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Herman Dale
ASHWORTH
Robbery
Same day
TAFT STATEMENT ON ASHWORTH CLEMENCY
COLUMBUS (September 23, 2005) – Governor Bob Taft
today issued the following statement regarding the clemency of
Herman Dale Ashworth:
“On the evening of September 10, 1996, Mr.
Ashworth assaulted and robbed Daniel Baker for $40 dollars in
drinking money. Hours later, Mr. Ashworth returned to where he had
left Mr. Baker unconscious and brutally beat Mr. Baker to death to
avoid being identified. Mr. Ashworth pled guilty to charges of
aggravated murder and aggravated robbery. He was convicted by a
three-judge panel, and was sentenced to death.
“Mr. Ashworth’s decision to plead guilty and
failure to offer any mitigating evidence has been exhaustively
reviewed by both the state and federal courts, and five medical
experts have confirmed his competency to do so. He has steadfastly
maintained his desire to waive any further appeals of his sentence,
and has not asked for clemency.
“The Ohio Parole Board thoroughly considered Mr.
Ashworth’s case in anticipation of his pending execution date. Mr.
Ashworth declined to participate in the Parole Board’s review. Based
upon the unanimous report and recommendation of the Parole Board,
judicial opinions, the arguments of the Ohio Attorney General’s
Office and Licking County Prosecutor, and other relevant materials,
I have decided to deny clemency.
“May God bless the family and friends of Daniel
Baker.”
Media Contact: Mark Rickel, Governor’s Press
Secretary,
On 9/10/96, Ashworth murdered 40-year-old Daniel
Baker outside the Wagon Wheel bar in Newark. After having a few
drinks at the Wagon Wheel and Legend Bars with Mr. Baker, Ashworth
beat Daniel with a board and kicked him several times. He then stole
Daniel's wallet. Ashworth later confessed and pled guilty to the
charges.
Sep 27, 2005
A man who said he deserved to die was executed by
lethal injection Tuesday for luring a man into an alley in 1996 and
beating him to death for $40. Herman Dale Ashworth, 32, was the
fourth death row inmate since 1999 to drop his appeals to speed his
execution. He was pronounced dead at 10:19 a.m. at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility.
Ashworth pleaded guilty in 1997 to the slaying of
Daniel Baker, 40, of Newark, who was beaten so badly a deputy
coroner said his injuries were consistent with a high-speed traffic
accident or plane crash. Ashworth and Baker, who had never met
before, had a few drinks and were walking to a bar when Ashworth
called Baker over to an alley and beat him with his fists and a 6-foot
board and kicked him, according to court documents and Ashworth's
interview with police.
"A life for a life, let it be done and justice
will be served," Ashworth said in his final statement.
After beating Baker, Ashworth took about $40 from
him and went back to a bar in Newark, about 30 miles east of
Columbus. Ashworth told police that Baker, a divorced father of a
then-12-year-old girl, came onto him and he freaked out.
His
girlfriend at the time, Tanna Brett, testified that Ashworth told
her about the beating and said he had to go back to the alley to
kill him to prevent Baker from identifying him. Brett said she
thought she persuaded Ashworth to leave Baker alone. However, when
she went looking for him later she heard a metal sound coming from
the alley and found Baker in a different position near a metal
loading dock door.
The husband of Baker's niece, Samuel Overly, sat
motionless with his arms crossed over his chest.
Ohio has now put 17 men to death since it resumed
executions in 1999 with another volunteer, Wilford Berry.
Ashworth's adoptive parents, James Ashworth and
Anna Mae Dalton, were unable to visit with their son before the
execution because of Hurricane Rita, which kept them from reaching
their flight in Baton Rouge, La., his attorney said Monday.
September 27, 2005
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A condemned inmate stayed
true to his words all the way to his execution Tuesday, saying he
deserved to die for luring a man into an alley where he beat him to
death in 1996 for $40.
"A life for a life, let it be done and
justice will be served," Herman Dale Ashworth, 32, said in his final
statement before being executed by lethal injection at the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility for the killing of Daniel Baker.
Ashworth became the fourth death row inmate in
Ohio since 1999 to drop his appeals to speed his death sentence. He
refused to try any appeals so his adoptive parents could make the
trip from his native state, hurricane-ravaged Louisiana, to visit
him before his execution.
The 6-foot-4 Ashworth breathed calmly as the
execution started, then shook before his breaths became more shallow
and rapid. Soon he was motionless, his white Adidas hightops hanging
off the gurney's edge. He was pronounced dead at 10:19 a.m.
Three witnesses for the state, including Samuel
Overly, the husband of Baker's niece, Tangee Overly, sat largely
motionless in one room. Ashworth had no witnesses on his behalf. "I
can't lie and say that I'm sorry that this conclusion happened
because I'm not," said Tangee Overly, who waited in the prison
during the execution. "Dan was very brutally murdered."
Carol Wright, a lawyer who served as Ashworth's
standby attorney after he had her and another attorney removed as
his legal counsel, described Ashworth as having been at peace in the
hours preceding the execution with his choice not to appeal. "He was
very resolute. I think he felt good. I think he was very certain of
his decision and pleased that it was finally happening," she said.
Baker, 40, of Newark, about 30 miles east of
Columbus, was beaten so badly a deputy coroner said his injuries
were consistent with a high-speed traffic accident or plane crash.
Ashworth and Baker, who had never met before, had
a few drinks and were walking to a bar in Newark when Ashworth
called Baker over to an alley and beat him with his fists and a 6-foot
board and kicked him, according to court documents and Ashworth's
interview with police.
After beating Baker, Ashworth took about $40
from him and went back to a bar. Ashworth told police that Baker, a
divorced father of a then-12-year-old girl, came onto him and he
freaked out. His girlfriend at the time, Tanna Brett, testified that
Ashworth told her about the beating and said he had to go back to
the alley to kill him to prevent Baker from identifying him.
Brett said she thought she persuaded Ashworth to
leave Baker alone. However, when she went looking for him later she
heard a metal sound coming from the alley and found Baker in a
different position near a metal loading dock door. "No mother can
sleep at night knowing that her son was murdered in the fashion that
my uncle was murdered in," Overly said after the execution. "My
grandparents live with this every day, for the last nine years. And
this has brought closure to my family."
Ohio has now put 17 men to death, two this year,
since it resumed executions in 1999 with another volunteer, Wilford
Berry.
Before he walked into the death chamber, prison
medical technicians in a neighboring room had trouble inserting the
shunt into Ashworth's right arm where the lethal drugs were
administered. Workers ran their hands up his right arm looking for
another location for the second shunt after the one in his left arm
went in easily. Within 10 minutes, they had inserted the shunt.
Ashworth stayed calm throughout, talking with workers in the room.
The execution attracted about 120 protesters,
mostly Roman Catholic high school and college students from the
Cleveland area who paid $25 apiece to charter three buses. They set
up sandwich boards outside the prison fence with lists of those
executed in Ohio and their pictures.
Ashworth's adoptive parents,
James Ashworth and Anna Mae Dalton, were unable to visit with their
son before the execution because of Hurricane Rita, which kept them
from reaching their flight in Baton Rouge, La., Wright said Monday.
Ashworth stayed up Monday night in an
unsuccessful attempt to reach them in Louisiana before the execution,
a prisons spokeswoman said. Ashworth told Wright during visits late
Monday and early Tuesday that he thought his parents' absence was
for the best, she said.
Wright said she spoke with Ashworth's parents
after the execution. "The one thing Anna said was, 'I just wish I
could've been there for him,'" she said.
Herman Ashworth - Ohio - September 27, 2005
Convicted of beating Daniel L. Baker to death on
the evening of Sept. 10, 1996, Herman Dale Ashworth, a white man,
faces execution on Sept. 27, 2005. At trial Ashworth plead guilty
and waived the right to present mitigating evidence. Consequently,
defense counsel made no objections and declined to cross-examine
witnesses. Herman Dale Ashworth was 23 years old at the time of this
momentous decision and has since decided to appeal his convictions
and sentence.
Herman Dale Ashworth claimed that Daniel L. Baker
had made unwelcome sexual advances and had refused to stop when
rebuffed. Ashworth claims that these advances prompted the attack
and the record indicates that Ashworth felt immediate remorse.
Ashworth also suffered from a problem with alcohol abuse.
According to the dissent of Justice Pfeifer of
the Ohio Supreme Court the death penalty in Ohio “should be reserved
for the most severe of cases” and this case is not one of the most
severe. Justice Pfeifer explains that Ashworth “showed immediate and
continued remorse for his actions.”
Furthermore, the majority
opinion admits “Ashworth’s willingness to step forward and take
responsibility for his actions, without any offer of leniency by the
state, indicates a person who is remorseful for the crimes he has
committed.” The opinion also acknowledges that remorse has been
considered a mitigating factor in past cases.
Finally it is possible that one of the trial
judges mistakenly believed that if no mitigating evidence was
presented, there would be no choice but to impose a death sentence.
The Ohio Supreme Court held that such an error in this case was “harmless.”
Please write to Gov. Bob Taft and request that he
stop the execution of Herman Dale Ashworth.
September 25, 2005
COLUMBUS | Gov. Bob Taft on Friday denied
clemency to a killer who isn't challenging his execution, set for
Tuesday.
Herman Dale Ashworth, 32, has acknowledged
meeting Robert Baker, 40, at a Newark bar on Sept. 11, 1996, luring
him to a nearby alley and robbing him of $42 and his credit cards.
He then used his fists, feet and a 6-foot board to beat Baker to
death.
Ashworth has said repeatedly he would rather die
than spend additional years on death row.
Taft's decision follows the recommendation of the
Ohio Parole Board, which held a hearing even though Ashworth didn't
ask for one. The clemency process is in state law.
Ashworth's wait to be executed — he arrived on
death row in June 1997 — would be the second-shortest since Ohio
resumed executions in 1999 after a 36-year hiatus. Scott Mink of
Montgomery County was put to death in July 2004, less than four
years after he killed his elderly parents.
Ashworth is the fourth inmate to give up his
appeals and face the death penalty since Ohio resumed executions.
Besides Mink, the others were Wilford Berry in 1999 and Stephen
Vrabel in 2004.
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (USATODAY.com) — A man was
executed Tuesday for luring another man into an alley and beating
him to death in 1996. He said he deserved to die for the crime.
Herman Dale Ashworth, 32, was pronounced dead at 10:19 a.m. after a
lethal injection at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.
Ashworth pleaded guilty in 1997 to the slaying of
40-year-old Daniel Baker, who was beaten so badly a deputy coroner
said his injuries were consistent with a high-speed traffic accident
or plane crash. Ashworth and Baker, who had never met before, had a
few drinks and were walking to a bar when Ashworth called Baker over
to an alley. He beat Baker with his fists and a 6-foot board and
kicked him, according to court documents and Ashworth's interview
with police.
"A life for a life, let it be done and justice
will be served," Ashworth said in a final statement. The husband of
Baker's niece, Samuel Overly, sat motionless with his arms crossed
over his chest during the execution.
After beating Baker, Ashworth took about $40 from
him and went back to a bar in Newark, about 30 miles east of
Columbus. Ashworth told police that Baker, a divorced father of a
then-12-year-old girl, came onto him and he freaked out.
Ashworth's
girlfriend at the time, Tanna Brett, testified that Ashworth told
her about the beating and said he had to go back to the alley to
kill him to prevent Baker from identifying him. Brett said she
thought she persuaded Ashworth to leave Baker alone. However, when
she went looking for him later she heard a metal sound coming from
the alley and found Baker in a different position near a metal
loading dock door.
Ohio has now put 17 men to death since it resumed
executions in 1999.
Ashworth's adoptive parents, James Ashworth and
Anna Mae Dalton, were unable to visit with their son before the
execution because Hurricane Rita kept them from reaching their
flight in Baton Rouge, his attorney said Monday.
NO DEFENSE: A condemned inmate says he deserves
to be executed for beating a man to death while out drinking in
1996.
THE NUMBER: Herman Dale Ashworth is the fourth
inmate to drop his death penalty appeals since Ohio resumed
executions in 1999.
A QUOTE: "What's it going to hurt to have them
have their day of justice? A needle isn't all that bad and I'm going
to go to sleep." - Ashworth speaking about the victim's family.
Defendant pled guilty in the Court of Common
Pleas, Licking County, to aggravated murder arising from beating
death of victim met in bar during course of aggravated robbery, and,
after defendant waived presentation of mitigation evidence for sole
purpose of obtaining death sentence, was sentenced to death.
Defendant appealed. The Supreme Court, Alice Robie Resnick, J., held
that: (1) when a capital defendant wishes to waive presentation of
all mitigating evidence, trial court must inquire as to whether
waiver is knowing and voluntary; (2) death verdict was not unsound
merely because defendant did not present potentially mitigating
evidence; (3) trial judge was not biased or prejudiced; (4) a
capital defendant is mentally competent to forgo presentation of
mitigating evidence if he has mental capacity to understand choice
between life and death and to make knowing and intelligent decision;
(5) defendant was mentally competent to waive presentation of
mitigating evidence; and (6) aggravating circumstance outweighed
mitigating factors, so as to warrant imposition of death penalty.
Affirmed.
Syllabus by the Court 1. In a capital case, when
a defendant wishes to waive the presentation of all mitigating
evidence, a trial court must conduct an inquiry of the defendant on
the record to determine whether the waiver is knowing and voluntary.
2. A defendant is mentally competent to forgo the
presentation of mitigating evidence in the penalty phase of a
capital case if he has the mental capacity to understand the choice
between life and death and to make a knowing and intelligent
decision not to pursue the presentation of evidence. The defendant
must fully comprehend the ramifications of his decision, and must
possess the ability to reason logically, i.e., to choose means that
relate logically to his ends.
Appellant, Herman Dale Ashworth, was charged with
two counts of aggravated murder of Daniel L. Baker and with a
separate count of aggravated robbery. A specification that the
aggravated murder was committed during the course of an aggravated
robbery was attached to each murder count. In addition, a
specification that the murder was committed to escape detection for
the aggravated robbery was attached to the second murder count.
Ashworth pled guilty and waived the presentation of mitigating
evidence. The three-judge panel found a sufficient basis to find him
guilty of aggravated murder, all capital specifications, and the
aggravated robbery count, and sentenced him to death. He appeals his
convictions and death sentence.
Ashworth had been living in Louisiana and had
moved to Newark, Ohio, in April 1996. He was living with his cousin,
Ron Sillin. On September 10, 1996, Ashworth went to the Wagon Wheel
Bar and began drinking. Another cousin, Louis Dalton, also stopped
off at the Wagon Wheel for a few drinks, around 4:30 or 5:00 p.m.
Dalton stayed for a couple of hours, and before he left, Ashworth
asked him whether he could borrow some money. Dalton told him no.
Lloyd Thompson, owner of the Wagon Wheel, saw
Ashworth in the bar around 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. Ashworth asked Thompson
whether he could borrow $10, but Thompson said no. Thompson later
saw Ashworth talking to a man whom Thompson had not seen before, but
who was later identified as Daniel Baker. People in the bar,
including Baker, were buying Ashworth drinks. Ashworth told Thompson
that he thought that Baker was gay and he (Ashworth) was going to
get rid of him. Thompson did not observe anything that would
indicate that Baker was gay, nor did Thompson see any advances made
by Baker toward Ashworth.
Thompson saw Ashworth and Baker leave
together. Thompson saw Ashworth later in the evening but never saw
Baker again. When Ashworth returned to the bar, he appeared to have
over $40 with him. Ashworth asked Thompson to cover for him if the
cops came in. It appeared to Thompson that Ashworth's right hand was
swollen.
Tanna Brett, Ashworth's girlfriend, saw Ashworth
that evening outside the TNT Bar and Wagon Wheel Bar. As they were
talking to each other Brett grabbed Ashworth's right hand. Ashworth
fell to his knees in pain, and told Brett that he hurt his hand in a
fight with a guy. Ashworth took her behind the Legend Bar, to the
Salvation Army loading dock. Brett observed a man lying on his belly
but did not see any blood.
However, she heard what sounded like
snoring coming from him. She did not observe any belongings on the
ground, and they stayed less than a minute. She did notice that
Ashworth had blood on one shoe.
Brett and Ashworth proceeded to the TNT Bar,
where Ashworth bought a "bucket of beer." Brett noticed that
Ashworth had a $5 bill, a few singles, and a $10 bill. Ashworth told
Brett that he thought he should go back and finish the guy off,
because he did not want to be recognized. Brett begged him not to go
back, and Ashworth told her he was going over to the Wagon Wheel
Bar.
Brett stayed at the TNT until "last call," around 2:15 a.m. She
then went over to the Wagon Wheel, but Ashworth was not there. She
proceeded to the Legend Bar to look for him. When she got near the
Legend, she heard a noise that sounded like something hitting metal.
She walked toward the noise, which was coming from the Salvation
Army loading dock. She saw the same man lying on his back, with his
head against the garage door. There was a lot of blood. This time
she observed papers and articles strewn about. She could hear the
man breathing, and saw him move his hand a little bit. She left
because it made her sick to her stomach.
Brett returned to the Wagon Wheel, grabbed
Ashworth, and said, "You robbed him." Ashworth did not say anything;
he just looked at the floor. She saw dark spots on his pants.
Earlier that evening, around 9:30 p.m., Dalton had received a call
from Ashworth. Ashworth told him that he had been in a fight and "kicked
the shit out of this guy." Ashworth said that he kicked him until he
could not kick him any more. He mentioned that his hand hurt.
Around 3:45 a.m. on September 11, 1996, Daniel
Baker's body was found on the Salvation Army loading dock.
By the
time police arrived, he was already dead. There was blood around
Baker's head and upper shoulder area. There was so much blood that
it had seeped underneath the garage door. Items belonging to Baker
were strewn about the area.
Bloody footprints surrounded the area
and also were evident on Baker's chest. While police were
investigating the crime scene, a 911 call came into the police
station (around 4:13 a.m.). The caller said that he had beaten a man
badly and left him on the loading dock of the Salvation Army. The
call was traced to a public telephone located less than a mile from
Ashworth's house.
Based on their investigation, police went to the
home of Ron Sillin, where Ashworth was residing. Initially they
knocked and rang the doorbell, but no one answered. They called Ron
Sillen and obtained permission to enter. They found Ashworth asleep
in the back bedroom. They woke him and asked him to come down to the
police station for questioning. He ultimately agreed, and dressed.
After being informed of his Miranda rights, he agreed to make a
taped statement.
According to Ashworth, he had been drinking at
the Wagon Wheel, starting around 3:30 p.m. Baker arrived around 8:00
p.m., and the two started talking together. Upon Baker's suggestion,
the pair went over to the Legend Bar, where they had a beer, and
then Ashworth suggested going back to the Wagon Wheel.
On the way
back to the Wagon Wheel, Baker told Ashworth that he wanted to show
him something. They went around the corner, where, Ashworth claimed,
Baker "reached down and grabbed me on my butt." Ashworth told him to
stop, that he was not "that way," but Baker would not stop.
Ashworth
said that he kept trying to move away from Baker, and they ended up
on the loading dock. Baker kept moving toward him and again tried
grabbing him. Ashworth began to hit him with his fist, and "freaked
out." Baker did not fight back, but kept coming at him, saying "it's
okay," "it'll be all right."
Ashworth said that he eventually picked
up a board, about six inches wide and five feet long, and struck
Baker with it. After Baker fell down, Ashworth then kicked him.
Ashworth took the wallet out of Baker's pants, but denied keeping
the wallet; instead, he said he just took the money, about $42. The
remaining contents of the wallet spilled out.
Ashworth stated that he had not planned to take
the wallet or money, but he just thought of it at the time. Ashworth
said that he went back to the Wagon Wheel Bar and drank and then
went to the TNT Bar and drank some more. He then went home but did
not remember how he got there. He woke up Sillin and asked him to
take him up to Tee Jaye's Restaurant to get something to eat.
On the
way back, he asked Sillin to stop so he could use the phone because
he was worried about Baker, but Sillin told him not to worry about
it. After he got home, he said that he began to worry and walked
back to the pay phone and called 911.
He told the operator that he
had hurt someone, that the person needed some help, and described
the location, but he did not identify himself. He then went back
home and went to bed. Ashworth never admitted going back to the
loading dock a second time.
During his statement to police, Ashworth
indicated that the clothes he had worn were at his house and that he
was wearing the shoes he had on during the encounter with Baker. The
shoes had blood on them, and the police confiscated them.
The
officers asked for Ashworth's consent to obtain the clothing he had
worn, and he gave it. The police also obtained a search warrant. The
pants they recovered had blood on them and in the front pants pocket,
contrary to Ashworth's statement, they found Baker's driver's
license and credit cards. The soles of Ashworth's shoes matched the
bloody footprints found at the scene and on the victim's shirt.
The coroner found that Baker had died as a result
of numerous blunt force injuries. He stated that the injuries he
observed were typical of those he was more likely to see as a result
of a car accident or an airplane crash. In his twenty years of
practice, he had seen only one other case with such severe injuries
as a result of a beating. The coroner opined that with such
injuries, death would normally occur in ten to twenty minutes.
At his request, Ashworth was first examined for
competency to stand trial and was found competent. Ashworth
eventually decided that he wanted to plead guilty to the crime and
waive the presentation of mitigating evidence so that he would be
executed. As a result of Ashworth's decision, his original lead
counsel, George C. Luther, withdrew, and new lead counsel, W. Joseph
Edwards, was appointed.
Edwards requested that Ashworth be examined
for competency to waive further proceedings, including mitigation,
under the standard set forth in State v. Berry (1996), 74 Ohio St.3d
1504, 659 N.E.2d 796, which had been recently issued. The trial
court appointed a clinical psychologist, agreed upon by both parties,
to examine Ashworth. Edwards also asked the trial court to appoint
an independent counsel to present mitigating evidence during the
sentencing proceeding, but the court denied that request.
After a psychological report was prepared, the
case was heard. Ashworth was found competent to waive the
presentation of mitigation and all appeals. He changed his plea to
guilty and the state set forth a factual basis, pursuant to Crim.R.
11(C)(3), through the presentation of witnesses. Defense counsel,
pursuant to their client's wishes, made no objections and did not
cross-examine the witnesses. Ashworth agreed to the facts as
presented by the state. The trial court accepted his plea and found
him guilty as charged.
ALICE ROBIE RESNICK, Justice.
In this appeal, Ashworth raises five propositions of law, all
relating solely to his death sentence. Finding none meritorious, we
affirm his convictions and sentence. In addition, we have reviewed
the two propositions of law raised by the state, independently
reviewed the record, weighed the aggravating circumstance against
the mitigating factors, and examined the proportionality and
appropriateness of the death sentence in this case. Upon a complete
review of the record, we affirm Ashworth's convictions and sentences.
GWIN
Appellant Herman Dale Ashworth appeals a judgment of the Licking
County Common Pleas dismissing his petition for post-conviction
relief without an evidentiary hearing.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. I THE TRIAL COURT ERRED
IN ISSUING INSUFFICIENT FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW IN
REGARD TO APPELLANT'S PETITION FOR POST-CONVICTION RELIEF.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. II THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING THE
APPELLEE'S SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION. ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. III THE
TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT DENIED APPELLANT MORELAND [SIC] AN
EVIDENTIARY HEARING ON HIS PETITION FOR POST-CONVICTION RELIEF, THUS
VIOLATING HIS RIGHTS UNDER THE FIFTH, SIXTH, EIGHTH, NINTH, AND
FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND ARTICLE
I, SECTIONS 1,2,9,10, 16, AND 20 OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. IV THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ITS APPLICATION
OF THE DOCTRINE OF RES JUDICATA TO APPELLANT'S CLAIMS FOR RELIEF,
THUS VIOLATING HIS RIGHTS UNDER THE FIFTH, SIXTH, EIGHTH, NINTH, AND
FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS TO THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND ARTICLE
I, SECTIONS 1,2,5,9,10,16 AND 20 OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. V OHIO'S POST-CONVICTION PROCESS IS NOT AN
ADEQUATE AND CORRECTIVE PROCESS.
After living in DeQuincy, Louisiana, appellant
moved to Newark, Ohio in April of 1996. On September 10, 1996,
appellant went to the Wagon Wheel Bar and began drinking. While in
the bar, appellant began talking to Daniel Baker. People in the bar,
including Baker, were buying appellant drinks.
Appellant told the
owner of the bar he thought Baker was gay, and he was going to get
rid of him. The bar owner did not observe anything that would
indicate that Baker was gay, nor did he see Baker make any
homosexual advances toward appellant. The bar owner did see
appellant and Baker leave together.
Appellant later met his
girlfriend outside the Wagon Wheel Bar and the TNT Bar. As they were
talking, appellant's girlfriend grabbed his right hand. He fell to
his knees in pain, and told the girlfriend that he hurt his hand in
a fight. Appellant then took his girlfriend behind the Legend Bar,
to the Salvation Army loading dock. Appellant's girlfriend observed
a man lying on his belly, but did not see any blood. She heard what
sounded like snoring coming from him. She also noticed that
appellant had blood on one of his shoes.
Appellant and his
girlfriend proceeded to the TNT Bar, where appellant purchased a
bucket of beer. Appellant told his girlfriend that he thought he
should go back and finish the guy off, because he did not want to be
recognized. When his girlfriend begged him not to go, appellant told
her he was going back to the Wagon Wheel Bar. Appellant's girlfriend
stayed at the TNT until the last call, around 2:15 a.m. She then
went to the Wagon Wheel, but appellant was not there.
When she got
near the Legend Bar, she heard a noise that sounded like something
hitting metal. She walked toward the noise, which was coming from
the Salvation Army loading dock. She saw the same man she had seen
earlier, lying on his back, with his head against the garage door.
There was a lot of blood at the scene. She observed papers and
articles thrown about.
Appellant's girlfriend returned to the Wagon
Wheel where she grabbed appellant, and said, "You robbed him".
Appellant did not reply. He had dark spots on his pants. Earlier
that evening, appellant told a friend that he had been in a fight,
and "kicked the shit out of this guy". Appellant told his friend
that he kicked him until he could not kick anymore.
Around 3:45 a.m. on September 11, Daniel Baker's
body was found on the Salvation Army loading dock. When the police
arrived, Baker was dead. Blood had seeped underneath the garage
door, and items belonging to Baker were strewn about. Bloody
footprints surrounded the area, and were evident on Baker's chest.
While police were investigating the crime scene, a 911 call came
into the police station. The caller said that he had beaten a man
badly and left him on the loading dock of the Salvation Army. The
call was traced to a public telephone located less than a mile from
appellant's home.
After police located appellant, he agreed to come
to the station for questioning. He agreed to make a taped statement
after being informed of his Miranda rights. Appellant told police
that Baker "reached down and grabbed me on my butt."
Appellant
claimed that he told him to stop, claiming he was "not that way",
but Baker would not stop. Appellant said that he kept trying to move
away from Baker, and they ended up on the loading dock. Appellant
told police that Baker kept moving toward him and tried grabbing him.
Appellant then began to hit him with his fist. Appellant stated that
Baker did not fight back, but kept coming at him. Appellant said
that he eventually picked up a board and struck Baker with it. After
Baker fell down, appellant kicked him. Appellant took the wallet out
of Baker's pants, claiming he took about $42 in cash.
Appellant's pants and shoes were confiscated. The
shoes had blood on them. The pants had blood on them, and in the
front pants pocket, police found Baker's driver's license and credit
cards. The soles of appellant's shoes matched the bloody footprints
at the scene, and on the victim's shirt.
Appellant was charged with two counts of
aggravated murder, and a separate count of aggravated robbery. A
specification that the murder was committed during the course of an
aggravated robbery was attached to each murder count. In addition, a
specification that the murder was committed to escape detection for
the aggravated robbery was attached to the second murder. Appellant
entered a plea of guilty, and waived the presentation of mitigating
evidence. A three-judge panel found sufficient basis to find him
guilty of aggravated murder, all capital specifications, and
aggravated robbery, and sentenced him to death.
Appellant appealed the judgment of conviction and
sentence to the Ohio Supreme Court. The court found that the trial
court did not err in allowing appellant to waive all mitigating
evidence, based on a finding that he was competent to do so. The
court concluded that in a capital case, when a defendant wishes to
waive the presentation of all mitigating evidence, the trial court
must conduct an inquiry of the defendant on the record to determine
whether the waiver is knowingly and voluntary. State v. Ashworth
(1999), 85 Ohio St.3d 56, 706 N.E.2d 1231, syllabus one.
A defendant
is mentally competent to forego the presentation of mitigating
evidence if he has the mental capacity to understand the choice
between life and death, and to make a knowing and intelligent
decision not to pursue the presentation of evidence. Id. at syllabus
two. The defendant must comprehend the ramifications of his decision,
and must possess the ability to reason logically. Id.
The Ohio
Supreme Court concluded that the procedure followed by the trial
court in the instant case was adequate to allow appellant to waive
his right to present mitigating evidence. The court further held
that the court need not go farther and appoint independent counsel
to investigate and present mitigating evidence over appellant's
wishes. After conducting an independent sentence review, the court
affirmed the conviction and sentence.
Appellant filed a petition for post-conviction
relief, arguing primarily that counsel was ineffective for failing
to present mitigating evidence. The court dismissed the petition
without an evidentiary hearing.
* * *
For the reasons stated in the Memorandum-Opinion
on file, the judgment of the Licking County Common Pleas Court is
affirmed.
SARGUS, J.
Petitioner, a prisoner sentenced to death by the State of Ohio, has
pending before the Court a habeas corpus action pursuant to 28 U .S.C.
§ 2254. This matter is before the Court on respondent's motion to
dismiss procedurally defaulted claims (doc.no.22), petitioner's
memorandum in opposition (doc.no.23), and the Joint Appendix.
I. Factual History
The details of this capital murder and aggravated
robbery are set forth in numerous state court opinions, including
the Ohio Supreme Court's published opinion in State v. Ashworth, 85
Ohio St.3d 56 (1999):
Appellant, Herman Dale Ashworth, was charged with
two counts of aggravated murder of Daniel L. Baker and with a
separate count of aggravated robbery. A specification that the
aggravated murder was committed during the course of an aggravated
robbery was attached to each murder count.
In addition, a
specification that the murder was committed to escape detection for
the aggravated robbery was attached to the second murder count.
Ashworth pled guilty and waived the presentation of mitigating
evidence.
The three-judge panel found a sufficient basis to find him
guilty of aggravated murder, all capital specifications, and the
aggravated robbery count, and sentenced him to death. He appeals his
convictions and death sentences.
Ashworth had been living in Louisiana and had
moved to Newark, Ohio, in April 1996. He was living with his cousin,
Ron Sillin. On September 10, 1996, Ashworth went to the Wagon Wheel
Bar and began drinking. Another cousin, Louis Dalton, also stopped
off at the Wagon Wheel for a few drinks, around 4:30 or 5:00 p.m.
Dalton stayed for a couple of hours, and before he left, Ashworth
asked him whether he could borrow some money. Dalton told him no.
Lloyd Thompson, owner of the Wagon Wheel, saw
Ashworth in the bar around 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. Ashworth asked Thompson
whether he could borrow $10, but Thompson said no.
Thompson later
saw Ashworth talking to a man whom Thompson had not seen before, but
who was later identified as Daniel Baker. People in the bar,
including Baker, were buying Ashworth drinks. Ashworth told Thompson
that he thought that Baker was gay and he (Ashworth) was going to
get rid of him. Thompson did not observe anything that would
indicate that Baker was gay, nor did Thompson see any advances made
by Baker toward Ashworth.
Thompson saw Ashworth and Baker leave
together. Thompson saw Ashworth later in the evening but never saw
Baker again. When Ashworth returned to the bar, he appeared to have
over $40 with him. Ashworth asked Thompson to cover for him if the
cops came in. It appeared to Thompson that Ashworth's right hand was
swollen.
Tanna Brett, Ashworth's girlfriend, saw Ashworth
that evening outside the TNT Bar and Wagon Wheel Bar. As they were
talking to each other Brett grabbed Ashworth's right hand. Ashworth
fell to his knees in pain, and told Brett that he hurt his hand in a
fight with a guy. Ashworth took her behind the Legend Bar, to the
Salvation Army loading dock. Brett observed a man lying on his belly
but did not see any blood.
However, she heard what sounded like
snoring coming from him. She did not observe any belongings on the
ground, and they stayed less than a minute. She did notice that
Ashworth had blood on one shoe.
Brett and Ashworth proceeded to the TNT Bar,
where Ashworth bought a "bucket of beer." Brett noticed that
Ashworth had a $5 bill, a few singles, and a $10 bill. Ashworth told
Brett that he thought he should go back and finish the guy off,
because he did not want to be recognized.
Brett begged him not to go
back, and Ashworth told her he was going over to the Wagon Wheel
Bar. Brett stayed at the TNT until "last call," around 2:15 a.m. She
then went over to the Wagon Wheel, but Ashworth was not there. She
proceeded to the Legend Bar to look for him. When she got near the
Legend, she heard a noise that sounded like something hitting metal.
She walked toward the noise, which was coming from the Salvation
Army loading dock. She saw the same man lying on his back, with his
head against the garage door. There was a lot of blood. This time
she observed papers and articles strewn about. She could hear the
man breathing, and saw him move his hand a little bit. She left
because it made her sick to her stomach.
Brett returned to the Wagon Wheel, grabbed
Ashworth, and said, "You robbed him." Ashworth did not say anything;
he just looked at the floor. She saw dark spots on his pants.
Earlier that evening, around 9:30 p.m., Dalton had received a call
from Ashworth. Ashworth told him that he had been in a fight and
"kicked the shit out of this guy." Ashworth said that he kicked him
until he could not kick him any more. He mentioned that his hand
hurt.
Around 3:45 a.m. on September 11, 1996, Daniel
Baker's body was found on the Salvation Army loading dock. By the
time police arrived, he was already dead. There was blood around
Baker's head and upper shoulder area. There was so much blood that
it had seeped underneath the garage door. Items belonging to Baker
were strewn about the area.
Bloody footprints surrounded the area
and also were evident on Baker's chest. While police were
investigating the crime scene, a 911 call came into the police
station (around 4:13 a.m.). The caller said that he had beaten a man
badly and left him on the loading dock of the Salvation Army. The
call was traced to a public telephone located less than a mile from
Ashworth's house. Based on their investigation, police went to the
home of Ron Sillin, where Ashworth was residing. Initially, they
knocked and rang the doorbell, but no one answered.
They called Ron
Sillin and obtained permission to enter. They found Ashworth asleep
in the back bedroom. They woke him and asked him to come down to the
police station for questioning. He ultimately agreed, and dressed.
After being informed of his Miranda rights, he agreed to make a
taped statement.
According to Ashworth, he had been drinking at
the Wagon Wheel, starting around 3:30 p.m. Baker arrived around 8:00
p.m., and the two started talking together. Upon Baker's suggestion,
the pair went over to the Legend Bar, where they had a beer, and
then Ashworth suggested going back to the Wagon Wheel.
On the way
back to the Wagon Wheel, Baker told Ashworth that he wanted to show
him something. They went around the corner, where, Ashworth claimed,
Baker "reached down and grabbed me on my butt." Ashworth told him to
stop, that he was not "that way," but Baker would not stop.
Ashworth
said that he kept trying to move away from Baker, and they ended up
on the loading dock. Baker kept moving toward him and again tried
grabbing him. Ashworth began to hit him with his first, and "freaked
out." Baker did not fight back, but kept coming at him, saying, "it's
okay," it'll be all right." Ashworth said that he eventually picked
up a board, about six inches wide and five feet long, and struck
Baker with it.
After Baker fell down, Ashworth then kicked him.
Ashworth took the wallet out of Baker's pants, but denied keeping
the wallet; instead, he said he just took the money, about $42. The
remaining contents of the wallet spilled out. Ashworth stated that
he had not planned to take the wallet or money, but he just thought
of it at the time.
Ashworth said that he went back to the Wagon
Wheel Bar and drank and then went to the TNT Bar and drank some
more. He then went home but did not remember how he got there. He
woke up Sillin and asked him to take him up to Tee Jaye's Restaurant
to get something to eat. On the way back, he asked Sillin to stop so
he could use the phone because he was worried about Baker, but
Sillin told him not to worry about it.
After he got home, he said
that he began to worry and walked back to the pay phone and called
911. He told the operator that he had hurt someone, that the person
needed some help, and described the location, but he did not
identify himself. He then went back home and went to bed. Ashworth
never admitted going back to the loading dock a second time.
During his statement to the police, Ashworth
indicated that the clothes he had worn were at his house and that he
was wearing the shoes he had on during the encounter with Baker. The
shoes had blood on them, and the police confiscated them. The
officers asked for Ashworth's consent to obtain the clothing he had
worn, and he gave it.
The police also obtained a search warrant. The
pants they recovered had blood on them and in the front pants
pocket, contrary to Ashworth's statement, they found Baker's
driver's license and credit cards. The soles of Ashworth's shoes
matched the bloody footprints found at the scene and on the victim's
shirt.
The coroner found that Baker had died as a result
of numerous blunt force injuries. He stated that the injuries he
observed were typical of those he was more likely to see as a result
of a car accident or an airplane crash. In his twenty years of
practice, he had seen only one other case with such severe injuries
as a result of a beating. The coroner opined that which such
injuries, death would normally occur in ten to twenty minutes.
At his request, Ashworth was first examined for
competency to stand trial and was found competent. Ashworth
eventually decided that he wanted to plead guilty to the crime and
waive the presentation of mitigating evidence so that he would be
executed. As a result of Ashworth's decision, his original lead
counsel, George C. Luther, withdrew, and new lead counsel, W. Joseph
Edwards, was appointed.
Edwards requested that Ashworth be examined
for competency to waive further proceedings, including mitigation,
under the standard set forth in State v. Berry (1996), 74 Ohio St.3d
1504, 659 N.E.2d 796, which had been recently issued. The trial
court appointed a clinical psychologist, agreed upon by both parties,
to examine Ashworth. Edwards also asked the trial court to appoint
an independent counsel to present mitigating evidence during the
sentencing proceeding, but the court denied that request.
After a psychological report was prepared, the
case was heard. Ashworth was found competent to waive the
presentation of mitigation and all appeals. He changed his plea to
guilty and the state set forth a factual basis, pursuant to Crim.R.
11(C)(3) , through the presentation of witnesses. Defense counsel,
pursuant to their client's wishes, made no objections and did not
cross-examine the witnesses. Ashworth agreed to the facts as
presented by the state. The trial court accepted his plea and found
him guilty as charged.
Upon a finding of guilty, defense counsel renewed
the motion for independent counsel, which was denied by the entire
panel. The defense presented no mitigating evidence, and the panel
entered a sentence of death. Ashworth, 85 Ohio St.3d at 57-60
II. State Court Procedural History
A. Trial and
Direct Appeal
Petitioner was indicted by the Licking County
Grand Jury on September 20, 1996. On September 23, 1996, upon
petitioner's request, the trial court appointed two attorneys to
represent petitioner. At his arraignment on September 30, 1996,
petitioner entered pleas of not guilty. Ultimately, petitioner
waived his right to trial by jury, changed his pleas to guilty, and
waived his right to present mitigation evidence.
Following a
competency evaluation indicating that petitioner was competent, and
presentation by the State of facts demonstrating a factual basis for
petitioner's pleas, the three-judge panel found petitioner guilty as
charged. During the sentencing phase, no mitigation evidence was
presented on petitioner's behalf, at petitioner's insistence. The
three-judge panel concluded that the aggravating circumstances
outweighed the mitigating factors, and sentenced petitioner to death,
which judgment was entered on June 16, 1997.
Represented by new counsel, [FN1] petitioner
pursued his direct appeal as of right to the Supreme Court of Ohio.
In a merit brief filed on January 5, 1998, counsel for petitioner
raised the following propositions of law:
FN1. Petitioner was represented on direct appeal
by the Ohio Public Defender's Office and by attorney Carol Wright.
Proposition of Law No. I: The Eighth Amendment to
the United States Constitution precludes a state from imposing a
sentence of death unless the sentencing authority actually considers
all relevant evidence of mitigation. Consequently, a capital
defendant cannot interpose his Sixth Amendment right to self-representation
as a bar to the introduction of mitigation evidence. Proposition of
Law No. II: When a trial court is predisposed to sentence a
defendant to death, the defendant is denied his due process rights
as guaranteed by the U.S. and Ohio Constitutions. Proposition of Law
No. III: A person may elect to forgo capital mitigation proceedings
if he has the capacity to appreciate his position and make a
rational choice with respect to presenting or waiving mitigation. A
person is not competent to forgo capital mitigation proceedings if
he suffers from a mental disease, disorder, or defect which may
substantially affect his capacity to make that decision. Proposition
of Law No. IV: Sentencing an individual to death in violation of
treaties to which the United States of America is a signatory
violates the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution.
Proposition of Law No. V: The death penalty authorized by the Ohio
Revised Code deprives capitally-charged defendants of their lives
without due process of law, denies equal protection, and imposes
cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Ohio and United
States Constitutions.
J.A. Vol. VI, at 59. On March 24, 1999, the Ohio
Supreme Court issued a decision rejecting petitioner's propositions
of law, and concluding after independent review that the death
sentence against petitioner was appropriate and proportional. State
v. Ashworth, supra, 85 Ohio St.3d 56; J.A. Vol. VII, at 124. On
April 24, 1999, the Ohio Supreme Court summarily denied petitioner's
motion for reconsideration. J.A. Vol. VII, at 160.
B. Postconviction
On March 16, 1998, represented by the Ohio Public
Defender's Office, petitioner filed a state postconviction action to
vacate or set aside the judgment against him. Petitioner's grounds
for relief may be summarized as follows:
First Ground for Relief: The judgment and
sentence against Herman Dale Ashworth are void or voidable because
the recent amendments to the Ohio post-conviction process violate
his constitutional rights to procedural due process which the Ohio
and United States Constitutions afford him. ¶¶ 25-34.
Second Ground for Relief: The imposition and
planned execution of the death sentence under Ohio law and practice
upon Herman Dale Ashworth is void and/or voidable because the death
penalty is administered and applied arbitrarily, capriciously, and
whimsically in the State of Ohio and petitioner was sentenced to die
and will be executed, pursuant to a pattern and practice of wholly
arbitrary and capricious infliction of that penalty. The theoretical
justifications for capital punishment are groundless and irrational
in fact; death is thus an excessive penalty that fails factually to
serve any rational and legitimate social interests that can justify
its unique harshness. ¶¶ 35- 43.
Third Ground for Relief: The Sixth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution require that
a sentencing authority actually consider all relevant mitigation
evidence before a sentence of death may be imposed. (citations
omitted). The Constitution requires a sentencing body to seek out
and actually consider all relevant mitigation evidence. Failure to
do so renders a death sentence void. (citations omitted). ¶¶ 44-54.
Fourth Ground for Relief: Due to the actions of
the trial court [rejecting defense counsel's suggestion for the
appointment of independent counsel to present mitigation evidence],
petitioner was deprived of counsel. The deprivation of counsel meant
the preclusion of expert assistance. As a result, petitioner's
sentencer was prevented from considering and giving effect to the
expert testimony, specifically expert testimony regarding Southern
culture in which he was born and reared. ¶¶ 55-65.
Fifth Ground for Relief: Due to the actions of
the trial court [rejecting defense counsel's suggestion for the
appointment of independent counsel to present mitigation evidence],
petitioner was deprived of counsel. The deprivation of counsel meant
the preclusion of expert assistance. As a result, petitioner's
sentencer was prevented from considering and giving effect to the
expert testimony of a toxicologist regarding the effect that
petitioner's alcohol consumption would have had on Mr. Ashworth in
terms of the crimes charged against him. ¶¶ 66-75.
Sixth Ground for Relief: Due to the trial court's
failure to appoint independent counsel, petitioner's sentencer was
prevented from considering compelling mitigating evidence regarding
Dale's abandonment by his birth parents; his adoptive parents'
divorce, the death of his beloved brother Ricky; and the abusive,
alcoholic environment to which he was consistently exposed. Other
mitigation evidence was available pertaining to the community and
culture of violence and alcoholism that further surrounded him. If
independent counsel had been appointed, they could have presented
evidence that Dale was highly homophobic, and there was evidence
that the victim's death was precipitated by an inappropriate
homosexual advance made on petitioner. Petitioner also had a family
history replete with alcoholics and depression. ¶¶ 76-87.
Seventh Ground for Relief: At the penalty phase
of a capital case, the central issue is not whether the defendant is
guilty of the crimes he was convicted of, but rather whether the
defendant, notwithstanding his crimes, is a person who should live
or die. When relevant mitigating evidence is available but is not
introduced or considered by the sentencer, the appropriateness of
any death sentence imposed is undermined. The trial court's refusal
to appoint independent counsel to present petitioner's case in
mitigation completely eliminates any notion that the death sentence
in his case is appropriate. ¶¶ 88-94.
J.A. Vol. VIII, at 1. On May 15, 1998, the trial
court denied petitioner's postconviction action. J.A. Vol. IX, at
130. Petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Appellate District and raised the following assignments of error:
Assignment of Error No. I: The trial court erred
in issuing insufficient findings of fact and conclusions of law in
regard to appellant's petition for postconviction relief. 1. A trial
court's decision denying a post-conviction petition must contain
findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding each of a
petitioner's claims.
Assignment of Error No. II: The trial court erred
in granting the appellee's summary judgment motion. 1. A party is
not entitled to summary judgment when the moving party cannot point
to evidence which affirmatively demonstrates that the non-moving
party has no evidence to support the non-moving party's claims.
Assignment of Error No. III: The trial court
erred when it denied appellant an evidentiary hearing on his
petition for post-conviction relief, thus violating his rights under
the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendment of the
United States Constitution and Article I, Sections 1, 2, 9, 10, 16,
and 20 of the Ohio Constitution. 1. A trial court cannot deny an
evidentiary hearing to a post-conviction petitioner when his
petition is sufficient on its face to raise constitutional claims
which depend on factual allegations that cannot be determined from
the record.
Assignment of Error No. IV: The trial court erred
in its application of the doctrine of res judicata to appellant's
claims for relief, thus violating his rights under the Fifth, Sixth,
Eighth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution and Article I, §§ 1, 2, 5, 9, 10, 16, and 20 of the
Ohio Constitution. 1. The doctrine of res judicata cannot be applied
to bar Appellant's claims for relief when those claims were
supported by evidence dehors the record.
Assignment of Error No. V: Ohio's post-conviction
process is not an adequate and corrective process. 1. Ohio's post-conviction
procedures fail to afford a petitioner with an adequate and
corrective process. On May 3, 1999, the appellate court issued a
decision affirming the trial court's decision. J.A. Vol. IX, at 305.
Petitioner pursued a discretionary appeal to the Supreme Court of
Ohio and, in his memorandum in support of jurisdiction, raised the
following propositions of law:
Proposition of Law No. 1: R.C. 2953.21 requires a
trial court to issue sufficient findings of fact and conclusions of
law regarding each of petitioner's claims.
Proposition of Law No. 2: A party is not entitled
to summary judgment when the moving party cannot point to evidence
which affirmatively demonstrates that the non-moving party has no
evidence to support that non-moving party's claims.
Proposition of Law No. 3: A trial court cannot
deny an evidentiary hearing to a post-conviction petitioner when his
petition is sufficient on its face to raise constitutional claims
which depend on factual allegation that cannot be determined from
the record.
Proposition of Law No. 4: The doctrine of res
judicata cannot be applied to bar a petitioner's claims for relief
when those claims are supported by evidence dehors the record.
Proposition of Law No. 5: Ohio's post-conviction process does not
provide an adequate corrective process in violation of the Due
Process, the Equal Protection, and the Supremacy Clauses of the
United States Constitution. J.A. Vol. IX, at 354. On March 17, 2000,
the Ohio Supreme Court issued an entry declining to hear
petitioner's appeal.
III. Habeas Corpus
On June 1, 2000, petitioner filed an application
to proceed in forma pauperis, a notice of intent to file a habeas
corpus petition, a motion for stay of execution, and a motion for
appointment of counsel. Attorneys Carol Wright [FN2] and Herman
Carson were appointed on July 7, 2000 and, on July 14, 2000,
petitioner's motion for a stay of execution was granted. On November
14, 2000, petitioner filed his formal habeas corpus petition raising
the following grounds for relief:
FN2. Ms. Wright has been representing petitioner
since his first appeal of right.
First Ground: The Eighth Amendment restrictions
on the State of Ohio's power to execute are paramount to the
individual's right to self-representation and thus by permitting the
Sixth Amendment right to self representation to trump the Eighth
Amendment, the State of Ohio denied petitioner his constitutional
rights to a reliable sentencing determination and circumvented the
statutory and constitutional requirements.
Second Ground: Providing an opportunity to
present mitigation evidence is insufficient to guarantee a death
sentence meets the requirements of the Eighth Amendment. A valid
death sentence requires both guided discretion and an individualized
sentencing determination. Petitioner was denied the safeguards
required by the Eighth Amendment when his counsel felt obligated to
follow his wishes to seek a death sentence because the proceeding
that resulted lacked the adversarial testing that his required to
assure the system's reliability.
Third Ground: Petitioner Ashworth was deprived of
counsel in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel when
the trial court refused to appoint independent counsel. Such state
induced deprivation of counsel violates the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth,
and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Fourth Ground: Petitioner was not competent to
waive his right to present mitigation evidence and thus his death
sentence violates the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
Fifth Ground: Petitioner Ashworth was denied the
individualized and reliable sentencing determination guaranteed by
the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution when
the state Supreme Court conducted its independent review as the
court failed to consider and give effect to mitigating circumstances
that were manifestly present in the record.
Sixth Ground: To have a valid waiver of a
fundamental constitutional right, there must be an intentional
relinquishment of a known right. Petitioner did not validly waive
his fundamental right to present mitigation evidence and thus, his
due process rights and his rights to a reliable sentence as
guaranteed by the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the
U.S. Constitution were violated.
Seventh Ground: Petitioner was denied the
effective assistance of counsel in violation of the Fifth, Sixth,
Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Eighth Ground: Petitioner was tried and sentenced
by a trial court that was predisposed to sentence him to death which
deprived Petitioner Ashworth of his right to a fair trial and
sentencing determination in violation of the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth,
and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Ninth Ground: Petitioner Ashworth was deprived of
his rights under the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments
to the United States Constitution since he is factually innocent of
the offenses of which he was convicted and for which he was
sentenced to death.
Tenth Ground: A sentence of death by
electrocution violates the Eighth Amendment. Furthermore, forcing a
death sentenced individual to elect his own means of execution by
choosing between electrocution and lethal injection constitutes
cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment.
Eleventh Ground: Petitioner's sentence of death
violates treaties to which the United States of America is a
signatory, thereby violating the Supremacy Clause of the United
States Constitution.
Twelfth Ground: The statutory provisions
governing the Ohio capital scheme violate the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth,
and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. This
scheme is unconstitutional on its face. Petition, doc.no. 13.
On March 12, 2001, respondent filed a motion to
dismiss procedurally defaulted claims. Petitioner filed a memorandum
in opposition on April 2, 2001. This order will address the
questions of whether any of petitioner's grounds for relief must be
denied because they were procedurally defaulted during the course of
state court proceedings, and whether he has successfully
demonstrated the existence of cause sufficient to excuse that
default.
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, respondent's motion to
dismiss procedurally defaulted claims is GRANTED as to grounds nine
and ten, as well as paragraphs 107, 108, and 115 in part of ground
seven, and DENIED as to grounds five, six, and the remaining claims
of ground seven. IT IS SO ORDERED.