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Harold
Wayne NICHOLS
A.K.A.: "Red-Headed Stranger"
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Serial rapist
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
September 30, 1988
Date of arrest:
January 5, 1989
Date of birth:
December 31, 1960
Victim profile:
Karen Pulley, 21
Method of murder: Hitting on the head with a board
Harold Wayne Nichols is on death row for
raping and murdering 21-year-old Karen Pulley in 1988. According to
court records, he hit her on the head with a board at least four
times, causing skull fractures and brain injuries.
State
High Court Upholds Harold Wayne Nichols Conviction
Chattanoogan.com
October 7, 2002
The Tennessee Supreme Court has ruled against a
post conviction petition for Harold Wayne Nichols, who was given the
death penalty for the 1988 murder of 21-year-old Karen Pulley.
Nichols had also been convicted in a string of
rapes of other women.
The vote was 4-1 with Justice Adolpho Birch writing
a dissenting opinion.
Judge D. Kelly Thomas Jr. had upheld the death
penalty, but ordered new sentencing hearings on the remaining
convictions.
The Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that Judge
Thomas erred by allowing Nichols to assert his right against self-incrimination
during the post-conviction proceedings, yet upheld the ruling of Judge
Thomas in all other respects.
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE
May 2, 2002 Session
HAROLD WAYNE NICHOLS v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal
Appeals
Criminal Court for Hamilton County
Nos. 205863, 213883-213896 D. Kelly Thomas, Jr.,
Judge, by Designation
No. E1998-00562-SC-R11-PD - Filed October 7, 2002
The petitioner, Harold Wayne Nichols, filed post-conviction
petitions seeking relief from his conviction for felony murder, his
sentence of death, and his numerous convictions for aggravated rape,
first degree burglary, and larceny upon the basis of ineffective
assistance of counsel, as well as other legal grounds. After
conducting several evidentiary hearings, the trial court denied relief
as to the felony murder conviction and sentence of death, but granted
partial relief by ordering new sentencing hearings as to the remaining
convictions. The Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that the trial
court erred by allowing the petitioner to assert his right against
self-incrimination during the post-conviction proceedings, yet upheld
the trial court’s judgment in all other respects.
After reviewing the record and applicable authority,
we conclude: (1) that the petitioner was not denied his right to the
effective assistance of counsel based on the failure to investigate
and challenge his confessions as false; (2) that the petitioner was
not denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel based on
the failure to challenge the legality of his arrest; (3) that the
petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to present additional mitigating evidence; (4) that the
petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to object to misconduct by the prosecution; (5) that the
petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to request mitigating instructions; (6) that the petitioner
was not denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel at the
sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the failure to raise
issues regarding the constitutionality of capital punishment; (7) that
the petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to object to the discovery of notes prepared by a defense
psychologist on self-incrimination grounds; (8) that the Court of
Criminal Appeals did not err in refusing to remand the case for
additional DNA testing; (9) that the Court of Criminal Appeals erred
by addressing the issue of whether the petitioner had a right against
self-incrimination in this post-conviction proceeding but the error
had no effect on the outcome; and (10) that the trial court’s findings
were not clearly erroneous and cumulative error did not require the
reversal of the petitioner’s convictions. Accordingly, we affirm the
Court of Criminal Appeals’ judgment.
Tenn. R. App. P. 11 Appeal by Permission; Judgment
of the Court of Criminal Appeals Affirmed
E. Riley Anderson, J., delivered the opinion of the
court, in which Frank F. Drowota, III, C.J., and Janice M. Holder, and
William M. Barker, JJ., joined. Adolpho A. Birch, Jr., J., filed a
concurring and dissenting opinion.
Ardena J. Garth, District Public Defender, and Mary
Ann Green, Assistant Public Defender, Chattanooga, Tennessee; Donald
E. Dawson, Post-Conviction Defender, and Catherine Y. Brockenborough,
Assistant Post-Conviction Defender, Nashville, Tennessee, for the
appellant, Harold Wayne Nichols.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter;
Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General; Gordon W. Smith, Associate
Solicitor General; Gill Robert Geldreich, Assistant Attorney General;
William H. Cox, III, District Attorney General; and C. Leland Davis,
C. Caldwell Huckabay, and Glenn R. Pruden, Assistant District
Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
David M. Eldridge and Jeanne L. Wiggins, Knoxville,
Tennessee, for Amicus Curiae, The National Association of Criminal
Defense Lawyers and The Tennessee Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers.
OPINION
BACKGROUND
Procedural History
The petitioner, Harold Wayne Nichols, was convicted
of felony murder and sentenced to death for the 1988 killing of 21-year-old
Karen Pulley in Chattanooga, Tennessee. In imposing the death penalty,
the jury found that Nichols had several prior convictions for violent
felonies, including five aggravated rapes committed against four
different victims. To place the issues in this post-conviction appeal
in the appropriate context, we first summarize the extensive
background facts and procedural history.
On September 30, 1988, the petitioner, Harold Wayne
Nichols, broke into a home in the Brainerd area of Chattanooga and
found the victim, Karen Pulley, alone in an upstairs bedroom. After
forcibly removing Pulley’s clothing, Nichols raped her and struck her
in the head with a board he had found in the home. After the rape,
Nichols struck the victim in the head with the board at least four
more times as she struggled. Although Pulley was found alive by one of
her roommates, she died the following day. The cause of death was the
blunt trauma to the victim’s head, which resulted in skull fractures
and massive brain injuries.
Several months later, on January 5, 1989, police
officers arrested Nichols after receiving information that he
committed several rapes in the East Ridge area near Chattanooga that
were unrelated to the Pulley rape and murder. When questioned by
officers of the East Ridge Police Department on January 6, 1989,
Nichols confessed to several rapes that occurred in December of 1988
and early January of 1989. When questioned later by Detective Richard
Heck of the Chattanooga Police Department, Nichols confessed to the
rape and murder of Karen Pulley and gave a videotaped statement in
which he discussed the layout of the victim’s home and bedroom, his
entry point into the home, the facts of the rape and murder, and his
disposal of the murder weapon.
Following these confessions, Nichols was first
charged with and convicted of numerous offenses involving four
different victims:[1] aggravated rape and first degree burglary
committed against T.R. on December 27, 1988; aggravated rape and first
degree burglary committed against S.T. on January 3, 1989; two counts
of aggravated rape and first degree burglary committed against P.R. on
January 3, 1989; and aggravated rape, first degree burglary, and petit
larceny against P.G. on December 20, 1988. Nichols pled guilty to the
offenses involving T.R. and S.T., but elected to go to jury trials for
the offenses involving P.G. and P.R. and was convicted.[2]
After these convictions, Nichols pled guilty to
charges of felony murder, aggravated rape, and first degree burglary
for the offenses against Karen Pulley. At a sentencing hearing to
determine the punishment for the felony murder conviction, the
prosecution sought the death penalty based upon two aggravating
circumstances: that Nichols had prior convictions for felonies
involving violence and that the killing of Pulley had occurred during
the commission of a felony. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-204(i)(2) and
(7). The State introduced Nichols’ five prior convictions for
aggravated rape against T.R., S.T., P.G., and P.R., as well as his
videotaped confession to the murder and rape of Karen Pulley.
In mitigation, the defense introduced evidence of
the defendant’s character and background. Reverend Robert Butler
testified that he had known Nichols since his childhood and that
Nichols had the “best quality” of character as a child. Winston Gonia,
a minister who had known Nichols since age ten, also testified that
Nichols was a good person. Similarly, Reverend Charles Hawkins
testified that he had visited Nichols at an orphanage on many
occasions and that Nichols had been a “very fine young man.” Reverend
Hawkins testified that he could not associate the crimes with the
person he once knew.
A co-employee, Larry Kilgore, testified that he
worked with Nichols at Godfather’s Pizza and considered Nichols to be
a dependable employee and a friend. Kilgore testified that Nichols had
received promotions leading to assistant manager and worked night
shifts and did paperwork. Kilgore was shocked at Nichols’ arrest and
said that the person who committed these crimes was not the person
that he knew.
The defendant’s wife, Joanne Nichols, testified
that she married Nichols in 1986 and that he was a perfect gentleman
who was nice, caring, and never mean to her. The couple lived for a
time with Nichols’ father, whom Joanne Nichols described as harsh and
unloving. She testified that her husband worked late hours and
sometimes did not come home all night. She did not think that Nichols
raped and killed the victim because he never showed any indication
that he would act in that manner. She admitted that she told an
investigating officer that Nichols had said the murder was an accident.
Finally, she testified that she did not want her husband to die.
Nichols, age 29 at the time of the sentencing
hearing, testified about his family background. When Nichols was ten
years of age, his mother died of cancer and he was placed in an
orphanage by his father. Nichols did not know why he had been placed
in the orphanage and did not recall any abuse taking place while he
was there. When Nichols was about to be adopted in 1976, he was
instead returned to his father with whom he had a difficult
relationship.
Nichols joined the army and received an honorable
discharge in 1984. He married his wife, Joanne Nichols, in 1986, and
he believed they had a good marriage. Nichols testified that he had a
prior conviction for assault with intent to commit rape and that he
had a daughter through a prior relationship for whom he paid child
support up until the time of his arrest. Nichols said that he enjoyed
his job and had received promotions from cook to assistant manager.
Nichols testified that when he committed acts of
violence, he had a “strange energized feeling” that he could not
resist or stop. He conceded that he had never sought help for or told
anyone about his criminal activity. He did not know Karen Pulley and
intended only to burglarize her home and not to kill her. He knew
Pulley was hurt during his attack but he did nothing to help her;
instead, he disposed of the murder weapon and his clothing. Although
he was remorseful, he admitted that he would have continued his
violent behavior had he not been arrested.
Dr. Eric Engum, a clinical psychologist, testified
that he met with Nichols five or six times and that Nichols was of
“high average” intelligence and fairly articulate. He diagnosed
Nichols with “intermittent explosive disorder,” which is marked by an
irresistible drive to commit a violent, destructive act until the act
is committed. Dr. Engum testified that the condition may relate to
organic factors or developmental factors such as a hostile environment,
abuse, absence of love, and abandonment. In Nichols’ case, there was
the presence of a harsh, hostile father and the abandonment of being
placed in an orphanage after his mother’s death. Dr. Engum testified
that Nichols was not a psychopath and was not always violent or evil;
indeed, according to Dr. Engum, Nichols’ confessions reflected his
“good side taking responsibility for what [his] bad side did.” Dr.
Engum concluded that Nichols would function well in an
institutionalized setting but would repeat the destructive behavior if
released.
The jury imposed a sentence of death after finding
that the evidence of the two aggravating circumstances outweighed the
evidence of mitigating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt. The
trial court later imposed a 60-year sentence for the aggravated rape
and a 15-year sentence for the first degree burglary, to be served
consecutively. This Court affirmed the convictions and the sentence of
death on direct appeal. State v. Nichols, 877 S.W.2d 722 (Tenn.
1994).[3]
Post-Conviction Proceedings
In April of 1995, Nichols filed a petition for
post-conviction relief seeking to set aside his felony murder
conviction and death sentence. In December of 1996, he filed post-conviction
petitions challenging all of the aggravated rape and related
convictions in the non-capital cases. The main allegation underlying
all of the post-conviction petitions was that the petitioner was
denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel under the
United States and Tennessee Constitutions.
The trial court conducted evidentiary hearings on
the post-conviction petitions over the course of eight days,
considered thousands of pages of records and documentary evidence, and
heard testimony from dozens of witnesses. Nichols introduced extensive
evidence in an effort to show that his trial counsel were ineffective
in his capital and non-capital cases because they failed to
investigate evidence of his innocence and failed to challenge his
numerous confessions to all of the offenses. Nichols also introduced
the testimony of numerous witnesses that he contends should have been
presented as mitigating evidence in the penalty phase of his capital
trial. Although the State called Nichols to testify in support of his
allegations, Nichols invoked his constitutional right against self-incrimination
and refused to answer questions.
The petitioner’s trial counsel in all of the cases
were Hugh Moore and Rosemary Bryan. Moore had defended defendants in
two capital cases before representing Nichols and had published work
in a capital defense manual. Bryan had worked on one prior capital
case, had attended numerous seminars in criminal defense, and had a
practice consisting of 40 to 70 percent criminal cases. Moore and
Bryan presented time records indicating that they worked over 1,300
out-of-court hours and 259 in-court hours on the Karen Pulley case, in
addition to over 650 out-of-court hours and nearly 30 in-court hours
on the other cases.
Following the hearings, the trial court made
detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law and denied post-conviction
relief by upholding the felony murder conviction, the death sentence,
and all of the non-capital convictions. The trial court, however,
granted partial relief by ordering new sentencing proceedings on the
non-capital convictions.[4] Although the Court of Criminal Appeals
concluded that Nichols should not have been permitted to invoke his
right against self-incrimination in these post-conviction proceedings
and that a reviewing court is allowed to draw a negative inference
from such a failure to testify, it nonetheless held that the evidence
supported all of the other determinations made by the trial court and
affirmed its judgment.
We granted this appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The April 1995 petition challenging Nichols’
conviction for felony murder and death sentence is governed by the
Post-Conviction Procedure Act then in effect, which required that
allegations be proven by a preponderance of evidence. See Tenn. Code
Ann. § 40-30-101, et seq. (1990). The December 1996 petition
challenging all of the convictions in the non-capital cases is
governed by the more recent Post-Conviction Procedure Act, which
requires that allegations be proven by clear and convincing evidence.
See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-210(f) (1997).
A trial court’s findings of fact are conclusive on
appeal unless the evidence in the record preponderates against them.
State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d 453, 461 (Tenn. 1999). When reviewing factual
issues, the appellate court will not re-weigh or re-evaluate the
evidence; moreover, factual questions involving the credibility of
witnesses or the weight of their testimony are matters for the trial
court to resolve. Henley v. State, 960 S.W.2d 572, 579 (Tenn. 1997).
When reviewing legal issues, however, or a mixed question of law and
fact such as an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the appellate
court’s review is de novo with no presumption of correctness. State v.
Burns, 6 S.W.3d at 461.
INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
To establish ineffective assistance of counsel
under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and
article I, § 9 of the Tennessee Constitution, a petitioner must show
that counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficiency
prejudiced the defense. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
692, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 2067, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984); Goad v. State, 938
S.W.2d 363, 370 (Tenn. 1996). Because a petitioner must establish both
prongs of the test, a failure to prove either deficiency or prejudice
provides a sufficient basis to deny relief on the ineffective
assistance claim. Id.
To prove a deficiency in counsel’s performance, a
petitioner must show that counsel’s acts or omissions were so serious
that they fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under
prevailing professional norms. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688, 104 S.Ct.
at 2064; Baxter v. Rose, 523 S.W.2d 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975). As this
Court has observed:
[T]he assistance of counsel required under the
Sixth Amendment is counsel reasonably likely to render and rendering
reasonably effective assistance. It is a violation of this standard
for defense counsel to deprive a criminal defendant of a substantial
defense by his own ineffectiveness or incompetence. . . . Defense
counsel must perform at least as well as a lawyer with ordinary
training and skill in the criminal law and must conscientiously
protect his client’s interests, undeflected by conflicting
considerations. . . .
Id. at 934-35 (quoting Beasley v. United States,
491 F.2d 687, 696 (6th Cir. 1974) (citations omitted)). In reviewing
counsel’s conduct, a “fair assessment . . . requires that every effort
be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to
reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to
evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689, 104 S.Ct. at 2065.
A key aspect of counsel’s performance pertinent to
the allegations raised in this case is counsel’s duty to investigate.
Defense counsel “must conduct appropriate investigations, both factual
and legal,” and “must assert them in a proper and timely manner.”
Baxter, 523 S.W.2d at 932, 935. As the United States Supreme Court has
said, “counsel has the duty to make reasonable investigations or to
make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
unnecessary.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691, 104 S. Ct. at 2052.
Although a defendant’s statements or confessions do not eliminate
counsel’s duty to investigate, the reasonableness of counsel’s actions
“may be determined or substantially influenced by the defendant’s own
statements or actions.” Id. at 691, 104 S. Ct. at 2066. Moreover,
counsel’s conduct must be “assessed for reasonableness in all the
circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s
judgments.” State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d at 462.
To establish that a deficiency resulted in
prejudice, a petitioner “must show that there is a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result
of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability
is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S.Ct. at 2068. In short, a petitioner
must establish that the deficiency of counsel was of such a degree
that it deprived the defendant of a fair trial and called into
question the reliability of the outcome. State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d at
463. In cases involving a guilty plea, a petitioner must establish
that but for counsel’s deficiency, he would have gone to trial instead
of entering the plea of guilty. Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 59, 106
S. Ct. 366, 370 (1985).
ANALYSIS
I. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel – Failure
to Investigate
A. Petitioner’s Allegations
The petitioner argues that he was denied his right
to the effective assistance of counsel with respect to his felony
murder capital conviction and with respect to all of his non-capital
convictions. His underlying arguments are two-fold: that his trial
counsel failed to investigate evidence of his innocence and failed to
challenge all of his confessions in light of the evidence of his
innocence. Nichols also argues that the Court of Criminal Appeals
applied an incorrect standard of review by requiring him to prove his
actual innocence of the offenses. We will review each of his
underlying arguments and analyze them in light of trial counsel’s
conduct and performance.
1. Serology Evidence Regarding Karen Pulley and
T.R.
The petitioner argues that his counsel were
ineffective for failing to investigate serology evidence that excluded
him as the perpetrator of the murder and aggravated rape of Karen
Pulley, notwithstanding his guilty plea to the offenses. Relying upon
a report prepared in 1989 by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation,
the petitioner argues that spermatozoa found in a vaginal swab taken
from the victim, which did not contain A, B or H antigens, excluded
him as the perpetrator because he is a blood type O secretor who
produces H antigens in his bodily fluids.
Mike VanSant, a former T.B.I. serologist, testified
at the post-conviction hearing that massive bleeding and blood
transfusions may affect serological tests on blood samples but not on
saliva or vaginal samples. Although VanSant testified that semen from
a vaginal swab is distinguishable from blood even when the vaginal
swab is bloody, he agreed that the blood flow will have a “cleansing
action” over a period of time. He was then asked:
Q. [B]ut just because there’s a lot of blood, that
doesn’t hide the fact that there’s semen there, that whatever antigens
you would get from the semen?
A: Not necessarily.
There was no further testimony or evidence
following up on this issue; accordingly, given the equivocal nature of
the evidence regarding whether massive bleeding may have had a
cleansing action that affected the discovery of antigens, as well as
the lack of expert testimony indicating that the petitioner was
excluded as the perpetrator, the Court of Criminal Appeals concluded
that the evidence was inconclusive.
Similarly, Nichols claims that serology evidence
excluded him from the class of possible offenders in the aggravated
rape of T.R., notwithstanding his guilty plea to the offense. In
particular, he argues that saliva and vaginal swabs of the victim
revealed the presence of a type B antigen and that he and the victim
were both type O secretors who secreted only type H antigens.
VanSant testified that as a T.B.I. serologist in
1989, he tested a saliva sample taken from T.R., which revealed a B
antigen, and a vaginal sample, which revealed B and H antigens in
three of four tests and only an H antigen in one of the four tests. He
indicated that he did not test the saliva sample for semen and that
the results were therefore inconclusive. Although VanSant agreed that
it was a “definite possibility” that the rapist was a type B secretor,
he testified that he also found a sample of spermatozoa on the victim’s
bedspread that contained only type H antigens. According to Van Sant,
the type H antigen could only have been produced by the victim,
Nichols or any other type O secretor; moreover, although the type B
antigen must have been produced by someone other than the petitioner,
its presence did not exclude the petitioner or anyone else as the
perpetrator of the offense.
VanSant testified that he was unaware at the time
he performed his analysis that the victim had sexual relations three
days before the offense:
[T]here were seven areas of stain on the bedspread
. . . . Had I known that she had voluntary sexual intercourse
previously I would have tested maybe two or three different areas to
try to find something different than the H [antigen] because, you
know, I can’t say, that could just be hers.
Although VanSant said he would not expect to find
antigens in a sample three days after sexual intercourse, he
acknowledged that the relevant “literature” states that antigens may
be found up to nine days later. After reviewing all of the evidence,
the Court of Criminal Appeals again determined that the evidence was
inconclusive.
2. Murder Weapon
The petitioner contends that his counsel were
ineffective because they failed to investigate the circumstances
concerning the officers’ discovery of the alleged murder weapon. As
stated above, Nichols’ confession to the murder and rape of Karen
Pulley indicates that he gave a detailed description of the route he
used in fleeing the scene and of the area in which he had disposed of
the two-by-four by throwing it out of his car window. According to
Detective Heck, the petitioner accompanied officers to the scene and a
board was found that the petitioner stated “looked like the one he
threw out the window of his car.”
At the post-conviction hearing, Steve Miller, an
officer with the Chattanooga Police Department, testified that he did
not find a two-by-four board in his search of the area where it was
later found. Susan Saunders Massey, who was Karen Pulley’s roommate,
testified she was taken to the area by police and saw a two-by-four
leaning against a tree. She did not recognize the board but believed
there had been a two-by-four in their home under a washer that was
being repaired. Finally, Dr. Neal Haskeall, a forensic entomologist,
testified that no blood or fiber evidence was found on the two-by-four
that linked Nichols to the murder of Karen Pulley. He also found no
evidence of plant material even though the board was allegedly
discarded by the petitioner in September of 1988 and not recovered
until January of 1989.
3. Hair Evidence
The petitioner argues that his counsel were
ineffective for failing to investigate hair samples collected from the
Karen Pulley crime scene; in particular, evidence at the post-conviction
hearing indicated that two slides containing several samples from the
pubic area of the victim each revealed one hair that was inconsistent
with Pulley or Nichols. The petitioner argues that the evidence may
have established reasonable doubt inasmuch as the evidence also showed
that the victim had never had sexual intercourse before the rape.
As the Court of Criminal Appeals observed, the
report prepared by Forensic Science Associates and relied upon by
Nichols was not dated until after the post-conviction hearings
concluded; thus, the State had no opportunity to contest the issue and
no expert witness testified as to the result. In any event, the report
itself stressed that because “hairs are ubiquitous in the environment,
degrade very slowly, and are easily inadvertently picked up,
transferred, or shed, a loose hair is of relatively little
significance without some independent knowledge that it is related to
the incident being investigated.” The evidence showed that Karen
Pulley lived with two other women from whom hair samples were not
evaluated as reference samples as part of the forensic evaluation now
relied upon by the petitioner.
4. Alibi Defense
Nichols contends that his trial counsel were
ineffective for failing to investigate evidence of alibi defenses for
all of the offenses. During post conviction, Nichols cited evidence
that he was at work at the time an offense was committed against T.M.
– an offense not at issue in this post-conviction proceeding – and
argued that the evidence of an alibi for this offense should have
prompted his trial counsel into investigating defenses for all of the
other offenses to which he gave false confessions. The record
indicates, however, that Nichols confessed and later pled guilty to
the offense against T.M., and was also identified by T.M. as the
person who attacked her. Although the petitioner argues this “rock
solid” alibi should have prompted trial counsel to investigate alibi
defenses in the other cases, he did not present any alibi evidence at
the post-conviction hearing regarding any of the offenses at issue in
this proceeding.
5. Other Evidence and Suspects
The petitioner argues that his counsel were
ineffective for failing to investigate that a pistol recovered from
the trunk of his car did not match the description of a “blue steel
revolver” used in the offense against S.T. The record reflects that
Nichols confessed to the offense against S.T. and entered a guilty
plea; before the plea was entered, the prosecutor stated that S.T. had
identified Nichols from a photograph and that Nichols had consented to
a search of his car that revealed a .38 revolver belonging to S.T.
According to Dwight Short, a witness presented at
the post-conviction hearing by the petitioner, a property sheet
prepared by police officers indicated that the pistol was an “Auto
SST,” which he interpreted to mean a stainless steel automatic. Short
also testified, however, that the serial number recorded for the
pistol on the property report was traced to a “three inch .38 Ross
revolver with a blue finish.”
In addition, the petitioner argued that his counsel
were ineffective for failing to investigate a suspect named Fred Coats
because there was evidence that a police dog tracked a scent from P.R.’s
residence following the offense to a car owned by Coats’ mother and
that P.R. had identified Coats. The record reveals, however, that
during the aggravated rape trial of P.R., the victim testified that
she saw a photograph of Coats in which there were features that
resembled the perpetrator. After later seeing Coats in a lineup,
however, she told the officers he was not the rapist. She also
testified that she identified Nichols as the one who had raped her,
and she made an in-court identification of him at trial. The
petitioner asserted that the defense failed to pursue other possible
suspects as well.
6. Ofshe Deposition
In addition to presenting evidence of alleged
innocence, Nichols presented the deposition of Dr. Richard Ofshe, a
Ph.D. in sociology, who teaches, works, and researches in the field of
police interrogations and false confessions. Ofshe discussed
“coercive” interrogation techniques, which can lead to false
confessions through the making of threats or promises, and
“persuading” interrogation techniques, which can lead to false
confessions by convincing an innocent suspect that he or she committed
the crimes. Ofshe testified that numerous factors must be reviewed in
analyzing the nature of the interrogation and the veracity of a
confession: whether a confession has been recorded in its entirety;
whether the confession contains any details uniquely known to the
defendant; whether the confession has been tainted or contaminated by
an officer telling the suspect the facts of the offense; and whether
the confession is corroborated by other evidence.
After reviewing Nichols’ confessions, Ofshe
determined that there were no indications as to how the statements
came about or whether they were reliable. In Ofshe’s view, trial
counsel should have investigated whether officers told Nichols that he
would receive “treatment” in exchange for his statements, whether
officers “rehearsed” Nichols’ statements before recording them, and
whether Nichols had requested an attorney. Ofshe testified that there
were no indications in the record that trial counsel had investigated
the circumstances of the confessions, despite the lack of physical
evidence, and that any attorney who fails to conduct an investigation
cannot competently advise a defendant on whether to plead guilty or go
to trial.
Ofshe acknowledged that at the time of the offenses,
confessions, and convictions in this case, his field of study was in
its earliest stages with regard to research and publication. Ofshe did
not testify regarding any of Nichols’ traits or characteristics that
may have made him susceptible to undue pressure or risk of giving a
false confession under the interrogation techniques he had described.
Ofshe admitted that he never met with the petitioner.
Applying Ofshe’s framework, the petitioner asserts
that his confessions bore several indicia of falsity and unreliability.
For instance, he contends that his confessions to the offenses against
T.R., S.T., P.G., and P.R. were coached by East Ridge investigators
who used leading questions to elicit one-word responses in a short
period of time. He also asserts that the interrogation was
contaminated by the fact that investigators showed him incident
reports of the offenses and prompted him with regard to details.
Similarly, the petitioner now argues that his confession to the Pulley
offenses was coached by Detective Richard Heck of the Chattanooga
Police Department and contained details that were inconsistent with
the actual facts of the investigation.
B. Counsel’s Conduct
Hugh Moore, lead counsel for Nichols, testified
that he reviewed files and records, talked to investigating officers,
interviewed witnesses, and visited the crime scenes. He was aware the
prosecution’s strategy was to obtain convictions for the rapes and
then to use those convictions in seeking the death penalty for the
murder of Karen Pulley, and he argued at trial and on appeal that the
procedure was improper because the rape offenses had occurred later in
time.[5] When asked whether he had considered filing a motion for a
speedy trial on the Karen Pulley charges, Moore said he was concerned
such a strategy would reduce the amount of time in which they had to
prepare for the capital charge.
Moore conceded that the guilty pleas were entered
with respect to the charges against S.T. and T.R. before the
petitioner had received an independent psychiatric examination. He
stated, however, that there been no evidence to support a mental
incapacity or insanity defense when Nichols was examined by state-employed
mental health professionals following the charges. Moore conceded that
he did not cross-examine the victims in the trials of P.G. and P.R.,
and therefore did not ask them about their identifications of the
petitioner or other possible suspects.
Moore was questioned about the defense’s
consideration of various issues such as serology reports, hair samples,
other possible suspects, weapon description, and other matters. He did
not recall exactly why the defense had not pursued DNA testing, but
expressed concern that a result adverse to Nichols could have been
used against the defense. Although Moore was unable to recall some
details relating to the investigation, he reiterated several times
that the strategy had been shaped by Nichols’ numerous confessions to
the charged offenses, including the murder and rape of Karen Pulley.
Moore and his co-counsel spent nearly 70 hours
meeting with Nichols in prison, during which Nichols consistently
confirmed his statements to officers. Moore concluded that Nichols had
said nothing to indicate the confessions were false or had been
coerced and that investigation of other suspects “did not seem
fruitful.” When they were unsuccessful at having Nichols’ statements
suppressed, counsel focused upon presenting a mitigating defense to
the death penalty, a strategy with which Nichols was familiar and
understood. Moore did not believe that any of the evidence at the
post-conviction hearing would have changed Nichols’ decisions to plead
guilty or the defense’s mitigation strategy.
Rosemary Bryan, co-counsel, testified that her
investigation included numerous conversations with Nichols, reviewing
the prosecution’s files, interviewing police officers, and attempting
to interview the victims of the rapes, who declined to speak with her.
Bryan admitted that Nichols pled guilty to two of the rapes, T.R. and
S.T., because he wanted to “get them over with” and because other
charges were dismissed in return. She admitted that although these
guilty pleas were entered prior to Dr. Engum’s examination of Nichols,
the petitioner had already been examined by Dr. Nickerson, who had
found no basis for a competency or insanity issue. Bryan could not
recall why the cases involving P.G. and P.R. went to trial or why the
victims were not asked about other possible suspects. She believed
that P.R. was not asked about Fred Coats as a possible suspect because
the victim’s direct testimony fully explained why she had
misidentified Coats.
Bryan testified that the petitioner had admitted
the facts against him in “great detail” and that he never told her the
confessions were false or coerced. She described Nichols’ statements
to her about the offenses as “very vivid,” containing facts that only
he and the victims would have known. Bryan testified that the defense
investigated many of the issues raised by Nichols in post-conviction,
such as the victims’ identifications of the petitioner, the
suppression of statements, and possible alibi defenses. With regard to
possible alibi defenses, for example, Bryan testified:
Another thing we were aware of is that [Nichols]
was clocked in some of the times that some of the rapes were supposed
to have occurred, but I talked to [Nichols] about those things. . . .
There was one, and it may have been [T.M.], where
he supposedly could not have done it according to his wife. Well, I
spent many, many hours talking to [Nichols and his wife] about this
time thing and was this really a defense we had and it turned out it
wasn’t and again I don’t remember why. It was either he was clocked in
but he had [gone] to deliver a pizza.
Bryan testified that “there were things like that .
. . we looked at and tried to ascertain if they would be helpful and
they weren’t . . . .” She concluded that challenging all of the
confessions as false would have been “ludicrous” and would have
required that the defense “manufacture a defense.”
Although she and Moore investigated all of the
offenses, Bryan said that most of their work was on the death penalty
case and that Nichols played a knowing, active role in formulating the
defense strategy. Bryan said that the defense focus became mitigation
but that she and Moore very carefully decided what witnesses to
present in the penalty phase. She believed that the petitioner’s
family were not as cooperative with regard to testifying at trial as
they appeared to be in post-conviction.
Michael Cohan testified that he worked with lawyers
Moore and Bryan as an investigator. Cohan, who had years of experience
in law enforcement before becoming a private investigator, recorded
163 hours locating and interviewing witnesses and over 50 hours
discussing the defense with counsel. Cohan testified that Nichols told
him extensive details about his attack on Karen Pulley that
corroborated the facts he had told investigating officers, as well as
additional facts. Cohan testified that he worked primarily on the
Pulley offense but also worked on the other cases when requested to do
so by trial counsel.
C. Findings and Conclusions
1. Karen Pulley Offenses
After reviewing all of the testimony and evidence
from the trial and extensive post-conviction hearings, the trial court
determined that the ineffective assistance of counsel claim with
respect to the Karen Pulley offenses was without merit:
Trial counsel and investigator Cohan testified that
any allegation that counsel should have more fully researched the
possibility of a false confession was ‘ludicrous.’ The petitioner gave
very detailed statements to trial counsel separate from his statements
given to the police. Trial counsel testified that they thoroughly
discussed the options available with the petitioner and that the
petitioner understood that his confessions would be very damaging
evidence at the guilt phase. They advised him that if he entered a
guilty plea and took responsibility for his actions that the jury
might take this into consideration in the penalty phase despite the
obviously weighty aggravating factors. Under all the circumstances,
the decision to plea was a strategic decision which will not now be
questioned using 20-20 hindsight. It is also noted that counsel’s time
records ‘speak for themselves’ as to the substantial amount of time
expended by counsel on this case.
We agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals that
the evidence in the record does not preponderate against the trial
court’s factual findings. With respect to the murder and rape of Karen
Pulley, trial counsel testified regarding their investigation and
defense strategy, which they admitted was influenced by Nichols’
confessions. The petitioner’s detailed and emotional videotaped
confession to the murder and rape, for instance, described the victim’s
house, the petitioner’s point of entry, the layout of the bedroom, and
the facts of the rape and murder. The petitioner also consistently
admitted his guilt regarding the Pulley offense to his counsel,
investigator, and mental health expert. As we have noted, it is
entirely reasonable for counsel’s actions to be influenced by a
defendant’s own statements. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. at
691, 104 S. Ct. at 2066 (stating that reasonableness of counsel’s
actions “may be determined or substantially influenced by the
defendant’s own statements or actions”).
In addition, the record reveals substantial
evidence corroborating the testimony of trial counsel and the defense
investigator. At the sentencing phase for the rape and murder, for
example, Nichols admitted that he broke into the victim’s home, raped
her, and killed her when he was trying to leave. The petitioner’s wife
also indicated that she had asked about the Karen Pulley offense and
that the petitioner told her that it was an accident. Dr. Engum’s
testimony at sentencing also indicated that Nichols had committed the
offenses against Karen Pulley.
Nichols continued to admit his guilt even after the
sentencing hearing. Bryan testified, for example, that the petitioner
met with Karen Pulley’s mother after the death sentence had been
returned and in a brief but emotional meeting, “apologized over and
over for what he had done to her daughter . . . .” Similarly, the
petitioner’s uncle, Claude Nichols, testified during post conviction
that he visited his nephew in prison after the Karen Pulley trial and
that he admitted the crimes. Lastly, Dr. David Solovay, a clinical
psychologist relied upon by the petitioner in this post-conviction
proceeding, indicated that the petitioner had expressed his guilt and
remorse.
Despite his confessions and statements, the
petitioner’s main argument is that his confessions should have been
challenged as false because they contained inaccuracies and omissions
and because there was evidence of his innocence. The argument is
immediately undercut, however, by the fact that the petitioner never
refuted his confessions or his own statements to his trial counsel and
others. As the Court of Criminal Appeals stated, it is in this context
in which trial counsel’s conduct must be viewed:
[W]e will first consider the situation in which
trial counsel found themselves at the time of the petitioner’s trials.
The petitioner had given multiple confessions to the offenses with
which he was charged . . . . The petitioner’s statements to both trial
counsel, as well as their investigator, were consistent with his
confessions to law enforcement officers. Trial counsel’s motions to
suppress the confessions was unsuccessful. The petitioner has not
attempted to explain how, in view of his continuing to assert that the
confessions were true, trial counsel could have effectively presented
a ‘false confession’ defense.
(emphasis added).
The evidence presented at post-conviction did not
alter the fact that the petitioner consistently admitted his guilt and
never provided a basis for a false confession defense. Nichols never
told his counsel, for example, that the confession to the Karen Pulley
offenses was false or coerced. Morever, there was no evidence
presented at post-conviction indicating that the petitioner suffered
from a mental impairment, intellectual deficiency, or other condition
that rendered him prone to being led or confessing falsely. Although
Dr. Ofshe discussed the issue of false confessions in general, he
never met the petitioner and did not address any of the petitioner’s
own characteristics. Indeed, as the intermediate court noted:
There was not, and has never been, a showing that
the petitioner was susceptible to suggestions and pressure and might
have been led into giving false confessions. In fact, had trial
counsel tried to present such a claim, they would have been confronted
by proof showing that the petitioner was twenty-eight years old and
married, with three previous felony convictions and time spent in the
Tennessee prison system. Thus, he could not have claimed youth and
experience as reasons for falsely confessing.
Accordingly, when viewed in the appropriate context
– that applicable to trial counsel at the time of their representation
– we agree with the trial court’s conclusion that the evidence
presented during the post-conviction failed to establish that trial
counsel’s performance was deficient. The evidence showed that counsel
and their investigator put thousands of hours into the investigation
of the offenses and considered numerous issues and the viability of
several possible defenses. They had numerous meetings and
conversations with the petitioner, who was aware of and understood the
evidence of his guilt and the strategy used in his defense. While the
lens of hindsight indicates that trial counsel could have developed
some of the issues more fully, such as the serology and the absence of
physical evidence on the alleged murder weapon relating to Karen
Pulley, Nichols still confessed and the issues were fully litigated by
the post-conviction trial court. In sum, as the trial court found,
nothing at post-conviction established that trial counsel’s
representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness
either in failing to investigate evidence of innocence or in failing
to challenge the confessions as false when viewed in the context of
the petitioner’s own confessions and statements of guilt.
In addition, we also agree with the Court of
Criminal Appeals’ conclusion that the petitioner failed to show any
prejudice under the second prong of the analysis with respect to his
guilty plea to the offenses involving Karen Pulley.[6] As we have
pointed out in great detail, the record reveals that Nichols confessed
to the offenses against Karen Pulley and that he knowingly and
voluntarily entered pleas of guilty. The petitioner was well aware
that the defense strategy was to accept responsibility for his actions
and focus on mitigating evidence. Moreover, given his confessions and
the consistent statements of guilt he made to his trial counsel and
others, it would be speculation to find that the evidence at the post-conviction,
which did not exclude Nichols as the perpetrator or otherwise
establish a defense, would have resulted in a decision to proceed to
trial instead of pleading guilty. See Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. at
59, 106 S. Ct. at 370.
2. Non-Capital Convictions
The trial court’s findings with respect to counsel’s
performance in the rape cases involving T.R., S.T., P.G., and P.R.
were nearly identical to its findings with respect to counsel’s
performance in the Karen Pulley cases, and it concluded that the
petitioner had not established his allegations by clear and convincing
evidence. We again agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals that the
evidence in the record does not preponderate against the trial court’s
factual findings and that the petitioner failed to establish that
trial counsel were deficient.
As with the Karen Pulley case, trial counsel’s
investigation and defense were reasonably shaped by Nichols’
confessions and statements to the non-capital offenses. Nichols
confessed to the offenses involving T.R., S.T., P.G., and P.R. His
confession to the rape of P.R. described his entry into the victim’s
home with a screwdriver, the location of the victim, the clothing he
tore from the victim, and the circumstances of the offense. His
confession to the rape of P.G. described his entry, use of a knife,
the location of the victim on a couch in the living room, and the
facts of the offense.
Although the petitioner now argues that his trial
counsel failed to investigate evidence of his innocence and failed to
challenge his confessions as false because they were given in a short
period of time in response to leading questions asked by police
officers, we once again observe that he never refuted his confessions
or his statements to his trial counsel and never provided a basis for
a false confession defense. In addition, the record reveals that
substantial evidence corroborated trial counsel’s testimony. By
entering guilty pleas for the offenses against S.T., for example, the
petitioner acknowledged the evidence of his guilt, which included S.T.’s
identification of him from a photograph and the finding of a pistol
belonging to S.T. in his car. In entering guilty pleas for the
offenses against T.R., the petitioner conceded the evidence of his
guilt and knowingly and voluntarily waived his right to a jury trial.
Finally, in the trials for the offenses against P.G. and P.R., the
victims made in-court identifications of the petitioner as the
assailant, and the juries found that the petitioner’s guilt was proven
beyond a reasonable doubt.
In sum, the evidence at the post-conviction
hearings did not establish the deficient performance of counsel given
the petitioner’s confessions and consistent statements of guilt. We
conclude that trial counsel’s representation did not fall below an
objective standard of reasonableness either in failing to investigate
any evidence of innocence or in failing to challenge the confessions
as false.
In addition, we agree with the Court of Criminal
Appeals’ conclusion that Nichols failed to show any prejudice under
the second prong of the analysis. As we have discussed, the record
reveals that Nichols confessed to the offenses against T.R. and S.T.
and that he knowingly and voluntarily entered pleas of guilty to the
offenses. In light of his confessions and consistent statements of
guilt, as well as trial counsel’s testimony that the petitioner was
fully aware of the defense strategy and all of his options, it would
be speculation to find from any of the evidence introduced at post-conviction
that he would have proceeded to trial instead of pleading guilty. See
Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. at 59, 106 S. Ct at 370. Similarly, the
petitioner’s confessions to the offenses committed against P.G. and
P.R. were read to the jury in the trials for those offenses, and the
victims identified him as the perpetrator. The evidence at post-conviction
with respect to P.G. and P.R. therefore failed to establish a
reasonable probability of a different outcome but for the performance
of counsel.
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel – Unlawful
Arrest
The petitioner argues that his trial counsel were
ineffective for failing to seek suppression of his statements on the
basis that he was arrested without a warrant and without probable
cause on January 5, 1989. Nichols asserts that police notes indicate
that it was not until after his arrest that at least three of the
victims identified him from a photograph taken by police on January 6,
1989, and that the statements he made during the period of alleged
illegal detention should have been suppressed. The State maintains
that the police verified the anonymous tip by discovering evidence of
Nichols’ prior arrest for a sex crime and that an arrest was made
after at least one of the victims identified Nichols from his mug shot.
The trial court reviewed the evidence in the record
and the testimony of trial counsel, who recalled that they vigorously
sought suppression of Nichols’ statements on numerous grounds.
Although the trial court determined that counsel “should have more
fully pursued this issue,” it found that
[v]iewing the exhibits and records as a whole, it
appears that some of the photo identifications occurred after the
petitioner’s arrest. This fact, however, does not establish that none
of the identifications occurred before his arrest. Numerous documents
and/or statements refer to some pre-arrest identifications. . . . No
victims were called to ask at what point they had made these
identifications. Although petitioner has pointed out the ambiguities,
. . . he has failed to establish the lack of any pre-arrest
identifications and thus has failed to establish any prejudice. . . .
We agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals’
conclusion that the record does not preponderate against the trial
court’s factual findings inasmuch as there is evidence in the record
indicating that Nichols had been identified before his arrest. An
offense report dated January 6, 1989 and prepared by the East Ridge
Police Department states that officers received an anonymous tip on
January 5, 1989, which led to a computer check and discovery of
Nichols’ prior arrest for a sex offense. The report indicates that a
victim identified Nichols as the perpetrator from his mug shot and
that “she was the fourth victim in a row” to identify Nichols. In
addition, the record reveals that at the trial of P.R., Captain
Holland of the East Ridge Police Department testified that the victim
identified Nichols prior to his arrest on January 5, 1989. As both the
trial court and Court of Criminal Appeals observed, none of the
victims were called to testify in post-conviction as to when they made
an identification of Nichols. Accordingly, we conclude that the
evidence in the record does not preponderate against the trial court’s
factual findings on this claim and that the petitioner has failed to
establish that his trial counsel were deficient on this ground.
In a similar vein, Nichols argues that counsel were
ineffective for failing to seek suppression of his statements on the
basis that he was not taken before a judicial officer within 72 hours
of his arrest. The trial court specifically rejected the basis for
this claim:
Although no paperwork on the arraignment was
introduced, there was evidence of an arraignment. In the transcript of
the motion to suppress, the petitioner himself referred numerous times
to the fact that he was arraigned the day after he was arrested. . . .
In addition, [the assistant district attorney’s] notes refer to an
arraignment before a special judge as well. Under these circumstances,
petitioner has not established that he was not arraigned, that counsel
was ineffective or that he was in any way prejudiced by counsel’s
failure to challenge the timing of the arraignment.
We agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals’
conclusion that the evidence in the record does not preponderate
against the trial court’s factual findings on this issue. We also
agree that the petitioner failed to show that suppression would not
have been required given that Nichols was read his Miranda rights,
that he confessed within 24 hours of his arrest, and that there
appeared to be no intervening circumstances or misconduct in regard to
obtaining the confessions. See State v. Huddleston, 924 S.W.2d 666,
674 (Tenn. 1996). In sum, we conclude that the petitioner failed to
establish that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel on
this basis.
III. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel –
Mitigating Evidence
A. Standards in Capital Sentencing
The Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United
States Constitution mandate that a death sentence be based on a
“particularized consideration of relevant aspects of the character and
record of each . . . defendant.” Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S.
280, 303, 96 S. Ct. 2978, 2991, 49 L. Ed. 2d 944 (1976). As a result,
courts are “particularly cautious in preserving a defendant’s right to
counsel at a capital sentencing hearing.” Goad v. State, 938 S.W.2d
363, 369 (Tenn. 1996) (quoting Deutscher v. Whitley, 884 F.2d 1152,
1160 (9th Cir. 1989)). Although there is no requirement that defense
counsel present mitigating evidence in the penalty phase of a capital
trial, counsel’s duty to investigate and prepare for a capital trial
encompasses both the guilt and sentencing phases. Goad v. State, 938
S.W.3d at 369-70; State v. Melson, 772 S.W.2d 417, 421 (Tenn. 1989).
When a petitioner challenges a death sentence based
on ineffective assistance of counsel in the penalty phase, he or she
must show that “there is a reasonable probability that, absent the
errors, the sentencer . . . would have concluded that the balance of
aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695, 104 S.Ct. at 2069. Where the alleged
prejudice involves counsel’s failure to present sufficient mitigating
evidence, several factors are of significance: (1) the nature and
extent of the mitigating evidence that was available but not presented;
(2) whether substantially similar mitigating evidence was presented to
the jury in either the guilt or penalty phase of the proceedings; and
(3) whether there was such strong evidence of aggravating factors that
the mitigating evidence would not have affected the jury’s
determination. Goad v. State, 938 S.W.2d at 371.
B. Petitioner’s Allegations
The petitioner argues that his counsel were
ineffective during the sentencing phase of the capital proceeding for
the rape and murder of Karen Pulley for failing to present sufficient
evidence of mitigating circumstances. The State maintains that the
trial court properly denied relief on this claim after finding that
the mitigating evidence now cited by the petitioner would have
duplicated or been cumulative to that introduced by trial counsel. We
will review the evidence introduced by Nichols at the post-conviction
hearings.
Deborah Nichols Sullivan, the petitioner’s sister,
who testified by deposition, said that she loved her brother and tried
to take care of him after their mother died of cancer. She described
Nichols as quiet, with a mild demeanor, and recalled that he held his
mother’s hand while she was ill. She testified that she was afraid of
her father’s intense spankings, which often left welts and stripes.
She was “sure” Nichols received such spankings as well. She would not
confirm that she was sexually abused but did say “that would be me and
not [the petitioner].” When they were placed in the children’s home,
she was told it was because her father could not care for them.
Deborah Nichols acknowledged that trial counsel
probably tried to contact her but that she did not return their calls.
Indeed, counsel Rosemary Bryan testified that she spoke to the witness
two or three times and that they hoped she would testify about the
family background, their abusive father, and the orphanage. Counsel
said, however, that Deborah Nichols “was the most unwilling witness
that you would ever want to put on the stand.” The witness told
counsel, for example, that she would not talk about any abuse in the
family and had nothing to say that would help her brother. Moreover,
her husband said that she would not testify under any circumstances.
Finally, counsel said that Nichols decided he did not want to make his
sister testify under the circumstances.
Several other witnesses testified as to their
experiences with Nichols, as well as with Nichols’ family. Diana
Allred testified that she and her brother lived with the Nichols’
family from 1961 to 1967 following the death of their parents. She
said that Nichols’ father would get angry and “spank” Nichols and his
sister, Deborah, and that she saw Deborah bleeding after the spankings.
Allred testified that Nichols’ father often undressed in front of her
and once asked if he could get in bed with her. She said that although
Nichols seemed like a “normal” child when she lived there, he and his
sister seemed frightened and shy years later after Allred had moved
out.
Royce Sampley, Diana Allred’s brother, testified
that the Nichols’ home was a “threatening” place in that Nichols’
father was often angry and cursing. Sampley testified that he never
saw any sexual abuse of Nichols. Neither Allred nor Sampley had any
contact with Nichols after 1971 and were not aware of the charges
against Nichols at the time of the trial and sentencing. Dennis
Sampley, brother of Royce Sampley and Diana Allred, testified that he
was not familiar with Nichols but that he had lived in the same
children’s home. He testified that he received whippings in the home,
as did other children, and was not permitted to tell anyone. He
described it as a “hellacious home.”
Juanita Herron, a cousin, said that Nichols became
“disturbed” and “sad” following his mother’s death. She testified that
Nichols’ sister had reported sexual abuse and that family members
arranged to have the children placed in a children’s home. Louella
Wagner, also a cousin, testified that Nichols’ father was strict.
Margaret Crox and Linda Crox Johnson, who had been neighbors of the
Nichols, said that the petitioner’s father did not seem concerned
about his children.
Jim Gumm testified that he went to school with
Nichols until they were both sophomores in high school and that he
always considered Nichols to be “one of the nicest guys around.” Nancy
Atchley, who taught Nichols in the seventh and eight grades, testified
that he had been a sweet, kind, and well-mannered student who was
quieter than the other boys. Jacqueline Boruff, whose son was a friend
of Nichols when they wer, e teenagers, said that Nichols was “sweet”
and that his father was an “ass” who was cold and uncaring. Like
several of the post-conviction witnesses, Boruff said that she was not
contacted before the capital sentencing proceeding.
Several witnesses testified regarding the children’s
home in which Nichols and his sister had been placed after their
mother’s death. Claude Nichols, the petitioner’s uncle, testified that
the petitioner’s father said the children had been placed in a group
home through a decision of the church. Winston Gonia, who had
testified during the capital sentencing, testified that he had been a
board member of the Tomlinson Children’s Home; the group home was a
disciplined place but he never saw any abuse take place there. Jackie
Bailey, an academic and personal counselor at the Tomlinson Children’s
Home from 1974 to 1977, testified that she counseled Deborah Nichols
but had no information about the petitioner or his background.
Linda Melton, a former house parent at the
Tomlinson Children’s Home, testified that the petitioner and his
sister were close. She said that the 15-year-old Nichols never caused
any problems and was a “sweetheart.” Melton testified that the
children’s activities were church-related and that paddling was not
used as a means of discipline.[7] Arlyne McGriff testified by
deposition that she was a house parent at the home just before it
closed; she recalled that Nichols talked about his mother and did not
cause any problems. She testified that Nichols’ father visited two or
three times while she was the house parent. Neither Melton nor McGriff
were contacted by trial counsel.
Finally, Nichols presented testimony from three
expert witnesses. Dr. Kenneth Nickerson, a clinical psychologist,
evaluated Nichols in April and May of 1989. He testified that he
interviewed Nichols and reviewed notes taken by Dr. Frausto Natal, a
psychiatrist who had conducted an interview and examination. Dr.
Natal’s notes indicated that Nichols denied murdering any of the
victims. Dr. Nickerson testified that Nichols had not shown any prior
signs of “intense or explosive emotions,” that he was found competent
to stand trial, and that he was not legally insane at the time of the
offenses.
Dr. David Solovay, a clinical psychologist,
testified that he reviewed the case notes, examination, assessment,
reports, and testimony of Dr. Eric Engum, who had testified on Nichols’
behalf in the sentencing proceeding. Dr. Solovay said that Dr. Engum
did a “fine job” and that Engum’s notes and data were similar to his
own. He criticized Dr. Engum for failing to identify himself as a
member of the defense team, however, and for failing to present the
petitioner’s background as a mitigating factor. Dr. Solovay did not
agree with the diagnosis of intermittent explosive disorder, but
instead diagnosed Nichols as having borderline personality disorder.
Dr. Solovay said that Nichols had learned to “disassociate” from
threatening situations. He admitted that his report revealed that
Nichols had acknowledged his guilt to him and had shown remorse.
Dr. Frank Einstein testified that he is a
mitigation specialist who works with defense attorneys in capital
defense representation. He described that mitigation work involves
examining a defendant’s life, identifying life events that led up to
the offense, and presenting the complete story of the defendant’s life
for the jury’s consideration. Dr. Einstein testified that significant
events in this case included Nichols’ inability to remember events
before the age of ten, the presence of Nichols’ cousins in his home,
the death of his mother and grandmother, the physical and emotional
abuse in the home, and his being placed in an orphanage.
Dr. Einstein said that Dr. Engum and investigator
Michael Cohan identified the major events in Nichols’ life. He
believed that trial counsel should have presented additional
information to humanize Nichols and to illustrate the conduct of
Nichols’ father, the presence of physical and sexual abuse in the home,
and the isolation of the family. Dr. Einstein said that although trial
counsel identified many of these themes, they did not present the
evidence in such a way to establish a link between Nichols’ background
and the crimes. He admitted that some mitigation themes can have a
negative effect and that it is difficult to second-guess counsel.
C. Findings and Conclusions
The trial court, after considering the testimony of
all of these witnesses during the post-conviction hearings and
reviewing the record, made extensive findings of fact, including:
Petitioner presented numerous relatives and
acquaintances at the hearings in this matter to demonstrate the amount
and type of mitigating evidence which was not presented at the
sentencing hearing at the original trial. . . . Many of these
witnesses, however, were cumulative and only expounded on issues which
were raised through the evidence presented by trial counsel at the
sentencing hearing. . . . The psychologist retained by post-conviction
counsel even testified that while he may have had more personal
history in conducting his evaluation, it was essentially the same kind
of information Dr. Engum and trial counsel had at the original trial.
The trial court further concluded:
Many of the witnesses testified that they were not
contacted and that the petitioner probably did not know how to contact
them. Some witnesses, however, testified that the petitioner knew how
to contact them but that they received no contact and did not step
forward on their own. Using 20-20 hindsight more witnesses may have
been preferable; based upon all the evidence and documentation,
however, this court finds that counsel [were] not derelict in their
investigation of this case and that no prejudice has been shown. . . .
Any additional witnesses would have been cumulative or the weight of
their testimony would have been minimal. The aggravator of prior
violent felonies was very substantial.
We agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals that
the evidence in the record supported the trial court’s findings and
conclusions.
In applying the first part of the analysis in Goad
v. State, 938 S.W.2d at 371, the trial court correctly noted that the
nature and the extent of the evidence at post-conviction focused on
the petitioner’s family background, abusive father, placement in a
children’s home, and pleasant personality as a child. Although
witnesses described the petitioner’s father as angry and abusive,
Nichols himself never testified regarding any possible abuse he
suffered at home or in the children’s home. Only one witness, Deborah
Nichols, said that she saw her father abuse the petitioner; however,
she made herself unavailable to trial counsel and refused to testify.
Several witnesses testified that Nichols was a pleasant child who was
quiet and well-mannered. Although one witness claimed that abuse took
place in the children’s home, there was no evidence that Nichols was
ever abused there; indeed, several other witnesses testified that the
orphanage was not an abusive environment. Finally, there was expert
testimony questioning whether Nichols suffered from an explosive
disorder, as diagnosed by Dr. Engum, and questioning the manner in
which trial counsel presented the mitigating themes and evidence at
the sentencing.
In applying the second Goad factor, the trial court
correctly found that the evidence was cumulative to that presented by
trial counsel at sentencing. Three witnesses at sentencing had
testified about Nichols’ background and placement in an orphanage.
Several witnesses said they had known Nichols to have been a “fine
young man” and to have possessed good character as a child and as an
adult. Several witnesses, including Nichols, testified about his
troubled relationship with his father and the abandonment associated
with being placed in an orphanage. Nichols denied, however, that he
was ever physically abused by his father or at the orphanage. Finally,
there was expert testimony regarding Nichols’ intermittent explosive
disorder and how it affected his conduct. Accordingly, the record
indicates that trial counsel identified and supported the relevant
mitigating themes. The evidence presented at post-conviction did not
contest trial counsel’s performance in this regard, but rather, second-guessed
the quantity of the mitigating evidence and the manner of its
presentation.
Finally, with respect to the third and final Goad
factor, it appears that any of the evidence at post-conviction which
was not cumulative or may have bolstered the evidence presented at
trial would not have affected the jury’s determination given the
strong evidence supporting the prior violent felonies aggravating
circumstance. In sum, Nichols has not established a reasonable
probability that the jury would have concluded that the “balance of
aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695, 104 S.Ct. at 2069; see also Goad v. State,
938 S.W.3d at 371.
IV. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel –
Prosecutorial Misconduct
The petitioner next argues that his trial counsel
were ineffective for failing to object to the prosecution’s misconduct
in eliciting the facts of the rape offenses used to prove the prior
violent felony aggravating circumstance during the sentencing phase of
his capital trial. The State maintains that counsel were not
ineffective because there was no misconduct by the prosecution.
The record reveals that in its cross-examination of
Nichols, the prosecution asked about the rapes he committed against
T.R., S.T., P.G., and P.R. In particular, the prosecutor asked whether
Nichols had committed a rape on December 21, 1988, by using a knife;
whether Nichols had committed a rape on December 27, 1988, by using an
electrical cord; and whether Nichols had committed a rape against two
victims on January 3, 1989, one of which involved the use of a knife.
Nichols admitted that he committed all of the offenses.
In State v. Bigbee, 885 S.W.2d 797 (Tenn. 1994),
the prosecutor introduced the facts of a prior murder conviction it
relied upon as an aggravating circumstance and strongly implied in
closing argument that the jury should return a death sentence based on
the facts of the prior murder conviction for which the defendant had
only received a life sentence. Indeed, the prosecutor’s argument
contained extensive references to the facts of the prior murder, the
victim of the prior murder, the family of the victim of the prior
murder, and the need to impose the death penalty because of the prior
murder. Id. at 810. We concluded that the introduction of such
evidence is error where the prior conviction on its face involves
violence or the threat of violence, and we held that the prosecutor’s
argument, which improperly enhanced the impact of the aggravating
circumstance, affected the jury’s determination to the prejudice of
the defendant. Id. at 811-12.
In applying Bigbee, we have focused upon the nature
and extent of the evidence introduced, the prosecutor’s intent, and
whether the evidence or argument improperly enhanced the aggravating
circumstance or affected the jury’s verdict to the prejudice of the
defendant. See State v. Stout, 46 S.W.3d 689, 701 (Tenn. 2001); State
v. Chalmers, 28 S.W.3d 913, 918 (Tenn. 2000). We have, in effect,
clarified that Bigbee involved serious prosecutorial misconduct and
that not every violation of the Bigbee holding warrants reversible
error and a re-sentencing.
Accordingly, our review of the record reveals that
trial counsel did not render ineffective assistance of counsel by
failing to object to the prosecutor’s questioning. First, we note that
Bigbee had not been decided at the time of the sentencing in this
case; thus, counsel cannot be considered deficient for failing to
object to a violation of its holding. Second, the record indicates
that the facts of the underlying rapes were briefly cited by the
prosecutor and admitted by Nichols without a lengthy discussion or
detailed description of the rapes. Finally, the prosecution did not
enhance the aggravating circumstance by unduly or repeatedly
emphasizing the underlying facts of the prior convictions, nor did it
imply that the jury should impose the death penalty based on the facts
of the prior convictions in such a manner that affected the verdict to
the prejudice of the petitioner.[8] Accordingly, we conclude that
trial counsel were not deficient in failing to object to the
prosecutor’s conduct and that there was no reasonable probability of a
different outcome even had counsel objected.
V. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel – Jury
Instructions
The petitioner argues that his counsel were
ineffective for failing to request that the trial court charge the
jury with regard to the definition of mitigation, the weight to be
given mitigating evidence, the mitigating circumstances in Tennessee
Code Annotated § 39-13-204(j)(7) and (8), and several non-statutory
mitigating circumstances. As the State asserts, each of the issues is
without merit.
First, this Court has held that a jury instruction
on the definition of mitigation or the weight to be given mitigating
circumstances is not required. See State v. Brimmer, 876 S.W.2d 75, 83
(Tenn. 1993). Next, the record did not support an instruction on the
mitigating circumstance in Tennessee Code Annotated § 39-13-204(j)(7),
i.e., the youthfulness of the defendant, given that Nichols was a 28-year-old
high school graduate with an honorable discharge from the military.
Third, contrary to the petitioner’s contention, the trial court did
charge the jury on the mitigating circumstance in Tennessee Code
Annotated § 39-13-204(j)(8), i.e., that the defendant’s capacity to
appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his conduct
to the requirements of the law was substantially impaired as a result
of a mental disease or defect that substantially affected his judgment.
Finally, we have held that the trial court was not required to charge
the jury on specific, non-statutory mitigating circumstances at the
time of this offense and trial. See State v. Cauthern, 967 S.W.2d 726,
747 (Tenn. 1998). Accordingly, trial counsel were not deficient for
failing to request these instructions.
In a related issue, Nichols argues that trial
counsel were deficient for failing to object to the trial court’s
instruction that “the verdict must be unanimous” because it misled the
jury to believe that unanimity was required to return a life sentence.
As the State observes, this Court has rejected arguments contesting
the unanimous verdict instruction. See State v. Nesbit, 978 S.W.2d
872, 902-903 (Tenn. 1998); State v. Brimmer, 876 S.W.2d at 87.
VI. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel –
Constitutional Issues
The petitioner argues that trial counsel were
ineffective for failing to challenge the constitutionality of the
death penalty on the basis that it cannot be administered fairly and
cites the dissenting opinion in Callins v. Collins, 510 U.S. 1141,
1143, 114 S. Ct. 1127, 1128, 127 L.Ed.2d 435 (1994) (Blackmun, J.,
dissenting). This Court has repeatedly upheld the constitutionality of
the death penalty in this State. See Terry v. State, 46 S.W.3d 147,
169 (Tenn. 2001); State v. Stout, 46 S.W.3d at 719; State v. Hall, 976
S.W.2d 121, 166 (Tenn. 1998).
Nichols also argues that trial counsel were
ineffective for failing to challenge the constitutionality of the
death penalty on the basis that it violates the fundamental right to
life without serving any compelling state interest. This Court has
rejected such a claim. State v. Mann, 959 S.W.2d 503, 536 (Tenn.
1998); State v. Bush, 942 S.W.2d 489, 523 (Tenn. 1997).
VII. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel –
Psychologist’s Notes
The petitioner argues that his trial counsel were
ineffective for failing to argue that the trial court’s order
requiring the defense to disclose the notes of Dr. Eric Engum at trial
violated his right against self-incrimination under the United States
and Tennessee Constitutions. The State contends that trial counsel
were not ineffective because the disclosure of the notes for the
purpose of impeachment or rebuttal did not violate the petitioner’s
right against self-incrimination.
The record reveals that the trial court’s order
stemmed from the defense’s failure to prepare a final report of Dr.
Engum’s findings until the second day of trial. On direct appeal, we
held that the notes were discoverable under the circumstances of the
case pursuant to the discovery provisions of Tenn. R. App. P.
16(b)(1)(B):
We thus conclude that when a psychologist or
psychiatrist does not prepare a summary report, but instead relies on
extensive memoranda to record not only observations and hypotheses but
also evaluations, such records are discoverable. . . . Although we do
not suggest that the trial court should require a formal report in
every case, we do conclude, under the facts of this cases, that Rule
16 authorized discovery of the available reports to the extent that
they related to the testimony to be given at trial.
State v. Nichols, 877 S.W.2d at 730.
The petitioner now argues that his counsel were
ineffective for failing to argue that the disclosure violated his
constitutional right against self-incrimination and that the error was
prejudicial because the prosecution used the notes to impeach the
testimony of Dr. Engum by charging that he was a member of the defense
team attempting to help Nichols avoid the death penalty. Although
Moore and Bryan admitted at the post-conviction hearing that the
disclosure and the prosecution’s cross-examination of Dr. Engum was
damaging to the defense, they did not believe it affected the jury’s
verdict.
As the State notes, this Court has indicated that
where a defendant initiates a psychiatric examination and introduces
evidence from the examination, his right against self-incrimination is
not violated by disclosure of the information or the prosecution’s use
of the information for impeachment and rebuttal. See State v. Martin,
950 S.W.2d 20, 24 (Tenn. 1997). The same principles apply to the
sentencing proceeding of a capital trial. State v. Reid, 981 S.W.2d
166, 172-73 (Tenn. 2001).
Moreover, although as the trial court noted,
“hindsight may indicate that the failure to prepare a final report may
have been imprudent,” it is clear that the issue did not affect the
jury’s verdict. The prosecution would have been entitled to a final
report that would not have violated the petitioner’s right against
self-incrimination; indeed, on direct appeal, we said that the notes
were tantamount to a report under the facts of this case. Dr. Engum
testified that he evaluated Nichols and interviewed several background
witnesses and that he ultimately determined that Nichols had an
intermittent explosive disorder. The prosecution’s cross-examination
attempted to impeach Dr. Engum’s testimony by charging that Engum was
a member of the defense team and by showing that Nichols acted with
deliberation and in his own self interest. In sum, when the evidence
is viewed along with the petitioner’s confession and the overwhelming
weight of the aggravating circumstance, it is clear that the
petitioner has failed to show a reasonable probability of a different
outcome but for counsel’s failure to argue that the disclosure of the
notes violated his right against self-incrimination.
VIII. Remand for Additional DNA Testing
The petitioner argues that the Court of Criminal
Appeals erred in refusing to remand the case to the trial court for
additional DNA testing to establish his innocence.[9] The State
maintains that the issue of additional DNA testing was not properly
raised by the petitioner and was correctly denied.
The record indicates that the post-conviction trial
court authorized DNA testing of evidence taken from the rape kit
performed on Karen Pulley. After finding that “[n]o results which
would establish any prejudice to the petitioner . . . were submitted
to the court at the final hearing,” the trial court denied the
petitioner’s request for additional DNA testing. The petitioner did
not challenge the trial court’s denial of additional DNA testing as an
issue on appeal.
Following the Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision
and its denial of a petition to rehear, Nichols filed a motion for
consideration of post-judgment facts[10] requesting that the case be
remanded for additional DNA testing. The motion asserted that the
Court of Criminal Appeals’ rejection of the serology evidence
concerning Karen Pulley in effect meant that the court was requiring
the petitioner to show actual innocence to establish the prejudice
component of his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, and that
additional DNA testing was required to meet such an “unreasonable”
standard. The motion was accompanied by the records and documents
regarding Nichols’ initial request for DNA analysis, which had been
granted by the trial court, and his motion for additional DNA testing,
which had been denied. The petitioner asked that the record be
supplemented and asserted that due process required consideration of
this issue because his liberty interests outweigh any interest the
State may have in finality of the judgments.
The Court of Criminal Appeals denied the motion for
two reasons. First, the court stated that it had not required actual
innocence to establish the prejudice prong of the ineffective
assistance of counsel claim; instead, it applied the analysis of
whether the petitioner had shown a reasonable probability of a
different outcome. Second, the court found that the motion was not
based on post-judgment facts as required by Tenn. R. App. P. 14. The
court concluded:
Seeking to utilize the doorway made available by [Rule
14] for consideration of ‘facts concerning the action that occurred
after judgment,’ the petitioner asks by the motion to have this court
consider arguments and supporting documents as ‘facts’ and rule ex
parte on a matter which was not raised previously in his appeal. . . .
The petitioner has recast the arguments raised in his previous
petition to rehear, that this court erred in its treatment of the
serology evidence presented and in its application of the standard for
determining whether counsel was ineffective, and now presents them as
the basis of his motion to consider post-judgment facts.
Our review of the record reveals that the Court of
Criminal Appeals correctly denied the motion for consideration of
post-judgment facts and the request to remand the case for additional
DNA testing. The petitioner misconstrues the appellate court’s
analysis of the ineffective assistance claim – the court concluded
that Nichols failed to show that his trial counsel were deficient
inasmuch as he repeatedly admitted that he committed the offenses and
the serology evidence did not exclude him as the assailant. When the
court also considered the prejudice component, it properly analyzed
whether the petitioner showed a reasonable probability of a different
outcome.
In any event, the motion for consideration of post-judgment
facts was improper given that it did not contain post-judgment facts
but rather reasserted matters that had been denied by the trial court
and were not appealed at all by the petitioner. In addition, as the
State recognizes, relief based on DNA analysis may be sought upon
making the required showing pursuant to the appropriate procedure. See
Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-401 (“Post-Conviction DNA Analysis Act of
2001"). In sum, the Court of Criminal Appeals did not abuse its
discretion in denying relief.
IX. Right Against Self-Incrimination
As summarized earlier, Nichols did not testify in
support of his post-conviction allegations. Moreover, when called to
the stand by the prosecution, the petitioner invoked his right against
self-incrimination and refused to answer questions about the offenses
or the post-conviction allegations.
Although the State did not appeal the issue, the
Court of Criminal Appeals held that the trial court’s decision to
allow the petitioner to invoke his right against self-incrimination
was erroneous. The intermediate court reasoned that there is no right
against self-incrimination in a post-conviction case under the Fifth
Amendment to the United States Constitution or article I, § 8 and 9 of
the Tennessee Constitution because the petitioner had already been
convicted of the offenses being challenged. The court also stated that
a reviewing court may draw a negative inference from a petitioner’s
failure to testify in support of the post-conviction allegations.
Nichols initially argued that the Court of Criminal
Appeals erred in addressing this issue because it had not been
appealed by the State and was not properly before the court for review.
Nichols has additionally argued that there is a right against self-incrimination
in a capital post-conviction procedure due to the likelihood that a
capital conviction or sentence may be reversed and remanded for new
proceedings. In sum, Nichols argues that a petitioner should not be
forced to make statements in a post-conviction hearing because the
statements may be used in later proceedings if the petitioner is
successful in obtaining post-conviction relief. The State argues that
the Court of Appeals erred in addressing this issue because it was not
raised on appeal and that the court’s decision amounts to an improper
advisory opinion.
Although we ordered the parties to file additional
briefs on this issue, we now agree with the parties that the
intermediate court erred in addressing this issue. See Tenn. R. App.
P. 13(b) (“Review will generally extend only to those issues presented
for review”). Nichols was permitted to assert his right against self-incrimination
by the trial court and did not answer any of the questions asked by
the prosecutor about the offenses or the post-conviction allegations.
The State opted not to appeal the trial court’s ruling in this respect.
Although the petitioner was not prevented from
asserting a right against self-incrimination, he argues on this appeal
that he was harmed because the intermediate court drew a negative
inference from his failure to testify as it considered each issue on
appeal. It is not clear from the court’s language, however, whether it
did in fact draw such an inference or whether it was simply observing
that a court may choose to do so. (“[W]e conclude that an adverse
inference could have been drawn because of the petitioner’s refusal to
answer questions of the State.”). In either case, this Court has drawn
no inference from the failure to testify, and it has not affected our
conclusions that the evidence supports the trial court’s findings and
that the petitioner has not shown he is entitled to relief.
Accordingly, our review of whether a right against self-incrimination
applies in post-conviction cases under the facts and circumstances of
this case would amount to an advisory opinion. We therefore hold that
the Court of Criminal Appeals erred in addressing this issue, but that
the error has not affected the result.
X. Trial Court’s Findings and Cumulative Error
he petitioner argues that the trial court’s
findings were clearly erroneous and that the cumulative effect of all
the errors in the record amounted to reversible error. Our review of
all of the above issues necessarily reveals that these two contentions
are without merit.
CONCLUSION
After reviewing the record and applicable authority,
we conclude: (1) that the petitioner was not denied his right to the
effective assistance of counsel based on the failure to investigate
and challenge his confessions as false; (2) that the petitioner was
not denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel based on
the failure to challenge the legality of his arrest; (3) that the
petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to present additional mitigating evidence; (4) that the
petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to object to misconduct by the prosecution; (5) that the
petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to request mitigating instructions; (6) that the petitioner
was not denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel at the
sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the failure to raise
issues regarding the constitutionality of capital punishment; (7) that
the petitioner was not denied his right to the effective assistance of
counsel at the sentencing phase of his capital trial based on the
failure to object to the discovery of notes prepared by a defense
psychologist on self-incrimination grounds; (8) that the Court of
Criminal Appeals did not err in refusing to remand the case for
additional DNA testing; (9) that the Court of Criminal Appeals erred
by addressing the issue of whether the petitioner had a right against
self-incrimination in this post-conviction proceeding, but the error
had no effect on the outcome; and (10) that the trial court’s findings
were not clearly erroneous and cumulative error did not require the
reversal of the petitioner’s convictions.
Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Criminal
Appeals’ judgment. It appearing that the petitioner is indigent, costs
are taxed to the State of Tennessee.
E. RILEY ANDERSON, JUSTICE
*****
[1] We will refer to these victims by initials only.
[2] The convictions for the offenses against P.G.
and P.R. were affirmed by the Court of Criminal Appeals. State v.
Nichols, No. 03C01-9108-CR-00236, 1995 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 998 (December
19, 1995).
[3] The Court concluded that the jury’s reliance
upon the felony murder circumstance to impose the death sentence for
felony murder violated article I, § 16 of the Tennessee Constitution
for the reasons explained in State v. Middlebrooks, 840 S.W.2d 317 (Tenn.
1992), but that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Nichols, 877 S.W.2d at 739.
[4] The sentences for the convictions involving T.R.,
S.T., P.G., and P.R. originally amounted to an effective term of 647
years in the Department of Correction. The post-conviction court found
that the sentencing in these cases did not comply with the procedures
in State v. Pearson, 858 S.W.2d 879 (Tenn. 1993), and State v.
Blouvett, 904 S.W.2d 111 (Tenn. 1995). This part of the post-conviction
ruling was not appealed by the State and therefore is not at issue in
this appeal.
[5] On direct appeal, this Court found no
procedural or constitutional error with respect to the prosecutor’s
exercise of discretion in this regard. State v. Nichols, 877 S.W.2d
735-36.
[6] The petitioner vigorously asserts that the
Court of Criminal Appeals applied the incorrect standard by requiring
him to show “actual innocense” to establish prejudice. We disagree.
The appellate court first noted that the evidence presented at the
post-conviction was inconclusive and therefore failed to show that
counsel’s representation was deficient. The appellate court then
determined that any deficiency was not prejudicial by properly finding
that there was no reasonable probability of a different outcome.
[7] However, Pamela Taylor, a part-time
investigator, testified that she visited the children’s home,
conducted interviews, and gathered information about its operation.
She learned that the home’s policy was to keep children separate from
those outside the church and that the home had guidelines as to how
corporal punishment with a paddle was to be carried out.
[8] We note that both the Court of Criminal Appeals
and the State rely upon Tennessee Code Annotated § 39-13-204(c), which
presently states in part: “In all cases where the state relies upon
the aggravating factor that the defendant was previously convicted of
one (1) or more felonies, other than the present charge, whose
statutory elements involve the use of violence to the person, either
party shall be permitted to introduce evidence concerning the facts
and circumstances of the prior conviction.” Neither the intermediate
court nor the State acknowledge that this statute was not in effect
until 1998, well after the offenses and trial in this case, nor do
they otherwise cite reasons for applying the statute in this case.
[9] DNA analysis “means the process through which
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in a human biological specimen is analyzed
and compared with DNA from another biological specimen for
identification purposes.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-402.
[10] An appellate court “on its own motion or on
motion of a party may consider facts concerning the action that
occurred after judgment. Consideration of such facts lies in the
discretion of the appellate court. While neither controlling nor fully
measuring the court’s discretion, consideration generally will extend
only to those facts, capable of ready demonstration, affecting the
positions of the parties or the subject matter of the action such as
mootness, bankruptcy, divorce, death, other judgments or proceedings,
relief from the judgment requested or granted in the trial court, and
other similar matters.” Tenn. R. App. P. 14.
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
May 2, 2002 Session
HAROLD WAYNE NICHOLS v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal
Appeals
Criminal Court for Hamilton County
Nos. 205863, 213883-213896 D. Kelly Thomas, Jr.,
Judge, By Designation
No. E1998-00562-SC-R11-PD - Filed October 7, 2002
ADOLPHO A. BIRCH, JR., J., concurring and
dissenting.
I fully concur in the conclusion of the majority
that Nichols's convictions should be affirmed. To the extent, however,
that the petitioner's allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel
may be interpreted to include the failure to object to the method of
proportionality review, I continue to adhere to the views expressed in
a long line of dissents beginning with State v. Chalmers, 28 S.W.3d
913, 923-25 (Tenn. 2000) (Birch, J., concurring and dissenting), and
elaborated upon in State v. Godsey, 60 S.W.3d 759, 793-800 (Tenn.
2001) (Birch, J., concurring and dissenting). Those dissents suggest,
essentially, that the comparative proportionality review protocol
currently embraced by the majority is inadequate to shield defendants
from the arbitrary and disproportionate imposition of the death
penalty. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-206(c) (1997). Accordingly, while
I concur in the affirmance of Nichols's convictions, I cannot, for the
reasons above stated, concur in the imposition of the death penalty in
this case.