Executed February 15, 2006 06:17 p.m. CST by Lethal Injection in Texas
B / M / 18 - 32 W / M / 45
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Final Meal:
Final Words:
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Texas Department of Criminal Justice - Executed Offenders (Clyde Smith)
Texas Department of Criminal Justice
Texas Attorney General Media Advisory AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott offers the following information about Clyde Smith, who is scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006. Smith was sentenced to death for the 1992 capital murder of Yellow Cab driver David Jacobs in Houston.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On Feb. 7, 1992, Jacobs' body was found in his cab in the parking lot of a Houston apartment complex. An autopsy revealed Jacobs died after being shot three times in the back of his neck with a .38 caliber pistol.
Smith was charged in Jacobs’ death after an April 5, 1992, incident in which Smith shot himself in the leg at another apartment complex in Houston. While police were investigating, they found a .38-caliber pistol, which ballstic tests linked to the fatal shootings of Jacobs and another cab driver, Victor Bilton, who was shot three times during a March 22, 1992, robbery. Smith confessed to shooting both Jacobs and Bilton.
CRIMINAL HISTORY AND PUNISHMENT EVIDENCE
At the punishment phase of Smith’s capital murder trial, a woman testified she accompanied Smith when he robbed cab driver Victor Biltong. Smith’s tape-recorded statement, introduced into evidence at the punishment of his capital murder trial, offered his confession to shooting Bilton and taking $120 and a watch from the cabbie.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Clyde Smith was convicted in late 1993 of capital murder in David Jacob’s death. On Dec. 6, 1993, the jury found that Jacob’s should receive the death penalty, and the court sentenced Smith to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Smith’s conviction and sentence. Smith filed a provisional application for state writ of habeas corpus on April 23, 1997, and an amended application on December 8, 1997. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals adopted the trial court’s findings and conclusions and denied relief on January 17, 2001.
Smith filed a federal habeas petition and brief in support in U.S. district court on December 6, 2001. On March 7, 2003, the federal district court denied Smith’s petition for federal habeas relief. Smith applied for a certificate of appealability (“COA”) in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on January 7, 2004. The appeals court issued an order granting COA in part and denying it in part. Smith’s petition for certiorari review concerning the issues on which the 5th Circuit Court denied COA was filed in the U.S. Supreme Court on May 12, 2004 and certiorari review was denied on October 4, 2004. On October 4, 2005, Smith petitioned for certiorari review on the remaining issues on which the 5th Circuit Court granted COA. On Dec. 5, 2005, the 5th Circuit denied the petition.
"Before execution, killer thanks his supporters; Inmate 4th to die in Texas this year; he was convicted of killing a cabdriver," by Monica guzman. (Feb. 16, 2006, 1:11AM)
Clyde Smith Jr., convicted in the 1992 murder of one Houston cab driver and charged with the slaying of another, was executed Wednesday, becoming the fourth man to be put to death in Texas this year.
Smith thanked his lawyer and a handful of supporters. He did not acknowledge the family of one of his victims who watched his execution.
"I want to thank you all for being here and for your love and support. ... I love you all," he said to his lawyer and four European pen pals who befriended him during his prison term.
Smith, a Charlotte, N.C. native, was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m.
Smith was executed for the Feb. 6, 1992, robbery and death of 45-year-old Yellow Cab driver David E. Jacobs.
Police said he used the same gun to rob and kill Victor Bilton, a 51-year-old United Cab driver on March 22 that year.
Smith, who was 18 at the time of the slayings, stole $230 and a watch from the drivers to help pay off a rental car and his girlfriend's bills, he told investigators.
Smith confessed to robbing and killing both drivers. Jacobs' murder landed him on death row.
Dwayne E. Bilton, Bilton's younger brother, kept a grim expression during the seven minutes the lethal dose coursed through Smith's veins before he was pronounced dead. He said he loaned his brother the money to renew his cabdriver's license when he hit hard times. His brother drove his cab "with dignity" for six months before his slaying, he said.
"I'd have to say I was bland when I saw the life leave Clyde Smith," he said. "I was standing 3, 4 feet from the right arm that ruined our family, that ruined the Jacobs family."
No members of Jacobs' family attended the execution.
Smith has maintained his innocence since his 1993 trial, saying that while he was involved in the robberies, someone else pulled the trigger and killed both cabdrivers. In a recent death row interview, he said the confessions he recorded upon his arrest in April 1992 were tainted by pressure from homicide investigators.
"I never said I should get off scot-free," he said. "But I don't feel like the part I played in it should've led to me being on death row."
Kenneth Bilton, 43, Bilton's son, said he did not expect Smith would acknowledge his crimes.
"Only he knows what he did and didn't do. He can lie through his teeth for reporters to write down," he said. "It's between him and his maker."
Smith's execution ended a decade of failed appeals and motions, the last of which came from the Supreme Court just hours before his execution, denying a motion for stay.
Most of his past appeals contested his 1993 trial, in which his trial lawyer did not present evidence about Smith's troubled and abusive childhood to the jury that sentenced him to death.
"Man who killed Houston cabbie in 1992 executed." (Associated Press Feb. 15, 2006, 7:02PM)
HUNTSVILLE — Convicted killer Clyde Smith was executed today for the 1992 fatal shooting of a Houston cab driver during a robbery.
"I want to thank you all for being here and for your love and support," Smith said to friends who watched from a nearby window.
Smith, who was executed for the 1992 death of cab driver David Jacobs, did not acknowledge the relatives of another slain cab driver who were present for the execution.
Seven minutes after the lethal drugs began to flow, he was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m. CST.
His execution was the fourth this year in Texas and the second of three scheduled this month in the nation's busiest capital punishment state.
Smith confessed to the Feb. 7, 1992, slaying of the 45-year-old Jacobs, and a similar shooting and robbery six weeks later of another cab driver. But Smith said the confession was made under duress from police.
"I realize how bad that looked, because the two were so similar," he said of the two deaths. "But at the same time, I still maintain I didn't kill those persons."
Smith, 32, was convicted of shooting Jacobs four times in the head and robbing him of about $100.
"I wasn't there when he was killed," Smith said in a recent interview at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Polunsky Unit, home to the state's death row. "I got there afterward."
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Tuesday rejected requests to commute Smith's sentence to life and to issue a 180-day reprieve. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the request for a stay about an
About an hour before the scheduled execution today, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal in the case. Smith's lawyers had challenged the constitutionality of the lethal combination of drugs used in the injection. Similar appeals in recent weeks have failed to halt two other executions carried out in Texas.
In earlier appeals, lawyers pointed out federal judges agreed Smith may have had poor legal help during his trial and that he suffered significant abuse as a child, which they say was not pursued by his trial defense team.
"Nevertheless, ... courts concluded that Smith must shoulder the consequences," Clint Broden, Smith's appeals lawyers, said.
At his trial, defense attorneys presented no witnesses.
"I had no idea how the system worked," Smith said from death row. "All I knew was what I saw on TV. It's much different."
Joe Owmby, who prosecuted the case, said defense lawyers "had nothing to work with except ... to discredit the witnesses that we did have."
Two women, girlfriends of Smith, testified against him. One of his girlfriends called a crime tip line that led police to Smith. One of them said she was in the cab when he committed one of the slayings.
"Things always went wrong when I was associated with people," said Smith, who was 18 at the time of the deaths. "I didn't actually kill anyone, but it's possible I could be killed by the state."
Owmby doesn't believe Smith's claims of innocence.
"He is a cold-blooded, remorseless individual who could have contributed to society, but decided to take the lives of two people who were important to a lot of people just by being who they were — hardworking people who drove cabs and lived good lives in Houston," Owmby said.
Smith, a Charlotte, N.C., native, had been in Houston about 10 months. His father lived in Houston and his mother in Mississippi.
Smith dropped out of the ninth grade in Laurel, Miss., and once worked as a security guard.
He has four brothers and a sister. From death row, he said the last time he saw a relative was 1991.
He also has a daughter, about 18, who has no contact with him.
"I didn't want her to be exposed to this," he said.
Next on the execution schedule is Steven Staley, condemned for the 1989 slaying of a Fort Worth restaurant manager during a botched robbery. Staley, scheduled to be executed Feb. 23, won a reprieve last year.
Smith was sentenced to death for the 1992 capital murder of Yellow Cab driver David Jacobs in Houston. On Feb. 7, 1992, Jacobs' body was found in his cab in the parking lot of a Houston apartment complex. An autopsy revealed Jacobs died after being shot three times in the back of his neck with a .38 caliber pistol. Smith was charged in Jacobs’ death after an April 5, 1992, incident in which Smith shot himself in the leg at another apartment complex in Houston. While police were investigating, they found a .38-caliber pistol, which ballstic tests linked to the fatal shootings of Jacobs and another cab driver, Victor Bilton, who was shot three times during a March 22, 1992, robbery. Smith confessed to shooting both Jacobs and Bilton. At the punishment phase of Smith’s capital murder trial, a woman testified she accompanied Smith when he robbed cab driver Victor Biltong. Smith’s tape-recorded statement, introduced into evidence at the punishment of his capital murder trial, offered his confession to shooting Bilton and taking $120 and a watch from the cabbie.
Texas Execution Information Center by David Carson.
Clyde Smith Jr., 32, was executed by lethal injection on 15 February 2006 in Huntsville, Texas for the kidnapping, robbery, and murder of two taxi drivers.
On 6 February 1992, taxi driver David Jacobs picked up Smith at a downtown Houston hotel. Smith told Jacobs to drive to an apartment complex parking lot. Smith then shot Jacobs three times in the back of the neck with a .38-caliber pistol, and robbed him. Jacobs' body was discovered the next day.
On 22 March, Smith robbed and killed another tax driver, Victor Bilton. He also shot Bilton three times with the same handgun.
On 5 April, police were called to investigate a shooting at a Houston apartment complex. Smith had shot himself in the leg with a .38-caliber pistol. Ballistic tests linked Smith's pistol to the one used to kill the two taxi drivers. Smith then confessed to both murders. He said that he stole $230 and a watch from the drivers, which he used to pay a rental car bill and his girlfriend's bills.
At his trial, Smith recanted the confessions, saying that he made them under duress. He did admit being involved in the robberies, but he said that someone else pulled the trigger and killed the drivers.
Two of Smith's girlfriends testified against him. One of them said that she was in the cab when he committed one of the slayings.
A jury convicted Smith of capital murder of David Jacobs in December 1993 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in April 1996.
In 2004, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals heard Smith's claim that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because the jury was not presented evidence of him being abused as a child - evidence which his appeals lawyer claimed was possibly mitigating and could have resulted in a lesser penalty. The Fifth Circuit denied this claim. All of Smith's other appeals were also denied.
In an interview from death row, Smith maintained his stance that he didn't kill the men. "I realize how bad that looked, because the two were so similar," he said of the crimes. "But at the same time, I still maintain I didn't kill those persons ... I wasn't there when [Jacobs] was killed. I got there afterward."
"Things always went wrong when I was associated with people," Smith said. "I never said I should get off scot-free, but I don't feel like the part I played in it should've led to me being on death row."
Smith's execution was attended by his lawyer and by four pen pals from Europe. "I want to thank you all for being here and for your love and support," he said in his last statement. He did not acknowledge Victor Bilton's family, who also witnessed the execution. David Jacobs' family did not attend. When Smith's last statement was finished, the lethal injection was started. He was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m.
National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
Clyde Smith Jr., TX - February 15
Do Not Execute Clyde Smith Jr.!
Clyde Smith Jr., a 32-year-old black man, is facing a Feb. 8 execution date for the 1992 murder of David Jacobs. Jacobs, a cab driver, had picked up Smith in his taxi and driven to a deserted section of Harris County, as per Smith’s request. Upon arrival, Smith shot and killed Jacobs. Smith was 19 years old at the time of the crime.
Smith had several concerns about how his trial was conducted. First was that Smith’s property was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment and that the court shouldn’t have admitted statements made by Smith as a result of the seizure. Second, Smith argued that the jury instructions concerning sentencing failed to include information that might have made a sentence of life imprisonment appear more acceptable. Third, Smith believed the trial court standard of proof for the State’s demonstration of absence of mitigating circumstances was too low. Fourth, Smith asserted that the trial court used too narrow a concept of mitigation. And fifth, Smith claimed that his counsel was ineffective for failing to discover and present evidence of Smith’s abusive childhood as a mitigating factor.
As part of Smith’s habeas petition to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Smith’s trial counsel submitted an affidavit stating that he had known that “[Smith] had a difficult relationship with his mother and that any information regarding an abusive childhood might have been important at the punishment phase of trial.” Even starting with this information, Smith’s counsel contends that his investigations turned up nothing about an abusive childhood. This seems unusual, since Smith, Smith’s mother, and Smith’s brother were all willing to testify about Smith’s abuse.
Pursuant to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Smith filed his petitions for habeas relief in the proper order: first in state court, then in federal court. Yet even his appropriately sequential pursuit of relief was nearly stymied by the system when the state court refused to grant Smith an evidentiary hearing so that he might plead his case. Because Smith was prevented from fully exhausting his evidence for habeas relief in state court, he was prohibited, by AEDPA, from using that evidence in federal court. This put Smith at a disadvantage when the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals considered Smith’s petition.
In the end, the court determined Smith’s counsel not to have been ineffective, thus eliminating any chance of relief for Smith. Whether the court’s decision would have been different had the evidence excluded for technical legal reasons been considered is impossible to know. However, the mere possibility that a man’s life will be taken simply due to procedural complications is not acceptable.
Sherman Denison Herald Democrat
"Convicted killer of taxi driver scheduled to die Wednesday," by Michael Graczyk. (Associated Press February 15, 2006)
LIVINGSTON, Texas — Houston taxi driver David Jacobs carried a Bible with him in his cab.
“He would witness to people in his taxi if the conversation came up,” Joe Owmby, a Harris County district attorney, recalled.
The holy book provided little defense when he was shot four times in the head and robbed of about $110 almost 14 years ago.
The man convicted of killing him, Clyde Smith, also linked to the fatal shooting of another Houston cab driver, was set to die Wednesday night in Huntsville.
Smith, 32, who once worked as a security guard, would be the fourth prisoner put to death this year in Texas and the second of three scheduled to die this month in the nation’s busiest capital punishment state.
“I wasn’t there when he was killed,” Smith said in a recent interview at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Polunsky Unit, home to the state’s death row. “I got there afterward.”
Lawyers for Smith filed a clemency petition with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles in hopes of stopping the punishment, but the board rejected requests to commute his sentence to life and to issue a 180-day reprieve.
Attorneys then went to the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday with an appeal that contends Texas’ use of a lethal combination of drugs is unconstitutional. Similar appeals in the past two weeks have failed to halt two other executions carried out in Texas.
In earlier appeals, lawyers pointed out federal judges agreed Smith may have had poor legal help during his trial and that he suffered significant abuse as a child, which they said was not pursued by his trial defense team.
“Nevertheless, ... courts concluded that Smith must shoulder the consequences,” Clint Broden, Smith’s appeals lawyers, said.
At his trial, defense attorneys presented no witnesses.
“I had no idea how the system worked,” Smith said from death row. “All I knew was what I saw on TV. It’s much different.”
Owmby, who prosecuted the case, said defense lawyers “had nothing to work with except ... to discredit the witnesses that we did have.”
Two women, girlfriends of Smith, testified against him. One of them said she was in the cab when he committed one of the slayings.
“Things always went wrong when I was associated with people,” said Smith, who was 18 at the time of the slayings. “I didn’t actually kill anyone, but it’s possible I could be killed by the state.”
Smith, a Charlotte, N.C., native, had been in Houston about 10 months. His mother lived in Mississippi, where he dropped out of school in Laurel in the ninth grade. His father lived in Houston.
He said from death row the last time he saw a relative, among them four brothers and a sister, was 1991. He also has a daughter, about 18, who has no contact with him.
“I didn’t want her to be exposed to this,” he said.
One of his girlfriends called a crime tip line that led police to Smith, who later confessed to detectives about the Feb. 7, 1992, slaying of Jacobs, 45, and the similar shooting and robbery six weeks later of another cab driver, Victor Bilton, a confession he said he made after police wore him down.
“I realize how bad that looked, because the two were so similar,” he said of the two slayings. “But at the same time, I still maintain I didn’t kill those persons.”
"State Carries Out Fourth Execution Of 2006."
Clyde Smith, 32, was executed just after 6 p.m. Tuesday in the state’s death chamber in Huntsville for the 1992 murder of a cab driver in Houston.
Jacobs was shot four times in the head and robbed of about $100.
Smith confessed to detectives about the February 1992 slaying and the similar shooting and robbery six weeks later of another cab driver, but later said the confession was made under duress.
He later claimed he wasn’t present when Jacobs was slain, but arrived at the scene after the shooting.
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to block the execution earlier Wednesday.
The state parole board had earlier rejected requests to commute Smith's sentence to life or give him a 180-day reprieve.
Smith was the fourth inmate to be put to death so far this year in Texas and the second of three scheduled for execution this month.
"Convicted killer of taxi driver execution," by Juan A. Lozano. (02/16/2006 Associated Press)
Convicted killer Clyde Smith was executed Wednesday for the 1992 fatal shooting of a Houston cab driver during a robbery.
"I want to thank you all for being here and for your love and support," Smith said to friends who watched from a nearby window.
Smith, who was executed for the 1992 death of cab driver David Jacobs, did not acknowledge the relatives of another slain cab driver who were present for the execution.
Seven minutes after the lethal drugs began to flow, he was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m. CST.
His execution was the fourth this year in Texas and the second of three scheduled this month in the nation's busiest capital punishment state.
Smith confessed to the Feb. 7, 1992, slaying of the 45-year-old Jacobs, and a similar shooting and robbery six weeks later of another cab driver. But Smith said the confession was made under duress from police.
"I realize how bad that looked, because the two were so similar," he said of the two deaths. "But at the same time, I still maintain I didn't kill those persons."
Smith, 32, was convicted of shooting Jacobs four times in the head and robbing him of about $100.
"I wasn't there when he was killed," Smith said in a recent interview at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Polunsky Unit, home to the state's death row. "I got there afterward."
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Tuesday rejected requests to commute Smith's sentence to life and to issue a 180-day reprieve. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the request for a stay about an
About an hour before the scheduled execution on Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal in the case. Smith's lawyers had challenged the constitutionality of the lethal combination of drugs used in the injection. Similar appeals in recent weeks have failed to halt two other executions carried out in Texas.
In earlier appeals, lawyers pointed out federal judges agreed Smith may have had poor legal help during his trial and that he suffered significant abuse as a child, which they say was not pursued by his trial defense team.
"Nevertheless, ... courts concluded that Smith must shoulder the consequences," Clint Broden, Smith's appeals lawyers, said.
At his trial, defense attorneys presented no witnesses.
"I had no idea how the system worked," Smith said from death row. "All I knew was what I saw on TV. It's much different."
Joe Owmby, who prosecuted the case, said defense lawyers "had nothing to work with except ... to discredit the witnesses that we did have."
Two women, girlfriends of Smith, testified against him. One of his girlfriends called a crime tip line that led police to Smith. One of them said she was in the cab when he committed one of the slayings.
"Things always went wrong when I was associated with people," said Smith, who was 18 at the time of the deaths. "I didn't actually kill anyone, but it's possible I could be killed by the state."
Owmby doesn't believe Smith's claims of innocence.
"He is a cold-blooded, remorseless individual who could have contributed to society, but decided to take the lives of two people who were important to a lot of people just by being who they were — hardworking people who drove cabs and lived good lives in Houston," Owmby said.
Smith, a Charlotte, N.C., native, had been in Houston about 10 months. His father lived in Houston and his mother in Mississippi.
Smith dropped out of the ninth grade in Laurel, Miss., and once worked as a security guard.
He has four brothers and a sister. From death row, he said the last time he saw a relative was 1991.
He also has a daughter, about 18, who has no contact with him.
"I didn't want her to be exposed to this," he said.
Next on the execution schedule is Steven Staley, condemned for the 1989 slaying of a Fort Worth restaurant manager during a botched robbery. Staley, scheduled to be executed Feb. 23, won a reprieve last year.
"4th condemned killer this year set to die tonight; Responsible for murders of 2 local cabdrivers, inmate blames childhood," by Monica Guzman. (Feb. 15, 2006, 6:31PM)
Before he shot the United Cab driver three times in the head, his girlfriend testified, Clyde Smith Jr. asked Victor Bilton about his family.
Bilton, who normally didn't work after dark, might have told the man about his daughter, Pamela, who was flying home that night from visiting her brother in California.
He might have mentioned that he decided to take a few late fares while he waited to pick her up.
Bilton never made it to the airport.
Eventually, Smith confessed to robbing and killing both Bilton, 51, and Yellow Cab driver David E. Jacobs, 45, whom he shot three times in the head with the same .38-caliber Smith & Wesson. It was Jacobs' murder, on Feb. 6, 1992, that landed him on death row.
If put to death as scheduled tonight, he will be the fourth person executed in Texas this year. And Smith, in a recent death row interview, said he is not optimistic about any last-minute stays.
Bilton's family recently reflected on the life of a man they say never felt unsafe behind the wheel of his cab.
When United Cab asked if he wanted a safety shield installed between his front and back seats, Bilton had refused.
He liked to talk to his customers.
"My daddy wouldn't pass judgment on anybody," said Pamela Bilton Beard, who was 20 on March 22, 1992, the night she waited four hours at Hobby Airport for her father.
But Bilton had picked up his last fare at the downtown Hyatt Regency — a nice-looking couple from a nice-looking hotel who asked him to drive to 655 Maxey, a wastewater plant in a remote part of northeast Houston where Smith shot Jacobs the month before.
"She (the girlfriend) testified that they dressed up nice so people would pick them up," Bilton Beard said of the trial. "It was premeditated, it was calculated, (he) knew exactly what he was doing."
Smith told investigators he robbed Bilton to help with his girlfriend's bills. He robbed Jacobs to pay for a rental car. Jacobs' wallet yielded $110. Bilton carried $120.
Won't let his family come
Bilton Beard will attend Smith's execution with her brother, his wife and several other family members who still recall Bilton's warm sense of humor 14 years after his death.
No one from Smith's family will attend. He won't let them.
"He divorced me and he denied me, and I don't have no child, it look like," said his mother, Ruth Maye, who never visited her son in prison.
Maye said she and other family members in Mississippi had planned to go to the execution to see Smith "one last time," and claim his body — which he signed away to an unnamed friend.
Smith, who ran away at age 15, told police he would rather be in jail than in his mother's house.
Maye said she was a good mother to a stubborn child who wouldn't listen to her and got in with the wrong crowd.
"I don't know what happened to him," Maye said.
But according to affidavits filed by some of Smith's five siblings — only two of whom had the same father — Smith, who was no stranger to drugs and alcohol, ran away to escape excessive beatings by both his mother and the five men she married and divorced as they were growing up.
Didn't stay put for long
After spending time on the streets and at a boy's home, Smith moved back to Houston, where he had lived until he was 9, to live with his father, Clyde Smith. His mother warned him that "there ain't nothing left in Texas but death."
Smith's father turned him away, and Jacobs and Bilton were killed about a year later. Smith was 18 years old at the time. The men were only two of the 86 taxicab and livery drivers murdered while on the job nationwide in 1992.
In the 1980s, 15.1 of every 100,000 taxicab drivers lost their lives to murder. Though the murder rate has dropped since the mid-1990s, when cabs were first equipped with emergency alarms and cameras and could be tracked throughout their city routes, a 2000 report by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration revealed that cabdrivers are still 60 times more likely than other workers to be slain on the job.
Smith now says he was only an accessory to the murders and that others pulled the trigger. The three confessions he recorded upon his arrest, he says, were made under pressure from homicide investigators.
Points to violent childhood
While Smith's appellate lawyer does not deny his involvement in the killings, he says his life could have been spared had his trial attorney presented evidence regarding Smith's violent childhood to the jury that sentenced him to death.
"The literature sort of shows that that stuff is important to jurors," attorney F. Clinton Broden said.
"Whether it would've made a difference in this case, I don't know. But he should have had the chance."
In a sworn statement, his trial lawyer said he conducted a complete investigation and found no evidence of any abuse.
But Smith's lawyers have claimed in a string of failed appeals that the trial lawyer's investigation was scant, his client visits infrequent and that he never explained to Smith that his childhood could have helped save his life.
The state rejected Smith's first and most critical appeal, his postconviction writ of habeas corpus, in part because his court-appointed habeas lawyers did not include any evidence that family members would have testified to Smith's history had they been contacted.
By the time Broden obtained that evidence and filed new appeals, it was essentially too late, as higher courts cannot rule on evidence that could have been presented at the state level.
'I did not put you there'
But Assistant District Attorney Lynn Hardaway said it is "highly unlikely" that evidence about his childhood would have spared Smith the death sentence, in light of the overwhelming evidence presented against him.
"The fact is, while Clint Broden didn't like the way habeas counsel handled things, Mr. Smith has had all the due process consideration he should have and a full review of his conviction," she said.
Smith's mother wrote her son a letter the day after she heard he had banned her from seeing him die.
"I told him ... I did not put you there. You chose," she said.
But Smith believes that if he had a different childhood, he wouldn't be on death row.
Forty-three-year-old Kenneth Bilton, Victor Bilton's only son, said that is nothing but a "smokescreen" to hide the malice of the man who took his father away.
"I miss the fatherly life, that person to talk to that you can confide in about things," he said. "Life in prison would not have been enough."
Smith v. Johnson, --- F.3d ----, 2006 WL 330114 (5th Cir. 2006) (Sec. 1983)
Background: Death row inmate sought injunctive relief pursuant to § 1983, alleging that lethal injection method of execution used by Texas caused excruciating pain in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, Kenneth M. Hoyt, J., dismissed suit. Inmate appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Benavides, Circuit Judge, held that:
>BR>(1) inmate's delay in bringing challenge was not excusable, and
BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge:
The district court correctly applied our precedent. This Court has held that "[a] challenge to a method of execution may be filed any time after the plaintiff's conviction has become final on direct review." Neville v. Johnson, --- F.3d ----, 2006 WL 291292 (5th Cir. Feb.8, 2006) (citing White v. Johnson, 429 F.3d 572, 574 (5th Cir.2005)). Further, we have made clear that waiting to file such a challenge just days before a scheduled execution constitutes unnecessary delay. Harris v. Johnson, 376 F.3d 414, 417-19 (5th Cir.2004). Although Smith's direct appeal has been final for more than nine years, [FN1] he did not file the instant complaint until five days before his scheduled execution. Smith "cannot excuse his delaying until the eleventh hour on the ground that he was unaware of the state's intention to execute him by injecting the three chemicals he now challenges." Harris, 376 F.3d at 417. Whether or not Smith properly states a claim under § 1983, he is not entitled to the relief he seeks due to his dilatory filing. Smith has been on death row for more than nine years but decided to wait to challenge a procedure for lethal injection that has been used by the State during his entire stay on death row. See White, 429 F.3d at 574 (reaching the same conclusion when petitioner filed after six years); see also Harris, 376 F.3d at 417. Nonetheless, Smith contends that he has not delayed in bringing suit because his execution was not scheduled until September 9, 2005. Smith concedes that our very recent ruling in Neville, 2006 WL 291292, is "adverse" to his claim. Smith offers no other reason for the delay. Neville controls and requires us to affirm the district court's dismissal of this claim.
Smith also asks this Court to stay the execution pending the Supreme Court's decision in Hill v. Crosby, 05-8794, 2006 WL 171583 (Jan. 25, 2006) (granting certiorari), a case also involving a challenge to the method of execution. In Neville, we declined such an invitation, explaining that Fifth Circuit precedent "remains binding until the Supreme Court provides contrary guidance." 2006 WL 291292 at *1 (citation omitted). Moreover, the questions presented to the Supreme Court concern whether an Eighth Amendment claim is cognizable under § 1983 or should be construed as a habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Our precedent has not reached these questions; instead, we have denied equitable relief based on the dilatoriness of the filing.
Accordingly, for the above reasons, we AFFIRM the district court's dismissal of Smith's complaint and DENY the motion for stay of execution.
Smith v. Dretke, 134 Fed.Appx. 674 (5th Cir. 2005) (Habeas)
Background: Defendant convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. The United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas denied the petition and denied defendant's application for a certificate of appealability (COA). The defendant applied for a COA and the Court of Appeals, 89 Fed.Appx. 859,, granted the application in part. Defendant then appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Benavides, Circuit Judge, held that:
Before BARKSDALE, DeMOSS, and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges.
BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge: Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the Court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4.
In an earlier opinion, this Court granted Petitioner Clyde Smith, Jr., a Certificate of Appealability to appeal the district court's summary judgment denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. See Smith v. Dretke, 89 Fed.Appx. 859 (5th Cir.2004) (per curiam). Accordingly, Petitioner filed the instant appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment.
I. Background
Petitioner Clyde Smith, Jr., was convicted of capital murder in Texas and sentenced to death. Petitioner did not seek certiorari review in the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1997, Petitioner filed a state application for a writ of habeas corpus. Among other arguments presented in his state habeas application, Petitioner claimed that his trial counsel's failure to present mitigating evidence of Petitioner's childhood abuse during the punishment phase of trial denied him his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. Without holding an evidentiary hearing on Petitioner's claims, the state trial-level habeas court recommended to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals that Petitioner's application be denied. In 2001, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals followed that recommendation and denied Petitioner's application. Later that year, Petitioner filed a federal petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the denial of which he seeks to appeal, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
In the habeas proceedings before the district court, Petitioner again argued that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to present mitigating evidence of childhood abuse to militate against a death sentence. In support of that claim, he submitted several affidavits and other documents not presented to the state court.
Affidavits from Petitioner's brother and mother described Petitioner's disturbing childhood and attested that each affiant would have appeared in court to testify at trial if asked. Similarly, an affidavit from Petitioner himself gave an account of his childhood and described the scant contact he had with trial counsel and his meeting with trial counsel's investigator, in which the investigator did not ask about Petitioner's childhood and Petitioner did not offer any information about his childhood. Two letters written by Petitioner, one addressed to federal habeas counsel and another to state habeas counsel, document Petitioner's childhood in detail.
Also included in the evidence were two letters addressed to Petitioner from the State Bar of Texas. One acknowledges receipt of Petitioner's complaint regarding trial counsel, and the other notifies Petitioner that the complaint does not sufficiently allege professional misconduct. A letter from Petitioner to the judge presiding over Petitioner's trial expresses concern over the amount of contact between trial counsel and Petitioner. Petitioner also submitted the investigative report and invoice from the investigation company hired by trial counsel. The report summarizes the investigator's actions and lists possible witnesses and the information they might provide at trial. While the report is devoid of any mention of abuse, it refers to statements given by Reverend E.T. Wade, with whom Petitioner had lived briefly, indicating that Petitioner had a difficult relationship with his mother. The invoice shows that trial counsel was billed a total of $600 for the entire investigation.
In another affidavit submitted with Petitioner's federal habeas petition, a mitigation specialist from Capital Punishment Investigation & Educational Services ("CPIES") who conducted an investigation for Petitioner's federal habeas petition catalogues the individuals to whom she was referred by Petitioner, the ease with which she located them, and the information they provided. The director of investigation at CPIES stated in a separate affidavit that the investigation done by trial counsel and his hired investigator was incomplete and inadequate.
Petitioner also submitted an affidavit from trial counsel that was originally submitted by Respondent in the state habeas petition. In his affidavit, trial counsel acknowledges that he knew Petitioner had a difficult relationship with his mother and that any information regarding an abusive childhood might have been important at the punishment phase of trial. However, he asserts that his thorough investigation revealed no such information.
The district court held that Petitioner's failure to present the affidavits and other evidence described above to the state habeas court rendered them unexhausted. Accordingly, the district court disregarded the additional evidentiary materials, looking only to the evidence presented to the state courts. Based upon that evidence, the district court granted Respondent's motion for summary judgment and denied the petition for habeas corpus.
We subsequently granted Petitioner leave to appeal "the district court's denial of his application for a writ of habeas corpus with respect to his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, including the district court's procedural ruling that it could not consider certain evidence because the evidence was unexhausted in state court." Smith, 89 Fed.Appx. at 863.
II. Discussion
Petitioner contends that the district court erred in reviewing only the affidavits and evidence presented to the state habeas court. He claims that as a result of that error, the district court incorrectly adjudicated the merits of his ineffective assistance *677 of counsel claim in granting Respondent's motion for summary judgment. As explained below, we agree that the district court erred in its determination that it could not consider any of the affidavits presented to it. However, we nonetheless affirm the judgment of the district court because Petitioner's additional evidence does not alter the disposition of his ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
A. Consideration of Additional Evidence
We first consider the question whether Petitioner's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel was partially unexhausted as determined by the district court. "Whether a federal habeas petitioner has exhausted state remedies is a question of law reviewed de novo." Anderson v. Johnson, 338 F.3d 382, 386 (5th Cir.2003); Wilder v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 255, 259 (5th Cir.2001).
Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1), a federal habeas petitioner must fully exhaust remedies available in state court before proceeding to federal court. Id. Thus, only if the substance of a petitioner's claim was fairly presented to the state habeas court may a federal court consider that claim. Morris v. Dretke, 379 F.3d 199, 204 (5th Cir.2004). Petitioner asserts that his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel was sufficiently exhausted in state court to warrant consideration of the additional evidence presented to the federal habeas court. He also argues that, to the extent his claim was not exhausted in state court, the failure to do so was excused by the state court's improper denial of an evidentiary hearing. We treat each argument in turn.
1. Exhaustion of State Remedies
In Anderson v. Johnson, the petitioner claimed he had received ineffective assistance of counsel based on trial counsel's failure to interview and present testimony of a certain eye-witness to the murder for which the petitioner was convicted. 338 F.3d at 385. In his state petition, Anderson asserted that, had trial counsel interviewed the eye-witness, she would have attested that the defendant was not the shooter. Id. at 388.
In his federal petition, Anderson submitted an affidavit from the eye-witness in which she stated that the Anderson was not the shooter. Id. at 385. Because Anderson had been very specific in his allegations in state court and the affidavit only confirmed those very specific allegations, we concluded that Anderson had not fundamentally altered his claim. Id. at 388. Rather, he had only supplemented his claim. Id. We also noted that there was no evidence that Anderson had deliberately withheld the affidavit from the state courts: "if the state court had held an evidentiary hearing, Gray's exculpatory testimony likely would have been elicited." Id. at 389.
Similarly, in Dowthitt, the petitioner claimed that his counsel had been ineffective in failing to present a mitigation defense based on mental illness. 230 F.3d at 743. In his state petition, Dowthitt submitted a form from a hospital indicating that the petitioner was diagnosed as having a "schizophrenic reaction" of a "chronic paranoid type." Id. Dowthitt also submitted a statement from an Air Force Sergeant recommending that Dowthitt be discharged from the Air Force because Dowthitt suffered "from some mental deficiency." Id. at 744.
In his federal petition, Dowthitt added declarations from two mental health experts hired by habeas counsel. One declaration indicated that Dowthitt's "profile was consistent with paranoid and schizophrenic features," that Dowthitt suffered from depression, but that he was not sadistic or sociopathic. Id. The other stated that Dowthitt exhibited severe mental problems, that Dowthitt functioned well in the prison environment, and that the trial mental health expert had not done an adequate examination of Dowthitt. Id. We found that the new evidence did not render Dowthitt's claim unexhausted because "all crucial factual allegations were before the state courts...." Id. at 746 (citation omitted). Furthermore, the affidavits only confirmed Dowthitt's claim in state court--that he had a mental illness of the schizophrenic, paranoid type. Id.
The petitioner in Kunkle v. Dretke argued in his state petition that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because trial counsel failed to present mitigating evidence regarding the petitioner's troubled home life and family history of mental illness. 352 F.3d 980, 986 (5th Cir.2003). Kunkle's conclusory allegations were accompanied by an affidavit from trial counsel that simply averred there was abundant mitigating evidence of Kunkle's troubled home life and history of mental illness. Id. at 987. In his federal petition, Kunkle included an affidavit from his mother that detailed her mental illness, Kunkle's father's mental illness, and several instances of physical abuse that Kunkle suffered. Id. at 988 n. 3. He also submitted a psychological report indicating that Kunkle had a thought disorder similar to schizophrenia, as well as other personality disorders. Id. at 988 n. 4. We concluded that the addition of the report and affidavit detailing family mental illness and concrete instances of abuse presented "significant evidentiary support" not previously presented to the state court and that the state claim would have been substantially different in state court had Kunkle included more than the conclusory affidavit of trial counsel. Id. at 988. Thus, Kunkle had not exhausted his claims. Id.
From the opinions discussed above, we glean several factors that aid in a finding of exhaustion: there is no intentional withholding of evidence from state court; the state petition is very specific rather than vaguely conclusory as to petitioner's theory of ineffective assistance of counsel; additional evidence merely confirms what the petitioner specifically asserted in the state habeas proceeding; and all crucial facts were before the state court. The presence of those factors weigh in favor of finding that Petitioner has sufficiently exhausted his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in state court such that certain portions of the additional evidentiary support presented to the district court may be considered.
Petitioner's Intent
First, there is no evidence that Petitioner intentionally withheld evidence in order to reserve it for federal court. To the contrary, like the state habeas court in Anderson, the state court did not hold an evidentiary hearing in which Petitioner could have presented the affidavits that he eventually submitted with his federal petition. While this did not prevent him from submitting those affidavits as attachments to his petition, it does suggest that Petitioner may have expected to substantiate his claims later on in the proceeding but was denied that opportunity.
Specificity of State Habeas Petition
Second, like the petitioners in Anderson and Dowthitt, Petitioner was specific in his state application as to the theory behind his claim. Petitioner claimed that his counsel was ineffective in violation of the Sixth Amendment for failure to present evidence of his violent childhood, either through Petitioner's or others' testimony. The state application was also specific in the facts it alleged. The application contained an account of his abusive mother's violent relationships with several different men, many of whom also beat Petitioner. Unlike the state habeas petition in Kunkle, which lacked concrete incidents of abuse, Petitioner's state habeas petition catalogued a series of violent episodes he experienced or witnessed, including his step-father's attempted rape of Petitioner's sister; an incident in which his stepfather broke a stick across Petitioner's back while beating him; and his escape from his home and subsequent life on the streets. Petitioner argued that trial counsel should have called him or another witness to present Petitioner's history of abuse and asserted that, if he had been called to testify during the punishment phase of the trial, he would have related his childhood history.
Nature of Evidence not Presented to State Habeas Court
Third, several documents submitted by Petitioner with his federal habeas petition merely confirm what was alleged in the state habeas petition. Thus, they are merely confirm what was already alleged in the state habeas proceeding. However, because other filings submitted by Petitioner present new facts not alleged at the state habeas proceeding, they were properly disregarded by the district court. We discuss each piece of evidence in turn.
The affidavit of Petitioner's brother and mother merely substantiate Petitioner's claims in the state habeas proceeding. The affidavits present the history of divorce and turbulent relationships between Ruth Maye, Petitioner's mother, and various men. They describe the violence with which Maye and her boyfriends treated Petitioner and his siblings, with specific reference to some of the very incidents narrated in the state habeas petition. Likewise, the two letters written by Petitioner to state and federal habeas counsel recount Petitioner's childhood. The narration in these letters follows the outline of events included in the state habeas petition. In fact, it appears that the factual allegations in the state habeas petition were based on the letter to state habeas counsel. The information presented in these affidavits and letters, while not identical to the allegations made in the state habeas petition, serve to confirm, rather than fundamentally alter, Petitioner's claim that he suffered an abusive childhood and that he or other witnesses would have testified regarding this information.
Petitioner's affidavit, inasmuch as it narrates his childhood, also merely confirms the allegations made in the state petition. The affidavit describes with further elaboration the abuse chronicled in his state application. However, the portions of that affidavit dealing with trial counsel's relationship and contact with Petitioner, while relevant to Petitioner's overall theory of ineffective assistance of counsel, present facts not alleged in the state habeas petition. Thus, those portions are more than supplemental and therefore unexhausted for purposes of federal review of the habeas petition.
The affidavits of the CPIES investigators, while supporting the same legal theory of ineffective assistance of counsel presented in the state habeas petition, provide new facts not alleged in the state habeas proceeding. They serve as evidence of the ease with which evidence of Petitioner's childhood could have been obtained and the inadequacy of trial counsel's investigation. The state habeas petition did not discuss trial counsel's preparation for trial, but focused solely on trial counsel's failings at trial. Similarly, the two letters from the Texas state bar regarding Petitioner's complaint about his trial counsel and the letter from Petitioner to the judge presiding over the trial do more than merely confirm what was alleged in the state habeas petition. These items evidence the lack of contact between Petitioner and his trial counsel, a topic which was not mentioned in the state petition at all. The investigative report of the investigator hired by trial counsel, along with its accompanying invoice, are equally concerned with a theme not discussed in the habeas petition--trial counsel's investigation into Petitioner's background.
The affidavit of trial counsel, while new to Petitioner's habeas petition, was presented to the state habeas court by Respondent. It thus merely reasserts facts already presented to the state court.
Facts Available to State Courts
Finally, as in Dowthitt, all crucial facts were before the state courts such that the inclusion of the documents supplementing Petitioner's state habeas petition would not fundamentally alter Petitioner's claim. The state court had sufficient information to ascertain whether Smith's trial counsel had improperly omitted evidence of Smith's childhood abuse and whether that omission may have changed the outcome of Petitioner's trial.
The state court could determine how aware of potential abuse trial counsel was. Petitioner specifically stated in an affidavit presented to the state court that he would have testified at trial regarding his violent childhood. Furthermore, the court knew that Petitioner's trial counsel was aware that Petitioner had a difficult relationship with his mother and had heard from an individual his investigator interviewed that Petitioner's mother was the reason that he had so many problems.
From the detailed account provided in the state petition, as well as trial counsel's sworn statement that if he had known of childhood abuse he would have presented that evidence, the court understood the extent of Petitioner's abuse and could therefore weigh whether that evidence would have influenced jurors.
2. Excusal of Failure to Exhaust State Remedies
Petitioner argues that his actions during the state habeas proceedings were sufficiently diligent to preclude application of § 2254(e)(2). He turns our attention to his requests for an evidentiary hearing in state court and the state court's denial of his requests. However, "mere requests for evidentiary hearings will not suffice." Dowthitt, 230 F.3d at 758 (upholding district court's denial of evidentiary hearing in federal district court where petitioner had not fully developed the facts relevant to his claim in the state habeas proceeding). The fact that Texas law does not require the submission of affidavits with habeas applications and provides for evidentiary hearings where the facts are controverted in no way prevented Petitioner from doing so. [FN1] In fact, Respondent attached the affidavit of Petitioner's trial counsel with his response to Petitioner's state habeas application. Thus, Petitioner's actions evidence a lack of diligence in his presentation of his claims to the state habeas court; consequently, § 2254(e)(2) applies. Because there is no evidence that an attempt to obtain and submit affidavits to the state habeas court would have been in vain, Petitioner has not shown that the facts and evidence he now wishes to present to the district court "could not have been previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence." § 2254(e)(2)(A)(ii). Consequently, § 2254(e)(2) prevented the district court from holding an evidentiary hearing on Petitioner's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
FN1. We are puzzled by the state habeas court's failure to hold an evidentiary hearing or otherwise request evidentiary support as contemplated by the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Art. 11.071 § 9(a). According to Article 11.071, section 9(a), a Texas court considering a habeas application must enter an order designating any controverted factual issues to be resolved. Id. Section 9(a) further provides that the court may resolve the issues through the submission of evidence and personal recollection of the applicant's trial. id. ("[T]he court may require affidavits, depositions, interrogatories, and evidentiary hearings and may use personal recollection.") The remaining subsections detail the procedure, timing, and other rules relating to an evidentiary hearing provided for in that section. See § 9(b)-(g). The state court did not hold an evidentiary hearing as requested by Petitioner but instead relied in part on personal recollection to find that Petitioner's trial counsel had presented sufficient mitigation evidence at trial. However, the state habeas court did not have any such personal recollection as it did not preside over Petitioner's trial. Petitioner's concerns regarding the lack of evidentiary hearing are understandable, but we reject Petitioner's argument that this requires us to reverse the judgment of the district court.
B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Having determined what evidence was properly before the district court, we now turn to the merits of Petitioner's ineffective assistance of counsel claim. In a habeas corpus appeal, we review the district court's summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard of review to the state court's decision as applied by the district court. Proctor v. Cockrell, 283 F.3d 726, 729-30 (5th Cir.2002); Thompson v. Cain, 161 F.3d 802, 805 (5th Cir.1998).
Because Petitioner filed his petition for federal habeas corpus relief after the date of the enactment of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act ("AEDPA"), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 100 Stat. 1214 (codified as amended at 28 U.S.C. § 2254), we consider Petitioner's claims under the deferential approach provided by AEDPA. See Penry v. Johnson, 532 U.S. 782, 792, 121 S.Ct. 1910, 150 L.Ed.2d 9 (2001). Under AEDPA, this Court cannot grant habeas relief on Petitioner's claims unless the state habeas court's adjudication of the claim
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). Under § 2254(d)(1), a state habeas court may not base its decision on a rule of law contrary to one established by the Supreme Court or arrive at a result different from one of the Supreme Court on materially indistinguishable facts. Williams, 529 U.S. at 413. A state court decision is "an unreasonable application of clearly established" Supreme Court precedent under § 2254 if the state court "correctly identifies the governing legal rule but applies it unreasonably to the facts of a particular prisoner's case." Id. at 407-08. An unreasonable application of federal law is not simply an incorrect application of federal law. Id. at 410. See also Woodford v. Visciotti, 537 U.S. 19, 27, 123 S.Ct. 357, 154 L.Ed.2d 279 (2002). Rather, the application must be objectively unreasonable. Id. To prevail under § 2254(d)(2), a petitioner must rebut by clear and convincing evidence the presumption that a state court's factual findings are correct. See § 2254(e)(1) (providing that "a determination of a factual issue made by a State court shall be presumed to be correct"); Foster v. Johnson, 293 F.3d 766, 776 (5th Cir.2002). [FN2]
FN2. Petitioner briefly contends that the denial of a hearing in the state habeas proceedings relieves federal courts from applying 28 U.S.C. §§ 2254(d) and 2254(e)(1), which give deference to a state habeas court's denial of habeas relief. However, as acknowledged in Petitioner's
brief, we rejected that very argument in Valdez v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 941, 954, 959 (5th Cir.2001) ("[W]e hold that a full and fair hearing is not a prerequisite to the application of 28 U.S.C. § 2254's deferential scheme.").
The applicable "clearly established federal law" in this case is the two-pronged inquiry provided in Strickland v. Washington for the adjudication of ineffective assistance of counsel claims, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). See Anderson, 338 F.3d at 390. Under Strickland, the defendant must show both that (1) counsel's performance was deficient and (2) the deficient performance resulted in prejudice to the defendant. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. As discussed below, Petitioner has failed to show that trial counsel was deficient. Consequently, his ineffective assistance of counsel claim must fail and we need not consider the second prong of the Strickland test. Id. at 697 ("[T]here is no reason for a court deciding an ineffective assistance claim to ... address both components of the inquiry if the defendant makes an insufficient showing on one.").
To establish deficient performance under Strickland, a defendant must show that counsel's actions fell below an objective standard of reasonableness. Id. at 687-88. "This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the 'counsel' guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment." Id. at 687. Our review of counsel's performance is highly deferential and employs a presumption that "counsel's conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance." Id. at 689.
Here, Petitioner contends that trial counsel was ineffective at the punishment phase of trial for failing to present evidence of Petitioner's violent childhood and instead focusing on residual doubt and good character evidence. A trial attorney bears the duty of making a reasonable investigation or making a reasonable decision that makes a particular investigation unnecessary. Id. at 691. However, "[n]otwithstanding the constitutional stature of appropriate mitigating evidence in a capital case, counsel's failure to develop or present mitigating background evidence is not per se deficient performance." Moore v. Johnson, 194 F.3d 586, 615 (5th Cir.1999).
Before us is substantial evidence that Petitioner witnessed and suffered a great deal of abuse as a child. Both Petitioner's mother and brother attested to Petitioner's violent childhood, with reference to specific incidents. Petitioner's affidavit and letters also substantiate his claims that he was abused as a child. Arguably, a blatant disregard of that evidence or a complete failure to investigate a defendant's background would be unreasonable. See, e.g., Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 525, 123 S.Ct. 2527, 156 L.Ed.2d 471 (2003) (finding unreasonable trial counsel's failure to further investigate defendant's background where counsel was aware that defendant's "mother was a chronic alcoholic; [the defendant] was shuttled from foster home to foster home and displayed some emotional difficulties while there; he had frequent, lengthy absences from school; and, on at least one occasion, his mother left him and his siblings alone for days without food"). However, none of the evidence properly before us shows objectively unreasonable action on the part of trial counsel. There is no indication that trial counsel knew of Petitioner's turbulent childhood or had reason to believe that such mitigating evidence existed. Neither is there evidence that trial counsel's investigation of Petitioner's background was objectively inadequate. Rather, trial counsel's affidavit supports Respondent's contention that trial counsel did indeed perform an adequate investigation. Trial counsel and a hired investigator spoke to Petitioner and others who knew Petitioner regarding Petitioner's background. Neither trial counsel nor the investigator discovered anything unusual in the defendant's childhood during this investigation. Petitioner has not pointed to anything in the evidence properly before us that would support a contrary conclusion.
Without any indication that trial counsel should have identified child abuse as potential mitigation evidence, we are in no position to second-guess trial counsel's investigation, see Dowthitt, 230 F.3d at 743 (advocating caution in scrutinizing trial counsel's investigation and presentation of mitigating evidence when such inquiry comes down to "a matter of degrees"), and we find that Petitioner has failed to show deficient performance of trial counsel as required by Strickland. [FN3]
FN3. We must note that our inquiry would be much more difficult were we able to consider all of the affidavits and evidence Petitioner presented to the district court. The filings that we are precluded from considering suggest that trial counsel could indeed have discovered evidence of childhood abuse with little effort. According to trial counsel's own affidavit, if he had known of such information, he would have seriously considered presenting it during the penalty phase of Petitioner's trial. However, Petitioner did not present or refer to any evidence of trial counsel's inadequate investigative measures in his state petition; we are bound by the requirements of § 2254(b)(1), as explained earlier in this opinion, which requires us to consider Petitioner's claims only insofar as they have been properly exhausted in state court.
In light of the evidence properly before us, we cannot say that the state habeas court's denial of habeas relief, which was based on a finding that Petitioner failed to demonstrate deficient performance in calling Petitioner or other witnesses to testify regarding Petitioner's violent childhood during the penalty phase of trial, was an impermissible result under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). Thus, summary judgment in favor of Respondent was proper.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
8th murderer executed in U.S. in 2006
1012th murderer executed in U.S. since 1976
4th murderer executed in Texas in 2006
359th murderer executed in Texas since 1976
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder-Execution)
Birth
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder)
Murder
Murder
to Murderer
Sentence
Clyde Smith Jr.
David E. Jacobs
Summary:
Jacobs' body was found in his cab in the parking lot of a Houston apartment complex. An autopsy revealed Jacobs died after being shot three times in the back of his neck with a .38 caliber pistol. Two months later, Houston Police responded to an apartment complex and found that Smith had accidentally shot himself in the leg. A .38 caliber handgun was found and ballstic tests linked the gun to the fatal shootings of Jacobs and another cab driver, Victor Bilton, during a 1992 robbery. Upon his arrest, Smith confessed to shooting both Jacobs and Bilton. Two women, girlfriends of Smith, testified against him. One called a crime tip line that led police to Smith. One of them said she was in the cab when he committed one of the slayings.
Smith v. Dretke, 134 Fed.Appx. 674 (5th Cir. 2005) (Habeas).
Smith v. Johnson, --- F.3d ----, 2006 WL 330114 (5th Cir. 2006) (Sec. 1983).
"I want to thank you all for being here and for your love and support,"
Date of Birth: 08/31/1973
TDCJ#: 999088
Date Received: 01/14/1993
Education: 09 years (GED)
Occupation: Security
Date of Offense: 02/06/1992
County of Conviction: Harris County
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Black
Eye Color: Brown
Height: 6 ft 00 in
Weight: 191
(2) inmate was not entitled to stay of execution pending United States Supreme Court's decision in case also involving challenge to method of execution.
Affirmed.
The plaintiff-appellant, Clyde Smith, Jr. (Smith), is scheduled to be executed on February 15, 2006. Smith appeals the district court's dismissal of his suit seeking injunctive relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He alleged that the particular method of execution used by Texas, lethal injection, causes excruciating pain during an execution in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The district court dismissed the complaint with prejudice, concluding that Smith had failed to provide a reasonable justification for his delay in bringing the Eighth Amendment challenge to method of execution. The district court expressly recognized that it did not have to determine whether the Eighth Amendment claim is cognizable under § 1983 because Fifth Circuit precedent holds that Smith is not entitled to equitable relief due to his dilatory filing.
(1) defendant sufficiently exhausted his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in state court;
(2) district court was statutorily precluded from holding an evidentiary hearing on petitioner's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel; and
(3) defendant's trial counsel's performance at the punishment phase of trial was not deficient.
Affirmed.
As stated above, the substance of a petitioner's claim must first be fairly presented to the state habeas court before a federal court may consider that claim. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1); Morris, 379 F.3d at 204. The exhaustion requirement is not satisfied if the petitioner submits new factual allegations or new legal theories to the federal habeas court. Anderson, 338 F.3d at 386. See also Dowthitt v. Johnson, 230 F.3d 733, 746 (5th Cir.2000). However, "dismissal is not required when evidence presented for the first time in a habeas proceeding supplements, but does not fundamentally alter, the claim presented to the state courts." Anderson, 338 F.3d at 386-87 (quoting Caballero v. Keane, 42 F.3d 738, 741 (2d Cir.1994)) (emphasis added). The determination of whether a petitioner has exhausted state remedies is a case- and fact-specific analysis. Morris, 379 F.3d. at 205. In determining whether the evidence presented by Petitioner for the first time in federal court is merely supplemental, we turn to our recent opinions on the subject.
Petitioner contends that, to the extent his claim is not exhausted, the state habeas court's failure to hold an evidentiary hearing excused his failure to exhaust. He contends that the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing in which Petitioner could have further developed the facts relevant to his petition.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2), an applicant that has failed to develop the factual basis of a claim in the State habeas proceedings may not obtain an evidentiary hearing in the federal habeas proceedings unless two conditions are met. First, the petitioner's claim must rely on a new rule of constitutional law, or, more relevant here, on a "a factual predicate that could not have been previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence." § 2254(e)(2)(A)(ii). Second, "the facts underlying the claim would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that, but for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense." § 2254(e)(2)(B). These conditions on the grant of an evidentiary hearing, however, do not work against a petitioner unless the petitioner's failure to develop facts was due to "lack of diligence, or some greater fault, attributable to the prisoner or the prisoner's counsel." Dowthitt, 230 F.3d at 758 (quoting Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 420, 432, 120 S.Ct. 1479, 146 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000)). This determination depends upon "whether the prisoner made a reasonable attempt, in light of the information available at the time, to investigate and pursue claims in state court." Williams, 529 U.S. at 435.