IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. WR-81,532-01
EX PARTE BERNHARDT TIEDE II, Applicant
ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
CAUSE NO. 1997-C-103-A IN THE 123RD DISTRICT COURT
FROM PANOLA COUNTY
ALCALA , J., filed a concurring opinion in which PRICE, JOHNSON , and COCHRAN , JJ.,
joined.
CONCURRING OPINION
I concur in the Court’s judgment granting habeas corpus relief to Bernhardt Tiede,
applicant, by ordering that he receive a new hearing on punishment. Applicant was
sentenced to life imprisonment for first-degree murder after the jury rejected his claim of
sudden passion arising from an adequate cause, which, had it been accepted by the jury,
would have reduced the offense level to a second-degree felony.1 At trial, the State disputed
1
The Texas Penal Code provides that murder is a first-degree felony but becomes a second-
degree felony if, “[a]t the punishment phase of a trial, the defendant [ ] raise[s] the issue as to
whether he caused the death under the immediate influence of sudden passion arising from an
adequate cause” and proves the issue in the affirmative by a preponderance of the evidence. TEX .
PENAL CODE §19.02(d).
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applicant’s claim of sudden passion by presenting testimony from its expert, psychiatrist Dr.
Gripon, who described applicant as having an unremarkable mental-health history. Now,
in light of the habeas record that shows that Gripon’s testimony was false, the State agrees
that applicant caused the decedent’s death out of sudden passion arising from an adequate
cause. The State currently makes a factual representation that, had it known then what it
knows now, it would have sought to punish applicant under a second-degree punishment
range, and the habeas court has determined that representation to be credible. Furthermore,
regardless of the merits of applicant’s claim of sudden passion, the habeas evidence supports
the conclusion that the jury likely would have sentenced applicant to a period of confinement
for less than life in prison in light of the conclusive evidence that now explains his state of
mind as experiencing dissociation when he killed the decedent and left her body in a
refrigerator for an extended period of time. Having reviewed the pertinent portions of the
trial record and the entire habeas record, I conclude that applicant has proven by a
preponderance of the evidence both requirements for establishing his false-evidence claim,
namely, that the habeas record shows that evidence used in the punishment phase of his trial
was both false and material. See Ex parte Weinstein, 421 S.W.3d 656, 665 (Tex. Crim. App.
2014). I, therefore, would grant relief on that basis.2
I. Factual Background
2
This ground urges the Court to grant relief on the basis that “there was false evidence
presented at trial which was such that, once known to be false, confidence in the punishment verdict
is undermined.”
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In the guilt stage of applicant’s trial, the jury heard applicant’s version of the events,
which he gave in his written statement to police officers after the decedent’s body was
discovered. In that written one-page statement that contains few details, applicant stated,
[The decedent] had become very possessive over my life. She was now evil
and wicked. But I still cared for her. I went to her house on Nov. 19, 1996,
and made coffee at [approximately] 7:00 a.m. I then went home to take a
shower. I returned at [approximately] 10:00 a.m. I was there alone with her.
[The decedent] had a rifle in the freezer closet. She kept it there to shoot
crows and blackbirds in the yard. She was heading out of the house from the
hallway to the garage. I had moved the rifle into the bathroom near the
garage. She walked out into the garage towards my car. I took the rifle and
shot [the decedent] in the back.
Applicant briefly described how he then shot the decedent multiple times, placed her body
into a freezer, covered her body with food, and cleaned up the garage.
The trial record before us also includes the supplemental report of Captain David E.
Jeter, which revealed that applicant made statements to the investigative officers beyond the
few details that were included in his written statement. The report states,
Tiede states that [the decedent], over the last couple of years, had become very
mean. Tiede stated that she was very jealous of his friends and attempted to
destroy any friendship he had with anyone else.
The report also indicates that Tiede “stated that he had no life of his own.”
Applicant’s punishment-phase testimony further explained the events beyond what
was contained in his written statement. He described his relationship with the decedent as
“being in prison to some degree.” He expressed that feeling as “being choked, not being able
to get a breath, being able to just—just being smothered.” Applicant discussed an incident
Tiede - 4
when applicant told the decedent that he could no longer be friends with her because of her
possessiveness, and the decedent locked the gate to her house with a remote control so that
he could not leave as he attempted to get away from her. The trial record shows that
applicant generally described how he shot the decedent in her back as she was bent over but,
because the State’s attorney used physical gestures that were not described in the trial record,
it is unclear precisely where appellant and the decedent were located relative to each other
at the time of the shooting.
In addition to applicant’s punishment-phase testimony, applicant presented testimony
from his own expert, Dr. Mears, whom the judge did not permit to give testimony specific
to applicant himself. During the voir dire portion of his testimony outside the presence of
the jury, however, Dr. Mears relayed applicant’s explanation for killing the decedent, stating,
“[H]e said when he shot her that he felt out of his body.” Dr. Mears determined that that
description was “a pretty classic kind of dissociative feature,” and he noted that applicant had
some dissociative features. During his testimony generally describing the causes of
dissociation, Dr. Mears included “a child history of trauma” and occupations dealing with
highly stressful situations, such as funeral directors. Dr. Mears’s testimony suggesting that
applicant had experienced dissociation, however, was heavily undermined by the State’s
expert, Dr. Gripon, who indicated that applicant had an unremarkable mental-health history
that would not support that determination.
It is evident that the trial court believed that applicant’s punishment-phase testimony
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constituted some evidence that he killed the decedent under the immediate influence of
sudden passion arising from an adequate cause because the jury instructions permitted the
jury to make an affirmative finding on that matter. See T EX. P ENAL C ODE §19.02(d). Had
there been no evidence of sudden passion, the trial court would have erred by including an
instruction asking the jury to determine if applicant killed the decedent out of sudden passion.
The matter of sudden passion, therefore, was a factual matter to be resolved by the jury at
applicant’s trial.
In his closing argument to the jury in the punishment phase of applicant’s trial, the
State’s attorney said,
Let’s talk about our experts. Mine—my witness said their witness didn’t know
what he was talking about. My expert, the psychiatrist Dr. Gripon, an M.D.,
was much better than Dr. Mears, Ph.D[,] for many reasons, one of which [is
that] my guy cost[s] more. And even the first-class, high-flying defendant
knows you get more for your money. And I did.
Although the jury rejected applicant’s evidence of sudden passion at the time of his
trial, that is one of the questions before this Court in this application for a writ of habeas
corpus, along with the matter of whether the false evidence would have otherwise affected
the punishment that was actually assessed by the jury. The question is whether applicant was
harmed by false evidence introduced in the punishment phase of his trial that materially
colored the jury’s consideration of his sudden-passion evidence and influenced its overall
determination to assess a life sentence, rather than a lower one than that in light of
applicant’s mental-health history that has now come to light.
Tiede - 6
II. Analysis
Applying a standard of review that is deferential to the habeas court’s findings of fact,
I agree that applicant has established the first requirement by demonstrating the existence of
new evidence showing that testimony at his trial was false. See Weinstein, 421 S.W.3d at
665. Unaware of applicant’s suppressed memories at the time of applicant’s trial, Gripon
testified falsely that applicant had an unremarkable mental-health history. In his 2014
affidavit, Gripon explains,
When asked by the State regarding the relevance of the dissociation discussion
to the case at hand, I testified that ‘there isn’t any’ because no supporting
information for that condition was offered. I testified that if a person seemed
to have a clean bill of mental health, it would certainly not support the idea
that they had a dissociative episode at some time several years prior. From
what I heard and knew, the defendant had an unremarkable mental health
history. I was not aware of information indicating that Mr. Tiede was a victim
of childhood sexual abuse, nor of the abusive nature to which the decedent had
acted toward Mr. Tiede nor his associates. This information would have made
the discussion of a dissociative episode, at the time of the incident, highly
relevant. These facts, along with the information that Mr. Tiede had extensive
experience in hiding his sexual identity from the public, explains Mr. Tiede’s
ability to compartmentalize his behavior after the incident. . . . The new
evidence also helps to explain Mr. Tiede’s ability to compartmentalize his life
and thoughts, subsequent to the incident, allowing him to preserve the
decedent’s body and continue on with his life, as if nothing had happened.
According to the 2014 habeas affidavit by Gripon describing his recent interview of
applicant, applicant explained to Gripon why he killed the decedent stating,
He described the incident as arising out of Marge Nugent being, specifically,
abusive/critical toward Chris, the young gardener with whom Bernie had been
sexually involved. And, Bernie feeling that he “could not take this any longer”
and [he] grabbed the rifle and shot Marge Nugent, a number of times [in] the
back. He reports having done this without significant reflection and as an
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im pulsive reaction to an overw helm ing emotion of being
manipulated/controlled and abused. . . . At that point, he states that he
absolutely had no plan as to what to do with her body nor how to
respond/react. Therefore, he states that he just tried to appear as if “nothing
had happened.”
The new evidence to which Gripon refers as the underlying reason for changing his
expert opinion is applicant’s recent revelation that he was sexually abused as a child for an
extended period of time. I agree that, at first blush, it seems peculiar to characterize
information as newly discovered—the fact that he had been sexually abused as a
child—when, at least at some subconscious level, it had to have been known by applicant
himself at the time of trial. But this phenomenon was explained in the habeas record by
experts who averred that applicant had been the victim of sexual abuse as a child for many
years and had suppressed his actual awareness of it to the point that he was incapable of
revealing the memories to anyone at his trial. According to a 2014 affidavit by Noel Bridget
Busche-Armendariz,3 when applicant was a child, he “suffered from an extensive history of
childhood sexual abuse” by his uncle, who “repeatedly sexually abused him and his cousin
when they were children.” She observed that applicant “did not disclose this sexual history
until a recent interview” with her, and that his “delayed disclosure can be explained by a
number of factors found in research literature on child sexual abuse survivors.”
In light of the habeas evidence presented by Gripon and the other mental-health
3
Busch-Armendariz is a licensed social worker, director of the Institute on Domestic Violence
and Sexual Assault, and a Professor at the School of Social Work at the University of Texas at
Austin.
Tiede - 8
experts, the habeas court’s findings of fact determined that the habeas evidence was credible,
stating, “[T]he Court finds that . . . Dr. Gripon stated that: ‘based on reasonable psychiatric
probability, a review of his history and the history of the offense, as it is described, would
indicate that he suffered from a Dissociate Episode, at that time.’” As required by our
precedent, I apply a deferential standard of review to the habeas court’s finding on the matter
of whether the evidence was false, and, determining that the habeas court’s finding is
supported by the habeas record, I conclude that applicant has established that the evidence
was false. See id. at 664 (this Court conducts deferential review of habeas court’s
determination that evidence was false).
In contrast to the deferential review of the habeas court’s fact finding that the
evidence was false, this Court conducts a de novo review of the question whether the false
evidence was material under the facts of the case. See id. “Only the use of material false
testimony amounts to a due-process violation. And false testimony is material only if there
is a ‘reasonable likelihood’ that it affected the judgment of the jury.” Id. at 665.
Applying this de novo standard of review, I determine that applicant has established
that the false evidence was material to the punishment that was assessed by the jury. The
State’s attorney provided an affidavit averring that, had he been aware at the time of trial of
the evidence now included in this habeas application, he would have sought to punish
applicant for second-degree murder as opposed to first-degree murder. The situation before
us is unusual in that the two opposing parties to this proceeding, applicant and the State,
Tiede - 9
agree that, based on the new evidence showing that trial testimony was false in the
punishment stage, applicant should have been punished under the second-degree-felony
punishment range. The evidence at the habeas hearing was not contested and, despite the
fact that these types of parties are normally adverse to one another, the State and applicant
were in agreement in requesting that the habeas court recommend that relief be granted.
Furthermore, in light of the State’s attorney’s affidavit that he would have used his
prosecutorial discretion to seek a lower punishment range in the interest of justice had the
false evidence not been introduced at applicant’s trial, there is no doubt that the false
evidence negatively impacted the punishment imposed by the jury in this case. See T EX.
C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 2.01 (“It shall be the primary duty of all prosecuting attorneys,
including any special prosecutors, not to convict, but to see that justice is done.”). And even
if dissatisfied with the manner in which a State’s attorney uses his prosecutorial discretion,
a complainant or complainant’s family has no authority, at least not in criminal court, to limit
that discretion. Based on the State’s attorney’s representations that he would have used his
prosecutorial discretion to seek only a second-degree-felony punishment range and the fact
that the habeas record and trial court’s credibility findings support that representation, I
would find that applicant met his burden of proof to establish the materiality of the false
evidence.4
4
Here, the State’s attorney has not merely conceded error, as a matter of law, but rather has
provided facts about how he would have proceeded at the sentencing phase of applicant’s trial had
he been aware of the evidence now presented in this application. I agree that a party’s concession
(continued...)
Tiede - 10
I note here that, although there has been much focus on whether applicant’s evidence
now establishes sudden passion, the pertinent inquiry is really whether he has produced a
record that shows that the State’s use of false evidence materially affected the punishment
that was assessed in the sense that he likely would have received a lesser sentence than life
in prison had the false evidence not been used. In light of the trial-record evidence by Dr.
Mears that applicant experienced dissociation at the time that he killed the decedent, and in
light of Dr. Gripon’s newly revealed acknowledgment that his trial testimony disavowing the
existence of dissociation was false, the habeas record has shown that the jury was misled into
believing that applicant had an unremarkable mental-health history. Had the jury known then
what this record now reveals, I believe it is highly likely that applicant would have received
a sentence less than life in prison, even if the jury continued to reject applicant’s claim that
he killed the decedent out of sudden passion arising from an adequate cause.
Because I conclude that applicant has established both of the required elements of a
false-evidence claim, I concur in this Court’s judgment granting relief.5
4
(...continued)
on a matter of law that is mistaken should not necessarily affect this Court’s resolution on that matter
of law. Here, however, the State’s attorney provides a factual statement about how he would proceed
to seek to have applicant punished under the facts of the case. The habeas court found those facts
to be credible. Having reviewed the pertinent portions of the trial record and the entire habeas
record, there is no rational basis for determining that the State’s attorney’s factual representations
lack veracity.
5
Applicant’s alternative ground states, “There is relevant scientific evidence that was not
available to be offered at the time of the trial in the instant case, and which contradicts scientific
evidence relied on by the State at trial.” Because applicant’s grounds are alternatives, it is
(continued...)
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Filed: November 26, 2014
Publish
5
(...continued)
unnecessary to reach this ground.