Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Eric
Donald ROBERT
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Failed escape
attempt
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
April 12, 2011
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth:
May 31, 1962
Victim profile:
Ronald
“R.J.” Johnson, 63 (Corrections officer)
Method of murder: Beating
to death with a lead pipe
Location: Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USA
Status:
Sentenced to death on October 20, 2011. Executed by lethal
injection in South Dakota on October 15, 2012
On July 24, 2005, while posing as police officer, Robert pulled over
an 18-year-old woman and forced her into the trunk of his car. After
driving to a remote location, Robert flees after he hears her talking
to someone on her cell phone. In 2006, he was convicted and sentenced
to 80 years imprisonment.
Maintained in "high security" at the South Dakota
State Penitentiary after a lock is found cut in his working area,
Robert and accomplice Rodney Berget attempt an escape, beating 62 year
old corrections officer Ronald “R.J.” Johnson with a pipe and covering
his head in plastic wrap, killing him. They take his uniform, but are
spotted and captured before they can escape. Robert pled guilty and
waived all appeals. Accomplice Berget also pleaded guilty and was
sentenced to death. Accomplice Michael Nordman received a life
sentence for providing materials used in the slaying.
Citations:
State v. Robert, 820 N.W.2d 136 (S.D. 2012). (Direct Appeal)
Final/Special Meal:
Robert fasted in the 40 hours before his execution, consuming his last
meal on Saturday: Moose Tracks ice cream.
Final Words:
“In the name of justice and liberty and mercy, I authorize and forgive
Warden Douglas Weber to execute me for my crimes. It is done.”
ClarkProsecutor.org
South Dakota Department of Corrections
Office of Gov. Dennis Daugaard
www.sd.gov
Monday, Oct. 15, 2012
“This is a sad day for South Dakota. Executions are
rare in our state, and they are warranted only with extreme
forethought and certainty. In this case, Eric Robert admitted to his
crime and requested that his punishment not be delayed. I hope this
brings closure to “RJ” Johnson’s family and all those who loved him. I
also commend Warden Weber and others in the state Department of
Corrections who planned this very difficult task in a professional and
careful manner.”
October 12, 2012
Execution Date, Time Set For Inmate Eric Robert
PIERRE, S.D. - In accordance with South Dakota
Codified Law 23A-27A-17, Doug Weber, Director of Prison Operations and
Warden of the South Dakota State Penitentiary, has set the date and
time for the execution of inmate Eric Robert as Monday, Oct. 15, 2012,
at about 10 p.m. CDT.
State law allows judges in capital punishment cases
to appoint a week for the executions to occur. The exact date and time
of the execution is left to the warden's discretion. The warden is
required by state law to publicly announce the scheduled day and hour
of the execution not less than 48 hours prior to the execution.
Friday, Aug. 24, 2012
Warrant of Execution For Eric Robert Issued
PIERRE, S.D - Attorney General Marty Jackley
announced today that the warrant of execution for Eric Donald Robert
has been issued by Second Circuit Court Judge Bradley Zell. Robert is
scheduled to be executed between the hours of 12:01 a.m. and 11:59
p.m. during the week of Sunday, Oct. 14, 2012, through Saturday, Oct.
20, 2012, inclusive, at a specific time and date to be selected by the
warden of the State Penitentiary. Pursuant to South Dakota law, the
warden will announce to the public the scheduled day and hour within
48 hours of the execution.
South Dakota law further provides that for the
execution, the warden is to request the presence of the attorney
general, the trial judge who oversaw the conviction or the judge’s
successor, the state’s attorney and sheriff of the county where the
crime was committed, representatives of the victims, at least one
member of the media, and a number of reputable adult citizens to be
determined by the warden.
South Dakota Executes Inmate Who Killed Prison
Guard
By Dave Kolpack and Kristi Eaton -
HuffingtonPost.com
October 16, 2012
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — A South Dakota man who beat a
prison guard with a pipe and covered his head in plastic wrap to kill
him during a failed escape attempt was put to death Monday, in the
state's first execution since 2007. Eric Robert, 50, received lethal
injection and was pronounced dead at the state penitentiary in Sioux
Falls at 10:24 p.m. He is the first South Dakota inmate to die under
the state's new single-drug lethal injection method, and only the 17th
person to be executed in the state or Dakota Territory since 1877.
Robert had no expression on his face. Asked if he
had a last statement, Robert said: "In the name of justice and liberty
and mercy, I authorize and forgive Warden Douglas Weber to execute me
for the crimes. It is done." As the drug was administered, the
clean-shaven Robert, wearing orange inmate pants with a white blanket
wrapped around his upper body, appeared to be clearing his throat and
then began gasping heavily. He then snored for about 30 seconds. His
eyes remained opened throughout and his skin turned pale, eventually
gaining a purplish hue.
Robert was put to death in the same prison where he
killed guard Ronald "RJ" Johnson during an escape attempt on April 12,
2011. Robert was serving an 80-year sentence on a kidnapping
conviction when he tried to break out with fellow inmate Rodney
Berget, 50. Johnson's widow, Lynette, said after the execution that
she knows Robert's death will not bring back her husband, her
children's father or her grandchildren's grandfather. "But we do know
that the employees of the Department of Corrections and the public in
general will be just a little bit safer now," Lynette Johnson said.
"We need to have more attention and focus on the safety of all of the
correctional officers in the state of South Dakota. Ron, none of you
will ever know how great he is and is missed. We stand proud for Ron."
Lynette Johnson, her two children and their spouses all witnessed the
execution. No one from Robert's family was in attendance.
Robert ate his last meal of ice cream with his
lawyer, Mark Kadi, on Saturday night before fasting for 40 hours for
religious reasons. After the execution, Kadi said the execution was
very "orderly and polished." "The problem was it was too orderly. It
was so antiseptic and peaceful that it masked what was being done to
the person," Kadi said. "If more people were able to see the events,
there would be fewer of them."
Johnson was working alone the morning of his death
– also his 63rd birthday – in a part of the prison known as
Pheasantland Industries, where inmates work on upholstery, signs,
custom furniture and other projects. Authorities said the inmates beat
Johnson with a pipe, covered his head in plastic wrap and left his
body on the floor. Robert then put on Johnson's pants, hat and jacket
and approached the prison's west gate. With his head down, he pushed a
cart loaded with two boxes. Berget was hidden in one of the boxes,
according to a report filed by a prison worker after the slaying.
Other guards became suspicious as the men got closer to the gate. When
confronted, Robert beat one guard; other guards quickly arrived and
detained both inmates.
Months later, Robert told a judge his only regret
was that he hadn't killed more guards. He pleaded guilty to Johnson's
slaying and asked to be sentenced to death, telling a judge last
October that he would otherwise kill again. He never appealed his
sentence and even tried to bypass a mandatory state review in hopes of
expediting his death. Berget also has pleaded guilty in the killing
but has appealed his death sentence. A third inmate, Michael Nordman,
47, was given a life sentence for providing materials used in the
slaying.
Robert's execution could be the first of two in as
many weeks. Donald Moeller is scheduled to be put to death the week of
Oct. 28 for the 1990 kidnapping, rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl.
Robert had been on death row only for about a year, Moeller has been
there for more than two decades. Only three other inmates currently
are on the state's death row.
South Dakota's last execution before Monday took
place in 2007, and that was the first in the state for 60 years. "You
have few people on death row, few executions, and then you have this
coincidence of cases coming all at once," said Richard Dieter,
executive director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center.
"When people waive appeals, their cases start to move more quickly."
Eric Robert executed in South Dakota
Reuters.com
October 16, 2012
(Reuters) - South Dakota on Monday executed an
inmate convicted of beating a prison guard to death during a failed
escape attempt, in the state's first execution in five years. Eric
Robert, 50, was put to death by lethal injection at the state prison
in Sioux Falls. He was pronounced dead at 10:24 p.m. (11:24 p.m. EDT),
the corrections department said. Robert's execution came 18 months
after authorities say he and fellow inmate Rodney Berget beat guard
Ronald Johnson to death with a lead pipe and attacked other officers
in an escape attempt on Johnson's birthday in April 2011.
Johnson's widow, Lynette Johnson, witnessed the
execution. She said afterward that her family did not want people to
forget "how kind, how wonderful and caring" her husband was. "We know
this execution tonight is not going to bring back my husband to me, it
is not going to bring our children's father back to them, our six
grandchildren's 'papa' back to them but we do know that the employees
of the department of corrections and the public in general will be
just a little bit safer now," she said.
Robert pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in the
killing of Johnson, waived a jury for sentencing, told the judge
during sentencing that he would kill again if he did not receive the
death penalty and opposed efforts to halt his execution. Corrections
officials said his last words were: "In the name of justice and
liberty and mercy I authorize and forgive Warden Douglas Weber to
execute me for my crimes. It is done."
According to court records, Robert was five years
into an 80-year sentence for kidnapping a young woman when he and
Berget planned their escape from the prison in Sioux Falls. The men
entered an area of the prison they were not allowed to be in and
attacked Johnson with a lead pipe. Robert then put on the guard's
pants, shoes, jacket and baseball cap and Berget hid on a cart, court
documents show. Robert tried to push the cart with Berget inside
through a prison exit, but was challenged by an officer, setting off a
fight with several guards before they surrendered, they show.
Robert had a last meal of ice cream on Saturday
night, then fasted, said attorney Mark Kadi.
Executions have been rare in South Dakota - there
have only been two since 1913. "In this case, Eric Robert admitted to
his crime and requested that his punishment not be delayed," South
Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard said in a statement. But the state
might have a second execution in October. South Dakota is scheduled to
execute Donald Moeller for the 1990 rape and murder of 9-year-old
Becky O'Connell the week of October 28 to November 3. The prison
warden schedules the specific date and time.
Before Robert's execution, 31 prisoners had been
executed in the United States in 2012, according to the Death Penalty
Information Center.
S. Dakota executes inmate who killed prison
guard
CapJournal.com
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — A South Dakota man who
beat a prison guard with a pipe and covered his head in plastic wrap
to kill him during a failed escape attempt was put to death Monday, in
the state’s first execution since 2007. Eric Robert, 50, received
lethal injection and was pronounced dead at the state penitentiary in
Sioux Falls. He is the first South Dakota inmate to die under the
state’s new single-drug lethal injection method, and only the 17th
person to be executed in the state or Dakota Territory since 1877.
Robert was put to death in the same prison where he
killed guard Ronald “RJ” Johnson during an escape attempt on April 12,
2011. Robert was serving an 80-year sentence on a kidnapping
conviction when he tried to break out with fellow inmate Rodney
Berget, 50.
Johnson was working alone the morning of his death
— also his 63rd birthday — in a part of the prison known as
Pheasantland Industries, where inmates work on upholstery, signs,
custom furniture and other projects. Authorities said the inmates beat
Johnson with a pipe, covered his head in plastic wrap and left his
body on the floor. Robert then put on Johnson’s pants, hat and jacket
and approached the prison’s west gate. With his head down, he pushed a
cart loaded with two boxes. Berget was hidden in one of the boxes,
according to a report filed by a prison worker after the slaying.
Other guards became suspicious as the men got closer to the gate. When
confronted, Robert beat one guard; other guards quickly arrived and
detained both inmates.
Months later, Robert told a judge his only regret
was that he hadn’t killed more guards. He pleaded guilty to Johnson’s
slaying and asked to be sentenced to death, telling a judge last
October that he would otherwise kill again. He never appealed his
sentence and even tried to bypass a mandatory state review in hopes of
expediting his death. Berget also has pleaded guilty in the killing,
but has appealed his death sentence. A third inmate, Michael Nordman,
47, was given a life sentence for providing materials used in the
slaying.
Robert’s execution could be the first of two in as
many weeks. Donald Moeller is scheduled to be put to death the week of
Oct. 28 for the 1990 kidnapping, rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl.
Robert had been on death row only for about a year, Moeller has been
there for more than two decades. Only three other inmates currently
are on the state’s death row.
South Dakota’s last execution before Monday took
place in 2007, and that was the first in the state for 60 years. “You
have few people on death row, few executions, and then you have this
coincidence of cases coming all at once,” said Richard Dieter,
executive director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center.
“When people waive appeals, their cases start to move more quickly.”
South Dakota murderer executed by lethal
injection for beating to death prison guard with pipe during botched
escape
DailyMail.co.uk
Associated Press - October 15, 2012
A South Dakota man who beat a prison guard with a
pipe and covered his head in plastic wrap to kill him during a failed
escape attempt was put to death on Monday, in the state's first
execution since 2007. Eric Robert, 50, received lethal injection and
was pronounced dead at the state penitentiary in Sioux Falls at 10.24
pm. He is the first South Dakota inmate to die under the state's new
single-drug lethal injection method, and only the 17th person to be
executed in the state or Dakota Territory since 1877.
Robert had no expression on his face. Asked by the
Warden if he had a last statement, Robert said: 'In the name of
justice and liberty and mercy, I authorize and forgive Warden Douglas
Weber to execute me for the crimes. It is done.' As the drug was
administered, the clean-shaven Robert, wearing orange inmate pants
with a white blanket wrapped around his upper body, appeared to be
clearing his throat and then began to make heavy gasps. He started
snoring for about 30 seconds. His eyes remained opened throughout and
his skin turned pale, eventually gaining a purplish hue.
Robert was put to death in the same prison where he
killed guard Ronald 'RJ' Johnson during an escape attempt on April 12,
2011. Robert was serving an 80-year sentence on a kidnapping
conviction when he tried to break out with fellow inmate Rodney
Berget, 50.
Johnson was working alone the morning of his death
- also his 63rd birthday - in a part of the prison known as
Pheasantland Industries, where inmates work on upholstery, signs,
custom furniture and other projects. Authorities said the inmates beat
Johnson with a pipe, covered his head in plastic wrap and left his
body on the floor. Robert then put on Johnson's pants, hat and jacket
and approached the prison's west gate. With his head down, he pushed a
cart loaded with two boxes. Berget was hidden in one of the boxes,
according to a report filed by a prison worker after the slaying.
Other guards became suspicious as the men got closer to the gate. When
confronted, Robert beat one guard; other guards quickly arrived and
detained both inmates.
Months later, Robert told a judge his only regret
was that he hadn't killed more guards. He pleaded guilty to Johnson's
slaying and asked to be sentenced to death, telling a judge last
October that he would otherwise kill again. He never appealed his
sentence and even tried to bypass a mandatory state review in hopes of
expediting his death. Michael Nordman, 47, was given a life sentence
for providing materials used in the murder of Ronald Johnson Berget
also has pleaded guilty in the killing but has appealed his death
sentence. A third inmate, Michael Nordman, 47, was given a life
sentence for providing materials used in the slaying.
Robert's execution could be the first of two in as
many weeks. Donald Moeller is scheduled to be put to death the week of
October 28 for the 1990 kidnapping, rape and murder of a nine-year-old
girl.
Only three other inmates currently are on the
state's death row. South Dakota's last execution before Monday took
place in 2007, and that was the first in the state for 60 years. 'You
have few people on death row, few executions, and then you have this
coincidence of cases coming all at once,' said Richard Dieter,
executive director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center.
'When people waive appeals, their cases start to move more quickly.'
For religious reasons, Roberts spent his final 40
hours fasting and as a result his last meal was on Saturday night when
he ate Moose Track ice cream – vanilla ice cream with peanut butter
cups and Moose Track Fudge. According to his lawyer, Mark Kadi, the
fast is religious in nature with 40 hours serving as a metaphor for
the 40-day fast of Christ in the Bible.
Opponents of the death penalty held a vigil outside
the prison at 8pm. Any last-minute appeal or stay of execution is
unlikely, as Gov. Dennis Daugaard announced last week that he would
not intervene. Warden Doug Weber accompanied Robert into the execution
chamber this evening. The Minnehaha County coroner was present to
declare Robert dead.
None of Robert's friends or family were scheduled
to attend, said Kadi.
S. Dakota executes inmate who killed prison
guard
SiouxCityJournal.com
October 15, 2012
A South Dakota man who beat a prison guard with a
pipe and covered his head in plastic wrap to kill him during a failed
escape attempt was put to death Monday, in the state's first execution
since 2007. Eric Robert, 50, received lethal injection and was
pronounced dead at the state penitentiary in Sioux Falls at 10:24 p.m.
He is the first South Dakota inmate to die under the state's new
single-drug lethal injection method, and only the 17th person to be
executed in the state or Dakota Territory since 1877.
Robert had no expression on his face. Asked if he
had a last statement, Robert said: "In the name of justice and liberty
and mercy, I authorize and forgive Warden Douglas Weber to execute me
for the crimes. It is done." As the drug was administered, the
clean-shaven Robert, wearing orange inmate pants with a white blanket
wrapped around his upper body, appeared to be clearing his throat and
then began gasping heavily. He then snored for about 30 seconds. His
eyes remained opened throughout and his skin turned pale, eventually
gaining a purplish hue.
Robert was put to death in the same prison where he
killed guard Ronald "RJ" Johnson during an escape attempt on April 12,
2011. Robert was serving an 80-year sentence on a kidnapping
conviction when he tried to break out with fellow inmate Rodney
Berget, 50.
Johnson's widow, Lynette, said after the execution
that she knows Robert's death will not bring back her husband, her
children's father or her grandchildren's grandfather. "But we do know
that the employees of the Department of Corrections and the public in
general will be just a little bit safer now," Lynette Johnson said.
"We need to have more attention and focus on the safety of all of the
correctional officers in the state of South Dakota. Ron, none of you
will ever know how great he is and is missed. We stand proud for Ron."
Lynette Johnson, her two children and their spouses all witnessed the
execution. No one from Robert's family was in attendance.
Robert ate his last meal of ice cream with his
lawyer, Mark Kadi, on Saturday night before fasting for 40 hours for
religious reasons. After the execution, Kadi said the execution was
very "orderly and polished." "The problem was it was too orderly. It
was so antiseptic and peaceful that it masked what was being done to
the person," Kadi said. "If more people were able to see the events,
there would be fewer of them."
Johnson was working alone the morning of his death
_ also his 63rd birthday _ in a part of the prison known as
Pheasantland Industries, where inmates work on upholstery, signs,
custom furniture and other projects. Authorities said the inmates beat
Johnson with a pipe, covered his head in plastic wrap and left his
body on the floor. Robert then put on Johnson's pants, hat and jacket
and approached the prison's west gate. With his head down, he pushed a
cart loaded with two boxes. Berget was hidden in one of the boxes,
according to a report filed by a prison worker after the slaying.
Other guards became suspicious as the men got closer to the gate. When
confronted, Robert beat one guard; other guards quickly arrived and
detained both inmates.
Months later, Robert told a judge his only regret
was that he hadn't killed more guards. He pleaded guilty to Johnson's
slaying and asked to be sentenced to death, telling a judge last
October that he would otherwise kill again. He never appealed his
sentence and even tried to bypass a mandatory state review in hopes of
expediting his death. Berget also has pleaded guilty in the killing
but has appealed his death sentence. A third inmate, Michael Nordman,
47, was given a life sentence for providing materials used in the
slaying.
Robert's execution could be the first of two in as
many weeks. Donald Moeller is scheduled to be put to death the week of
Oct. 28 for the 1990 kidnapping, rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl.
Robert had been on death row only for about a year, Moeller has been
there for more than two decades. Only three other inmates currently
are on the state's death row. South Dakota's last execution before
Monday took place in 2007, and that was the first in the state for 60
years. "You have few people on death row, few executions, and then you
have this coincidence of cases coming all at once," said Richard
Dieter, executive director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information
Center. "When people waive appeals, their cases start to move more
quickly."
Eric Robert: From model citizen to death row
Man headed to death chamber tonight had seemingly
normal, productive life before turning to crime
By John Hult - MitchellRepublic.com
October 15, 2012
SIOUX FALLS — Eric Robert’s life bears little
resemblance to that of his peers on death row. Most condemned killers
have troubling personal stories and long criminal histories. Donald
Moeller was beaten, demeaned and made to watch his biological mother’s
drug use and sexual behavior. Elijah Page, executed in 2007, moved
from house to house with substance-abusing parents then bounced from
foster home to foster home in several states. Rodney Berget suffered
with an alcoholic father and abuse, and was first sent to the adult
prison system at age 15. His brother, Roger, was executed in 2003 in
Oklahoma, eight years before Rodney Berget and Robert would commit a
capital crime in the murder of Corrections Officer Ron Johnson.
Robert’s life looked nothing like Berget’s. He will be put to death at
10 p.m. today.
Robert was the child of a single mother who helped
raise his younger sister in his home state of Wisconsin. He had a
stellar academic record, put himself through college and had a
successful career in wastewater treatment. He was an emergency medical
technician and frequent community volunteer who once helped erect a
monument to a murdered sheriff. He grew close to his longest-term love
interest through her son, whom Robert coached on a Little League team.
In 2005, before he was sentenced to 80 years in
prison for a Meade County kidnapping, his sister told the judge that
her brother “has done more good in his life than many people in this
world.” This week, the state of South Dakota intends to put Robert to
death by lethal injection for the brutal, premeditated killing of
Johnson on April 12, 2011.
The rage that fueled the killing was a measure of
how far he’d fallen from the life he once had. Robert said so himself
in court one year ago. He’d refused to let his lawyer mention his good
deeds. “To be honest with you, the good acts that I’ve done in my life
were not mentioned here, because they are irrelevant to these
proceedings,” Robert said. “That person who did good things no longer
exists.”
Last week, through his lawyer Mark Kadi, Robert
reiterated his reasoning for staying quiet about his prior kind acts
during sentencing for the Johnson murder. “My client feels that none
of the good things he’s done justify the killing of Ron Johnson,” Kadi
said.
Early life
Eric Robert was born May 31, 1962, in
Massachusetts. His father was gone by the time he was 6 months old.
Robert, his mother and younger sister moved to Hayward, Wis., when he
still was young. His sister, Jill Stalter, declined to comment for
this story but testified on her brother’s behalf in 2005.
She said then that Robert was the father figure in
their house as their mother worked three jobs and studied to earn a
college degree. “My brother took care of everything. He took out the
trash, he made sure dinner was on the table, he even did grocery
shopping. He got me my first dog. He did everything. He even shoveled
snow, and in Hayward, it’s a lot of snow,” Stalter said. “He put
himself through college by working weekends and during summer breaks.
He didn’t take a penny from my mother because she was putting herself
through college.”
He was a good student, as well, graduating 18th in
his class at Hayward High School in 1980. He returned to Hayward after
earning a biology degree with a chemistry minor at the University of
Wisconsin-Superior. In 2000, he applied for a job as the wastewater
treatment supervisor for the city of Superior. On his job application,
released as part of a records request by the Argus Leader, Robert
wrote that he hadn’t missed a day of work in 10 years. He got along
well with co-workers. Frog Prell, the city attorney, started work for
the city in 2000, just a few months after Robert, whom family and
friends knew as “Ranger.”
Robert used to drop by the office to joke around,
quiz Prell about small towns in Wyoming, which is Prell’s home state.
The short interactions left an impression on Prell, who didn’t know
Robert was on death row until the records request came across his desk
this month. “If you’d have asked me what I thought about Eric Robert
before this, I’d have said he seemed like a pretty cool guy,” Prell
said. Dan Romans, the wastewater administrator for Superior, called
Robert a “natural-born leader” who accomplished more in 18 months on
the job than others had for decades.
‘Aggressive, mean’
Robert eventually lost his job in Superior, though,
because he failed to comply with a city residence requirement, but he
continued to consult with the city afterward. He was living in a home
in the rural community of Drummond, more than an hour southeast of
Superior.
It was in Hayward, almost a decade before, where he
met the woman with whom he’d later build the house in Drummond. That
woman, who testified at Robert’s pre-sentence hearing last year in
Sioux Falls but declined to comment for this story, said there was an
undercurrent of anger in him even then — one most people didn’t see.
“He was an aggressive, mean person who didn’t like other people and
had to be in control,” she said the woman, whom the Argus Leader is
not identifying because she is a victim. She’d gone to high school
with Robert but didn’t know him well at the time. They got
reacquainted in 1992, when he was coaching her son’s baseball team.
Robert soon was living with the woman and her two children.
“We got along fine at first,” she said, but then
“he showed me his true colors.” She recounted three specific incidents
in court from their decade-long romance. They rented an apartment in
Cable, Wis., as they built their house, she said. One day, as they sat
on the couch together, Robert backhanded her over an offhand remark.
She hit him back, she said, then recoiled when she realized that he
was sure to retaliate. “He punched me in the mouth so hard it pushed
my bottom teeth through my lip,” she said.
Robert, who knew most of the employees in the local
ER through his work as an EMT, told the doctors and nurses she’d
slipped on icy steps while carrying in groceries. He had similar
explanation for her appearance at the ER with a broken foot years
later. She called police on him after a separation, when he showed up
at her house drunk and started a fight that ended with him pulling her
around the yard by her hair. She dropped the charges for fear he’d
hurt her again. She lived with a lot, she told Judge Zell. He’d force
her to come to bed without clothing and beat her until she relented
and submitted to sex. “I told myself because I rolled over and said
‘fine’ that it wasn’t rape,” she said. Another former girlfriend
accused Robert of rape in 2002 in Brule County but never filed
charges. She was granted a protection order against Robert, however,
after telling a judge there that Robert had held her against her will
after a day of searching for apartments in Chamberlain.
80-year sentence
The crime that would land Robert in the
penitentiary in South Dakota took place in 2005, a few months after he
moved to Piedmont to help a friend with her business. On July 24,
2005, Robert followed an 18-year-old woman on a rural road near Black
Hawk and turned on his pickup’s spotlights to pull her over about 2
a.m. In court one year ago in Sioux Falls, the victim recounted her
story. She said Robert told her he was an undercover police officer
and asked her to perform field sobriety tests. “He didn’t have any
form of identification; he had maybe just a T-shirt on and jeans. Had
some facial hair, an unshaven look,” she said.
She was suspicious, she said, but went along with
it when Robert asked her to empty out the trunk of her car. That’s
when Robert scooped her up and stuffed her in the trunk. “I remember
hearing the vehicle that was behind my car leaving, so I thought he
had just left me there,” she said. She had a cellphone and called a
friend to tell them what had happened. Meanwhile, Robert drove his
truck to a lot just down the road, then returned to the location of
the stop and drove her car to the lot. Robert disappeared shortly
after parking her car, as the victim frantically described her
situation to the Pennington County Sheriff’s department.
When detectives found Robert and his pickup days
later, he no longer matched the description of the suspect. He’d
shaved his head and face and initially denied any involvement. In the
back of his truck, detectives found a bed, an ax, rope and
pornography. He eventually admitted to pulling the victim over and was
arrested. Prosecutors said the items were evidence that Robert planned
to rape the victim, but Robert denied that.
The friend he was working for in Piedmont said
“Ranger” would sleep in his truck to avoid hotel fees. She said he’d
never shown any interest in young girls. At his sentence hearing in
2005, she said he’d been working for her all summer for no pay, and
that she couldn’t believe the allegations against him at first. “It’s
unbelievable that he would do that, or that he did that. It’s nothing
of the man I know. He was incapable of doing that,” Cheryl Williamson
said.
Another friend of Robert, Bob Lang, an EMT from
Cable, Wis., also testified on his behalf. Robert volunteered his time
for the ambulance service, he said, but also volunteered around the
region in other ways. When a former Bayfield County Sheriff Richard
Parquette was killed in a domestic dispute, Lang decided that the
ambulance service ought to erect a memorial to him. Robert, who met
Lang shortly after the sheriff’s death and never knew Parquette
personally, put in hours of time raising funds for the memorial. “I
didn’t understand it,” Lang said. “He didn’t know Officer Parquette.
He didn’t really know me at the time. He just said he wanted to do
what was right.”
Lang and others did say Robert could be very
aggressive when drinking alcohol, but they also said he had given up
drinking alcohol on his own as a way to keep a lid on the aggression.
Robert was given an 80-year prison sentence, based in part on his
suspected intentions. In pronouncing sentence, Judge Warren Johnson
said it was too difficult to square Robert’s life in northern
Wisconsin with the man who committed the Meade County crime. “It
certainly sounds like the Wisconsin Eric Robert is a totally different
person from the South Dakota Eric Robert,” Johnson said. “It’s the
South Dakota Eric Robert I’m dealing with today.”
Prison life
Prison further hardened Robert. He spent years
battling the DOC and court system over a variety of issues. He
successfully fought an effort by the DOC to classify him as an
unconvicted sex offender based on the allegations made by the women
he’d known in Wisconsin, Chamberlain and his victim in Piedmont. In
2007, he was accused of attempting to escape by tampering with a lock
on the door of a shower room where he worked. He argued unsuccessfully
that he’d been set up by other inmates. Two other appeals consumed him
during his incarceration, according to testimony from DOC employees at
his sentencing last year. He first fought for a shot at a sentence
reduction. When that failed in 2009, he asked for a transfer to a
facility in Wisconsin, so he could be closer to his mother. That
failed, as well.
Soon thereafter, Robert’s rage metastasized until
he came to view himself as a soldier in a “war” against his
oppressors. “On April 12, 2011, RJ (Johnson) became a victim in
Robert’s war,” Judge Brad Zell wrote in his ruling on the death
penalty. “As Robert stated in court, anyone who stood in his way as an
oppressor would have died on that day.” Johnson wasn’t even scheduled
to work that day, which was his 63rd birthday. He’d agreed to come in
to cover a shift for a co-worker, who’d called in sick.
The 20-year veteran in the prison showed up and
took up his post in the Pheasantland Industries building that morning
at 7:30. Three hours later, Robert and his co-defendant, Rodney
Berget, walked into the building with a load of laundry. Even though
both men were classified as maximum security risks, their jobs
afforded them freedom of movement. Each man testified that they hid
and waited for Johnson, then snuck up on him, bashed him in the head
with a metal pipe then wrapped his head in plastic to stop him from
screaming. Robert put on Johnson’s uniform. Berget climbed into a box
atop a wheeled cart.
Robert pushed the cart through one of the double
doors in the sally port at the prison’s west gate, where he was
intercepted and questioned by Officer Matthew Freeburg. When Freeburg
asked the officer in the control booth to call for backup, Berget
sprang from the box and both inmates began to beat the officer as a
security alert went out through the penitentiary. In September, when
Robert pleaded guilty to first-degree murder, his lawyer, Mark Kadi,
told Judge Zell that his client wanted to plead guilty the next day.
Execution: South Dakota delivers Eric Robert his
death wish
By Steve Young - ArgusLeader.com
October 16, 2012
Eric Robert, whose botched attempt for freedom from
the state penitentiary resulted in the murder of a prison guard,
finally escaped Monday night from the bitter life behind bars he
loathed — this time through the execution chamber. Robert, 50, died by
lethal injection at 10:24 p.m. for his role in the April 12, 2011,
murder of officer Ron “R.J.” Johnson on the same penitentiary grounds
where the inmate was put to death Monday.
Asked by Warden Doug Weber before the execution if
he had any last statement, Robert began by saying, “In the name of
justice and liberty and mercy, I authorize and forgive Warden Douglas
Weber to execute me for my crimes. It is done.” Robert’s lawyer, Mark
Kadi of Sioux Falls, said it was important for Robert to forgive the
warden. “It may seem like a minor, odd point for everybody else,” Kadi
said. “But from the perspective of a man who’s got seconds left, the
last thing he wanted to do was forgive the individual who was causing
the execution, causing his death.”
Speaking afterward in the prison training academy
that was renamed for her husband on the one-year anniversary of his
death, Johnson’s widow, Lynette, said the family understands that
Robert’s death won’t bring their loved one back. Still, “we, Ron’s
children and I, want everyone please, do not forget how kind, how
wonderful and caring Ron Johnson is,” Lynette Johnson said. “We know
this execution tonight is not going to bring back my husband to me.
It’s not going to bring our children’s father back to them. ... our
six grandchildren’s ‘Papa’ to them. But we know that the employees of
the Department of Corrections and the public in general will be just a
little bit safer now.”
Corrections spokesman Michael Winder said Robert
was removed from his holding cell at 9:31 p.m. and placed on the table
in the execution chamber at 9:32 p.m. The first intravenous line was
started in his right arm five minutes later, and the second IV line,
in his left arm, at 9:41 p.m. After the witnesses were escorted to the
viewing rooms, Weber ordered the curtains opened at 9:59 p.m. Robert
gave his last statement at 10:01, and the injections were completed at
10:04. Media witness Dave Kolpack of The Associated Press said Robert
appeared to be clearing his throat as the lethal drug was being
administered. “He began to make some heavy gasps, and then started
snorting. That lasted about 30 seconds,” Kolpack said.
Dressed in a white T-shirt and orange prison pants,
with a sheet pulled up to about the middle of his chest, Robert
appeared to stop moving at about 10:03 p.m., said John Hult of the
Argus Leader, the second media witness to the execution. After the
clearing of his throat, “there was no movement,” Hult said. “I didn’t
see his chest move at all after that.” Coroners checked for a pulse in
his neck and chest for several minutes before he was finally declared
dead. Hult said the inmate’s eyes remained open the entire time, even
after an assistant coroner tried to close them. By the time he was
declared dead, his skin color had turned purple, witnesses said.
One controversial drug
Unnamed correctional officers on the execution team
administered a single drug, pentobarbital — a powerful barbituate that
stopped Robert’s respiration and created blood pressure changes that
caused his heart to give out. Attorney General Marty Jackley said he
never considered bringing in executioners from outside South Dakota’s
penitentiary system, even though the murdered guard was one of their
own. “From everything that I witnessed, Corrections staff were
exceptionally professional,” the attorney general said. “They carried
out a humane sentence. I saw no need to have another entity.”
The protocol for Robert’s execution was different
from that used five years ago, when Elijah Page was put to death for
his role in the 2000 murder of Chester Allan Poage near Spearfish.
Back then, South Dakota used a three-drug procedure that started with
an injection of sodium thiopental to knock him unconscious and numb
the pain of the other two drugs — pancuronium bromide to collapse the
lungs and potassium chloride to stop the heart. But a shortage of
those execution drugs in recent years led to controversy and delays
nationwide, and prompted South Dakota and states such as Georgia,
Ohio, Arizona, Idaho and Texas to make the switch to the single drug.
After South Dakota decided on pentobarbital, federally appointed
public defenders for death row inmate Donald Moeller challenged the
quality of the chosen barbituate, saying its plan to mix the drug from
powder posed a serious risk of contamination that could lead to pain
and suffering.
But Moeller, sentenced to die for the 1990 rape and
murder of 9-year-old Rebecca O’Connell, told a judge Oct. 4 that he
had no interest in pursuing that challenge and delaying his scheduled
execution two weeks from now. And Robert had long nixed any appeals on
his behalf, saying he could kill again if left to a life in prison. In
a prepared statement, Gov. Dennis Daugaard called Monday’s execution
“a sad day for South Dakota.” “Executions are rare in our state, and
they are warranted only with extreme forethought and certainty,” the
governor said.
'Calm and reserved'
On Saturday evening, Robert consumed his last meal
— Moose Tracks ice cream. Kadi said Robert chose to fast during his
last 40 hours before his execution. Kadi said Robert considered the
fast to be religious in nature and a metaphor for the 40-day fast of
Christ in the Bible. From 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday, the inmate “was
actually calm and reserved,” Kadi said, adding that the actual
execution itself “was so antiseptic and peaceful that it masks what
was actually being done to the person.”
Robert never denied his role in the escape attempt
that resulted in the death of Johnson on April 12, 2011 — the
correctional officer’s 63rd birthday. From the beginning, Robert took
responsibility for the crime, asking for and receiving the death
penalty and eschewing all appeals — thus the relative quickness in
which he was adjudicated and executed. Johnson, a 20-year veteran at
the prison, had volunteered for a shift in the Pheasantland Industries
building on the penitentiary grounds the morning that Robert and
fellow inmate Rodney Berget walked into the building with a load of
laundry. Even though both inmates were classified as maximum security
risks, their jobs afforded them the freedom of movement.
Each man testified that they had hid and waited for
Johnson, then snuck up on him, struck him in the head with a metal
pipe, then wrapped his head in plastic to stop him from screaming.
Robert put on Johnson’s uniform. Berget climbed into a box atop a
wheeled cart. They never made it out of the penitentiary before being
caught. A third inmate, Michael Nordman, 47, was given a life sentence
for providing materials used in the slaying.
Execution: Key dates in Eric Robert's life
May 31, 1962: Born in Massachusetts, later moves to
Hayward, Wis., with mother and younger sister
1980: Graduates 18th in his class at Hayward High School
1987: Graduates from University of Wisconsin-Superior
1988: Working as chemist for Murphy Oil in Superior
1992: Returns to Hayward, begins coaching youth baseball, later joins
volunteer EMT service
1994-99: Works in Cable, Wisconsin for wastewater treatment plant,
builds house in Drummond.
1999-2000: Works for Bayfield County, Wis., Zoning Office
2000-2004: First manages, then consults for, wastewater treatment
plant in Superior
2005: Moves to Piedmont, S.D., to help a friend
July 24, 2005: Posing as police officer, pulls over and kidnaps an
18-year-old woman.
Jan. 3, 2006: Sentenced to 80 years for kidnapping
2007: Classified as “high security” at South Dakota State Penitentiary
2009: Attempted sentence reduction fails, Robert denied transfer to
prison closer to Wisconsin
April 12, 2011: With Rodney Berget, kills corrections officer during
an escape attempt.
Sept. 16, 2011: Pleads guilty to frst-degree murder
Oct. 19, 2011: Asks for a death sentence from Judge Bradley Zell
Oct. 20, 2011: Zell sentences Robert to death
Aug. 2012: South Dakota Supreme Court upholds death sentence.
Oct. 12, 2012: Warden Doug Weber announces that Robert will be put to
death at 10 p.m. Oct. 15
Oct. 15, 2012: 9:31 p.m. Robert removed from his holding cell
9:32 p.m. Robert transferred to the execution table
9:35 p.m. Restraints are secured
9:37 p.m. First IV started in the right arm
9:41 p.m. Second IV is started
9:46 p.m. Staff begins to escort witnesses to the viewing rooms
9:59 p.m. With all witnesses present, warden orders the curtains open
10 p.m. Secretary of Corrections informs warden he is clear to proceed
with execution
10:01 p.m. Last statement: “It is done”
10:04 p.m. Injections are completed
10:24 p.m. Time of death
Eric Donald Robert
ProDeathPenalty.com
Eric Donald Robert was incarcerated at the State
Penitentiary in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, serving an 80-year sentence
for a kidnapping conviction. In that case, an 18-year-old woman told
police a man posing as a plainclothes police officer pulled over her
car near Black Hawk, told her he needed to search it and then forced
her into the trunk. She used her cell phone to call for help, and she
was found unharmed.
Robert, who most recently was head of a city's
water treatment department and had previously been a chemist with the
Environmental Protection Agency, had more than $200,000 in assets and
no debt when he was arrested on the kidnapping charges in 2005. Robert
contends he was drunk and trying to rob the 18-year-old girl of $200,
not sexually assault her. He was sentenced to 80 years in prison and
would not have been eligible for parole until he was 83.
On April 12, 2011, in Minnehaha County, Robert and
co-defendant Rodney Berget killed State Corrections Officer Ronald
Johnson with a metal pipe. The pair attacked the prison guard, wrapped
his head in plastic shrink wrap and left him to die before using his
uniform to sneak past security in an unsuccessful escape attempt.
Ronald Johnson was working alone in a part of the Sioux Falls prison
known as Pheasantland Industries, where inmates work on upholstery,
signs, custom furniture and other projects. Robert put on Johnson's
brown pants, hat and lightweight jacket before approaching the
prison's west gate with his head down, pushing a cart with two boxes
wrapped in packing tape, according to an investigator's affidavit.
Berget was hidden inside one of the boxes.
Another corrections officer opened an inner gate
and allowed Robert to wheel the cart into a holding area, but became
suspicious when Robert didn't swipe his electronic ID card. Robert
claimed he forgot his badge and said main control was out of temporary
cards. The officer then asked Cpl. Matthew Freeburg if he recognized
the guard, and Freeburg said no. When the officer called for a
supervisor, Robert started kicking and beating Freeburg and Berget
jumped out of the box to join in. More officers arrived to find Berget
still beating Freeburg. Robert had climbed the outer gate, reaching
the razor wire on top. Both inmates were apprehended before leaving
the grounds and taken to a jail in Sioux Falls. Freeburg was taken to
a hospital, but returned to work the next day. Johnson, who had worked
at the penitentiary for more than 23 years, was a father of two and
grandfather of six.
He died on his birthday, said his son, Jesse
Johnson. "He loved to relax and play with his grandkids," Jesse
Johnson told the Argus Leader. "He never had a bad thing to say about
anybody." Jesse Johnson said his father, known to friends and family
as R.J., had lived through a riot at the penitentiary in 1993 and knew
the danger of his job but never dwelled on it. At the sentencing
hearing for Robert, a witness who responded to the "code 5" call for
help testified, "I saw the sergeant pulling the saran wrap off of RJ's
head, I knew it was RJ." Lynette Johnson, Ronald Johnson's widow, said
she has a hard time responding when one of her six grandchildren ask
about their papa.
Rodney Berget was also sentenced to death. Berget
has been in and out of South Dakota's prison system since the
mid-1980s and is serving life sentences for attempted murder and
kidnapping. He was convicted of escaping from the penitentiary in
1984. In 1987, he and five other inmates again broke out of the same
facility on Memorial Day by cutting through bars in an auto shop. He
was caught in mid-July of that year.
State v. Robert, 820 N.W.2d 136 (S.D.
2012). (Direct Appeal)
Background: Following defendant's guilty plea to
first-degree murder for the death of a state penitentiary guard, and
his waiver of his right to have a jury determine his sentence, the
Circuit Court, Second Judicial Circuit, Minnehaha County, Bradley G.
Zell, J., sentenced defendant to death. Defendant waived his right to
appeal his death sentence.
Holdings: On mandatory sentence review, the Supreme
Court, Gilbertson, C.J., held that: (1) death sentence was not imposed
under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary
factor; (2) evidence supported findings of aggravating circumstances;
and (3) death sentence imposed on defendant was not excessive or
disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering
both the crime and defendant. Affirmed.
GILBERTSON, Chief Justice.
[¶ 1.] Eric Robert pleaded guilty to first-degree
murder for the death of penitentiary guard Ronald Johnson, a 23–year
veteran correctional officer at the South Dakota State Penitentiary in
Sioux Falls. Robert waived his right to a jury's determination of
whether the death sentence would be imposed. The circuit court
conducted a pre-sentence hearing and imposed the death penalty.
Subsequent to pleading guilty, Robert has consistently sought
imposition of the death penalty and that the execution be expedited.
Even though Robert waived his right to appeal the death sentence, this
Court is statutorily mandated to conduct a review of the death
sentence. SDCL 23A–27A–9.
Facts
[¶ 2.] Robert was convicted of kidnapping in Meade
County in January 2006. The Meade County Circuit Court sentenced him
to 80 years in prison. This conviction resulted in Robert being
incarcerated in the South Dakota State Penitentiary beginning in
January 2006.
[¶ 3.] On April 12, 2011, Robert and Rodney Berget,
also an inmate at the South Dakota Penitentiary, entered the
Pheasantland Industries' building FN1 in the penitentiary complex.FN2
Because of their maximum security classifications, neither inmate was
authorized access to this building. On this date, Johnson was working
in the Pheasantland Industries' building. Robert and Berget assaulted
Johnson by striking him with a lead pipe which they had acquired
earlier specifically for that purpose. Johnson was repeatedly struck
on the face and head with the lead pipe. An expert testified that the
blows to the head continued after Johnson was on the ground. The
attack fractured Johnson's skull in at least three locations and
exposed a portion of his brain. He also suffered defensive wounds to
his hands and arms. After immobilizing Johnson with the pipe, Robert
and Berget wrapped Johnson's head in plastic wrap which prevented him
from crying out and also from breathing. The inmates dragged Johnson's
body behind a large crate to conceal him.
FN1. Pheasantland Industries is an enterprise
within the walls of the State Penitentiary. FN2. A separate appeal is
currently pending in this Court in regard to Berget. See State v.
Berget, # 26318. We limit our factual review in this case to the
record contained herein. See also n. 13.
[¶ 4.] Robert then dressed himself in Johnson's
uniform and Berget climbed into a box placed on a four-wheel cart.
Robert, dressed as Johnson, pushed the cart toward the west gate of
the penitentiary. After observing that Robert did not swipe an ID
badge, Correctional Officer Jodi Hall confronted Robert about his
identity. When Robert's explanation did not satisfy her, Hall notified
Officer Matt Freeburg. Freeburg told Hall to call the Officer in
Charge. At this time, Berget sprang from the box and he and Robert
began assaulting Freeburg. The inmates used Johnson's radio to beat
Freeburg. Hall issued a distress call “Code Red—Code 3” on her radio.
While Berget continued the assault on Freeburg, Robert attempted to
scale the exterior gate of the penitentiary but became entangled in
razor wire. Robert then attempted to grab a gun from the responding
officers. When that did not work, Robert and Berget tried to bait the
officers into shooting them. Unsuccessful and surrounded, Robert shook
Berget's hand and the pair surrendered.
[¶ 5.] Because Robert was wearing Johnson's
uniform, penitentiary staff began to search for Johnson. His body was
discovered behind the crate in the Pheasantland Industries' building.
His face was badly disfigured and swollen from the beating and
asphyxiation. The correctional officer who found Johnson attempted
CPR. Life-saving efforts continued after medical personnel arrived and
on the way to the hospital, but all efforts proved futile. Johnson was
declared dead at the hospital.
Procedural History
[¶ 6.] On September 16, 2011, Robert pleaded guilty
to first-degree murder in violation of SDCL 22–16–1(1), 22–16–4(1),
22–16–12, and 22–3–3. Robert waived his right to a jury sentencing.
The circuit court found Robert competent, that he was represented by
competent counsel, and that the plea and jury waiver were entered
voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently.
[¶ 7.] Pursuant to South Dakota's statutes, a death
penalty prosecution is conducted in two phases. See SDCL 23A–27A–2.
The first phase adjudicates the defendant's guilt or innocence. Id. If
a guilty verdict is returned, the trial is resumed “to hear additional
evidence in mitigation and aggravation of punishment.” Id. Because
Robert pleaded guilty, there was no trial on the guilt phase.
Moreover, because he waived his right to jury sentencing, the penalty
phase was tried to the circuit court.
[¶ 8.] In order for the death penalty to be
considered, the State must prove at least one of the aggravating
circumstances enumerated in SDCL 23A–27A–1 FN3 beyond a reasonable
doubt. SDCL 23A–27A–6.FN4 Should at least one aggravating circumstance
be proven, the death penalty can be considered. Id. At the
pre-sentence hearing, defendants are allowed to present whatever
relevant mitigating evidence they can muster. SDCL 23A–27A–2.
FN3. This section provides: Pursuant to §§
23A–27A–2 to 23A–27A–6, inclusive, in all cases for which the death
penalty may be authorized, the judge shall consider, or shall include
in instructions to the jury for it to consider, any mitigating
circumstances and any of the following aggravating circumstances which
may be supported by the evidence: (1) The offense was committed by a
person with a prior record of conviction for a Class A or Class B
felony, or the offense of murder was committed by a person who has a
felony conviction for a crime of violence as defined in subdivision
22–1–2(9); (2) The defendant by the defendant's act knowingly created
a great risk of death to more than one person in a public place by
means of a weapon or device which would normally be hazardous to the
lives of more than one person; (3) The defendant committed the offense
for the benefit of the defendant or another, for the purpose of
receiving money or any other thing of monetary value; (4) The
defendant committed the offense on a judicial officer, former judicial
officer, prosecutor, or former prosecutor while such prosecutor,
former prosecutor, judicial officer, or former judicial officer was
engaged in the performance of such person's official duties or where a
major part of the motivation for the offense came from the official
actions of such judicial officer, former judicial officer, prosecutor,
or former prosecutor; (5) The defendant caused or directed another to
commit murder or committed murder as an agent or employee of another
person; (6) The offense was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible,
or inhuman in that it involved torture, depravity of mind, or an
aggravated battery to the victim. Any murder is wantonly vile,
horrible, and inhuman if the victim is less than thirteen years of
age; (7) The offense was committed against a law enforcement officer,
employee of a corrections institution, or firefighter while engaged in
the performance of such person's official duties; (8) The offense was
committed by a person in, or who has escaped from, the lawful custody
of a law enforcement officer or place of lawful confinement; (9) The
offense was committed for the purpose of avoiding, interfering with,
or preventing a lawful arrest or custody in a place of lawful
confinement, of the defendant or another; or (10) The offense was
committed in the course of manufacturing, distributing, or dispensing
substances listed in Schedules I and II in violation of § 22–42–2.
FN4. This section provides: In nonjury cases the
judge shall, after conducting the presentence hearing as provided in §
23A–27A–2, designate, in writing, the aggravating circumstance or
circumstances, if any, which he found beyond a reasonable doubt.
Unless at least one of the statutory aggravating circumstances
enumerated in § 23A–27A–1 is so found, the death penalty shall not be
imposed.
[¶ 9.] Robert's pre-sentence hearing began on
October 24, 2011, and lasted four days. Following the hearing, the
circuit court entered extensive findings of fact and conclusions of
law. The circuit court found that the State proved beyond a reasonable
doubt the existence of two aggravating circumstances: “the offense was
committed against a law enforcement officer, employee of a corrections
institution, or firefighter while engaged in the performance of such
person's official duties,” and “the offense was committed by a person
in, or who has escaped from, the lawful custody of a law enforcement
officer or place of lawful confinement.” SDCL 23A–27A–1(7), (8).
Although evidence had been presented regarding several other
aggravating circumstances, the circuit court found it unnecessary to
make further findings regarding any other aggravating circumstances.
Because at least one of the enumerated aggravating circumstances had
been proven, the circuit court concluded that consideration of the
death penalty was appropriate.
[¶ 10.] The circuit court then turned to its
consideration of the aggravating and mitigating evidence presented.
See SDCL 23A–27A–2.FN5 The court began this analysis by noting
Robert's intent and desire to die. The court concluded that such a
wish is not an aggravating circumstance appropriately considered in
the determination of whether the death penalty should be imposed. The
court also noted that Robert had instructed his counsel not to present
mitigating evidence on his behalf. However, the court indicated that
it considered all mitigating evidence contained in the record. This
mitigating evidence included Robert's acceptance of responsibility and
mitigating evidence from the Meade County kidnapping file, of which
the court took judicial notice. After considering both the aggravating
and mitigating evidence, the court concluded that “the only effective
and reasonable retribution or punishment under the totality of the
circumstances in this matter is the imposition of the death penalty.”
FN5. This section provides: In all cases in which
the death penalty may be imposed and which are tried by a jury, upon a
return of a verdict of guilty by the jury, the court shall resume the
trial and conduct a presentence hearing before the jury. Such hearing
shall be conducted to hear additional evidence in mitigation and
aggravation of punishment. At such hearing the jury shall receive all
relevant evidence, including: (1) Evidence supporting any of the
aggravating circumstances listed under § 23A–27A–1; (2) Testimony
regarding the impact of the crime on the victim's family; (3) Any
prior criminal or juvenile record of the defendant and such
information about the defendant's characteristics, the defendant's
financial condition, and the circumstances of the defendant's behavior
as may be helpful in imposing sentence; (4) All evidence concerning
any mitigating circumstances.
[¶ 11.] The circuit court entered a Judgment of
Conviction and Warrant of Execution on November 10, 2011. On November
16, 2011, Robert filed a Waiver of Appeal, waiving his right to appeal
his conviction. This waiver acknowledged his right to appeal,
acknowledged discussing his waiver with counsel, and stated that the
waiver was free and voluntary. The waiver was signed by Robert and was
notarized.
[¶ 12.] Regardless of Robert's waiver of appeal,
this Court is obligated to review each death sentence imposed in South
Dakota. “If the death penalty is imposed, and if the judgment becomes
final in the trial court, the sentence shall be reviewed on the record
by the South Dakota Supreme Court.” SDCL 23A–27A–9. This Court
conducts this review whether or not the defendant appeals the
sentence. When the defendant appeals, this Court's statutorily
obligated sentence review is consolidated with the direct appeal. Id.
This Court obtained jurisdiction to conduct this sentence review when
the circuit court clerk transmitted the record, transcripts, a
prepared notice of the clerk, and report of the trial judge to this
Court.FN6 See id.
FN6. Robert's position in this matter raised
procedural issues as of yet unique to this State's death penalty
procedure. Pursuant to SDCL 23A–27A–9, the circuit court clerk is to
transmit the entire record and transcript to this Court in order to
effectuate the mandatory sentence review. The time for transmittal of
the record from the circuit court to this Court hinges upon completion
of the transcripts. Because Robert chose not to appeal, he did not
order transcripts in connection with his notice of appeal. However,
transcripts needed to be ordered and completed both to effectuate this
Court's sentence review and to commence the time for transmittal of
the record from the circuit court to this Court. The circuit court,
appropriately relying on SDCL 23A–32–1, issued an order directing the
court reporters involved to prepare transcripts and charge the expense
to the County. Completion and filing of the transcripts provided this
Court with a complete record on which to conduct this mandatory
sentence review and triggered the procedural mechanism for initiating
that review when no notice of appeal was filed by Robert.
[¶ 13.] Upon obtaining jurisdiction, Robert's
position raised with this Court an issue of first impression. It was
clear to the Court that Robert had instructed his appointed counsel to
make no argument against imposition of the death penalty. This Court
is aware of society's interest in the constitutional imposition of the
death penalty. See Commonwealth v. McKenna, 476 Pa. 428, 383 A.2d 174,
181 (1978). This interest exists independent of the State's interest
in punishing Robert for his crimes. Aware that Robert's instructions
prevented his appointed counsel from arguing against imposition of the
death penalty and that the State would be arguing for imposition of
the death penalty, this Court appointed an experienced criminal trial
attorney as amicus curiae to identify and raise any potential issues
not presented due to the respective positions of Robert and the
State.FN7
FN7. Given Robert's position of seeking the death
penalty, this Court concluded it was appropriate to appoint an amicus
curiae to act as an independent “friend of the Court” to call to this
Court's attention any issues which are relevant to its statutory and
constitutional independent review of this case. The amicus did
appropriately function in this manner. [T]he term “amicus curiae”
literally means “a friend of the court.” It ordinarily implies the
friendly intervention of counsel to call the court's attention to a
legal matter which has escaped or might escape the court's
consideration. The right to be so heard is entirely within the court's
discretion.... He cannot be partisan. Neither can he be a party nor
assume the functions of a party to an action. Matter of Estate of
Ohlhauser, 78 S.D. 319, 322–3, 101 N.W.2d 827, 829 (1960).
[¶ 14.] Additionally, Robert's position called into
question his competency—especially his competency to waive
presentation of mitigating evidence at the pre-sentence hearing and
urge his own execution. The record revealed that Dr. Manlove, a
psychiatrist, had evaluated Robert for the purpose of determining his
competency to stand trial.FN8 While it was clear that Dr. Manlove
concluded Robert was competent to stand trial, Robert had prevented
either the State or the circuit court from reviewing Dr. Manlove's
report. At that point, Robert had sole access to the report and
refused to release it to the circuit court or to the State. Given the
gravity of the issues and potential outcome, this Court, sua sponte,
requested the parties address the issue of Robert's competency.
Specifically, this Court requested the parties' analysis of the
appropriate competency standard, and whether Robert gave any
indication of failing that standard. All parties, including the amicus
curiae, agreed that the record revealed no concern as to Robert's
competency. The circuit judge had found Robert competent, and Robert's
in-court statements throughout the circuit court proceedings were
those of a competent, intelligent man. Nevertheless, out of an
abundance of caution, this Court accepted Robert's offer to review
in-camera the Manlove report completed after Robert chose to plead
guilty. The contents of this report, which remain under seal,
alleviate our concerns regarding Robert's competency. FN8. Dr. Manlove
had also evaluated Robert in connection with the Meade County
proceedings.
[¶ 15.] With amicus appointed and Robert's
competency settled, this Court entered an order setting a briefing
schedule. Further, we ordered Robert's execution stayed until such
time as this sentence review was completed. Robert strenuously
objected to the briefing schedule and the resultant delay of his
execution, arguing that this Court was without jurisdiction to stay
his execution absent a direct appeal. We addressed Robert's objections
in an earlier opinion. State v. Robert, 2012 S.D. 27, 814 N.W.2d 122.
We determined that this Court has jurisdiction to stay Robert's
execution pending our review. Id. This Court having received the
briefs of Robert, the State, and amicus curiae, now proceeds to review
Robert's sentence. FN9. Robert and the State both waived oral argument
in this matter. As the parties' respective briefs illustrated no
difference in their positions on the statutorily mandated areas of
inquiry, we accepted the waiver and review Robert's sentence on the
record presented. This should not be understood as rendering our
review of Robert's death sentence cursory. As we have recognized:
“This is in keeping with the mandate of the Supreme Court that we must
review carefully and with consistency death penalty cases and not
engage in ‘cursory’ or ‘rubber stamp’ type of review.” State v. Piper,
2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 83, 709 N.W.2d 783, 815 (quoting Arizona v. Watson, 129
Ariz. 60, 628 P.2d 943, 946 (1981)). See also Piper v. Weber ( Piper
II ), 2009 S.D. 66, ¶ 6, 771 N.W.2d 352, 355 (“ ‘The penalty of death
is qualitatively different from a sentence of imprisonment, however
long. Death, in its finality, differs more from life imprisonment than
a 100–year prison term differs from one of only a year or two.’
Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. 280, 305, 96 S.Ct. 2978, 2991, 49
L.Ed.2d 944 (1976). ‘The qualitative difference of death from all
other punishments requires a correspondingly greater degree of
scrutiny of the capital sentencing determination.’ California v.
Ramos, 463 U.S. 992, 998–99, 103 S.Ct. 3446, 3452, 77 L.Ed.2d 1171
(1983)”).
Analysis
[¶ 16.] Regardless of whether a direct appeal is
filed by a defendant, this Court is obligated to review each sentence
of death imposed in this state. “If the death penalty is imposed, and
if the judgment becomes final in the trial court, the sentence shall
be reviewed on the record by the South Dakota Supreme Court.” SDCL
23A–27A–9. This Court is required to make certain enumerated inquiries
regarding each death sentence. With regard to the sentence, the
Supreme Court shall determine: (1) Whether the sentence of death was
imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other
arbitrary factor; and (2) Whether the evidence supports the jury's or
judge's finding of a statutory aggravating circumstance as enumerated
in § 23A–27A–1; and (3) Whether the sentence of death is excessive or
disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering
both the crime and the defendant. SDCL 23A–27A–12. We address each
inquiry in turn.
[¶ 17.] (1) Whether the sentence of death was
imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other
arbitrary factor.
[¶ 18.] The pre-sentence verdict illustrates the
circuit court's thought process in reaching its sentencing conclusion.
The conclusion was based on appropriate considerations including:
Robert's future dangerousness, including his threat to kill again; his
violent history, including the 2005 kidnapping; his ability to be
rehabilitated; and the severity and depravity of the crime. The court
also considered any mitigating evidence it could find, despite
Robert's desire that no such evidence be presented. None of the
considerations articulated as factoring into the sentencing decision
evidence the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary
factor.
[¶ 19.] Perhaps the obvious manner in which Robert
fights so vigorously for his execution calls us to review the
propriety of it. Robert's passion toward this end generates an
examination of the manner in which the sentence was imposed. Robert's
persistent efforts to hasten his own death necessitate intense
scrutiny to guarantee his desire to die was not a consideration in the
sentencing determination. We do not participate in a program of
state-assisted suicide. “The State must not become an unwitting
partner in a defendant's suicide by placing the personal desires of
the defendant above the societal interests in assuring that the death
penalty is imposed in a rational, non-arbitrary fashion.” Grasso v.
State, 857 P.2d 802, 811 (Okla.Crim.App.1993) (Chapel, Judge,
concurring). Indeed, had the sentencing determination been based in
any degree on Robert's desire to die, the sentence may have been
impermissibly imposed based on a non-statutory arbitrary
factor—Robert's suicide wish. See Lenhard v. Wolff, 444 U.S. 807, 815,
100 S.Ct. 29, 33, 62 L.Ed.2d 20 (1979) (Marshall, J., dissenting). If
that were the case, and the record revealed that the circuit court
based its decision on Robert's desire to die, this Court would be
obligated to reverse the sentence of death and remand for
resentencing. See SDCL 23A–27A–13. It is not a statutory aggravating
circumstance to invoke the death penalty. See SDCL 23A–27A–1. However,
the circuit court went out of its way to make it clear that the
sentencing decision was based in no part on Robert's desire to die.
This Court can affirm the constitutional imposition of the death
penalty imposed in accordance with our statutes; it will not sanction
state-assisted suicide.
[¶ 20.] As noted above, Robert waived presentation
of mitigating evidence at the pre-sentence hearing. The circuit court
recognized Robert's right to do so. Schriro v. Landrigan, 550 U.S.
465, 479, 127 S.Ct. 1933, 1942, 167 L.Ed.2d 836 (2007). The circuit
court in Schriro engaged the defendant in an on-the-record colloquy
regarding his waiver of presentation of mitigating evidence. Id. at
469, 127 S.Ct. at 1937. Here, the record presents no such
on-the-record colloquy specifically relating to Robert's waiver of
mitigating evidence. However, the Supreme Court indicated in Schriro
that such a colloquy had never been required. Id. at 479, 127 S.Ct. at
1943. It also indicated that an “informed and knowing” standard for
waiving mitigating evidence had not been established, but it assumed
that one existed. Id. at 479, 127 S.Ct. at 1942. While it may be
better practice to conduct an on-the-record colloquy with a capital
defendant choosing to waive mitigating evidence, the record supports
the conclusion that, assuming an “informed and knowing” standard
applies to such a waiver, Robert's waiver satisfied that standard.
[¶ 21.] Recognizing that Robert had a right to
waive presentation of mitigating evidence, the circuit court
considered mitigation from whatever source it could find. SDCL
23A–27A–1 requires that the judge “shall consider ... any mitigating
circumstances.” Piper, 2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 32, 709 N.W.2d at 799 (also
citing Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 604–05, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 2964–65,
57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978)). Despite Robert's waiver, the circuit court's
consideration of “any mitigating circumstances” was required. This the
circuit court did. Robert's death sentence does not appear to have
been the result of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor.
[¶ 22.] (2) Whether the evidence supports the
jury's or judge's finding of a statutory aggravating circumstance as
enumerated in § 23A–27A–1.
[¶ 23.] The circuit court found that the State had
proven the existence of two of the aggravating circumstances
enumerated in SDCL 23A–27A–1. FN10 Specifically, the court found the
existence of circumstance 7: “The offense was committed against a law
enforcement officer, employee of a corrections institution, or
firefighter while engaged in the performance of such person's official
duties;” and circumstance 8: “The offense was committed by a person
in, or who has escaped from, the lawful custody of a law enforcement
officer or place of lawful confinement.” FN10. “We have previously
held the aggravating factors under SDCL 23A–27A–1 to be
constitutional.” Piper, 2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 28, 709 N.W.2d at 783.
[¶ 24.] The evidence presented at the pre-sentence
hearing included testimony from Douglas Weber, Director of Adult
Corrections and Chief Warden for the State of South Dakota. He
testified that on April 12, 2011, Ronald Johnson was employed as a
corrections officer at the South Dakota Penitentiary. He also
testified that, at the time of the murder, Johnson was on duty in the
Pheasantland Industries' building, covering a shift for a different
corrections officer's absence. The evidence presented supports the
finding of the aggravating circumstance identified in SDCL
23A–27A–1(7).
[¶ 25.] The record also contains the testimony of
Jodi Hall and Matt Freeburg from the pre-sentence hearing. These two
officers described the situation they encountered on April 12, 2011.
Officer Hall described Robert's actions as he approached the
penitentiary gate, dressed as Johnson. She also described Robert's
attempt to climb through the razor wire on top of the gate after she
called for the Officer in Charge to come to the location. Officer Hall
testified: “Mr. Robert and Berget were attempting to escape.” FN11.
SDCL 22–11A–1 defines escape as the “departure [by a prisoner] without
lawful authority....” SDCL 22–11A–2 provides, in relevant part, Escape
in the First Degree to be “if the prisoner effects the escape.... (2)
From a secure correctional facility....”
[¶ 26.] Officer Freeburg also described the events
of April 12, 2011. Officer Freeburg testified that Robert assaulted
him, then attempted to climb the gate. The evidence presented supports
the finding of the aggravating circumstance found in SDCL
23A–27A–1(8).FN12 In Piper, “we acknowledge[d] that once aggravating
circumstances have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt, the lower
court has broad discretion in determining whether to sentence a
particular defendant to death.” 2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 28, 709 N.W.2d at 798.
FN12. Furthermore, Robert admitted the existence of these two
aggravating circumstances. All other evidence is consistent with that
admission so as not to taint his admission by his admitted goal of
seeking the death penalty.
[¶ 27.] (3) Whether the sentence of death is
excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases,
considering both the crime and the defendant.
[¶ 28.] The final inquiry regarding Robert's death
sentence is the proportionality of the sentence compared to the
penalty imposed in similar cases. This Court is obligated “to include
in its decision a reference to those similar cases which it took into
consideration.” SDCL 23A–27A–13. We clarified the “universe” of cases
to be considered in conducting this review in Rhines I. We conclude
that similar cases for purposes of SDCL 23A–27A–12(3) are those cases
in which a capital sentencing proceeding was actually conducted,
whether the sentence imposed was life or death. “Because the aim of
proportionality review is to ascertain what other capital sentencing
authorities have done with similar capital murder offenses, the only
cases that could be deemed similar ... are those in which imposition
of the death penalty was properly before the sentencing authority for
determination.” State v. Rhines ( Rhines I ), 1996 S.D. 55, ¶ 185, 548
N.W.2d 415, 455–56 (quoting Tichnell v. State, 297 Md. 432, 468 A.2d
1, 15–16 (1983) (citation omitted)).
[¶ 29.] In Piper, 2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 38, 709 N.W.2d at
801, and State v. Page, 2006 S.D. 2, ¶ 60, 709 N.W.2d 739, 760–61, we
identified those cases up to that point falling into this category.
Since that time, our records reflect that, other than Robert, and now
Berget FN13, there has been one case in which a capital sentencing
proceeding was conducted— State v. Daphne Wright. See State v. Wright,
2009 S.D. 51, 768 N.W.2d 512. In Wright, a Minnehaha County jury,
faced with the decision of whether to impose the death penalty, chose
life in prison. Therefore, we compare Robert's sentence with those
cases identified in Piper and Page, as well as Wright. FN14 As we did
in Page and Piper, we take judicial notice of the summaries of the
cases set forth in Rhines I, 1996 S.D. 55, ¶ 196, 548 N.W.2d at
456–57.
FN13. As previously noted, Berget's case is pending
before this Court for review in a separate proceeding. See State v.
Berget, # 26318. We do not engage in a comparison of the Robert and
Berget cases at this point as Berget's appeal is still pending before
this Court. As such, it is not a final decision of this Court
appropriate for proportionality analysis. Moreover, Berget is
contesting whether his actions justify a sentence of death on a
proportionality basis. In part, he specifically relies upon a direct
comparison between himself and Robert. To engage in such a joint
analysis at this point could taint Berget's right to fully argue the
same issue on his behalf based upon the record in his case at the
point when his case is ready to be considered by this Court rather
than the record in the Robert case now before us.
Although Page and Piper were considered and decided
simultaneously, we limited ourselves to an examination of the
individual record in each case when considering the statements of each
defendant as to the facts of the homicide and culpability of each. See
Page, 2006 S.D. 2, ¶ 110, 709 N.W.2d at 775; Piper, 2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 86,
709 N.W.2d at 815. FN14. The universe of cases in which a capital
sentencing proceeding was conducted includes: State v. Howard Adams;
State v. Steven Bittner; State v. William J. Helmer; State v. Donald
Moeller; State v. James Elmer Smith; State v. Edwin Swallow; State v.
David Waff; State v. Charles Russell Rhines; State v. Robert Leroy
Anderson; State v. Darrell Hoadley; State v. Elijah Page; State v.
Briley Piper; and State v. Daphne Wright. Moving forward, the universe
will include State v. Eric Robert and State v. Rodney Berget.
[¶ 30.] Of these cases, the sentencing authority
imposed the death sentence on six individuals (Moeller, Rhines,
Anderson, Page, Piper, and Berget) and life without parole on the
other eight. For purposes of comparative proportionality review, “a
death sentence is comparatively excessive if other defendants with
similar characteristics generally receive sentences other than death
for committing factually similar offenses in the same jurisdiction.”
Rhines I, 1996 S.D. 55, ¶ 205, 548 N.W.2d at 457 (quoting State v.
Bey, 137 N.J. 334, 645 A.2d 685, 689 (1994)). Proportionality review
focuses on both the crime and the defendant. Id. ¶ 206. We have
recognized that “the disparity in suffering endured by victims is an
important and legitimate consideration when evaluating the
proportionality of a death sentence.” Id. ¶ 207.
[¶ 31.] As this is the first time this Court has
included the case of Daphne Wright in its proportionality review of a
death sentence, a summary is appropriate. Fueled by jealousy, Wright
murdered a friend of her girlfriend by beating her to death with a
blunt object. The victim was also asphyxiated. Wright then attempted
to secrete the crime by cutting the victim's body into pieces and
disposing of the parts in several places. The State sought the death
penalty based on the depravity of the crime. The evidence at trial
established that the victim's body was dismembered post-mortem. The
jury heard that Wright is deaf and that she was traumatized when her
parents sent her to a boarding school for the deaf at age five. A
psychological evaluation gauged Wright's reading comprehension at a
third-grade level, and found that she may have suffered brain damage
from an infant illness that caused her deafness. Wright's mitigating
evidence also included struggles with her sexual identity and multiple
suicide attempts.
[¶ 32.] Wright's crime factually resembles
Johnson's death. Wright beat her victim to death with a blunt object
then asphyxiated her. The State sought the death penalty based on the
depravity of the murder. The jury found the existence of the depravity
aggravating circumstance, but returned a sentence of life without
parole. Distinguishing Wright's crime from Robert's, Wright's victim
was not an on-duty corrections officer, nor was Wright attempting to
escape lawful confinement at the time. These facts alone separate
Robert's offense from Wright's.
[¶ 33.] A proportionality review focuses not only
on the crime, but also on the defendant. Id. Wright's jury considered
mitigating factors not present in Robert's case. Wright had been deaf
her entire life, struggled with sexual identity issues, and had
attempted suicide several times. A psychological evaluation concluded
that Wright read at a third-grade level, and suggested the possibility
of brain damage.
[¶ 34.] None of the mitigating circumstances
present in Wright are present here. Robert presents as an intelligent,
college-educated man well able to function in society. He held a
college degree from the University of Wisconsin and has held several
long-term jobs. At the time of the 2006 Meade County kidnapping
conviction, Robert had over $14,000.00 in his checking account, and
over $200,000.00 in total assets available. Even though Robert was
capable of functioning as a productive member of society, his past
contains several instances of violent, abusive behavior.
[¶ 35.] Robert committed this crime while
incarcerated for the 2005 kidnapping of a young woman. At the time of
the kidnapping, Robert's vehicle contained rope, a shovel, and
pornographic material. For the kidnapping, Robert received 80 years in
prison.
[¶ 36.] Robert's violent history predates this
murder and the kidnapping. At the pre-sentence hearing, the State
elicited testimony from a person with whom Robert had had a long-term
relationship. This testimony established that, before the kidnapping,
Robert was a violent, abusive, sexually assaultive man, capable of
violent acts against innocent victims. This witness testified that
Robert physically assaulted her, including punching, tackling, and
pointing a gun to her head. She also testified that Robert physically
beat her until she acquiesced to sex. This testimony is relevant
because, as noted, the excessiveness and proportionality inquiry focus
not only on the crime, but also the defendant. FN15. In his reply
brief, Robert argues that because he agreed the death penalty was a
proper sentence, the testimony concerning his past behavior was
irrelevant. But Robert's decision to accept the death penalty is the
irrelevant fact in the sentencing determination, not his history. As
previously noted, if the only relevant consideration were Robert's
decision to accept and even seek execution, this State would be
assisting his suicide, rather than constitutionally imposing the most
severe criminal sanction available.
[¶ 37.] This case presents the second time that a
capital sentencing phase has been conducted based on the potential
applicability of SDCL 23A–27A–1(7) ( “The offense was committed
against a law enforcement officer, employee of a corrections
institution, or firefighter while engaged in the performance of such
person's official duties.”). In State v. Bittner, Bittner stabbed two
police officers responding to a call that Bittner physically assaulted
his girlfriend. One of the officers died. The jury did not find the
existence of any aggravating circumstances. Bittner established
various mitigating circumstances, including the use of alcohol
immediately prior to the crime and a disavowal of any intent to
deliberately kill the officer. Bittner received life in prison.
[¶ 38.] At the time of this crime, Robert was an
inmate in the penitentiary. Alcohol played no role in this killing.
Nor has Robert disavowed his intent to kill Johnson. Rather, Robert
confessed his intent to kill not only Johnson, but any other
correctional officer standing in his way of escape. The nature of
Johnson's injuries supports Robert's professed intent to kill Johnson.
Robert's escape attempt relied on immobilizing Johnson and stealing
his uniform. But the intensity of the beating and use of the plastic
wrap prove that Robert intended to assure Johnson's death, even if
immobilization would have sufficed. Robert's sobriety and intent to
kill Johnson set this case apart from Bittner's. Robert's death
sentence is not disproportionate to the life sentence Bittner
received.
[¶ 39.] The case of Darrell Hoadley also presents a
horrendous beating death. Hoadley received a life sentence from a jury
after co-defendants Page and Piper both received death sentences from
a judge.FN16 In considering the proportionality of Piper's death
sentence to co-defendant Hoadley, we noted that Hoadley's involvement
distinguished the sentences of Piper and Page. “South Dakota reenacted
the death penalty in 1979. Since that time, only defendants Moeller,
Rhines, and Anderson have approached the sheer brutality exhibited by
Piper and his co-defendant Page, and all have received the death
penalty. Piper and Page jointly planned the murder scheme and it was
only after it was agreed upon between them did they so inform Hoadley
and involve him in its execution.” Piper, 2006 S.D. 1, ¶ 39, 709
N.W.2d at 801. This was not merely an escape attempt on the spur of
the moment where events spiraled out of control. Here, the record
reflects that Robert had been planning his escape attempt, which
included the murder of a corrections officer, for well over a month.
His planning stage included obtaining the lead pipe eventually used to
kill Johnson.
FN16. This Court reversed Piper's death sentence in
Piper v. Weber, 2009 S.D. 66, 771 N.W.2d 352. Piper was later
sentenced to death by a jury. Piper has appealed the jury's death
sentence to this Court, which appeal is currently pending. State v.
Piper, # 26126.
[¶ 40.] The combination of the record concerning
the crime and defendant satisfy this Court that Robert's death
sentence is neither excessive nor disproportionate when compared to
the applicable universe of cases.
Conclusion
[¶ 41.] The circuit court did not base its
sentencing decision on any passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary
factor. The evidence supports the aggravating circumstances found by
the circuit court, and the death sentence is neither disproportionate
nor excessive when compared to other South Dakota cases in which a
capital sentencing phase was conducted. The death sentence is
affirmed. This matter is remanded to the circuit court for entry of a
warrant of execution pursuant to SDCL 23A–27A–31. Affirmed.
KONENKAMP, ZINTER, and SEVERSON, Justices, and
MILLER, Retired Justice, concur. MILLER, Retired Justice, sitting for
WILBUR, Justice, disqualified.