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Joseph L.
TRUEBLOOD
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Parricide - Revenge
Number of victims: 3
Date of murder:
August 15,
1988
Date of birth:
December 26,
1956
Victims profile: Susan Bowsher Hughes, 23
(his ex-girlfriend); Ashlyn Bowsher, 2 and William Bowsher, 17
months (children of Susan)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Tippecanoe County, Indiana, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Indiana on June 12,
2003
Summary:
Trueblood was upset with his former girlfriend, Susan Bowsher,
because she expressed her intention of going back with her ex-husband.
Trueblood picked up Susan and her two small children one day and
while they were in the car he shot Susan 3 times in the head, and
shot each child once in the head.
He then drove to the home of his twin brother, admitted to him what
he had done, borrowed a shovel, then drove to a secluded area and
buried all three in a shallow grave. After 4 witnesses had testified
at trial, Trueblood indicated a desire to plead guilty and did so.
When interviewed by the Probation Officer for the Presentence Report,
Trueblood claimed that Susan had shot the kids, then killed herself.
He then sought to withdraw his guilty plea, which was denied.
Citations:
Direct Appeal: Trueblood v. State, 587 N.E.2d 105 (Ind. February 28, 1992).
Conviction Affirmed 5-0 DP Affirmed 5-0
Shepard Opinion; Debruler, Givan, Dickson, Krahulik concur.
Trueblood v. Indiana, 113 S. Ct. 278 (1992) (Cert. denied).
PCR:
05-09-94 PCR filed; Denied 08-12-96. Trueblood v. State, 715 N.E. 2d 1242 (Ind. September 9, 1999).
Habeas: Trueblood v. Anderson, 156 F.Supp.2d 1056 (N.D.Ind. 2001).
Trueblood v. Davis, 301 F.3d 784 (7th Cir. 2002).
Final Meal:
Trueblood refused a special last meal. "This is the way I'm
protesting what the state is getting ready to do." Instead, he was
given the same dinner as other inmates: a bologna sandwich, a cheese
sandwich, cookies and fruit.
Final Words:
In a final statement, Trueblood reiterated his innocence, asserting
that Bowsher had killed herself and her children and that his
attorneys had told him that pleading guilty was the best way to
avoid the death penalty. "That's the only reason I pleaded guilty,"
he said, in a statement given through attorney John Sommers. "If I
had been given a lie detector test, it would have proven I was
telling the truth."
ClarkProsecutor.org
TRUEBLOOD, JOSEPH
L. # 64
EXECUTED BY LETHAL INJECTION 06-13-03
AT 12:24 AM
DOB: 12-26-1956
DOC#: 902302 White Male
Tippecanoe County Circuit Court Judge Ronald E. Melichar
Prosecutor: Jerry Bean, John
Meyers
Defense: George Wilder, Thomas
O'Brien, Michael O'Reilly
Date of Murder: August 15, 1988
Victim(s): Susan Bowsher W/F/23
(ex-girlfriend); Ashlyn Bowsher W/F/2 and William Bowsher W/M/17
months (children of Susan)
Method of Murder: shooting with
handgun
Summary: Trueblood was upset
with his former girlfriend, Susan Bowsher, because she expressed her
intention of going back with her ex-husband.
Trueblood picked up Susan and her two small
children one day and while they were in the car he shot Susan 3
times in the head, and shot each child once in the head.
He then drove to the home of his twin brother,
admitted to him what he had done, borrowed a shovel, then drove to a
secluded area and buried all three in a shallow grave. After 4
witnesses had testified at trial, Trueblood indicated a desire to
plead guilty and did so.
When interviewed by the Probation Officer for the
Presentence Report, Trueblood claimed that Susan had shot the kids,
then killed herself. He then sought to withdraw his guilty plea,
which was denied.
Conviction: Pled Guilty during
trial without a Plea Agreement to Murder (3 counts) (Motion to
withdraw guilty plea before sentencing was denied)
Sentencing: April 12, 1990 (Death Sentence)
Aggravating Circumstances: b(12)
2 victims less than 12 years of age; b(8) 3 murders
Mitigating Circumstances:
extreme emotional disturbance; good conduct while in jail awaiting
trial; mixed personality disorder; kind to children; heroism for
pulling woman from burning building.
Joseph Trueblood Put to Death
Relatives of Ex-Girlfriend,
2 Children Waited for Call, Closure
By Shannon Tan - Indianapolis Star
June 13, 2003
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -- Joseph L. Trueblood, who
shot and killed a woman and her two children 15 years ago, was
executed by lethal injection at 12:24 a.m. today at the Indiana
State Prison. Trueblood, 46, Lafayette, was convicted in the fatal
shootings on Aug. 15, 1988 of Susan Bowsher, 22, and her children
Ashelyn, 2, and William, 1.
In Lafayette Thursday, relatives of those victims
gathered to await a phone call from a prison official confirming the
death sentence had been carried out. "At least I can give my sister
and her children some peace," said Paul Bowsher Jr., Susan Bowsher's
brother. "I think after it's all said and done, I think we want to
be left alone."
Gov. Frank O'Bannon denied Trueblood's clemency
petition on Wednesday. Trueblood had asked that his death sentence
be commuted to life in prison. And less than 10 hours before he was
scheduled to be executed, the Indiana Supreme Court again refused to
spare him.
Trueblood had argued that O'Bannon didn't follow proper
procedures in the clemency by not considering certain evidence. But
in its unanimous denial, the justices disagreed. "The exclusive
power to grant clemency rests with the governor," Chief Justice
Randall T. Shepard wrote. About 8 p.m. Thursday, the U.S. Supreme
Court also denied a stay of execution.
Trueblood visited with family members and friends
Thursday but did not ask them to witness his execution. His
attorneys -- John Sommer, Kathleen Cleary and Chris Hitz-Bradley --
and a Catholic priest, Rev. Thomas McNally, were going to witness
his execution. Trueblood refused a special last meal. "This is the
way I'm protesting what the state is getting ready to do," he said
Tuesday.
Among those he met with on his last day was Katie
Pawski, 25, a University of Notre Dame graduate who got to know
Trueblood through a priest while she attended college. Pawski said
she and Trueblood ate candy, soft drinks and chips from a vending
machine and prayed together.
Beverly Miller, 56, who also visits
Death Row inmates, has known Trueblood for 12 years. She said
Thursday that "he believes he will be in heaven with Susan and (the)
children."
Trueblood also is battling the Department of
Correction to prevent an autopsy. A LaPorte County judge on Thursday
granted a temporary restraining order preventing the department from
conducting an autopsy, according to Trueblood's attorneys. A hearing
will be held at 1 p.m. today to decide whether the autopsy will take
place. "I don't want my body desecrated in any way," Trueblood said.
"Once they murder me, they no longer have any authority over me."
Trueblood said at the news conference his family was claiming the
body and he would be buried near Lafayette.
Death penalty opponents gathered outside the
governor's mansion in Indianapolis and outside the Indiana State
Prison Thursday night. At the governor's residence at 46th and
Meridian streets, about 25 protesters gathered -- even though
O'Bannon isn't there. He has moved out while the mansion is
renovated. Holding an "Execution is Murder" sign, bookseller Diane
Plantenga said: "I think it is ridiculous to kill to teach that
killing is wrong."
Some drivers in passing cars honked their horns
in apparent support; one man in a passing car yelled "Kill 'em all!"
"I wanted to be out here and show my face against people like that,"
said Abbey Hambright. When demonstrator Jennifer Cobb got too close
to the curb, she was clipped in the elbow by a passing vehicle's
side mirror. The impact tore the mirror from the vehicle -- which
didn't stop -- but Cobb wasn't hurt and didn't leave, though an
ambulance was called to check her out.
Up in Michigan City, as the hour of execution
neared, the 15 death penalty opponents gathered outside the prison
gates began chanting the Lord's Prayer, as Trueblood had requested.
They included Marvin B. Hayes, who said he was a retired
correctional officer who had worked on Death Row. "I'm pro-life," he
said. "When I say that, many people misinterpret it. I'm against
abortion -- but I'm also against this." About half a dozen death-penalty
supporters also were there, including four who live nearby. Mark
Hamner had a longer trip; he drove up from Indianapolis. "People in
Indiana support the death penalty," Hamner said. "There are some
crimes that deserve the harshest penalty."
Trueblood's attorneys argued that Trueblood -- a
Lafayette taxi driver who had an abusive childhood -- had suffered
brain damage from several strokes. They also cited his heroism in
saving a woman from a burning building.
Trueblood also claims when
he pleaded guilty to the children's murders, his trial attorney told
him he had a plea bargain and would not be sentenced to death.
Trueblood maintains that Bowsher, who was suicidal, shot her
children before shooting herself. Trueblood said he then fired the
final shot out of compassion. Prosecutors, however, said Trueblood
was upset that Bowsher, with whom he had been living, was planning
on returning to her ex-husband.
Condemned Can Make Big Deal Out of Last Meal
By Abbie VanSickle -
Indianapolis Star
June 13, 2003
State gives inmates choice of anything but
alcohol from selected restaurant menus.
When Joseph L. Trueblood skipped the ritual of a
final meal to protest his execution, he passed up the chance to have
almost anything he wanted on the public's tab. Condemned Indiana
inmates have asked for -- and gotten -- everything from steak to
Brussels sprouts, and taxpayers have spent as much as $150 to meet
their requests.
Prisoners can have about whatever they want from the
menus of four restaurants in Michigan City, where Indiana has its
Death Row. The restaurants serve hearty meat-and-potatoes fare, said
prison spokesman Barry Nothstine. The only thing banned is alcohol.
Of the 38 states that have the death penalty,
most offer some type of last meal a few days before the execution,
said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty
Information Center in Washington, D.C. He said an exact count is
difficult because it is an informal ritual for many Death Rows. In
Indiana, a condemned prisoner's last meal is actually served two
days before the execution.
Nothstine said the prison changed the
meal's timing in 1995 because many inmates told officials they
weren't hungry in the 24 hours before their death. So inmates eat
regular prison fare the day they die. Trueblood was served a bologna
sandwich, a cheese sandwich, cookies, crackers, fruit and Kool-Aid.
Offering special meals well before executions may
be more humane, said Fordham University law Professor Deborah Denno,
an expert on the use of lethal injections. Denno said the tradition
of giving prisoners a large, heavy meal as little as six to eight
hours before lethal injection raises the chance the inmate will
choke or gag when the first of three chemicals, sodium thiopental,
an anesthetic agent, is injected.
As for the popularity of items such as "Last Meal,"
a new coffee table book on the final dining of executed prisoners,
or the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Web posting that lists
inmates and their last meals -- all the way back to 1982 -- Denno
credits the natural human interest in death. "I think it appeals to
our ghoulish instincts, and we're a rather violent country," she
said. "Plus, death is something we all share. I think people are
always fascinated with something like that that we fear."
Other last meals in Indiana:
Joseph Trueblood refused the option of a special
meal before his scheduled execution. In recent years, three other
inmates also have declined to make any special requests -- Tommie J.
Smith (1996), James Lowery (2001) and Kevin Hough (2003).
But many Indiana Death Row inmates have had
elaborate meal plans:
• Steven T. Judy, executed March 9, 1981, ordered
prime ribs and lobster.
• William Vandiver, executed Oct. 16, 1985,
ordered a soda and a pizza with everything -- except anchovies.
• Gary Burris, executed Nov. 20, 1997, ordered
steak and lobster, a baked potato, a salad with Thousand Island and
bleu cheese dressing, and cheesecake. He also drank two espressos.
• Robert A. Smith, executed Jan. 29, 1998,
ordered steak, lobster, shrimp cocktail, chicken livers, fried
eggplant, meatballs, salad with bleu cheese dressing, a loaf of
bread, an entire Boston cream pie and three cans of Dr Pepper.
• Gerald W. Bivins, executed March 14, 2001, ate
German ravioli and chicken and dumplings prepared by his mother.
State Executes Trueblood for Triple Murder
By
Ryan Lenz - South Bend Tribune
AP - June 13, 2003
MICHIGAN CITY— A convicted murderer executed by
injection for the 1988 shooting deaths of his girlfriend and her two
children had asked the state not to perform an autopsy on his body.
Speaking outside the Indiana State Prison following the execution
early Friday morning, Joseph Trueblood's attorneys said the state
should turn Trueblood's body over to his family. "Joe's sentence was
death. The state of Indiana has carried out its sentence, it has
killed Joe," said Christopher Hitz-Bradley, one of three attorneys
who witnessed the execution. "One of the things he was absolutely
adamant about was that no autopsy be done on him."
A LaPorte Superior Court judge issued a temporary
restraining order Thursday barring the state from conducting an
autopsy on Trueblood. A final ruling was expected Friday. Prison
spokesman Barry Nothstine said he could not remember a death row
inmate ever fighting an autopsy in his 16 years with the prison.
Officials at the Indiana State Prison pronounced
Trueblood dead at 12:24 a.m., about four hours after his final court
appeal was rejected.
Trueblood, 46, of Lafayette, was convicted of
the shooting deaths of Susan Bowsher of Lafayette and her children,
2-year-old Ashelyn Hughes and 1-year-old William E. Bowsher. Though
he had a television and telephone to use, prison officials said
Trueblood spent his final hours visiting with family and friends.
They said he made no telephone calls. Trueblood also rejected a last
meal.
The U.S. Supreme Court, which had refused to
reconsider Trueblood's case, denied a stay of execution about 8 p.m.
Thursday. Gov. Frank O'Bannon denied his clemency request Wednesday.
About 20 anti-death penalty protesters gathered
outside the prison gates hours before the execution for a
candlelight vigil, carrying signs with such slogans as "They lie and
the poor die."
Among them was Kevin Noringer, 50, a steel worker
from Michigan City. He sat outside the prison holding a candle hours
before the execution. "I'm sorry that the community that I live in
does this," Noringer said. "To me this is just as barbaric as the
original crime." Two death penalty supporters — off-duty police
officers from Indianapolis — also stood outside the gates. "I think
his crime definitely fits the criteria for the death penalty. And
there's no question that by far the majority of Hoosiers support the
death penalty," said Mark Hamner, 36. "We are standing up for the
victims who can no longer speak for themselves."
According to court testimony, Trueblood became
enraged in 1988 after learning Bowsher planned to leave him and
return to her ex-husband. He shot Bowsher and her two children and
buried their bodies in shallow graves in rural Fountain County in
western Indiana.
Trueblood, the 11th person put to death by the
state since it resumed executions in 1981 after 20 years without any,
had said he killed Bowsher, but claimed in his appeals that she had
killed the children. The victims' family was not present for the
execution. Indiana law does not allow anyone to view an execution
without the condemned inmate's consent.
Indiana Executes Man for Shooting His
Girlfriend, Children
CNN Law Center
AP - June 13, 2003
MICHIGAN CITY, Indiana (AP) -- An Indiana man was
executed by lethal injection early Friday for the 1988 shooting
deaths of his girlfriend and her two children.
Officials at the
Indiana State Prison pronounced Joseph Trueblood dead at 12:24 a.m.,
about four hours after his final court appeal was rejected.
Trueblood, 46, was convicted in the murders of Susan Bowsher of
Lafayette and her children, 2-year-old Ashelyn Hughes and 1-year-old
William E. Bowsher.
Trueblood rejected the prison's customary
practice of conducting an autopsy on executed inmates. A LaPorte
Superior Court judge issued a temporary restraining order Thursday
barring the state from conducting an autopsy and was expected to
issue a final ruling Friday. Trueblood's attorney Don Pagos said
there was no point in an autopsy since the cause of death would be
known. Prison spokesman Barry Nothstine said he could not remember a
death row inmate ever fighting an autopsy in his 16 years with the
prison.
According to court testimony, Trueblood became
enraged in 1988 after learning Bowsher planned to leave him and
return to her ex-husband. He shot Bowsher and her two children and
buried their bodies in shallow graves in rural Fountain County in
western Indiana. Trueblood told the parole board last month that he
was driving with Bowsher and her children on a rural road outside
Lafayette when she pulled out a handgun and shot Ashelyn.
He said he tried to wrestle the gun from Bowsher
with one hand as he drove with the other. The gun went off twice
more, with the second shot hitting William in the head. He said
Bowsher then shot herself twice and that she was wounded so badly he
fatally shot her in an act of mercy.
Trueblood was the 11th person put to death by the
state since it resumed executions in 1981 after 20 years without any.
Indiana Executes Triple Murderer
Reuters News
June 13, 2003
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. - The state of Indiana
executed a man on Friday who killed his girlfriend, her two-year-old
daughter and one-year-old son. Joseph Trueblood, 46, was pronounced
dead at 1:24 a.m. EDT following a lethal injection, said officials
at the Indiana State Prison.
His was the 858th execution since the United
States resumed capital punishment in 1976, the 38th so far this year
and the second in Indiana in six weeks.
Trueblood pleaded guilty to the 1988 shooting
deaths of Susan Bowsher, 22, and her two children. Police said he
had been dating Bowsher but became enraged and shot all three when
she told him she planned to reconcile with her ex-husband. He made a
number of appeals over the years, saying Bowsher actually shot the
children and herself in an act of suicide.
In a final statement, Trueblood reiterated his
innocence, asserting that Bowsher had killed herself and her
children and that his attorneys had told him that pleading guilty
was the best way to avoid the death penalty. "That's the only reason
I pleaded guilty," he said, in a statement given through attorney
John Sommers. "If I had been given a lie detector test, it would
have proven I was telling the truth."
Trueblood had not requested a special final meal
but was given the same dinner as other inmates: a bologna sandwich,
a cheese sandwich, cookies and fruit. Indiana Gov. Frank O'Bannon
rejected his final plea for clemency, saying Trueblood had presented
no new evidence of innocence.
There has been a renewed debate over capital
punishment in the United States, which is alone among western
democracies in still carrying it out. It was prompted by the former
governor of Illinois, George Ryan, who put a hold on all executions
in that state and them emptied the state's death row pending a
reform of laws designed to protect the innocent.
ProDeathPenalty.com
Joseph Trueblood was upset with his former
girlfriend, Susan Bowsher, because she expressed her intention of
going back to her ex-husband. Trueblood picked up Susan and her two
small children one day and while they were in the car he shot Susan
3 times in the head, and shot each child once in the head.
He then
drove to the home of his twin brother, admitted to him what he had
done, borrowed a shovel, then drove to a secluded area and buried
all three in a shallow grave. After 4 witnesses had testified at
trial,
Trueblood indicated a desire to plead guilty and did so. When
interviewed by the Probation Officer for the Presentence Report,
Trueblood claimed that Susan had shot the kids, then killed herself.
He then sought to withdraw his guilty plea, which was denied.
UPDATE: In Michigan City, prison officials
executed Lafayette taxi driver Joseph Trueblood early today for the
shooting deaths of his ex-girlfriend and her 2 children. Trueblood,
46, was moved into a holding cell at the Indiana State Prison
Thursday night.
Shortly after midnight, he was placed on a gurney
and rolled to the white-painted execution chamber, where prison
officials administered a lethal dose of drugs via intravenous feeds
in each arm. Prison officials pronounced Trueblood dead at 12:24
a.m.
The U.S. Supreme Court denied a stay of execution
for Trueblood about 8 p.m. Thursday. The court had refused without
comment to reconsider the case earlier this week, and Gov. Frank
O'Bannon on Wednesday rejected his clemency request.
Earlier this
week, Trueblood told reporters he did not intend to cooperate with
authorities in his death. He rejected the traditional last meal and
said he did not want his body to be autopsied. A LaPorte Superior
Court judge on Thursday issued a temporary restraining order
preventing an autopsy by the state Department of Correction
following Trueblood's execution. Don Pagos, a Michigan City attorney
representing Trueblood, argued there was no point in an autopsy
since the cause of death would be known. A final ruling was expected
Friday.
Trueblood said he did not want any of his family
members to witness his execution. His witnesses were to be his 3
appeals lawyers and the Rev. Thomas McNally, a Roman Catholic priest.
McNally and family members were among Trueblood's visitors during
his last full day on death row. Another visitor was Katie Pawski of
Chicago, a 25-year-old University of Notre Dame graduate who
addressed about 20 anti-death penalty protesters outside the prison
gates Thursday night. "He's a human being with humanity and
compassion," said Pawski, who met Trueblood while doing prison
outreach while attending Notre Dame. "Nobody deserves to die.
Killing creates more victims," she said.
Trueblood, 46, was condemned for the 1988 murders
of Susan Bowsher of Lafayette and her children, 2-year-old Ashelyn
Hughes and 1-year-old William E. Bowsher. Prosecutors said he shot
the woman and children to death after learning that she intended to
return to her ex-husband. Trueblood said the deaths resulted from a
suicide attempt by Susan Bowsher.
Trueblood told the parole board
last month that he, Bowsher and her children were driving on a rural
road outside Lafayette when she pulled out a handgun and shot
Ashelyn. He described Bowsher as suicidal. He said he tried to
wrestle the gun from Bowsher with one hand as he drove with the
other. The gun went off twice more, with the 2nd shot hitting
William in the head. He said Bowsher then shot herself twice and
that she was wounded so badly he fatally shot her in an act of mercy.
The parole board chairman, however, called Trueblood's account "wholly
improbable." Relatives and friends of Bowsher have called his story
a lie and asked for the execution to be carried out.
TheDeathHouse.com
Trueblood is scheduled for execution June 13 for
the murders of his girlfriend and her two children, ages 2 and 1.
The murders occurred in 1988. His lawyers now appear to be mounting
a mental retardation defense. Trueblood, 46, had pleaded guilty to
the murders. The victims were Susan Bowsher Hughes, 22, and her two
children, Ashelyn, 2, and William, 1.
The murders occurred in
Tippecanoe County. Court documents stated that on Aug. 15, 1988,
Trueblood picked up Hughes and her two children, shot them each in
the head and borrowed a shovel from his twin brother to bury them in
a rural area outside of Lafayette. His twin brother later testified
against him in court, saying he had confessed to murdering the woman
and two children.
The motive for the murders appeared to be Hughes
decision to return to her ex-husband. Trueblood once claimed he shot
Hughes - at her request- after she had killed the children. But
later, he admitted the killings in court. On Oct. 6, 1988, he
pleaded guilty to the murder of Susan Hughes.
In February 1990,
following two days of trial, Trueblood decided to plead guilty to
the murders of the two children. he was sentenced to death in all
three cases by a judge. Throughout his appeals, defense lawyers for
Trueblood claim his trial attorney should not have allowed him to
plead guilty, saying he has mental problems. After his initial
guilty pleas, Trueblood later tried to withdraw them, but has been
denied by the courts.
Despite the guilty pleas, a federal judge in 2001
had overturned the death sentences for the murders of the children
and even Trueblood’s conviction for murdering Hughes. The judge
contended that Trueblood didn’t understand that by admitting to the
murders, he could be sentenced to death. However, a federal appeals
court alter overturned that ruling-putting Trueblood back on track
for the death house.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Joseph Trueblood, Indiana - June 13, 2003
The state of Indiana is scheduled to execute
Joseph Trueblood May 13 for the murders of Susan Bowsher Hughes and
her two children, Ashelyn and William, in Tippecanoe County.
Trueblood, a white man, allegedly shot them each in the head on Aug.
15, 1988. He pled guilty to the murders, and in 1990, a judge
sentenced him death. On May 28, the Indiana Parole Board voted
against a clemency recommendation.
Trueblood has argued throughout the years that
his trial judge failed to properly weigh the mitigating evidence in
his case. Records indicate that he was depressed and possibly
suicidal at the time of the crime, and that his mixed personality
disorder impacted his judgment. A mental health therapist testified
that Trueblood suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as a
result of his abusive childhood, and other experts noted his anti-social
personality traits. A forensic social worker also pointed to his
exceptionally poor educational background as another mitigating
factor.
The court also failed to give adequate
consideration to the fact that Trueblood had saved a woman’s life by
pulling her out of a fire. This, along with his commendable record
as a prison inmate, shows his humanity and compassion, which all too
often fall by the wayside in the death penalty process.
Although the U.S. Supreme Court banned the
execution of people with mental retardation in 2002, the states have
a long way to go in terms of dealing with mental retardation and
mental health in the criminal justice system. The mitigating
evidence in Trueblood’s case reveals a man damaged by an abusive
upbringing and plagued by struggles with mental illness; executing
such a person clearly constitutes a despicable human rights
violation.
Trueblood has also argued that his defense
counsel failed to present all the available mitigating evidence at
his trial, which could have helped him avoid a death sentence.
Indiana has executed one person – Kevin Hough – in 2003; Hough also
had a very strong ineffective assistance claim.
Gov. Frank O’Bannon is a staunch proponent of the
death penalty, and the Indiana Parole Board is equally merciless.
However, sooner or later the state of Indiana must face the fact
that the death penalty is an inadequate solution to the cycles of
abuse and violence in society, and that fundamental flaws plague the
fairness of the system. Please write Gov. O’Bannon and urge him to
ask the board to reconsider its decision in Joseph Trueblood’s case
and re-evaluate Indiana’s death penalty system.
Slayings, execution cast long shadow; Family
members and authorities await closure
By Shannon Tan - Indianapolis Star
June 12, 2003
Susan Bowsher now lies in a Lafayette cemetery
with her two children. Even in death, she still cradles 1-year-old
Billy, and the arms of Ashelyn, 2, wrap her in an undying hug. The
three rest in the same pose that their killer, Joseph Trueblood,
left them in 15 years ago when he buried them in a Fountain County
woods.
Shortly after midnight, Trueblood is scheduled to die for the
murders of his ex-girlfriend and her two children. His execution
will be Indiana's second in six weeks, and the 11th in Indiana since
the death penalty was reinstated in 1977. On Wednesday, Gov. Frank
O'Bannon denied Trueblood's request for clemency.
Those affected by the crime describe an
excruciating wait that has lasted more than a decade, leaving a
haunting trail that will remain even after Trueblood's death. For
the Bowsher family, his execution puts an end to years of appeals.
Finally, Trueblood will breathe no more. Carolyn "Sue" Bowsher,
Susan's mother, doesn't plan on going to Michigan City for the
execution. She'll stay at home and wait for a phone call from prison
officials. "At least my babies will be put to rest then," she said.
For Trueblood's family, the pain has only begun.
The brother
Each year, when Paul E. Bowsher Jr.'s August
birthday rolls by, he remembers his 22-year-old sister's death: Aug.
15, 1988. Almost every day, he stops by her grave. He's kept her
hope chest filled with the children's toys, pillows embroidered with
their birthdates and an unfinished stitching of their family tree.
He wishes his daughter could have met his niece and nephew. The only
way he thinks he could expect closure would be to watch Trueblood
die.
During court hearings, he wanted to snatch Trueblood, 46, out
of the courtroom and make him suffer, too. "He should have been put
to death within a year," the Lafayette assistant restaurant manager
said. "For 15 years, you're getting free room, board, free clothing.
Hell, we're the ones supporting you."
The ex-husband
For 15 years, Robert Hughes has seen Trueblood's
face in his worst dreams. "I still have nightmares he might escape
from prison," he said, "or if they go give him chemicals that kill
him, it might not work." After losing his children and the woman he
was going to remarry, Hughes spent seven or eight months in a
Lafayette mental hospital.
For the past decade, the Lafayette truck
driver has avoided talking publicly about the murders. He's angry
that Trueblood claims Bowsher shot the children and that he finished
her off as an act of mercy. "You made a mistake in life," he wants
to tell Trueblood. "It's time to take responsibility for what you've
done." Trueblood's family lived down the street from Bowsher.
Trueblood had stalked her since she was 15, said Hughes, who
remembers Trueblood following them on dates. The two married after
Ashelyn was born but divorced when Billy was a few months old. She
planned on remarrying Hughes, he said, and they were going to leave
Indiana to escape Trueblood. Then Trueblood killed Bowsher and the
kids.
The detective
Jim Withers left police work 13 years ago but
still remembers the killings like they happened last night.
Trueblood's sister-in-law had shown up to work the morning after the
murders and claimed Trueblood had killed three people. After burying
the bodies, she told police, he showered at his twin brother's home
before returning to rebury the bodies -- this time deeper in the
woods.
Withers, then a Lafayette police captain, cornered Trueblood
on a dead-end street. "His car was full of blood from one end to the
other," Withers said. "It was so bloody he cut out the fabric
portion of the seats where the blood had soaked in."
Trueblood first
agreed to show Withers the bodies but took him beyond the wooded
burial site and then asked for an attorney, without revealing the
grave. The next day -- three days after the slayings -- police found
the bodies by spotting flies and signs of digging.
Autopsies showed
Bowsher was shot three times, and her children were each shot once.
On the night of the murders, witnesses had seen Trueblood burning
things in an alley. Police found charred fabric and a pair of
eyeglass frames that probably belonged to Bowsher. "You can't forget
anything like that," said Withers, a policeman for 26 years before
retiring in 1990. Even in retirement, he says, "it's my job to see
that this case is resolved."
The prosecutor
Tippecanoe County Deputy Prosecutor John Meyers
has sought the death penalty only twice. And he has no doubt about
the guilt of Jim Lowery, who was executed in 2001, and Trueblood. "This
is not a case where there is any doubt about it," Meyers said. "I
hate the notion we do this, but I think it's wholly justified here."
Meyers can't get rid of an image that has stuck in his mind all
these years. "He shot the little girl last," he said. "That little
girl was looking down the barrel of the gun when he pulled the
trigger," he said, "and that little girl never did anything to him.
"Anyone who feels any sympathy for him should remember that."
The attorney
When Trueblood dies, John Sommer will mourn his
death like he would that of a family member. People tell him not to
take it personally. But a life is on the line. "This will be the
most tragic, unavoidable loss for me," said Sommer, Trueblood's
attorney. "I do believe he deserves relief. If he doesn't get it,
I'll feel it's my personal fault." Maybe there was something he
could have tried differently or done better.
Sommer, 39, hasn't
taken on another Indiana death penalty case in more than seven years.
It got to be too much. Instead, he is an Indianapolis attorney
working for special-needs children and their families. He figures
helping them as kids will prevent them from turning into criminals.
He represented Charles Roche Jr., who had his death sentence vacated
last year. In Florida, 18 Death Row inmates were his clients,
including Frank Lee Smith, who died of cancer months before DNA
proved his innocence. Every day, he checks to see if any of the
other inmates have execution dates. Trueblood has asked Sommer to
watch him die. It will be his first execution.
Condemned Killer Asks for Polygraph; Trueblood
slated to die early Friday for 3 murders
By Shannon Tan - Indianapolis Star
June 11, 2003
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -- With just days to live,
Joseph L. Trueblood asked Gov. Frank O'Bannon on Tuesday for a
polygraph test to prove the Death Row inmate has been telling the
truth.
Trueblood insists his lawyers told him he would not face
death when he pleaded guilty to killing Ashelyn Bowsher, 2, and her
1-year-old brother, Billy. Trueblood expected a prison term of 30 to
40 years, he told reporters. Instead, Trueblood is scheduled to die
early Friday for killing the children and their mother, Susan
Bowsher, 22, his former girlfriend -- unless O'Bannon intervenes. On
Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to block the execution.
Trueblood, 46, read his handwritten "dying
declaration" at a news conference Tuesday at the Indiana State
Prison. Even as he pleaded for his life, it was clear he had begun
to accept the prospect of his death. He hoped to be buried next to
Bowsher and her children in Lafayette, but that won't happen.
His
family will claim his body; he will be buried "near Lafayette"
instead. He is fighting the Indiana Department of Correction to
avoid an autopsy and will decline his last meal. "I'm not going to
cooperate that much with the state of Indiana," he said.
Like all Indiana Death Row inmates about to be
executed, Trueblood was allowed to hold one news conference. The
policy was implemented around 1999 to reduce what had become a flood
of media requests for in-person interviews, State Prison spokesman
Barry Nothstine said.
In 1996, Tommie Smith granted up to 27
interviews before his execution, Nothstine said, and in 1998, Robert
Smith gave 16. The last inmate news conference, by Gerald Bivins in
2001, was in stark contrast to Tuesday's. Then, Bivins surprised the
family of his victim with expressions of remorse and sorrow.
Trueblood has written at least one letter to
O'Bannon seeking a lie detector test. Although he has yet to rule in
this case, O'Bannon has not granted clemency to any inmate since
taking office in 1997. "Nobody has the right to take another human
being's life, and that includes me," Trueblood said. "And that
includes the state."
Trueblood, a former Lafayette taxi driver who
suffered an abusive childhood, has contended Bowsher shot her
children before shooting herself on Aug. 15, 1988. He said he then
fired the final shot into Bowsher as an act of compassion. "I'm
responsible for their deaths," Trueblood said.
He said he has forgiven his twin brother,
William, who testified against him at trial. That testimony was key
because, after the killings, Trueblood drove to his brother's home
to borrow a shovel before burying the bodies. Thursday, Trueblood
will spend time with relatives. Then, after taking a shower and
putting on a new set of khakis, he'll be taken to the execution room,
accompanied by a Catholic priest until strapped to a gurney to await
the prick of a needle. Trueblood asked the priest and his lawyers --
John Sommer, Kathleen Cleary and Chris Hitz-Bradley -- to witness
his death. The condemned decides who can witness the execution. "You
still keep hope alive in yourself," he said. "It's not a good idea
to give up. But also, you have to realize and accept the fact that
I'm going to die. I think I've pretty much accepted that."
Kim Orrell, Bowsher's friend, said in a statement
that the victims had no appeals, parole hearings or news conferences.
"Joe, you are about ready to answer to the highest authority there
is, and he knows the whole truth in this matter," she wrote. "You
will once again answer for your wrongdoings."
Clemency Denied for Trueblood
Indianapolis Star
June 11, 2003
Gov. Frank O'Bannon denied clemency for Death Row
inmate Joseph Trueblood today, saying his guilt in the 1988 shooting
deaths of his girlfriend and her two children was clear and his
legal proceedings fair. Trueblood is scheduled to die by lethal
injection early Friday at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City.
"Trueblood's claims of legal error have received
extensive consideration in state and federal courts, and all of them
have been rejected," O'Bannon said in his denial statement. "He has
presented no new evidence indicating that he is innocent or showing
that a miscarriage of justice took place."
Trueblood, 46, was condemned for the murders of
Susan Bowsher of Lafayette and her children, 2-year-old Ashelyn
Hughes and 1-year-old William E. Bowsher. According to trial
testimony, Trueblood became enraged after learning Bowsher planned
to return to her ex-husband. He shot Bowsher and her two children
and buried their bodies in shallow graves in rural Fountain County
in western Indiana.
Condemned Man Seeks Lie Detector Test
By Shannon Tan - Indianapolis Star
June 10, 2003
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -- With two days to live,
Joseph L. Trueblood asked Gov. Frank O'Bannon today to give him a
polygraph test to prove he's been telling the truth for more than a
decade: When he pleaded guilty to killing 2-year-old Ashelyn Bowsher
and her brother, Billy, 1, Trueblood says his attorneys told him he
would not be sentenced to death.
Trueblood, 46, read from his handwritten "dying
declaration" at a news conference held in Indiana State Prison. He
told reporters he thought his sentence would be 30 to 40 years in
prison. Instead, he will die shortly after midnight Thursday for
murdering his ex-girlfriend, Susan Bowsher, 22, and her children.
O'Bannon today took no action on Trueblood's pending clemency
request, which the state parole board voted unanimously last month
to recommend against. The U.S. Supreme Court also today refused
without comment to block the execution, the Associated Press
reported.
Trueblood has written at least one letter to
O'Bannon -- who has never granted clemency to an inmate since taking
office in 1997 -- asking for a polygraph. "Nobody has the right to
take another human being's life, and that includes me," said
Trueblood, who wore a red prison jumpsuit and was shackled at the
wrists and ankles. "And that includes the state."
Trueblood, a former Lafayette taxi driver who
suffered an abusive childhood, has claimed Bowsher shot her children
before shooting herself on Aug. 15, 1988. He supposedly then fired
the final shot as an act of compassion. "I'm responsible for their
deaths," Trueblood said. He hoped to be buried next to Bowsher and
her children in Lafayette, but Trueblood said he will be buried "near
Lafayette" instead. He doesn't want the state to conduct an autopsy
on his body. There will be no last meal. "I'm not going to cooperate
that much with the state of Indiana," he said. "This is the way I'm
protesting what the state is ready to do."
Trueblood said he has forgiven his twin brother,
William, who testified against him at trial. After the killings,
Trueblood drove to his brother's home to borrow a shovel before
burying the bodies in a shallow grave.
On Thursday, Trueblood will spend time with
family members. Then, after taking a shower and putting on a new
pair of khakis, he'll be taken to the execution room. A Catholic
priest will remain with him until the time comes for him to be
strapped to a gurney awaiting the prick of a needle. "You still keep
hope alive in yourself," he said. "It's not a good idea to give up.
But also, you have to realize and accept the fact that I'm going to
die. I think I've pretty much accepted that."
Like all Indiana Death Row inmates about to be
executed, Trueblood was given the chance to hold one news conference.
The policy was implemented around 1998 or 1999 to reduce the flood
of media requests for in-person interviews, said Indiana State
Prison spokesman Barry Nothstine. The last inmate who chose to give
a news conference was Gerald Bivins, who was executed in 2001.
Trueblood v. State,
587 N.E.2d 105 (Ind. February 28, 1992). (Direct Appeal)
Defendant pled guilty to three counts of murder,
and was sentenced to death by the Tippecanoe Circuit Court, Ronald
E. Melichar, J., and defendant appealed. The Supreme Court, Shepard,
C.J., held that: (1) trial court may refuse to permit withdrawal of
guilty plea in capital case if guilty plea is reliable; (2) trial
court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to permit defendant
to withdraw guilty plea; (3) trial court did not erroneously fail to
consider mitigating circumstances; (4) trial court did not
erroneously find aggravating circumstance; and (5) trial court
properly imposed death penalty. Affirmed. Krahulik, J., concurred in
result.
SHEPARD, Chief Justice.
Joseph L. Trueblood pled guilty to three counts of murder. Ind.Code
§ 35-42-1-1(1) (West Supp.1991). The trial court sentenced him to
death for these murders. We affirm. In this direct appeal, Trueblood
has raised two issues:
I. Whether the court erred in refusing to allow
Trueblood to withdraw his guilty pleas, and II. Whether the court
failed to consider available mitigating circumstances and found an
aggravating circumstance which was not supported by the evidence.
The facts most favorable to the judgment are as
follows. Trueblood, a former boyfriend of Susan Bowsher, was upset
with Susan because she was going to return to her ex-husband. He
took a gun from his parents' house.
A few days later on August 15,
1988, he picked up Susan and her two children, Ashlyn, age two and a
half, and William, age seventeen months. While they were in his
automobile Trueblood shot each of them in the head, killing all
three. He then drove to his brother's home and borrowed a shovel. He
took the victims to a secluded area and buried them in a shallow
grave.
Trueblood pled guilty to the murder of Susan on
October 6, 1988. On December 6, 1989, he filed a motion to withdraw
his guilty plea, which the trial court denied. In February 1990, he
went to trial on the charges of murdering the children. After
several prosecution witnesses testified before the jury, Trueblood
informed the court that he wanted to plead guilty to the murders of
the children. The court took the plea and then discharged the jury.
Within two or three days, Trueblood changed his story while giving
his version of events to the probation officer for the pre-sentence
investigation report. On March 2, 1990, he asked the court to allow
him to withdraw the guilty pleas with respect to the children and
proceed with a new trial. The trial court denied his request,
expressly finding Trueblood was telling the truth when he pled
guilty to the murders of the children and was not being truthful
about the withdrawal of these pleas. The court subsequently heard
evidence and argument relative to the imposition of the death
penalty, and sentenced Trueblood to death for the three murders.
* * * *
The trial court was thus called upon to weigh
substantial aggravating circumstances--the commission of a triple
murder and the murder of young children--against the modest
mitigators described above. The trial judge was warranted in finding
that the aggravators outweighed the mitigators and in imposing the
death penalty in accordance with Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9. The judgment
of the trial court is affirmed.
DeBRULER, GIVAN and DICKSON, JJ., concur.
KRAHULIK, J., concurs in result.
Trueblood v. State,
715 N.E. 2d 1242 (Ind. September 9, 1999). (PCR)
Defendant convicted, on his plea of guilty, of
the murder of his ex-girlfriend and her two children, affirmed at
587 N.E.2d 105 petitioned for postconviction relief. The Tippecanoe
Circuit Court, Thomas K. Milligan, Special Judge, denied the
petition, and defendant appealed. The Supreme Court, Boehm, J., held
that: (1) defendant was not denied effective assistance of trial or
appellate counsel; (2) postconviction court's exclusion of evidence
was not an abuse of discretion; and (3) evidence supported
conclusion that guilty pleas were voluntary and intelligent.
Affirmed.
BOEHM Justice.
Joseph L. Trueblood pleaded guilty to the murders of Susan Bowsher
and her two children. He was sentenced to death for each of the
three murders. He appeals the denial of his petition for
postconviction relief and raises eight issues, which we restate as
four: (1) ineffective assistance of trial counsel; (2) ineffective
assistance of appellate counsel; (3) the postconviction court's
summary disposition of claims and exclusion of evidence at the
postconviction hearing; and (4) the voluntariness and intelligence
of the guilty pleas.
Factual and Procedural Background
On August 15, 1988, Trueblood picked up his ex-girlfriend
Susan Bowsher and her two children and, while they were in his
automobile, shot each of them in the head. After borrowing a shovel
from his brother's home, Trueblood took the bodies to a secluded
area and buried them in a shallow grave. Trueblood v. State, 587 N.E.2d
105, 107 (Ind.1992).
Trueblood pleaded guilty to the murder of Susan
on October 6, 1988. More than a year later he sought to withdraw
that guilty plea, but his request was denied. In February of 1990, a
jury trial commenced for the murders of the two children. After two
days of trial, Trueblood pleaded guilty to both murders and the
trial court accepted those guilty pleas.
A few days later, Trueblood
sought leave to withdraw the last two guilty pleas and that leave
was also denied by the trial court. Trueblood was sentenced to death
on each of the three counts. On direct appeal this Court affirmed
the trial court's denials of the motions to withdraw his guilty
pleas. The death sentences were also affirmed. See id. at 110-11.
Trueblood then filed a petition for
postconviction relief. Both parties moved for summary judgment as to
some issues, and the trial court denied Trueblood's motion, granted
the State's, and sua sponte dismissed some of Trueblood's other
claims. After an evidentiary hearing that spanned five days, the
postconviction court denied Trueblood's remaining claims. This
appeal ensued.
* * * *
In sum, the postconviction court concluded that
the guilty pleas were voluntary and intelligent and refused to
vacate them. That determination turned on factual issues and is
therefore entitled deference on appeal. See Harrison v. State, 707
N.E.2d 767, 773 (Ind.1999). Because Trueblood has not convinced this
Court that the evidence as a whole leads unerringly and unmistakably
to a decision opposite that reached by the postconviction court, see
id. at 774, we affirm the postconviction court's conclusion that the
guilty pleas were voluntary and intelligent. Conclusion: The denial
of postconviction relief is affirmed.
Trueblood v. Anderson,
156 F.Supp.2d 1056 (N.D.Ind. 2001) (Habeas)
Defendant pled guilty in the Tippecanoe Circuit
Court, Ronald E. Melichar, J. to three counts of murder, and was
sentenced to death. Upon appeal, the Supreme Court, Shepard, C.J.,
587 N.E.2d 105, affirmed. Defendant's petitions for postconviction
relief were denied and appeals from denial were affirmed. Defendant
petitioned for writ of habeas corpus. The District Court, Allen
Sharp, J., held that: (1) defendant's guilty plea was not knowing
and voluntary; (2) failure by trial counsel to understand
consequences of guilty plea or to correctly advise defendant of such
consequences was ineffective assistance of counsel; (3) trial and
appellate counsel were not otherwise ineffective; and (4) reweighing
of aggravating circumstances against relevant mitigating
circumstances was required. Granted in part and denied in part.
* * * *
This court cannot imagine a greater consequence
than the admission of guilt to one count of capital murder, which
would also constitute an aggravating circumstance in two other
counts of capital murder, and it is undeniable that Trueblood was
not advised of the use of his plea as an aggravating circumstance in
the other two murders. Thus, this court must grant the petition on
this count and find the plea of guilty to Count III unknowing and
unvoluntary.
* * * *
While the Indiana Supreme Court found that the
decision to plead Trueblood guilty to Count III was an appropriate
tactical decision, there can be no tactical explanation for the
failure to explain to Trueblood the full implications of that
decision. The prejudice arising from the deficient performance is
clear, as the plea of guilty was also an admission to an aggravating
factor for each of the other murders. Thus, this court finds it must
grant relief on this claim as well. This decision is supported by,
but not dependent on, the decision of the Seventh Circuit in Miller.
* * * *
VIII. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the court now
GRANTS the petition with respect to Grounds One, Two, and Four, and
DENIES the petition with respect to Grounds Three, Five, Six, and
Seven. The Great Writ is now GRANTED conditioned upon the release of
Trueblood or retrial within 120 days. IT IS SO ORDERED.
Petitioner, convicted in state court on plea of
guilty to murder of his girlfriend and her two children, and
sentenced to death, having exhausted state-court appeals, 587 N.E.2d
105, and postconviction relief, 715 N.E.2d 1242, petitioned for writ
of habeas corpus. The United States District Court for the Northern
District of Indiana, Allen Sharp, J., 156 F.Supp.2d 1056, granted
petition in part. Petitioner and state cross-appealed. The Court of
Appeals, Posner, Circuit Judge, held that: (1) trial court's failure
to advise defendant that conviction for murder of his girlfriend
could be used as aggravating circumstance at sentencing for murder
of girlfriend's children did not violate defendant's due process
rights; (2) trial court's remarks at sentencing concerning
helplessness of victims and coldbloodedness of crime, neither of
which was aggravating factor under Indiana law, did not indicate
that defendant's death sentence was based on improper factors; and
(3) petitioner was not prejudiced by counsel's failure to accompany
petitioner to presentence interview by probation officer. Reversed.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
The petitioner was sentenced to death and after exhausting his state
remedies, see Trueblood v. State, 587 N.E.2d 105 (Ind.1992), 715 N.E.2d
1242 (Ind.1999), sought and obtained federal habeas corpus.
Trueblood v. Anderson, 156 F.Supp.2d 1056 (N.D.Ind.2001). His state
custodian appeals.
Upset that his former girlfriend was planning to
return to her ex-husband, the petitioner took a gun from his parents'
house, picked up the woman and her two children, who were aged two
and a half years and 17 months respectively, in his automobile, shot
all three in the head, killing them, then borrowed a shovel from his
brother and buried his three victims in a secluded spot.
Charged in
an Indiana state court with all three murders, he pleaded guilty to
murdering the mother but decided to stand trial for the murder of
the children. The theory of the defense was that the mother had shot
her children and that he then at her request had killed her, a kind
of mercy killing.
The strategy collapsed when his brother took the
stand and testified that the petitioner had confessed all three
murders to him. The petitioner then interrupted the trial and
pleaded guilty to murdering the children; he did this in order to
avoid a jury recommendation of the death penalty.
The judge
nevertheless sentenced him to death, as he was authorized by
Indiana's death-penalty law to do, Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(d) ("if the
trial was to the court, or the judgment was entered on a guilty plea,
the court alone shall conduct the sentencing hearing"); Smith v.
State, 686 N.E.2d 1264, 1271 n. 3 (Ind.1997), upon a finding of one
or more statutory aggravating circumstances. The judge found two--murder
of more than one person and a victim (in fact two victims) under the
age of 12. Ind.Code §§ 35-50-2-9(b)(8), (12).
The federal district judge in the habeas corpus
proceeding rejected some of the petitioner's challenges to the
sentence, precipitating a cross-appeal by him. There was no need for
the petitioner to file a cross-appeal, since he was not seeking to
alter the judgment but merely defending it on additional grounds.
The district judge based his grant of relief on a determination that
the Indiana courts had in three respects unreasonably applied U.S.
Supreme Court precedent, which is the statutory standard for habeas
corpus for state prisoners. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) Williams v.
Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 409, 412, 120 S.Ct. 1495, 146 L.Ed.2d 389
(2000)
The first involved the failure of the state trial
judge to inform the petitioner explicitly that by pleading guilt to
the murder of the mother he was acknowledging the existence of an
aggravating circumstance (namely an additional murder victim) if he
was later convicted of murdering either or both of the children and
the state sought, as undoubtedly it would, and as in fact it did,
the death penalty.
* * * *
For the reasons stated earlier, the petition for
habeas corpus should have been denied. REVERSED.