five-inch puncture into the rib and liver,
and wounds eight and nine all fractured bony structures. Wound two,
four inches in depth, crossed her neck from left to right. Wound ten
punctured the liver and was no more than four inches in depth. Two
wounds, one and five, showed no signs of hemorrhage and thus were
inflicted after death or when the heart was not pumping sufficient
blood. Wounds one, three, four, and six were superficial. Bradford's
body exhibited no other evidence of injury or trauma such as bruises
or defense wounds, and Bonnell observed no twisting motion in the
stab wounds that would indicate a violent struggle. All the wounds
could have been inflicted by the same, single edged knife.
On September 28, 1987 homicide detectives went to
where Smith lived, the home of Bertha Reid, Smith's mother, which
was about four blocks from Bradford's house. When police arrived,
Smith was not at home, and Reid let the officers in. While at Reid's
home, police noticed a television set matching the description of
one of the two sets missing from Bradford's home. Thereafter, police
secured a warrant, found the missing two televisions in Reid's home,
and seized them.
Reid testified that when her son came home around
2:00 a.m. on September 27, he did not act unusual, nor did he appear
to be drunk, high, or upset. However, Smith did carry into Reid's
home the two televisions in question along with a large stereo
system and two speakers. Reid asked where he got the televisions and
stereo, and Smith replied that his girlfriend Carolyn gave them to
him. Reid did not accept her son's explanation, telling him he would
"have to explain to me a little more about what's going on." Later
that morning, Smith and his cousin, Greg, took the stereo and two
speakers away but left the televisions. Reid also showed police
clothing that her son had worn on September 26 and 27, which police
seized. Subsequent forensic analysis revealed that Smith's shirt and
shoes bore traces of human blood.
On September 28, 1987, police apprehended and
took Smith to police headquarters for questioning. After being
advised of his rights, Smith agreed to talk to police. Smith
initially asserted that he had driven Bradford home that night but
had just dropped her off.
He later admitted that he had been in her
apartment but had left when her boyfriend arrived. Smith told police
that he met Bradford at the Race Inn, later drove her and her
girlfriend to another bar, and then drove Bradford home. While at
her house, Smith claimed that someone he thought to be Bradford's
boyfriend arrived, and Smith decided to leave quickly. After Smith
left, he realized that he had left a packet of cocaine, worth
$2,500, at Bradford's house. After he returned, Bradford's boyfriend
and the cocaine were both gone. Smith then talked with Bradford.
* * *
[W]e talked about restitution, you know. She said
she'd give me some of that body. I said okay, it's good enough for
me, you know, but then after I got that [had sex with her] it wasn't
good enough, you know, so I asked her like you got any money and
stuff, you know. She said she ain't have no money. So we start
arguing and stuff and next thing you know she slid over to the
kitchen and got [a] little blade--[small carving knife]." According
to Smith, Bradford was stabbed in the stomach during the ensuing
struggle and fell onto a chair. He removed the knife from her
stomach, and she dragged or walked by herself to the bedroom. He
recalled stabbing her in the neck in the bedroom after she called
him a motherfucker, but he did not admit inflicting the other stab
wounds. When she was lying on the bed, he took her clothes off and
got back on top of her and had sex again. Police asked: "Q. * * * [A]fter
you had sex with her the second time, after she was stabbed, then
what'd you do? "A. I gathered up my things together and started
taking her stuff downstairs. "Q. What'd you take out of there? "A.
Her two TVs and her stereo."
Smith said he made four trips carrying her things
down to his car and that he took her things in order to sell them.
Although Smith initially claimed that he did not know whether
Bradford had stopped breathing, he later admitted he decided to have
sex with her again because "she was still breathing then." He said
that he pulled his penis out as he started to climax and finished
ejaculating on her stomach. He did this because he was thinking
about getting out of the apartment. Smith claimed he threw the knife
into the Ohio River and sold Bradford's stereo in Dayton. However,
police recovered her stereo in Cincinnati. When police interviewed
Smith, they also seized a pair of undershorts from him stained with
blood of the same type as Bradford's.
Smith was indicted on two counts of felony-murder,
count I alleging murder during rape, and count II alleging murder in
the course of aggravated robbery. Each count contained two death
penalty specifications, one alleging aggravated murder during rape
and the other alleging murder during aggravated robbery. Count III
alleged rape and count IV alleged aggravated robbery. Smith pled not
guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity, but he later withdrew
the insanity plea. A panel of three judges convicted Smith as
charged. After a hearing, the panel sentenced Smith to the death
penalty on each murder count. The court of appeals affirmed the
convictions and death penalties. The cause is now before this court
upon an appeal as of right.
ALICE ROBIE RESNICK, Justice.
We have reviewed appellant's sixteen propositions of law,
independently assessed the evidence relating to the death sentences,
balanced the aggravating circumstances against the mitigating
factors, and reviewed the proportionality of the sentences to those
imposed in similar cases. As a result, we affirm the convictions and
sentences of death.
Following murder conviction and imposition of
death sentence, 574 N.E.2d 510, petition was filed for habeas corpus
relief. The United States District Court for the Southern District
of Ohio, S. Arthur Spiegel, Senior District Judge, 104 F.Supp.2d
773, entered order denying petition, and appeal was taken. The Court
of Appeals, Suhrheinrich, Circuit Judge, held that: (1) attorney who
represented capital murder defendant was not ineffective in
allegedly failing to adequately investigate defendant's background
and in allegedly presenting less than full and accurate mitigation
evidence; (2) indigent capital murder defendant did not have right
to any psychiatric assistance at sentencing, let alone to
independent expert assistance, after he withdrew his insanity
defense; (3) appellate counsel was not ineffective for failing to
raise certain alleged errors; (4) even assuming that it was error
for state trial court to impose two death sentences for single
homicide, error was not prejudicial; (5) defendant failed to show
that ad hoc policies adopted by county prosecutor's office reflected
any racial bias in charging and prosecuting capital offenses; (6)
victim impact evidence did not so infect trial of capital murder
case as to render it fundamentally unfair, or to warrant habeas
relief; (7) defendant's waiver of right to jury trial was voluntary
and knowing; (8) alleged unreliability of Ohio's capital sentencing
procedures, in requiring defendant to prove the existence of
mitigating circumstances by preponderance of evidence, did not rise
to level of Constitutional violation; and (9) defendant was
procedurally barred from claiming that African-Americans were
underrepresented in county's grand jury pool. Affirmed. Cole,
Circuit Judge, concurred in part and dissented in part and filed
opinion.
SUHRHEINRICH, J., delivered the opinion of the
court, in which BATCHELDER, J., joined. COLE, J. (pp. 215-218),
delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
SUHRHEINRICH, Circuit Judge.
In April 1988, a unanimous three-judge panel of the Court of Common
Pleas, Hamilton County, sentenced William H. Smith ("Smith" or "Petitioner")
to death for the aggravated murder of Mary Bradford. The Ohio state
courts denied all of Smith's claims for relief, as did the federal
district court on habeas. Smith now appeals from the judgment of the
district court denying his application for writ of habeas corpus
under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging both his conviction and sentence.
The principal issue on appeal is whether trial counsel were
ineffective for failing to present mitigating evidence at sentencing.
For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district
court.
I. Background
A. Facts
The following facts are taken from the Ohio
Supreme Court's opinion on direct appeal.
On Saturday afternoon, September 26, 1987, Mary Virginia Bradford,
age forty-seven, visited the Race Inn, a neighborhood bar in
Cincinnati, Ohio. While at the Race Inn, she had several beers and
met, talked, and danced with William H. Smith, appellant, a regular
bar patron. She left the Race Inn around 11:45 p.m.
Around 4:00
p.m., on September 27, Marvin Rhodes, Bradford's boyfriend, stopped
by her apartment because he had not seen her since Friday, September
25. No one answered the doorbell, but Rhodes saw blood near the
front door and found Bradford in the bedroom. Feeling her face, he
found no life in her body and called the police.
Responding police officers found Bradford lying
stabbed to death on her bed, nude from the waist down. On the floor,
near her bed, police found a woman's pants and panties, bloodstained
and turned inside out, and, on the bed, an oxygen machine used by
asthmatics. Forensic examination disclosed a .13 blood-alcohol level
and revealed sperm in her vagina and on her abdomen. Near the front
door of the apartment, police found a chair, with a pool of blood on
it, and, on the floor, blood smears including a bare bloody
footprint leading to the bedroom.
The apartment was otherwise
exceptionally neat and clean, with no signs of disorder, disarray,
or a struggle, and police found no murder weapon in the apartment.
One color television, one black and white television, and a stack
stereo with two speakers were missing from Bradford's apartment.
Dr.
Harry J. Bonnell, Chief Deputy Coroner, testified that Bradford died
as a result of ten stab wounds to her upper body and consequent loss
of blood. She was five feet, three inches tall, weighed one hundred
sixteen pounds, and a portion of her lungs was missing, which
explained her asthmatic condition. Bonnell numbered the wounds from
one to ten for descriptive purposes (but not indicative of the order
in which inflicted).
The most lethal wounds, causing incapacitation
within five minutes, were wound eight, a four-inch wound into
Bradford's right lung and heart, and wound nine, a four-inch wound
into the sternum and the heart's right ventricle. Wound seven, a
five-inch puncture into the rib and liver, and wounds eight and nine
all fractured bony structures. Wound two, four inches in depth,
crossed her neck from left to right. Wound ten punctured the liver
and was no more than four inches in depth. Two wounds, one and five,
showed no signs of hemorrhage and thus were inflicted after death or
when the heart was not pumping sufficient blood. Wounds one, three,
four, and six were superficial. Bradford's body exhibited no other
evidence of injury or trauma such as bruises or defense wounds that
would indicate a violent struggle. All the wounds could have been
inflicted by the same, single edged knife.
On September 28, 1987 homicide detectives went to
where Smith lived, the home of Bertha Reid, Smith's mother, which
was about four blocks from Bradford's house. When police arrived,
Smith was not at home, and Reid let the officers in. While at Reid's
home, police noticed a television set matching the description of
one of the two sets missing from Bradford's home. Thereafter, police
secured a warrant, found the missing two televisions in Reid's home,
and seized them.
Reid testified that when her son came home around
2:00 a.m. on September 27, he did not act unusual, nor did he appear
to be drunk, high, or upset. However, Smith did carry into Reid's
home the two television sets in question along with a large stereo
system and two speakers. Reid asked where he got the televisions and
stereo, and Smith replied that his girlfriend Carolyn gave them to
him. Reid did not accept her son's explanation, telling him he would
"have to explain to me a little more about what's going on." Later
that morning, Smith and his cousin, Greg took the stereo and two
speakers away but left the televisions. Reid also showed police
clothing that her son had worn and September 26 and 27, which police
seized. Subsequent forensic analysis revealed that Smith's shirt and
shoes bore traces of human blood.
On September 28, 1987, police apprehended and
took Smith to police headquarters for questioning. After being
advised of his rights, Smith agreed to talk to police. Smith
initially asserted that he had driven Bradford home that night but
had just dropped her off. He later admitted that he had been in her
apartment but had left when her boyfriend arrived. Smith told police
that he met Bradford at the Race Inn, later drove her and her
girlfriend to another bar, and then drove Bradford home. While at
her house, Smith claimed that someone he thought to be Bradford's
boyfriend arrived, and Smith decided to leave quickly. After Smith
left, he realized that he had left a packet of cocaine, worth
$2,500, at Bradford's house. After he returned, Bradford's boyfriend
and the cocaine were both gone. Smith then talked with Bradford.
* * *
[W]e talked about restitution, you know. She said
she'd give me some of that body. I said okay, it's good enough for
me, you know, but then after I got that [had sex with her] it wasn't
good enough, you know, so I asked her like you got any money and
stuff, you know. She said she ain't have no money. So we start
arguing and next thing you know she slid over to the kitchen and got
[a] little blade--[small carving knife]." According to Smith,
Bradford was stabbed in the stomach during the ensuing struggle and
fell onto a chair. He removed the knife from her stomach, and she
dragged or walked by herself to the bedroom. He recalled stabbing
her in the neck in the bedroom after she called him a motherfucker,
but he did not admit inflicting the other stab wounds. When she was
lying on the bed, he took her clothes off and got back on top of her
and had sex again. Police asked: "Q. * * * [A]fter you had sex with
her the second time, after she was stabbed, then what'd you do? "A.
I gathered up my things together and started taking her stuff
downstairs. "Q. What'd you take out of there? "A. Her two TVs and
her stereo."
Smith said he made four trips carrying her things
down to his car and that he took her things in order to sell them.
Although Smith initially claimed that he did not know whether
Bradford had stopped breathing, he later admitted he decided to have
sex with her again because "she was still breathing then." He said
that he pulled his penis out as he started to climax and finished
ejaculating on her stomach. He did this because he was thinking
about getting out of the apartment. Smith claimed he threw the knife
into the Ohio River and sold Bradford's stereo in Dayton. However,
police recovered her stereo in Cincinnati. When police interviewed
Smith, they also seized a pair of undershorts from him stained with
blood of the same type as Bradford's. State v. Smith, 61 Ohio St.3d
284, 574 N.E.2d 510, 512-14 (Ohio 1991).
B. Trial Proceedings
Smith was indicted on October 21, 1987, on two
counts of aggravated murder, pursuant to Ohio Rev.Code § 2903.01(B)
(Counts I & II), and one count of rape (Count III), and one count of
aggravated robbery (Count IV). Counts I and II each contained two
death penalty specifications, one alleging aggravated murder during
rape and the other alleging murder during aggravated robbery. Smith
initially entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity as to
all charges. [FN1]
As a result, the trial court ordered that Smith
be evaluated with respect to his mental state at the time of the
alleged offense. Smith was evaluated by three experts, Nancy
Schmidtgoessling, Ph.D, a clinical psychologist of the Court
Psychiatric Center, Roger H. Fisher, Ph.D, a clinical psychologist,
and Glenn Weaver, M.D., a psychiatrist. Dr. Schmidtgoessling
evaluated Smith on November 27, 1987, and on December 12, 1987. On
December 14, 1987, Dr. Schmidtgoessling filed a report with the
court, in which she concluded that Smith currently showed no sign of
major psychological disorder and that he was sane at the time of the
alleged offense.
* * *
IV. Conclusion
Having completed our
responsibility "to ensure that Petitioner's conviction and death
sentence comport with the requirements of our Constitution," Byrd,
209 F.3d at 540, we hereby AFFIRM the judgment of the district court
denying the petition for writ of habeas corpus.