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Thomas Henry
BATTLE
Rape - Robbery
State of Missouri v.
Thomas Battle
661 S.W. 2d 487
Thomas Battle was executed
August 7, 1996
Case Facts:
In the early morning hours of July 5, 1980 Thomas Battle and Tracy
Rowan were in Battle's bedroom drinking beer and "getting high."
Battle suggested they burglarize the apartment of Ms. Birdie Johnson,
an 80 year old neighbor of Battle's.
The two gained entrance to Ms. Johnson's
apartment by ripping the screen from an open kitchen window and
climbing into the apartment. As the two entered the kitchen Battle
picked up a twelve-inch butcher knife.
Evidence showed that while in the apartment Ms.
Johnson was brutally beaten and raped. The apartment was ransacked.
At one point, Rowan turned on a light and Battle announced that
because Ms. Johnson had seen their faces she would have to die.
Battle repeatedly stabbed Ms. Johnson with the
butcher knife and finally plunged the blade into Ms. Johnson's face
just under her left eye. Ms. Johnson was still alive talking and
saying short prayers when Battle and Rowan left the apartment.
Sometime between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. a neighbor of
Ms. Johnson's was awakened by knocking sounds coming from the
victim's apartment. The neighbor went to Ms. Johnson's apartment and
upon hearing moans coming from the residence broke down the front
door and found Ms. Johnson laying on the floor.
Police and medical personnel were summoned and Ms.
Johnson was transported to the hospital where she died at 5:45 a.m.
Death was attributed to severe trauma and bruising of her head
resulting in cranial hemorrhaging, multiple bruises and contusions
to her face and body, multiple incisions and lacerations to her
chest and back, eight rib fractures, multiple lacerations of the
lung, an injury to the brain from the facial stab wound, and shock.
Police interviewed a number of individuals
concerning the murder which led them to Battle. After further
investigation, Battle admitted that he was involved in the beating
and stabbing of Ms. Johnson.
Missouri Executes Killer of Elderly Neighbor
The New York Times
August 8, 1996
A man was executed by injection early today for killing an 82-year-old
neighbor with a butcher knife during a burglary in 1980.
The inmate, Thomas Henry Battle, 34, had been on
death row for 15 years after being convicted of the murder and rape
of Birdie Johnson, who had befriended Mr. Battle at her home in St.
Louis.
He had initially confessed to killing Mrs.
Johnson but recanted, maintaining his innocence to the end. His last
words, prison officials said, were, ''God as my witness, I did not
commit murder and rape.''
Mr. Battle was caught after the police matched
his shoe print to one taken from the scene of the crime. At his
trial he said the police had put pressure on him to confess and had
given him details of the crime.
Mr. Battle had hoped that DNA tests would clear
him of the rape and murder, but the results were inconclusive.
902 F.2d 701
Thomas Henry Battle, Appellant, v.
William Armontrout, Warden of Missouri State
Penitentiary, Appellee
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Feb. 14, 1990.
Decided May 9, 1990
Before McMILLIAN, FAGG, Circuit
Judges, and STROM,*
District judge.
FAGG, Circuit Judge.
Thomas
Henry Battle appeals from the denial of his
petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C.
Sec. 2254 (1988). Battle was convicted of
capital murder and sentenced to death. The
Missouri Supreme Court affirmed the
conviction and sentence on direct appeal.
State v. Battle, 661 S.W.2d 487 (Mo.1983)
(en banc), cert. denied, 466 U.S. 993, 104
S.Ct. 2375, 80 L.Ed.2d 847 (1984). Battle
filed a motion for postconviction relief
under Missouri Supreme Court Rule 27.26 (repealed
1988), which the court denied after an
evidentiary hearing. The Missouri Court of
Appeals affirmed the denial. Battle v. State,
745 S.W.2d 730 (Mo.Ct.App.1987), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 109 S.Ct. 183, 102
L.Ed.2d 152 (1988).
Battle
then filed his section 2254 petition,
claiming fifteen separate grounds for relief
and requesting appointment of counsel. The
asserted grounds fall into five general
categories: (1) ineffective assistance of
counsel; (2) error in jury selection; (3)
error in jury instruction; (4) introduction
of improperly obtained confessions; and (5)
improper application of the death sentence.
The district court engaged in an exhaustive
review of the records of the trial, appeal,
and Rule 27.26 proceedings. In a lengthy and
detailed memorandum opinion, the court
examined each of the fifteen grounds Battle
raised. The district court concluded the
trial court committed no prejudicial error
and denied Battle's petition and his motion
for appointment of counsel. The district
court granted a motion for reconsideration,
but again denied the petition.
Battle's
initial argument on appeal is that the
district court committed error in denying
his motion for appointment of counsel. A
court may appoint counsel for any
financially eligible person seeking relief
under section 2254 when the interests of
justice so require. See 18 U.S.C. Sec.
3006A(a)(2) (1988); 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254; R.
8(c) (1988). We review the court's denial of
the request to appoint counsel under the
abuse of discretion standard. Williams v.
Missouri, 640 F.2d 140, 144 (8th Cir.), cert.
denied, 451 U.S. 990, 101 S.Ct. 2328, 68
L.Ed.2d 849 (1981). Initially, the district
court must decide whether the pro se
litigant has presented a nonfrivolous claim
and then whether the nature of the
litigation will make the appointment of
counsel of benefit to the litigant and the
court. See Johnson v. Williams, 788 F.2d
1319, 1322 (8th Cir.1986). Several factors
should influence the court's decision,
including the pro se litigant's ability to
investigate facts and present claims and the
complexity of the factual and legal issues.
See id. at 1322-23.
Considering each of these factors, we
conclude the district court abused its
discretion in failing to appoint counsel.
Battle has presented a nonfrivolous claim
for relief. Battle's ability to investigate
is seriously impaired by his incarceration.
See Shields v. Jackson, 570 F.2d 284, 286
(8th Cir.1978) (per curiam) (indigent,
incarcerated litigant not in position to
investigate adequately). The factual and
legal issues are sufficiently complex and
numerous that appointment of counsel would
benefit both Battle and the court by
allowing counsel to develop Battle's
arguments and focus the court's analysis. Of
course, the complexity of the issues takes
on even greater significance in a case
involving the death penalty. See Chaney v.
Lewis, 801 F.2d 1191, 1196 (9th Cir.1986) (complexity
of issues coupled with death penalty
required appointment of counsel), cert.
denied, 481 U.S. 1023, 107 S.Ct. 1911, 95
L.Ed.2d 516 (1987).
At this
initial stage of proceedings in the federal
courts, the interests of justice require
appointment of counsel to advocate Battle's
position. Accordingly, without reaching the
merits of Battle's claims, wevacate the
judgment of the district court and remand
for appointment of counsel and
reconsideration of Battle's petition.
64 F.3d 347
Thomas
Henry BATTLE, Appellant, v.
Paul K. DELO, Appellee.
No.
93-1852.
United
States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted
April 20, 1995.
Decided Aug. 21, 1995.
Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing
En Banc Denied Nov. 2, 1995.*
Before
BEAM, Circuit Judge, FLOYD R. GIBSON and
JOHN R. GIBSON, Senior Circuit Judges.
BEAM,
Circuit Judge.
Thomas
Henry Battle petitions for
reconsideration of our opinion affirming
the district court's1
denial of habeas corpus relief. Battle
v. Delo, 19 F.3d 1547 (8th Cir.1994) (Battle
I ). In part, Battle's petition is based
upon our application of Sawyer v.
Whitley, 112 S.Ct. 2514, 505 U.S. 333,
120 L.Ed.2d 269 (1992), to the
procedural default of several of his
claims of ineffective assistance of
trial counsel. In Battle I, after
finding no cause or prejudice, we
applied Sawyer to find that Battle had
not shown by " 'clear and convincing
evidence' that but for the claimed
constitutional error, no reasonable
juror would find him [guilty]." Battle
I, 19 F.3d at 1554. We therefore held
that his default was not excused.
After
our decision, the Supreme Court granted
certiorari on the question of whether
the Sawyer standard, originally
articulated to demarcate the habeas
"actual innocence" gateway in situations
of procedurally defaulted death-penalty
sentencing errors, delineated the
"actual innocence" gateway for
consideration of procedurally defaulted
guilt-phase claims. See Schlup v. Delo,
--- U.S. ----, ----, 115 S.Ct. 851, 854,
130 L.Ed.2d 808 (1995).
We
stayed our mandate to have the benefit
of Schlup when considering Battle's
attempt to pass through the guilt-phase
"actual innocence" gateway. After Schlup
clarified the appropriate standard, we
requested supplementary briefing on
Battle's claim of gateway innocence and
granted a rehearing limited to that
issue. Having heard Battle's argument
and applied the dictates of Schlup to
the record of the case before us, we now
reaffirm the result of our earlier
opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Battle
was convicted and sentenced to death for
the rape and murder of Ms. Birdie
Johnson, an eighty-year-old woman who
was a family acquaintance and long-time
neighbor. At the time of the crime,
Battle was eighteen years old. Although
Battle's school attendance was erratic
after the eighth grade,2
he is an articulate and literate person
who speaks and writes very well. Ms.
Johnson, according to Battle, was also a
bright and friendly person who called
him "sweetboy."
Up
until the time of the crime, Battle
lived in his parents' basement, next
door to Ms. Johnson. He occasionally
helped his parents with their business
and Ms. Johnson with odd jobs. In the
early morning hours of July 5, 1980,
that relatively peaceful state of
community was shattered when Battle
destroyed Ms. Johnson's and, ultimately,
his own life.
Because of the evidentiary balancing
inherent in determining whether a habeas
petitioner has made a sufficient showing
of factual innocence to lift a
procedural bar, we recite the available
evidence in some detail.
On the
morning of July 5, 1980, Ms. Johnson was
found in her foyer, naked, ravished, and
beaten, yet still conscious, alert and
trying to summon help. She had multiple
stab wounds, bruises, crushed bones, and
a butcher knife protruding from her
eyesocket. She died shortly afterwards.
Several days later, police received a
tip that an Elroy Preston might be
involved in the murder. Preston was
picked up for questioning. Neither his
fingerprints nor shoe prints matched
those from the crime scene. Preston told
police that he had been drinking with
Battle and a Tracy Rowan that night, and
had then gone to a party. The officers
sought Battle to confirm Preston's alibi.
The next day, Battle contacted the
officers in response to a message left
with his mother, and agreed to see them.
The
interview began at the station at about
ten-thirty A.M. During that interview,
the officers noticed that Battle seemed
unduly distraught for someone not
suspected of any crime. When Battle
slouched down in his chair, the sergeant-in-charge
noticed that Battle's shoes seemed to
match a shoe print lifted from the crime
scene. The interview was halted and
Battle was given his Miranda rights. He
gave written and oral permission for his
shoe and palm prints to be taken and
compared with those obtained from Ms.
Johnson's home at the perpetrators'
point of entry and exit. Both the shoe
and palm prints matched.
By two-thirty
that afternoon, Battle had given three
successive recorded statements in which
he became progressively more candid
about the murder of Ms. Johnson.3
According to Battle, he and his "nephew,"
Tracy Rowan, committed the crime at the
end of a night spent drinking and
partying.4
Battle
described how he and Rowan entered Ms.
Johnson's apartment to commit a burglary.
They picked up a butcher knife on their
way in through the kitchen although they
knew the occupant was elderly and lived
alone. Battle said Rowan then raped Ms.
Johnson (while Battle himself engaged in
an ever-shifting variety of activities).
Battle
told how and where they searched for
valuables, and how they decided that
they must kill Ms. Johnson when a light
was turned on and their identities were
revealed. He related how they each
attempted to fatally stab Ms. Johnson,
but were initially unsuccessful because
the knife kept bending. Battle mentioned
that Ms. Johnson nearly escaped out the
back door when their attention was
diverted towards a renewed search for
valuables, so they grabbed her and
stabbed her some more.
Finally, in frustration, Battle took the
knife from Rowan, complaining that Rowan
was simply torturing Ms. Johnson, and
plunged it into her eyesocket. After
that, Battle could continue no longer
and fled, though he knew Ms. Johnson was
not yet dead because she was crawling on
her knees towards her front door saying
"little short prayers." Battle also told
police that he did not know what Rowan
would tell them about the crime "because
we haven't even got our story together."
In
addition to the confessions, the shoe
print and the palm print, the evidence
presented at trial included serology
evidence that linked Battle to the scene.
Human sperm with A and B antigens were
found in Ms. Johnson. A separate sperm
stain was found on her sheets, which
contained only B antigen. Battle is a B
secretor, and therefore a possible
source of the stain containing the B
antigen.5
By all
accounts, Battle, Rowan, and Preston had
been drinking together at Preston's on
July 4th, the evening preceding the
crime. At trial, Battle testified that
Preston, who lived nine houses from the
Battles, coerced him into participating
in the burglary. Battle owed Preston $15
to $35 for a chess board broken during
one of their chess games and Preston
wanted his money that night. Preston
knew that Ms. Johnson would have
recently received her benefit check.
Battle said he had no choice but to go
to Ms. Johnson's with Preston or take a
beating. Battle argued that Preston or
Rowan committed the rape and murder
after he had fled the scene.6
Although initially excluded as
inadmissible evidence, Battle had
previously exonerated Preston from any
involvement in Ms. Johnson's murder.
This information came in on Battle's
cross-examination.7
Battle
also presented evidence that Preston was
known as a bully in the neighborhood and
that Preston, when jailed several months
later on unrelated capital charges, came
to Battle's cell and asked that Battle
take "the case" for him. Preston became
angry when Battle refused and an
argument ensued. It was unclear to which
"case" Preston was referring, although
at no time was Preston charged in the
murder of Ms. Johnson.
II. DISCUSSION
Our
reconsideration of Battle's claim of
gateway innocence is not analytically
complex. In the absence of a showing of
cause and prejudice, federal courts may
not consider a habeas petitioner's
claims of constitutional error unless
that petitioner has properly presented
and preserved those claims in state
court. See, e.g., Wainwright v. Sykes,
433 U.S. 72, 97 S.Ct. 2497, 53 L.Ed.2d
594 (1977); Murray v. Carrier, 477 U.S.
478, 106 S.Ct. 2639, 91 L.Ed.2d 397
(1986).
However, if a petitioner presents new
evidence of innocence so persuasive that
we cannot have confidence in his
conviction unless we are also convinced
that his trial was free of nonharmless
constitutional error, he may pass
through the "actual innocence" gateway
to the procedural bar and present the
merits of his otherwise defaulted claims.
Schlup, --- U.S. at ----, 115 S.Ct. at
861. Battle attempts to pass through
this gateway in order that we may
consider the merits of his procedurally
defaulted claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel.
To
determine whether Battle falls into the
"rare" and "extraordinary" set of habeas
petitioners in default able to overcome
the "strong" and usually "conclusive
presumption of guilt" which attaches
after a trial and conviction, we must be
persuaded that, in view of all the
evidence, "it is more likely than not
that no reasonable juror8
would have found [Battle] guilty beyond
a reasonable doubt." Schlup, --- U.S. at
----, ---- n. 42, ----, 115 S.Ct. at
864, 866 n. 42, 867. To make our
determination, we consider all relevant
evidence: that presented at trial; that
arguably wrongly excluded from trial;
and that unavailable at trial. Id. at
----, 115 S.Ct. at 867.
If new
evidence calls the credibility of
certain witnesses into question, and
their credibility figures reasonably in
our assessment, remand for an
evidentiary hearing may be appropriate.
See id. at ----, 115 S.Ct. at 868.
However, the mere fact that affidavits
are presented does not automatically
require such a remand.9
Jones v. Delo, 56 F.3d 878, 883 (8th
Cir.1995); Washington v. Delo, 51 F.3d
756, 761 (8th Cir1995); Barrington v.
Norris, 49 F.3d 440, 441 (8th Cir.1995).
A. New
evidence presented
Battle
presents as new evidence an affidavit by
Charles Hall, the tipster who originally
turned police suspicion to Preston.
According to the affidavit, Hall watched
a group of people, including Battle and
Preston, drinking in the street in front
of his house during the early morning
hours of the date of the murder. He also
states that his stepson, Julius
Henderson, woke him early that same
morning to inform him that Battle,
Preston, and Rowan were breaking into Ms.
Johnson's home. Hall learned later that
Ms. Johnson had been murdered. Finally,
he avers that he heard Preston threaten
Pearl Thompson about one week after the
murder, telling her he would "do to [her]
what [he] done to that old lady."
When
Hall initially contacted police with his
tip, he related the alleged incident
with Pearl Thompson. After police
questioned Preston, a woman, purportedly
Thompson, called police to report that
whoever reported the threat was lying.
When queried as to why anyone would make
it up, she replied that Preston was
disliked and that many people would like
to harm him. Thompson is now deceased.
Preston could not remember making the
threat but told police he was frequently
drunk and said a lot of crazy things he
did not mean. After Battle confessed to
the murder, police again contacted Hall
and Preston. Both confirmed that Battle
and Rowan had been drinking near Ms.
Johnson's house on the date of the
murder.
Hall's
stepson, Julius Henderson, was contacted
by Battle's attorneys. Henderson
declined to get involved. However,
according to the affidavit of Battle's
counsel, Henderson related that he had
seen Battle, Preston, and Rowan walking
in the direction of Ms. Johnson's house.
He later saw Preston walking in the
opposite direction alone.
These
statements must be taken in conjunction
with Preston's eleventh hour confession,
more than five years after Battle's
conviction and sentencing. At Battle's
state postconviction hearing, Preston,
who was by then on death row with Battle,
claimed to be the real killer. However,
the state court found Preston's
testimony not only to be "not credible"
but to be "incredible." Battle v.
Missouri, PCR 1459, slip op. at 9 (Cir.Ct.,
City of St. Louis, Apr. 10, 1987) (order
denying postconviction relief). Absent a
showing that the state court finding of
fact was somehow deficient, see 28 U.S.C.
Sec. 2254(d), we are bound by that
finding. We have no reason to doubt the
state court's finding, and, after
reviewing Preston's testimony, agree
completely. We therefore give no weight
to Preston's purported confession.10
Even
crediting the affidavits, and
considering the cumulative effect of the
new evidence therein,11
we do not believe that any reasonable
juror, presented with all the evidence
would, more likely than not, have
entertained a reasonable doubt as to
Battle's guilt. For the most part, the
affidavits confirm what no one
disputes--that Preston was drinking in
the area the night of the murder and was
with Battle and Rowan. Since Preston
lived in the neighborhood, knew Battle
sufficiently well to engage in chess
matches with him, and told police
himself that he had been drinking with
Battle and Rowan that evening, the
affidavits contain very little that was
not already before the jury.
The
only items which would be at all new or
probative are Hall's hearsay testimony
as to Henderson's seeing Preston aiding
Battle enter Ms. Johnson's home, and,
perhaps, Preston's disputed threat to
Pearl Thompson.12
This information simply does not work to
exonerate Battle. At best, it
incriminates Preston, thus lending
tangential support to Battle's version
of the facts. See Allen v. Nix, 55 F.3d
414, 417 (8th Cir.1995) (evidence
indirectly supporting petitioner's
version of facts insufficient to
establish actual innocence). It does
nothing to detract from the physical
evidence placing Battle at the scene,
from the placement of the prints
suggesting that Battle was the last to
leave, or from Battle's vivid and
detailed confession, which was
corroborated by the state of the crime
scene.
Even
assuming Battle's trial was not error
free, tangential evidence raising the
faintest shadow of doubt as to whether
Preston was along that night is not the
"new reliable evidence--whether it be
exculpatory scientific evidence,
trustworthy eyewitness accounts, or
critical physical evidence" which
destroys our confidence in the outcome
of the trial. Schlup, --- U.S. at ----,
115 S.Ct. at 865. It is certainly not so
strong that adding it to Battle's
confession, belated retraction thereof,
and the physical evidence, would more
likely than not create a reasonable
doubt in the mind of any reasonable
juror as to Battle's actions against Ms.
Johnson.13
B. New
Evidence not presented
Battle
requests that we remand to the district
court for an evidentiary hearing to
enable him to develop serology evidence
which, he claims, will exonerate him or
at least show that his counsel was
ineffective for not hiring an expert to
attack the State's serology evidence.
This claim really has two prongs, that
of ineffective assistance and that of
"actual innocence."
Although the ineffective assistance
prong is procedurally barred, it is not
as if it were never addressed on the
merits. The bar arises from Battle's
abandonment of that claim in his appeal
of his postconviction motion. At the
motion hearing, Battle argued that his
counsel was ineffective for not hiring
an expert to counter the State's
serologist, or to prepare for cross-examination
of the serologist. Battle's counsel
explained, however, that while he did
not hire a serologist, he did consult
with one in order to determine the
weaknesses of the State's presentation.
From his consultation, counsel
determined that the serology evidence
was not vulnerable to attack, except for
the statistical fact that B secretors
make up 7.7% of the United States
population. That translates into the
real world fact that millions of other
people besides Battle are B secretors.
Counsel brought this fact out on cross-examination.
The
motion court ruled that counsel had
adequately prepared for the serology
evidence and that, under the
circumstances, it was not ineffective
assistance to forego engaging an expert.
Battle chose not to attack the motion
court's finding on appeal, most probably
because it was shown to be meritless.
Thus he abandoned it. Battle now
attempts to revive the barred serology
claim through the backdoor of "new
evidence." Nothing, however, prevented
Battle from developing the desired
serology evidence at his postconviction
hearing in the Missouri state court or
from developing it before now, except,
perhaps, his knowledge that the serology
evidence would ultimately be fatal to
his professed innocence.14
In fact, at his postconviction hearing
Battle argued that his trial counsel was
ineffective for failing to have
Preston's blood tested.15
It was then that he should have
developed his serology evidence, if he
thought it would be helpful to him.
Even
if an evidentiary hearing was necessary
for Battle to develop and present the
serology evidence, he has not shown the
cause and prejudice, or fundamental
miscarriage of justice, necessary to
excuse his failure to develop this
evidence in state court. Keeney v.
Tamayo-Reyes, 504 U.S. 1, 8-12, 112 S.Ct.
1715, 1719-21, 118 L.Ed.2d 318 (1992);
Jones, 56 F.3d at 884. In essence,
Battle is asking us to excuse his
evidentiary default as to his claim of
actual innocence, through the actual
innocence exception, in order that he
may develop sufficient evidence of his
actual innocence. This circular argument
is without merit.
More
fundamentally, a remand is inappropriate
because the "actual innocence" gateway
through a procedural bar is not intended
to provide a petitioner with a new trial,
with all the attendant development of
evidence, in hopes of a different result.
Washington, 51 F.3d at 761-62. Rather it
is an opportunity for a petitioner,
aggrieved by an allegedly defective
trial and having inexcusably defaulted
the available remedies, to raise such a
strong doubt to his guilt that, in
hindsight, we cannot have confidence in
the trial's outcome unless it was indeed
free of harmless error. To avail himself
of that opportunity, it is the
petitioner's, not the court's, burden to
support his allegations of "actual
innocence" by presenting "new reliable
evidence" of his innocence. Schlup, ---
U.S. at ----, 115 S.Ct. at 865.
Although adequate considering and
weighing, or even perfecting, of the new
evidence which a petitioner brings to a
habeas court in support of his claim of
gateway innocence may indeed require an
evidentiary hearing, it is not the
habeas court's role to uncover such
evidence ab initio. The "actual
innocence" gateway is there to avoid
fundamental miscarriages of justice, not
to provide the opportunity for fishing
expeditions and delay or, as Battle
seems to desire, a second trial.16
Battle
has shown no cause and prejudice for his
failure to develop this evidence in
state court, nor he has met his burden
of production under the actual innocence
exception. We therefore deny his request
for a remand for an evidentiary hearing
to explore and develop new serology
evidence.
III. CONCLUSION
After
reconsidering Battle's claim of "actual
innocence," we find that he has failed
to raise sufficient doubt about his
guilt to excuse his procedural default
of his underlying constitutional claims.
Accordingly, we deny his request for
remand for an evidentiary hearing, and
we affirm the result of our original
decision as amended by this opinion.
Battle's
education is somewhat of an enigma.
At points in the record he claims to
have no education beyond the eighth
grade. At other points it appears
that he has completed the tenth
grade. At still another point he
claims to be a high school graduate.
What is clear from the record is
that Battle is quite bright
Battle moved to
suppress the statements as
involuntary. A lengthy suppression
hearing was held at which the state
more than met its burden of showing
voluntariness
During their
initial contact with police, Rowan
and Battle each asserted that he had
fled before the murder was committed
by the other. When questioned as to
Preston's involvement, both
exonerated him. It was not until
seven months after Battle's
confession, after his counsel had
withdrawn and new counsel had been
appointed, and after Preston had
been arrested on unrelated capital
charges, that Battle put forth the
theory that Preston had bullied him
into participating, and that he
subsequently fled while either
Preston or Rowan committed the
murder
Other evidence
available to us (as arguably
erroneously excluded at trial, see
infra at 352) includes Battle's
spontaneous statements to police,
the day after his arrest, that he
had made a phone call to God and
that God had told him to get himself
straight. During the same excluded
interaction, Battle told police that
his "nephew" was not involved and
that he alone had gone to Ms.
Johnson's to look for money. He
complained bitterly that Ms. Johnson
need not have called him "sweetboy,"
because he wasn't "no sweetboy."
A reasonable
juror is one who is conscientious
and properly instructed, and who
fairly considers the evidence,
giving the concept of beyond a
reasonable doubt its proper scope.
Schlup, --- U.S. at ----, 115 S.Ct.
at 868. In other words, the
proverbial "reasonable person" cast
in the role of juror
If a remand were
automatic, petitioners could create
an infinite habeas loop between
appellate and district courts,
forever forestalling execution. We
are confident that the Supreme Court
intended no such result
Preston's
testimony was extremely vague, even
with leading questions. He appeared
to have learned what he knew from
his own attorney's attempt to
persuade him not to testify. Preston
claimed not to have come forward
sooner because Battle owed him $35,
which debt he had finally paid
through six years of confinement
As explained in
Kyles v. Whitley, --- U.S. ----, 115
S.Ct. 1555, 131 L.Ed.2d 490 (1995),
courts determining the impact of
evidence unavailable at trial must
evaluate the new items of evidence
individually, but must make their
final decision based on the likely
cumulative effect of that evidence
had it been presented at trial
Henderson's
statement to Battle's attorney that
he saw the three together that
night, and later saw Preston alone
neither helps nor harms Battle, as
it is consistent with either version
of events
As the cases
state, a reasonable doubt is more
than that arising from a mere
possibility, bare imagination, or
conjecture, but a real doubt
preventing a reasonable person from
being firmly convinced, or from
having an abiding conviction of the
truth of a charge. Victor v.
Nebraska, --- U.S. ----, ---- -
----, 114 S.Ct. 1239, 1245-1253, 127
L.Ed.2d 583 (1994). Often, a
reasonable doubt is analogized with
that uncertainty to predicate facts
which would cause a reasonable
person to hesitate to act on those
facts. Id. at ---- - ----, 114 S.Ct.
at 1249-50. Proof beyond a
reasonable doubt does not, however,
require absolute certainty. Id. at
----, ---- - ----, ----, 114 S.Ct.
at 1244, 1249-50, 1255
If Preston turned
out to be a B secretor, it would not
exculpate Battle, also a B secretor.
However, if Preston turned out not
to be a B secretor, Battle's tenuous
argument becomes no argument at all
At the
postconviction hearing, Battle's
trial counsel explained that he did
not have Preston tested for
strategic reasons. Counsel felt it
would be very damaging to Battle's
theory of the case if the test
showed Preston not to be a B
secretor, and not decisive either
way if Preston proved to be a B
secretor. Counsel thought it the
wiser course to argue the unknown.
Battle preserved his ineffective
assistance claim as to that
strategic decision and lost on the
merits. Battle, 19 F.3d at 1556-57
Battle also makes
a naked request for a remand with
instructions for the district court
to order DNA testing. However,
Battle has made no showing as to why
the federal courts should intervene
and provide such testing. We can
only consider such an unsupported
request as an additional attempt to
turn his habeas petition into a
second trial, and to delay the end
of his federal habeas litigation