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Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Alabama on January 13, 2011
Summary:
Schoolteacher Ruby White had filed for divorce in August 1988. Angry
about the divorce, her husband Leroy White shot her in the leg with a
.38-caliber pistol after she filed the divorce petition, but she did
not press charges.
On October 17, Leroy White went to her home where
she was visiting with her sister. Leroy White shot open the home’s
front door and went inside where he shot Stella Lanier in the chest
and shoulder. He returned to his car, reloaded the shotgun and went
back in the house. He shot Ruby White with the shotgun while she was
running out the door. He returned again to his car to reload the
shotgun, then fired more shots at Ruby White while she was lying in
the yard. She died at the scene from wounds to her arm, chest, neck
and leg. Stella Lanier survived and testified against White.
The jury took about 20 minutes to convict White of
capital murder and then voted 9-3 to recommend a sentence of life
without parole. The trial Judge rejected the recommendation and
sentenced White to death.
Citations:
White v. State, 587 So.2d 1218 (Ala.Cr.App. 1990). (Direct
Appeal) White v. State, 587 So.2d 1236 (Ala.1991). (Direct Appeal)
Final/Special Meal:
Guards at Holman Prison in Atmore offered White a final meal this
afternoon but he declined, instead buying a cheeseburger from the
vending machine plus a V8 juice, pork skins and a Yahoo drink,
according to Brian Corbett, spokesman for Alabama Department of
Corrections.
Final Words:
Declined.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Alabama Department of Corrections
DOC#: Z505
Inmate: White, Leroy B
Gender: M
Race: B
DOB: 11/28/1958
Prison Holman
Received:09-09-89
Charge: AGGRAVATED MURDER
County: Riley
Man executed for '88 killing of estranged wife
By Bob Johnson - MontgomeryAdvertiser.com
January 14, 2011
ATMORE -- Alabama has executed a death row inmate
for the 1988 shooting death of his estranged wife as he held their 17-month-old
daughter in one of his arms. Fifty-two-year-old Leroy White died by
lethal injection Thursday night despite a plea by the daughter, now
grown, that his life be spared. He was pronounced dead at 9:10 p.m. He
had no last words.
The U.S. Supreme Court ordered a last-minute delay
and then denied his plea for a stay of execution. Justice Clarence
Thomas had issued a temporary stay shortly before the execution was
scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. Thursday. A temporary stay gives the
court additional time to consider legal arguments in the case. About
21/2 hours later the stay was denied without giving a reason.
Relatives of the victim, Ruby White, including the daughter Leroy
White held in his arms, joined his effort for a reprieve. The daughter,
La Tonya, filed a written statement with the clemency petition to
Riley saying that she has forgiven her father. "I am deeply opposed to
my father's execution. He is the only thing that I have left that's
part of me. Taking away my only biological parent will hurt me more
than I can say," La Tonya White said in the statement.
White would be the 25th inmate executed in Alabama
during Gov. Bob Riley's eight years in office, the most under the
supervision of any Alabama chief executive since the 1940s.
La Tonya White visited with her father at Holman
along with other relatives. Prison officials said White made no
request for a last meal, but instead ate a cheeseburger, a V8 drink, a
Yoo-hoo drink and coffee from vending machines. He gave some of his
belongings, including a Bible and his legal papers, to his daughter.
He gave his brother, Charles White, the $54.74 remaining in his prison
account. He gave other belongings, including a 13-inch black and white
television and a radio, to fellow death row inmates.
Ruby White, a first-grade teacher at West
Huntsville Elementary School, was killed during a violent dispute on
Oct. 17, 1988, at her Huntsville home. According to court records,
Leroy White shot and injured her and her sister, Stella Lanier
Walker,then picked up their toddler daughter, holding her in one arm
as he fired the fatal shot.
Leroy White's attorney, Brian Stevenson, said
Walker and other relatives of Ruby White signed statements asking the
governor to stop the execution. They said they were following the
wishes of La Tonya White, who was raised by her father's family.
Stevenson also noted for Riley that the trial jury recommended by a
9-3 vote that White be sentenced to life in prison without the
possibility of parole. That recommendation was not followed by the
trial judge, who sentenced White to death.
Riley turned down White's plea, saying his case had
been reviewed by various courts."Leroy White committed unspeakably
cruel and heinous acts in the murder of his estranged wife, Ruby White.
For his brutal crime, he was tried, convicted and sentenced to death,"
Riley said. "I see no reason why this office should overturn this
sentence."
In his pleadings for a stay and clemency, Stevenson
complained that White has not had his full round of appeals because
his former attorneys did not inform him of a key ruling in his case
and caused him to miss a deadline to appeal his conviction to the 11th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
A statement from one of those attorneys, James
Benoit Jr. of Crownsville, Md., was included in the filing in federal
district court in Birmingham. In the sworn statement, Benoit said he
was a tax attorney and had "never been in a courtroom in my career."
"I made a mistake by not vigilantly ensuring he was represented and
ensuring that his appellate rights were preserved," Benoit said.
Assistant Attorney General Clay Crenshaw asked the
courts and the governor to reject the last-minute pleas, saying White
had not presented evidence that the appeal of his conviction would
have been successful.
Leroy White's last few hours continued odd
journey to his execution
By Brian Lawson - The Huntsville Times
January 15, 2011
HUNTSVILLE, AL -- Leroy White's last visitor left
at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, an hour and a half before he was scheduled to
be executed. With no visitors allowed, White couldn't ask his lawyer
what was happening. But shortly before the 6 p.m. execution, Supreme
Court Justice Clarence Thomas issued a stay to consider a final motion
in the former Huntsville resident and convicted murderer's case.
White sat in a cell near the gurney, waiting to
learn his fate. Nearly three hours later, shortly before 9 p.m., White
was executed for the shotgun slaying of his estranged wife, Ruby White,
at her Evans Drive home on Oct. 17, 1988. The wait marked one final
odd turn in White's case, which featured the victim's family asking
that his life be spared, and one of White's own lawyers admitting he
allowed White to miss a critical deadline to appeal. That request was
rejected by Gov. Bob Riley.
The jury at his trial recommended that he be given
a life sentence for shooting his estranged wife twice with a shotgun,
the second time while he was holding the couple's 17-month-old
daughter. But the judge in the case didn't accept the jury's
recommendation and instead gave him the death penalty. The couple's
daughter also asked Riley to spare White.
White's lawyer, Brian Stevenson, director of the
Montgomery-based Equal Justice Initiative, which opposes capital
punishment, took up White's case last summer, after White was notified
Alabama had asked the state Supreme Court to set an execution date.
White was surprised to learn an execution date was approaching, and
assumed he was still in the appeals process, Stevenson said.
Over the past week Stevenson petitioned both the
11th Circuit Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court, asking that
the execution be delayed because White's appeals process had been
short-circuited by an inexperienced lawyer who withdrew without
telling White. That withdrawal resulted in White missing a crucial
appeal deadline and started the clock for the scheduling of his
execution.
Both courts rejected the missed deadline argument,
despite an affidavit by former attorney G. James Benoit of Maryland,
who admitted withdrawing for unrelated work reasons and failing to
tell White about it.
Benoit, who took over White's case after another
member of his law firm was suspended from practicing law, said he
doesn't believe he communicated with White during the time an appeal
could be filed. He said he was unaware of rules that required him to
file an appeal. "At all times I represented Mr. White pro bono,"
Benoit wrote. "I formerly practiced transactional tax and corporate
law and no longer practice law. I have never tried a case and have
never been in a courtroom in my career."
Benoit was White's lawyer in June 2009 when the U.S.
District Court rejected his claims of ineffective assistance of
counsel during his trial. White was offered a deal to plea to capital
murder and spend life in prison, but he rejected it. Stevenson argued
he was badly advised by his trial attorney.
Alabama Assistant Attorney General Clayton Crenshaw,
who heads Alabama's Capital Litigation Division, said White had
numerous reviews of his case and each of his arguments over the
roughly 21-year appeals process was heard by the courts. Crenshaw said
the case file has filled 10 boxes. He said the missed deadline is an
issue that White's lawyers raised in the final days of his life, but
they didn't have a persuasive argument on the key issue: given more
time to appeal, could he win the appeal on the merits of his case?
Stevenson said about half of the roughly 200
prisoners on Alabama's death row were represented by a lawyer who is
not allowed to spend more than $1,000 on out-of-court time working on
the case, unless given permission by the trial court under Alabama
indigent defense rules. He said that inequity leads to problems with
the quality of assistance defendants are getting.
"The death penalty is not just about do people
deserve to die for the crimes they are accused of, the death penalty
is also about do we deserve to kill," Stevenson said. "If we don't
provide fair trials, fair review procedures, when we have executions
that are unnecessarily cruel and distressing, or if we have a death
penalty that is arbitrary or political or discriminatory, then we are
all implicated."
Inside the Leroy White execution; something
wasn't right
By Keith Clines - Blog.al.com
January 15, 2011
HUNTSVILLE, AL. - Sitting in a prison van outside
death row for three hours was not one of the things I thought could
happen while covering the Thursday night execution of Leroy White. My
first execution in almost 25 years as a news reporter turned out to
contain more drama and waiting than usual, as U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Clarence Thomas issued a temporary stay minutes before the 6
p.m. execution was to be carried out at Holman Correctional Facility
in Atmore.
Thomas issued the stay to give the court more time
to review White's case and the grounds for his appeals. A few hours
later, the entire Supreme Court lifted the stay and White was put to
death by lethal injection for the 1988 shotgun slaying of his wife,
Ruby White, at her Evans Drive home.
I drove across the highway from the gate to a media building where I
waited with a Holman death row corrections officer, an Associated
Press reporter and Corbett for the 5:30 p.m. van ride to the prison.
The AP reporter and I emptied our pockets, and the officer patted us
down before heading out to the van. About the only things we were
allowed to take in were a notebook and pen. We had to give our cell
phones to the officer, who would hold them for us until the ride out
of the prison when we would be allowed to call our waiting editors and
tell them White ad been executed.
It didn't take long for the others to realize
something wasn't right after the officer parked the van outside the
door that led to the execution viewing room. They expected someone to
tell us that White had been moved from a holding cell to the execution
chamber and we would be going inside in a few minutes. But word didn't
come.
Shortly after 6 p.m., Corbett was notified of the
execution stay. We had no idea how long it would be in effect.
Fortunately, the van had plenty of gasoline and the heater worked well.
I was happy that I had used the restroom right before we left. So what
did we do for three hours? Just what you would expect from five guys:
We talked football, movies and prison, and we watched a few of the
feral cats that roam the grounds.
Corbett was notified at 8:23 p.m. that the stay had
been lifted and White was to be prepped for the execution. At 8:45
p.m. were led into the witness room next to the execution chamber. The
witness room is about the size of a small bedroom and has 11 cheap
chairs that you might find in a waiting room. It has tile floors,
concrete block walls, a window about the size of a pool table and
signs that say, "Stay seated and quiet." Less than a minute later, the
curtain in the execution room was pulled back and we could see White
strapped to a gurney.
The execution order was read. White shook his head
"no" when asked if he had any last words, and a prison chaplain knelt
beside the gurney. The lethal drugs began to flow through the IVs into
White's arms. It was only minutes before his eyes closed and White
seemed to drift off to sleep.
The curtain was closed at 9:05 p.m. White was
pronounced dead at 9:10 p.m. We were led out to the van, given our
phones and made our final calls.
Leroy White scheduled to be executed Thursday
for 1988 slaying of his wife
Road2Justice.wordpress.com
January 12, 2011
HUNTSVILLE, AL. – More than 22 years after taking
the life of his wife, Ruby Lanier White, Leroy White is scheduled to
pay the ultimate price Thursday night. White, 52, is scheduled to be
executed by lethal injection at 6 p.m. Thursday at Holman Prison in
Atmore for the Oct. 17, 1988, shotgun slaying of his estranged wife at
her northwest Huntsville home.
A man who helped put White on death row in 1989
will not get any satisfaction from his execution. Bruce Gardner was a
Madison County assistant district attorney who prosecuted White, but
is now a defense lawyer and opponent of the death penalty. “I think
I’ll be in a very somber, contemplative mood,” Gardner said about
Thursday night. “Wishing the best for Leroy, whatever that is.”
Gardner called the death penalty “a barbaric,
abhorrent practice.” Asked if he will be responsible for White’s death
Thursday night, Gardner said, “To a certain extent, I do feel that way.”
U.S. District Judge Karon Bowdre last week denied a
motion by White’s attorneys to stop the execution because his previous
attorneys caused him to miss a deadline to file an appeal. White will
be the fourth person from Madison County – and first since 1998 -
executed by the state since the state took over executions from the
counties in 1927.
Ruby White, 35, was a first-grade teacher at West
Huntsville Elementary School when she was gunned down outside her
Evans Drive home. Leroy White wounded Ruby’s sister, Stella Lanier,
before shooting Ruby White.
Barbara Johnson, a special education teacher at
West Huntsville at the time, was at home watching the evening news
when the newscast was interrupted for breaking news about the shooting.
“It was pretty devastating,” Johnson, now a parental involvement
education specialist for the city school system, said last week. “She
was a real nice, pleasant teacher,” Johnson said of Ruby White. “The
children all loved her.”
News reports at the time said that Ruby White had
filed for divorce in August 1988. Leroy White shot her in the leg with
a .38-caliber pistol after she filed the divorce petition, but she did
not press charges. Late in the afternoon of Oct. 17, Leroy White went
to the Evans Drive home the couple had shared with a shotgun and the
same .38-caliber pistol he had used in the August shooting. According
to news reports and trial testimony, Leroy White shot open the home’s
front door and went inside where he shot Stella Lanier in the chest
and shoulder. He returned to his car, reloaded the shotgun and went
back in the house. He shot Ruby White with the shotgun while she was
running out the door. He returned again to his car to reload the
shotgun, then fired more shots at Ruby White while she was lying in
the yard. She died at the scene from wounds to her arm, chest, neck
and leg.
Leroy White shot Ruby White because he was angry
about the pending divorce, witnesses said at the trial. Stella Lanier
was the chief witness against Leroy White.
The jury took about 20 minutes to convict White of
capital murder and then voted 9-3 to recommend that the judge sentence
White to life in prison without parole.
But, in Alabama judges can disregard a jury’s
sentencing recommendation. Then-Circuit Judge Daniel Banks overruled
the jury and sentenced White to death because White’s actions were
especially “heinous and atrocious compared to other capital offenses.”
Randy Gladden, who defended White, said he has had
contact with White’s appellant attorneys over the years, but none with
White. He will not attend the execution. “I don’t think it would be
appropriate for me to do so,” Gladden said last week. Gladden said it’s
“hard to say” how he’ll feel Thursday night. “All I can say is that it’s
a horrible situation all the way around,” he said. Gladden said he
thought he’d almost pulled off a miracle when the jury recommended
life without parole after seeing the “horrible” evidence that had been
presented against White. “Under the circumstances, I don’t know what
else I could have done,” he said.
Gardner, an assistant district attorney from 1980
to 1989, prosecuted four capital cases, but White is the only one
sentenced to death. Gardner said it was his idea to prosecute White
for capital murder because his breaking into the house was considered
a burglary, which is a felony. A person can be charged with capital
murder if the killing occurs while committing another felony offense.
Gardner said he received a letter from White about
10 years ago “in which he expressed a great deal of remorse. What his
life was like. He realized he had made a mistake, but couldn’t change
it. I thought it was heartfelt and he was remorseful for what he had
done.”
Gardner said his position on the death penalty
changed over time partly because he became a defense lawyer, but
mostly because of age and a spiritual evolution. “I have come to think
of it as a ridiculous institution,” he said.
The death penalty is not applied equitably and
fairly because of race, where a trial is held and the quality of legal
representation, he said. “You can’t design a system where you can
ensure that an innocent person is not executed,” Gardner said.
Executions in Alabama
* The state has executed 202 people since taking
over executions from the counties in 1927.
* The state has executed three men sentenced in
Madison County. They are Walter Miller on June 19, 1936; William F.
Bowen Jr. on Jan. 15, 1965; and Steven A. Thompson on May 8, 1998.
* There are 203 inmates on death row in Alabama.
There are 99 white men, 97 black men, three men of other races and
four women on death row.
* There are 10 people sentenced in Madison County
on death row. They are Leroy White, Nick Acklin, Benito Albarran,
James Barber, Anthony Tyson, Jeffery Rieber, Mohammad Sharifi, Jason
Sharp, Derrick Mason and Joey Wilson.
* Legislation passed in 1923 provided for state-performed
executions by electrocution in a room at Kilby Prison. Up to that
time, each county had conducted hangings held in private gallows
instead of the public hangings of the frontier past. A convict, Ed
Mason, built the electric chair, “Yellow Mama” for Kilby’s death row.
* On April 8, 1927, “Yellow Mama” was used for the
first execution conducted in Alabama by electrocution when Horace
DeVaughan of Jefferson County was executed.
* In 1965, the U.S. Supreme Court declared the
death sentence process unconstitutional and executions were stopped.
William F. Bowen Jr. of Madison County was the last inmate executed
before the ruling.
* The state resumed performing executions on April
22, 1983, with the execution of John Louis Evans III of Mobile County.
* Legislation adopted in 2002 provided lethal
injection as the means for execution unless the condemned person
chooses electrocution. Lynda L. Block of Lee County was the last
person executed in “Yellow Mama” on May 10, 2002. Anthony K. Johnson
of Morgan County was the first inmate executed by lethal injection on
Dec. 16, 2002.
Leroy White
ProDeathPenalty.com
Ruby White, a schoolteacher, was the estranged wife
of Leroy White. The couple had separated during the month of August or
September, 1988, when Ruby White left their home in Huntsville,
Alabama, and moved into a shelter for abused spouses. During a
previous argument, White had shot Ruby in the leg.
Following their separation, Ruby White hired an
attorney and filed a petition for divorce. A hearing was scheduled at
which time they both verbally agreed that White would move out of the
home and would allow Ruby and her two children to return. The
residence was owned solely by Ruby prior to her marriage to White.
After her return to the house, Ruby changed the door locks and her
sister, Stella Lanier, moved in with Ruby and her two children. The
children were Brian Smith, age 16, son of Ruby White and a former
husband, John Smith, and Latonia White, age 17 months, daughter of
Ruby and Leroy White.
On the afternoon of October 17, 1988, White
purchased a shotgun from Blue Springs Pawn Shop. After purchasing the
shotgun, he went to Larry's Pawn Shop and purchased some double-aught
shotgun shells. After making these purchases, White drove to Ruby's
home. The testimony indicated that White had been drinking alcohol
during the day. On his first arrival at the home on Evans Drive, White
pulled his car into the driveway and almost ran over his 17 month old
daughter. Stella Lanier observed this and White and Stella got into an
argument about his driving. White then placed his daughter in the car
and drove off.
As Stella tried to flee the house, White ran out on the front porch
and shot four times. Stella fell in the yard, having been wounded in
her right arm and right leg. White then went back in the house and
confronted Ruby who was begging and pleading for her life. After a
brief confrontation, Ruby ran out into the front yard at which time
White told her to stop or he would blow her legs off. She stopped and
White confronted her with the shotgun. Ruby grabbed the barrel of the
shotgun and continued to plead for her life. Her daughter Latonia was
in White's car and her son Brian was in the house. Finally, White
shoved Ruby away from the gun and fired at her at point blank range
with the double-aught buckshot. The blast tore the flesh from her
right arm as she tried to shield herself and the pellets penetrated
her chest and abdomen. Ruby fell to the ground moaning but she was not
dead.
Testimony revealed that White then went back into
the house and called for Brian to come out of his hiding place. When
Brian came out, White told him to tell his daddy that "... when I get
out of this, I'm going to kill him, too." White then went back outside,
walked up to where Ruby lay on the ground moaning and said, "Bitch,
you ain't dead yet." He then went to his car, re-loaded the shotgun,
picked up his 17 month old daughter and walked back over to where Ruby
lay on the ground. As he placed the muzzle of the shotgun to her neck,
he said, "Bitch, this is the last thing you will see." He then smiled
and pulled the trigger. The blast tore a hole in Ruby's neck where the
gun shot entered and blew off the back side of her head where it
exited. At this time, the police arrived and White surrendered without
incident. Stella Lanier was the prime witness against White at his
trial. The jury found White guilty after 20 minutes of deliberation.
The same jury recommended life by a vote of 9 to 3, however, as
allowed by Alabama law, the trial court judge sentenced White to death.
Judge Daniel Banks said White's actions were especially "heinous and
atrocious compared to other capital offenses."
UPDATE:
Leroy White was executed after refusing the
opportunity for a final meal or last words. When asked if had any
statements to make before his death, White said, "No." He waved his
fingers at the witnesses to his execution before being pronounced dead
at 9:10 p.m. The families of both Leroy and Ruby White decided not to
witness the execution. Family friends Jim and Shelley Douglass were
the only two people who requested to view it.
White v. State, 587 So.2d 1218 (Ala.Cr.App.
1990). (Direct Appeal)
Defendant was convicted in the Circuit Court,
Madison County, Daniel Banks, Jr., J., of the capital murder of his
estranged wife, and he was sentenced to death. Appeal was taken. The
Court of Criminal Appeals, Bowen, J., held that: (1) defendant failed
to show that he was deprived of a jury representing a fair cross
section of the community or that the prosecutor used peremptory
strikes for racially discriminatory reasons; (2) defendant could be
found guilty of burglarizing his estranged wife's residence as the
component of capital murder; (3) defendant's confessions were
voluntary and admissible, despite his intoxication; (4) prosecutor's
comments during closing argument did not deprive defendant of fair
trial; and (5) evidence supported the trial court's finding of
aggravating circumstances that warranted imposition of death penalty,
even after jury recommended sentence of life in prison without
possibility of parole. Affirmed.
BOWEN, Judge.
Leroy White was indicted and convicted for the
capital burglary-murder of his wife, Ruby White, under Ala.Code 1975,
§ 13A-5-40(a)(4). He was sentenced to death by electrocution. His
trial and sentencing procedures were in accord with the applicable
sections of Alabama's 1981 Death Penalty Act, found in Ala.Code 1975,
§ 13A-5-39 et seq. The defendant raises 20 issues on this appeal from
that conviction and sentence.
I.
The defendant contends that blacks were under-represented
on the jury venire because the proportionate number of blacks on the
venire did not equal their composition of the population in Madison
County. This issue was not presented at trial. From the record it is
impossible to ascertain the racial composition of the venire, although
it can be determined that the jury was struck from a panel of 64
members, of whom at least seven were black. The defendant's appellate
counsel states that he “has been unable to obtain any statistics which
would show the true racial composition of Madison County.” Appellant's
brief at 46.
“In order to establish a prima facie violation of
the fair-cross-section requirement [of the Sixth Amendment], the
defendant must show (1) that the group alleged to be excluded is a
‘distinctive’ group in the community; (2) that the representation of
this group in venires from which juries are selected is not fair and
reasonable in relation to the number of such persons in the community;
and (3) that this underrepresentation is due to systematic exclusion
of the group in the jury-selection process.” Duren v. Missouri, 439
U.S. 357, 364, 99 S.Ct. 664, 668, 58 L.Ed.2d 579 (1979).
The defendant has also failed to establish a prima
facie violation of the equal protection clause of the fourteenth
amendment by proving that the jurors were selected in an intentionally
discriminatory fashion, Castaneda v. Partida, 430 U.S. 482, 97 S.Ct.
1272, 51 L.Ed.2d 498 (1977), or a prima facie violation of fundamental
fairness under the due process clause, see Hobby v. United States, 468
U.S. 339, 104 S.Ct. 3093, 82 L.Ed.2d 260 (1984). The record does not
even raise the inference of unconstitutional jury selection. See Ex
parte Watkins, 509 So.2d 1074, 1076-77 (Ala.), cert. denied, 484 U.S.
918, 108 S.Ct. 269, 98 L.Ed.2d 226 (1987) (“The defendant cannot
successfully argue that error is plain in the record when there is no
indication in the record that the act upon which error is predicated
ever occurred.”).
II.
The record does show that the defendant's rights
under Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106 S.Ct. 1712, 90 L.Ed.2d 69
(1986), and Ex parte Branch, 526 So.2d 609 (Ala.1987), were not
violated by the prosecutor's exercise of two of his peremptory strikes
to remove black veniremembers.
The prosecutor's stated reasons for striking each
veniremember were racially neutral. One veniremember admitted that he
and the defendant had mutual friends and that this would affect his
ability to serve. The other black veniremember had previously been
arrested for assault and resisting arrest. Scales v. State, 539 So.2d
1074, 1075 (Ala.1988) (prior arrest record); Levert v. State, 512
So.2d 790, 795 (Ala.Cr.App.1987) (juror not sure she could be fair and
impartial); State v. Guillory, 544 So.2d 643, 650 (La.App.), cert.
denied, 551 So.2d 1334 (La.1989) (shared the same friends).
III.
The defendant argues that his conviction is not
supported by the evidence because, he argues, that evidence does not
show that he knowingly and unlawfully entered his wife's residence
with the intent to commit the crime of murder. He contends that he is
not guilty of burglary because, he argues, he was licensed or
privileged to enter the marital residence. This issue of whether one
spouse may burglarize the residence of the estranged spouse is one of
first impression in Alabama.
The trial judge's “finding of facts summarizing the
crime” are supported by the record:
“The victim in this case, Ruby White, was the
estranged wife of the defendant, Leroy White. The parties had
separated during the month of August or September, 1988, when Ruby
White left the marital dwelling at 2217 Evans Drive, Huntsville,
Alabama, and moved into a shelter for abused spouses. During previous
difficulties between the defendant and his wife, the defendant had
shot her in the leg.
“Following their separation, Ruby White employed an
attorney and filed a petition for divorce. A pendente lite hearing was
scheduled at which time the defendant and Ruby White verbally agreed
that the defendant would move out of the dwelling at 2217 Evans Drive
and would allow Ruby White and her two children to return to the
dwelling. The residence at 2217 Evans Drive was owned solely by Ruby
White prior to her marriage to the defendant.
“After her return to 2217 Evans Drive, Ruby White
changed the door locks and her sister, Stella Lanier, moved in with
Ruby and her two children. The children were Brian Smith, age 16, son
of Ruby White and a former husband [John Smith] and Latonia White, age
17 months, daughter of Ruby White and Leroy White.
“On the afternoon of October 17, 1988, the
defendant, Leroy White, purchased a shotgun from Blue Springs Pawn
Shop. After purchasing the shotgun, he went to Larry's Pawn Shop and
purchased some double-aught shotgun shells. After making these
purchases, the defendant drove to the home of Ruby White at 2217 Evans
Drive. The testimony indicated that the defendant had been drinking
alcoholic beverages during the day. On his first arrival at the home
on Evans Drive, the defendant pulled his car into the driveway and
almost ran over his 17 month old daughter. Stella Lanier observed this
and the defendant and Stella got into an argument about his driving.
The defendant then placed his daughter in the car and drove off.
“At approximately 5:15 p.m. the defendant returned
to the Evans Drive residence of his wife and exited his vehicle armed
with a [12 gauge] shotgun and a [.38 caliber] pistol. Ruby and Stella
observed the defendant pull up and get out of his car with the shotgun
and pistol. They went into the house and locked the doors. Brian Smith
was sent to a rear bedroom by his mother and told to hide under the
bed. Latonia White was still in the defendant's car.
“The defendant then came up to the front door of
2217 Evans Drive and finding it locked, shot the glass out of the
storm door and shot the lock off the wooden front door. He then kicked
the door open, entered the house and began to scuffle with Ruby and
her sister, Stella. As Stella tried to flee the house, the defendant
ran out on the front porch and shot four times. Stella fell in the
yard [having been wounded in her right arm and right leg].
“The defendant then went back in the house and
confronted Ruby who was begging and pleading for her life. After a
brief confrontation, Ruby ran out into the front yard at which time
the defendant told her to stop or he would blow her legs off. She
stopped and the defendant confronted her with the shotgun. Ruby
grabbed the barrel of the shotgun and continued to plead for her life.
Her daughter Latonia was in the defendant's car and her son Brian was
in the house.
“Finally, the defendant shoved Ruby away from the
gun and fired at her at point blank range with the double-aught
buckshot. The blast tore the flesh from her right arm as she tried to
shield herself and the pellets penetrated her chest and abdomen. Ruby
fell to the ground moaning but she was not dead. Testimony revealed
that the defendant then went back into the house and called for Brian
to come out of his hiding place. When Brian came out, the defendant
told him to tell his daddy that ‘... when I get out of this, I'm going
to kill him, too.’ “The defendant then went back outside, walked up to
where Ruby lay on the ground moaning and said, ‘Bitch, you ain't dead
yet.’ He then went to his car, re-loaded the shotgun, picked up his 17
month old daughter and walked back over to where Ruby lay on the
ground. As he placed the muzzle of the shotgun to her neck, he said,
‘Bitch, this is the last thing you will see.” He then smiled and
pulled the trigger. “The blast tore a hole in Ruby's neck where the
gun shot entered and blew off the back side of her head where it
exited. “At this time, the police arrived and the defendant
surrendered without incident.”
In Alabama, “[b]urglary, like trespass, is an
offense against the possession, and hence the test for the purpose of
determining in whom the ownership of the premises should be laid in an
indictment is not the title, but the occupancy or possession at the
time the offense was committed.” Hamilton v. State, 283 Ala. 540, 545,
219 So.2d 369, 374, cert. denied, 396 U.S. 868, 90 S.Ct. 134, 24 L.Ed.2d
121 (1969) (quoting Fuller v. State, 28 Ala.App. 28, 30, 177 So. 353,
354 (1937)). “A person ‘enters or remains unlawfully’ in or upon
premises when he is not licensed, invited or privileged to do so.”
Ala.Code 1975, § 13A-7-1(4). Under Alabama law, a person who is
licensed or privileged to enter premises cannot commit criminal
trespass or burglary. Johnson v. State, 473 So.2d 607, 609 (Ala.Cr.App.1985).
At the time of the crime, the defendant and his
wife were separated. The wife had filed for divorce and a court
hearing had been set for September 23, 1988, for the purpose of
forcing the defendant out of the marital residence. On the day of the
scheduled hearing, the defendant and his wife, represented by their
lawyers, negotiated a settlement. The defendant agreed to vacate the
house and did so the very next day, taking all of his belongings with
him. On that day, September 24, the victim changed the locks on her
house. The defendant physically abused his wife, and, immediately
prior to September 24, for a period not exceeding 30 days, the victim
had been living in a shelter for abused women. The defendant did not
live at the residence from September 24 until October 17, the day of
the murder.
In his oral charge, at the guilty phase of the
trial, the trial court instructed the jury: “Ladies and gentlemen, I
am going to instruct you that where the husband and wife have in fact
separated, if they have, and that's for you to decide, and where they
are living separate and apart, each having their own separate dwelling,
and the parties have communicated that fact to each other, then one
spouse would have no right to enter the other's separate dwelling
without consent solely because they were married, solely because of
this marital relationship or this right of consortium. That alone
would not authorize such conduct. Stated another way, when the husband
and wife have separated and have established separate dwellings,
neither the marital relationship nor the right of consortium would,
standing alone, authorize the non-consensual entry by one spouse into
the other's separate dwelling. Of course, that's for you to decide.
The law of this state does not prohibit a finding by a jury that one
spouse unlawfully entered the separate dwelling of another spouse when
they are in fact separated and living separate and apart.”
The law in this regard is stated in 12A C.J.S.
Burglary § 38 at 230 (1980): “Some authorities broadly state that a
man cannot burglarize his wife's home, and it is considered that the
burglary statute is not designed to protect against entries by persons
occupying a marital or immediate familial relationship with the legal
possessor of property. So, it is held that in the absence of a legal
separation agreement, or restraining order, or court decree limiting
or ending the consortium rights of the parties, each spouse has a
legal right to be with the other spouse on premises possessed by
either or both spouses so long as the marriage exists, and entry onto
such premises by either spouse cannot be a burglary, although a court
order will negate any rights to enter the premises.” (Footnotes
omitted.)
While “the offense [of burglary] is not committed
by one who breaks and enters his own dwelling or other building,”
Stanley v. State, 57 Ala.App. 83, 84, 326 So.2d 148, 149 (1976);
Wilson v. State, 247 Ala. 84, 85, 22 So.2d 601, 602 (1945), “[i]t has,
however, also been held that the mere existence of the marriage
relationship does not preclude the one spouse from committing burglary
against the other spouse.” 12A C.J.S. Burglary § 38 (1990 Supp.) (footnote
omitted).
We agree with the holding of the Florida Supreme
Court in Cladd v. State, 398 So.2d 442, 443-44 (Fla.1981): “The sole
issue presented for review is whether a husband, who is physically but
not legally separated from his wife, can be guilty of burglary when he
enters premises, possessed only by the wife and in which he has no
ownership or possessory interest, without the wife's consent and with
intent to commit an offense therein.... We hold that ... under the
particular facts of this case, the defendant could be guilty of
burglary of his estranged wife's apartment....
“The factual situation is narrow. The defendant and
his wife had been separated for approximately six months, although
there was no formal separation agreement or restraining order. He had
no ownership or possessory interest in his wife's apartment and had at
no time lived there. One morning, he broke through the locked door of
her apartment with a crowbar, struck her, and attempted to throw her
over the second floor stair railing.... We reject the defendant's
contention that the marriage relationship and the right of consortium
deriving therefrom preclude the State from ever establishing the
nonconsensual entry requisite to the crime of burglary.... Since
burglary is an invasion of the possessory property rights of another,
where premises are in the sole possession of the wife, the husband can
be guilty of burglary if he makes a nonconsensual entry into her
premises with intent to commit an offense, the same as he can be
guilty of larceny of his wife's separate property. In State v. Herndon,
158 Fla. 115, 27 So.2d 833 (1946), discussing a wife's separate
property rights, we held that a husband could be charged with the
larceny of his wife's separate property, and we explained:
“In a society like ours, where the wife owns and
holds property in her own right, where she can direct the use of her
personal property as she pleases, where she can engage in business and
pursue a career, it would be contrary to every principle of reason to
hold that a husband could ad lib appropriate her property. If the
common-law rule was of force, the husband could collect his wife's pay
check, he could direct its use, he could appropriate her separate
property and direct the course of her career or business if she has
one. We think it has not only been abrogated by law, it has been
abrogated by custom, the very thing out of which the common law was
derived. 27 So.2d at 835. The defendant's consortium rights did not
immunize him from burglary where he had no right to be on the premises
possessed solely by his wife independent of an asserted right to
consortium.”
This principle is supported by additional authority:
“We reject the position that there is any absolute right on the part
of one spouse to be with the other against the other's wishes, giving
a right to break into the home of the other with the intent to commit
a crime. We adopt the position of the Florida court in Cladd v. State,
Fla., 398 So.2d 442 (1981), of the Ohio court in State v. Herrin, 6
Ohio App.3d 68, 453 N.E.2d 1104 (1982), and of the Washington court in
State v. Schneider, 36 Wash.App. 237, 673 P.2d 200 (1983), all of
which hold that burglary is an invasion of the possessory right of
another and extends to a spouse.” Matthews v. Commonwealth, 709 S.W.2d
414, 420 (Ky.1985), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 871, 107 S.Ct. 245, 93 L.Ed.2d
170 (1986).
A number of authorities are cited in Parham v.
State, 79 Md.App. 152, 161, 556 A.2d 280, 284-85 (1989): “The only
evidence on the status of the property in the instant case was that
Queen [the defendant's wife] was in sole possession and in the process
of purchasing the property in her own name, and that appellant was
living with his sister and was not on the title. Appellant had
separated from his wife approximately six weeks prior to the incident,
having spent only a week in the West Lombard Street home before the
separation. He had left very few belongings there; most of his clothes
were at other places.
“While we have not had occasion to hold
specifically than an estranged spouse can be convicted of burglary if
the dwelling house broken into was once shared with his or her spouse,
other courts have held, virtually unanimously, that the marital
relationship does not preclude a conviction for burglary. We
discovered no cases other than the following. See Cladd v. State, 398
So.2d 442, 443 (Fla.1981) (husband who had been separated from wife
for six months with no formal separation agreement or restraining
order had no ownership or possessory interest in wife's apartment and
could be charged with burglary, expressly overruling Vazquez v. State,
350 So.2d 1094 (Fla.App.1977), which held that the husband had a legal
right to be with his wife on the premises occupied by her at the time
of entry); Matthews v. Commonwealth, 709 S.W.2d 414, 420 (Ky.1985),
cert. denied, 479 U.S. 871, 107 S.Ct. 245, 93 L.Ed.2d 170 (1986) (husband
who was under a court order in connection with a sexual abuse charge
to stay away from the premises was not entitled to directed verdict on
burglary charge where the evidence indicated he broke into his
estranged wife's residence approximately five weeks after they had
separated); Knox v. Commonwealth, 225 Va. 504, 304 S.E.2d 4, 6 (1983)
(husband separated from wife for approximately six months had no
proprietary interest in wife's apartment and could be charged with
burglary); State v. Dively, 431 N.E.2d 540, 543 (Ind.App.1982) (mere
fact of conjugal status does not preclude a spouse from committing
burglary against the other spouse); State v. Woods, 526 So.2d 443, 445
(La.App.1988) (Louisiana's community assets rule did not preclude a
burglary conviction of husband of apartment tenanted by legally
separated wife); State v. Cox, 73 N.C.App. 432, 326 S.E.2d 100,
102-03, cert. denied, 313 N.C. 605, 330 S.E.2d 612 (1985) (evidence
which established that husband had been separated from his wife
without separation agreement for more than a year prior to offense and
wife repeatedly refused permission for husband to enter her residence
was sufficient to sustain conviction for burglary); State v. Schneider,
36 Wash.App. 237, 673 P.2d 200, 203-04 (1983) (sufficient evidence to
convict wife who had been separated from husband for nine months of
conspiracy to burglarize husband's residence where the wife was not
living at residence at the time of offense). But see State v. Weitzel,
112 Ohio App. 300, 168 N.E.2d 550, 551 (1960) (stating that a man
cannot burglarize his wife's home, but State v. Herrin, 6 Ohio App.3d
68, 453 N.E.2d 1104, 1106 (1982), seemingly contradicts Weitzel in
holding that husband who was separated from wife for 12 years
committed burglary even though he and his wife owned the house). The
common thread running through these cases is that the mere existence
of the marriage relationship does not put a spouse's separate property
beyond the protection of the law and subject to the depredation of the
other spouse. See Dively, 431 N.E.2d at 543.
“Given the evidence, a rational trier of fact could
have found beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant neither had a
possessory interest in the residence nor had a right to be in the
residence at the time he entered. We hold the evidence is sufficient
to sustain appellant's conviction for burglary.” (Footnotes omitted.)
While this is an issue of first impression in this
state, there is case law which tends to support our holding. In Cook
v. Cook, 125 Ala. 583, 584-85, 27 So. 918 (1900), the Alabama Supreme
Court stated: “That a wife must sue alone for the recovery of her
separate property is expressly provided by statute. Code, § 2527 [Ala.Code
1975, § 30-4-11]. That she may sue her husband for the recovery of
personal property belonging to her has been expressly decided. Bruce
v. Bruce, 95 Ala. 563, 11 South. 197. The right to sue her husband to
recover from him possession of her realty rests upon the same
statutory provision and the same principles declared in the case cited
as to her personalty, and can no more be denied in respect of one
class of property than in respect of the other. Nor is it of
consequence that the land of which recovery is sought was at one time
occupied by the husband and wife with their children as a homestead,
nor that the defendant at the time of the trial is willing, and all
along has been, for the wife to return to this homestead and occupy it
jointly with him. He has no right to compel her to let him into joint
possession or occupation of any of her land, nor any right to exclude
her from the possession and occupation altogether unless she assents
to joint possession and occupation with him. There is no law to compel
a wife to live with her husband on her land or on his. There is no
legal prohibition upon her separating from him and living apart. And,
having separated from him and left her home in his possession, she is
entitled to recover it from him, as if he were a stranger. To hold
otherwise would be to give the husband rights and estates in the
wife's lands which our statutes not only do not provide for, but
expressly provide against.”
See also Holman v. State, 495 So.2d 115 (Ala.Cr.App.1986)
(evidence that the defendant had been kicked out of his girlfriend's
residence where he had been living, that he had telephoned the
residence and asked to be allowed to come back, and that he had been
denied permission demonstrated that any license or privilege which he
had to enter the residence had been terminated before he broke and
entered, thus permitting a conviction for burglary).
Based upon the above authorities, we find that the
evidence supports the jury's finding that the defendant was guilty of
burglary in the first degree as a component of the capital offense
charged in the indictment.
IV.
The defendant argues that his confessions should
not have been admitted into evidence because, he says, he was too
intoxicated to make a voluntary, knowing, and intelligent waiver of
his constitutional rights.
The shooting occurred at approximately 5:15 on the
afternoon of October 17, 1988, and the defendant was immediately taken
into police custody. The defendant gave two statements to the police.
He was interrogated by Huntsville Police homicide investigator Mickey
Lee Brantley, who testified that he informed the defendant of his
constitutional rights at 8:34 that same night. Brantley also stated
that, in his first statement, the defendant claimed that on the day of
the shooting he had consumed “four to six beers, a pint of dry gin,
and about three or four ounces of Old Forester liquor.” In his second
statement, which was tape-recorded, the defendant stated, “I've had
several beers, approximately six or seven or eight. I don't know. I
dranked a pint of extra dry Seagram, extra dry gin, and a few shots of
Old Forester.”
Investigator Brantley testified that in his opinion
the defendant was not intoxicated. Brantley said he could not smell
any alcoholic beverage on the defendant. He testified that the only
thing that would cause him to think that the defendant had been
drinking was the fact that “his eyes were somewhat bloodshot.” The
investigator stated that the defendant's speech was slow but that he
“was very precise in the way he said things. He seemed to be thinking
about what he was saying. He seemed to be very aware of what he was
saying.”
Stella Lanier, the victim's sister, was present at
the time of the crime. She argued with the defendant and observed his
actions. She testified that the defendant was not “drunk” but that the
defendant “was under the influence of alcohol. He was drinking.”
The defendant did not testify at trial and there
was no testimony presented to rebut Investigator Brantley's testimony.
The trial court properly determined that the
defendant's confessions were voluntary. “[U]nless intoxication, in and
of itself, so impairs a defendant's mind that he is ‘unconscious of
the meaning of his words,’ the fact that the defendant was intoxicated
at the time he confessed is simply one factor to be considered when
reviewing the totality of the circumstances surrounding the confession.”
Carr v. State, 545 So.2d 820, 824 (Ala.Cr.App.1989). “The intoxicated
condition of an accused when he makes a confession, unless it goes to
the extent of mania, does not affect the admissibility in evidence of
the confession, but may affect its weight and credibility.” Callahan
v. State, 557 So.2d 1292, 1300 (Ala.Cr.App.), affirmed, 557 So.2d 1311
(Ala.1989).
V.
We reject the defendant's argument that the
introduction of Investigator Brantley's testimony concerning the
unrecorded confession, in addition to the playing of the recorded
confession, constitutes prejudicial error. The first statement the
defendant gave to Brantley was not tape-recorded. Immediately after
that statement, the defendant agreed to give a tape-recorded statement
to Investigator Brantley. The State proved that both statements were
made after the defendant had knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily
waived his constitutional rights. “Admission of cumulative testimony
is within the sound discretion of the trial judge. Even though such
evidence may tend to inflame the jury, its admissibility will not be
affected if it sheds light upon a material inquiry or illustrates the
transaction at issue.” Allen v. State, 290 Ala. 339, 343, 276 So.2d
583, 586 (1973).
VI.
The defendant's argument that the prosecution
violated the pretrial discovery order of the trial court by not
informing defense counsel of the contents of the defendant's first
statement to Investigator Brantley is simply not supported by the
record. There is nothing in the record to dispute or contradict the
prosecutor's statement to the trial court that defense counsel had
been given a copy of Brantley's summation of the first confession.
VII.
The defendant argues that the use of “burglary” as
the aggravating component of the intentional killing of the capital
offense is improper where the only motive for the burglary is the
commission of the crime of murder.
This “overlap” is constitutionally permissible.
“[T]he fact that the aggravating circumstance duplicated one of the
elements of the crime does not make this sentence constitutionally
infirm.” Lowenfield v. Phelps, 484 U.S. 231, 246, 108 S.Ct. 546, 555,
98 L.Ed.2d 568 (1988). See Kuenzel v. State, 577 So.2d 474, 487 (Ala.Cr.App.1990),
and cases cited therein. In Duncan v. State, 436 So.2d 883, 904-05 (Ala.Cr.App.1983),
cert. denied, 464 U.S. 1047, 104 S.Ct. 720, 79 L.Ed.2d 182 (1984),
this Court rejected the contention that “the legislature did not
intend § 13A-5-31(a)(4), Code of Alabama 1975 [now § 13A-5-40(a)(4) ]
to be applied except in cases where the burglary ‘was unrelated to and
not for the purpose of the killing itself.’ ” See also State v. Monroe,
397 So.2d 1258, 1273-74 (La.1981), cert. denied, 463 U.S. 1229, 103
S.Ct. 3571, 77 L.Ed.2d 1411 (1983). Neither Proffitt v. Wainwright,
685 F.2d 1227 (11th Cir.1982), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 1002, 104 S.Ct.
508, 78 L.Ed.2d 697 (1983), nor McKinney v. State, 511 So.2d 220
(Ala.1987), cited by the defendant, supports an argument to the
contrary.
VIII.
The defendant argues that improper and prejudicial
remarks by the prosecutor during the guilt phase of the trial
prevented him from obtaining a fair trial.
The prosecutor's comments concerning the marital
and domestic “troubles” the defendant and his wife had experienced,
that fact that Mrs. White had been living in a shelter for battered
women, that the defendant “literally run Ruby White out of her own
residence,” and that Mrs. White and her sister “locked themselves in
that residence” with “good reason” to take “sanctuary” are fully
supported by the facts in evidence. See Part X of this opinion. These
comments were based on facts in evidence and were entirely proper. See
Emerson v. State, 281 Ala. 29, 35, 198 So.2d 613, 618 (1967). “The
test of legitimate argument is that whatever is based on a fact or
facts in evidence is within the scope of proper comment in argument to
the jury.” Kirkland v. State, 340 So.2d 1139, 1140 (Ala.Cr.App.1976),
cert. denied, 340 So.2d 1140 (Ala.1977).
The prosecutor's remark that if the jury did not
find the defendant guilty he would probably “get” John Smith was based
on the testimony of Brian Smith, the son of John Smith and the
defendant's stepson. Brian testified that after the defendant had shot
his mother, the defendant told Brian, “I ain't going to hurt you. Just
tell your daddy when I get out of this I'm going to kill him.” There
was evidence that the defendant went to his wife's residence to kill
John Smith and his wife. Contrary to the defendant's argument, the
prosecutor did not make any comment that the defendant would harm the
jurors if they did not convict him.
In his closing argument, the prosecutor stated:
“Ladies and gentlemen, in just a few short weeks the school year will
begin again and, at least in my house, that's a great time with a
first grader, the same age as perhaps the 20 or so students of Ruby
White. The very young children she was teaching to read that year will
no doubt read or hear about your verdict in this case, and as young
people do will ask a very penetrating question of what happened to the
man who did that to their teacher, and ask in a way that maybe we
can't, what justice is in a case of this kind.”
There was no objection to these comments.
The prosecutor's argument is subject to criticism
because it is not completely based on the facts in evidence or the
reasonable and legitimate inferences to be drawn from those facts.
There was evidence that the victim taught the first grade. However,
there was no evidence of how many students she taught, what subjects
she taught, or that the prosecutor had a “first grader.” While we
discourage such argument, the above comment is in the nature of an
appeal to the jury to enforce the law. “In Alabama, the rule is that a
district attorney in closing argument may make a general appeal for
law enforcement.” Ex parte Waldrop, 459 So.2d 959, 962 (Ala.1984),
cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1030, 105 S.Ct. 2050, 85 L.Ed.2d 323 (1985).
See Soriano v. State, 527 So.2d 1367, 1371 (Ala.Cr.App.1988). “In
making appeals for law enforcement, the attorney for the prosecution
does well to avoid making a statement that purports to convey to the
jury information as to facts not shown by the evidence and emanating
solely from the mind of counsel.” Moberg v. State, 385 So.2d 74, 78 (Ala.Cr.App.1980).
Considered within the context of the prosecutor's lengthy argument, we
do not find the prosecutor's comments to constitute plain error or to
be so egregious or obvious as to “seriously affect the fairness or
integrity of the judicial proceedings.” Ex parte Womack, 435 So.2d
766, 769 (Ala.), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 986, 104 S.Ct. 436, 78 L.Ed.2d
367 (1983). The test for determining whether the prosecutor's
statements during the trial were prejudicial is “whether, taken as a
whole in the context of the entire case, the statements prejudicially
affected substantial rights of the defendant.” United States v. Long,
674 F.2d 848, 855 (11th Cir.1982). We find no basis for reversal on
this issue.
IX.
We do not consider the prosecutor's references in
closing arguments to the defendant as “cold” and “unfeeling” as
improper. In fact, these characterizations are supported by the
evidence of the manner in which the defendant committed the crime. We
consider them accurate descriptions of the defendant's conduct. See
Parts XVI and XVII of this opinion. The prosecutor's comments were
proper. Barbee v. State, 395 So.2d 1128, 1134-35 (Ala.Cr.App.1981).
X.
The defendant argues that the repeated comments and
references to the fact that the victim was in a shelter for battered
women, in addition to the evidence that the defendant had shot her in
the leg on a prior occasion, constituted ineradicable, prejudicial,
and reversible error. There was no objection to any of this testimony
and most of it was elicited by defense counsel. In a prosecution for
murder, evidence of former acts of hostility between the accused and
the victim are admissible as tending to show malice, intent, and ill
will on the part of the accused. Bennefield v. State, 281 Ala. 283,
286, 202 So.2d 55, 58 (1967); Blue v. State, 246 Ala. 73, 81, 19 So.2d
11, 18 (1944). “In a prosecution for the murder of a wife by her
husband, their general relations toward each other and evidence of
actual cruelty by the defendant upon his wife prior to the shooting
are admissible on the question of whether the shooting was intentional
or accidental ... and on the questions of malice and intent.” Akers v.
State, 399 So.2d 929, 931 (Ala.Cr.App.1981) (citations omitted).
XI.
The defendant argues that the trial court erred in
failing to instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of
manslaughter defined in Ala.Code 1975, § 13A-6-3(a)(2): “He causes the
death of another person under circumstances that would constitute
murder under § 13A-6-2; except, that he causes the death due to a
sudden heat of passion caused by provocation recognized by law, and
before a reasonable time for the passion to cool and for reason to
reassert itself.”
The trial court charged the jury on the lesser
included offenses of murder and reckless manslaughter. The failure to
charge on sudden heat of passion manslaughter does not constitute
plain error because there is no evidence of “provocation.” “To
constitute adequate legal provocation, it must be of a nature
calculated to influence the passions of the ordinary reasonable man.”
Biggs v. State, 441 So.2d 989, 992 (Ala.Cr.App.1983). “In the case at
bar, no adulterous affair was discovered at the time of the shooting
nor was there any mention by deceased of any past specific act of
adultery. Mere suspicion, belief or knowledge of past adulterous
affairs will not change the character of a homicide from murder to
manslaughter.” Biggs, 441 So.2d at 992.
Furthermore, the evidence shows that the killing
was not due to any “sudden heat of passion.” The evidence shows that
the defendant deliberately planned and prepared to kill his wife that
afternoon before he ever arrived at her residence. “The law has
declared, and can declare, no length of time, within which the man-slayer
must deliberate, or premeditate, to raise the offense to the highest
grade of homicide, murder in the first degree. If the mind reasons
about, or resolves upon the act, before committing it, or if the
purpose be formed, no matter for how brief a period, on an event then
future, or on a contingency that may happen, to use a deadly weapon,
this is deliberation, premeditation; and a homicide, committed
pursuant thereto, is murder in the first degree.” Ex parte Brown, 65
Ala. 446, 447-48 (1880).
We also note that any error in instructing the jury
on the offense of reckless manslaughter was harmless because the jury
found the defendant guilty of an intentional killing. Cf. Ex parte
Jordan, 486 So.2d 485, 489 (Ala.1986) (“Although the jury was given
the opportunity to apply the elements of manslaughter and criminally
negligent homicide to the facts of this case, the jury rejected these
theories to reach a verdict of guilty on the greater offense of murder.
Therefore, we must logically conclude that an instruction on vehicular
homicide, although proper, would not have affected the outcome of this
case.”).
XII.
The defendant argues that the jury should have been
charged on the lesser included offense of felony-murder. “[A] death
sentence may not be imposed after a jury verdict of guilt of a capital
offense when the jury is not permitted to consider a verdict of guilt
of a lesser included offense, when the evidence would have supported
such a verdict.” Beck v. State, 396 So.2d 645, 647 (Ala.1980). Here,
the evidence does not support a verdict of felony-murder.
“[T]he purpose of the felony-murder doctrine is to
hold felons accountable for unintended deaths caused by their
dangerous conduct.” W. LaFave and A. Scott, 2 Substantive Criminal Law
§ 7.5 at 210 (1986). See Ex parte Ritter, 375 So.2d 270, 273-74
(Ala.1979), vacated on other grounds, 448 U.S. 903, 100 S.Ct. 3044, 65
L.Ed.2d 1133 (1980); Ex parte Bates, 461 So.2d 5, 7 (Ala.1984). Here,
the evidence shows that the defendant intentionally killed his wife.
There is no rational basis for a verdict convicting him of felony-murder.
§ 13A-1-9(b).
XIII.
Contrary to the defendant's argument, the trial
court did not instruct the jury on the offense of reckless murder.
There was no violation of the holding of Ex parte Washington, 448
So.2d 404 (Ala.1984).
XIV.
“[T]he instructions of the trial court accurately
informing a jury of the extent of its sentencing authority and that
its sentence verdict was ‘advisory’ and a ‘recommendation’ and that
the trial court would make the final decision as to sentence does not
violate Caldwell [ v. Mississippi, 472 U.S. 320, 105 S.Ct. 2633, 86
L.Ed.2d 231 (1985) ].” Martin v. State, 548 So.2d 488, 494 (Ala.Cr.App.1988),
affirmed, 548 So.2d 496 (Ala.), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 970, 110 S.Ct.
419, 107 L.Ed.2d 383 (1989). See also Kuenzel v. State, 577 So.2d 474,
502 (Ala.Cr.App.1990); Hooks v. State, 534 So.2d 329, 357-60 (Ala.Cr.App.1987),
affirmed, 534 So.2d 371 (Ala.1988), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 1050, 109
S.Ct. 883, 102 L.Ed.2d 1005 (1989); Ex parte Hays, 518 So.2d 768, 777
(Ala.1986), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 929, 108 S.Ct. 1099, 99 L.Ed.2d 262
(1987).
XV.
The jury, by a vote of nine for and three against,
recommended that the defendant be sentenced to life imprisonment
without the possibility of parole. In its sentencing order imposing
the death penalty, the trial court stated: “The Court has carefully
weighed the aggravating and mitigating circumstances which it finds to
exist in this case, and has given consideration to the recommendation
of the jury contained in its advisory verdict. While the mitigating
circumstances and the jury's recommendation of life without parole
have been heavily considered by the Court, it is the judgment of this
Court that such are outweighed by the aggravating circumstances of
this offense. Accordingly, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED by this
Court that the defendant shall be punished by death.”
The defendant's argument that the United States
Constitution requires the adoption in Alabama of the rule of Tedder v.
State, 322 So.2d 908, 910 (Fla.1975), that in order to sustain a
sentence of death following a jury recommendation of life, the facts
suggesting a sentence of death must be so clear and convincing that
virtually no reasonable person could differ, was rejected by the
Alabama Supreme Court in Ex parte Jones, 456 So.2d 380, 381-82
(Ala.1984), cert. denied, 470 U.S. 1062, 105 S.Ct. 1779, 84 L.Ed.2d
838 (1985).
In support of his argument that the trial court
improperly rejected the sentence recommendation of the jury, the
defendant cites the fact that in his oral findings at the close of the
sentence hearing, the trial judge erroneously stated that the
presentence investigation report “reveals that you were dishonorably
discharged from the Army for aggravated assault.” The trial judge was
considering this in connection with the mitigating circumstance of no
significant history of prior criminal activity, which the trial court
did find to exist. However, when this error was called to the trial
judge's attention by defense counsel, the trial judge acknowledged his
“mistake” and noted that the presentence investigation report did
state that the defendant “received a general discharge.”
In the trial court's written findings made pursuant
to § 13A-5-47(d), the trial court, in finding the existence of the
mitigating circumstance of no significant history of prior criminal
activity, commented: “The Court also notes from the pre-sentence
report that the defendant was discharged from the Army because of his
involvement in an aggravated assault.” The presentence investigation
report states: “White was in the United States Army from 1977 to 1981.
He was given a general discharge in 1981 after having been Court
Martialed for Aggravated Assault.” Because the trial court corrected
its “mistake,” we reject this ground of the defendant's argument that
the trial court improperly overrode the sentence recommendation of the
jury.
XVI.
The trial court was correct in finding as an
aggravating circumstance the fact that the defendant knowingly created
a great risk of death to many persons under Ala.Code 1975, §
13A-5-49(3). The finding of the trial court in this regard is stated
in the following portion of the trial judge's “findings concerning the
existence or non-existence of aggravating circumstances.” “The
evidence in this case indicates that the defendant indiscriminately
fired a shotgun into an occupied dwelling containing not only the
victim but two other people. The evidence also indicates that the
defendant fired the pistol out in the front yard in a residential
neighborhood where many other people were present. The Court finds
that the defendant's conduct in the indiscriminate firing of these
weapons did, in fact, create a great risk of death to many other
people.”
In addition to the written findings of the trial
court, in imposing the sentence of death, the trial court stated in
open court at the conclusion of the sentencing hearing: “In this case
the evidence at the trial was to the fact that you were firing a
shotgun with double O buckshot in it and a pistol rather
indiscriminately into a house that was occupied by several people. You
shot that pistol and shotgun in the yard and neighborhood where other
people were present. That does to me appear to be evidence of that
aggravating circumstance.”
The defendant's argument that “the only persons who
were in danger of ‘great risk of death’ were the two women who were
actually injured,” Appellant's brief at 120, is without factual
support and is contrary to the facts of this case. The evidence fully
supports the trial court's findings and the application of this
aggravating circumstance. See Edwards v. State, 515 So.2d 86, 92-93 (Ala.Cr.App.1987).
XVII.
The trial court properly found as an aggravating
circumstance, under § 13A-5-49(8), the fact that the defendant's
conduct “was especially heinous, atrocious and cruel.” In this regard,
the trial court found: “The Court reaches this conclusion [that the
capital offense was especially heinous, atrocious and cruel compared
to other capital offenses] based upon the following evidence:
“a. The victim of this crime was completely
defenseless and was begging and pleading for her life during the
commission of the offense. “b. The children of the victim were present
when the killing occurred and certainly the victim suffered extreme
concern for their safety as evidenced by her instructing Brian to hide
under the bed. “c. The victim witnessed the apparent killing of her
sister prior to her own death. “d. The victim obviously realized that
it was the defendant's intent to kill her when she saw him drive up
and exit his car armed with a pistol and a shotgun. Even though she
locked the doors, this did not prevent his entry into the dwelling.
“e. The victim obviously suffered extreme pain when she was initially
shot by the defendant. This gun blast removed the flesh from the bone
of her right arm and the pellets which entered her body, according to
the testimony of the forensic pathologist would have caused extremely
severe pain. “f. After inflicting this obvious severe injury to the
victim, she was left lying on the ground while the defendant entered
the house to confront her minor child, Brian Smith. “g. The most
brutal aspect of the defendant's conduct occurred when, after he
realized the victim was not dead, he calmly went to his car, re-loaded
the shotgun and returned to the severely wounded victim with their 17
month old daughter in his arms and said to her, ‘This is the last
thing you will see.’
“The Court finds that this was a conscienceless and
pitiless killing which was unnecessarily torturous. By any standard
acceptable to civilized society, this crime was extremely wicked and
shockingly evil. It was perpetrated under circumstances which had to
cause a high degree of pain to the victim and the evidence indicates
that there was utter indifference on the part of the defendant to this
pain. The Court recognizes that all capital offenses are heinous,
atrocious and cruel to some extent, but the degree of heinousness,
atrociousness and cruelty which characterizes this offense exceeds
that which is common to all capital offenses.”
In open court at the conclusion of the sentencing
hearing, the trial court stated: “This wasn't just a killing. It had
to be a horrifying and terrifying experience for your wife to see you
drive up, get out of your car with a shotgun and a pistol. I think
that is evident from what she did and what her sister did when they
saw you, and that was to go in the house and lock the door and send
her child to hide under the bed. I think that is evidence that she
knew what was happening. As I stated, that had to be a horrifying and
terrifying experience.
“It had to be a horrifying and terrifying
experience to her when you shot the door off, when you shot the lock
off the door, and kicked it open. You then went in and confronted your
wife. As I recall, you fired the shotgun at her sister, or fired it
down the hallway. When Stella Lanier tried to flee the residence you
went out on the porch and shot at her and, according to what testimony
you believe, you shot up to four times. She fell in the yard. Your
wife witnessed that. You then went back in the house and confronted
her and, although I don't recall the exact words that you said, it was
something to the effect that, ‘You have made me kill your sister,’ or
‘I have had to kill your sister, and now I have got to kill you.’ It
was some words to that effect. With her standing there begging and
pleading for her life, with her child in the bedroom hidden under the
bed, and your child out in the car, she then tried to flee the
residence, obviously terrified. She ran out in the yard, whereupon, as
I recall, you told her to stop or you would shoot her legs off. Then
you confronted her in the yard. With her begging and pleading for her
life, she grabbed the shotgun, as I recall, the barrel of it, and
eventually you shoved her away and at point blank range fired a shot.
That gun with double 0 buckshot tore the flesh from her arm and the
pellets penetrated her body in areas, according to the forensic
pathologist, that would cause extreme pain to her. She fell to the
ground moaning. She was not dead at that point. I don't think that's
disputed.
“You left her lying in the yard and went back in
the house. At this point we will never know whether she was conscious
of what you were doing or not. She may have been. She may have seen
you go back in the house where her child was hiding under the bed. You
confronted her son and made your statement to him concerning what you
were going to do to his father.
“You then came back out. You realized that she was
not dead. In the presence of her daughter and other people there in
the neighborhood, and with her lying on the ground, mortally wounded,
in pain, completely defenseless, you placed the shotgun at her neck
and pulled the trigger. If that is not especially heinous or atrocious
and cruel, I don't know what is.”
The findings of the trial court are fully supported
by the testimony and evidence and fully justify the finding of this
aggravating circumstance.
Pursuant to and following our decision in Bui v.
State, 551 So.2d 1094, 1119-20 (Ala.Cr.App.1988), affirmed, 551 So.2d
1125 (Ala.1989), we find that the application of the aggravating
circumstance that the capital offense was especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel compared to other capital offenses was both proper
and constitutional under the facts of this case. Evidence as to the
fear experienced by the victim before death is a significant factor in
determining the existence of the aggravating circumstance that the
murder was heinous, atrocious, and cruel. Ex parte Whisenhant, 555
So.2d 235, 243-44 (Ala.1989), cert. denied, 496 U.S. 943, 110 S.Ct.
3230, 110 L.Ed.2d 676 (1990).
XVIII.
In imposing the sentence of death, the trial
court's consideration of the presentence investigation report and the
victim impact statements was not improper in this particular case. Ex
parte Martin, 548 So.2d at 497-98; Kuenzel, 577 So.2d at 526-527.
Both the “victim impact” section of the presentence
investigation report and the “victim's impact report” itself are
favorable to the defendant in that both statements indicate only that
the victim's aunt, Mrs. Rosie Garth, considered life without parole to
be a proper punishment. In this case, the victim impact statements did
not contain any information concerning the victim's personal
characteristics and did not contain any detailed or significant
information concerning the emotional impact of the crime on any
relative or friend of the victim. Compare, Pierce v. State, 576 So.2d
236 (Ala.Cr.App.1990).
XIX.
The defendant argues that the aggravating
circumstance that the capital offense was committed while the
defendant was engaged in the commission of a burglary under §
13A-5-49(4) is, by itself, insufficient to support the imposition of
the death penalty. Since we have rejected the defendant's arguments
that the aggravating circumstances that the defendant created a great
risk of death to many persons and that the crime was especially
heinous, atrocious, or cruel were improper, see Parts XVI and XVII of
this opinion, the present argument is without merit. Furthermore, in
Part VII, we concluded that the aggravating circumstance that the
capital offense was committed while the defendant was engaged in the
commission of burglary, § 13A-5-49(4), was proper as an element of the
capital offense. Since we have invalidated no aggravating circumstance
applied by the trial court, Proffitt v. Wainwright, 685 F.2d 1227,
1268 (11th Cir.1982), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 1002, 104 S.Ct. 508, 78
L.Ed.2d 697 (1983), has no application. Furthermore, Proffitt
indicates only that since the other aggravating circumstances were
found invalid by the appellate court and because the sole purpose of
the burglary was to commit the murder, that circumstance might not
have been sufficiently aggravating, in itself, for the trial court to
impose the death penalty. See Lindsey v. Smith, 820 F.2d 1137, 1152-53
(11th Cir.1987), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1059, 109 S.Ct. 1327, 103 L.Ed.2d
595 (1989).
XX.
In that portion of the defendant's brief on appeal
entitled “Summary of the Argument,” the defendant states: “An issue
which is not briefed but which is hereby pointed out for the
consideration of the court and should not be deemed to be waived is
the claim of Mr. White that his counsel at the trial court level was
ineffective under Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct.
2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674] (1984).”
The defendant was represented by retained trial
counsel at all stages of the proceedings in the circuit court.
Although the defendant's appointed appellate counsel filed a motion
for new trial, that motion does not contain an allegation of the
ineffective assistance of counsel.
Despite these procedural defaults in raising and
preserving this issue, this Court has carefully examined the record
with regard to trial counsel's performance. Even assuming that trial
counsel's failure to object or preserve an issue raised by appellate
counsel constitutes an adequate showing that counsel's performance
fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, there has been no
demonstration of a reasonable probability, and we have found none,
that counsel's deficient performance altered the outcome of the
proceedings. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052,
80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). A strong indication of trial counsel's
proficiency is the fact that the jury, despite the defendant's two
damning and incontrovertible confessions, recommended a sentence of
life without parole. We find no merit to the defendant's contention
that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel.
XXI.
The death sentence in this case is neither
disproportionate nor excessive.
As mandated by Rule 45A, A.R.App.P., this Court has
searched the record for any error which either has or probably has
adversely affected any substantial right of the defendant, without
regard to whether such error was preserved for review by proper and
timely objection. Pursuant to the required appellate review of §
13A-5-53(a), we have searched and have found no error adversely
affecting the rights of the defendant in the sentencing proceedings,
and have determined that the trial court's findings concerning the
aggravating and mitigating circumstances are supported by the evidence.
The trial court found the existence of the
following aggravating circumstances: that the defendant knowingly
created a great risk of death to many persons, that the capital
offense was committed while the defendant was engaged in the
commission of a burglary in the first degree, and that the capital
offense was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. The trial court
found the existence of two mitigating factors: that the defendant has
no significant history of prior criminal activity and that the
defendant apparently had a good reputation and good character prior to
the commission of this offense.
In determining that the death sentence is the
proper sentence in this case, pursuant to § 13A-5-53(b) we make the
following findings and determinations.
1) We have found nothing in the record to indicate
that the sentence of death was imposed under the influence of passion,
prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. In fact, the jury
recommended a sentence of life without parole. The trial court
rejected this recommendation only after obvious careful and thoughtful
consideration.
2) Our independent weighing of the aggravating and
mitigating circumstances indicates that death was the proper sentence.
As was the trial court, this Court is struck by the merciless, brutal,
and cold-blooded depravity of the defendant.
3) The sentence of death is neither excessive nor
disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering
both the crime and the defendant. See the following capital cases
involving burglary and intentional killing in which the death penalty
has been imposed: Lynn v. State, 543 So.2d 704 (Ala.Cr.App.1987),
affirmed, 543 So.2d 709 (Ala.1988), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 945, 110
S.Ct. 351, 107 L.Ed.2d 338 (1989); Ford v. State, 515 So.2d 34 (Ala.Cr.App.1986),
affirmed, 515 So.2d 48 (Ala.1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 1079, 108
S.Ct. 1061, 98 L.Ed.2d 1023 (1988); Grayson v. State, 479 So.2d 69 (Ala.Cr.App.1984),
affirmed, 479 So.2d 76 (Ala.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 865, 106 S.Ct.
189, 88 L.Ed.2d 157 (1985); Kennedy v. State, 472 So.2d 1092 (Ala.Cr.App.1984),
affirmed, 472 So.2d 1106 (Ala.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 975, 106 S.Ct.
340, 88 L.Ed.2d 325 (1985); Lindsey v. State, 456 So.2d 383 (Ala.Cr.App.1983),
affirmed, 456 So.2d 393 (Ala.1984), cert. denied, 470 U.S. 1023, 105
S.Ct. 1384, 84 L.Ed.2d 403 (1985). See also Spears v. State, 428 So.2d
174 (Ala.Cr.App.1982) (life without parole).
The judgment of the circuit court adjudging the
defendant guilty of the capital offense charged in the indictment and
sentencing the defendant to death is affirmed.
White v. State, 587 So.2d 1236
(Ala.1991). (Direct Appeal)
Defendant was convicted of capital burglary-murder,
and was sentenced to death, in the Madison Circuit Court, No.
CC-89-0011 FB, Daniel Banks, Jr., J., and defendant appealed. The
Court of Criminal Appeals, 587 So.2d 1218 affirmed, and defendant
petitioned for writ of certiorari. The Supreme Court, Maddox, J., held
that jury instruction on “reasonable doubt” was not plain error.
Affirmed.
MADDOX, Justice.
Having searched the record and considered each
issue raised by the petitioner, we summarily affirm the judgment of
the Court of Criminal Appeals. 587 So.2d 1218. We do, however, address
one issue raised by the petitioner in a supplemental brief. The
petitioner contends in the supplemental brief that the trial court
incorrectly instructed the jury regarding “reasonable doubt,” and
cites Cage v. Louisiana, 498 U.S. 39, 111 S.Ct. 328, 112 L.Ed.2d 339
(1990).
At trial, petitioner's counsel did not object to
the instruction he now contends was prejudicial. In a death penalty
case, of course, a defendant's failure to raise a claim of error at
trial does not preclude this Court from reviewing the record for
“plain error” and taking appropriate action whenever plain error
appears. A.R.App.P., Rule 39(k); see Ex parte Waldrop, 459 So.2d 959
(Ala.1984), cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1030, 105 S.Ct. 2050, 85 L.Ed.2d
323 (1985). “Error” is “plain error” only when it “has or probably has
adversely affected the substantial rights of the [defendant],” Rule
39(k), A.R.App.P., and plain error is to be acted upon “in the same
manner as if the defendant's counsel had preserved and raised [the]
error for appellate review.” Johnson v. State, 507 So.2d 1351, 1356
(Ala.1986).
We have examined the entire record in this case.
The evidence of the petitioner's guilt is overwhelming. We have
specifically examined petitioner's claim that the trial court's
instruction to the jury on “reasonable doubt” was “plain error.” In
that examination, we have compared the trial court's jury instruction
regarding “reasonable doubt” with the instruction recently reviewed by
the United States Supreme Court in Cage v. Louisiana, 498 U.S. 39, 111
S.Ct. 328, 112 L.Ed.2d 339 (1990), and condemned by that Court as
violative of Cage's constitutional rights. The instruction given in
this case does not contain the same infirmity that the Supreme Court
of the United States found in the trial court's instruction in Cage.
We hold, therefore, that there is no “plain error” affecting the
substantial rights of the petitioner, and thus, no legal reason to
grant the petitioner a new trial.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the
Court of Criminal Appeals is affirmed. ALMON, SHORES, ADAMS, HOUSTON,
STEAGALL, KENNEDY and INGRAM, JJ., concur.