''I'd just like to tell the Richard family that
I'm very, very sorry,'' said the 30-year-old slayer before the
electricity was switched on at 12:20 A.M. ''I hope in their hearts
they can forgive.''
Mr. Celestine was pronounced dead at 12:27, said
the warden of Louisiana State Penitentiary, Hilton Butler. It was
Louisiana's fifth execution since early last month.
Two of Mrs. Richard's grandsons, Robert and John
Broussard, were among the witnesses who watched the execution from
behind a glass window. They sat quietly throughout and did not talk
to reporters. Supporters at Execution
Also witnessing were Sister Helen Prejean, an
opponent of the death penalty who was Mr. Celestine's spiritual
adviser, and Millard Farmer, of Atlanta, his attorney.
Mr. Celestine mouthed the words ''I love you'' to
them as he was strapped into the electric chair.
The execution was delayed about 10 minutes
because Mr. Farmer was not a Louisiana resident and officials had to
call Gov. Edwin W. Edwards after midnight to get permission for him
to be a witness.
Only one death penalty opponent marched outside
the prison gate Sunday night, officials said. By 10:30 P.M., the
lone protester was gone and seven pro-death penalty demonstrators
were left.
The execution took place after Governor Edwards
rejected an 11th-hour plea for a reprieve from Mr. Celestine's
lawyers to allow the condemned man a hearing before the state Pardon
Board. Mr. Edwards has consistently refused to intervene in death
penalty cases. Rights Pleas Unsuccessful
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,
part of the Organization of American States, sent telegrams to
Secretary of State George P. Shultz and Governor Edwards asking that
the execution be halted.
The commission based its appeal on studies
showing that blacks are more likely to get the death penalty,
particularly if they kill whites. The Supreme Court earlier this
year rejected appeals based on that argument.
Earlier Sunday, the United States Supreme Court
refused to stop the execution. The United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit rejected Mr. Celestine's appeal on Saturday.
In a four-minute taped confession, played at his
1982 trial, Mr. Celestine said he was drunk and ''full of speed''
when he strangled Mrs. Richard and broke seven of her ribs and a
vertebra in her neck after raping her.
His death date had been postponed five times in
the last three years.
Mr. Celestine also was sentenced to life in
prison for breaking into the homes of two other elderly women in the
same Lafayette neighborhood and raping them.
He had several visitors Sunday, including his
parents, a brother and a sister, Mr. Farmer and Sister Prejean, and
talked to some friends by telephone, the warden said.
750 F.2d 353
Willie Lawrence CELESTINE, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Frank BLACKBURN, Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary,
Respondent-Appellee.
No. 84-4745.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Dec. 28, 1984.
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.
Before WILLIAMS, JOLLY and
HILL, Circuit Judges.
JERRE S. WILLIAMS, Circuit
Judge:
The district court denied,
without an evidentiary hearing, the petition of Willie L.
Celestine for habeas corpus relief from his Louisiana murder
conviction and death sentence. This court stayed appellant's
execution to permit full briefing and oral argument on his
claims of constitutional infirmity in the selection of jurors at
his trial and in the performance of his lawyer during the
penalty phase of that proceeding. For the reasons that follow,
we affirm the district court's judgment and vacate our stay.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Basis for the Murder Conviction and
Death Sentence
Some time between five-thirty
and seven o'clock in the morning of September 13, 1981,
appellant raped and killed Mrs. Marcelianne Richard, an 81 year-old
woman, at her home in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana. Appellant had
ingested alcohol and amphetamines during the previous night and
earlier morning of September 13.
A friend dropped him off near
his house, and he walked toward it until he saw a light shining
in Mrs. Richard's residence. Appellant did not know Mrs.
Richard. He entered the house through a bathroom window, leaving
a latent handprint on the lavatory. He found Mrs. Richard, who
had risen early to take a trip to visit her sisters in Texas.
Appellant raped Mrs. Richard
and strangled her, fracturing a bone in her neck in the process.
The nature of the break indicated that appellant applied
tremendous force in choking the victim. Appellant also severely
disfigured her face and fractured seven ribs on both sides of
her body.
Mrs. Richard suffered internal
injuries as a consequence of the beating. She died before seven
o'clock, when friends arrived to take her on the Texas visit.
Appellant's mother opened the door to the Celestine house for
appellant when he arrived home at seven o'clock.
In the late afternoon of the
same day, appellant was arrested at his home. After receiving
Miranda warnings at the police station, appellant voluntarily
confessed to raping two other women as well as Mrs. Richard. All
three women lived in appellant's neighborhood, and the three
attacks occurred within a relatively short period. The police
recorded the confession on a cassette tape. A Lafayette Parish
jury subsequently convicted appellant of two counts of
aggravated rape. Those trials preceded the conviction that he
now challenges.
B. The Trial and Post-Conviction
Proceedings
A Lafayette Parish jury found
appellant guilty of first-degree murder and recommended
imposition of the death penalty. The jury supported its death
penalty recommendation by finding the presence of three
statutory aggravating circumstances: (1) commission of
aggravated rape in the course of the murder, (2) previous
conviction of an unrelated aggravated rape, and (3) committing
the murder in an especially cruel manner.
The trial court accordingly sentenced appellant to death.
Appellant's efforts to
overturn his conviction and sentence have proved unavailing. On
direct appeal, the Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed the
conviction and sentence. State v. Celestine, 443 So.2d 1091
(1983), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 105 S.Ct. 224, 83 L.Ed.2d
154 (1984). That court also refused post-conviction relief.
Having exhausted his state
remedies, appellant filed this habeas corpus petition under 28
U.S.C. Sec. 2254 (1982), in the United States District Court for
the Western District of Louisiana. The district court denied the
petition without holding an evidentiary hearing. In this appeal,
appellant urges that the district court erred in not finding
merit in his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, in not
conducting an evidentiary hearing on that claim, in dismissing
his claim of juror bias against him, and in finding no violation
of Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U.S. 510, 88 S.Ct. 1770, 20 L.Ed.2d
776 (1968), in the exclusion of a juror for cause.
II. THE MERITS
A. Ineffective Assistance in the Penalty
Phase
Appellant contends that his
attorney's failure to present evidence of mitigating
circumstances at the sentencing portion of his trial denied him
the effective assistance of counsel that the Sixth Amendment
guarantees him. We perceive no merit in that claim. We also
agree with the district court that the claim did not require an
evidentiary hearing.
Our analysis necessarily flows
from Strickland v. Washington, --- U.S. ----, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80
L.Ed.2d 674 (1984), in which the Court established a two-prong
test for deciding ineffective assistance claims. Under that test,
a defendant must show both that counsel's performance was
deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced the
defense. --- U.S. at ----, 104 S.Ct. at 2064. A court need not
consider the deficiency prong if it concludes that the defendant
has demonstrated no prejudice. Id. at ----, 104 S.Ct. at 2070.
The defendant, moreover, may not simply allege but must "affirmatively
prove" prejudice. Id. at ----, 104 S.Ct. at 2067.
In a challenge to a death
sentence, the "question is whether there is a reasonable
probability that, absent the [counsel's] errors, the sentencer--including
the appellate court, to the extent it independently reweighs the
evidence--would have concluded that the balance of aggravating
and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death." Id. at
----, 104 S.Ct. at 2069. "A reasonable probability is a
probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome."
Id. at ----, 104 S.Ct. at 2068.
Appellant contends that his
lawyer's failure to put on evidence at the penalty phase
prejudiced his ability to avoid the death sentence. The nature
of the evidence appellant asserts his attorney should have
presented, however, belies the argument. That evidence would
have consisted virtually entirely of the testimony of
appellant's relatives, friends, and employers who would have
asserted appellant's affection for his family and friends, their
affection for him, his willingness to work hard without
complaint, his conscientiousness and dependability, his faith,
and his non-violent disposition. Some of the witnesses would
have pleaded for appellant's life. Other evidence would have
shown that tests in 1973 showed appellant to have an I.Q. of 69,
and that he committed the murder at the age of 25.
In light of the proffered
evidence, we believe that our decision in Willie v. Maggio, 737
F.2d 1372 (5th Cir.1984), controls our disposition of
appellant's claim here. A Louisiana jury had convicted Willie of
murder and recommended the death penalty, finding aggravating
circumstances in that Willie had committed the murder in the
course of aggravated rape and in an especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel manner.
Willie grounded his petition
for a writ of habeas corpus in federal court in part on his
allegation that his trial lawyer had failed to present evidence
of mitigating circumstances. The evidence that Willie claimed
his lawyer should have presented closely resembled the evidence
that appellant asserts his counsel should have submitted to the
jury. In rejecting Willie's claim, this court observed:
We do not believe that the
outcome of the jury's deliberations, in light of the state's
evidence showing the aggravated circumstances of the crime,
would have been altered by other defense witnesses who merely
told more about the defendant's troubled adoles[c]ence. The
evidence presented by the state in support of its request for
the death penalty was not only substantial but undoubtedly left
a deep impression on the jury....
In light of the foregoing, we
conclude that even if Willie's counsel had offered the
mitigating evidence that Willie has discussed in his petition,
that there is no reasonable probability that the omitted
evidence would have changed the jury's conclusion that, in the
face of the overwhelming aggravating circumstances, the death
penalty should be invoked. Strickland v. Washington, 104 S.Ct.
at 2071.
Willie, 737 F.2d at 1394. See
also Milton v. Procunier, 744 F.2d 1091, 1100 (5th Cir.1984),
where we held that "[t]he decision to not offer evidence at the
punishment phase was not defective in the constitutional sense."
We reach the same conclusion
in this case. The testimony of appellant's parents could have
added little to the penalty phase of the trial; both had just
before testified during the guilt phase. The evidence of
appellant's I.Q. would also have carried insignificant further
weight in view of his lawyer's argument to the jury regarding
appellant's psychological problems, impaired mental state during
the crime, and his underprivileged background.
Moreover, the aggravating
circumstances in this case exceeded those that the jury found to
exist in Willie. The grisly manner of Mrs. Richard's death needs
no reiteration. As the district court found, any evidence that
appellant could have introduced in mitigation would have
amounted to a plea for mercy. On the facts of this case,
counsel's failure to put on such evidence did not so prejudice
appellant as to violate appellant's constitutional right to
effective counsel.
Nor do we find fault in the
district court's failure to hold an evidentiary hearing.
Appellant does not suggest that a live hearing of the evidence
that he describes in his petition would have assisted the
district court in evaluating his claim of prejudice. In general,
a district court need not conduct such a hearing where doing so
would not produce further evidence in support of specific, non-conclusory
allegations. Conclusory allegations in a petition for habeas
corpus do not warrant such a hearing. Green v. McGougan, 744
F.2d 1189, 1191 (5th Cir.1984); Knighton v. Maggio, 740 F.2d
1344, 1349 (5th Cir.1984).
In this case, appellant
alleges generally that a hearing would elicit further evidence
of prejudice. Such a bare claim did not provide grounds for an
evidentiary hearing; neither, therefore, can it support the
specific claim of prejudice to establish the threshold showing
that would call for such a hearing. Where, as here, the evidence
that a defendant claims his counsel should have introduced does
not demonstrate prejudice and his allegation that other proof of
prejudice exists is only conclusory, the district court in its
discretion could properly refuse an evidentiary hearing.
B. Juror Bias
Appellant next asserts that
the trial court improperly failed to exclude two jurors. The
first juror harbored bias against him, he claims, because of her
relationships with the prosecutor and the victim's granddaughter.
The bias of the second juror appeared in his admission on voir
dire of racial prejudice against blacks generally. We consider
the claims as to each juror in turn.
1. Mrs. Broussard
During jury selection, Mrs.
Broussard admitted that she knew both the prosecuting attorney
and the granddaughter of Mrs. Richard, the victim. She stated
that the prosecutor had represented her father as an attorney on
occasion but that the prosecutor had not represented her and
that his representation of her father would not affect her
ability to remain impartial.
Her responses to the
prosecutor's questions regarding the granddaughter, however,
revealed a closer relationship. Because it is important to
consider the critical passages of the voir dire on the latter
relationship, we quote extensively from the examination. The
first excerpt represents most of the prosecutor's interchange
with Mrs. Broussard:
MR. HARSON: Would that factor,
or the fact that you know that person, would that have any
bearing upon your ability to be impartial in this case?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I don't think
so.
MR. HARSON: How well do you
know this granddaughter?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I know her
pretty well. She's a friend.
MR. HARSON: You went to school
with her, or she's just an acquaintence?
MRS. BROUSSARD: Well, she's
friends with--She went to school with my children.
MR. HARSON: Her daughter or
granddaughter?
MRS. BROUSSARD: Her
granddaughter.
MR. HARSON: Do you know
anything about the facts of this particular case?
MRS. BROUSSARD: No, not really.
MR. HARSON: Have you ever
discussed the matter with this granddaughter?
MR. HARSON: And you said when
I asked you if that knowledge would bear on your ability to be
impartial you said you weren't sure, and understandably at this
point in time, do you feel that you could put aside any
relationship that you had with this particular granddaughter and
look impartially at the evidence in this case and base a
decision solely on the evidence regardless of any kind of
relationship?
MRS. BROUSSARD: Right. Yes,
sir.
MR. HARSON: You think you
could.
MRS. BROUSSARD: Yes, sir.
* * *
* * *
In response to defense
counsel's queries, she answered:
MR. BEARD: And in spite of all
these facts, you feel like you can be fair and impartial towards
the accused and not favor the prosecution side of this case?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I would try to
do my civic duty and be fair, yes.
MR. BEARD: I understand that.
But wouldn't it be very hard to attempt to achieve an
impartiality in this matter and give both sides, but in this
case primarily the accused, a fair and impartial trial?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I will try to
do so, sir.
MR. BEARD: But wouldn't it be
very difficult on your part?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I would
believe so.
MR. BEARD: To such an extent
that it's almost impossible, wouldn't you say?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I wouldn't say
impossible. I would--
MR. BEARD: Nothing is
impossible, but it's very impractical, isn't it?
MRS. BROUSSARD: --I would try
to do my civic duty. Sort of impractical.
MR. BEARD: Yes, you would be
pulling for the prosecution, wouldn't you? I would.
MRS. BROUSSARD: I would try to
be fair to both sides; however, I couldn't say that I would
actually pull for either side until after I would hear the
testimony.
* * *
* * *
MR. BEARD: Do you think that
you could at all possibly give Willie that unblemished
presumption [of innocence] which you should be able to do were
you not associated with the people and the facts in this case as
you are?
MRS. BROUSSARD: Well, like I
said, I've never discussed the item with the granddaughter.
MR. BEARD: .... They must give
him that presumption of innocen[c]e in unequivocal terms. Can
you do that?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I would try.
MR. BEARD: But the question is
can you do it under the circumstances?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I would try it
as a case. I would try very hard to put my personal feelings
aside.
MR. BEARD: Do you think you
can put your personal feelings aside? Is that possible under the
circumstances?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I don't know.
* * *
* * *
Mrs. Broussard did not respond
when defense counsel asked whether she would favor the
prosecution, but she concluded that she would give it her "best
shot". Defense counsel did not ask the court to excuse Mrs.
Broussard for cause, however, until the court itself posed some
questions:
THE COURT: I have a question
that I want to ask Mrs. Broussard. You said that you would give
it your best shot. In a trial such as this, the only issue is
innocen[c]e or guilt, and you must put aside any factor that
would tend to influence your decision other than from the
evidence that's been adduced. The fact that you know Mr. Harson
or he has represented your father, if you are convinced that
this man is innocent, would it embarass you to find him not
guilty when you see Mr. Harson?
THE COURT: Would that bother
you at all?
THE COURT: Of if you saw the
victim's granddaughter?
MRS. BROUSSARD: I haven't seen
her in a while.
THE COURT: Then you would not
let those two factors I have just named influence you at all in
determining his innocen[c]e or guilt?
THE COURT: The fact that you
know the granddaughter and the fact that you know Mr. Harson?
MRS. BROUSSARD: Well, the way
I feel, if he's right, I would vote him right, but if he done
wrong, I would vote him wrong.
Defense counsel challenged Mrs.
Broussard for cause, but the trial judge declined to excuse her:
THE COURT: The court feels
that just as all of the others that we have to accept what they
tell us, and from my interrogation of her, I can find no reason
why she can't serve. In other words, it's very hard to find a
perfect Juror. But one who is candid I would trust a lot more
than one who would not tell you. I think she has made a complete
disclosure. I will deny the motion.
Defense counsel then
peremptorily challenged Mrs. Broussard. He exhausted his
peremptory strikes before jury selection ended.
We agree with the district
court that no constitutional violation arose from the trial
court's refusal to excuse Mrs. Broussard for cause. The
principles upon which this conclusion is based need explanation.
In United States v. Nell, 526 F.2d 1223 (5th Cir.1976), a direct
federal appeal, we stated that "as a general rule it is error
for a court to force a party to exhaust his peremptory
challenges on persons who should be excused for cause, for this
has the effect of abridging the right to exercise peremptory
challenges." 526 F.2d at 1229 (citing Swain v. Alabama, 380 U.S.
202, 85 S.Ct. 824, 13 L.Ed.2d 759 (1965)). That ruling did not
rest on constitutional grounds but on the common law principle
that the "denial or impairment of the right is reversible error
without a showing of prejudice." Swain, 380 U.S. at 219, 85 S.Ct.
at 835 (noting that Constitution confers no right to peremptory
strikes). We suggested as much in Willie v. Maggio, a Sec. 2254
case, where we declined "to consider the extent to which Nell is
applicable to federal habeas proceedings." Willie, 737 F.2d at
1382 n. 13. In Sec. 2254 proceedings, then, the question of
whether "impairment of the right" contravenes a defendant's
Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury remains an open one.
This case, however, does not
present an apt occasion for providing a definitive answer. Even
assuming that forcing a defendant to expend a strike implicates
the Sixth Amendment, we may find constitutional error only if
the trial court's refusal to excuse Mrs. Broussard exhibits
manifest error. See Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 723, 81 S.Ct.
1639, 1643, 6 L.Ed.2d 751 (1961); United States v. Dozier, 672
F.2d 531, 547 (5th Cir.1982) (direct federal appeal citing Irvin
); cf., e.g., Smith v. Phillips, 455 U.S. 209, 218, 102 S.Ct.
940, 946, 71 L.Ed.2d 78 (1982) (citing 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254
presumption of correctness of state court factual findings). We
find no such error.
Although some of Mrs.
Broussard's answers suggested that her emotions might affect her,
she consistently stated that her feelings would not so influence
her as to prejudice her against appellant. She had not discussed
the murder with the granddaughter, and she repeatedly denied
bias. Moreover, this case does not present a situation in which
a court must infer or presume juror bias. See generally De La
Rosa v. Texas, 743 F.2d 299, 306 (5th Cir.1984) (citing cases
involving presumptions or inferences of juror bias).
Mrs. Broussard was not related
to the prosecutor or to the granddaughter. Nor had the
prosecutor acted as her attorney. Such attenuated associations
do not create a presumption of bias against a defendant. Cf.,
e.g., Nell, 526 F.2d at 1229 n. 8 (indicating as instances
requiring presumption of bias relationships between prospective
juror and trial participant or victim such as kinship, master-servant,
interest in same claim, and others that the court enumerated in
United States v. Haynes, 398 F.2d 980 (2d Cir.1968), cert.
denied, 393 U.S. 1120, 89 S.Ct. 996, 22 L.Ed.2d 124 (1969)). The
district court properly held no disqualifying bias was shown.
2. Mr. Lemmon
This challenge for bias
concerns Mr. Lemmon's admission that he harbored prejudice
against blacks, but not against appellant in particular. Defense
counsel's voir dire interrogation revealed that bias:
MR. BEARD: The fact that
Willie is black, would that in any manner whatsoever make it
more difficult for you to be fair and impartial than if he were
say white? I know that's a question that may be embarrassing,
but I want you to be truthful with me, because there's no harm
in being truthful. I mean we have a great responsibility here,
you and me.
MR. LEMMON: That's difficult
for a person to answer, like you said.
MR. LEMMON: That's difficult
for a person to answer.
MR. BEARD: I understand that.
MR. LEMMON: I'm not
particularly prejudice[d] against this man, but I am prejudice[d],
if that's the question you're asking.
MR. BEARD: Yes. You are
prejudice[d], racially?
Mr. Lemmon later indicated
that he would "[h]onestly and sincerely try" to put aside any
ill-feelings against blacks and that he would "listen to [his]
conscience" in deciding the case even if all the other jurors
disagreed with him. Defense counsel neither asked the trial
court to excuse Mr. Lemmon for cause nor exercised a peremptory
strike against him. Mr. Lemmon did serve on the jury that
convicted appellant.
The failure of appellant's
lawyer to challenge Mr. Lemmon constituted a procedural default
under Louisiana law, see La.Code Crim.Proc. art. 800 (West Supp.1984),
and thus triggered application of the cause and actual prejudice
test of Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 97 S.Ct. 2497, 53 L.Ed.2d
594 (1977). To secure federal habeas review of his juror bias
claim, in other words, appellant had to show that his counsel
had cause for not challenging and that the omission actually
prejudiced appellant's defense. Id. at 84, 97 S.Ct. at 2505; see
also, e.g., Stokes v. Procunier, 744 F.2d 475, 479-80 (5th
Cir.1984).
Appellant showed no cause for
his trial lawyer's procedural default. Mr. Lemmon's responses to
the attorney's voir dire inquiries showed the grounds for
raising a challenge against the prospective juror. See, e.g.,
Stokes, 744 F.2d at 480; O'Bryan v. Estelle, 714 F.2d 365, 385
n. 15 (5th Cir.1983), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 104 S.Ct.
1015, 79 L.Ed.2d 245 (1984).
Moreover, defense counsel
sought and elicited from Mr. Lemmon responses that indicated the
prospective juror's determination to decide the case on the
evidence, to discount the testimony of police officers, to
presume appellant innocent until proven otherwise, and to vote
for imposition of the death penalty only if the facts justified
it. In these circumstances, it appears that appellant's trial
counsel reached a strategic decision that Mr. Lemmon would serve
without partiality and, more important, might accept the main
defense theory that the testimony of the police officers did not
warrant full credence. Such judgments of counsel bind a
defendant, and they constitute the very sort of waiver that the
Supreme Court contemplated in fashioning the cause prong of the
Sykes test. See Sykes, 433 U.S. at 90 n. 14, 97 S.Ct. at 2508 n.
14 (emphasizing need to recognize "the burden on a defendant to
be bound by the trial judgments of his lawyer"); Huffman v.
Wainwright, 651 F.2d 347, 351 (5th Cir.1981) (noting that
strategic failure to comply with procedural rules militates
against finding cause for default).
C. Improper Exclusion of
Prospective Juror for Cause
Appellant's asserted final
claim for overturning the judgment of the district court assails
the exclusion of Mrs. Holmes because of her scruples against
imposition of the death penalty. Appellant thus invokes
Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U.S. 510, 88 S.Ct. 1770, 20 L.Ed.2d
776 (1968), in which the Court held that the Constitution
permits striking jurors on the ground that they oppose capital
punishment only where they indicate:
(1) that they would
automatically vote against imposition of capital punishment
without regard to any evidence that might be developed at the
trial of the case before them, or (2) that their attitude toward
the death penalty would prevent them from making an impartial
decision as to the defendant's guilt.
391 U.S. at 522 n. 21, 88 S.Ct.
at 1777 n. 21 (emphasis in original). We find no merit in
appellant's claim.
Mrs. Holmes's voir dire
testimony unmistakably shows that she would under no
circumstances have voted for the death penalty:
MR. BEARD: In other words,
you're telling us that you would never include or consider the
death penalty?
MRS. HOLMES: No, sir. That's
correct.
* * *
* * *
MR. HARSON: [A]ssuming the
defendant is found guilty of the charge, and you're instructed
by the Court that one of the possible penalties to be imposed is
that of death, in the course of your fulfilling your duties as a
Juror and deliberating on the penalty to be recommended by the
Jury, would you be able to accept that instruction by the Court
and consider the imposition of the death penalty?
MR. HARSON: .... And you could
not under any circumstances come back with a recommendation of
death in the case, regardless of what the facts and
circumstances are which are brought out?
MRS. HOLMES: That's right.
We believe that, even under
the most liberal reading of Witherspoon, see generally Schnapper,
Taking Witherspoon Seriously: The Search for Death-Qualified
Jurors, 62 Tex.L.Rev. 977 (1984), Mrs. Holmes committed herself
to vote automatically against imposition of capital punishment
at appellant's trial. The district court correctly determined
that no constitutional violation arose from the trial court's
exclusion of Mrs. Holmes for cause.
III.
We find that appellant
received a constitutionally sound and fundamentally fair trial
as against his claims of constitutional infringement. Further,
the district court was not required to hold an evidentiary
hearing on his claims. We affirm the decision of the district
court and vacate our stay.
Judgment AFFIRMED and stay of
execution VACATED.
*****