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Carzell MOORE
Carzell Moore, 45, was
sentenced to death in January 1977 in Monroe County for the Dec. 12,
1976 rape, robbery and murder of 18-year-old Teresa Carol Allen, an
honors college student.
Mr. Moore met up with Roosevelt Greene
the day before the killing. Mr. Greene had just escaped from prison. On
Feb. 12, 1976, they robbed the store where Ms. Allen worked, taking her,
$466 and her vehicle. Both men raped Ms. Allen and Mr. Moore shot her.
Mr. Green was arrested in South
Carolina driving Ms. Allen's car. He was sentenced to death and executed
Jan. 9, 1985, at the age of 28.
Mr. Moore's sentence was overturned
once but he was resentenced to death. It was overturned a third time,
and a new sentencing trial has been pending since August 1992. Mr. Moore,
who has a Web site, was transferred to the general prison population
last September.
Carzell Moore
At approximately 3 p.m.
on December 12, 1976, 18-year-old Teresa Carol
Allen arrived at her place of part-time employment, the Majik
Market in Cochran, Georgia. Shortly before 7 p.m. the store was found to
be empty. The cash register and the safe were open and empty and Miss
Allen's automobile, a late model Pontiac Grand Prix, was missing. The
Majik Market area supervisor determined that $466 was missing from the
store.
On December 14, 1976,
Miss Allen's body was discovered lying in a wooded grassy area just off
a dirt road near Highway 41 in Monroe County, Georgia. Footprints, two
30.06 cartridge hulls, a 30.06 metal jacket of a bullet, parts of Miss
Allen's flesh, teeth and bone, tire tracks and a nylon stocking were
found near the body.
The cause of her death
was determined to be loss of blood from bullet wounds. Examination of
the body disclosed bruising on the inside of one thigh, a laceration of
the vagina, and blood and mucous like matter in the vaginal canal.
A pathologist testified
that the wounds in the abdomen, arms and face were caused by a high-powered
missile, and that the location and nature of the wounds were consistent
with the theory that Miss Allen had her arms crossed across her stomach
and was shot with a high-powered bullet which passed through both arms
and the abdomen. Miss Allen was also shot by a high-powered bullet
entering the left side of the neck, penetrating the lower face and
exiting the right side of the head.
In the early evening of
the day of the robbery, Carzell Moore and Roosevelt Green were
let off at Moore's house. Moore's house was four blocks from the
location of the Majik Market. Green was wearing high-heeled shoes.
In early January, 1977,
Thomas Pasby accompanied Moore to check out an automobile that Moore
intended to purchase. At that time, the Moore asked Pasby how Pasby felt
about killing when Pasby was in Viet Nam.
During their discussion,
Moore told Pasby, "Well, I killed somebody, too," and then related the
following: Moore said that he and Green went to the Majik Market in
Cochran. Moore told Green to go in and take Miss Allen to the meat
counter in order to attract her attention so that Moore could come in
the front of the store with a rifle. This was done, and Green and Moore
robbed the Majik Market. When they left the store, they took Miss Allen
with them forcibly. They left in her car with Moore driving. Shortly
after leaving the store Green turned to Miss Allen and said, "Bitch,
take off your clothes."
Miss Allen told Green
that she was a virgin and pleaded with him not to rape her. Green raped
her anyway. Green then changed places with Moore, and Green drove.
Carzell Moore then raped Miss Allen.
After driving further,
Moore told Green to stop the car. Moore then told Miss Allen to get out.
Miss Allen and Moore then got out of the car. Moore told Green to drive
to a gas station to get gas for the car. After Green left, Miss Allen
begged Moore not to kill her. Miss Allen crossed her arms over her
stomach to protect herself. Moore shot her in the abdomen with the
rifle. He then shot her in the face. Moore stated that he shot Miss
Allen in the face in an attempt to disfigure her so as to make it
difficult to identify her.
When Green returned,
the two of them picked up Miss Allen and threw her into the bushes.
Moore told Pasby that one of her hands was so mangled by the rifle blast
that he thought it was going to fall off. One of Miss Allen's hands was
almost severed from her body. The attendant at a nearby gas station
recalled selling gas for an automobile like that of the victim with a
Georgia county tag that showed only the letters RENS from Laurens. The
tag on the victim's car was in a similar condition.
Green later arrived in
South Carolina in possession of the car with a large amount of change
and a roll of bills, asked a friend to burn the car for him (which
request the friend refused), and traded the 30.06 rifle for a .25
caliber automatic. A Cochran florist testified the rifle was stolen from
him about the time and in the vicinity Moore was seen with it. When
Moore was informed while in jail that Green had been arrested with the
Allen car in South Carolina he stated, "Damn, I told Green to get rid of
that car and that rifle."
Later, Moore stated to
Pasby again, "You know, Green was supposed to have gotten rid of that
rifle and the car." A plaster cast of a footprint found near Miss
Allen's body was of similar size and impression as a flat Hushpuppy shoe
taken from Moore's room. Tire tracks found near her body were similar in
size and tread design to the tires found on Miss Allen's car. There was
other forensic evidence that circumstantially connected Moore to the
crimes. Moore testified in his own behalf that he met Green in an
Alabama prison in 1975.
On December 11, 1976,
he saw Green in Cochran looking for him. Green, out on escape, was using
the name Jerome Miller. Moore loaned Green some of his clothes and shoes.
They went to various places on December 11, and on the day of the
robbery, they went to Rosa Crawford's house to watch the football game.
Rosa's parents drove Moore and Green to Moore's house, where Green
borrowed the Hushpuppy shoes from Moore. Green left and Moore began
drinking, watched Sonny and Cher, and then became nauseated and passed
out. He awoke late that night, and went outside. The cafe was closed so
he just sat under a tree and smoked. A friend came along and they smoked
together. Then he went home and went to sleep.
He denied making the
statement to Pasby about robbing the Majik Market, raping Teresa Allen,
and killing her. He denied getting a 30.06 rifle. He denied Johnson's
testimony concerning Moore's asking about a place to rob. He denied
Johnson's testimony concerning his statements about the rifle. He denied
that he made the statement to Pasby while in jail.
Moore explained the
forensic evidence by stating that he had skinned himself while having
intercourse with his girl friend. He also testified that Green exchanged
his high platform shoes for appellant's Hushpuppys prior to the evening
of the robbery. In rebuttal, the state presented testimony that when
Green visited in South Carolina the morning following the robbery he was
wearing high-heeled shoes and not Hushpuppys.
809 F.2d 702
Carzell MOORE, Petitioner-Appellant, v.
Ralph KEMP, Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center,
Respondent- Appellee.
United States Court of Appeals for
the Eleventh Circuit
January 21, 1987
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Middle District of Georgia.
Before RONEY, Chief Judge, GODBOLD,
TJOFLAT, HILL, FAY, VANCE, KRAVITCH, JOHNSON, HATCHETT, ANDERSON,
CLARK, and EDMONDSON*,
Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON,**
Senior Circuit Judge.
Shortly before 7:00 p.m. on December
12, 1976, several patrons of the Majik Market convenience store in
Cochran, Georgia, found the store open and unattended. The store's
cash register and safe were open and empty, and the store's cashier,
eighteen-year-old Teresa Carol Allen, was missing. Her automobile had
also vanished. Two days later, Ms. Allen's body was discovered over
seventy miles northwest of Cochran in Monroe County, Georgia. Found
near her body were footprints, two 30.06 caliber cartridge hulls, a
30.06 caliber metal jacket of a bullet, tire tracks, a nylon stocking,
a pair of leather work gloves, and parts of Ms. Allen's flesh, teeth,
and bone.
Police immediately began a search
for Ms. Allen's automobile. Approximately one month later, the
automobile was discovered in South Carolina in the possession of an
escaped convict, twenty-year-old Roosevelt Green; Green had been
arrested for an unrelated convenience store robbery. From jail Green
made a telephone call to the mother of an acquaintance, Thomas Pasby,
and stated, "Tell Carzell Moore I'm in jail in South Carolina." The
Georgia law enforcement officials investigating Ms. Allen's murder
learned of this telephone call and questioned a number of persons in
Cochran about possible links between Green and Moore. They discovered
that Green and Moore met and became friends while they were in prison
in Alabama, that on December 11, 1976, after escaping from prison in
late 1975, Green arrived in Cochran asking for Moore, and that Moore
had introduced Green to a number of friends in Cochran, among them
Thomas Pasby. On January 10, 1977, Carzell Moore was arrested and was
placed in the Bleckley County jail, located in Cochran. Five days
later, authorities obtained a search warrant for Moore's home and
seized several items, including one pair of brown "Hush Puppy" shoes
and a gold towel. These items were submitted to the Georgia crime lab
for analysis
On February 15, 1977, a grand jury
in Monroe County, Georgia, returned an indictment charging Moore and
Green with the rape and first-degree murder of Ms. Allen. Green
escaped from the Monroe County jail prior to trial and was not
recaptured for several years. As a result, in June 1977, Moore was
tried separately before a jury in the Superior Court of Monroe County,
Georgia. The key witness for the State was thirty-year-old Thomas
Pasby. Pasby was a resident of Cochran and was employed as a cement
finisher in Hawkinsville, Georgia. He testified that he had known
Carzell Moore for fifteen years and that since his return to Cochran
in 1974, after serving in the Army for eight years, he had "spent a
lot of time" with Moore. According to Pasby, in late November 1976, he
drove Moore to a location in Cochran near a flower shop. Moore asked
Pasby to park and to wait for him to return. After a few minutes had
passed, Moore returned to the car carrying a 30.06 caliber hunting
rifle similar to the murder weapon. A few weeks later, Pasby
accompanied Moore to an abandoned schoolhouse where Moore kept the
rifle. Pasby examined the rifle and noticed that its serial number had
been obliterated.
Pasby also testified that on January
1, 1977, during a trip to Hawkinsville, Moore confessed to him that he
had raped and murdered Ms. Allen and described how the crimes were
committed. Pasby related Moore's description of the events of December
12, 1976, as follows. Roosevelt Green entered the Majik Market and
distracted Ms. Allen so that Moore could enter the store without the
rifle being noticed. After robbing the store, the two men abducted Ms.
Allen and drove away in her car. With Moore driving the car, Green
raped Ms. Allen. The two men then exchanged places, and Moore raped Ms.
Allen. Some time later Moore told Green to stop the car. He got out of
the car with Ms. Allen and told Green to go to a gas station to get
gas for the car. After Green left, Moore pointed the rifle at Ms.
Allen. She reacted by crossing her arms over her stomach. Moore then
fired the rifle into her abdomen. He fired a second shot into her face
in an attempt to make identification difficult. When Green returned,
the two men picked up the body and threw it into the bushes by the
side of the road. Moore told Pasby that his first rifle shot had so
mangled one of the victim's hands that he thought it was going to fall
off.
During his direct examination, Pasby
testified that he had been arrested on January 4, 1977, for theft by
taking. Pasby said that the arrest took place in Hawkinsville and that
shortly after he was taken into custody he was transferred to the
Bleckley County jail in Cochran. Pasby testified that Moore was placed
in the jail with him following Moore's arrest on January 10. Pasby
stated that, while he was in the jail with Moore, he learned that
Roosevelt Green had been arrested and told Moore about the arrest.1
Moore exclaimed, "Damn, I told Green to get rid of that car and
rifle."
The remainder of the State's case
consisted of evidence corroborating Pasby's testimony. Terry Kilgore,
the owner of a flower shop in Cochran, testified that his 30.06
hunting rifle was stolen from his truck some time after Thanksgiving
1976. The rifle, registered in Kilgore's name, was determined in a
ballistics test to have been the murder weapon. Green had the rifle in
his possession the morning after the Majik Market robbery. Charles
Livingston testified that, on that morning, Green arrived at his home
in South Carolina driving an automobile similar to Ms. Allen's car. In
Green's possession were a roll of bills, a "bank bag," a large amount
of coins (all of which were consistent with the items taken from the
Majik Market), and a 30.06 caliber rifle. Green traded the 30.06
caliber rifle for Livingston's .25 caliber automatic pistol. The
police subsequently confiscated the rifle, and Kilgore identified it
during his testimony.
Johnny Johnson, an acquaintance of
Moore's, testified that on December 9, 1976, three days before the
robbery, Moore asked him and a friend if they knew of a place to
"hit." Moore told them that he had a high-powered rifle and ammunition
that would be useful in a robbery. Three other witnesses testified
that on the afternoon of December 12 they saw Moore and Green at
Moore's home, approximately four blocks from the Majik Market.
A gas station attendant who worked
at an Amoco station near the murder site testified that on the night
of the murder a car matching the description of Ms. Allen's automobile
stopped for gas. Two persons were in the car, and the attendant
remembered that the passenger, a black male, paid for the gas and used
the restroom. Although he was unsure of the sex or race of the driver,
the attendant testified that he thought the driver was also a black
male.
The State utilized a number of
experts to inform the jury about the physical evidence found at the
murder site and in the search of Moore's home. The pathologist who
performed the autopsy on Ms. Allen testified that her injuries were
consistent with Moore's description to Pasby of the rape and murder.
His examination of the body revealed bullet wounds in each arm, the
abdomen, and the head. From the location and nature of the bullet
wounds, the pathologist theorized that Ms. Allen's arms had been
crossed over her stomach when she was shot, allowing one bullet to
pass through both arms before entering her abdomen. He noted that the
right arm was "almost completely torn in two" by the bullet, with the
right hand remaining attached to the body only by soft tissue. He also
stated that a separate bullet entered the left side of the victim's
head over her ear. His examination also revealed bruises on the inner
thigh and vaginal injuries indicating that Ms. Allen had been raped
prior to being killed.
A ballistics expert testified that
bullets fired from the 30.06 caliber rifle confiscated from Livingston
and registered to Terry Kilgore matched the 30.06 caliber slug
retrieved at the murder site. Warren Tillman, a microanalyst from the
state crime lab, testified that a plaster cast of a footprint found
near the body was similar in size and in its treadless design to the
pair of "Hush Puppy" shoes seized in the search of Moore's home. His
examination of plaster casts of tire tracks found near the murder site
revealed that the tracks were similar in size and tread design to the
tires on Ms. Allen's automobile. Tillman also testified that in his
opinion a Caucasian pubic hair and Negroid head hair removed from the
gold towel seized in the search of Moore's home could have come from
Ms. Allen and Mr. Moore respectively. In addition, he stated that the
Negroid head hair found on the towel did not come from Roosevelt Green
or Thomas Pasby. Finally, Linda Barton, a crime lab serologist,
testified that vaginal swabbings taken from the victim revealed
seminal fluids from an individual with type A blood. She concluded
that the seminal fluid could not have come from Roosevelt Green,
because he had type B blood. Although the serologist found that both
Moore and Pasby had type A blood, she testified that in her opinion
the seminal fluid could have come from Moore because he was a "strong
secretor" and could not have come from Pasby, because he was a "weak
secretor."
Carzell Moore testified in his
defense. He stated that he was twenty-four years old and that he was
employed by a lumber company in Cochran. Moore admitted that he met
Green in a penitentiary in Alabama, that Green had escaped from that
penitentiary in late 1975, and that Green had arrived in Cochran
looking for him on December 11, 1976. Moore also admitted that he had
allowed Green to stay in his home and had introduced Green to many of
his friends in Cochran. He stated that on the afternoon of the robbery
he and Green had been drinking. Moore testified that after Green left
his home on foot headed toward town, he passed out on a couch. He
denied participating in the robbery and denied making any statements
to Pasby about the incident. The jury rejected Moore's testimony and
returned a verdict of guilty on both the rape and the first-degree
murder counts.
During the sentencing phase of the
trial, the State presented documentary evidence of Moore's prior
convictions for burglary and for possession of marijuana. Moore then
testified, asking the jury for mercy and repeating his denial of any
involvement in the incident. His mother, Catherine Moore, also
testified, asking the jury to spare her son's life. In rebuttal, the
State called Joseph Allen, the victim's father. He testified that his
daughter would have been nineteen on December 25, 1976, had been an
honor student in high school, was attending Middle Georgia College on
a partial scholarship studying to become a nurse, and had been working
part time at the Majik Market to help pay for her education. After
deliberating, the jury recommended the death penalty on both the rape
and the first-degree murder counts and found the following statutory
aggravating circumstances: first, each crime was committed during the
commission of additional capital felonies, i.e., the murder was
committed during the commission of the rape, kidnapping, and armed
robbery, and the rape was committed during the commission of the
murder, kidnapping, and armed robbery, see O.C.G.A. Sec.
17-10-30(b)(2) (1982); and, second, each crime was outrageously and
wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman in that it involved torture of
the victim and depravity of mind on the part of the defendant, see
O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-10-30(b)(7) (1982). As required by Georgia law, the
trial judge adopted the jury's recommendation and entered a sentence
of death on both counts.2
B.
On direct appeal, the Supreme Court
of Georgia affirmed Moore's convictions and sentences. Moore v. State,
240 Ga. 807, 243 S.E.2d 1, cert. denied, 439 U.S. 903, 99 S.Ct. 268,
58 L.Ed.2d 249 (1978). Moore subsequently petitioned the Superior
Court of Butts County for a writ of habeas corpus. After conducting an
evidentiary hearing, the court denied Moore's petition. The Supreme
Court of Georgia denied Moore's application for a certificate of
probable cause to appeal, and the United States Supreme Court denied
his petition for a writ of certiorari to review the state habeas
corpus decision. Moore v. Zant, 446 U.S. 947, 100 S.Ct. 2176, 64 L.Ed.2d
803 (1980). Thereafter, Moore filed a second habeas corpus petition in
the Superior Court of Butts County in an effort to exhaust those
issues he had failed to raise in any of the previous judicial
proceedings. The court summarily dismissed the petition without
holding a hearing. In response, Moore filed an application for a
certificate of probable cause to appeal, which the Supreme Court of
Georgia denied.
Having exhausted his state remedies,
Moore filed the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the
district court on April 7, 1981. Moore raised sixteen claims of error.3
The petition was referred to a magistrate who made findings of fact
and conclusions of law and recommended that the district court deny
the petition without an evidentiary hearing. On September 20, 1982,
the district court entered an order adopting the magistrate's
recommendation and denying the petition. Moore appealed, contesting
the district court's disposition as to five of his claims.4
In addition, Moore contended that the district court erred in refusing
to hold an evidentiary hearing as to four of his claims.5
A panel of this court rejected Moore's arguments and affirmed the
district court's denial of relief. Moore v. Zant, 722 F.2d 640 (11th
Cir.1983). We vacated the panel opinion and granted Moore's petition
for rehearing en banc on March 15, 1984. During oral argument, the
parties informed us that a recent Supreme Court of Georgia decision,
Stynchcombe v. Floyd, 252 Ga. 113, 311 S.E.2d 828 (1984), appeared to
represent a change in Georgia law directly related to an issue Moore
raised in his appeal. In Floyd, the court held that a jury instruction
virtually identical to one challenged in Moore's case was erroneous
because it failed to inform the jury of its option to recommend a life
sentence in spite of the presence of a statutory aggravating
circumstance. Id. at 114, 311 S.E.2d at 830. Accordingly, we held
Moore's appeal in abeyance so that he could resubmit his jury
instruction claim to the Georgia courts.
Moore immediately filed a petition
for habeas corpus relief in the Superior Court of Butts County. After
an evidentiary hearing, the court dismissed Moore's petition as
successive. The Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed on April 24, 1985.
Moore v. Kemp, 254 Ga. 279, 328 S.E.2d 725 (1985). After being
notified of this disposition and receiving supplemental briefs, we
heard further oral argument in this case on October 21, 1985.
We now proceed to a
discussion of the four claims that prompted us to rehear this case en
banc: (1) that the trial court's denial of Moore's pretrial request
for an independent expert to assist his attorney in confronting the
physical evidence the State introduced against him at trial denied him
due process of law; (2) that the district court erred in refusing to
hold an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the prosecutor
withheld portions of Thomas Pasby's criminal record from the defense
and whether Pasby testified against Moore pursuant to an undisclosed
agreement with the State; (3) that the trial court's sentencing
instructions to the jury did not adequately inform it of its option to
return a life sentence, even if it found a statutory aggravating
circumstance; and (4) that the testimony of the victim's father during
the sentencing phase of the trial deprived Moore of his right to a
sentencing hearing free from passion and prejudice. As to the
remaining claims Moore raises on appeal, we reinstate the panel
opinion.
II.
Petitioner was indigent at the time
of his prosecution. Prior to trial, he moved the court to provide a "criminologist
or other expert witness" to assist his attorney in the preparation and
presentation of his defense. The court denied the motion. Petitioner
claims that this denial deprived him of the right to a fundamentally
fair trial guaranteed by the due process clause of the fourteenth
amendment;6 he
cites two reasons. First, without the assistance of an expert, his
attorney was unable adequately to cross-examine the State's experts,
Warren Tillman, a microanalyst, and Linda Barton, a serologist, and
thus could not challenge the validity of the conclusions they derived
from their tests. Second, petitioner asserts that an expert appointed
to assist counsel might have conducted different and more conclusive
tests, the results of which might have supported his alibi defense.
A.
Supreme Court precedent establishes
the principle that the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment
requires that the state, upon request, provide indigent defendants
with the "basic tools of an adequate defense ... when those tools are
available for a price to other prisoners." Britt v. North Carolina,
404 U.S. 226, 227, 92 S.Ct. 431, 433, 30 L.Ed.2d 400 (1971); see also
Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 77, 83, 105 S.Ct. 1087, 1094, 1097, 84
L.Ed.2d 53 (1985); Ross v. Moffitt, 417 U.S. 600, 94 S.Ct. 2437, 41
L.Ed.2d 341 (1974); Griffin v. Illinois, 351 U.S. 12, 76 S.Ct. 585,
100 L.Ed. 891 (1956) (plurality). The state need not provide indigent
defendants all the assistance their wealthier counterparts might buy;
rather, fundamental fairness requires that the state not deny them "an
adequate opportunity to present their claims fairly within the
adversary system." Ross, 417 U.S. at 612, 94 S.Ct. at 2444-45; see
also Ake, 470 U.S. at 77, 105 S.Ct. at 1094.7
In the case at hand, petitioner contends that the state trial court,
in denying his request for the appointment of a "criminologist or
other expert witness," deprived him of a basic tool of an adequate
defense and therefore rendered his trial fundamentally unfair.
An expert can assist a criminal
defendant in marshaling his defense in two essential ways. First, he
can gather facts, inspect tangible evidence, or conduct tests or
examinations that may aid defense counsel in confronting the
prosecution's case, including its expert witnesses, or in fashioning a
theory of defense. Second, the expert can provide opinion testimony to
rebut prosecution evidence or to establish an affirmative defense,
such as insanity. In a given case, the assistance of an expert could
be so important to the defense that without it an innocent defendant
could be convicted or, at the very least, the public's confidence in
the fairness of his trial and its outcome could be undermined. Even
so, an indigent defendant who did not have the assistance of an expert
in preparing and presenting his case cannot be heard to complain about
his conviction on due process grounds unless he made a timely request
to the trial court for the provision of expert assistance, the court
improperly denied the request, and the denial rendered the defendant's
trial fundamentally unfair.
In the case before us, a timely
request for the appointment of an expert was made. The question we
must decide next is whether the trial court erred in denying it.
Specifically, we must assess the reasonableness of the trial judge's
action at the time he took it. This assessment necessarily turns on
the sufficiency of the petitioner's explanation as to why he needed an
expert. That is, having heard petitioner's explanation, should the
trial judge have concluded that unless he granted his request
petitioner would likely be denied an adequate opportunity fairly to
confront the State's case and to present his defense?
B.
The Supreme Court adopted the
approach described above in Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 83, 105 S.Ct.
1087, 1097, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985), and in Caldwell v. Mississippi, 472
U.S. 320, 323 n. 1, 105 S.Ct. 2633, 2637 n. 1, 86 L.Ed.2d 231 (1985) (plurality).
In Ake, the Court concluded that the due process clause's guarantee of
fundamental fairness is implicated "when [an indigent] defendant
demonstrates to the trial judge that his sanity at the time of the
offense is to be a significant factor at trial" and that "the State
must, at a minimum, assure the defendant access to a competent
psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate examination and assist in
evaluation, preparation, and presentation of the defense." Ake, 470
U.S. at 83, 105 S.Ct. at 1097.
Ake was arrested and charged with
murdering a couple and wounding their two children. At his arraignment,
and while in jail, his behavior was so bizarre that the trial judge,
sua sponte, ordered him examined by a psychiatrist. As a result of
that examination, Ake was committed to a state hospital for a
determination of his competency to stand trial. A few weeks later, the
chief forensic psychiatrist at the state hospital told the court that
Ake was not competent to stand trial. After a competency hearing, the
court found Ake to be a "mentally ill person in need of care and
treatment," id. at 71, 105 S.Ct. at 1091, and incompetent to stand
trial. The court ordered him committed to the state mental hospital.
Six weeks later, the chief forensic psychiatrist advised the court
that Ake, who was being treated with an antipsychotic drug, had become
competent to stand trial. The court thereafter found Ake to be
competent, and the criminal prosecution resumed. See id. at 70-72, 105
S.Ct. at 1090-91.
At a pretrial conference, defense
counsel informed the court that his client would raise an insanity
defense at trial. The attorney further stated that in order to prepare
and present that defense a psychiatrist would have to examine Ake with
respect to his mental condition at the time of the murders. Because
during his stay at the state hospital Ake was not examined to
determine his sanity at the time of the offenses and, as an indigent,
could not afford to pay a psychiatrist, counsel asked the court either
to arrange or provide the necessary funds for such an examination. The
court denied counsel's motion. See id. at 72, 105 S.Ct. at 1091.
At trial, defense counsel did not
dispute Ake's involvement in the charged crimes; his sole argument was
that Ake was not guilty by reason of insanity. To support his argument,
counsel called the psychiatrists who had examined Ake at the state
hospital and questioned them about his mental condition at the time of
the offenses. They were unable to render an opinion on the point,
however, because they had not examined Ake for that purpose. As a
result, no one testified as to his sanity at the time of the offenses,
and, having failed to carry his burden of proof on the insanity
defense, he received guilty verdicts. The State then sought the death
penalty. Following a sentencing hearing, in which the parties
presented no additional expert testimony, the jury recommended that
Ake be sentenced to death for each of the two murders, and he was
sentenced accordingly.
Ake appealed to the Oklahoma Court
of Criminal Appeals, claiming, among other things, that his
convictions and death sentences were invalid because the trial court's
failure to provide psychiatric assistance denied him a fair trial. The
court of criminal appeals rejected that claim on a procedural ground,
holding that he had waived it by not challenging the trial court's
ruling in his motion for a new trial. The Supreme Court of the United
States, on certiorari, reversed Ake's conviction and remanded the case
for a new trial because the failure to provide psychiatric assistance
operated to deny Ake due process of law.
In reaching this
conclusion, the Supreme Court focused on the information available to
the trial judge when defense counsel requested psychiatric assistance
and on the effect the denial of such assistance had on the
presentation of Ake's defense at trial. The Court observed that when
Ake's counsel requested the provision of a psychiatrist, the trial
judge knew that insanity would be Ake's sole defense, that his case
rested on his ability to prove that he was insane when he committed
the crimes, and that none of the state psychiatrists who had examined
and treated Ake had undertaken to assess his mental condition at that
time. In addition, the trial judge had determined previously that Ake
was suffering from a mental illness that may have affected him at the
time of the shootings and had rendered him incompetent to stand trial
for a six-week period. Finally, the trial judge knew that Ake could
stand trial only if he remained under medication. The Supreme Court
concluded that, given the facts before the trial judge and defense
counsel's explanation for requesting expert assistance, it was
unreasonable for the trial judge to have denied the request; he should
have known that to refuse the request would be to deny the defendant
an adequate opportunity to prepare and present his insanity defense.
The Court further concluded, on the basis of what took place at trial,
that the denial of expert assistance precluded Ake from presenting an
effective defense.
In Caldwell, also a capital case,
the Supreme Court was faced again with a claim that a trial court's
refusal to provide a defendant with expert assistance denied the
defendant a fair trial. Caldwell asked for the appointment of a
criminal investigator, a fingerprint expert, and a ballistics expert.
His requests were denied. The state supreme court affirmed the denials
"because the requests were accompanied by no showing as to their
reasonableness." Caldwell, 472 U.S. at 323 n. 1, 105 S.Ct. at 2637 n.
1. For example, the motion requesting the ballistics expert included
only the general statement that the expert was necessary; the motion
failed to explain in specific terms why the expert was needed. See
Caldwell v. State, 443 So.2d 806, 812 (Miss.1983), rev'd on other
grounds sub nom. Caldwell v. Mississippi, 472 U.S. 320, 105 S.Ct.
2633, 86 L.Ed.2d 231 (1985) (plurality). The Supreme Court concluded
that because "petitioner offered little more than undeveloped
assertions that the requested assistance would be beneficial, [there
was] no deprivation of due process." Caldwell, 472 U.S. at 324 n. 1,
105 S.Ct. at 2637 n. 1 (citation omitted).
The Supreme Court's statement in
Caldwell implies that the government's refusal to provide
nonpsychiatric expert assistance could, in a given case, deny a
defendant a fair trial. The implication is questionable, however, in
light of the Court's subsequent statement that it had "no need to
determine as a matter of federal constitutional law what if any
showing would have entitled a defendant to assistance of the type [Caldwell]
sought." Id. (emphasis added). We nonetheless assume, for sake of
argument, that the due process clause could require the government,
both state and federal, to provide nonpsychiatric expert assistance to
an indigent defendant upon a sufficient showing of need.
Ake and Caldwell, taken together,
hold that a defendant must demonstrate something more than a mere
possibility of assistance from a requested expert;8
due process does not require the government automatically to provide
indigent defendants with expert assistance upon demand. Rather, a fair
reading of these precedents is that a defendant must show the trial
court that there exists a reasonable probability both that an expert
would be of assistance to the defense9
and that denial of expert assistance would result in a fundamentally
unfair trial. Thus, if a defendant wants an expert to assist his
attorney in confronting the prosecution's proof--by preparing counsel
to cross-examine the prosecution's experts or by providing rebuttal
testimony--he must inform the court of the nature of the prosecution's
case and how the requested expert would be useful. At the very least,
he must inform the trial court about the nature of the crime and the
evidence linking him to the crime. By the same token, if the defendant
desires the appointment of an expert so that he can present an
affirmative defense, such as insanity, he must demonstrate a
substantial basis for the defense, as the defendant did in Ake. In
each instance, the defendant's showing must also include a specific
description of the expert or experts desired; without this basic
information, the court would be unable to grant the defendant's motion,
because the court would not know what type of expert was needed. In
addition, the defendant should inform the court why the particular
expert is necessary. We recognize that defense counsel may be
unfamiliar with the specific scientific theories implicated in a case
and therefore cannot be expected to provide the court with a detailed
analysis of the assistance an appointed expert might provide. We do
believe, however, that defense counsel is obligated to inform himself
about the specific scientific area in question and to provide the
court with as much information as possible concerning the usefulness
of the requested expert to the defense's case.10
With the foregoing principles in
mind, we address the merits of petitioner's claim. We begin by
examining the information before the trial court when it ruled on
petitioner's motion.
C.
On January 10, 1977, petitioner was
arrested and charged with the murder of Ms. Allen. Two weeks later, on
January 24, attorneys A.J. Welch, Jr. and Rod Meadows were appointed
to defend petitioner by the Honorable Hugh D. Sosebee, the superior
court judge who was assigned to the case and who later presided over
petitioner's trial. Later that day, a "committal hearing"11
was held before another superior court judge, the Honorable Sam C.
Whitmire.12 On
February 9, 1977, a transcript of the committal hearing was filed and
placed in the record. Attached to this document was the portion of the
transcript from the committal hearing held for Roosevelt Green
containing the testimony of the Monroe County sheriff, L.C. Bittick.
In his testimony, Sheriff Bittick described the results of tests
conducted by Linda Barton, the crime lab serologist, on some seminal
fluid found in the body of the victim and on samples of Green's blood
and saliva. According to the sheriff, Barton had determined from these
tests that the seminal fluid was produced by an individual who had
type A blood and was also a "secretor." Barton had determined that
Green had type B blood, thus eliminating him as a possible source of
the seminal fluid.
On February 15, 1977, Judge Whitmire
presided over a hearing on discovery motions filed by petitioner's
counsel. At the conclusion of the hearing, defense attorney Welch
advised the court that the State had agreed to provide the defense
with copies of "all the physical evidence ... including the Crime Lab
reports, chemical analysis, and so forth conducted on the physical
evidence." Welch then made the following motion:
We would like to make a motion to the Court that an
independent research analysis [sic] be appointed by this Court that is
not employed by the State of Georgia to examine this evidence to find
his own conclusions on behalf of the defendant, to reach his own
conclusions, in order that we can first of all, have someone to advise
us as to the expertise of the Georgia Crime Lab, whether or not they
performed the correct tests, whether or not there could be any
variances in the findings of the Georgia Crime Lab, in order that we
would have this knowledge available to us.
The court did not rule on the motion
but instead asked Welch to submit the motion in writing.
Petitioner was indicted by the grand
jury later that day, thereby eliminating the need for a committal
hearing and terminating Judge Whitmire's jurisdiction over the case.
See Douglas v. State, 132 Ga.App. 694, 209 S.E.2d 114 (1974). All
subsequent proceedings in petitioner's case were handled by Judge
Sosebee.
On February 24, 1977, petitioner's
appointed counsel asked the court's permission to withdraw, and the
court appointed a new attorney, W. Franklin Freeman, Jr., to represent
petitioner. Freeman continued to press the State for copies of any
written reports from the crime lab, and he requested the State to
provide him with a list of witnesses the State would call at trial. On
April 6, 1977, at the request of counsel for each side, the court
continued a scheduled pretrial hearing so that both parties could
examine the reports of the crime lab. The crime lab issued ten reports,
including the reports of Warren Tillman and Linda Barton. On April 15,
three days after Freeman received the reports, the State gave him a
list of witnesses who would testify at trial.13
Tillman and Barton were named as witnesses in that document.
On the same day, Freeman filed a
written motion styled "Motion to Request the Court to Appoint
Criminologist or Other Expert Witness to Assist Defense Counsel and
Plea in Abatement." The motion alleged the following:14
(1) petitioner was indigent; (2) petitioner had been indicted for rape
and murder; (3) the State had assembled various items of physical
evidence including a gun, shoes, clothing, hosiery, foot castings, and
had taken from the defendant samples of his blood, saliva, and hair
that may have been examined by the Georgia crime lab; (4) some of
these items of physical evidence tended to connect petitioner, or a
person with physical characteristics similar to his, with the
commission of the charged crimes; (5) defense counsel could not
determine without the assistance of an expert whether any tests
performed by the crime lab were complete or conclusive; and (6)
defense counsel believed that a test could be performed on hair
samples that "might conclusively prove whether or not the hair samples
found [by the police at the scene of the murder] are those from
defendant."
At a motions hearing, also held on
April 15, defense counsel called the court's attention to his motion
for the appointment of an expert and, when asked by the court if he
had anything to say in support of the motion, responded: "I think
everything that I have relative to this would be contained in the
motion." Shortly thereafter, the court recessed the hearing to give
defense counsel further time to prepare a motion to suppress evidence
the State had obtained during the search of petitioner's residence on
January 15, 1977, five weeks after the murder. Because the court
desired to rule on the motion to suppress before it ruled on
petitioner's motion for an expert, the court did not at that time rule
on the motion for an expert.
At the next hearing, held on May 4,
1977, the State called Sheriff Bittick to rebut the defense's claim
that the warrant issued for the search of petitioner's home was not
supported by probable cause. From the sheriff's testimony, Judge
Sosebee learned that footprints found near the victim's body appeared
to have been made by shoes with a molded, treadless sole, such as a "Hush
Puppy" brand shoe, and that a pair of "Hush Puppy" shoes matching the
size of the footprints discovered at the murder scene had been found
in petitioner's home five weeks later. Following the sheriff's
testimony, the court denied the motion to suppress. The following
discussion then ensued.
BY MR. FREEMAN: I think my next
motion was a motion to request the Court to appoint an expert witness
and incorporated in that was the plea in abatement.
BY THE COURT: Plea in abatement on
what grounds?
BY MR. FREEMAN: Well, it's generally
stated. I think in trying to paraphrase the motion, we contend that
we're entitled because of the peculiar circumstances of this case,
we're entitled to an expert witness to assist us in deciphering
evaluations made by the Crime Lab or possibly conducting other tests
on their own. We recognize, apparently, that there's no statutory
right for this, but argue to the Court that an absence of such a
statutory right to obtain an expert witness or procedure where we can
have this made available to us, constitutes a procedural and due
process violations and that the absence of this is a constitutional
question and that the indictment should be abated because there's no
statutory arrangement where this can be granted.15
BY THE COURT: Is that all on that
motion?
BY MR. FREEMAN: Yes, sir, it's all
pretty well set out in the motion, I believe, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT: Does
the State have anything else that you want to say in response to this
particular motion?
BY MR. WALDREP: No, sir, Your Honor.
Of course, the State has expert witnesses or people that are expert in
these fields employed to do these investigations. They don't actually
represent--work for us or work for the defendant, they just analyze
these items when they're sent to them at the State Crime Laboratory
and whatever the results are, that's what they are. We say, of course,
that he doesn't have any right to have someone else appointed and
actually, when you really look to the substance of it, I don't know
who the Court would appoint to do something like that and the only
people that the State to do those type things are the people at the
Crime Laboratory.
BY THE COURT: The Court will
overrule that motion in its entirety.
Several minutes after this
discussion the court took a brief recess. When the court was
reconvened, defense counsel made the following statement:
BY MR. FREEMAN: Your Honor, could I
put something else in the record before we get on to the Brady motion?
In connection with the motion to appoint a criminologist which the
Court has already overruled, I didn't have this letter with me, didn't
have it in front of me at the time but the District Attorney was
stating that there wasn't anybody available that could be appointed. I
just wanted to state in our place that we do have somebody that's
available, is Dr. W.L. Woodford, 585 Lakeshore Drive, N. E., Atlanta,
and who, we think, would charge approximately $1500.00 to make some of
these tests and perform some of this analyses, so we do have someone
that's available, if the Court had seen fit to appropriate the money
for it. I just wanted to put that in the record.
Petitioner never renewed his motion
for the appointment of an expert either prior to or during his trial.
In determining the merits of petitioner's request for expert
assistance, therefore, we consider only the facts available to Judge
Sosebee on May 4, when he ruled on petitioner's motion for the
appointment of an expert.
The facts available to Judge Sosebee
came from four sources: the transcript of petitioner's January 24,
1977 committal hearing before Judge Whitmire; the transcript of the
testimony Sheriff Bittick gave at Roosevelt Green's committal hearing
held the same day;16
the evidence presented at the May 4, 1977 suppression hearing before
Judge Sosebee; and petitioner's written motion for the appointment of
a criminologist or other expert. The transcript of petitioner's
committal hearing described the murder scene and how Ms. Allen died.
It also contained the testimony of the key prosecution witness, Thomas
Pasby, who related what petitioner had told him about the robbery of
the Majik Market and the kidnapping, rape, and murder of Ms. Allen.
The transcript of Sheriff Bittick's testimony disclosed that Linda
Barton, the serologist, had tested seminal fluid removed from the
victim's body, that the fluid had come from a person possessing type A
blood, and that Roosevelt Green had type B blood. It also revealed
that Barton had determined that Roosevelt Green's hair was present on
some gloves the police found at the murder scene.17
The May 4 suppression hearing informed Judge Sosebee that footprints
found near the victim's body appeared to have been made by shoes
similar to those found in petitioner's bedroom when the police
searched his residence.
Petitioner's motion and the
statements his lawyer made in support of the motion18
provided Judge Sosebee with little additional information about the
State's case and petitioner's need for expert assistance. Liberally
read, the motion informed the court that the State had collected
various items of evidence from the crime scene, the petitioner's home,
and the petitioner's body (blood, saliva, hair) and that some of this
evidence may have been examined at the state crime lab. The motion
also informed the court that certain undescribed tests performed by
experts at the crime lab may have buttressed the State's claim that
petitioner was present when the rape and murder took place.
In sum, the information before Judge
Sosebee from these four sources indicated the following: first, that
the State, on the basis of petitioner's admissions to Thomas Pasby,
could establish that petitioner and Roosevelt Green robbed the Majik
Market and kidnapped, raped, and murdered Ms. Allen; second, that the
hair tests performed by Linda Barton placed Green at the scene of the
murder, but that the tests she performed on seminal fluid taken from
the victim's body cast some doubt on whether he had raped the victim;19
third, that someone at the state crime lab, comparing plaster casts of
footprints at the murder scene with shoes later found in petitioner's
bedroom, could testify that a person wearing shoes like petitioner's
may have been present when Ms. Allen was murdered. The information did
not disclose, and petitioner's counsel did not speculate about, any
connection between petitioner's blood, saliva, and hair and the crimes
in question; nor did counsel indicate what tests the state crime lab
may have conducted on those samples. All Judge Sosebee knew was that
petitioner's lawyer wanted an expert of some kind to review any tests
the state crime lab may have performed and to conduct an unspecified
number of tests that counsel declined to describe.
We do note that, on April 12, 1977,
three days before petitioner's attorney presented his motion for the
appointment of an expert to Judge Sosebee, the prosecutor gave him
copies of the reports he had received from the state crime lab and the
names of the experts who had authored the reports and would testify
for the prosecution. Inexplicably, petitioner's counsel never informed
Judge Sosebee what those reports disclosed or the areas of expertise
of the persons who had made them and, presumably, would testify at
trial. Counsel also failed to inform Judge Sosebee whether he had
interviewed the State's experts about any tests they may have
performed and, if not, whether they would be amenable to such
interviews. A thorough study of the crime lab reports and interviews
with the authors of the reports may have eliminated any need for
expert assistance. At the very least, if defense counsel had been more
diligent in his study and more specific in his motion, Judge Sosebee
would have been more fully apprised of the prosecution's case and of
the defense's need, if any, for expert assistance.
We also observe that petitioner did
not advise the court about the kind of expert he desired or the role
the expert would play. The motion merely requested the court to
appoint a "criminologist or other expert witness." It is clear,
however, that petitioner did not desire a "criminologist"20
but instead wanted an expert or experts whose expertise matched that
of each of the State's experts. Of course, because petitioner did not
inform the court about the expertise of any of the State's witnesses,
the court could not have known exactly what type of expert petitioner
needed or requested. On May 4, after the court had heard argument of
counsel and ruled on petitioner's motion, defense counsel did offer
the name of an expert who "was available to be appointed," but he did
not inform the court of that person's expertise or what he could have
contributed to the defense.
Petitioner's motion, considered in
the light of the record before Judge Sosebee when he made his
dispositive ruling, failed to create a reasonable probability that
expert assistance was necessary to the defense and that without such
assistance petitioner's trial would be rendered unfair. We accordingly
hold that the trial court did not err in denying petitioner's motion.
Having concluded that the trial
court did not err in denying petitioner's motion for the appointment
of an expert, we need not determine whether at trial petitioner's
failure to obtain the requested assistance in fact deprived him of the
ability to present his defense.21
Thus, we affirm the district court's rejection of petitioner's due
process claim.
III.
As we have indicated in Part I.A.,
supra, the State's key witness was Thomas Pasby. In fact, without
Pasby's testimony, it is doubtful whether the case would have gone to
the jury. There were no eyewitnesses to the robbery of the Majik
Market or to the kidnapping, rape, and murder of Ms. Allen, and the
physical evidence and expert opinion testimony the prosecution
presented merely suggested that petitioner could have been a
perpetrator of these crimes.22
The State had a much stronger case
against Roosevelt Green; he had been caught red-handed in South
Carolina with the murder weapon and the victim's car, and several
witnesses placed him in Cochran on the day the crimes were committed.
Green could have explained how he obtained possession of the murder
weapon and Ms. Allen's car, why he was in Cochran on the day of the
crime, why he had petitioner's and Pasby's telephone numbers in his
possession, and why he called Pasby's home after he was arrested in an
effort to inform petitioner that he was in jail in South Carolina. But
Green was unavailable as a prosecution witness; he was a fugitive,
having escaped from the Monroe County jail prior to his indictment.
Green's availability as a witness depended on his being apprehended
and on his willingness to testify.
Pasby was the only witness the State
had who could explain how the crimes were committed. Relating the
admissions petitioner made to him on January 1, 1977, Pasby told the
jury about petitioner's past association with Green, how petitioner
and Green robbed the Majik Market and kidnapped Ms. Allen, and about
the rape and murder. The remainder of the prosecution's case was
principally devoted to corroborating Pasby's testimony; none of it,
independently or circumstantially, placed petitioner with the victim
at any time during the robbery, kidnapping, rape, or murder with the
certainty required by the criminal law.
To obtain petitioner's conviction,
the prosecutor obviously had to convince the jury to accept Pasby's
testimony. To accomplish this task, the prosecutor had to confront
Pasby's criminal record, which posed a substantial threat to his
credibility if fully comprehended and exploited by defense counsel.
The basis of the claim we now consider is the prosecutor's handling of
Pasby's criminal record, especially prior to petitioner's trial when
the court, in response to petitioner's Brady and Giglio motions,
instructed him to disclose that record and any promises the State may
have made to Pasby for his testimony.
A prosecutor has a
duty to provide an accused with all evidence in the state's possession
materially favorable to the accused's defense. Brady v. Maryland, 373
U.S. 83, 87, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 1196-97, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963). A
prosecutor's failure to produce such evidence may necessitate a
retrial "irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the
prosecution." Id. at 87, 83 S.Ct. at 1197. When the defendant's guilt
or innocence may turn on the reliability of a witness, the
prosecutor's nondisclosure of evidence affecting the credibility of
the witness falls within this general rule. See Napue v. Illinois, 360
U.S. 264, 269, 79 S.Ct. 1173, 1177, 3 L.Ed.2d 1217 (1959). Promises
made by the state to a witness in exchange for his testimony relate
directly to the credibility of the witness. A prosecutor has a duty to
disclose evidence of any promises made by the state to a prosecution
witness in exchange for his testimony. Giglio v. United States, 405
U.S. 150, 92 S.Ct. 763, 31 L.Ed.2d 104 (1972). This is especially true
when the testimony of the witness is essential to the state's case.
See Haber v. Wainwright, 756 F.2d 1520, 1523 (11th Cir.1985).
Petitioner claims that the
prosecutor breached his Brady/Giglio duty by deliberately withholding
from the defense material portions of Thomas Pasby's criminal record
which, if considered in light of the portions of Pasby's criminal
record the prosecutor did disclose, suggest that Pasby had either been
given immunity from prosecution by the State for his testimony or
thought he had been given such immunity. The district court rejected
petitioner's claim without an evidentiary hearing. The court concluded
that an evidentiary hearing was unnecessary because the state habeas
court had already given petitioner a full, fair, and adequate hearing
on his claim and found that the State had made no promises to Pasby
for his testimony. That finding, according to the district court, was
entitled to a presumption of correctness under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254(d)
(1982) and foreclosed petitioner's claim. We conclude that petitioner
did not receive a full, fair, and adequate hearing in the state habeas
court; accordingly, its findings of fact carry no presumption of
correctness.23 As
the following discussion makes clear, in order to resolve the merits
of petitioner's Brady/Giglio claim, an evidentiary hearing must be
held.
The importance of Pasby's criminal
record to petitioner's defense first became apparent at petitioner's "committal
hearing" held on January 24, 1977.24
The Superior Court of Monroe County convened the hearing to determine
whether there was probable cause to bind petitioner over to the Monroe
County grand jury on charges that he participated in the rape and
murder of Ms. Allen. Because Monroe County is in the Flint Judicial
Circuit, the district attorney of that circuit,25
E. Byron Smith, and his assistant, Kenneth Waldrep, presented the
State's case. Two court-appointed attorneys, A.J. Welch, Jr., and Rod
Meadows, represented petitioner.
Pasby was the State's principal
witness at the committal hearing. Pasby began his testimony by
explaining that he had been transported to the hearing (which was
being held in Forsyth, the Monroe County seat) from the Bleckley
County jail (in Cochran) where he had been held for some twenty days
on a charge of theft by taking (involving a 30.06 caliber hunting
rifle, the same type of rifle used to murder Ms. Allen).26
See O.C.G.A. Sec. 16-8-2 (1982); see also infra note 43. Pasby then
proceeded to tell the court that, on January 1, while he and
petitioner were driving from Cochran to Hawkinsville so that
petitioner could examine an automobile he was thinking of purchasing,
petitioner confessed to him that on December 12, 1976, he and Green
robbed the Majik Market, kidnapped and raped Ms. Allen, and that he
shot her to death with a 30.06 rifle. At the conclusion of Pasby's
direct examination, the district attorney asked Pasby whether he had
been induced to testify by promise or threat, and he replied that he
had not.
On cross-examination, Pasby revealed
that since his arrest and confinement in the Bleckley County jail on
January 4, he had been questioned extensively by the Bleckley County
sheriff's office (in whose jurisdiction the Majik Market robbery and
the Allen kidnapping had occurred), the Monroe County sheriff's office
(in whose jurisdiction the rape and murder had occurred), and the
Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) (which had jurisdiction over all
of the crimes) about the December 12 events, and that the questioning
had been tape recorded. Pasby admitted that when the officers
initially questioned him he denied having any knowledge of those
events. He did not break down and tell them of petitioner's confession
to him on January 1, he said, until a subsequent interrogation, after
he concluded that it would be in his best interest to cooperate.
In an effort to learn more about the
circumstances surrounding Pasby's decision to cooperate with the
police, the defense called the Bleckley County sheriff to the stand.
He confirmed that his office, the Monroe County sheriff's office, and
the GBI had interrogated Pasby about the Allen murder on several
occasions, perhaps as many as six, and had tape recorded each session.
He added that Pasby did not disclose petitioner's and Green's
involvement in the crimes until the second or third interrogation. At
the conclusion of the committal hearing, the court, principally on the
basis of Pasby's testimony, found probable cause to hold petitioner in
custody for the rape and murder of Ms. Allen pending the grand jury's
investigation.
Petitioner's attorneys were
concerned that Pasby had testified against petitioner at the committal
hearing because he had made a deal with the prosecutor: the State
would drop the pending theft by taking charge in Bleckley County and
withhold the prosecution of any other crimes Pasby may have committed
if Pasby testified against petitioner at his committal hearing and
then at trial. Counsel consequently moved the Superior Court of Monroe
County for an order directing the district attorney to divulge Pasby's
complete criminal record and any promises he or any other state
prosecutor or law enforcement official may have made to Pasby to
induce him to testify against petitioner.27
The superior court heard the motion on February 11 and 15, 1977.
Petitioner's lawyers argued that they were entitled to such
information under Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150, 92 S.Ct. 763,
31 L.Ed.2d 104 (1972), and that, depending on the prosecutor's
disclosures, they might ask the court to reconvene the committal
hearing. They suggested that the prosecutor run Pasby's name through
the "law enforcement computer."28
The prosecutor, in response, argued that he was not required to
conduct a record search to determine Pasby's criminal record, adding
that to his knowledge Pasby had no record other than the theft by
taking charge Pasby alluded to at petitioner's committal hearing. The
court ruled that the prosecutor did not have to search for Pasby's
criminal record; rather, it would be sufficient if he simply gave
defense counsel copies of any documents he had in his possession
indicating that Pasby had been arrested or convicted. The prosecutor
produced none.
On February 15, 1977, the Monroe
County grand jury indicted petitioner and Green for the rape and
murder of Ms. Allen. A few days later, petitioner's attorneys moved
the court for leave to withdraw for personal reasons. The court
granted their motion and appointed W. Franklin Freeman, Jr. to
represent petitioner.
On April 15, 1977, Freeman renewed
petitioner's previous motion to require the district attorney to
disclose Pasby's full criminal record and any deals the State may have
made with Pasby to obtain his testimony. Freeman also moved the court
to require the prosecutor to produce the tape recordings, and the
transcripts thereof, of all interviews the sheriff's offices of Monroe
and Bleckley Counties and the GBI had conducted with Pasby or any
other prosecution witness, contending that they constituted Brady
material. The superior court heard argument on the motion the same day.
In presenting his motions, Freeman
asked the court to require the district attorney, Smith, in carrying
out his Brady/Giglio duty, to disclose whether the State had granted
Pasby immunity from prosecution for any offense. The court, agreeing
that petitioner was entitled to the requested disclosure, asked the
district attorney whether the State had made any promises to Pasby for
his cooperation. Smith responded that his office had made none.
Freeman was dissatisfied with Smith's response and asked the court to
require Smith to disclose any promises made to Pasby by any other
prosecutor or by any law enforcement official. Freeman reminded the
court that in Bleckley County, Pasby was facing a felony charge, theft
by taking, which was being prosecuted by the district attorney for the
Oconee Judicial Circuit, and that he was concerned that Pasby's
cooperation with Smith's office might have an effect on the
disposition of that charge. Smith told the court that he could not
speak for the district attorney of the Oconee Judicial Circuit. Smith
did say that he had spoken to the Bleckley County sheriff and that the
sheriff had assured him that Pasby had not been granted immunity from
prosecution on the theft by taking charge. The court agreed with Smith
that he did not have to consult with the district attorney for the
Oconee Judicial Circuit, concluding that Smith would be in compliance
with the Brady and Giglio holdings if, upon learning of any promises
to Pasby, he disclosed them to petitioner's counsel. The court and the
prosecutor ended the discussion concerning the status of Pasby's
criminal record with the following colloquy:
BY THE COURT: All right, let me ask
Mr. Smith, does the State have any information of a criminal record of
any witness that you expect to use, including any and all charges
which may be pending and which have not been officially disposed of by
plea, trial or otherwise?
BY MR. SMITH: Your Honor please, the
only one that I can think of is the crime that's charged against
Thomas Pasby [i.e., the rifle theft charge pending in Bleckley County].
I'm aware of that.
BY THE COURT: Is that the only--
BY MR. SMITH: That's the only one I
know about.
BY THE COURT: Is that the only
person that you might use? Mr. Freeman, are you familiar with what
he's talking about, the charge against Mr. Pasby?
BY MR. FREEMAN: I'm familiar that
there is a charge. I'm not familiar with--
BY THE COURT: Do you know where it's
pending?
BY MR. FREEMAN: I understand that
it's pending in the Oconee Judicial Circuit.
BY THE COURT: Bleckley County?
BY MR. FREEMAN: I assume that it's
in Bleckley County but I couldn't state that affirmatively.
BY THE COURT: Mr. Smith, do you know
what county it's in?
BY MR. SMITH: Your Honor, I was
under the impression that it was in Hawkinsville but I'm not--[the
Bleckley County sheriff] is in Court. I can't keep those counties in
my mind.
BY THE COURT: If it's
in Hawkinsville, that's Pulaski County. Well, it seems to me that this
particular request as to this witness can be resolved and Mr. Smith
says he's not aware of any record against any other person, so I will
consider that as having been answered.
The court then turned to the defense
request that the prosecutor produce the tape recordings and
transcripts of the State's interrogation of prosecution witnesses. It
advised the prosecutor that the defendant was entitled under Brady to
all evidence in the State's possession materially favorable to his
defense. Petitioner's counsel asked the court to listen to the tapes
in camera and to make this determination. The court deferred its
ruling on counsel's request to allow the prosecutor to examine his
file for Brady material, and the hearing concluded.
On May 4, 1977, the district
attorney filed a formal response to petitioner's Brady request,
asserting that
[c]ounsel for the State has no tape recordings or
transcripts of recordings of interviews [with various persons
concerning the investigation of the Allen murder] in its file. We have
reason to believe that some interviews were taped. However, these
tapes are most probably in the possession of the various law
enforcement agencies.
The response also stated that the
prosecutor had provided defense counsel with a description of the
theft by taking charge, involving the theft of a 30.06 caliber rifle,
pending against Pasby in Bleckley County, and would provide any
additional information the State received concerning the criminal
record of any prosecution witness. That same day, the court resumed
the hearing on defense counsel's request that the court listen to the
tapes in camera to determine whether they contained information
favorable to the accused. The prosecutor informed the court that he
could not produce the tapes, because he did not have them. All that he
had, he said, were summaries of some of the tapes.29
He further represented that only one of them constituted Brady
material and that he had given a copy of that summary to defense
counsel.30
The court agreed with the prosecutor
that Brady did not require him to produce material that was not in his
actual possession. At this point, the court announced that it would
examine in camera the material the prosecutor did have in his
possession, his "file," and took a brief recess for that purpose. At
the conclusion of its examination, the court ordered the prosecutor to
provide the defense with seven additional summaries of interviews
conducted during the murder investigation.31
The court also ordered the prosecutor to provide defense counsel with
a statement Pasby had given to a special agent of the GBI. The court
ruled that, although the statement incriminated petitioner, it
constituted impeachment evidence because Pasby made the statement only
after the agent warned him that he could be viewed as aiding and
abetting the murder of Ms. Allen if he concealed information about it
from the authorities.32
Petitioner went to trial on June 6,
1977. The trial lasted four days. Pasby testified for the prosecution,
relating what we have recited in Part I.A.,supra. Shortly after
calling Pasby to the witness stand, the district attorney asked Pasby
about his arrest and confinement in the Bleckley County jail on
January 4, 1977, for stealing a 30.06 caliber rifle, and inquired as
to the disposition of that charge. Pasby said that the charge had been
dropped, and that he had been released from the Bleckley County jail
because the State could not prove its case.33
After examining Pasby about the
stolen rifle charge, the prosecutor had Pasby relate in detail what
petitioner told him on January 1, 1977, concerning the robbery of the
Majik Market and the kidnapping, rape, and murder of Ms. Allen. Then,
at the conclusion of his direct examination, the prosecutor returned
to the matter of Pasby's criminal record, asking Pasby whether he had
ever been convicted of a felony. Pasby replied: "I went to court twice;
once I went for DUI and driving without a license.... I went once for
theft by taking ... a case involving three people and some rings [worth]
$300 and something." When the prosecutor asked him whether he went to
trial or pled guilty to the theft offense, Pasby stated: "I entered a
plea of guilty." Precisely what Pasby said immediately thereafter is
not disclosed by the record, because the remainder of Pasby's
testimony on direct examination, consisting of one page, is missing
from the transcript of petitioner's trial. According to petitioner's
habeas attorney, Pasby told the jury that he received a one-year
probation sentence as a result of that guilty plea.34
In his cross-examination,
petitioner's attorney made no attempt to impeach Pasby with his
criminal record. Instead, he sought to discredit Pasby's story about
petitioner's confession to him by getting Pasby to admit that when the
police initially questioned him he denied any knowledge of the Allen
murder and by suggesting that Pasby concocted petitioner's confession
after the GBI agent threatened him with prosecution for aiding and
abetting the murder if he refused to cooperate. Counsel pursued the
same theme in his closing argument to the jury, arguing that Pasby or
Green committed the murder while petitioner was at home sleeping off a
drinking spree. The jury was not persuaded, however, and apparently
giving Pasby's testimony full credence, found petitioner guilty as
charged.
In his direct appeal to the Supreme
Court of Georgia, petitioner argued that he was entitled to a new
trial because the State made a bargain with Pasby for his testimony
and failed to disclose that fact to his attorney. The court rejected
his argument because the record contained no evidence of such an
agreement; all that it contained was counsel's bald allegation that a
deal had been made. Moore v. State, 240 Ga. 807, 812, 243 S.E.2d 1, 6,
cert. denied, 439 U.S. 903, 99 S.Ct. 268, 58 L.Ed.2d 249 (1978).
Having lost his argument in the
supreme court, petitioner, represented by a new attorney, Robert K.
Kates, turned to the Superior Court of Butts County for habeas corpus
relief.35 On March
26, 1979, the court held an evidentiary hearing on his claims.36
Prior to the hearing, Kates learned that Pasby was on probation at the
time of petitioner's trial, having been sentenced on a plea of guilty
by the Superior Court of Bleckley County on November 10, 1977, to the
felony of theft by taking, a charge involving the theft of $300 worth
of rings. Kates located Pasby's probation officer, Robert E. Baker,
who had left the probation service prior to petitioner's trial and
moved to Florida. From Baker, Kates discovered that on January 5,
1977, the day after Pasby's arrest and confinement in the Bleckley
County jail on the stolen rifle charge, Baker made out a "delinquency
report," recommending that Pasby's probation be revoked and requesting
his sentencing judge to initiate the revocation proceeding by issuing
a warrant for his arrest. Armed with this information, Kates amended
petitioner's habeas petition to allege that this information was
material to the issue of Pasby's credibility and that the district
attorney's failure to disclose it prior to petitioner's trial violated
the principles of Brady. Kates further alleged that Pasby had
testified under a grant of immunity, whereby the State agreed not to
prosecute him on the stolen rifle charge or to revoke his probation if
Pasby incriminated petitioner at trial.
When the March 26 evidentiary
hearing began, petitioner's counsel informed the court that he had
subpoenaed Alan Marchant, chief probation officer of the Oconee
Judicial Circuit, along with Pasby's probation file, and that he
intended to ask Marchant to disclose the contents of the file. The
State, now being represented by an assistant state attorney general,
objected to the procedure, contending that Pasby's probation file was
confidential because Pasby had been sentenced under Georgia's first
offender act, O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-60 (1985),37
and that the act prohibited the disclosure of the file's contents to
petitioner's attorney. See O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-65 (1985).38
The court agreed that Pasby's probation file was confidential and
sustained the State's objection to the wholesale disclosure proposed
by petitioner's counsel. At the same time, the court recognized that
the State could not use the confidentiality requirement of the first
offender act as a means of avoiding its duties under the Constitution--specifically,
those defined by Brady and Giglio--and ruled that petitioner was
entitled to be informed of anything in the file material to Pasby's
credibility or indicating that the State had made a deal with Pasby
for his testimony against petitioner. The State suggested that the
court examine the file in camera. The court did so and announced that
nothing in the file indicated that the State made any promises to
Pasby for his testimony.39
Counsel then asked the court whether anything in the file revealed the
disposition of Pasby's probation revocation proceeding, which had been
initiated when the Superior Court of Bleckley County issued the
warrant for Pasby's arrest on January 5, 1977. The court refused to
answer the question, implying that the first offender act's
confidentiality provision prohibited it from revealing that
information. The court placed Pasby's probation file under seal and
made it a part of the record of the habeas proceeding. At the
conclusion of the hearing, the court denied petitioner's Brady/Giglio
claim. The Supreme Court of Georgia, in denying petitioner's
application for a certificate of probable cause to appeal, declined to
review that ruling.40
Petitioner thereafter brought this
habeas corpus action in the district court. In his petition, he again
alleged that the state prosecutor breached his Brady/Giglio duty by
withholding from defense counsel material portions of Pasby's criminal
record and that Pasby received prosecutorial concessions from the
State in return for his testimony. He asked for an evidentiary hearing
so that he could prove his allegations. The state attorney general, in
answering the petition, contended that an evidentiary hearing was
unnecessary because the state habeas court had given petitioner a
full, fair, and adequate hearing, and its finding that the State made
no promises to Pasby for his testimony was presumptively correct. See
28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254(d) (1982). Based on the State's answer, to which
the records of petitioner's criminal trial and state habeas corpus
proceedings--with the exception of Pasby's sealed probation file--were
annexed as exhibits,41
the magistrate to whom the case had been referred concluded that the
state habeas court accorded petitioner a full, fair, and adequate
hearing on his claim. Acting pursuant to section 2254(d), the
magistrate adopted the state court's finding that no promises had been
made to Pasby for his testimony. The magistrate accordingly
recommended in his report to the district court that it deny
petitioner's Brady/Giglio claim on the basis of the state court habeas
record, without an evidentiary hearing. Petitioner objected to the
magistrate's report and recommendation, attaching to his objection
what he represented to be a copy of Pasby's probation file. Petitioner
asked the district court to examine the file and to convene an
evidentiary hearing on his Brady/Giglio claim. The district court
denied petitioner's request for an evidentiary hearing and, without
alluding to petitioner's objection or to the attached probation file,
adopted the magistrate's report and denied relief.
Pasby's probation file, which for
purposes of this appeal we assume to be genuine,42
viewed against the background of petitioner's criminal prosecution,
suggests that when the State called Pasby to the witness stand at
petitioner's trial, the prosecutor was withholding from the defense
critical information concerning Pasby's criminal record. Such
information, if fully comprehended and exploited by defense counsel,
might have led the jury to conclude that Pasby testified against
petitioner because the State had given him immunity from all
prosecution or because he thought the State had given him such
immunity, and that his testimony implicating petitioner in the Allen
murder was thus not worthy of belief.
According to the documents contained
in the probation file, Pasby was arrested on November 1, 1976, for
committing the felony of theft by taking, see O.C.G.A. Sec. 16-8-2
(1982);43 he had
allegedly stolen some rings valued at $300. On November 10, 1976,
Pasby, using the name Thomas Moss, presumably his true surname,44
pled guilty to the charge in the Superior Court of Bleckley County and,
because it was his first felony offense, the court sentenced him under
the first offender act, O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-60 (1985).45
This act authorized the court, without adjudicating Pasby's guilt, to
"[d]efer further proceedings and place [Pasby] on probation ... or [to]
[s]entence [him] to a term of confinement as provided by law," i.e.,
for a prison term of up to ten years, the maximum penalty provided by
law for committing the offense of theft by taking. The court sentenced
Pasby, as Thomas Moss, to twelve months in prison, suspended the
execution of that sentence, and placed him on probation for a term of
one year, until November 10, 1977. The conditions of Pasby's probation
required, among other things, that he violate no penal laws, that he
avoid "persons ... of disreputable character," and that he maintain
"general good behavior."46
If Pasby failed to abide by any of the conditions of his probation,
the court could revoke it, adjudge him guilty of the theft offense to
which he had pled guilty, and "proceed as otherwise provided by law."
O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-60(b) (1985).47
In addition, if he committed a new crime, Pasby could lose the benefit
of his first offender status, and his unadjudicated guilty plea to
theft by taking would be considered a prior conviction for purposes of
the habitual offender act. See O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-10-7(a) (Supp.1985).48
On December 13, 1976, the day after
the Majik Market robbery and Ms. Allen's disappearance, the GBI's
Crime Information Center in Atlanta issued two reports "for official
use only": one on "Thomas Pasby Moss," "SID number GA00521109;" the
other on Thomas Pasby. The reports were based on information furnished
to the Center by "FBI and/or Georgia Fingerprint Contributors"49
and indicated respectively that Moss and Pasby had been placed on
probation for one year as the result of an arrest on November 1 and a
subsequent conviction for theft by taking. Pasby's probation file does
not reveal who requested these reports or when they were placed in the
file. Nor does the file indicate the existence of any relationship
between the reports and the Majik Market robbery and Ms. Allen's
disappearance, beyond the simple fact that the reports were issued one
day later.
On January 5, 1977, the day after
Pasby was arrested and confined in the Bleckley County jail for
stealing a 30.06 caliber hunting rifle, Pasby's probation officer,
Robert E. Baker, submitted a "delinquency report" to the sentencing
judge, requesting that he issue a warrant for Pasby's (i.e., Moss')
arrest for failing to comply with the conditions of his probation. The
warrant issued immediately, directing the Bleckley County sheriff to
take Thomas Moss into custody; the sheriff executed the warrant the
next day, January 6. At this time, Pasby was being held in the county
jail for two reasons: for allegedly stealing a rifle, a felony, and
for allegedly violating the conditions of his probation. His probation
file does not indicate how long Pasby was detained for either reason.
We do know, with respect to the probation revocation matter, that
Georgia law required the sheriff, on executing the arrest warrant
issued by Pasby's sentencing judge, to bring Pasby before the judge "forthwith,"
O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-38(a) (1985), and authorized the judge to "commit
him or release him with or without bail to await further hearing or [to]
dismiss the charge." O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-38(b) (1985).50
Pasby testified at trial that he was released from the Bleckley County
jail in late March, when the State decided not to prosecute him on the
stolen rifle charge, but he said nothing, and the record contains
nothing, about the sentencing judge's disposition of the probation
revocation proceeding which began with the issuance of the warrant for
his arrest on January 5. Nor does the probation file indicate what
happened to the stolen rifle charge that triggered the revocation
proceeding. Pasby's probation file does indicate, though, that he
satisfactorily terminated his probation on November 10, 1977, five
months after testifying at petitioner's trial.
Between Pasby's confinement in the
Bleckley County jail on January 4, 1977, and petitioner's indictment
forty-two days later, Baker paid several visits to Pasby and also
conferred with the Bleckley County sheriff. On occasion, Baker made
notes of these contacts and placed them in Pasby's probation file. For
example, the file reflects that on January 13, after Pasby had been in
custody for nine days, Baker spoke to an investigator in the Bleckley
County sheriff's office, who stated that they had a "good" case
against Pasby but added that Pasby had been "very cooperative ... in a
wide ranging investigation of stolen firearms, one of which may be [the]
murder weapon in the Theresa [sic] Allen case." Baker made a note on
February 8, apparently after discussing Pasby's situation with the
Bleckley County sheriff, that he had informed Pasby that the sheriff "said
he would put in a good word for him when his case comes up because of
his cooperation."
The information contained in Pasby's
probation file, considered in the light of what was known to defense
counsel when petitioner's trial began, raises several questions--none
of which petitioner's jury or attorney could have recognized--about
Pasby's status in Georgia's criminal justice system at the time he
testified. The most obvious question is whether Pasby was still
awaiting a probation revocation hearing. If he was, his testimony at
petitioner's trial provided ample evidence that he had violated two of
the conditions of his probation.
First, Pasby had engaged in conduct
proscribed by the criminal laws of Georgia. Pasby's probation could
have been revoked if the State had decided to prosecute him on the
stolen rifle charge and obtained a conviction.51
Even in the absence of a conviction, Pasby's sentencing judge could
have revoked his probation if satisfied that Pasby had, in fact,
stolen the rifle. Pasby's conduct on two other occasions may have
warranted revocation of his probation for violating the criminal law.
Pasby testified that he was with petitioner the night petitioner stole
the 30.06 caliber rifle that eventually became the murder weapon.
Arguably, Pasby aided and abetted the theft. At the very least, he was
an accessory after the fact. Pasby also admitted that for several days
following his arrest on January 4, 1977, he refused to tell the police
what he knew about the Allen murder. The police considered Pasby's
recalcitrance potentially criminal and so advised him.52
Second, Pasby had associated with "persons
... of disreputable character." Pasby provided evidence of his failure
to comply with this condition of probation when he admitted that he
had associated with petitioner, an ex-convict, and Roosevelt Green, an
escaped convict, both before and after the Allen murder.
Another question the
record does not answer is the total prison sentence Pasby faced if he
refused to testify for the prosecution at petitioner's trial.
Petitioner's attorney knew that Pasby could receive a ten-year
sentence if convicted of the stolen rifle charge, see O.C.G.A. Sec.
16-8-12(a)(1) (1982);53
counsel did not pursue this point in cross-examining Pasby, however,
because he had been told that the State could not prove Pasby's guilt.
What petitioner's attorney did not know was that Pasby was on
probation at the time he was testifying, that probation revocation
proceedings had been instituted against him, and that he faced a
possible ten-year prison sentence if his probation was revoked.54
Finally, the question still remains
whether Pasby testified under a formal or informal grant of immunity
and, if so, the extent of that immunity, or whether, absent such a
grant, Pasby thought he had immunity. Pasby freely admitted engaging
in conduct which, at the very least, warranted the revocation of his
probation; yet, the conduct went unpunished. Petitioner is entitled to
inquire whether the State promised Pasby that it would go unpunished.
He is also entitled to pursue the answers to the other questions the
record poses.
In sum, our review of Pasby's
probation file, in the context of the entire record, convinces us that
it contained information highly relevant to petitioner's Brady/Giglio
claim. The state habeas court, in denying petitioner's counsel access
to that information, denied petitioner the opportunity to prove his
claim. It follows that the state habeas hearing was not full, fair,
and adequate; therefore, the findings produced by that hearing
regarding the Brady/Giglio claim are not entitled to deference under
28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254(d) (1982). The district court erred in adopting
them and in denying petitioner an evidentiary hearing. This case must
be remanded for that purpose.
IV.
Petitioner contends that the court's
instructions to the jury at the sentencing phase of his trial did not
clearly and explicitly inform it of its option to impose a life
sentence even if it found the existence of a statutory aggravating
circumstance. Under Georgia's death sentencing scheme, the jury must
first decide whether a statutory aggravating circumstance is present.
If such a circumstance exists, the jury may impose a sentence of death.
The presence of a statutory aggravating circumstance thus defines the
class of persons eligible for the death penalty in Georgia. See
generally Zant v. Stephens, 462 U.S. 862, 870-80, 103 S.Ct. 2733,
2739-44, 77 L.Ed.2d 235 (1983) (referring to Supreme Court of
Georgia's answer to certified question).
Once a statutory aggravating
circumstance is found, the jury has the absolute discretion to impose
a sentence of life imprisonment or one of death. Id. In exercising
this discretion, the jury must consider all evidence in mitigation,
extenuation, and aggravation. The jury is not required to "give any
special weight to any aggravating circumstance, to consider multiple
aggravating circumstances any more significant than a single such
circumstance, or to balance aggravating against mitigating
circumstances pursuant to any special standard." Id. at 873-74, 103
S.Ct. at 2741. In sum, the finding of any statutory aggravating
circumstance makes the defendant eligible for a sentence of death, and
the jury must, considering all the evidence, determine whether to
impose such a sentence or to impose a life sentence instead.55
Given Georgia's sentencing scheme,
this circuit's case law has established that the eighth and fourteenth
amendments require that the trial judge "clearly and explicitly
instruct the jury about mitigating circumstances and the option to
recommend against death." Spivey v. Zant, 661 F.2d 464, 471 (5th Cir.
Unit B 1981), cert. denied, 458 U.S. 1111, 102 S.Ct. 3495, 73 L.Ed.2d
1374 (1982);56 see
Goodwin v. Balkcom, 684 F.2d 794, 801-02 (11th Cir.1982), cert. denied,
460 U.S. 1098, 103 S.Ct. 1798, 76 L.Ed.2d 364 (1983); see also Peek v.
Kemp, 784 F.2d 1479 (11th Cir.1986) (en banc) (instruction upheld
where no reasonable juror could have misunderstood his option to
impose a sentence of life imprisonment). Similarly, Georgia case law
mandates that a death sentence cannot be imposed unless the trial
court makes it "clear to the jury that they could recommend a life
sentence even if they found the existence of a statutory aggravating
circumstance." Fleming v. State, 240 Ga. 142, 146, 240 S.E.2d 37, 40
(1977); see Stynchcombe v. Floyd, 252 Ga. 113, 114, 311 S.E.2d 828,
830 (1984).
Petitioner initially raised the
claim that the jury had not been adequately instructed on its option
to recommend a life sentence in his first petition for habeas relief
filed in state court. The state court denied the petition, holding
that the charge to the jury, viewed as a whole, would have informed
the jury of its ability to recommend a life sentence even if
aggravating circumstances were present. The court focused on language
in the instruction telling the jury that, if it found a statutory
aggravating circumstance, it would be "authorized to consider" whether
to impose a death penalty. The court reasoned that the "authorization"
to consider a death sentence implied the ability not to impose the
death penalty. The Supreme Court of Georgia denied a certificate of
probable cause to appeal.
Petitioner next raised his jury
instruction claim in the instant petition for habeas relief filed in
the district court. The district court concluded that the jury
instruction met the requirements enunciated in Spivey and Goodwin and
denied the petition. As we have indicated in Part I.B., supra, the
panel affirmed the district court on this issue. Following the panel's
decision and before the initial argument to the en banc court, the
Supreme Court of Georgia decided Stynchcombe v. Floyd, 252 Ga. 113,
114, 311 S.E.2d 828, 830 (1984), which held that a jury instruction
very similar to the one in this case did not "include language
explaining to the jury that they could recommend a life sentence even
if they found the existence of a statutory aggravating circumstance."
The jury in Floyd, like the jury at petitioner's trial, had been
instructed that upon finding an aggravating circumstance it was "authorized
to consider" imposing a sentence of death. The Supreme Court of
Georgia's decision in Floyd therefore made it appear that petitioner's
jury instruction claim had been erroneously decided in his initial
state habeas proceeding. We held this case in abeyance so that
petitioner could present to the Georgia courts any claims he might
have arising out of Stynchcombe v. Floyd.
Petitioner then filed a new petition
in state court seeking habeas relief. The state habeas court refused
to reconsider the merits of petitioner's jury instruction claim
because the identical issue had been raised in a previous petition.
The court held that Floyd did not represent a change in the law that
would warrant the consideration of a subsequent petition but was
merely an application of the same law under which petitioner's claim
was adjudicated in his first state habeas petition. The petition was
therefore dismissed as successive despite the fact that the state
trial court had, in the first habeas proceeding, applied the law in a
manner inconsistent with the Supreme Court of Georgia's holding in
Floyd.
The Supreme Court of Georgia granted
a certificate of probable cause to appeal. The court, agreeing with
the trial court's analysis, held that Floyd did not represent new law
and that petitioner had not presented grounds sufficient to mandate
reconsideration of a claim that had been raised in a previous petition.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court of Georgia dismissed the petition as
successive. We then received supplemental briefing and heard
additional argument from counsel.
We must determine whether the trial
judge's charge, taken as a whole, see Cupp v. Naughten, 414 U.S. 141,
146-47, 94 S.Ct. 396, 400, 38 L.Ed.2d 368 (1973), adequately informed
the jury that it had the option to recommend against death,
notwithstanding the presence of a statutory aggravating circumstance.
See Goodwin, 684 F.2d at 801-02; Spivey, 661 F.2d at 471. We conclude
that it did not.
The court instructed the jury on
certain statutory aggravating circumstances posited by the State. The
court then instructed the jury as follows:
If you find that such statutory
aggravating circumstances existed beyond a reasonable doubt ... then,
in that event, you would be authorized to consider imposing a sentence
of death.
If you do not find that such
statutory aggravating circumstances existed beyond a reasonable doubt,
then you would not be authorized to consider the penalty of death. In
that event, the sentence would be imprisonment for life.
....
In arriving at your determination as
to what sentence is appropriate in each count, you are authorized to
consider all of the evidence received here in Court presented by the
State and by the defendant throughout the trial before you and the
statements made and evidence offered in the pre-sentence hearing that
has just been completed in your presence. You are authorized to
consider any previous history of criminal activity, if any; you are
authorized to include in your consideration, the facts and
circumstances, if any, in mitigation and aggravation. Mitigating
circumstances are those which do not constitute a justification or
excuse for the offenses in question but which in fairness and mercy
may be considered as extenuating or reducing the degree of moral
culpability or blame.
In considering mitigating
circumstances, you would consider the age of the defendant at the time
of the offense, if that has been shown to you, and if it has not, you
can form your own opinion as to his age from your observation.
Aggravating circumstances are those
which increase the guilt or the enormity of the offense and add to
those injurious consequences.
....
If you find the statutory
aggravating circumstances which the Court has enumerated to you which
the State contends exist, which the defendant denies, the form of your
verdict would be, "We, the Jury, fix punishment of the defendant,
Carzell Moore, on Count I at death and we find the following statutory
aggravating circumstances:
....
If, on the other hand, upon
considering this case and all of the facts and circumstances, you
impose a life sentence, the form of your verdict would be, on Count I,
"We, the Jury, fix punishment of the defendant, Carzell Moore, on
Count I, at life imprisonment."
....
As to Count II, if you find one or
more of the statutory aggravating circumstances which the State
contends to exist, existed in this case, and if you have occasion to
consider the death penalty, the form of your verdict as to Count II
would read: "We, the Jury, fix punishment of the defendant, Carzell
Moore, on Count II at death and we find the following statutory
aggravating circumstances:"
The instruction told the jury that
upon finding an aggravating circumstance it was "authorized" to impose
a death sentence and that, absent an aggravating circumstance, it was
not authorized to consider the penalty of death. The jury was then
instructed that if an aggravating circumstance was found "the form of
your verdict would be ... death." This instruction, in mandatory
language, informed the jury that it was required to return a sentence
of death if it found an aggravating circumstance.57
It is true that the instruction
elsewhere described mitigating circumstances and allowed the jury to
consider all of the evidence presented. The fact that the instruction
made reference to mitigating circumstances distinguishes it from the
instructions employed in Spivey and Goodwin, which omitted any
reference to mitigating circumstances. We also agree that the "authorization
to consider" imposing a sentence of death if the jury found an
aggravating circumstance could imply the ability not to impose such a
sentence. It is not the same, however, as explaining to the jurors
that even upon finding an aggravating circumstance they had the option
to recommend a life sentence.58
The instruction, taken as a whole,
at best was contradictory and confusing as to the jury's function if
it determined that an aggravating circumstance was present. The jury
was told that upon finding an aggravating circumstance its verdict
would be death. That portion of the instruction was plainly erroneous
and directly contradicted any option to consider a life sentence. It
is possible, of course, to lift isolated phrases from the jury
instruction and find in those phrases an indication that a death
sentence need not have inexorably flowed from a finding of an
aggravated circumstance. On the whole, however, the instruction falls
far short of providing clear and explicit information to the jury that
it had the option not to recommend a sentence of death. An average
juror could easily have gotten the impression that the existence of an
aggravating circumstance necessitated a death sentence. The court
instructed the jury to that effect. The instruction failed to provide
clearly and explicitly the constitutionally required guidance.
Petitioner's death sentences must therefore be set aside.
V.
Petitioner has also contended that
the admission of the testimony of Ms. Allen's father in rebuttal
during the sentencing phase of petitioner's trial encouraged the jury
to base its decision on a comparison of the characters of Ms. Allen
and petitioner, thereby rendering his death sentence unconstitutional
because it was based on arbitrary factors. Because we hold, in Part IV,
supra, that the trial court's instruction to the jury at the
sentencing hearing was constitutionally defective and that
petitioner's death sentence must be set aside, we need not address the
merits of petitioner's alternate argument. The State may wish to
pursue the death penalty, however, thus requiring a new sentencing
hearing before a jury, and we therefore feel obligated to comment
briefly on one aspect of Mr. Allen's testimony. The State called Mr.
Allen in rebuttal as a "witness to show aggravating circumstances"; he
was the last witness to testify at the sentencing hearing. Mr. Allen
testified, over the defense's objection, that at the time of her death,
Ms. Allen was almost nineteen years old, had been an honor student in
high school, was attending Middle Georgia College on a partial
scholarship, had been working part time at the Majik Market to help
pay for her education, and desired to become a nurse.
On direct appeal, petitioner
challenged the admissibility of Mr. Allen's testimony. The Supreme
Court of Georgia found that his testimony was admissible to rebut an
inference that could have been drawn from evidence presented during
the guilt phase of the trial that Ms. Allen had participated in the
robbery; during the guilt phase of the trial, the defense elicited
testimony from Joyce Brown, the assistant manager of the Majik Market,
who said that when she arrived at the Majik Market shortly after Ms.
Allen was abducted, she discovered the safe unlocked and undamaged.
According to the Supreme Court of Georgia, Ms. Allen's participation
in the robbery would have constituted a mitigating factor that the
State was entitled to rebut.
In this appeal, the State has also
raised an alternative justification, not considered by the Supreme
Court of Georgia, for the admissibility of Mr. Allen's testimony. The
State now argues that it was seeking to prove the statutory
aggravating circumstance that the crimes charged (rape and murder)
were committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of an
additional capital felony or aggravated battery (armed robbery or
kidnapping as well as rape or murder). See O.C.G.A. Sec.
17-10-30(b)(2) (1982). The State contends that the defense could have
argued that Ms. Allen participated in the robbery and willingly
departed with those who committed it, thus diminishing the State's
showing as to this aggravating factor. Thus, the State urges that it
permissibly introduced Mr. Allen's testimony to rebut any inference
that his daughter was involved in the robbery or willingly accompanied
the perpetrators.
After reviewing the entire record,
we find these arguments unconvincing. In the first instance, under
either the rationale advanced by the Supreme Court of Georgia or the
alternative justification now advanced by the State, there was no
reason to introduce the testimony of Mr. Allen in rebuttal after the
defendant had put on his evidence at the sentencing hearing. The
defense's case at sentencing consisted of petitioner's reiteration of
his innocence, his plea for mercy, and his mother's plea for mercy. Mr.
Allen's testimony, purportedly aimed at demonstrating his daughter's
lack of involvement in the crime, did not "rebut" any evidence the
defense adduced at sentencing on that point. Furthermore, the entire
thrust of petitioner's defense was his contention that he was not
present when the crimes took place. He testified that on the afternoon
in question, after drinking a large amount of alcohol, he passed out
at his home and was therefore asleep at the time the crimes occurred.
At the sentencing hearing, petitioner reasserted his innocence and
denied any involvement in the crimes. Given this testimony, it would
have been impossible for him to contend that, although he was present
at the Majik Market, no armed robbery or kidnapping occurred because
Ms. Allen willingly opened the safe and left with him. Such an
argument would have been totally inconsistent with petitioner's
testimony at trial and at sentencing and was never advanced by the
defense. Because it was clear that this argument could not have been
made to the jury, Mr. Allen's testimony was not necessary to rebut it,
and his testimony could not have been admitted for that purpose.
Whether the substance of Mr. Allen's testimony would have been
admissible for any other sentencing purpose is an issue that we leave
for another day.
VI.
In conclusion, we affirm the
district court's disposition of petitioner's Ake claim for the reasons
set forth in Part II and reinstate the panel's disposition of the
claims not discussed in this opinion. For the reasons stated in Part
III, we remand the case to the district court for an evidentiary
hearing on petitioner's Brady/Giglio claim. After disposing of that
claim, and depending on its ruling thereon, the district court shall
issue a writ of habeas corpus directing the State either to grant
petitioner a new trial or to grant him a new sentencing proceeding.
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part;
and REMANDED, with instructions.
*****
RONEY, Chief Judge, concurring in
part, specially concurring in part, and dissenting in part, in which
FAY, Circuit Judge, joins:
I concur in the judgment which
reverses the denial of habeas corpus relief on the instruction issue,
for the reasons set forth in Judge Tjoflat's opinion.
I concur in reinstating the panel
opinion on all other claims not discussed in Judge Tjoflat's opinion.
I specially concur in the denial of
relief on the Ake ground for the reasons set forth in both Judge
Tjoflat's opinion and Judge Hill's opinion.
I dissent from the grant of relief
on the Brady/Giglio issue for the reasons set forth in Judge Hill's
dissent.
I would not grant relief on the
issue concerning the father's testimony for the reasons set forth in
Judge Hill's opinion for the panel, in which the discussion was
concluded with:
Thus, it appears that the prosecution properly
presented evidence of characteristics of the victim to the jury. In
the brief evidence taken, the prosecution did not undertake to
demonstrate the racial, ethnic, or other forbidden characteristic of
any party. We cannot say that the trial judge's balancing of the
relevancy of Mr. Allen's testimony against its prejudice was
constitutionally faulty. We are not prepared to hold that it violates
the constitution for the jury to know who it was that was the victim
of murder.
Moore v. Zant, 722 F.2d 640, 646
(11th Cir.1983). To the extent the judgment of the Court denies relief
on this issue, I concur; to the extent it grants relief, I dissent.
In sum, I would reverse the district
court's judgment and remand with instructions to grant relief on the
instruction issue, but deny relief on all other claims.
*****
GODBOLD, Circuit Judge, dissenting
in part and concurring in part:
On the Ake issue, I respectfully
dissent from the opinion and holding of the court (Part II of the
opinion by Judge Tjoflat) and I join in Part I of the dissenting
opinion by Judge Johnson.
On the Giglio issue, I concur in the
opinion and holding of the court (Part III of the opinion by Judge
Tjoflat).
On the jury instruction issue, I
concur in the opinion and holding of the court (Part IV of the opinion
by Judge Tjoflat).
On the comparable worth issue, I
concur in Part II of the dissenting opinion by Judge Johnson except
the part thereof regarding the jury argument concerning deterrence.
*****
HILL, Circuit Judge, concurring in
part and dissenting in part, in which RONEY, Chief Judge, FAY and
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge, joins:
I concur in the judgment of the
court, insofar as the sentence of death is concerned. Without reaching
the constitutionality of the instructions given in this case had the
judge not misspoke and instructed the jury that if they found an
aggravating circumstance their verdict "would be" death, I agree that
the instructions that were given do not pass constitutional muster. I
also agree that petitioner has not shown that, under the Supreme
Court's recent decision in Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 105 S.Ct.
1087, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985), he was constitutionally entitled to the
assistance of non-psychiatric experts to aid him in his defense. I
write separately on that issue because my analysis of that question
differs somewhat from that of the majority opinion. I must
respectfully dissent, however, from the majority's holding that
petitioner is entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the Brady/Giglio
claim he presents. I address petitioner's Ake claim in Part I and the
Brady/Giglio claim in Part II.
I. NON-PSYCHIATRIC EXPERT ASSISTANCE UNDER AKE
v. OKLAHOMA
The majority opinion concludes that
petitioner's due process rights were not violated by the trial court's
refusal to appoint experts to assist him in the presentation of his
defense because he failed to make the requisite showing that an expert
would aid the defense or that the denial of such assistance would
result in a fundamentally unfair trial. See Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S.
68, 82-83, 105 S.Ct. 1087, 1096-97, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985); see also
Caldwell v. Mississippi, 472 U.S. 320, 323 n. 1, 105 S.Ct. 2633, 2637
n. 1, 86 L.Ed.2d 321 (1985). I would not turn the analysis of this
issue on that conclusion. Petitioner has probably shown that expert
assistance would have aided his defense. I would thus proceed to an
analysis of whether, under Ake, petitioner was constitutionally
entitled to the expert assistance he sought.
At the outset I observe that the
holding in Ake is simply that where the defendant makes a pre-trial
showing that his sanity is likely to be a significant issue in the
case he is entitled to the assistance of an independent psychiatrist
at state expense if he cannot afford one. The issue of sanity vel non
is a peculiar issue in criminal law, and the holding in Ake was
principally motivated by the Court's recognition that to prove a valid
insanity defense one must necessarily present the testimony of
psychiatrists. Analyzing the probable value of the psychiatric
assistance sought in Ake and the risk of error in the proceeding if
the assistance were not offered, the Supreme Court obviously
considered essential to its decision the "reality that we recognize
today, namely, that when the State has made the defendant's mental
condition relevant to his criminal culpability and to the punishment
he might suffer, the assistance of a psychiatrist may well be crucial
to the defendant's ability to marshal his defense." Ake, 470 U.S. at
80, 105 S.Ct. at 1095. The court commented at length upon the arcane
nature of the inquiry into whether one is legally insane, noting in
particular the indispensable nature of psychiatric testimony in
presenting an insanity defense. The issues involved "inevitably are
complex and foreign" to the common knowledge of jurors, so that "the
testimony of psychiatrists can be crucial and 'a virtual necessity if
the insanity plea is to have any chance of success.' " Id. at 81, 105
S.Ct. at 1096. The Court therefore held that the state's financial
interests must, as a matter of constitutional law, yield to the
interests of the state and the defendant in the accuracy of the
criminal proceedings in those cases in which the defendant can
demonstrate to the trial court before trial that his sanity is likely
to be a significant factor in his defense. Id. at 83-84, 105 S.Ct. at
1097.1
This, of course, is not a case
involving the issue of sanity vel non. The defendant interposed a plea
of not guilty based on the facts of the offense, not on the condition
of his mind. In Ake, the denial of the indigent defendant's request
for psychiatric assistance had the necessary effect of almost
completely precluding him from presenting any claim of insanity to the
jury, regardless of the validity of the defense. In this case,
although it appears that appellant might have been aided at trial by
the assistance of experts of his own, his inability to obtain their
services did not have the necessary effect of preventing him from
asserting and supporting his defense.2
A valid claim by the defendant that he was not at the scene of the
crime ordinarily may be supported effectively at trial in a wide
variety of ways. Regardless of the nature of the prosecution's proof
on such an issue, expert testimony constituted but one of the many
effective means by which such a claim might be substantiated. In this
case, appellant offered little but his own testimony to rebut the
evidence presented by the prosecution to show that he was at the scene
of the crime when it occurred and had committed it. I certainly would
not hold, however, that simply because appellant's defense was weak on
the facts and methods of proof otherwise available to him, he was
constitutionally entitled to the assistance of experts to help him
develop and support his theory of the case before the jury. Further,
appellant was not entitled to the assistance of his own experts simply
because the state relied in part upon expert testimony to prove its
case. The purpose of providing expert assistance to the defendant is
not to even the score. The accuracy-enhancing value of affording
expert assistance to the defendant and the risk of an erroneous
determination of guilt if such assistance is not provided are not
increased significantly in a case like appellant's by the extensive
use of experts by the state or by the defendant's inability to present
any other evidence in support of the defense he chooses to assert.
Those circumstances might render expert assistance to such a defense
helpful, but they do not render such assistance significantly more
essential to the accurate determination of whether the defendant
committed the crimes with which he was charged.
To extend Ake as appellant suggests
would impose an extraordinarily far-reaching and costly burden on the
states and their taxpayers. There are obviously many important issues
in criminal trials whose presentations could conceivably be enhanced
by expert testimony. Ake however, is a narrow holding premised upon
the peculiar role psychiatric testimony necessarily plays in the
assertion of an insanity defense or, in a capital sentencing
proceeding, evaluating mental condition as an aggravating or
mitigating circumstance. Absent further direction from the Supreme
Court, I am convinced that unless non-psychiatric expert assistance is,
because of the nature of the issue on which it is sought, as vital to
resolution of the issue as psychiatric assistance was in Ake, the
Constitution does not require that it be provided in a criminal trial.
I therefore agree with the majority that petitioner is not entitled to
an evidentiary hearing in the district court on his claim that his
constitutional rights were violated when he was tried following the
trial court's refusal to provide him with funds to hire experts to aid
him in the formulation and presentation of his defense.
II. THE BRADY/GIGLIO CLAIM
Moore claims that his rights under
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963),
and Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150, 92 S.Ct. 763, 31 L.Ed.2d
104 (1972), were violated when the prosecutor failed to reveal certain
information that would have aided the defense in its attempts to
undermine the credibility of Thomas Pasby. This claim was litigated in
the state courts, but in those proceedings Pasby's probation file was
not made available to petitioner or his counsel. For that reason, the
majority finds that Moore's claim was not fully and fairly litigated
in the state proceedings and that the state court's findings are
therefore not entitled to the statutory presumption of correctness.
The court further holds that an evidentiary hearing is warranted on
the claim and remands the case to the district court for that purpose.
The probation file would have
revealed the following facts that the prosecution, according to
petitioner, should have disclosed to the defense in a timely manner:
(1) that Pasby had been sentenced on November 10, 1976 to serve 12
months in custody and placed on probation, with a condition of
probation being that, if he violated the terms thereof, he could be
required to serve the balance of the 12 months; (2) that on January 6,
1977 Pasby was arrested for violating the terms of his probation; and
(3) that his probation officer had told him that the sheriff of
Bleckley County would "put in a good word for him when his case comes
up because of his cooperation" in some unspecified matter, presumably
a "wide ranging investigation of other stolen firearms, one of which
may be [the] murder weapon in the Theresa [sic] Allen case" mentioned
in a previous entry in the report. This information could have been
useful to the defense in two respects: (1) It arguably suggests that
Pasby may have been led to believe that he would receive special
consideration in the probation revocation proceedings in exchange for
his cooperation in the Moore case. (2) It could have been used to
undermine his credibility by suggesting that perhaps he reasonably
believed such consideration might be forthcoming, even if no
assurances had been made.
I agree with the majority's
conclusion that petitioner has not received a full and fair hearing in
the Georgia courts on the Brady/Giglio claim he seeks to raise in this
court now.3 The
question before this court then becomes whether the allegations of
Moore's complaint, supported as they are by the probation file,
warrant an evidentiary hearing in the district court. The majority
opinion holds that they do, relying heavily on inferences that might
be drawn from the information contained in the probation report. In my
view, the bare allegations of petitioner's complaint, supported by the
copy of the probation file that we have been able to examine, are
clearly insufficient to warrant an evidentiary hearing. I reach this
conclusion not because I believe the prosecutor acted correctly in
failing to discover and turn over the file, but because I find it
clear beyond question that there is no "reasonable probability that,
had the evidence [petitioner claims was improperly withheld] been
disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been
different." United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 105 S.Ct. 3375,
3384, 87 L.Ed.2d 481 (1985) (Blackmun, J., joined by O'Connor, J.); id.,
105 S.Ct. at 3385 (White, J., joined by Burger, C.J., and Rehnquist,
J.).
Taking the probation file to
establish all that it suggests, the only arguably material facts
bearing on Pasby's credibility that were not revealed in a manner that
would have permitted their effective use at trial are (1) the fact
that Pasby was on probation when he testified and (2) the fact that he
had been told by his probation officer that because of his cooperation
in the Teresa Allen murder investigation, the sheriff of Bleckley
County would "put in a good word for him when his case [came] up."
This could have been exploited by defense counsel at trial to suggest
at most that Pasby's testimony was motivated in part by a desire to
avoid serving the remainder of the one year sentence of imprisonment
that had been suspended when he was placed on probation.4
The possible effect
of this sort of impeachment on the jury's assessment of Pasby's
credibility may only be evaluated in the context of the impeachment of
Pasby with material turned over to the defense by the state that the
jury found unconvincing. On cross-examination, defense counsel brought
out the fact that Pasby had made several statements to investigating
officers soon after he was arrested to the effect that he knew nothing
about the crime. His story changed, however, when he found himself
threatened with prosecution for the murder that was under
investigation. Defense counsel completed his cross-examination of
Pasby as follows:
Q. Do you remember being interviewed
by GBI Agent Roy Olinger?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Had you told it like it was
before you talked to Officer Olinger?
A. No, sir.
Q. You hadn't told it like it was
then?
A. No, sir.
Q. Do you remember Officer Olinger
asking you this question: "This is what we want. I realize it may
incriminate you in some way. I'm not out after you for the rifle. I'm
not trying to hang you in any way, shape or form. I'm wanting to know
about that rifle. I'm wanting to know if you had any knowledge with
reference to where it was stolen. I know you know about the rifle but
I'd like to know if you knew where it was stolen. I'd also like to
know anything else you have in reference to this. That's all I'm
asking of you. I'm not going to--to try to put pressure on you. I'm
not wanting to sit here trying to bullshit you, I'm wanting nothing
but the truth. I can get hardnosed. You know what an accessory is?
That is aiding and abetting. That is, according to Georgia law, is
called aiding and abetting. You have an accessory before the fact, you
have an accessory during, and you have an accessory after. You could
fall into one of these categories. Refusing to give information that
we can prove that you had prior to this questioning makes you an
accessory. If you want to go that route, that's called aiding and
abetting. That makes you liable to receive the same punishment as the
person who actually pulls the trigger or who actually raped the girl
or who kidnapped the girl. Now, that's strictly up to you. I'm not
wanting to be hardnosed that way. All I'm doing is trying to sit down
with you, Thomas, and ask you to tell me the truth and give me the
information, that's all, maybe clean the rest of it right here." Do
you remember him telling you that?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And then you got it down right
then after that?
A. Yes, sir.
BY MR. FREEMAN: That's all.
Defense counsel then made reference
to this cross-examination of Pasby in his closing argument:Pasby says
that he didn't talk about this case until after he'd been in jail
several weeks or several days, some period of time, and in any case,
he was a suspect while he was in jail, and that when he talked about
it, he talked about it after Roy Olinger--you remember when I read
that statement from Olinger, what he told Pasby, that unless he told
what they wanted him to tell, told the truth, told something, that he
was going to get the same punishment as everybody else did. He didn't
change his story; up until that point, he had told them he didn't know
anything about it. He didn't say he knew anything about it until after
they told him they were going to put pressure on him. Roy Olinger was
on the witness stand yesterday, I called him for direct examination.
There was not a single question asked him by the State to show--there
was no effort made to deny that he actually told Pasby that. If he
didn't tell him that, the State could--he could have told them. I
think the only conclusion is that he actually did tell Pasby,
threatened him that he was going to be punished for it himself unless
he told about it.
Thus Pasby was heavily impeached
with the fact that he was a suspect in this very murder and had failed
to implicate petitioner until he was threatened with prosecution
himself. The prosecutor did not address directly the challenge posed
by defense counsel's impeachment of Pasby in that manner, focussing
instead on the physical and testimonial evidence tending to
corroborate Pasby's testimony. Yet the jury obviously believed Pasby.
Thus defense counsel was unable to influence the jury's assessment of
Pasby's credibility with the unchallenged assertion that Pasby's
testimony was motivated at least in part by the fear that he, himself,
might be prosecuted for the Allen murder. In light of that fact, I
cannot believe that the jury might have been moved by the argument
that Pasby's testimony was somehow influenced by his probationary
status at the time he testified or by any expectation of favorable
treatment on any other charge. In short, if the jury did not believe
Pasby was lying to avoid a murder prosecution, they surely would not
have believed he was lying for any of the reasons petitioner suggests.
It is important to me that
prosecutors respect their obligations under Brady and Giglio, and I am
willing to assume with the majority that the prosecutor in this case
was under an obligation to turn over to the defense any information
found in Pasby's probation file that might have been useful to the
defense in impeaching the witness at trial. I am deeply disturbed,
however, by the prospect of a federal district court ordering the
release of a convicted murderer subject to retrial at this late date
on the basis of circumstances as unlikely to have had anything to do
with his confinement as those that have been alleged in this case.
Because I cannot find there to exist a reasonable probability that the
outcome of petitioner's trial would have been affected by any of the
information petitioner alleged was wrongfully withheld, I cannot agree
with the majority that an evidentiary hearing is warranted on
petitioner's Brady/Giglio claim. From this portion of the majority's
holding I therefore respectfully dissent.
*****
JOHNSON, Circuit Judge, concurring
in part and dissenting in part, in which KRAVITCH and HATCHETT,
Circuit Judges, join, and in which GODBOLD, Circuit Judge, joins Part
I and Part II in part, and in which ANDERSON and CLARK, Circuit Judges,
join Part I:
I join the majority's opinion as to
Sections I, III, and IV. With deference, I disagree with its
disposition of the Ake issue in Section II, and I would more squarely
address the problems raised by certain testimony and by the
prosecutor's comments that the majority discusses in its Section V.
I. The Ake Issue:
In Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 105
S.Ct. 1087, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985), the Supreme Court considered whether
the state in a capital case is required, by the constitutional
guarantee of due process of law, to provide an indigent defendant with
a psychological expert when insanity is offered as a defense. Eight of
the Justices so held. They gave express recognition to the tremendous
effect that uncontested expert testimony generally has upon the fact
finder,id. at 81, n. 7, 105 S.Ct. at 1096, n. 7, and then held that "[w]hen
the defendant is able to make an ex parte threshold showing to the
trial court that his sanity is likely to be a significant factor in
his defense, the need for the assistance of a psychiatrist is readily
apparent. It is in such cases that a defense may be devastated by the
absence of a psychiatric examination and testimony...." Id. at 82-83,
105 S.Ct. at 1097.
In identifying this constitutionally
protected right, the Court set forth a three-pronged test to be
considered in determining if an indigent capital defendant is entitled
to state-paid expert assistance: 1) "the private interest that will be
affected by the action of the State"; 2) "the governmental interest
that will be affected if the safeguard is to be provided"; and 3) "the
probable value of the additional or substitute procedural safeguards
that are sought, and the risk of an erroneous deprivation of the
affected interest if those safeguards are not provided." 470 U.S. at
77, 105 S.Ct. at 1094. It is clear from the Court's analysis, however,
that in capital cases prongs one and two will always yield identic
results: the private interest "is almost uniquely compelling," "obvious
and weighs heavily in our analysis;" the state's interest is
coincident with that of the individual--in an accurate and fair
verdict. Id. at 77-80, 105 S.Ct. at 1094-95.
Thus it is solely upon the third
factor, the probable value of the expert assistance and the risk of
error attendant upon its denial, that courts will focus in deciding
these questions. In Ake the Supreme Court noted six factual criteria
that dictated the need for state appointed assistance in Ake's case.
Id. at 84-88, 105 S.Ct. at 1098-99. But the Court was careful to note,
in identifying these factors, that it was setting forth neither a
touchstone nor a catechism. Id. at 86, n. 12, 105 S.Ct. at 1099, n.
12. The Court reaffirmed its unwillingness to state a precise test in
that same term in Caldwell v. Mississippi, 472 U.S. 320, 323-324, n.
1, 105 S.Ct. 2633, 2637, n. 1, 86 L.Ed.2d 231 (1985) (rejecting
request for criminal investigator, fingerprint expert and ballistics
expert because petitioner "offered little more than undeveloped
assertions that the requested assistance would be beneficial....").
Caldwell, read in conjunction with
Ake, teaches us several things. First, it reaffirms that the obvious
object of the Court's reticence in Ake was the need for flexible
decisionmaking tailored to the facts of a given case. Capital cases do
not lend themselves to rigid, ritualistic formulae. Second, it belies
the state's suggestion that Ake must be read narrowly and confined to
its facts. Caldwell's footnote 1 suggests that the Court was willing
to entertain extending Ake in the fashion Moore requests today. Rather
than rejecting the claim out of hand as inappropriately stretching Ake
to a different question, the Court refused to grant relief only
because Caldwell failed to make a showing of sufficient need under Ake
's flexible standard.1
The majority opinion today accepts,
for the sake of argument, the proposition of extending Ake to non-psychiatric
experts. Thus I believe that our query today is not whether Ake may be
logically and appropriately extended to such experts. Rather we must
decide two questions: A) how should courts decide whether a defendant
is entitled to such assistance given the elastic rule that Ake molded;
and B) whether Moore made a showing before the trial court of his need
for such assistance sufficient to meet the measure of this test. The
majority crafts such a test in its Section II, and then answers the
second question in the negative. Because I believe that the majority's
reading of Ake creates a proverbial "Catch-22," making it impossible
for all but the most nimble (and prescient) defendant to obtain expert
assistance under Ake, I would restructure the majority's test and then
answer the second question affirmatively, based upon the record before
us.
A.
The majority today attempts to bring
this case under the aegis of Caldwell, arguing that Moore failed to
make a showing of need for an expert that went beyond mere ipse dixit.
The majority correctly views Ake and Caldwell as requiring a defendant
seeking the assistance of an appointed expert to show that a
reasonable probability exists both that such an expert would be of
assistance to his defense and that denial of expert assistance would
result in a fundamentally unfair trial. However, the majority engrafts
upon that standard strict requirements that make relief unobtainable.
The majority demands, as the price for a favorable ruling upon a
request for assistance, that the defendant provide a specific
description of the expert desired and why the assistance of that
expert is necessary. If assistance is needed to confront the
prosecution's case, the majority requires the defendant to detail both
the nature of the prosecution's case and how the requested expert
would be useful in challenging that case.
I cannot agree with this approach
for two reasons.2
First, the standards the majority creates actually contravene the
flexible approach announced in Ake and Caldwell. By mandating
essential elements in applying Ake 's third prong, the majority does
precisely what the Supreme Court declined to do: it determines which "of
these factors, alone or in combination, is necessary to make [a]
finding [that a defendant is entitled to state-provided expert
assistance]." 470 U.S. 86, n. 12, 105 S.Ct. at 1099, n. 12. The
majority thus impermissibly limits the interplay of factual
considerations, unique to each case, that the Supreme Court sought to
preserve in deciding this question.
Second, even accepting the
legitimacy of any formal set of points for decision, the majority's
standards are too exacting because they require the defendant to
possess already the knowledge of the expert he seeks. The Court in
Caldwell required no more than that the defendant make a threshold
showing of reasonableness. That standard requires only that the
defendant make something more than "undeveloped assertions that the
requested assistance would be beneficial...." 472 U.S. at 324, n. 1,
105 S.Ct. at 2637, n. 1. But the majority goes beyond this and
requires a defendant to make a full-fledged showing of an expert
opinion that rebuts the state's case. I have grave doubts whether a
defendant can make the sort of particularized showing that the
majority demands.
For example, in this case Moore's
counsel may well have known that in order to contest evidence
regarding vaginal swabbings from the victim he needed an expert. But
how could he know if he needed a microbiologist, an organic chemist, a
urologist, a hematologist, or that which the state used, a serologist?
How further could he specify the type of testing he needed without
first hiring an expert to make that determination? In this case one
important question is whether Moore's and Pasby's semen has a high or
low "secretion" content. How could Moore's attorney both know of and
show to the court the existence of, as well as the need for, such
tests without first obtaining the very advice he seeks the court
provide. This is, I submit, a Catch-22 that few will surmount.
A court should not deny relief
summarily simply because the defendant cannot specify the type of
expert he needs. If physical evidence constitutes the bulk of the
prosecution's case, the need for expert assistance to confront the
prosecution's evidence is manifest. However, the defendant genuinely
may not know what type of expert he needs to mount an effective
challenge. The majority would foreclose any inquiry into the
defendant's need for assistance simply because the defendant cannot
state up front the specific assistance he requires. When a defendant
asks for assistance and the need for assistance is obvious, it is
fundamentally unfair for the court to deny assistance merely because
the defendant lacks scientific knowledge. After reviewing the physical
evidence the prosecution possesses, the court, with its experience in
criminal cases, may itself be able to determine what type of expert
the defendant needs.
Furthermore, lawyers often lack
either the time or the ability to learn whole areas of forensic
science. Experts can acquaint defense counsel with the scientific
principles involved, point out weaknesses in the prosecution's tests,
and recommend tests that the defense might find useful. The majority
would preclude a defendant from ever receiving such assistance from
appointed experts. This is not to say that a defendant is entitled to
an appointed expert upon demand whenever the prosecution's case
involves physical evidence. However, the standard in Ake is
sufficiently flexible to allow appointed experts to provide such
preliminary assistance in certain instances.
The majority also places on the
defendant the burden of prescience: of knowing (or really guessing)
that the state intends to use certain testimony in certain ways.3
Despite the limits of discovery and the scope of the work product rule,
Moore's counsel undoubtedly knew that the state had and would present
expert interpretations of physical evidence. He may even have known
the gist of the testimony to be offered. However, how could any
defendant ever have more than an inkling as to how the prosecution
intended to use such evidence? In this case the prosecutor relied
heavily upon it, telling the jury that it was "very incriminating."
But a prudent prosecutor could only make effective use of such flabby
testimony if he knew that the defendant could not rebut it with his
own experts. Consequently, the majority's test is circular. The
evidence will only play an important role if the defendant has no
expert, and the defendant needs no expert if the evidence plays no
important role. To the extent that this factor is retained at all, the
burden of proof ought to be placed upon the government to show that
the information at issue is not critical to its case. Then that
showing ought to be made a binding commitment by the government to use
the evidence only in that fashion.
I reiterate that the Supreme Court
has required only that the defendant make a bona fide showing of
reasonableness. That is a showing that the defense could, if the
request has merit, and ought to make in order to justify appointment
of assistance. My objection is that the majority's opinion engrafts
upon this requirement unnecessary and improper burdens that, I fear,
will almost always prove fatal to the defendant's request.
B.
Benjamin Cardozo, with
characteristic grace, once noted that "a defendant may be at an unfair
disadvantage[ ] if he is unable because of poverty to parry by his own
witnesses the thrust of those against him." Reilly v. Berry, 250 N.Y.
456, 461, 166 N.E. 165, 167 (1929) (per Cardozo, C.J.). The Supreme
Court has noted that which any experienced trial judge or lawyer could
confirm: that " '[t]estimony emanating from the depth and scope of
specialized knowledge is very impressive to a jury. The same testimony
from another source can have less effect.' " Ake, 470 U.S. at 81, n.
7, 105 S.Ct. at 1096 n. 7 (quoting F. Bailey & H. Rothblatt,
Investigation and Preparation of Criminal Cases Sec. 175 (1970)). A
defendant's inability to rebut expert testimony, coming before the
jury with what is effectively a presumption of correctness, is "devastating"
to the unassisted defendant's chances of persuading the jury to reject
such evidence. 470 U.S. at 82-84, 105 S.Ct. at 1097.
The case against Moore was, to be
charitable, weak. There was no direct evidence linking him to the
crime and he claimed that at the time of the murder he was passed out
on his sofa at home. No one at trial offered an eye witness account of
any episodes in the crime. The prosecution's case was built solely
upon a two-part foundation: the testimony of Pasby as to Moore's
supposed admissions to him; and the testimony of several expert
witnesses as to physical evidence found at the scene of the crime and
in Moore's house one month later. The jury convicted Moore based upon
these two elements.
This Court today finds that Pasby's
testimony may have been given in exchange for lenity in regard to
charges pending against him--a fact the jury did not know. Upon remand
it may well be that Pasby's testimony will be found incredible, given
his own likely biases. The physical evidence thus assumes an even more
critical role in the question of Carzell Moore's guilt or innocence
because half of the foundation for the prosecution's case may well
have been undermined by constitutional error. Under such circumstances,
it is not unfair to say that in large part the determination of
Carzell Moore's guilt will hinge upon the testimony of state experts
that the majority would leave him powerless to contradict with any
degree of effectiveness.
Ake requires "an ex parte threshold
showing to the trial court" that the matter subject to expert
testimony is "likely to be a significant factor" in the defense. 470
U.S. at 82, 105 S.Ct. at 1097. By Caldwell 's language, Moore must
show that his need for expert assistance to interpret physical
evidence is based upon a developed assertion of reasonable necessity.
The majority would require a description of the assistance needed and
the type of testing, an explanation of the importance of the physical
evidence to the state's case, and an explanation of how the expert
would assist Moore in defending himself. Under all three rubrics I
believe that Moore made an adequate showing of need for and
entitlement to state-paid expert assistance.
At the pre-trial hearing, Moore's
attorney addressed the court orally on the subject.
We would like to make a motion to the Court that an
independent research analysis [sic] be appointed by this Court that is
not employed by the State of Georgia to examine this evidence to find
his own conclusions on behalf of the defendant, to reach his own
conclusions, in order that we can first of all, have someone to advise
us as to the expertise of the Georgia Crime Lab, whether or not they
performed the correct tests, whether or not there could be any
variances in the findings of the Georgia Crime Lab, in order that we
would have this knowledge available to us.
R.Exh. 2-40. This, standing alone,
is no more than an "undeveloped assertion[ ] that the requested
assistance would be beneficial...." Caldwell, 472 U.S. at 324, n. 1,
105 S.Ct. at 2637, n. 1. But the defense attorney supplemented this
oral statement with a written request:
Defendant has been informed that the
various items of physical evidence tend to connect him to a commission
of the crime for which he is charged, even though defendant
understands that a number of the tests performed by the State Crime
Lab do not conclusively prove the presence of defendant, but rather
prove the presence of someone similar to defendant.
Neither the defendant nor his
counsel are [sic] sufficiently knowledgeable to determine whether the
test and examinations performed by the State Crime Lab on the various
pieces of physical evidence are complete, conclusive, or exhaustive.
This, coupled with
the oral statement, goes to the requirements of Ake, of Caldwell, and
of the majority's opinion. It sets forth a reasonable need for expert
assistance in order both to impeach state witness credibility and
credentials and to attack the factual conclusions that those witnesses
will likely draw--in short the probable value of such assistance and
the risk of error if denied. The statement goes on, however:
Defendant understands that there are certain tests
which can be run which might conclusively prove whether or not the
hair samples found are those from defendant, but neither defendant nor
his counsel have the necessary funds or expertise to perform said
tests.
This bolsters the reasonableness of
the request and further meets the majority's requirement that the
defendant specify the tests he seeks to have performed. Moore's
attorney continued:
Appointed counsel cannot effectively
prepare the defense for Defendant without the services of an expert
witness to advise him concerning the tests and examinations run by the
law enforcement and judicial agencies and no provision has been made
for the Defendant to have available to him the kind of resources which
are available to the State through the State Crime Laboratory in order
that the Defendant can test the validity of and accuracy of any tests
which have been run by the State and the results of which may be
introduced into evidence against the defendant at trial.
R.Exh. 1-87. Again, the defendant
offered evidence of reasonableness and a showing sufficient to
describe the type of expert assistance needed. Moore's attorney even
went on to offer the trial court the name of his proposed expert and
the fee for his services: $1500.
Admittedly, Moore's lawyer did not
affirmatively allege that the state would rely upon the evidence here
at issue.4 But as
Moore's counsel noted in his motion for expert assistance, he could
not do so because:
[t]here is no statute in the law of Georgia giving
the Defendant the right to compulsory legal process which will require
the State to advise the Defendant of the basis on which the State
intends to attempt to prove that the defendant is guilty of the crime
for which he has been indicted.
R.Exh. 1-88. Thus the majority today
imposes a burden on all indigent defendants which the law of Georgia
makes impossible to meet. Moreover, given the lack of any eye witness
to this crime, and the fact that aside from the physical evidence the
state's only witness was a cellmate with a criminal record of his own,
I believe it was so patently obvious as to go without saying that the
physical evidence, and expert interpretation of that evidence, would
be critical, even absent an express guess by the defendant to that
effect.
The physical evidence in this case
was, standing alone, weak. As the state's witnesses themselves
conceded, there were major questions as to the validity and accuracy
of the tests performed. The majority's recitation of the facts does
not mention that the Hushpuppy shoe prints found at the scene of the
crime were not congruent in size with those seized from Moore's house,
yet Moore was unable to counter this damaging circumstantial evidence
with testimony as to whether the soil could have produced a print
longer and wider than the shoe. The semen sample could be identified
as coming from any of the two-fifths of the country's male population
sharing Moore's blood type.5
The two hairs seized from a towel in Moore's bathroom, one month after
the crime, could likewise only be shown to be consistent with those of
Allen and not inconsistent with those of Moore, Green or Pasby. In
essence, the state's "expert" could only say with certainty that which
any layman could also have observed: that he viewed a blond pubic hair
and a Negro head hair.6
Yet the prosecutor was able to characterize this evidence as "very
incriminating" in large part because he was assured that Moore could
not offer a witness of equal stature to question these assertions. It
is precisely in cases of this sort where failure to provide expert
assistance to the defendant becomes crucial. When physical evidence is
itself weak it may well be that the persuasiveness of that evidence
derives entirely from the enhancing effect caused by "expert"
testimony prodding the jury toward a particular conclusion.7
For all of the reasons foregoing, I
believe that the majority errs in its disposition of this question,
both as a theoretical matter and as applied within the confines of
this case. Moore has established a reasonable need for the assistance
of experts under Ake, and I would grant him relief.
II. Comparable Worth:
The majority notes that it need not
and will not pass upon Moore's claim of constitutional error resulting
from the testimony of Allen's father. Surprisingly, the majority then
goes on to offer a "comment" for the benefit of the state court on
remand that this was improper, although the majority claims that it
makes no holding on this point. The question posed by Moore is an
important one; this Court has found that considerations of judicial
economy in habeas cases involving the death penalty permit us to pass
on all possible bases for relief,8
the Ashwander doctrine to the contrary notwithstanding.9
I would do so today and, having squarely reached the question of error
flowing from Mr. Allen's testimony, as well as from the prosecutor's
comments on that testimony during closing argument, would hold that
Moore has stated a claim of constitutional deprivation.
In this case, after both the
prosecution and defense had rested in the sentencing phase, but before
closing arguments, the prosecution requested and the trial court
permitted the victim's father to take the stand to "rebut" certain
testimony and to provide evidence of "aggravating circumstances." He
was the last witness the jury heard. Over defense objections, Mr.
Allen testified that his daughter was nineteen years of age, had been
a high school honor student, was attending college in part on a
scholarship and in part on her earnings from work at the Majik Market,
and hoped to become a nurse.
As the majority notes, this
testimony was admitted ostensibly to rebut any suggestion that Ms.
Allen had voluntarily participated in the robbery, although Moore
never raised this allegation and indeed would have undermined his
entire defense had he done so. The state now argues also that this
evidence was admissible in order to show additional aggravation--armed
robbery or kidnapping--in addition to the already claimed rape and
murder.10
Thereafter, as will be explained more fully below, the prosecutor
invited the jury to weigh the relative worth or value to society of
the two lives at issue: Mr. Moore and Ms. Allen. Moore argues that it
is constitutionally impermissible for the state to inject into the
sentencing process information of such inflammatory nature as class
and worth, especially by means of tactics designed to leave that
testimony as the last evidence on the jury's mind.11
The whole thrust of American
jurisprudence in the capital punishment area has been an attempt to
excise from the sentencing process any traces of bias or caprice by
channeling and cabining discretion. Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238,
242, 92 S.Ct. 2726, 2728, 33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972) (Douglas, J.,
concurring) (capital punishment is unconstitutional if it
discriminates "by reason of ... race, religion, wealth, social
position, or class, or if it is imposed under a procedure that gives
room for the play of such prejudices"); Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S.
153, 189, 96 S.Ct. 2909, 2932-33, 49 L.Ed.2d 859 (1976) (opinion of
Stewart, Powell, & Stevens, JJ.) ("[W]here discretion is afforded a
sentencing body on a matter so grave as the determination of whether a
human life should be taken or spared, that discretion must be suitably
directed and limited so as to minimize the risk of wholly arbitrary
and capricious action"); Gardner v. Florida, 430 U.S. 349, 358, 97
S.Ct. 1197, 1204-05, 51 L.Ed.2d 393 (1977) ("It is of vital importance
to the defendant and to the community that any decision to impose the
death sentence be, and appear to be, based on reason rather than
caprice or emotion"); cf. C. Black, Capital Punishment: The
Inevitability of Caprice and Mistake 100 (2d ed. 1981) (the great
weakness of the capital punishment system is that it "is riddled and
saturated with uncontrolled discretion, however disguised"). When
discretion is unchained, the Eighth Amendment is at peril. Furman, 408
U.S. 309-10, 92 S.Ct. at 2762-63 (Stewart, J., concurring).
This Court recently considered the
question whether it is error to argue personal characteristics of the
victim to the jury. Brooks v. Kemp, 762 F.2d 1383, 1409-10 (11th
Cir.1985) (en banc ), makes clear that while it is not per se improper
to do so, the introduction of such information is problematical and
must be carefully controlled to prevent "excessive focus" on
prejudicial or irrelevant matters. Brooks, and the panel decision
below, make clear that the propriety of each episode turns on the
totality of the circumstances.
The decision to admit Mr. Allen's
testimony, and the prosecutor's suggestion to the jury that it weigh
the relative values of the two persons to society is, I think, error
of the grossest sort. While it is not per se unconstitutional to admit
testimony "not directly related to either statutory aggravating or
statutory mitigating factors," Barclay v. Florida, 463 U.S. 939, 967,
103 S.Ct. 3418, 3433, 77 L.Ed.2d 1134 (1983) (Stevens & Powell, JJ.,
concurring in plurality judgment), the Supreme Court has made clear
that at the sentencing stage it is of paramount importance that the
decision be individualized and based upon 1) the character of the
individual defendant, and 2) the circumstances of the crime. Stephens,
462 U.S. at 879, 103 S.Ct. at 2744 (citing cases). If a state permits,
under the rubric of aggravating circumstances, "factors that are
constitutionally impermissible or totally irrelevant to the sentencing
process, such as ... race, religion, or political affiliation of the
defendant.... due process of law would require that the jury's
decision to impose death be set aside." Id. at 885, 103 S.Ct. at 2747.
Here there can be no question but
that the testimony was a calculated attempt, under the guise of
permissible evidence of rebuttal or aggravation, Stephens, 462 U.S. at
878-79, 103 S.Ct. at 2743-44, to import into the deliberative process
precisely the class-based biases Justice Douglas decried in Furman.12
There was nothing in Mr. Allen's testimony that in any way elucidated
the already well-developed circumstances of the crime.13
The testimony thus fails to meet Stephens' requirement that it further
an individualized determination of the appropriate sentence in light
of the facts of the crime.
On the other hand, it could not but
help inflame the prejudices and emotions of the jury to be confronted
with a father's testimony of the virtuous life of his white daughter
violated and then mercilessly snuffed out by this black defendant. The
prosecutor's decision to sandbag this testimony until just prior to
closing arguments, so that Mr. Allen was the last witness the jury
heard, exacerbated the prejudice. The prosecutor sought, as Judge
Kravitch so aptly put it in her dissent from the panel opinion, "not
merely to let the jury know who the victim was, but rather to urge the
jury to return a sentence of death because of who the victim was."
Moore v. Zant, 722 F.2d 640, 651 (11th Cir.1983) (emphasis in
original). The result was based not upon reason, as the Supreme Court
and the Constitution demand, but upon emotion.
The trial court justified admitting
this information as relevant based upon testimony of one witness that
the safe at the Majik Market did not appear to have been forced open
suggesting, sotto voce, possible complicity in the crime by Teresa
Allen. The court reasoned it was appropriate to have Mr. Allen testify
as to his daughter's character so as to rebut this possible defense.
The panel opinion accepted this rationale. It noted that, while
ordinarily "the peculiar characteristics of persons involved" is not a
permissible basis for imposing the death penalty because it is "fraught
with constitutional danger," "where such characteristics are material
to resolving a genuine issue in the case" such testimony may come
before the fact finder. Moore, 722 F.2d at 646; accord Brooks, 762
F.2d at 1409 ("Any reference to such potentially prejudicial
characteristics must be undertaken only with the greatest of care and
only when the reference is relevant to some legitimate issue in the
case.").
The problem is that Moore never
argued this defense in any way; thus it was not a genuine issue in the
case. His defense was to maintain his innocence and lack of knowledge
of the deed. He never suggested that Teresa Allen was in any way an
accomplice with a crime that somehow went awry. The panel majority
conceded that not only was the evidence for such a defense "slim," id.
at 645, but that "defense counsel did not make such an argument to the
jury." Id. at 645 n. 2. The panel majority held that though it was
perhaps error, "[w]e cannot say that the trial judge's balancing of
the relevancy of Mr. Allen's testimony against its prejudice was
constitutionally faulty." Id. at 646. I can and I do. It was clear
error.
Subsumed in this claim is another
issue: whether the prosecutor's plea to the jury to impose the penalty
of death as a deterrent to others14
constitutes reversible error. This too violates Stephens because it
introduces questions of general applicability not related to the
proper task of the jury: to render an individualized determination in
the case at hand. 462 U.S. at 879, 103 S.Ct. at 2743. The prosecutor
here sought to induce the jury to strike a blow against crime and for
deterrence by making an example of Moore. This is impermissible and
unfair; it rises to the level of reversible error. Donnelly v.
DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637, 643, 94 S.Ct. 1868, 1871, 40 L.Ed.2d 431
(1974); Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 55 S.Ct. 629, 79 L.Ed.
1314 (1935); Brooks, 762 F.2d at 1399.
I believe Moore has stated three
further bases for relief. It was clear error to introduce the
testimony of Ms. Allen's father because it was completely irrelevant
and extraordinarily prejudicial. It was a grave, gross error for the
prosecutor to invite the jury to weigh the comparable worth of the two
lives. The error was compounded by the prosecutor's invitation to the
jurors to make the streets safe again by putting Carzell Moore to
death.
For the reasons foregoing, I must
enter a partial dissent from the majority's disposition of this
appeal.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge, became a member of the
court after this appeal had been orally argued but has participated
in this decision after listening to a recording of oral argument.
See 11th Cir.R. 24(g)
RONEY, Chief Judge, GODBOLD, HILL, FAY, VANCE,
KRAVITCH, JOHNSON, HATCHETT, ANDERSON, CLARK, and EDMONDSON, Circuit
Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge, concur in Part I and
Part IV
RONEY, Chief Judge, HILL, FAY, VANCE and
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge,
concur in Part II. GODBOLD, VANCE, KRAVITCH, JOHNSON, HATCHETT,
ANDERSON, and CLARK, Circuit Judges, concur in Part III. RONEY,
Chief Judge, HILL, FAY, VANCE, ANDERSON, CLARK, and EDMONDSON,
Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge, concur in Part
V.
The Bleckley County jail consists of a large
enclosure which is divided into several smaller cells. According to
Pasby, the doors to the cells remained open, allowing prisoners to
move freely from cell to cell. Pasby testified that he heard the
news of Green's arrest on television and that he went to Moore's
cell to notify him of the arrest
Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.S. 584, 97
S.Ct. 2861, 53 L.Ed.2d 982 (1977), decided 20 days after
petitioner's sentencing, precludes the imposition of the death
penalty for the crime of rape. Petitioner challenged his death
sentence on the rape count in his direct appeal to the Supreme Court
of Georgia. Moore v. State, 240 Ga. 807, 243 S.E.2d 1, cert. denied,
439 U.S. 903, 99 S.Ct. 268, 58 L.Ed.2d 249 (1978). The court read
Coker as allowing a death sentence in a rape case if the victim is
murdered immediately following the rape and thus affirmed
petitioner's sentence. Id. at 822, 243 S.E.2d at 11. In his habeas
petition in the district court, petitioner claimed that Coker
precluded his death sentence on the rape count. The district court
rejected his claim without stating any reason for its decision.
Petitioner has not questioned this ruling in this appeal; therefore,
we do not pass on it. Petitioner does attack his death sentence on
the rape count, as well as on the murder count, on the ground that
the trial judge failed adequately to instruct the sentencing jury on
its option to impose a life sentence despite the presence of a
statutory aggravating circumstance. We address this claim in Part IV,
infra
Although the petition listed 33 claims, we
conclude, after a careful reading, that the petition contained 16
cognizable constitutional claims. These claims were that: (1) the
exclusion of young adults and women from the venires from which
petitioner's grand jury and petit jury were chosen denied him due
process in violation of the fourteenth amendment; (2) the trial
court's denial of petitioner's motion for a change in venue based on
prejudicial pretrial publicity denied him a fair trial in violation
of the fifth, sixth, and fourteenth amendments; (3) the trial
court's denial of petitioner's request for an independent expert to
assist his attorney in confronting the physical evidence the State
introduced against him at trial violated his rights under the fifth,
sixth, and fourteenth amendments; (4) petitioner was denied the
effective assistance of counsel at all stages of his criminal
prosecution--pretrial, trial, sentencing, and direct appeal--and in
his state habeas proceedings in violation of the sixth and
fourteenth amendments; (5) the prosecution's failure to reveal
promises made to Thomas Pasby, the State's key witness, violated
petitioner's due process rights under the fourteenth amendment; (6)
petitioner's convictions were based on false testimony in violation
of the fourteenth amendment due process clause; (7) petitioner's
convictions were based upon evidence resulting from an illegal
search of his home in violation of the fourth and fourteenth
amendments; (8) the trial court improperly instructed the jury on
the issues of reasonable doubt and conspiracy at the guilt phase of
petitioner's trial in violation of the eighth and fourteenth
amendments; (9) the admission of inflammatory exhibits and hearsay
evidence denied petitioner a fair hearing at both phases of his
trial in violation of the sixth and fourteenth amendments; (10) the
prosecutor made improper and prejudicial remarks to the jury at the
sentencing phase of petitioner's trial, thus denying him due process
of law in violation of the fourteenth amendment; (11) the trial
court's sentencing instructions to the jury did not adequately
inform it of its option, under Georgia law, to return a life
sentence even if it found the existence of a statutory aggravating
circumstance in violation of the eighth and fourteenth amendments;
(12) the testimony of the victim's father at the sentencing hearing
deprived petitioner of his right to a sentencing hearing free from
passion and prejudice in violation of the sixth, eighth, and
fourteenth amendments; (13) petitioner was deprived of his right to
the guided exercise of jury sentencing discretion in violation of
the eighth and fourteenth amendments because (a) the trial court
permitted the State to present to the jury evidence of petitioner's
prior criminal history, (b) the trial court instructed the jury to
consider constitutionally defective statutory aggravating
circumstances under O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-10-30(b)(2), (b)(7) (1982), (c)
the trial court's instruction on mitigating circumstances precluded
the jury from considering mitigating circumstances other than
petitioner's age by specifically noting only that factor, and (d)
the trial court failed to require the jury to make findings of fact
as to the existence of mitigating factors; (14) a death sentence for
the crime of rape deprived petitioner of a sentence proportionate to
his crime in violation of the eighth and fourteenth amendments; (15)
the Supreme Court of Georgia denied petitioner adequate review of
his convictions and sentences in violation of the eighth and
fourteenth amendments; and (16) Georgia administers the death
penalty in a discriminatory fashion in violation of the eighth and
fourteenth amendments
Petitioner asserts in his brief to the en banc
court that the trial court's denial of his motion for the
appointment of an expert denied him a fair trial, in violation of
the due process and equal protection clauses of the fourteenth
amendment, rendered his attorney ineffective within the meaning of
the sixth and fourteenth amendments, and subjected petitioner to
cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth and
fourteenth amendments. Because petitioner's discussion of the
alleged error is in terms of the fairness of the trial he received,
we utilize a due process analysis in addressing his claim. This is
the same approach the Supreme Court employed in Ake v. Oklahoma, 470
U.S. 68, 87 n. 13, 105 S.Ct. 1087, 1099 n. 13, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985),
in which it examined a claim for psychiatric assistance under the
due process clause and declined to consider the applicability of the
equal protection clause or the sixth amendment
Among the tools the state must not deny an
indigent defendant in a criminal proceeding are the assistance of
counsel at trial, Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 83 S.Ct. 792,
9 L.Ed.2d 799 (1963), and on the defendant's first direct appeal as
of right, Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353, 83 S.Ct. 814, 9 L.Ed.2d
811 (1963), and a trial transcript, if it is necessary to a decision
on the merits of the appeal, Griffin v. Illinois, 351 U.S. 12, 76
S.Ct. 585, 100 L.Ed. 891 (1956). These tools are necessary to ensure
that an indigent defendant's access to justice is meaningful. See
Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 76-77, 105 S.Ct. 1087, 1093-94, 84
L.Ed.2d 53 (1985)
Requiring trial courts, both state and federal,
to provide for expert assistance--through direct appointment or a
grant of funds--would place a substantial, if not onerous, burden on
the administration of criminal justice. For example, the trial court
would have to (1) appoint a defense expert for every expert
available to the government; (2) provide for expert assistance
whether or not such assistance turned out to be needed; and (3)
provide for any additional experts the appointed experts might need
to explore theories that could aid the defense in cross-examining
prosecution witnesses or in presenting the defense's case. We
question the wisdom of such due process requirements absent a
substantial showing, such as the one made in Ake, of a significant
benefit to the truth-seeking function of a trial
This required showing is analogous to the
requirement that an indigent defendant wishing to obtain the
issuance of a subpoena at government expense make "a satisfactory
showing ... that the presence of the witness is necessary to an
adequate defense." Fed.R.Crim.P. 17(b). See United States v. Abshire,
471 F.2d 116, 119 (5th Cir.1972) ("[A] Rule 17(b) motion must state
facts that show the relevancy and necessity of the requested
witnesses' testimony.") (citation omitted) (In Bonner v. City of
Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir.1981) (en banc), this court
adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth
Circuit handed down prior to October 1, 1981.)
In a jurisdiction like Florida, which accords the
defendant substantial discovery rights, see Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.220 (requiring
prosecution to disclose, among other things, written statements of
persons having relevant information and reports or statements of
experts, including results of scientific tests, and allowing
defendant to depose any person having relevant information), the
defendant should have no difficulty in demonstrating the theory of
the government's case and outlining the evidence the prosecutor will
probably present at trial. The difficulty of the defendant's task
will vary depending on the scope of the jurisdiction's discovery
rules. In a jurisdiction still employing "trial by ambush," the
defendant might have to ask the court to make the prosecutor
disclose the theory of his case and the results of any tests that
may have been performed by government experts or at the government's
request
Under Georgia law, an accused being held in
custody can demand a preliminary hearing, often termed a "committal
hearing," for the purpose of determining whether there exists
probable cause to believe that the accused perpetrated the charged
crime and, if so, whether to bind the accused over to the grand jury.
See O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-7-23(a) (1982); Fleming v. Kemp, 748 F.2d 1435,
1439 n. 14 (11th Cir.1984), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 106 S.Ct.
1286, 89 L.Ed.2d 593 (1986)
Judge Sosebee did not preside over the committal
hearing, because under Georgia law the judge who has been assigned
to try the case cannot preside over the committal hearing. See
O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-7-23(b) (1982)
The State was required by statute, upon timely
motion, to produce copies of "any written scientific reports in the
possession of the prosecution which will be introduced in whole or
in part against the defendant by the prosecution in its case-in-chief
or in rebuttal." O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-7-211(b) (1982)
Now comes CARZELL MOORE, Defendant above named,
and moves the Court to appoint a criminologist or other expert
witness to assist defense counsel by showing to the Court the
following:
Approximately ninety-four items of
physical evidence have been assembled by the District Attorney of
the Flint Judicial Cirucit [sic]; Bleckley County Sheriff's
Department; Monroe County Sheriff's Department; Cochran City Police;
the Georgia Bureau of Investigation; the Georgia State Crime Lab;
the Honree County Police Department; [sic] Honree, South Carolina;
Conway City Police Department, Conway, South Carolina; the District
Attorney of the Oconee Judicial Circuit; and the officers, agents,
and employees of all the above (hereinafter referred to as Law
Enforcement and Judicial Agencies). Among the items assembled are
blood samples, saliva specimens, and hair specimens from the
defendant. Additionally, the gun, shoes, clothing, hosiery, foot
castings, and other types of physical evidence have been assembled
by said law enforcement and judicial agencies.
Defendant is indigent, and cannot
afford to procure the services of a private, independent expert to
assist and advise him on the scientific analysis of this evidence.
Defendant has been informed that
the various items of physical evidence tend to connect him to a
commission of the crime for which he is charged, even though
defendant understands that a number of the tests performed by the
State Crime Lab do not conclusively prove the presence of defendant,
but rather prove the presence of someone similar to defendant.
Neither defendant nor his counsel
are sufficiently knowledgeable to determine whether the test and
examinations performed by the State Crime Lab on the various pieces
of physical evidence are complete, conclusive, or exhaustive.
Defendant understands that there are certain tests which can be run
which might conclusively prove whether or not the hair samples found
are those from defendant, but neither defendant nor his counsel have
the necessary funds or expertise to perform said tests.
Appointed Counsel cannot
effectively prepare the defense for Defendant without the services
of an expert witness to advise him concerning the tests and
examinations run by the law enforcement and judicial agencies and no
provision has been made for the Defendant to have available to him
the kind of resources which are available to the State through the
State Crime Laboratory in order that the Defendant can test the
validity of and the accuracy of any tests which have been run by the
State and the results of which may be introduced into evidence
against the defendant at trial.
Under the laws of Georgia,
Defendant has no right to any pre-trial or pre-arraignment discovery
except to the extent that the state is obligated to produce
information which might tend to exculpate the Defendant or mitigate
his alleged involvement in the crime for which he has been indicted.
There is no statute in the law of Georgia giving the Defendant the
right to compulsory legal process which will require the State to
advise the Defendant of the basis on which the State intends to
attempt to prove that the Defendant is guilty of the crime for which
he has been indicted. The absence of any such statutory or other law
in Georgia, together with the indigency of the Defendant and the
failure of the Court to provide the Defendant with resources to make
his own independent investigation into certain scientific
evaluations which form the basis of the State's case, make it
impossible for the Defendant and his counsel to adequately prepare a
defense to the charges against the Defendant.
The absence of any such statutory
or other law in the State of Georgia and the absence of any
procedure whereby the Court can be required to make available to an
indigent defendant the same basic resources which are available to
the State for the purpose of scientific evaluation an expert
testimony constitute a violation of Defendant's right to procedural
due process of law under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
Constitution of the United States. A fundamental fairness required
by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution are
impossible to fulfill in Defendant's case for the reasons
hereinabove set forth and any trial of the Defendant on this
indictment will, for these reasons, violate his rights under the due
process clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
Constitution and will deny him equal protection of the laws under
the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.
WHEREFORE, Defendant moves the Court to appoint a
private, independent criminologist to advise and assist the Court
appointed Attorney in the conduct of his defense, and in the absence
of such appointment, Defendant prays that the Court inquire into
this his plea in abatement, taking evidence on the questions raised
herein if necessary, and that the indictment against the Defendant
be quashed and the charges against the Defendant be dismissed.
It is apparent from this colloquy and
petitioner's motion for the appointment of a criminologist or other
expert, see supra note 14, that defense counsel was under the
impression that Georgia law precluded the court from granting his
motion even if the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment
required that it be granted. This may explain counsel's failure to
make the sort of showing we find necessary
We are not convinced that the trial judge would
have denied petitioner the provision of expert assistance had
counsel made a more substantial demonstration of need. Although
Georgia statutory law does not give indigent defendants a right to
obtain expert witnesses at government expense, we find nothing in
Georgia case law, and have been cited to nothing, that would have
precluded the trial judge from granting such assistance had he
concluded that not to do so would create a reasonable probability
that petitioner would not receive a fair trial.
Although Judge Whitmire held both petitioner's
and Roosevelt Green's committal hearings, as we have indicated, see
supra note 12 and accompanying text, the transcript of petitioner's
hearing and the transcript of Sheriff Bittick's testimony at Green's
hearing were made a part of the record before Judge Sosebee. We
therefore assume, although the record is silent on the point, that
Judge Sosebee had read these transcripts by the time he ruled on
petitioner's request for expert assistance
Sheriff Bittick may have been mistaken when he
testified at Green's committal hearing that Barton had made this
determination. At trial, she gave no such testimony; rather, Warren
Tillman, the microanalyst, explained the results of the tests
performed on the various hair samples in the case
Petitioner's attorney had two opportunities prior
to Judge Sosebee's ruling at the conclusion of the May 4 hearing--the
May 4 hearing itself and the April 15 hearing--to inform the court
about these matters and to urge the court to appoint an expert; yet,
he remained silent
Linda Barton's test of the seminal fluid taken
from the victim's body indicated that the fluid came from a male
with type A blood. Green had type B blood; thus, the fluid she
examined could not have come from him. Green, however, could still
have raped the victim; the record does not show whether seminal
fluid existed that Barton did not test
A criminologist is a person who specializes in
criminology. Criminology is defined as "the scientific study of
crime as a social phenomenon, of criminal investigation, of
criminals, and of penal treatment." Webster's Third New
International Dictionary 537 (1976)
At trial, petitioner's attorney said nothing to
the court indicating that he needed expert assistance to
cross-examine the State's experts, Warren Tillman and Linda Barton.
See supra note 15. In fact, he effectively and comprehensively
cross-examined these experts at length. It can be inferred from
counsel's conduct that the trial court's refusal to appoint an
expert did not deny petitioner a reasonable opportunity to present
his case
Without Pasby's testimony, the State's case was
purely circumstantial: petitioner made an incriminating statement to
Johnny Johnson three days prior to the robbery, petitioner and Green
were friends, and petitioner was seen in Cochran with Green on the
afternoon of the robbery. The expert testimony relating to the
physical evidence recovered from petitioner's home and from the
crime scene did not prove that petitioner was a participant in the
crimes. The testimony of Warren Tillman established that shoes
similar in size and tread design to the "Hush Puppy" shoes found in
petitioner's home were worn at the crime scene. Tillman's testimony,
concerning hairs found on a towel seized in the search of
petitioner's home, added little to the State's case and his
testimony relating to this evidence was substantially discredited.
The testimony of Linda Barton, the serologist, established that a
male "secretor" with type A blood produced the semen found in the
body of Ms. Allen. Petitioner was shown to be a secretor with type A
blood, but Barton admitted on cross-examination that approximately
40% of the population has type A blood and approximately 90% of
these individuals are secretors. Thus, Barton's testimony did not
conclusively prove that petitioner raped Ms. Allen
State court fact findings cannot be presumed to
be correct if it appears that the petitioner "did not receive a
full, fair, and adequate hearing in the State court proceeding." 28
U.S.C. Sec. 2254(d)(6) (1982)
There are 45 judicial circuits in Georgia; each
circuit is composed of one or more counties. Each judicial circuit
has an elected district attorney who prosecutes all felony cases
brought within the circuit. Similarly, each circuit has one or more
judges who sit in the superior courts of the counties that make up
the judicial circuit. Petitioner was tried in the Superior Court of
Monroe County because the Allen rape and murder occurred in Monroe
County. Monroe County is in the Flint Judicial Circuit, and
therefore the district attorney and assistant district attorney who
prosecuted the case and the judge who presided at trial were from
the Flint Judicial Circuit
No one at the hearing, including Pasby, disclosed
that a rifle was the object of the alleged theft. The record
suggests, however, that prior to trial defense counsel learned that
the object was a 30.06 caliber hunting rifle, like the one used to
commit the Allen murder, and that the police initially thought that
the rifle was the murder weapon. Subsequent investigation disclosed
that the rifle seized following Green's arrest, not the rifle Pasby
was charged with stealing, was used to kill the victim
Counsel made this request in the context of a
written motion seeking the State's production of various information
in its possession. The request for criminal records and Giglio
material was made in general terms and encompassed everyone the
prosecutor intended to call at petitioner's trial. At hearings held
on February 11 and 15 and on April 15, 1977, however, petitioner's
counsel stressed that he was particularly interested in obtaining
Pasby's criminal record and any evidence of a deal between the State
and Pasby. We therefore focus on the requests as they relate to
Pasby
Presumably, counsel was referring to the GBI's
Crime Information Center which maintains records of arrests and
convictions. The information is provided to the Center by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and "Georgia Fingerprint
Contributors," which includes Georgia police departments and
sheriff's offices. These records are available to state prosecutors
The record does not disclose the
exact number of these summaries or, with the exception noted in the
text, what interviews were involved. Further, the prosecutor stated
that it was possible that not all of the taped conversations had
been summarized
This consisted of a statement made by Mrs.
Beverly Ann Mays to a special agent of the GBI on January 18, 1977.
The substance of the statement is not disclosed in the record. It is
unclear whether the statement was tape recorded
The record reveals the names of only two of the
persons whose interview summaries were produced pursuant to the
court's directive. It is unclear from the record what information
the summaries contained or in what manner they were beneficial to
the defendant. This, however, is not relevant to petitioner's Brady/Giglio
claim
This is what we want. I realize it may
incriminate you in some way. I'm not out after you for the rifle.
I'm not trying to hang you in any way, shape or form. I'm wanting to
know about that rifle. I'm wanting to know if you had any knowledge
with reference to where it was stolen. I know you know about the
rifle but I'd like to know if you knew where it was stolen. I'd also
like to know anything else you have in reference to this. That's all
I'm asking of you. I'm not going to--to try to put pressure on you.
I'm not wanting to sit here trying to bullshit you, I'm wanting
nothing but the truth. I can get hardnosed. You know what an
accessory is? That is aiding and abbetting [sic]. That is, according
to Georgia law, is called aiding and abetting. You have an accessory
before the fact, you have an accessory during, and you have an
accessory after. You could fall into one of these categories.
Refusing to give information that we can prove that you had prior to
this questioning makes you an accessory. If you want to go that
route, that's called aiding and abbetting [sic]. That makes you
liable to receive the same punishment as the person who actually
pulls the trigger or who actually raped the girl or who kidnapped
the girl. Now, that's strictly up to you. I'm not wanting to be
hardnosed that way. All I'm doing is trying to sit down with you,
Thomas, and ask you to tell me the truth and give me the information,
that's all, maybe clean the rest of it right here.
It appears from this statement that the summary
of Pasby's interview was actually a transcript of the interview.
Thus, the State's assertion in its response to petitioner's motion
for Brady material that its file did not contain any transcripts of
recorded interviews might not have been accurate.
The Bleckley County sheriff's testimony at
petitioner's trial corroborated Pasby's statement. The sheriff
testified that around January 1, 1977, police learned from an
informant that Pasby had the murder weapon, a 30.06 rifle, and that
Pasby had sold it to a man at a junkyard in Macon, Georgia. After
retrieving the rifle, which he then believed to be the murder weapon,
see supra note 26, the sheriff arrested Pasby on January 4.
According to the sheriff, Pasby insisted that he was innocent and
requested that the sheriff take him to the junkyard in Macon to see
if the purported buyer could identify him. The sheriff eventually
sent a deputy to Macon with photographs of Pasby. Although his
testimony is unclear, the sheriff indicated that the State decided
not to prosecute Pasby, because of the purported buyer's inability
to identify him
Counsel made this statement during a hearing
before the Superior Court of Butts County on petitioner's first
habeas petition in arguing that the prosecutor had deliberately
withheld Brady/Giglio information from the defense
Actually, another attorney filed the habeas
petition. That attorney subsequently withdrew from the case, and
Kates filed his appearance as petitioner's attorney
42-8-60. Probation of first offenders prior to
adjudication of guilt; effect of violation of terms of probation or
conviction for another crime.
(a) Upon a verdict or plea of guilty or a plea of
nolo contendere, but before an adjudication of guilt, in the case of
a defendant who has not been previously convicted of a felony, the
court may, without entering a judgment of guilt and with the consent
of the defendant:
(1) Defer further proceedings and place the
defendant on probation as provided by law; or
(2) Sentence the defendant to a term of
confinement as provided by law.
(b) Upon violation by the defendant of the terms
of probation or upon a conviction for another crime during the
period of probation, the court may enter an adjudication of guilt
and proceed as otherwise provided by law. No person may avail
himself of this article on more than one occasion.
O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-65(a) (1985) provides in
relevant part:
[T]he record of discharge [of a probation
sentence imposed under the first offender act] shall be released
solely to the Attorney General, a district attorney, a solicitor of
a state court, the Department of Corrections, the office of a county
probation system or of a state or county probation system of another
state or of the United States, an office of the State Board of
Pardons and Paroles, an office of the pardons and paroles division
of another state or of the United States, or a prosecuting attorney
of another state or of the United States, upon certification by such
probation system or prosecuting attorney that there are pending in a
court of competent jurisdiction criminal charges against any person
discharged under this article. No such agency, law enforcement
agency, or court may release any information regarding an
adjudication of guilt under this article except to disclose the fact
that the defendant has exercised his or her right to first offender
treatment under Georgia law and that such person has been discharged.
The court did not address whether the probation
file otherwise contained information that might have affected
Pasby's credibility before petitioner's jury
The supreme court's decision is unreported. The
State makes no claim that the supreme court refused to issue a
certificate of probable cause on the ground that petitioner, having
raised his Brady/Giglio claim on direct appeal, was precluded from
presenting it to the habeas court on collateral attack
The State should have included Pasby's probation
file in the exhibits filed with its answer because the file was part
of the record of the state court habeas proceeding and was obviously
relevant to petitioner's Brady/Giglio claim. See Rule 5, Answer;
Contents, Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases, 28 U.S.C. fol. Sec.
2254 (1982). The district court, in reviewing the record of the
state habeas proceedings (upon which it based its decision to reject
petitioner's Brady/Giglio claim), should have noted the absence of
Pasby's probation file and, pursuant to Rule 5, ordered that the
sealed file be produced and made a part of the record in the
district court
We assume that the probation file is genuine
because the State did not object to its authenticity in the district
court. We do not, however, assume that the file is complete. Among
other things, it does not contain any evidence of the Superior Court
of Bleckley County's disposition of the probation revocation
proceeding the court initiated on January 5, 1977, when it issued a
warrant for Pasby's arrest
At the time of Pasby's arrest, the crime of theft
by taking was considered a felony when the property stolen exceeded
$100 in value. Ga.Code Ann. 26-1812(a) (1977). This statute
subsequently was amended to raise the minimum value to $200 and
recodified as O.C.G.A. Sec. 16-8-12(a)(1) (1982 & Supp.1986). If
convicted of the crime, Pasby faced a prison sentence of not less
than one year and not more than ten years. Ga.Code Ann. 26-1812(a)
(1977) (amended and recodified as O.C.G.A. Sec. 16-8-12(a)(1) (1982
& Supp.1986))
We presume that Pasby's true surname is Moss
because he was arrested under that surname, said he was Thomas Moss
when he pled guilty, and the superior court sentenced him as Thomas
Moss. We refer to him in this opinion as Pasby because that is how
he is referred to in the record, with the exception of the probation
file
Under this statutory scheme, once the offender
completes his sentence--whether on probation or in prison--he is "discharged
without court adjudication of guilt," O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-62 (1985),
and consequently does not suffer the civil disabilities normally
suffered by those who have been adjudged guilty of an offense under
Georgia law. "The discharge ... completely exonerate[s] the
defendant of any criminal purpose and [does] not affect any of his
civil rights or liberties; and the defendant shall not be considered
to have a criminal conviction." O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-62 (1985)
O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-10-7(a) (Supp.1985) provides as
follows:
Any person convicted of a felony offense in this
state ... and sentenced to confinement in a penal institution, who
shall afterwards commit a felony punishable by confinement in a
penal institution, shall be sentenced to undergo the longest period
of time prescribed for the punishment of the subsequent offense of
which he stands convicted, provided that, unless otherwise provided
by law, the trial judge may, in his discretion, probate or suspend
the maximum sentence prescribed for the offense.
We assume that the Bleckley County sheriff
brought Pasby before his sentencing judge after he executed the
warrant for Pasby's arrest. The record does not indicate whether the
judge ordered Pasby "committed" for violating the conditions of his
probation or released him "with or without bail to await further
hearing," e.g., a probation revocation hearing, or dismissed the
charge by dissolving the arrest warrant. All that the record shows
is that Pasby remained in the Bleckley County jail for about three
months
A GBI special agent, in interrogating Pasby in
January 1977, told Pasby that if he did not cooperate he would be
considered an accessory to the Allen murder. For the full text of
the agent's statement to Pasby, see supra note 32
Ten years was the maximum penalty for theft by
taking. If sentenced under the habitual offender act, see supra note
48 and accompanying text, Pasby faced a mandatory 10-year prison
sentence
The first offender act, under which Pasby had
been sentenced, authorized the court, on a plea of guilty to the
charged offense but without an adjudication of the offender's guilt,
to sentence him to a period of confinement (up to 10 years for theft
by taking) or to place him on probation. See O.C.G.A. Sec.
42-8-60(a) (1985). The act also authorized the court, upon revoking
the offender's probation, to adjudicate him guilty of the offense to
which he had pled guilty and to impose up to the maximum sentence
provided for that offense, see O.C.G.A. Sec. 42-8-60(b) (1985),
which, in Pasby's case, was 10 years. See supra note 43
In sentencing Pasby on November 10, 1976, the
court deviated from the statute by imposing a one-year term of
imprisonment, and suspending it, before placing Pasby on probation.
Although this sentence did not conform to the statute, Georgia
courts have upheld similar sentences imposed under the act. See
Griffin v. State, 163 Ga.App. 871, 295 S.E.2d 863 (1982) (five-year
term of imprisonment suspended and defendant placed on probation
under the act); Johnson v. State, 161 Ga.App. 506, 288 S.E.2d 366
(1982) (ten-year term of imprisonment suspended and defendant placed
on probation under the act). These cases indicate, however, that a
suspended sentence can affect the court's ability, upon revoking
probation, to impose a term of imprisonment greater than the
suspended sentence unless the court, at the time it places the
offender on probation, either informs him in person or in its
written sentencing order that he could receive the maximum term of
imprisonment allowed by law if he violates the terms of his
probation. See Griffin, 163 Ga.App. at 871, 295 S.E.2d at 864. In
Pasby's case, the court's written sentencing order did not inform
Pasby that, upon the revocation of his probation, he could be
sentenced to a prison term of up to 10 years. Therefore, Pasby could
not have been subjected to the maximum prison term (his maximum
exposure being limited to the unexpired portion of his 12-month
suspended sentence) upon the revocation of his probation unless the
court informed him in person at sentencing that he remained subject
to the maximum prison term. Because the transcript of Pasby's
sentencing hearing is not in the record, we do not know whether
Pasby was so informed.
The final aspect of the Georgia death sentencing
scheme involves automatic and mandatory appellate review of every
death sentence. See Zant v. Stephens, 462 U.S. 862, 871-80, 103 S.Ct.
2733, 2740-44, 77 L.Ed.2d 235 (1983); O.C.G.A. Sec. 17-10-35(a)
(1982)
In Stein v. Reynolds Securities, Inc., 667 F.2d
33 (11th Cir.1982), this court adopted as binding precedent all
decisions of Unit B of the former Fifth Circuit handed down after
September 30, 1981
We must assume, of course, that a reasonable
juror would discharge his duty under the law and faithfully execute
the court's instructions. In this case the instruction required the
jury to "fix punishment ... at death" if any statutory aggravating
circumstance was found to exist
In Stynchcombe v. Floyd, 252 Ga. 113, 114, 311
S.E.2d 828, 830 (1984), the Supreme Court of Georgia held that a
jury instruction informing the jury that upon finding one or more
aggravating circumstances it was "authorized to consider imposing a
sentence of death" was not sufficient to explain to the jury that it
could also recommend a life sentence
The Court was careful to note, however, that such
a defendant is not constitutionally entitled to choose a
psychiatrist of his own personal liking or receive funds to hire his
own. Rather the Court required only that he be provided access to a
competent, independent psychiatrist to assist him in proving his
defense. Ake, 470 U.S. at 83, 105 S.Ct. at 1097; see also Martin v.
Wainwright, 770 F.2d 918, 933-35 (11th Cir.1985). This is because
the constitutionally cognizable objective served by the provision of
a psychiatrist's assistance is greater accuracy in the judicial
proceedings, not a greater likelihood that the defendant will
succeed with his defense. See Ake, 470 U.S. at 77-83, 105 S.Ct. at
1094-97
Whether the defendant in fact would have
benefitted substantially from the assistance of experts of his own
is not free from doubt. Indeed, such expert testimony as was offered
was less than conclusive, and both direct and cross-examination of
the state's expert witnesses amply demonstrated the limited and
qualified nature of their opinions. A reading of this record
persuades me that experts who might have been available to the
defendant would have done little more to limit the force of the
testimony of the state's experts than the latter, in candor, did
themselves. As my analysis indicates, however, I am willing to
assume for the purposes of determining appellant's constitutional
claim that the assistance to which he now claims he was entitled in
fact would have done him some good
In the state habeas proceeding on which the state
relies in support of its argument that Moore has already received a
full and fair hearing on the Brady/Giglio claim only the following
version of the claim was presented to the state habeas court: "The
trial court by overruling Petitioner's motion to disclose to whom
immunity had been disclosed [sic], and the prosecution by failing to
disclose prior to trial to Petitioner that the crucial prosecution
witness PASBY, had been promised or granted immunity from a
previously suspended trial under the Georgia First Offender Act,
deprived Petitioner of due process of law under the Fourteenth
Amendment." Count Six of petitioner's amended state habeas petition
(citations omitted). Thus the state habeas court was not presented
with the claim that even if no deal was made, the probation report
and information contained therein should have been disclosed under
Giglio because it might have aided the defense in its impeachment of
Pasby. As a result, it seems clear that Moore has not had a full and
fair hearing on the Brady/Giglio claim he seeks to make here. The
state habeas court could be said to have found that no deals were
made, but could not reasonably be said to have found that no
information favorable to the defense was withheld
The majority opinion assumes for the purpose of
its analysis that Pasby could have been required to serve up to ten
years in prison if his probation was revoked. See ante at n. 54. The
court order placing Pasby on probation stated unequivocally that if
he violated the terms of his probation he could be made to serve the
remainder of his one year sentence that had been imposed. If the
transcript of Pasby's sentencing hearing would have indicated that
Pasby was told he might be exposed to ten years of imprisonment upon
violation of his probation rather than the remaining part of one,
petitioner could have and presumably would have at least alleged as
much. I see no reason to assume, for the purposes of determining
whether petitioner has made out an entitlement to an evidentiary
hearing, facts that are not even alleged
Other circuit courts have considered favorably
the question of constitutional entitlement to non-psychiatric
experts in capital cases. Williams v. Martin, 618 F.2d 1021, 1025-26
(4th Cir.1980) ("There can be no doubt that an effective defense
sometimes requires the assistance of an expert witness.... Moreover,
provision for experts reasonably necessary to assist indigents is
now considered essential to the operation of a just judicial system.");
Mason v. Arizona, 504 F.2d 1345, 1351 (9th Cir.1974) ("[T]he
effective assistance of counsel guarantee of the Due Process Clause
requires, when necessary, the ... appointment of investigative
assistance for indigent defendants in order to insure effective
preparation of their defense by their attorneys."), cert. denied,
420 U.S. 936, 95 S.Ct. 1145, 43 L.Ed.2d 412 (1975); cf. Westbrook v.
Zant, 704 F.2d 1487, 1494-97 (11th Cir.1983) (state must furnish
psychiatric or psychological experts to indigent capital defendant
if evidence not available from other sources is necessary to prove
mitigating circumstances); Knott v. Mabry, 671 F.2d 1208, 1212-13
(8th Cir.1982) (failure of counsel to obtain expert to contradict
government witness may constitute "constitutional flaw in the
representation of a defendant...."). The former Fifth Circuit
considered this question in Hoback v. Alabama, 607 F.2d 680, 682 &
n. 1 (5th Cir.1979), and said that, while there might be some
situations where states could be required to furnish experts, that
question need not be decided in that case
Nor can I accept the state's assertion that in
order to justify appointment of experts the defendant must present
"concrete evidence ... as to specifically what other information he
could have obtained by the use of an independent expert, that was
not available to him by an examination of the state's expert's
[sic]...." Supplemental Brief of Appellee at 19-20. First, the Court
in Ake imposed no such requirement of proof. Second, the state's
crabbed reading belies the tone and spirit of the Supreme Court's
holding. There was no evidence in Ake to suggest that the expert the
defendant sought would necessarily contradict state experts. Nor was
there evidence that his witness would provide evidence that was not
available from other sources or from cross-examining state witnesses
Experts are the "basic tools" necessary for the
defendant to marshal his defenses. Experts assist, inter alia, in
gathering and interpreting facts and drawing conclusions from them,
in formulating strategies for cross-examining the state's experts,
and in translating scientific jargon into terms understandable to
the fact finder. Ake, 470 U.S. at 77-82, 105 S.Ct. at 1094-96. The
Supreme Court's concern was clearly more expansive than the state
here admits.
I note that the majority places upon the
defendant the burden of informing the court whether the physical
evidence and the related expert testimony would play an important
role in the State's case. This marks a significant modification of
the Supreme Court's holding in Ake, which merely required the
defendant to demonstrate "to the trial court that his sanity is
likely to be a significant factor in his defense...." 470 U.S. at
83, 105 S.Ct. at 1097 (emphasis supplied). Ake is properly read as
requiring the defendant to show that from his perspective a given
issue will be critical. Accord Bowden v. Kemp, 767 F.2d 761, 764
(11th Cir.1985). The majority requires him to offer evidence from
the perspective of the prosecutor--an infinitely more difficult
burden
Moore's attorney did ask for assistance, in part,
"in order that the defendant can test the validity of and accuracy
of any tests which have been run by the State and the results of
which may be introduced into evidence against the defendant at trial...."
(emphasis supplied). This is at least suggestive that Moore's
attorney recognized that the physical evidence would be important to
the state's case and that he needed to be able to respond to it
The expert who examined the semen could only show
that it came from someone of Moore's blood group, a trait he shared
with forty per cent of the male population
The microanalyst of the hair samples admitted on
cross examination that "[a]s to whether or not they [the two hairs
from the towel] actually come from [a particular person] is
impossible to determine in forensic science." He further confessed
that his attempts to match a hair sample with a particular
individual are at best "right fifty-one percent of the time and
wrong forty-nine percent of the time."
The majority intimates at the end of its
discussion of this issue that any prejudice suffered by Moore
through failure to appoint an expert to assist him was, in effect,
harmless given that his attorney comprehensively cross-examined the
state's witnesses and that he did not renew his motion at trial
It is doubtful whether an adequate defense could
be had simply by impeaching the witnesses and their findings during
cross-examination. As the Supreme Court noted in Ake, expert
testimony is often of exceptional persuasiveness to a jury. Even
presentation of a contrary witness not billed as an "expert" is less
effective. 470 U.S. at 81, n. 7, 105 S.Ct. at 1096, n. 7. Of course,
the average juror would give even less credence to the naturally
biased observations of defense counsel in cross-examining state
witnesses or in making closing arguments. It is not enough to say
that the defendant has the opportunity to respond. Rather, he must
be assured of "a fair opportunity to present his defense." Id. at
76, 105 S.Ct. at 1093 (emphasis added).
See, e.g., Brooks v. Kemp, 762 F.2d 1383, 1394 n.
15 (11th Cir.1985) (en banc). Thus, for example, the Court today
resolves both the Brady-Giglio claim and the Spivey error, granting
relief on both grounds even though it could have remanded this case
on either ground alone
This presents a mixed question of law and fact.
Factual determinations attendant on a habeas petition are presumed
correct under 28 U.S.C.A. Sec. 2254(d) (1985). But the "presumption
of correctness does not apply to legal findings or to mixed
questions of law and fact," that is, " 'the application of legal
principles to the historical facts of [the] case.' " Hance v. Zant,
696 F.2d 940, 946-47 (11th Cir.) (brackets in Hance ) (quoting
Cuyler v. Sullivan, 446 U.S. 335, 342, 100 S.Ct. 1708, 1715, 64 L.Ed.2d
333 (1980)), cert. denied, 463 U.S. 1210, 103 S.Ct. 3544, 77 L.Ed.2d
1393 (1983), modified on other grounds, Brooks v. Zant, 762 F.2d
1383 (11th Cir.1985) (en banc ). In such cases, the "Judge must
exercise his own judgment on this blend of facts and their legal
values." Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. 443, 507, 73 S.Ct. 397, 446, 97
L.Ed. 469 (1953) (opinion of Frankfurter, J.). In a capital case "the
severity of the sentence mandates careful scrutiny in the review of
any colorable claim of error." Zant v. Stephens, 462 U.S. 862, 885,
103 S.Ct. 2733, 2747, 77 L.Ed.2d 235 (1983)
Now, I sympathize with someone that's [sic]
lacked a father; I was fortunate enough to have one and I sympathize
as far as Mrs. Moore is concerned about her son, but there is no way
that parents today can predict how their children are going to come
out, all they can do is the best they can. And I certainly don't
think that Carzell Moore is due any sympathy from you Lady and
Gentlemen for having a good mother.... Now, on the other hand,
you've got the Allens. The family is here, all of them. You've seen
them in Court, the Courtroom has been full of them. They've come up
here in the interest of their loved one just like Mrs. Moore comes
in the interest of her loved one. So, the reason for putting up to
Mr. Allen, I wanted you to find out something about Teresa just as
Carzell related something about himself.
* * *
Now, when you talk about useless killings, and I
think this killing was absolutely useless, there is absolutely no
mitigation, no mitigating circumstances whatsoever.... There was
absolutely no reason in the world for this young girl to have been
killed, and I think if you're going to discuss sympathy for Carzell
Moore, then you ought to certainly think about what Mr. Allen said
about the girl having been an honor graduate in high school, helping
her parents by working, trying to earn a living and get a decent
education, better herself, help her folks and here her life is ended
at age eighteen, by someone who displays no more emotion and no more
feeling, than to come in here to Court and just absolutely deny one
hundred percent something that you, Lady and Gentlemen, know that he
did and know full well that he did.
The trial court's ruling that Mr. Allen's
testimony could be admitted was also premised on the belief that it
would be limited to cumulative information that had come in at trial.
In this way it would be a mild rebuttal of sorts to Mrs. Moore's
testimony on behalf of her son and the hardships of his life. But in
fact the testimony elicited went far beyond what came in before.
Here, as elsewhere, the state trial judge seemed to have difficulty
controlling the prosecutor
They talk about it not being a deterrent in
crimes like this and they talk about it being a deterrent; factors
that play a part as to whether or not people will commit crimes of
this nature if they knew the punishment that would naturally follow
the consequences of their act, and that is, if people knew at the
time, would they do senseless crimes of this nature where there is
absolutely no reason and no justification, no mitigation whatsoever
and if the death penalty is not imposed in cases like this, then
what is the reason--[objection]
* * *
Well, I submit to you then, Lady and Gentlemen,
in this particular case that if the death penalty is not imposed,
then it is not a deterrent and that you might as well just kill the
witnesses, that you can just get by with it because there's nothing
else going to happen to [you], but you get a life sentence and you
might as well just kill them all. [objection]