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James Edward
REID
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
- Alcoholic
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
October 12,
1996
Date of birth:
October 10,
1945
Victim profile: Annie Lester
(female, 87)
Method of murder: Stabbing
with scissors 22 times
Location: Montgomery County, Virginia, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Virginia on September 9,
2004
Summary:
The body of 87 year old Annie Lester was discovered in the bedroom
of her home. An autopsy revealed that she had suffered 22 scissor
stab wounds. One of the wounds punctured a lung, another her heart.
Annie had also been beaten about her head with a can of condensed
milk, and a bone in her throat had been crushed by strangulation or
being struck with a hard object. A trail of blood led from Annie's
kitchen to her bedroom.
Reid was acquainted with Annie Lester and had received an automobile
ride to her house. Forensics later determined that Lester had been
hit on the head in the kitchen and dragged to the bedroom, where she
was stabbed with scissors and strangled with the cord of a heating
pad. He was seen walking from the area of Annie's lifelong home,
drunk and covered in blood.
Blood on his clothes matched Lester's DNA, his saliva was found on a
cigarette butt left in her room, his handwriting was found on a card
that said "I've gotta kill you," and Reid's bloody fingerprints were
found on the telephone in Annie's bedroom. Not surprisingly, Reid
pled guilty to the murder.
According to court records, Reid was in an automobile accident in
1968 and suffered a serious head injury. Afterward he suffered from
a seizure disorder. As an adult, he was affected by alcoholism. His
trial attorney was forced to surrender his law license by the
Virginia Disciplinary Board in 2002 for making materially false
representations regarding his experience in this case.
Citations:
Reid v. Commonwealth, 506 S.E.2d 787 (Va. 1998) (Direct
Appeal). Reid v. Virginia, 120 S.Ct. 91 (1999) (Cert. Denied). Reid v. True, 349 F.3d 788 (4th Cir. Va. 2004) (Habeas).
Final Meal:
None requested.
Final Words:
"I forgive you for what you are doing but I don't forgive you for
what you think, or for what you feel, or what you say, or what you
do. I forgive you because God has forgiven me."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Virginia inmate executed after appeal rejected
CNN Law Center
Friday, September 10, 2004
JARRATT, Virginia (AP) -- A man who killed an
elderly woman with a metal can and a pair of scissors in a drunken
attack eight years ago was executed Thursday by injection. James
Edward Reid, 58, was pronounced dead at Greensville Correctional
Center at 9:12 p.m.
The intravenous line carrying the lethal dose of
drugs was placed in Reid's upper groin because veins in his arms,
where IV lines are usually placed, apparently had deteriorated from
years of drinking. It took medical technicians 12 minutes, three
times longer than usual, to place the IV lines. "I forgive you for
what you are doing, but I don't forgive you for what you think or
what you feel or what you say or what you do," Reid said when asked
if he had a final statement. "I forgive you because God has forgiven
me."
Reid killed Annie Lester, 87, in her home on
October 12, 1996. She was stabbed 22 times with the scissors and
struck in the head with a can of condensed milk, according to court
documents. Reid, an alcoholic, was seen leaving the area of Lester's
home with blood on his jacket. A witness said he smelled like a "brewery."
He was convicted in 1997 of capital murder, attempted rape and
attempted robbery.
Earlier Thursday, the Supreme Court rejected
Reid's final appeal. Over the years, his lawyers argued that the
state's execution method was unconstitutionally cruel and unusual
because it was possible Reid would still be conscious when the last
of three drugs was administered, and would suffer pain before he
died. The final appeal objected to the state's plan, if necessary,
to place the IV line in Reid's groin. Only Justice John Paul Stevens
said he would have voted to hear the appeal, a court spokesman said.
The execution was the 94th in Virginia since the
Supreme Court allowed executions to resume in 1976. Only Texas, with
325 executions, has put more people to death since then.
Virginia Executes Man for Killing Elderly Woman
By Frank Green - Reuters News
Sep 9, 2004
JARRATT, Va. (Reuters) - An alcoholic, brain-damaged
man who stabbed an elderly woman to death with a pair of scissors in
1996 was executed in Virginia on Thursday night. James Edward Reid,
58, was executed by injection at the Greensville Correctional Center
and pronounced dead at 9:12 p.m., said Larry Traylor, spokesman for
the Virginia Department of Corrections.
He was sentenced to death for the Oct. 12, 1996,
murder of Annie Lester, a Christiansburg resident who was believed
to be in her late 80s, during an attempted robbery or attempted
rape. Lester was stabbed 22 times and beaten in the head with a can
of condensed milk.
Reid's appeals in recent months alleged the use
of lethal injection could violate his constitutional protection
against cruel and unusual punishment. His execution was stayed by
the U.S. Supreme Court last December. However, the justices lifted
the stay in August and on Thursday they rejected Reid's most recent
request for an injunction.
According to court records, Reid was in an
automobile accident in 1968 and suffered a serious head injury. He
was in a coma for at least five days. Afterward he suffered from a
seizure disorder. In addition to the brain injury and seizures, Reid
was also affected by alcoholism, noted an opinion from the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals. Reid was a spree drinker who drank to
excess once a month when he received his disability check.
Shortly after the slaying, witnesses saw a
drunken Reid, his clothes covered with blood, in the vicinity of the
victim's home where he had been doing chores earlier in the day. A
DNA test showed it was her blood on his clothes and he left bloody
fingerprints on her telephone.
Reid was the fifth person executed in Virginia
this year and the 94th in the state since the U.S. Supreme Court
allowed the death penalty to resume in 1976. In a final statement,
he said: "I forgive you for what you are doing but I don't forgive
you for what you think, or for what you feel, or what you say, or
what you do. I forgive you because God has forgiven me."
Inmate executed after Supreme Court rejects
appeal
Hampton Roads Daily Press
By Bill Baskervill.
AP - September 9, 2004
JARRATT, Va. -- A man who killed an 87-year-old
Christiansburg woman was put to death Thursday night by an injection
method that his lawyers had challenged hours earlier in an appeal to
the U.S. Supreme Court. James Edward Reid, 58, was pronounced dead
at Greensville Correctional Center at 9:12 p.m.
The intravenous line carrying the lethal dose of
drugs was placed in Reid's right upper groin because his veins in
his arms, where the IV lines are usually placed, apparently had
deteriorated from years of drinking. It took medical technicians 12
minutes, three times longer than usual, to place the IV lines in
Reid. "I forgive you for what you are doing, but I don't forgive you
for what you think or what you feel or what you say or what you do,"
Reid said when asked if he had a final statement. "I forgive you
because God has forgiven me."
Using a can of condensed milk and a pair of
scissors, a drunken Reid killed Annie Lester in her home on Oct. 12,
1996. She had been stabbed 22 times and struck in the head with the
can, according to court documents. Shortly after the slaying, Reid,
an alcoholic, was seen leaving the area of Lester's home with blood
on his jacket. A witness said he smelled like a "brewery." Reid was
convicted in 1997 of capital murder, attempted rape and attempted
robbery.
Reid's lawyers sought an injunction from the
Supreme Court earlier Thursday after learning that the state planned
to insert the IV into a vein near his groin. The court denied their
request, with only Justice John Paul Stevens saying he would have
voted to grant the application, court spokesman Ed Turner said. Gov.
Mark R. Warner also rejected Reid's clemency petition, citing "overwhelming"
evidence of Reid's guilt and exhaustive court reviews. Earlier in
the day, Reid was visited for two hours by his mother, sister and
sister-in-law.
Reid claimed throughout the appeals process that
Virginia's method of execution amounted to unconstitutional cruel
and unusual punishment. He won a stay of execution in December, but
in August the Supreme Court tossed out the stay and the new
execution date was set. Last week, a federal judge rejected Reid's
claim that Virginia's execution method was unconstitutional because
it was possible Reid would still be conscious when the last of three
drugs is administered and would suffer pain before he dies.
In a final appeal Thursday, Reid's lawyers argued
that it was unclear whether the procedure of inserting the IV near
the groin would be performed by a properly trained physician. The
state said Reid attempted "to inject a new claim into this case" by
alleging that the state's plan to use a different IV placement than
his lawyers expected amounts to a surgical procedure, called a "cut
down," that can be used if a vein is not readily accessible. "This
is just not true," the state said. "The Department of Corrections
protocol does not permit a `cut down' procedure, nor does it specify
a particular vein for the IV placement in an execution."
Reid's execution is the fifth in Virginia this
year and the 94th since the U.S. Supreme Court allowed executions to
resume in 1976. Only Texas, with 325 executions, has put more people
to death since 1976.
Judge rejects killer's execution challenge
By Alan Cooper - Richmond Times-Dispatch
September 4, 2004
A federal judge rejected yesterday the contention
of James Edward Reid that the way Virginia carries out lethal
injection should delay his execution, which is scheduled for
Thursday. Reid was sentenced to die for the murder and attempted
robbery or rape of Annie Lester, an elderly Montgomery County woman,
in October 1996. Reid stabbed Lester 22 times and inflicted other
injuries to her head, face and arms.
His attorneys contended that Virginia's method of
execution is unconstitutional because of the possibility that the
defendant will actually be conscious when the last of three drugs is
administered and will suffer pain before he dies. The first drug
puts the defendant into a state of unconsciousness similar to that
experienced by a surgery patient. The second drug causes paralysis
and suppresses involuntary seizures that might create the false
perception that the defendant is experiencing pain. The third causes
the defendant's heart to stop beating.
U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson concluded
that the procedure will kill the defendant within five to 10 minutes
and reduce the chance that a defendant will be conscious of any pain
to less than 6/1000 of 1 percent. "There is simply no reason to
believe the speculative list of horribles described by Reid are
likely to come to pass," Hudson wrote. "The record establishes that
the defendants have taken reasonable measures to eliminate the
possibility of human error and to ensure the condemned will
experience nothing other than the insertion of an intravenous
catheter followed by unconsciousness and death."
Hudson noted that Reid did not challenge the
method of execution until a few days before it was scheduled to be
carried out in December. That delay left little doubt that the real
purpose of the challenge was to delay his execution, not to change
the manner in which he is ultimately executed, Hudson said.
Reid's attorneys can attempt to delay the
execution further by appealing Hudson's decision to the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals and to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Virginia Executes Elderly Woman's Killer
By
Ian Shapira - Washington Post
September 10, 2004
James Edward Reid, who beat and stabbed to death
an 87-year-old southwest Virginia woman in her home in 1996, was
executed by injection last night in Virginia's death chamber. Reid,
58, was pronounced dead at 9:12 p.m. at Greensville Correctional
Center in Jarratt, said Larry Traylor, spokesman for the Virginia
Department of Corrections.
In his final statement, Reid said: "I forgive you
for what you're doing. But I don't forgive you for what you think or
what you feel or what you say. I forgive you because God has
forgiven me."
In numerous appeals, Reid's attorneys
unsuccessfully argued that Virginia's method of lethal injection
constitutes cruel and unusual punishment and therefore is
unconstitutional. They contended that the first phase of the state's
lethal injection designed to render the body unconscious would wear
off -- or not work at all -- and that Reid would "suffer an
excruciatingly painful and protracted death" when the second and
third chemicals were administered.
Virginia Attorney General Jerry W. Kilgore (R)
issued a statement last night, saying that he found it "tragically
ironic" that Reid believes his execution will be "cruel and
inhuman." "Those words should rightly be associated with the
horrifying death Mrs. Lester suffered," Kiglore said. ". . .It was a
crime of extreme and senseless violence. The sentence has been
carried out and justice has been served. My thoughts and prayers are
with the victim and her family."
Nearly eight years ago, on Oct. 12, 1996, Reid
went to the Christiansburg, Va., home of Annie Lester to do some
handyman work. He got drunk, stabbed the emaciated woman 22 times
with scissors, stripped off her clothing, and struck her on the head
with a milk can. Reid was convicted in 1997 of capital murder,
attempted rape and attempted robbery and was sentenced to death.
Last year, his attorneys' arguments about the
legality of the state's lethal injection seemed promising. The U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in Richmond issued a stay Dec.
17, the day before his scheduled execution, pending a U.S. Supreme
Court decision that later upheld the legality of lethal injections.
Last week, a U.S. District Court judge in
Richmond denied the request to stay the execution, a decision that
was upheld Wednesday by a panel on the federal appeals court in a 2
to 1 decision. James Turk, one of Reid's attorneys, said yesterday
that Reid was appointed an ineffective defense team when he was
first prosecuted and that his sentence should be commuted because he
had been suffering from brain damage and had a serious addiction to
alcohol. Reid got drunk before he committed the crime, the attorney
said, and "voluntary intoxication negates intent," which would have
reduced his capital murder charge. "I honestly believe he didn't
have a clue what he did," Turk said.
Sister pleads for stay of execution
By Bob Gibson - The Daily Progress
September 8, 2004
The oldest inmate on Virginia’s death row should
be spared from Thursday’s scheduled execution because his state-appointed
lawyers botched his defense, the man’s sister and a Radford lawyer
said Tuesday. Ida Reid of Charlottesville, sister of James Edward
Reid, said her brother’s lead counsel at his 1997 trial in
Christiansburg put up no defense, nodded off in court and falsely
advised him that an Alford plea (tantamount to a guilty plea)
probably would result in a sentence of 20 or fewer years.
“When I witnessed Peter Theodore sleeping on and
off throughout court proceedings as well as during meetings with the
family, I knew that the court-appointed attorney system was sorely
lacking in quality representation for the indigent, especially in
capital cases,” she said.
Despite what lawyers later called ineffective
representation and Reid’s drunken state at the time of his crimes,
Reid was sentenced to death after being found guilty of the October
1996 capital murder of 83-year-old Annie V. Lester. Reid’s sister
said he and Lester were friends and on the day of the murder he had
headed to her house to show her a scrapbook and cards he had
received for his 51st birthday.
Born in Charlottesville, Reid has suffered
seizures since he was in a car crash at age 23, has an IQ of 79 and
has had problems with alcohol, she said. Since he has been on death
row, there have been dozens of executions and two suicides of death-row
inmates, she said. Ida Reid has written Gov. Mark R. Warner pleading
for clemency for her brother on the grounds that since the trial,
Theodore was forced to surrender his Virginia law license for making
false statements about his representation of Reid.
The Virginia State Bar ruled two years ago that
Theodore, who has since left his Christiansburg practice, had to
change his license status to disabled in light of making assertions
to the bar that the bar found to be false or misleading.
Radford lawyer James C. Turk Jr. joined Ida Reid
in expressing hope that Warner would grant Reid clemency and commute
his death sentence to life imprisonment. “With all the questions
surrounding whether he got fair and adequate representation from his
trial lawyers, I certainly think that would be the fair thing to
do,” said Turk, the son of a federal judge. “Mr. Reid said he was
told all along that he couldn’t receive the death penalty and that
he had no defense,” Turk said. “He had a very, very good chance of
not being convicted of a capital crime.”
Turk, who was appointed to represent Reid on
appeal, has filed a motion for clemency as well as a federal court
motion challenging the state’s protocol for administration of the
three drugs it uses in lethal injections.
A spokesman for Warner said the governor’s office
is reviewing a clemency petition from Turk and other lawyers. Jack
Payden-Travers, executive director of Virginians for Alternatives to
the Death Penalty, wrote Warner on Tuesday and urged him to
intervene. “Only you have the power to redress the wrongs of this
case and see that justice - not injustice - is carried out,” he
wrote. “His court-appointed counsel erroneously urged him to enter
an Alford plea to his indictment before they had even reviewed the
evidence of Mr. Reid’s medical examinations.”
“He is caught in a judicial Catch-22,” Payden-Travers
wrote Warner. “Reid, who is brain damaged and possesses an IQ of
only 79, relied on the erroneous advice of his court-appointed
attorneys. The courts have basically said that Reid’s conviction and
death sentence should stand because the Virginia Supreme Court could
have believed Mr. Theodore’s lies at the time they considered Reid’s
ineffectiveness claim back in 2000.”
Turk said that Reid “simply did not receive
competent representation in this case,” which affects fundamental
fairness. “Because the quality of counsel is indispensable to
ensuring a fair and reliable determination of guilt and the
appropriate punishment, [the state] must provide a defendant with
competent representation,” Turk said.
ProDeathPenalty.com
James Edward Reid was convicted and sentenced to
death for the murder of 87-year-old Annie Lester. Annie's body was
discovered on October 12, 1996. She had been brutally murdered; an
autopsy revealed that she had suffered 22 scissor stab wounds. One
of the wounds punctured a lung, another her heart. Annie had also
been beaten about her head with a can of condensed milk, and a bone
in her throat had been crushed by strangulation or being struck with
a hard object. A trail of blood led from Annie's kitchen to her
bedroom, where her body was found. Annie's clothing was in disarray,
and the room had been ransacked. There was a wine bottle on the
floor at the foot of the bed where he placed her frail body.
Substantial evidence connected Reid to the murder.
Reid was acquainted with Annie Lester and had received an automobile
ride to her house in the mid-morning of the day of the murder; on
the way, he purchased a bottle of wine. Forensics later determined
that Lester had been hit on the head in the kitchen and dragged to
the bedroom, where she was stabbed with scissors and strangled with
the cord of a heating pad. Late in the afternoon, Reid was seen
walking from the area of Annie's lifelong home, drunk and covered in
blood. Blood on his clothes matched Lester's DNA, his saliva was
found on a cigarette butt left in her room, his handwriting was
found on a card that said "I've gotta kill you," and Reid's bloody
fingerprints were found on the telephone in Annie's bedroom
according to the 4th Circuit's ruling in the case.
Reid said he did not remember the killing. Two
mental health consultants testified during sentencing that a brain
injury from a car accident in 1968 combined with Reid's alcohol
abuse impaired his judgment.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
James Reid, VA
The state of Virginia is scheduled to execute
James Reid, a black man, Sept. 9 for the 1996 murder of Annie Lester
in Christianburg. According to his sister, Mr. Reid “suffered from
serious health problems ranging from heart disease and lung cancer
to epileptic seizures resulting from brain damage he sustained in a
car wreck in 1968. All those factors triggered violent rages Reid
could neither control nor remember.”
In the middle of a wine-induced black-out, Mr.
Reid murdered Ms. Lester. Later he was found outside her house,
covered in blood, looking for a ride home. Mr. Reid was not capable
of pre-meditation, nor was he aware of what he had done; evidenced
by his behavior after the crime.
Mr. Reid’s court-appointed attorneys were
incompetent, following the familiar pattern of the majority of poor
capital defendants. His attorneys persuaded him to waive his right
to a jury and enter an “Alford plea,” which is a plea of no contest.
An Alford plea makes no admission of guilt, but raises no defense.
Once the prosecution had presented their case, and Mr. Reid’s
attorneys realized that there was a lack of significant evidence,
they tried to change his plea. This maneuver clearly indicates that
they were ignorant of the complexities of the justice system,
particularly in a capital murder case.
Affadavits filed by Mr. Reid and his sister state
that his attorneys told them that “an Alford plea is ‘not a guilty
plea’ and that it was the only way to keep Reid alive.”
His attorneys also failed to pursue an insanity
defense or get a competency hearing. Mr. Reid has an IQ of 79, has
been committed to state mental institutions several times, and
suffers black-outs and dementia. These black-outs are particularly
frequent when he has consumed alcohol, as he had the day of the
murder. His brain damage from a car accident that left him in a coma
for five days is well-documented, as is its contribution to his
seizure disorder and alcoholism. His attorneys presented no defense,
instead placing Mr. Reid’s fate in the hands of Judge Ray Grubbs
rather than a jury.
Elizabeth Semel, director of the American Bar
Association’s Death Penalty Representation Project argues that the
quality of court-appointed lawyers depends on three things: adequate
compensation, adequate resources, and high standards to ensure
quality. ”If you don’t have these three things you have a recipe for,
at best, occasionally adequate and frequently abysmal representation.
And that’s what you have in Virginia.”
Mr. Reid is being executed for what should not
even be considered a capital crime. This was not premeditated murder.
While it was a horrific crime, Mr. Reid, brain-damaged and suffering
alcohol-induced dementia, did not plan the crime or attempt to cover
it up. His lawyers did not even attempt a defense, nor was he
properly assessed for his ability to stand trial. Please write Gov.
Mark Warner and urge him to commute the death sentence of Mr. Reid
and declare a moratorium on executions
Virginians for Alternatives to
the Death Penalty
In February 1998, James Edward Reid was sentenced
to death for the capital murder, attempted rape, and attempted
robbery of Annie V. Lester. Reid was 51 years old at the time of the
crime. He has no recollection of the events that took place between
the time he arrived at Lester's house and the next morning when he
awoke with blood on his clothes. Because overwhelming circumstantial
evidence linked him to the crime, Reid entered a guilty plea.
Evidence connecting him to the crime included fingerprint and DNA
matches and handwriting samples, all found either at the scene or on
Reid's bloody clothes. His attorneys hoped to avoid a death sentence
by showing that Reid blacked out during the crime.
During the sentencing phase of the trial, Reid's
attorneys presented uncontradicted mitigating evidence, including
evidence of three impairments which provided an explanation, if not
an excuse, for Reid's actions. First, Reid's attorneys showed that
he suffered brain damage stemming from head injuries sustained
during a car accident that left him in a coma for five days. As a
result of the accident, the part of Reid's brain that affects
personality and the ability to control impulses was damaged. Second,
his attorneys showed that the head injuries led to the development
of a seizure disorder. Third, Reid's attorneys showed that Reid was
an alcoholic and binge drinker. Three medical experts discussed
these impairments and explained their effect on Reid's ability to
form the requisite intent necessary to make him eligible for the
death penalty.
The experts testified to Reid's tendency to blackout
when intoxicated and his inability to perform intentional acts
during the blackout periods. In addition, Reid's family members and
friends testified to the nature and extent of Reid's impairments and
blackouts. Reid's attorneys argued that the combination of Reid's
health problems, mixed with alcohol, triggered blackout periods
during which Reid became a different person. However, when Reid was
sober, he was a calm, kind, and conscientious person.
In his direct appeal to the Supreme Court of
Virginia, Reid claimed that the trial court had failed to properly
consider uncontradicted evidence, including evidence which showed no
planning, premeditation, or memory of the crime. Reid argued that
this evidence refuted the vileness factor, the aggravating factor
relied upon by the trial judge in sentencing Reid to death. The
Supreme Court of Virginia concluded that the trial court had
properly considered Reid's mitigating evidence. The court also found
that Reid's death sentence was neither excessive nor
disproportionate.
How Reid could have been sentenced to death
despite the compelling and uncontradicted medical evidence, may be
explained by the abysmal quality of his legal counsel. It was on the
advice of his counsel, Peter Theodore and Robby Jenkins, that Reid
pled guilty to capital murder, and was subsequently sentenced to
death by Honorable Judge Ray Grubbs in January 1998.
In fact, Reid’s
lawyers advised him to plead guilty without investigating whether he
had a viable defense and while laboring under a misunderstanding of
Virginia law regarding pleas. Reid’s attorneys advised him to plead
guilty before they had obtained and considered reports from the
medical experts who examined Reid and the State’s evidence. After
reviewing the evidence and Reid’s history, all experts concluded
that due to Reid’s severe brain injury from a car accident years
earlier, and his extreme intoxication at the time of the offense,
Reid would have been unable to premeditate and form the intent
necessary to sustain a charge of first degree murder.
In addition, at the time Reid’s attorneys advised
him they erroneously believed that the trial court could reduce the
charge after the plea, and in fact asked the court to do so in this
case. As the federal district court judge who presided over the
habeas proceedings noted, Virginia law had not permitted a trial
court to reduce charges after a plea for over 20 years. Reid’s
attorneys simply did not know the law.
Reid’s lead counsel, Pete Theodore, has since
been suspended from practice for lying to the court in this case.
During state and federal habeas proceedings, the courts nevertheless
upheld Reid’s guilty plea and death sentence relying upon an
affidavit Theodore prepared, claiming that he told Reid to plead
guilty because:
Due to Theodore’s extensive trial experience,
including capital jury trial experience, Theodore believed that a
jury in Montgomery County would not be receptive to any mental
health evidence presented. According to Theodore, numerous unnamed
experienced Virginia attorneys had advised him that he must avoid a
jury at all costs and that he must plead Reid guilty. In fact, these
representations are lies. Theodore flat-out falsified both his trial
experience and capital trial experience.
For example, he claimed to
have handled a capital jury trial that never occurred. He claimed to
have tried 12-15 murder cases but has been unable to identify a
single one. Had he been truthful, Theodore never would have been
qualified for appointment to this case – certainly not as lead
counsel. Theodore also lied when he claimed that all the lawyers he
consulted with about this case told him he must plea Reid guilty.
Theodore has never identified a single lawyer who provided this
advice. In fact at least three lawyers gave him the opposite advice.
In October of 2002, after a hearing, the Virginia
Disciplinary Board forced Theodore to surrender his law license for
making materially false representations to the Virginia Supreme
Court and the federal court regarding his experience and the advice
he received in this case.
The Board forced Theodore to change his
status to “disabled” and ruled that Theodore could not petition for
reinstatement unless and until a medical doctor and a psychiatrist
examine Theodore and certify that he is competent to practice law.
The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has nevertheless held
that because the Virginia Supreme Court could have believed
Theodore’s lies at the time they considered Reid’s ineffectiveness
claim back in 2000, Reid’s conviction and death sentence should
stand.
James Edward Reid was scheduled for execution on
December 18, 2003. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals granted Reid
a stay of execution on December 17, 2003 following an Amicus Brief
filed on his behalf noting the Alabama case (Nelson v Campbell)
pending in the Supreme Court that considers whether lethal injection
is “cruel and unusual punishment.”
Virginia Attorney General Kilgore
appealed this decision to the US Supreme Court. The court denied
Kilgore's appeal, upholding the stay on Reid's execution. On August
11, 2004 the US Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision lifted the stay of
execution. No reasons were given. However, on August 2nd, the
Federal Court of Appeals in Richmond had ruled that Reid had raised
legitimate claims that the particular manner in which the VA
Department of Corrections (DOC) plans to execute him is prohibited
by the Constitution. Thus establishing Reid’s right to file a Civil
Rights suit (§1983).
Virginia Attorney General Jerry Kilgore, who also
represents the DOC, did not object to the Court of Appeals about the
legitimacy of Reid’s claims. Instead, he went to the county circuit
court and insisted that an execution date be set so soon it may
prevent the federal court from resolving Reid’s challenge.
Montgomery Circuit Court Judge Ray E. Grubbs has ordered that James
Edward Reid be executed at the Greensville Correctional Center on
Sept. 9th. The order sets the stage for a tense stand-off between
the state and federal courts over Reid’s execution.
Inmate: James Reid
DOB: 10-10-45
Race: B
County of Conviction: Montgomery County
Offense: Murder
DOC#: 253963
Receipt: 02-27-98
Virginians United Against Crime
Victim: Annie Lester
Murderer: James Reid
Date and Location of Murders: October 12, 1996, Montgomery County,
VA
Aggravating Factor: Attempted Sexual Assault, Attempted Robbery
Execution Date: September 9, 2004
At his trial, James Reid elected to offer an
unusual Alford plea [whereby he did not admit guilt, but
acknowledged that the commonwealth had enough evidence to convict
him] for the October 12, 1996 murder, attempted rape and attempted
robbery of 87 year old Annie Lester at her Christiansburg home.
She had been brutally murdered; an autopsy
revealed that Lester had suffered 22 stab wounds. Lester had also
been beaten about her head with a blunt instrument, and a bone in
her throat had been crushed by strangulation or being struck with a
hard object. A trail of blood led from Lester's kitchen to her
bedroom, where her body was found. Lester's clothing was in disarray,
and the room had been ransacked. A bottle of wine was found on the
floor at the foot of the bed.
Substantial evidence connected Reid to the murder.
Reid was acquainted with Lester and had received an automobile ride
to her house in the mid-morning of the day of the murder; on the way,
he purchased a bottle of wine. Late in the afternoon, Reid was
observed walking from the direction of Lester's house, drunk and
covered in blood. The blood on Reid's clothing was later determined
to be consistent with Lester's DNA. Reid's fingerprints were found
in blood on the telephone in Lester's bedroom, his saliva was found
on a cigarette butt left in the room, and his handwriting was found
on pieces of paper in the house.
Reid’s Alford plea did not spare him, as
Montgomery County Judge Ray Grubbs sentenced him to death for the
crimes in February, 1998.
Reid v. Commonwealth,
506 S.E.2d 787 (Va. 1998) (Direct Appeal).
Defendant was convicted in the Circuit Court,
Montgomery County, Ray W. Grubbs, J., of capital murder, attempted
rape, and attempted robbery. Defendant appealed. The Supreme Court,
Kinser, J., held that: (1) mitigating evidence did not, as a matter
of law, negate finding of "vileness," in support of imposition of
death penalty, and (2) death sentence was not excessive or
disproportionate to sentences generally imposed for comparable
capital murders. Affirmed.
KINSER, Justice.
On December 3, 1997, James Edward Reid pled guilty to three charges:
(1) capital murder of Annie V. Lester during the commission of
attempted rape and/or attempted robbery in violation of Code §
18.2-31; (2) attempted rape in violation of Code § 18.2-67.5; and
(3) attempted robbery in violation of Code § 18.2-58 [FN1] After
accepting the pleas and hearing evidence about the commission of the
offenses, the trial court found Reid guilty as charged.
FN1. Reid entered the guilty pleas pursuant to
North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 91 S.Ct. 160, 27 L.Ed.2d 162
(1970).
During the subsequent sentencing proceedings, the
trial court heard evidence from both sides and received a pre-sentence
report. [FN2] The trial court then sentenced Reid to death for the
capital murder conviction and imposed two ten-year sentences for the
attempted rape and attempted robbery convictions.
In imposing the
death penalty pursuant to Code §§ 19.2-264.2 and - 264.4(C), the
trial court found that Reid's conduct in committing capital murder
was "outrageously vile, horrible and inhuman in that it involved
such aggravated battery to the victim, that is ... qualitatively and
quantitatively ... more culpable than the minimum necessary to
accomplish an act of murder."
FN2. The trial court conducted the first part of
the penalty phase hearing on December 3, 1997, immediately after
finding Reid guilty. The court reconvened the hearing on February
20, 1998.
On appeal, Reid contends that the trial court
disregarded certain mitigating evidence and therefore erred in
imposing the death penalty. [FN3] Upon consideration of the record,
briefs, and argument of counsel, we find no error in the judgment of
the trial court. Further, upon conducting our review pursuant to
Code § 17-110.1(C), we conclude that the sentence of death in this
case was not imposed "under the influence of passion, prejudice or
any other arbitrary factor" and is not excessive or disproportionate.
Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment of the trial court.
FN3. Reid is before this Court for automatic
review of his death sentence under Code § 17-110.1. Code § 17-110.1
was repealed and replaced by § 17.1-313, effective October 1, 1998.
Because the parties briefed and argued this case under the
provisions of § 17-110.1, and because the relevant provisions remain
unchanged in § 17.1-313, we will cite to § 17-110.1 in this opinion.
FACTS
"Since the Commonwealth prevailed in the trial
court, we review the evidence and all reasonable inferences arising
therefrom in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth." Graham
v. Commonwealth, 250 Va. 79, 81, 459 S.E.2d 97, 98.
In the afternoon on October 12, 1996, Lester's
cousin went to Lester's house, and after finding the front screen
door open, entered the house, discovered Lester's body on the floor
at the end of a bed, and observed debris all over the bedroom floor.
The cousin left and went to a relative's house to call for emergency
help, but then returned to Lester's home and was there when the
police arrived.
Before disturbing the crime scene, the police
made a video recording of the inside of Lester's house. The tape was
admitted into evidence, and Officer Tommy Lawson narrated what was
being seen as the trial court watched it. Blood was present
throughout Lester's home on such items as the kitchen floor, the
back door and back door trim, the refrigerator, a can of milk, a wig
lying on the kitchen floor, the door leading from the kitchen into a
television room, scissors lying on a chair in the television room,
the bed and headboard in the bedroom where Lester's body was found,
the cord of an electric heating pad that was under Lester's head,
and the seat of a chair beside her body.
Several items of Lester's
clothing had blood on them, including a sweater, a slip, and a bra
that was still fastened in the back but that "[was] broken in some
fashion in the front." The bedroom was in complete disarray with
dresser drawers on the floor and bed and clothing strewn all around.
A wine bottle was sitting on the floor at the foot of the bed.
William Massello, the Assistant Chief Medical
Examiner for Western Virginia, performed an autopsy on Lester. He
described Lester as an elderly, slender, and "somewhat emaciated"
female. During the autopsy, Massello observed 14 stab wounds to the
front of Lester's neck and three stab wounds to her chin, one of
which went into the jugular vein on the left side of her neck. There
were also five stab wounds to the front of Lester's chest. Massello
testified that several of these wounds went through the chest wall
into Lester's left lung and into her heart.
In Massello's opinion,
the most rapidly lethal wounds were four of the stab wounds to the
chest, which caused bleeding into the chest cavity and, in turn,
caused Lester to die rapidly. According to Massello, all the stab
wounds had a Z-shaped or H-shaped configuration consistent with
injuries caused by two blades superimposed on one another or
scissors blades.
In addition to the stab wounds, Massello observed
multiple lacerations and bruises on Lester's body. Some of these
injuries on the top of Lester's head and face were caused either by
Lester's head being struck with a blunt instrument, or by her head
striking another object such as a door or wall. Lester had
lacerations on the right and left sides of her face and linear crush
marks on the right side of her face. [FN4] Finally, Lester sustained
a fracture of the hyoid bone, [FN5] resulting either from the force
of strangulation or from being struck in that area with an object.
FN4. Massello opined that the can of milk found
in Lester's kitchen was the kind of instrument that could have
caused some of the injuries to Lester's head. FN5. Hyoid bone is
defined as "a bone or complex of bones situated at the base of the
tongue and developed from the second and third visceral arches,
supporting the tongue and its muscles...." Webster's Third New
International Dictionary 1111 (1993).
The evidence linking Reid to the commission of
these crimes consists, in part, of testimony from witnesses who saw
Reid at or in the vicinity of Lester's house on the day of her
murder. Around 10:30 a.m. on October 12, Reid secured a ride to
Lester's house with Haywood Alexander and Robert Smith. Reid's
stated purpose for going to Lester's house was to do some work there.
[FN6]
En route to Lester's home, Reid asked Alexander and Smith to
stop at a store where Reid purchased a bottle of wine. They then
proceeded to Lester's house, and upon arriving there, Reid exited
the vehicle and *566 walked around to the back of the house with his
bottle of wine. Alexander and Smith then left. FN6. Reid apparently
had performed odd jobs for Lester on previous occasions and enjoyed
discussing the Bible with her.
Around 4:30 p.m. on that same day, George Eanes,
who worked at Eanes Body Shop located across the street from
Lester's house, observed Reid walking across the street from the
direction of Lester's house. Reid approached Eanes and asked for a
ride. Eanes explained to Reid that he was working on his vehicle and
could not give him a ride at that time.
When asked at the trial to
describe Reid's appearance, Eanes stated that "[Reid] had a lot of
blood on him and he was staggering." [FN7] After seeing the blood on
Reid's clothing, Eanes asked Reid how he got in that condition.
According to Eanes, Reid responded by referring to a former lover
and stating that "he did it for love." FN7. Reid had blood on his
sleeve, shoes, pants, and front of his coat.
George W. Eanes, father of George Eanes, also saw
Reid at the body shop and confirmed that Reid appeared to have been
in a fight because he had blood all over him. Eanes' father stated
that Reid smelled like a "brewery" but that he, nevertheless, agreed
to give Reid a ride home. During that drive, Reid explained to Eanes'
father that some person had given him some drugs and that they had
gotten into an argument or fight.
The results of forensic tests, fingerprint
analyses, and handwriting comparisons also place Reid at Lester's
house on the day in question. Forensic tests established that Reid's
DNA matched a stain abstracted from a cigarette butt found in
Lester's home. A blood stain abstracted from the same cigarette butt
was consistent with the DNA profile of Lester and Reid.
In addition,
the forensic scientist who conducted these tests testified that
Lester's DNA was consistent with blood recovered from Reid's jacket.
Finally, two of Reid's fingerprints were identified in blood found
on the handset of a rotary telephone in Lester's bedroom, and Reid's
handwriting was found on some papers recovered in Lester's house.
The Commonwealth presented all the foregoing
evidence during the guilt phase of Reid's trial but also relied upon
it during the sentencing phase. In addition, the Commonwealth
presented testimony from Robert D. O'Neal, a probation officer.
O'Neal interviewed Reid while preparing the pre-sentence report.
During that interview, Reid stated to O'Neal that he did not
remember anything about the incident.
According to O'Neal, Reid
believes that he "blacked out" because he remembers being at
Lester's house prior to the offense but does not recall anything
that transpired from that point until he awoke at home and found
blood on his clothing.
In mitigation, Reid presented evidence from three
medical experts: Dr. Pogos H. Voskanian, a forensic psychiatrist;
Dr. Stephen Herrick, a forensic psychologist; and Dr. Randy Thomas,
a clinical psychologist. **791 Each of these witnesses discussed
Reid's medical and psychiatric conditions that, in their opinion,
affect Reid's ability to form the intent to commit a crime and that
have caused Reid to experience "blackout" periods during which he is
basically out of control and engages in disorganized, aggressive
behavior toward an unlikely target.
Three factors were significant to these medical
experts in formulating their respective opinions. First, Reid
suffered a major head trauma as a result of an automobile accident
in 1968 and was in a coma for at least five days. The damaged area
of Reid's brain was the left temporal lobe and part of the frontal
lobe, which affects an individual's personality and ability to
control impulses.
Thus, Reid does not resist acting on his impulses.
Second, Reid developed a seizure disorder shortly after the head
injury. According to Dr. Voskanian, Reid's head trauma triggered the
seizure disorder. Because Reid has been noncompliant with taking his
medication to control the seizures, he has experienced repeated
seizures that have, in turn, progressively caused more damage to his
brain.
Finally, Reid has a family history of alcoholism, has abused
alcohol since age 15, and has had numerous admissions to both
psychiatric hospitals and alcohol abuse rehabilitation centers.
Because of Reid's brain injury, he is more vulnerable to the effects
of alcohol and likely to become intoxicated more quickly than
another person. In addition, Reid is a binge drinker, meaning that
he has not built up a tolerance for the effects of alcohol.
Dr. Voskanian opined that Reid experiences "blackout"
episodes when he is intoxicated. During these episodes, Reid may not
remember what he did five minutes ago but would retain his memory
for established information such as his name and residence. Dr.
Voskanian further opined that Reid was in "an impaired state of
consciousness" when he left Lester's house because Reid said things
that could not be understood and did nothing to conceal his bloody
clothing.
In summary, Dr. Voskanian stated that Reid's head trauma,
seizure disorder, long history of drinking, and serious medical
conditions, [FN8] could " have a significant impact on Mr. Reid's
ability to think clearly, or perform intentional acts."
Dr. Voskanian also opined that these conditions could cause violent
outbursts that Reid would not remember if he were intoxicated.
However, all three medical experts believed that Reid would not be
susceptible to these violent outbursts if he were in a structured
setting where he would not have access to alcohol.
FN8. Reid underwent cardiac by-pass surgery.
Several years after the surgery, Reid again had chest pains and
suffered a myocardial infarction. Reid has also been diagnosed with
lung cancer.
Some of Reid's family members also testified that
Reid is a different person when he is intoxicated. His ex-wife,
sister, and mother described Reid as a kind and considerate person
when he is sober, but acknowledged that Reid has violent episodes
during periods of intoxication.
They also confirmed that Reid cannot
remember what he does when he is intoxicated. For example, his ex-wife
testified that Reid once stabbed her when he was intoxicated but
that he had no recollection of the incident the next morning.
Under
Code § 19.2-264.4(B), facts in mitigation that a trial court can
consider in deciding whether to impose a sentence of death or life
imprisonment may include the following: (ii) the capital felony was
committed while the defendant was under the influence of extreme
mental or emotional disturbance, ... [and] (iv) at the time of the
commission of the capital felony, the capacity of the defendant to
appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct
to the requirements of law was significantly impaired.
On appeal, Reid argues that the trial court erred
by not considering evidence establishing these mitigating factors.
Specifically, Reid contends that the court failed to address
evidence showing Reid's lack of planning or premeditation, lack of
memory of the incident, and behavior subsequent to the commission of
the crimes.
Reid also asserts that the trial court failed to
consider the uncontradicted medical testimony regarding his medical
and psychiatric impairments. According to Reid, this evidence
demonstrates not only that he was unaware of what he was doing at
Lester's home on the day in question but also that he cannot now
remember anything about the incident.
Thus, Reid argues that his
conduct in committing the murder of Lester cannot be deemed "vile"
and that the trial court, therefore, erred by imposing a sentence of
death based on the "vileness" factor. Reid's arguments can be
distilled into a single complaint that the trial court must not have
considered his mitigating evidence since the court imposed the death
penalty.
Reid asserts that, since his evidence was uncontradicted
and is not inherently improbable or inconsistent, it had to be
accepted as true. Once that evidence was accepted as true, Reid
contends that it negated the trial court's finding of "vileness." In
other words, Reid asserts that the trial court should have given
controlling weight to his mitigating evidence. We do not agree.
Following a 15-minute recess after the close of
the evidence in the penalty phase, the trial court announced its
sentencing decision and, in doing so, stated, "The Court has the
duty to consider all such evidence, both favorable to you and
unfavorable presented relative to this hearing in ascertaining
whether the crime of which you have been convicted is so atrocious
that the death sentence should be imposed."
Thus, we conclude that
the trial court did, in fact, consider Reid's mitigating evidence.
We have addressed this type of complaint on at least two previous
occasions. First, in Correll v. Commonwealth, 232 Va. 454, 468, 352
S.E.2d 352, 360, the defendant argued, as does Reid, that the
mitigating evidence was of such weight that the court could not have
considered it and still sentenced him to death.
The mitigating
evidence in that case established that Correll had a troubled
childhood and unfortunate home situation. Taking the view that such
evidence tended to explain, but did not excuse, Correll's commission
of the capital murder, we concluded that "it did not require as a
matter of law that the death penalty not be imposed." Id. We further
stated that the fact-finder has a duty to consider mitigating
evidence along with other evidence in determining the appropriate
sentence but that the fact-finder is "not required to give
controlling effect to the mitigating evidence." Id. at 468-469, 352
S.E.2d at 360.
Similarly, in Murphy v. Commonwealth, 246 Va.
136, 142, 431 S.E.2d 48, 52, we addressed the defendant's argument
that the trial court had failed to consider fully the evidence in
mitigation of the imposition of the death penalty. As in the present
case, the trial court in Murphy stated on the record that it had
considered all the evidence. Relying on our decision in Correll, we
concluded that the trial court had "maturely, carefully, and calmly
deliberated the full range of issues." Id. the evidence upon which
Reid relies is mitigating in that it shows "extenuating
circumstances tending to explain, but not excuse, his commission of
the crime." The trial court was not, however, required to give
controlling weight to the mitigating evidence. Id. at 469, 352 S.E.2d
at 360.
Moreover, Reid's mitigating evidence does not, as
a matter of law, negate the trial court's finding of "vileness."
Reid stabbed Lester 22 times and inflicted other wounds on her head,
face, hyoid bone, and arms. According to the medical examiner, four
of the five stab wounds to Lester's chest were fatal. From the
presence of blood throughout Lester's house, it can be inferred that
Reid carried or dragged her body from the kitchen into the bedroom.
At some point, he also removed her clothes and ransacked her bedroom.
Reid's medical and psychiatric impairments, his
periods of "blackout," his lack of memory regarding the acts he
committed at Lester's home, and his behavior subsequent to the
incident when he made no attempt to hide either his presence at
Lester's home or his blood-covered clothing do not change the fact
that the commission of this crime was "outrageously ... vile,
horrible or inhuman, in that it involved ... aggravated battery" to
Lester. Code §§ 19.2-264.2 and -264.4(C). It was "qualitatively and
quantitatively ... more culpable than the minimum necessary to
accomplish an act of murder." Smith v. Commonwealth, 219 Va. 455,
478, 248 S.E.2d 135,, cert. denied, 441 U.S. 967, 99 S.Ct. 2419, 60
L.Ed.2d 1074 (1979).
We have never held that the "vileness" factor
under Code §§ 19.2- 264.2 and -264.4(C) includes a requirement that
a defendant's mental state embrace the intent to commit an "outrageously
or wantonly vile" murder, and we decline to do so now. "The number
or nature of the batteries inflicted upon the victim is the essence
of the test whether the defendant's conduct 'was outrageously or
wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman in that it involved ... an
aggravated battery.' " Boggs v. Commonwealth, 229 Va. 501, 521, 331
S.E.2d 407, 421 (1985).
PREJUDICE AND PROPORTIONALITY REVIEW OF DEATH
SENTENCE
Pursuant to Code § 17-110.1(C)(1), we are
required to determine whether the death sentence in this case was
imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or other
arbitrary factors. Upon careful examination of the record, we find
no evidence that any such factor was present or influenced the trial
court's sentencing decision. Indeed, Reid has not asserted that the
imposition of the death penalty in this case was the result of
passion or prejudice.
We must also determine whether the sentence of
death in this case is "excessive or disproportionate to the penalty
imposed in similar cases." Code § 17-110.1(C)(2). In conducting this
review, we have inspected the records of all capital cases presented
to this Court including those cases in which the trial court imposed
a life sentence instead of the death penalty. In complying with the
directive in Code § 17-110.1(C)(2) to compare "similar" cases, we
have given particular attention to those cases in which the
underlying felony predicates and the facts and circumstances
surrounding the commission of the crimes were the same as those in
this case.
We have also focused on cases in which the death penalty
was imposed solely on the basis of the "vileness" factor. However,
our proportionality review does not require that a given capital
murder case "equal in horror the worst possible scenario yet
encountered." Turner v. Commonwealth, 234 Va. 543, 556, 364 S.E.2d
483, 490. Based on this review, the Court concludes that Reid's
sentence of death is not excessive or disproportionate to sentences
generally imposed in this Commonwealth for capital murders
comparable to Reid's murder of Lester.
As already stated, Reid inflicted 22 stab wounds
upon the victim, four of which were lethal wounds to Lester's chest,
in addition to multiple other injuries. Reid committed these acts
while carrying or dragging Lester's body through her house and
removing her clothing. For these reasons, we find no error in the
imposition of the sentence of death, nor do we perceive any reason
to commute the death sentence. Therefore, we will affirm the
judgment of the trial court. Affirmed.
Defendant, who was convicted, pursuant to his
Alford plea, of murdering 80- year-old woman and attempting to rape
and rob her, filed petition for federal habeas relief. The United
States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, Samuel
G. Wilson, Chief Judge, 2002 WL 31107536, entered order denying
petition, and defendant appealed. The Court of Appeals, Wilkins,
Chief Judge, held that: (1) Virginia postconviction relief court's
determination that counsel who represented capital murder defendant
were not ineffective in allegedly failing to adequately investigate
and to advise defendant on voluntary intoxication or insanity
defense was not unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent,
and did not warrant federal habeas relief; (2) even assuming that
state had raised procedural rule in previous case, in unsuccessful
attempt to bar another defendant from raising constitutional claim
not asserted on direct appeal, single instance in which state courts
had failed to apply this procedural bar was insufficient to
establish inadequacy of rule, as independent basis on which state
court could rely to decline to address petitioner's claim; and (3)
Virginia postconviction relief court's finding that trial court had
considered mitigating evidence presented by capital murder defendant
was not unreasonable, and prevented grant of federal habeas relief
on that basis. Affirmed.
WILKINS, Chief Judge:
James Edward Reid appeals a district court order denying his
petition for a writ of habeas corpus, see 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254 (West
1994 & Supp.2003), in which he challenged his conviction and death
sentence for the murder of 80- year-old Annie Lester. For the
reasons set forth below, we affirm the rejection of Reid's claims by
the district court. Reid named Page True, Warden of Sussex I state
prison, as Respondent. We refer to Respondent as "the State."
Lester's body was discovered on October 12, 1996.
She had been brutally murdered; an autopsy revealed that Lester had
suffered 22 stab wounds. Lester had also been beaten about her head
with a blunt instrument, and a bone in her throat had been crushed
by strangulation or being struck with a hard object. A trail of
blood led from Lester's kitchen to her bedroom, where her body was
found. Lester's clothing was in disarray, and the room had been
ransacked. A bottle of wine was found on the floor at the foot of
the bed.
Substantial evidence connected Reid to the murder.
Reid was acquainted with Lester and had received an automobile ride
to her house in the mid-morning of the day of the murder; on the way,
he purchased a bottle of wine. Late in the afternoon, Reid was
observed walking from the direction of Lester's house, drunk and
covered in blood. The blood on Reid's clothing was later determined
to be consistent with Lester's DNA. Reid's fingerprints were found
in blood on the telephone in Lester's bedroom, his saliva was found
on a cigarette butt left in the room, and his handwriting was found
on pieces of paper in the house.
Reid, who claimed to have no memory
of Lester's murder, subsequently entered an Alford plea to one count
each of capital murder, attempted rape, and attempted robbery. See
North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 37, 91 S.Ct. 160, 27 L.Ed.2d
162 (1970) (holding that a defendant may plead guilty "even if he is
unwilling or unable to admit his participation in the acts
constituting the crime").
After a sentencing hearing, the trial
judge imposed the death penalty, finding that the murder satisfied
the vileness predicate of Virginia law. See Va.Code Ann. §
19.2-264.2 (Michie 2000) (permitting imposition of the death penalty
if the court determines that the defendant's conduct in committing
the murder "was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman
in that it involved torture, depravity of mind or an aggravated
battery to the victim").
On direct appeal, Reid claimed that the trial
court failed to consider uncontradicted mitigating evidence in
reaching its sentencing determination. The Virginia Supreme Court
characterized this argument as a "complaint that the trial court
must not have considered [Reid's] mitigating evidence since the
court imposed the death penalty" and rejected it, concluding that "the
trial court did, in fact, consider Reid's mitigating evidence." Reid
v. Commonwealth, 256 Va. 561, 506 S.E.2d 787, 792 (1998). The United
States Supreme Court thereafter denied Reid's petition for a writ of
certiorari. See Reid v. Virginia, 528 U.S. 833, 120 S.Ct. 91, 145
L.Ed.2d 77 (1999).
Reid subsequently sought habeas relief in the
Virginia Supreme Court, contending, as is relevant here, that his
guilty plea was not knowing and voluntary and that counsel were
constitutionally ineffective for advising him to enter an Alford
plea. The Virginia Supreme Court denied relief, ruling that the
first claim was defaulted and that the second was without merit.
Reid filed this federal habeas petition on November 6, 2000,
claiming that counsel were constitutionally deficient for advising
him to enter an Alford plea, that his Alford plea was not knowing
and voluntary, and that the trial court failed to consider
mitigating evidence.
The district court denied Reid's motions for
discovery and to expand the record but conducted an evidentiary
hearing to determine "what Reid's trial counsel told him about the
effect of his Alford pleas" and "Reid's understanding about the
effect of his Alford pleas." J.A. 379. Following the hearing, the
district court denied the petition, concluding that Reid's claims
regarding counsel's ineffectiveness and the voluntariness of his
plea were without merit and that Reid's claim regarding
consideration of mitigating evidence by the trial court was
procedurally defaulted.
* * * *
The trial court imposed sentence in an
extemporaneous oral ruling. Pinpoint accuracy in phrasing is not a
hallmark of such rulings, and should not be expected. There can be
no question that the court was aware of a duty to consider evidence
favorable to Reid; indeed, the mitigating circumstances were the
subject of lengthy argument by Reid's counsel at two penalty-phase
hearings.
In view of these circumstances, we cannot say that the
Virginia Supreme Court made an unreasonable determination in finding
that the trial court did consider the mitigating evidence proffered
by Reid. Therefore, we must deny relief. See 28 U.S.C.A. §
2254(d)(2).
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that
the district court correctly denied Reid's petition for a writ of
habeas corpus. We therefore affirm. AFFIRMED.