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Timothy George BALDWIN
Timothy George
Baldwin was executed on September 10, 1984. Baldwin was
convicted of beating to death an 85-year-old blind woman, Mary James
Peters, during the robbery of her West Monroe home on April 4,
1978.
Peters, who was a
former neighbor of Baldwin's and the godmother of his youngest child,
was beaten with a skillet, a stool, a small television set, and a
telephone. Baldwin, who maintained his innocence, gave this final
statement:
"I've always tried
to be a good sport when I've lost at something and I see no reason
not to leave this world with the same policy. After all, it was a
hell of a battle.
"I therefore
congratulate all those who have tried so hard to murder me. I
definitely have to give them credit as it takes a very special kind
of person to murder an innocent man and still be able to live with
themselves."
Timothy Baldwin
VictimsoftheState.org
Baldwin was convicted of the murder of Mary Lee Peters,
the godmother of Baldwin’s child. Peters, an 84-year-old West
Monroe woman, was beaten to death during a robbery of her home.
After the trial, defense lawyers found a hotel receipt proving that
Baldwin was hundreds of miles away in another state on the night of
the murder.
In response, the prosecution claimed that he had driven to the hotel
in order to establish an alibi and then returned to Louisiana to
commit the murder. If Baldwin staged his alibi, the prosecution did
not explain why he did not have the receipt available for trial.
The main witness against Baldwin was his girlfriend, Marilyn Hampton,
who received a life sentence, rather than the death penalty, for her
part in the murder. The prosecution claimed that Hampton waited
outside in a car while Baldwin committed the murder. Baldwin
allegedly had confessed to the crime and was convicted by an all-white
jury.
The judge, the prosecutor, and Baldwin's own court-appointed
attorney used racially derogatory language during the trial.
Baldwin was executed in the electric chair on Sept. 10, 1984.
Shortly before the execution, a former sheriff's deputy swore in a
statement that Baldwin had been beaten and tortured into a
confession by white officers.
Howard Marsellus, the chairman of the Louisiana Board of Pardons and
Parole, was troubled that he may have allowed an innocent man to be
put to death. The governor had appointed Marsellus and Marsellus
felt he had to go along with the governor wishes that there be no
recommendation for clemency in any capital case.
The
governor visited Hampton in prison before signing Baldwin’s death
warrant. Marsellus believed the purpose of the visit was to induce
Hampton to maintain her original testimony. Two months later the
Board of Pardons and Paroles received Hampton's file marked
"Expedite." Seven years into a life sentence for first-degree
murder Hampton was freed.
653 F.2d 942
No.
81-3249
August 17, 1981
Before WISDOM, GEE and POLITZ,
Circuit Judges.
GEE, Circuit Judge:
The facts in this case, as
elaborated by the Louisiana Supreme Court on direct
appeal, State v. Baldwin, 388 So.2d 664, 669
(La.1980), are not in dispute.
Facts
Timothy Baldwin, his wife Rita,
and their seven children were neighbors of Mary
James Peters in West Monroe, Louisiana, from 1971
until 1977. Mrs. Peters was godmother to their
youngest, Russell. During the latter part of their
stay in West Monroe, William Odell Jones also
resided with the Baldwins.
The group went to Bossier City
for six months and then moved to Ohio. The oldest
daughter, Michelle, remained in West Monroe with one
brother. A second son entered the service. Marilyn
Hampton and her three daughters stayed with the
Baldwins in Ohio. Marilyn, Timothy Baldwin, and her
children then left, accompanied by Jones. Baldwin
and Jones worked together in the business of
installing aluminum siding.
After the departure of her
husband, Rita Baldwin got in financial difficulties
and was picked up on bad check charges. Her four
younger children went to live with Michelle in West
Monroe. Meanwhile, Timothy Baldwin, Jones, Marilyn
Hampton and her three children led an itinerant
existence. Their last means of transportation was a
1978 black Ford van, rented in Tampa, Florida.
On April 4, 1978, Marilyn Hampton
and Timothy Baldwin drove the van to West Monroe.
Jones and the children stayed at a cabin in Holmes
State Park, near Jackson, Mississippi. Baldwin and
Marilyn Hampton visited Michelle's apartment in West
Monroe but left there around 8:00 p. m. Shortly
thereafter, a van was seen parked in front of Mrs.
Peters' house. A man and woman were observed leaving
the residence between 10:00 and 11:00 p. m. Shortly
before their departure, passersby saw and heard
indications that someone in the Peters' home was
being beaten.
Baldwin testified in his own
behalf and admitted that he and Marilyn visited Mrs.
Peters that evening but denied the murder. Mrs.
Peters, who was 85 years old, was beaten with
various things, among them a skillet, a stool, and a
telephone. She remained on the kitchen floor
overnight and was discovered the next morning
shortly before noon by an employee of the Ouachita
Council Meals on Wheels, who was bringing her noon
meal. Although helpless and incoherent, Mrs. Peters
tried to defend herself against the police officers
and the ambulance attendant who took her to the
hospital.
Dr. A. B. Gregory saw her in the
emergency room around 12:30 p. m. on April 5, 1978,
and found her semi-comatose. Her left cheekbone and
jawbone were shattered; she had brain damage from
multiple contusions and lacerations. According to
Dr. Gregory, Mrs. Peters could not communicate
rationally. She died of the injuries the following
day. Dr. Frank Chin, who performed the autopsy,
attributed her death to massive cerebral hemorrhage
and swelling, secondary to external head injuries.
Timothy Baldwin and Marilyn
Hampton were subsequently located in El Dorado,
Arkansas. Timothy Baldwin signed consents for the
search of their motel room and the van. Two blue
bank bags, one empty and one containing savings
bonds and certificates of deposit payable to Mary
James, were found in the van.1
Jones, to whom Marilyn Hampton and Timothy Baldwin
had made inculpatory statements both before and
after the crime, helped police officers locate a
safe that had belonged to the victim in the
LaFourche Canal in West Monroe. Baldwin's finger and
palm prints were found on various items in the
Peters' home: a cigarette lighter, a television set,
and a coffee cup.
Baldwin was found guilty, and the
jury recommended the death sentence, finding two
aggravating circumstances: "1. the offender was
engaged in the perpetration or attempted
perpetration of an armed robbery (appellant had a
knife on his person) and 2. the offense was
committed in an especially heinous, atrocious or
cruel manner." The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed
the conviction and denied rehearing. The United
States Supreme Court denied certiorari on January
12, 1981. Baldwin v. Louisiana,
449 U.S. 1103 , 101 S.Ct. 901, 66 L.Ed.2d 830
(1981).
Appellant's execution was
scheduled for March 31, 1981. He then sought post-conviction
relief, which was denied for lack of jurisdiction by
the state district court on March 26, 1981, and
denied by the Louisiana Supreme Court without
written reasons on March 27, 1981. Appellant
immediately filed a petition for writ of habeas
corpus in federal district court and was granted a
stay of execution on March 27, 1981. The district
court denied relief without an evidentiary hearing
and ordered the stay dissolved as of May 4, 1981.
Denial of Effective Counsel
Appellant asserts that the
district court erred in finding, without holding an
evidentiary hearing, that trial counsel was not
ineffective. This issue was not raised on direct
appeal but was raised in appellant's state petitions
for post-conviction relief and denied without a
hearing. Appellant first argues that counsel was
ineffective for failing to pursue a consistent
defense strategy, asserting that counsel's
questioning on voir dire evidenced an intent to
pursue an intoxication defense, which was not
developed at trial and was abandoned in the jury
charge.
Before trial, counsel moved to
change the plea to guilty by reason of insanity
based in part on appellant's heavy drinking. See
State v. Baldwin, 388 So.2d at 670. Counsel
questioned prospective jurors about their
understanding of the concept of specific intent and
their feelings about alcohol consumption. Counsel's
opening and closing remarks are not included in the
transcript, and their content is unknown; but
appellant did cross-examine two state witnesses
about their knowledge of appellant's increasing use
of alcohol over the years and his extensive drinking
on the day of the murder. Appellant's wife was
called to testify about his increasing use of
alcohol, and appellant testified at length about his
drinking on the day of the murder.
On cross-examination, appellant
admitted that, although drunk, he was fully
conscious of his activities on the night of the
murder. Counsel subsequently agreed to deletion of
the intoxication defense from the jury charge.
Counsel then argued on motion for new trial that
appellant's mental state or intoxicated condition
precluded specific intent. See id. at 676. As the
state asserts, appellant also defended on the theory
that he had visited in the victim's home but left
without committing the murder.
The Sixth Amendment entitles a
criminal defendant to counsel reasonably likely to
render and rendering reasonably effective assistance.
Effective assistance is not tantamount to errorless
assistance or counsel judged ineffective by
hindsight. The methodology for applying the standard
involves an inquiry into the actual performance of
counsel and a determination based on the totality of
the circumstances and the entire record. Nelson v.
Estelle, 642 F.2d 903, 906 (5th Cir. 1981). "Informed
evaluation of potential defenses to criminal charges
and meaningful discussion with one's client of the
realities of his case are cornerstones of effective
assistance of counsel." Gaines v. Hopper, 575 F.2d
1147, 1149-50 (5th Cir. 1978). But tactical
decisions do not render assistance ineffective
simply because in retrospect it is apparent that
counsel chose the wrong course. Beckham v.
Wainwright, 639 F.2d 262, 265 (5th Cir. 1981).
The district court below
considered "the evidence, the character of the
defendant, and the circumstances of the crime." It
noted that Baldwin had been represented by two
experienced criminal lawyers who engaged in three
months of pretrial preparation, numerous substantive
motions, a five-day trial, and extensive post-trial
litigation. The district court found counsel
reasonable effective and refused to scrutinize
counsel's decision not to develop further the
intoxication defense. We conclude that it was not
error for the district court to deny an evidentiary
hearing while finding that counsel's assistance at
trial had been effective.
This court has remanded for an
evidentiary hearing when it could not conclusively
determine from the record the accuracy of a
petitioner's allegations of ineffective assistance.
See Clark v. Blackburn, 619 F.2d 431, 432 (5th Cir.
1980). "The district court should hold a full
hearing on any issues not resolved because of an
insufficient record." Id. at 434. Here appellant
does not raise allegations that require reference
outside the record. Compare Harris v. Oliver, 645
F.2d 327, 331 (5th Cir. 1981) (record presented
sharp conflicts of evidence requiring credibility
choices), with Williams v. Blackburn, 649 F.2d 1019
(5th Cir. 1981) (evidentiary hearing unnecessary
since district court had full record).
Where a petitioner can point to
specific incidents of ineffectiveness, this circuit
does not hesitate to grant a new trial or a hearing,
but it does not blindly accept speculative and
inconcrete claims. United States v. Gray, 565 F.2d
881, 887 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
435 U.S. 955 , 98 S.Ct. 1587, 55 L.Ed.2d 807
(1978). Here appellant has failed to produce
evidence to support a federal constitutional
deprivation. The burden of proof is on the
petitioner in a habeas corpus proceeding. Jones v.
Estelle, 632 F.2d 490, 492 (5th Cir. 1980), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 101 S.Ct. 1992, 68 L.Ed.2d
307 (1981).
Appellant's case was difficult to
defend, considering the evidence of fingerprints in
the victim's home, the victim's property found in
appellant's van, and the testimony of Jones that
appellant had said he would kill the victim if
necessary in order to get her money. Appellant
precipitated the abandonment of the intoxication
defense when he testified on cross-examination that
he was fully conscious of his activities on the
night of the murder. Counsel's only asserted
alternative strategy would have been to pursue an "arguable
defense of alibi." This alibi defense is discussed
below and is without merit. Appellant has failed to
meet his burden of alleging facts to support the
grant of an evidentiary hearing. See Rutledge v.
Wainwright, 625 F.2d 1200, 1205 (5th Cir. 1980),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 101 S.Ct. 1746, 68 L.Ed.2d
229 (1981).
The second basis for appellant's
assertion of ineffective assistance of counsel is
counsel's failure to move for a new trial despite
newly discovered evidence. Five months after trial,
counsel acquired a motel receipt indicating that
appellant was in El Dorado, Arkansas, some 70 miles
away, on the night of the murder. The district court
did not investigate this allegation, simply assuming
that counsel would have developed any adequate alibi
defense after exerting the effort to uncover the
evidence. Although under other circumstances the
failure to grant a hearing on this allegation might
have constituted error, our review of the record
indicates that appellant's counsel did not further
develop the new evidence probably because it did not
provide the appellant with an adequate alibi.
Appellant testified at trial that
he left the victim's house and that he and Mrs.
Hampton drove to an El Dorado motel that night.
Appellant does not assert that the motel receipt
indicates a check-in time inconsistent with
appellant's presence in the victim's house between
10:00 and 11:00 p. m., the time of the murder. State
v. Baldwin, 388 So.2d at 669. Even if this court
were inclined to second guess appellant's trial
counsel, this allegation is without merit.
Violation of State
Sequestration Laws
Appellant asserts that the trial
judge did not instruct the last seven jurors
concerning sequestration and allowed the jurors to
go to a concession stand in the courthouse lobby
during trial, possibly unescorted. After the first
day of voir dire, the court excused the remaining
prospective jurors for the night, noting the
existence of publicity about the case and
instructing them not to expose themselves to any
information that might influence them. The court
then addressed the five selected jurors and
instructed them not to discuss the case with anyone,
listen to any discussions, or discuss the case among
themselves. The record does not conclusively
indicate whether the entire panel heard the last
instruction. The following morning, defense counsel
moved to have the remaining panel members polled
concerning a newspaper article about the case.
The story mentioned a safe, the
significance of which was unknown to the general
public, a pre-psychiatric stress test, and
appellant's volunteering to take a lie detector test
over his counsel's objections. Appellant's request
was granted, and the remaining panel members were
individually asked, out of the presence of the
selected jurors, whether they had read the story.
The trial court then found that
three of the sixteen panel members had come into
contact with some form of news media and that those
three stated they did not have a different opinion
after the exposure and that the jury panel had not
been tainted by the exposure. Appellant's counsel
stated no objection to this ruling, and it is not
challenged on appeal. Appellant admits that no
objection was made to the failure to instruct the
last seven jurors concerning sequestration or their
trip to the concession stand.
Appellant's exclusive reliance on
Louisiana's strict sequestration requirements in
capital cases is misplaced. In habeas proceedings,
the federal courts sit to determine whether there
has been a constitutional infraction of the
appellant's due process rights that would render the
trial as a whole "fundamentally unfair," not to
enforce state procedural rules. Nelson v. Estelle,
642 F.2d 903, 906 (5th Cir. 1981). "(F)ederal habeas
corpus relief is available only for the vindication
of rights existing under federal law; not rights
existing solely under the rules of state procedure."
Id. at 905-06; Stewart v. Estelle, 634 F.2d 998, 999
(5th Cir. 1980). "The constitutional standard of
fairness requires that a defendant have 'a panel of
impartial, indifferent jurors.' " Murphy v. Florida,
421 U.S. 794, 799, 95 S.Ct. 2031, 2036, 44 L.Ed.2d
589 (1975) (quoting Irvin v. Dodd, 366 U.S. 717, 81
S.Ct. 1639, 6 L.Ed.2d 751 (1961).
Appellant asserts no prejudice
from the brief jury separation and appears to
request an evidentiary hearing in order to ascertain
whether prejudice existed. Prejudice is presumed in
habeas cases only when pretrial publicity is so
pervasive and expressly prejudicial that the
community is prejudiced. United States v. Williams,
568 F.2d 464 (5th Cir. 1978) (direct appeal
discussing confusion of federal and constitutional
standards); United States v. Herring, 568 F.2d 1099,
1103 (5th Cir. 1978) (direct appeal consciously
applying due process principles).
The standard of review, at least
on direct appeal, is stricter for publicity during
trial than for pretrial publicity, and principles
from the two types of cases must not be allowed to
overlap haphazardly. Williams, 568 F.2d at 468.
Juror exposure to news accounts of the crime with
which defendant is charged does not, standing alone,
presumptively deprive the defendant of due process.
Murphy v. Florida, supra 421 U.S. at 799, 95 S.Ct.
at 2035.
Appellant has not demonstrated
and the record does not suggest such a degree of
prejudicial pretrial publicity as would support a
presumption of prejudice. See Mayola v. State of
Alabama, 623 F.2d 992, 996-98 (5th Cir. 1980), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 101 S.Ct. 1986, 68 L.Ed.2d
303 (1981) (appellant seeking nullification of
conviction must demonstrate an "actual, identifiable
prejudice attributable to that publicity on the part
of members of his jury"). Appellant has shown no
constitutional violation in the jurors' trip to the
concession stand. Indeed, it has been held that the
decision to sequester the jury lies within the sound
discretion of the trial court. Mastrain v. McManus,
554 F.2d 813, 818 (8th Cir.), cert.denied,
433 U.S. 913 , 97 S.Ct. 2985, 53 L.Ed.2d 1099
(1977) (denial of motion to sequester jury in
first degree murder case; no state requirement
involved).
Appellant's other allegation of
error, failure to instruct the last seven jurors not
to discuss the case with anyone, must also fail
absent alleged prejudice. Rotolo v. United States,
404 F.2d 316, 317 (5th Cir. 1968) (failure of trial
judge to admonish jury not to discuss case prior to
lunch recess did not constitute reversible error
absent allegation of actual prejudice). Appellant
has thus failed to allege a federal constitutional
violation, and the denial of his petition on this
basis without evidentiary hearing was not error.
Jury Instructions on
Substantive Crime
The appellant next challenges the
jury instructions. In brief, the appellant argues
that the instructions given the Louisiana jury that
convicted and sentenced him to death were inaccurate,
confusing and incomplete, thus denying him due
process. He argues that the instructions
substantially undermined the reliability of the
jury's determinations and created an impermissible
risk that the jury had not found every element of
the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
This claim presents a more
difficult issue than those discussed above. While
the decision to punish certain conduct as a state
crime and the determination of the constituent
elements of such crimes are largely left to the
legislatures and courts of the various states, due
process requires that convictions under those laws
not be arbitrarily or confusedly obtained. If the
instructions given the jury were likely to cause an
imprecise, arbitrary, or insupportable finding of
guilt on the charge of first degree murder, then the
defendant may be entitled to habeas relief. The
legal background for the appellant's claim must be
explained.
Spurred by the United States
Supreme Court decision in Roberts v. Louisiana,
428 U.S. 325 , 96 S.Ct. 3001, 49 L.Ed.2d 974
(1976), holding that Louisiana's efforts to
reinstitute the death penalty consistent with the
principles of Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238, 92
S.Ct. 2726, 33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972), had failed, the
State of Louisiana amended its statutes on murder
and its capital sentencing procedures in 1976 and
1977. First degree murder was defined at the time of
the appellant's trial as a homicide committed with
specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily
harm. La.R.S. 14:30. Second degree murder was then
defined in part as "the killing of a human being
when the offender has a specific intent to kill,
under circumstances that would be first degree
murder under Article 30, but the killing is
accomplished without any of the aggravating
circumstances listed in Article 905.4 of the
Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure." La.R.S.
14:30.1(B) (1977).
Those "aggravating circumstances,"
the absence of which negatively defined second
degree murder, normally played a role in the second
part of the first degree murder trial. Once a
defendant was found guilty of murder in the first
degree, a sentencing hearing was held before the
convicting jury. If the jury unanimously found at
least one of article 905.4's aggravating
circumstances (defendant engaged in perpetration of
aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated
burglary, or armed robbery; victim a firefighter or
a peace officer on duty; defendant previously
convicted of an unrelated murder, aggravated rape,
or aggravated kidnapping; defendant knowingly
created a risk of death or harm to more than one
person; defendant was offered or given anything of
value for commission of crime; defendant at time of
offense was imprisoned for another unrelated
forcible felony; offense was committed "in an
especially heinous, atrocious or cruel manner"), it
could, but did not have to, unanimously impose the
death penalty; alternatively, the jury could
unanimously choose life imprisonment. If the jury
could not reach unanimity on the sentence, the trial
judge was obligated to impose a life sentence on the
defendant. Much of the above scheme is still in
place in Louisiana, but the state supreme court
opinion in State v. Payton, 361 So.2d 866 (La.1978),
and the consequent statutory amendments have altered
the definitions of first and second degree murder.
In its Payton opinion, the
Louisiana Supreme Court purported to decide what the
state legislature had really meant in its statutory
definitions of murder. "By defining second degree
murder as an unaggravated, specific intent homicide,
the legislature clearly intended by implication to
remove this type of conduct from the definition of
first degree murder and to redefine the capital
offense as a specific intent homicide accomplished
with a statutorily prescribed aggravating
circumstance." Id. at 870.
All seven of the aggravating
circumstances prescribed in article 905.4 for
consideration of imposition of the death penalty
were not properly, despite the language of the
second degree murder statute, to be considered as
part of the proof of first degree murder. The
conviction of a defendant of other violent crimes
was not a circumstance related to the commission of
the homicide and thus was not a circumstance whose
showing was sufficient for a finding of first degree
murder.
Also, the particular heinous or
cruel nature of the crime, while related to the
offense at issue, was deemed intolerably prejudicial
to the fair determination of guilt/innocence. The
court, then, redefined first degree murder in
Louisiana as a homicide committed with a specific
intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm with the
presence of one or more of the remaining aggravating
circumstances in article 905.4. Id. at 872.
The sentencing stage remains the
same as before Payton. At this stage the jury still
focuses on all the aggravating circumstances,
including prior convictions for unrelated murder,
aggravated rape, or aggravated kidnapping, and the "heinous,
atrocious or cruel" nature of the offense in order
to determine punishment. As mentioned above, the
legislature has amended the statute to comply
substantially with the court's opinion.
Under Payton, then, a Louisiana
jury finding that a defendant committed a homicide
with the intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm
would, absent a finding of one of the aggravated
circumstances, result in conviction of murder in the
second, not the first, degree. In this case the
trial judge instructed the jury as follows:
First degree murder is the
killing of a human being when the offender has a
specific intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm....
First degree murder is a capital offense meaning
that if the defendant is found guilty of that
offense the jury is given the authority to make a
binding recommendation as to whether the sentence
shall be death or life imprisonment without benefit
of probation, parole or suspension of sentence. Any
such recommendation would occur in the second phase
of the trial which would follow a finding of guilty
of first degree murder. In this stage and at this
time your only ... function is to determine the
guilt or innocence of the defendant. Since two of
the responsive verdicts you will be considering here
are second degree murder and manslaughter, it's
necessary that we define these crimes.
Revised Statute 14:30.1 provides,
"Second degree murder is the killing of a human
being when the offender is engaged in the
perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated
rape, aggravated arson, aggravated battery,
aggravated kidnapping, aggravated escape, armed
robbery or simple robbery, even though he has no
intent to kill or ... the killing of a human being
when the offender has a specific intent to kill
under circumstances that would be first degree
murder under Article 30, but the killing is
accomplished without any of the aggravating
circumstances listed in Article 905.4 of the
Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure....
Nowhere in the charge are the
elements of article 905.4 indicated. Nor does the
charge indicate that one of the aggravating
circumstances must be found as an element of first
degree murder. The appellant challenges the
instruction for this failure to include an essential
element of first degree murder and for not clearly
defining second degree murder.
Although the jury charge was not
objected to at trial and Louisiana has a
contemporaneous objection rule, La.Code Crim.P. art.
841; Tyler v. Phelps, 643 F.2d 1095, 1100 (5th Cir.
1981), this is not fatal to the appellant's claim.
The principles of comity and federalism that prevent
federal courts from granting habeas relief to state
prisoners whose claims are unreviewable in state
courts because of failure to object, give way where
there is cause for the procedural default and actual
prejudice from the error. Wainwright v. Sykes, 433
U.S. 72, 97 S.Ct. 2497, 53 L.Ed.2d 594 (1977).
The appellant convincingly
explains his failure to object, pointing to the
judicial change in the definition of first degree
murder in Louisiana through the Payton case. Payton
was decided on June 30, 1978, a month prior to the
appellant's trial, but was not published until after
rehearing on August 18, 1978, three weeks after the
trial had ended. The offense was committed April 4,
1978, during the period when the Payton decision was
effective. Compare with State v. Berry, 391 So.2d
406, 409 and 412 (La.1980) (Payton applicable to
crime committed January 30, 1978); State v. Eaker,
380 So.2d 19, 27 (La.), cert. denied,
449 U.S. 847 , 101 S.Ct. 133, 66 L.Ed.2d 57
(1980) (Payton inapplicable because offense
committed prior to effective date of statute
construed by Payton).
As the appellee admits at one
point in its brief, appellant's counsel could not
have anticipated this decision; appellant's failure
to object at trial is thus understandable. Even if
the Payton decision had been disseminated prior to
trial, it would not have become final until action
on the petition for rehearing. The criminal code
provides: "If an application for a rehearing has
been made timely, a judgment of the appellate court
becomes final when the application is denied."
La.Code Crim.P. art. 922(D) (1981).
The official revision comments
state that the code provisions were amended to
conform to the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure, articles 2166 and 2167, which are
virtually identical. Here rehearing was granted, and
the original opinion was slightly modified. Although
neither code speaks to the granting of a rehearing,
articles 2166 and 2167 have been interpreted as
meaning that the original decree of a court of
appeal never attains the status of a final judgment
if it is modified or reversed on rehearing; the
decree on rehearing is considered the final judgment.
Consolidation Loans, Inc. v. Guercio, 356 So.2d 441,
442 (La.App.1977). Appellant has therefore
established "cause" for purposes of Wainwright v.
Sykes. See Jiminez v. Estelle, 557 F.2d 506, 511
(5th Cir. 1977).
The appellant, however, fails to
demonstrate any harm resulting from this
irregularity in the instructions. "Before a federal
court may grant relief under 28 U.S.C. 2254 based on
alleged error in a state trial court's unobjected to
charge, the error must be so egregious as to rise to
the level of a constitutional violation or so
prejudicial as to render the trial itself
fundamentally unfair." Bryan v. Wainwright, 588 F.2d
1108, 1110-1111 (5th Cir. 1979). The ailing
instruction itself must so infect the entire trial
that the resulting conviction violates due process.
Henderson v. Kibbe, 431 U.S. 145, 154, 97 S.Ct.
1730, 1736, 52 L.Ed.2d 203 (1977).
Although the jury in this case
was not directed to make the necessary finding of
aggravated circumstances in order to find the
defendant guilty of first degree murder, the same
jury was directed to find aggravated circumstances
in the sentencing portion of the trial. The jury
unanimously found two aggravating circumstances in
the course of its decision to impose the death
penalty: the heinous nature of the crime and its
commission during the perpetration of an armed
robbery. Since Payton prohibited consideration of
the heinous nature of the offense in the guilt
portion of the trial as an element of first degree
murder, 361 So.2d at 871, the jury's first finding
is irrelevant. The jury's second finding, however,
would have been sufficient for a conviction of first
degree murder under Payton.
Presumably, the danger the
appellant points to here would be a conviction
absent "proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every
fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he
is charged." Kibbe, 431 U.S. at 153, 97 S.Ct. at
1736, citing In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364, 90
S.Ct. 1068, 1072, 25 L.Ed.2d 368 (1970). Still, as
this circuit has often pointed out, "actual
prejudice, or its absence, must be determined by the
facts and circumstances of each case." Thomas v.
Estelle, 587 F.2d 695, 698 (5th Cir. 1979).
Despite the valiant attempts of
counsel, we fail to see how the fact that
instructions on aggravated circumstances were given
in the wrong step of a bifurcated guilt/sentencing
procedure proved unfair to the defendant. In the
sentencing charge, the court properly defined armed
robbery: "Armed robbery is the theft of anything of
value from the person of another or which is in the
immediate control of another by use of force or
intimidation, while armed with a dangerous weapon."
The state did not introduce any evidence of
aggravating factors in the sentencing portion of the
trial but relied on the evidence of armed robbery
developed during the guilt/innocence phase, without
indicating what that evidence was.
The victim was bludgeoned to
death with objects from her own home, including a
skillet, a stool, and a telephone. State v. Baldwin,
388 So.2d at 669. "Dangerous weapon" is defined as
an "instrumentality, which, in the manner used, is
calculated or likely to produce death or great
bodily harm." La.R.S. § 14:2(3). "The term 'dangerous
weapon' is not limited to those instrumentalities
which are inherently dangerous, but includes any
instrumentality 'which in the manner used, is
calculated or likely to produce death or great
bodily harm.' " State v. Bonier, 367 So.2d 824, 826
(La.1979).
The evidence at trial included
two stool legs, part of a telephone, and pieces of a
skillet, analysis of which by an expert
criminologist detected blood and hair that matched
the blood type and hair samples of the victim. There
was also evidence that, prior to the murder,
appellant had stated his intent to rob the victim
and to kill her if necessary in order to take her
money. The record therefore contains overwhelming
evidence that the offense was committed during the
perpetration of an armed robbery. This record was
not added to, except in mitigation, at the time of
sentencing.
The jury's combined findings in
the guilt and sentencing portions of the trial
permitted the imposition of the death penalty on
appellant. The aggravating circumstance that led
them to the imposition of this punishment existed
regardless of when the jury was instructed to
consider it, and it was necessarily a part of their
determination of guilt. What the appellant objects
to and what is really at stake here is not his
conviction but his punishment. There is no denying
that when punishment was finally imposed on the
defendant, at the end of his trial, the jurors had
been properly instructed on everything necessary to
determine their verdict and had found it all beyond
a reasonable doubt.
Jury Instructions on
Sentencing
Appellant alleges error in the
court's failure clearly to instruct the jury that
should they be unable to reach a unanimous
recommendation of either life or death, then the
trial court would be obliged under the law to impose
a life sentence. There is no dispute that the jury
was informed that the sentence they wished to impose
whether life imprisonment or death had to be
unanimous under Louisiana law.
The appellant argues that the
jury was not clearly told, however, of the judge's
duty to impose a life sentence should even one jury
member refuse to join in a sentencing verdict.
According to the appellant, this failure introduced
an unacceptable level of risk that the jury might
erroneously impose a death penalty. Appellant cites
State v. Williams, 392 So.2d 619 (La.1980), where
the Louisiana Supreme Court found a failure to give
such an instruction to be constitutional error.
We disagree with the appellant's
allegation of lack of clarity. The trial court told
the jury at the sentencing stage:
(I)f you find beyond a
reasonable doubt that any of the statutory
aggravating circumstances existed, you are
authorized to consider imposing a sentence of death;
if you do not unanimously find beyond a reasonable
doubt that any of the statutory aggravating
circumstances existed, then life imprisonment
without benefit of probation, parole or suspension
of sentence is the only sentence that may be imposed.
Although the jury was never
specifically told that if even one member of the
jury held out, the trial judge would be required to
impose a life sentence, we believe that the above
words to the jury made this sufficiently clear.2
District-wide Proportionality
Review
The Louisiana Code of Criminal
Procedure requires the state supreme court to review
every death sentence to see if it is an excessive
penalty in the particular case. La.Code Crim.P.
905.9. In pursuit of that duty, procedures have been
formulated in Rule 28 of the Rules of the Supreme
Court of Louisiana that require review in each case
of the other death sentences imposed in that same
judicial district since 1976. The appellant argues
that comparative sentence review on less than a
statewide basis is not a constitutionally valid
sentencing scheme. Appellant purports to derive this
principle from cases like Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S.
153, 96 S.Ct. 2909, 49 L.Ed.2d 859 (1976), Proffitt
v. Florida,
428 U.S. 242 , 96 S.Ct. 2960, 49 L.Ed.2d 913
(1976), and Jurek v. Texas,
428 U.S. 262 , 96 S.Ct. 2950, 49 L.Ed.2d 929
(1976).
The argument made is unconvincing.
The appellant's brief effectively gives the argument
away: "The opinions of the Supreme Court make it
clear that the lack of any express provision for
proportionality review is not fatal to the validity
of a death penalty statute ; however, there still
must be an assurance that the death penalty is being
administered in a reasonably consistent manner
throughout the state for a statute to pass
constitutional muster." (emphasis added). The United
States Supreme Court has approved various states'
systems of appellate review to insure evenhanded
disposition of cases imposing the death penalty, but
the Court has never put forth any one system as
sacrosanct. The Constitution is concerned with the
elimination of caprice, and the Louisiana approach
insures "that the death penalty is being
administered in a reasonably consistent manner
throughout the state." The Louisiana scheme to
promote evenhanded, rational, and consistent
imposition of death sentences provides for a court
with statewide jurisdiction to review each case
where the sentence has been imposed and, in turn,
satisfy itself that the sentence was not "imposed
under the influence of passion, prejudice or any
other arbitrary factors, whether the evidence
supports the jury's finding of a statutory
circumstance, and whether the sentence is
disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar
cases, considering both the crime and the defendant."
La.Code Crim.P. 905.9.1; La. Supreme Court R. 28.
The court further requires the district attorney to
file a list of all first degree murder cases
occurring within his district having occurred since
January 1, 1976, with a synopsis of its facts, the
crime convicted of, and sentence imposed. La.
Supreme Court R. 28 § 4. This is in addition to the
court's knowledge, jurisdiction, and review of all
other murder cases throughout the state. Thus,
though the court's scrutiny is directed initially to
those murder cases within a given judicial district,
the review is not limited to such.
Furthermore, the facts of this
case make it a peculiar one from which to launch an
attack on the state's proportionality review
procedures. Appellant was convicted of brutally
beating to death an elderly woman with several blunt
instruments in order to steal her possessions. It is
doubtful that any conceivable method of
proportionality review would show the death penalty
here to be excessive or to have been arbitrarily or
capriciously imposed. A justice of the Louisiana
Supreme Court, who shares the appellant's sentiments
on the constitutionality of the Louisiana procedures,
made the same point in his concurrence in State v.
Baldwin, 388 So.2d at 678:
I remain of the belief that our
scheme for review of the proportionality of the
imposition of the death penalty is constitutionally
flawed in not mandating statewide review of the
sentences imposed in similar cases. See State v.
Prejean, 379 So.2d 240, 249 (La.1980) (dissenting
from denial of hearing). However, the extraordinary
deliberateness and brutality of this murder of an
84-year-old woman for her valuables clearly
justifies the death penalty without need of
extensive comparison with other offenses.
For the above reasons, the
district court's denial of relief is AFFIRMED.
*****
715 F.2d 152
United States
Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Sept. 1, 1983
Before RUBIN
and JOHNSON, Circuit Judges, and
PARKER*,
District Judge.
ALVIN B.
RUBIN, Circuit Judge:
Timothy Baldwin has asked us
to stay the issuance of our
mandate denying his petition
for habeas corpus, pending
filing and disposition of
his petition for a writ of
certiorari to the Supreme
Court. Baldwin's conviction
has been reviewed by the
Louisiana Supreme Court
twice, once on direct appeal
and again on his application
for a writ of habeas corpus.
He has twice sought a writ
of certiorari from the
United States Supreme Court
and both applications have
been denied. We have fully
reviewed his contentions
that his constitutional
rights were violated and
have found them meritless.
His claims have by now been
presented to eight different
state justices and judges
and, including the
applications to the Supreme
Court, to sixteen different
federal judges, in most
instances more than one
time. Not a single judge has
found them valid. We
ourselves examined them with
meticulous care and found
them to lack merit. We,
therefore, deny the stay and
explain our reasons.
A Louisiana trial court
convicted Baldwin of capital
murder in 1978 and sentenced
him to death. Following his
exhaustion of direct
appellate remedies, State v.
Baldwin, 388 So.2d 664
(La.1980), cert. denied, 449
U.S. 1103, 101 S.Ct. 901, 66
L.Ed.2d 830 (1981), and the
failure of his initial
application for post-conviction
relief, Baldwin v. Blackburn,
524 F.Supp. 332 (W.D.La.),
aff'd, 653 F.2d 942 (5th
Cir.1981), cert. denied, 456
U.S. 950, 102 S.Ct. 2021, 72
L.Ed.2d 475 (1982), the
Louisiana trial court set
his execution for May 27,
1982.1
Baldwin again sought a writ
of habeas corpus from the
federal district court and
this application was denied.
On May 24, 1982, we stayed
his execution pending
consideration of the merits
of his claims. On May 16,
1983, we affirmed the
district court's denial of
habeas corpus. Baldwin v.
Maggio, 704 F.2d 1325 (5th
Cir.1983). Baldwin filed a
timely petition for
rehearing, thereby delaying
the issuance of our mandate
pending disposition of that
petition, Fed.R.App.P.
41(a). We denied the
petition for rehearing on
June 23, 1983. Baldwin then
timely filed the present
request for a stay of our
mandate pending his filing a
petition for certiorari. Our
mandate has again been
withheld pending disposition
of this request. Loc.R. 27.
Our evaluation of Baldwin's
request is governed by well-established
standards for granting a
stay of a mandate pending
disposition of a petition
for certiorari:
[T]here
must be a reasonable
probability that four
members of the Court would
consider the underlying
issue sufficiently
meritorious for the grant of
certiorari or the notation
of probable jurisdiction;
there must be a significant
possibility of reversal of
the lower court's decision;
and there must be a
likelihood that irreparable
harm will result if that
decision is not stayed.
Barefoot v. Estelle, --- U.S.
----, ----, 103 S.Ct. 3383,
3395, 77 L.Ed.2d ---- (1983)
(quoting White v. Florida,
457 U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct. 1,
73 L.Ed.2d 1385 (1982) (Powell,
Circuit Justice)). Barefoot
emphasizes that, when a
petitioner under imminent
threat of execution has made
a substantial showing of a
denial of a federal right,
he must be afforded an
adequate opportunity to
present the merits of his
argument, and he must
receive a considered
decision on the merits of
his claim. --- U.S. at ----,
103 S.Ct. at 3394. When the
court has expedited its
decisional process, a denial
of a stay of execution to a
petitioner presenting a "question
of some substance," id. at
---- n. 4, 103 S.Ct. at 3394
n. 4, is "tolerable" if and
only if the expedited
procedures provide adequate
time and means for rendition
of a considered judgment on
the merits prior to the
scheduled execution date. Id.
at ----, 103 S.Ct. at 3394.
But, even after expedited
procedures, "[s]tays of
execution are not automatic
pending the filing and
consideration of a petition
for a writ of certiorari
...." Id. at ----, 103 S.Ct.
at 3395. "When the process
of direct review--which, if
a federal question is
involved, includes the right
to petition [the Supreme]
Court for a writ of
certiorari--comes to an end,
a presumption of finality
and legality attaches to the
conviction and sentence. The
role of federal habeas
proceedings, while important
in assuring that
constitutional rights are
observed, is secondary and
limited." Id. at ----, 103
S.Ct. at 3391.
Here the procedure was
conventional and deliberate.
We have twice stayed
Baldwin's execution pending
review of his appeal on the
merits. Moreover, we
withheld our most recent
opinion to have the benefit
of the Supreme Court's
decisions during the entire
1982 Term. Baldwin has also
had two earlier
opportunities to present to
the full Supreme Court
claims that his death
sentence was imposed
unconstitutionally. He is
not seeking a stay to permit
completion of direct review.2
Nonetheless, if Baldwin's
petition for a stay
establishes a reasonable
probability that certiorari
will be granted and a
significant possibility that
our decision will be
reversed,3
we must grant a stay to
allow adequate time for
considered deliberation of
his petition for certiorari.
We are, of course, acutely
aware that the Supreme Court
"generally places
considerable weight on the
decision reached by the
circuit courts in these
circumstances." Barefoot,
--- U.S. at ----, 103 S.Ct.
at 3395; accord Commodity
Futures Trading Commission
v. British American
Commodity Options Corp., 434
U.S. 1316, 1319, 98 S.Ct.
10, 12, 54 L.Ed.2d 28, 31
(1977) (Marshall, Circuit
Justice).
Baldwin's request for a stay
is premised on the Supreme
Court's grants of certiorari
in Washington v. Strickland,
693 F.2d 1243 (5th Cir.1982)
(en banc), cert. granted,
--- U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct.
2451, 77 L.Ed.2d 1332 (1983)
and Harris v. Pulley, 692
F.2d 1189 (9th Cir.1982) (per
curiam), cert. granted, ---
U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct. 1425,
75 L.Ed.2d 804 (1983). The
en banc decision in
Washington announced our
standards for finding
ineffective assistance of
counsel and for determining
whether the prejudice caused
by counsel's ineffectiveness
warrants habeas corpus
relief. We applied those
standards in denying
Baldwin's claims of
ineffective assistance.
Baldwin, 704 F.2d at 1130,
1333-34.
The propriety of those
standards is squarely
presented by the petition
for certiorari in Washington
v. Strickland, but that
petition was filed by the
state, seeking a more
lenient prejudice standard
than the one we applied.4
As set forth in the footnote,
the state's petition for
certiorari relies on the
difference between our
Washington v. Strickland
standard and the more
demanding standard adopted
by the District of Columbia
Circuit in United States v.
DeCoster, 624 F.2d 196 (D.C.Cir.1979)
(en banc).
On Baldwin's charge that
counsel was ineffective, we
cannot find a reasonable
probability that four
members of the Supreme Court
will find his position
sufficiently meritorious to
grant certiorari. Nor do we
see a significant
possibility of reversal of
our decision on that issue.
Pulley involves the question
whether the Constitution
requires that a court of
statewide jurisdiction
conduct any "proportionality
review" of death sentences,
and, if so, the requisites
of such a review.5
The question Baldwin
presents is whether the
Louisiana Supreme Court,
which under the Louisiana
capital punishment statute
reviews death sentences
meted out by juries,
violates the federal
Constitution by reviewing
those sentences on a
district-by-district rather
than a statewide basis.6
Even if the Court in Pulley
decides that proportionality
review is constitutionally
required, we find no
reasonable basis for
concluding that the Court
will require the statewide
review that we declined to
require in Williams. This
conclusion is reinforced by
the denial of review, albeit
now stayed, in Williams. See
supra note 6. In short, we
can find no reasonable
probability of a grant of
certiorari and no
substantial possibility of
reversal of our decision on
that ground.
Petition for stay DENIED.
*****
JOHNSON, Circuit Judge,
dissenting:
The controlling legal
standards utilized by this
panel in affirming the
district court's denial of
Timothy Baldwin's petition
for habeas corpus relief
presently lie in legal
limbo, the Supreme Court
having granted certiorari in
the two controlling cases
that governed this panel's
decision. See Washington v.
Strickland, 693 F.2d 1243
(5th Cir.1982) (en banc ),
cert. granted, --- U.S.
----, 103 S.Ct. 2451, 77
L.Ed.2d 1332 (1983) (No.
82-1554) and Harris v.
Pulley, 692 F.2d 1189 (9th
Cir.1982) (per curiam ),
cert. granted, --- U.S.
----, 103 S.Ct. 1425, 75
L.Ed.2d 787 (1983). That the
Supreme Court may in the
very near future alter the
standards applied in
determining whether
Baldwin's trial met with the
requirements of basic
constitutional law seems
inarguable.
What this Court has before
it for consideration should
be clearly understood: it is
a request for a stay of the
issuance of this Court's
mandate pending only the
filing and disposition of
his petition for a writ of
certiorari to the Supreme
Court. The temporary nature
of the requested stay is
self-evident. This being
true, I simply cannot
sanction Timothy Baldwin's
execution knowing that the
Supreme Court may, in the
very near future, alter or
reject the constitutional
standards applied in denying
Baldwin's petition. This
Court should not permit the
ultimate punishment to be
exacted when live,
fundamental constitutional
issues remain unresolved in
a defendant's appeal.
Accordingly, I respectfully
dissent from my colleagues'
denial of Timothy Baldwin's
request for a stay of our
mandate pending filing and
disposition of his petition
for a writ of certiorari in
the Supreme Court.
Barefoot v. Estelle, --- U.S.
----, 103 S.Ct. 3383, 77
L.Ed.2d ---- (1983) teaches
that when a petitioner under
imminent threat of execution
has made a substantial
showing of a denial of a
federal right, he must be
afforded an adequate
opportunity to present the
merits of his argument, and
he must receive a considered
decision on the merits of
his claim. Id. at ----, 103
S.Ct. at 3394. A denial of a
stay of execution to a
petitioner presenting a "question
of some substance," ibid. at
note 4, is "tolerable," ibid.,
if and only if expedited
procedures provide adequate
time and means for rendition
of a considered judgment on
the merits prior to the
scheduled execution date.
Ibid.
Baldwin's request is, of
course, in a different
posture than was Barefoot's:
Baldwin has received the
plenary review of his appeal
of right to this Court that
was at stake in Barefoot,
and now requests a stay in
order to seek the
discretionary review of the
Supreme Court. But the
constitutional imperative--that
the State cannot take a life
in the name of justice until
justice has been given to
the one condemned--does not
melt away as the procedural
posture of the petition
changes. Orderly
consideration of the
substantial constitutional
questions remaining after
plenary appellate review is,
like a thorough and
considered decision in the
Court of Appeals itself,
requisite to the
administration of justice
under law.
Baldwin's petition for a
stay is premised on the
Supreme Court's grants of
certiorari in Washington v.
Strickland, 693 F.2d 1243
(5th Cir.1982) (Unit B) (en
banc ), cert. granted, ---
U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct. 2451,
77 L.Ed.2d ---- (1983) and
Pulley v. Harris, 692 F.2d
1189 (9th Cir.1982), cert.
granted, --- U.S. ----, 103
S.Ct. 1425, 75 L.Ed.2d 787
(1983). The en banc decision
in Washington announced our
standards for finding
ineffective assistance of
counsel and for determining
whether prejudice accruing
on ineffective assistance
warrants habeas corpus
relief. Our refusal to
accept Baldwin's two claims
of ineffective assistance of
counsel turned in each
instance on our decision
that he had failed to show
the "actual, substantial
prejudice" demanded by
Washington to establish a
constitutional defect in the
adequacy of representation.1
The propriety of that test
is squarely presented by the
petition for certiorari.2
Pulley involves questions of
the constitutional necessity
of a "proportionality review"
of death sentences by a
court of state-wide
jurisdiction, and the
requisites of such a review.3
In his petition for habeas
corpus, Baldwin presented a
similar question, i.e., that
the Louisiana Supreme
Court's practice of
conducting its
proportionality reviews of
sentences meted out in
capital murder cases on a
district-by-district basis
fails to satisfy the eighth
and fourteenth amendments to
the United States
Constitution. He conceded on
appeal that our
consideration of that claim
was foreclosed by our
earlier rejection en banc of
the identical claim in
Williams v. Maggio, 679 F.2d
381, 394-95 (5th Cir.) (en
banc ), cert. denied, ---
U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct. 3553,
77 L.Ed.2d 1399 (1983).
Baldwin v. Maggio, 704 F.2d
at 1326 n. 1.
I think that the presence of
these issues--particularly
the propriety of Washington
's standards for evaluating
claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel--before
the Supreme Court requires
that we stay our mandate
pending filing and
disposition of a petition
for certiorari, see ante
note 1. Though the Supreme
Court may not, in the course
of its decisions of
Washington and Pulley, reach
the issues implicated in
Baldwin's case, I think that
its grant of review of those
petitions requires a present
conclusion that all of the
issues the petitions raise
are "cert-worthy."
The questions of law
presented by those cases are
not so clearly settled that
I can, with confidence,
predict that the Court's
decision will endorse our
own. Acceleration of an
admittedly deliberate
appellate process should not
come at the expense of the
defendant's life, when
fundamental constitutional
issues remain unresolved in
his case. As Judge Goldberg
noted so poignantly
concurring in Bass v.
Estelle, 696 F.2d 1154, 1161
(5th Cir.1983), "There can
be no writs of habeas corpus
from a casket."
Baldwin
also filed an application
for a writ of habeas corpus
in the Louisiana District
Court. This application was
denied on March 26, 1981,
and the Louisiana Supreme
Court denied review on March
27, 1981. See Baldwin v.
Blackburn, 524 F.Supp. at
336
Because
our mandate has not yet
issued, the Louisiana trial
court charged with setting
Baldwin's execution date has
not yet resumed jurisdiction
over the matter. For that
reason, no execution date is
presently pending. In White
v. Florida, Justice Powell
held that a petitioner under
sentence of death was not
entitled to a stay of
execution pending filing and
disposition of a petition
for certiorari; there was no
threat of imminent harm
since no execution date had
been set and the state did
not contemplate that one
would be set in the near
future. 457 U.S. at ----,
103 S.Ct. at 1, 73 L.Ed.2d
at 1385. We assume that the
circumstances here warrant
consideration of the stay
application because
Louisiana has not assured us
that no execution date is
likely to be set in the
immediate future. Louisiana
law requires the court of
original jurisdiction to fix
an execution date not less
than thirty days nor more
than forty-five days from
the dissolution of our stay.
La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 15:567 (West
Supp.1983). We act now to
avoid the frantic urgency
created by the all-too-common
eleventh-hour pleas for
relief. Not long ago, we
criticized counsel for
creating just such an
emergency by failing earlier
to seek a stay of the
issuance of our mandate
pending filing and
disposition of a petition
for certiorari, Smith v.
Balkcom, 677 F.2d 20, 21
(5th Cir.), cert. denied,
--- U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct.
181, 74 L.Ed.2d 148 (1982).
The requisite of irreparable
harm and the need for
orderly deliberation are
both satisfied by Baldwin's
present attempt to forestall
the rescheduling of his
execution
The
petition for certiorari has
been summarized as follows:
Ruling
below:
Habeas
petitioner claiming
ineffective assistance of
counsel must show that
counsel's reasonable,
strategic choice to pursue
only one of several
plausible defenses worked to
his actual and substantial
prejudice before relief will
be granted; ultimate burden,
however, remains on state to
show that any constitutional
error that did occur was
harmless beyond reasonable
doubt; remand is in order in
this case, both to allow
district court to make
findings about trial
counsel's alleged failure to
investigate and also because
of district court's improper
consideration of Florida
trial judge's testimony.
Questions
presented: (1) Has court of
appeals, in expressly
overruling Florida Supreme
Court and expressly
rejecting en banc opinion of
another federal court of
appeals, U.S. v. DeCoster,
624 F.2d 196 (C.A.D.C.1976
[sic], applied correct
standard for review of
claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel? (2)
Did court of appeals
misapply Fayerweather v.
Ritch, 195 U.S. 276 [25 S.Ct.
58, 49 L.Ed. 193] (1904), to
exclude testimony of state
trial judge, testifying as
expert and as presiding
judge, that new evidence
offered by habeas petitioner
would make no difference
upon imposition of sentence?
(3) Did court of appeals
correctly reverse denial of
habeas petitioner's habeas
application while failing to
consider or apply
presumptive validity and
factual findings of four
state courts and federal
district court? (4) Did
habeas petitioner abuse
habeas writ?
The
petition for certiorari has
been summarized as follows:
Ruling
below:
As
interpreted in Gregg v.
Georgia, 428 U.S. 153 [96
S.Ct. 2909, 49 L.Ed.2d 859]
(1976), and Proffitt v.
Florida, 428 U.S. 242 [96
S.Ct. 2960, 49 L.Ed.2d 913]
(1976), Constitution
requires as prerequisite for
imposition of death penalty
that court conduct "proportionality
review" for purpose of
comparing defendant's
sentence to other sentences
imposed for similar crimes.
Questions
presented: (1) Does
Constitution, in addition to
procedures whereby trial
court and jury impose death
sentence, require any
specific form of "proportionality
review" by court of
statewide jurisdiction prior
to execution of state death
judgment? (2) If so, what is
constitutionally required
focus, scope, and procedural
structure of such review?
Our
consideration of that claim
was foreclosed by the en
banc court's rejection of an
identical claim in Williams
v. Maggio, 679 F.2d 381,
394-95 (5th Cir.1980) (en
banc), cert. denied, --- U.S.
----, 103 S.Ct. 3553, 77
L.Ed.2d 1399 (1983). See
Baldwin, 704 F.2d at 1326 n.
2. Justice Brennan stayed
the effect of the denial of
certiorari in Williams by
order of July 14, 1983
We note
that Justice Dennis of the
Louisiana Supreme Court, who
is of the view that
statewide rather than
district-by-district review
is constitutionally required,
nevertheless concurred in
the court's affirmance of
Baldwin's sentence. He
stated: "[T]he extraordinary
deliberateness and brutality
of this murder of an 84-year
old woman for her valuables
clearly justifies the death
penalty without need of
extensive comparison with
other offenses." State v.
Baldwin, 388 So.2d at 678 (Dennis,
J., concurring).