United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS April 14, 2004
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
No. 03-10024
RICKY EUGENE MORROW,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
DOUG DRETKE, DIRECTOR,
TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS DIVISION,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
For the Northern District of Texas
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
This is an application for a certificate of appealability by
Ricky Eugene Morrow, a Texas death row inmate, seeking to appeal
the decision of the federal district court denying habeas relief
and refusing a COA. Morrow raises three contentions. First, he
argues that the district court erred in denying an evidentiary
hearing and presuming the findings of the State habeas court to be
correct even though it held no hearing. Second, he asserts that
the state habeas court committed constitutional error in rejecting
his claim that the state suppressed FBI and Dallas police reports
of interviews with prosecution witnesses. Third, he urges that the
district court erred in rejecting his claim that his counsel was
ineffective at the guilt-innocence phase of his trial. We grant
the request for a COA on the Brady claims and ultimately affirm
their denial on the merits. We deny a COA on the remaining claims.
I
Morrow was convicted of capital murder by a jury in Dallas
County, Texas, in 1983 and sentenced to death. That conviction was
reversed on appeal.1 He was tried again with the same result.
This second conviction was affirmed on appeal.2 Morrow filed his
state habeas petition on October 21, 1996, supplemented on January
26, 1999. Because the judge who presided at the trial had retired,
the habeas case was assigned to a visiting judge who denied a
request for an evidentiary hearing and recommended denial of relief
upon the record as supplemented by affidavits and documents, a
recommendation accepted by the Court of Criminal Appeals.3
Morrow’s federal petition followed on September 13, 2000. The
federal magistrate judge also denied an evidentiary hearing, and on
April 9, 2002, filed her recommendations. The district court in
1
Morrow v. State, 753 S.W.2d 372 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988).
2
Morrow v. State, 910 S.W.2d 471 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995).
3
There was one exception. The Court of Criminal Appeals did
not accept a finding by the trial court that Morrow had waived his
claim of ineffectiveness because it was not properly briefed.
2
turn adopted the sixty-five page report of the magistrate judge,
denying relief and a COA.
II
A
Unless a COA is granted, this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear
this appeal.4 The standard is whether Morrow “has made a
substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.”5
This standard “includes showing that reasonable jurists could
debate whether (or, for that matter, agree that) the petition
should have been resolved in a different manner or that the issues
presented were adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed
further.”6
The COA determination “requires an overview of the claims in
the habeas petition and a general assessment of their merits” but
not “full consideration of the factual or legal bases adduced in
support of the claims.”7
B
As for the merits, under section 2254(d), an application for
a writ of habeas corpus shall not be granted with respect to any
4
28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1)(A) (2001).
5
Id. § 2253(c)(2); Barefoot v. Estelle, 463 U.S. 880, 893
(1983); Dowthitt v. Johnson, 230 F.3d 733, 740 (5th Cir. 2000).
6
Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 483-84 (2000) (internal
quotations and citations omitted); Dowthitt, 230 F.3d at 740.
7
Miller-El v. Cockrell, 123 S.Ct. 1029, 1039 (2003).
3
claim that was adjudicated on the merits in state court proceedings
unless the 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.8
The Supreme Court has explained that a state court decision is
“contrary” to established federal law if the state court “applies
a rule that contradicts the governing law set forth in [the
Court’s] cases,” or confronts facts that are “materially
indistinguishable” from a relevant Supreme Court precedent, yet
reaches an opposite result.9 Alternatively, a state court
“unreasonably applies” clearly established federal law if it
correctly identifies the governing precedent but unreasonably
applies it to the facts of a particular case.10
A federal habeas court’s inquiry into reasonableness should be
objective rather than subjective, and a court “may not issue the
writ simply because that court concludes in its independent
judgment that the relevant state-court decision applied clearly
8
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (2001).
9
(Terry) Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 405-06 (2000);
Hernandez v. Johnson, 248 F.3d 344, 346 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
534 U.S. 1034 (2001).
10
Williams, 529 U.S. at 407-09; Hernandez, 248 F.3d at 346.
4
established federal law erroneously or incorrectly.”11 Rather,
federal habeas relief is only merited where the state court
decision is both incorrect and objectively unreasonable.12 However,
“an unreasonable application of federal law is different from an
incorrect application of federal law.”13 In other words, habeas
relief is inappropriate when a state court, at a minimum, reaches
a “satisfactory conclusion.”14 This court has also held that it is
the state court’s “ultimate decision” that is to be tested for
reasonableness, “not every jot of its reasoning.”15
Additionally, section 2254(e)(1) also requires federal courts
to presume correct the factual findings of the state courts unless
the petitioner “rebut[s] the presumption of correctness by clear
and convincing evidence.”16
C
For reasons we will explain, we deny Morrow’s request for a
certificate of appealability on his claim that the district court
11
Williams, 529 U.S. at 411; see also Tucker v. Johnson, 242
F.3d 617, 620-21 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 533 U.S. 972 (2001).
12
Williams, 529 U.S. at 411; Martin v. Cain, 246 F.3d 471, 476
(5th Cir.), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 885 (2001).
13
Williams, 529 U.S. at 410.
14
Id. at 410-11 (citing Wright v. West, 505 U.S. 277, 287
(1992)).
15
Santellan v. Cockrell, 271 F.3d 190, 193 (5th Cir. 2001),
cert. denied, 535 U.S. 982 (2002).
16
28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
5
erred in denying an evidentiary hearing and in presuming the state
court findings to be correct, as well as his claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel. We grant the certificate for Morrow’s claim
that the State suppressed FBI reports and interviews with
prosecution witnesses. However, we reject this claim on its merits
and affirm the judgment of the district court insofar as it denied
Morrow relief on this claim.
III
The federal district court described the robbery and murder as
follows:
Trial testimony adduced the following facts regarding the
events at issue. In the late morning of January 19,
1982, Morrow and [Linda Ferguson Morrow]17 proceeded to
a laundromat so that Ferguson could do their laundry
while Morrow went to a pawnshop to purchase a radio. He
later returned for Ferguson and they in turn went back to
the pawnshop ostensibly to purchase a television. They
instead purchased two handguns – a smaller .25 pistol and
a larger .38 revolver. After purchasing the weapons,
they proceeded to a mall to purchase ammunition.
Ferguson and Morrow arrived at Metropolitan [Savings] at
around 4:15 p.m. Morrow went inside the bank and
“started screaming and cursing and hollering and
directing profanities at everyone in the bank and
demanding the money.” Joena Bailey Shipley, Jean Cullum
Blum, W.L. Miller, and Carol Fritchie were working at
Metropolitan at the time of the robbery. Morrow exited
the bank with a sack of money, including coins. As he
exited, the sack ripped and his gun discharged. He
stopped to retrieve the dropped money. Two bystanders,
Louis Wong and Bo Holmes, witnessed a man leaving the
scene with money falling from a ripped sack. No one
disputes that the man they saw was petitioner Ricky
Morrow.
17
Ferguson married Morrow after the crime occurred.
6
John Norton, a Dallas police officer at the time of the
robberies, interviewed witnesses at Metropolitan. After
the Metropolitan robbery, Dallas police officer K.C.
Edmonds interviewed Shipley, Blum, Miller, and Fritchie.
Agent Nelson Borrero of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation also interviewed Blum.
After leaving Metropolitan, Morrow and Ferguson arrived
at First Texas [Savings] between 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. As
Morrow entered First Texas he approached Kathy Knoebber
Crouse at her desk. When Mark Frazier, another bank
employee, asked Morrow if he needed assistance, Morrow
“started screaming and ranting and raving and cursing and
hollering it was a robbery.” He led Frazier at gunpoint
to Tammy Roy’s teller window and pointed one pistol at
her and another pistol at Frazier. After getting a sack
of money from Roy, Morrow shot and killed Frazier and
exited the bank.
Jo Brown, Operations Supervisor at First Texas, witnessed
the events at First Texas on January 19, 1982. Nancy
Galloway, another employee of First Texas, also witnessed
the events of that date. Jan Noble, a real estate agent
with an office in the same building at First Texas,
witnessed Morrow and Ferguson leave the scene in their
vehicle.
After robbing First Texas, Morrow and Ferguson proceeded
to the Park Cities Inn and rented Room 311. Richard A.
Acree, a police officer then employed by the University
Park Police Department, spotted their vehicle at the inn.
He spoke with Sherry Baker, the clerk-receptionist for
the inn, and ascertained that Morrow and Ferguson were in
room 311. He called for assistance and several units
arrived on the scene soon thereafter.
Numerous law enforcement officers from the FBI, Dallas
Police Department, and University Park Police Department
arrived at the inn, converged on Room 311, and demanded
that Morrow and Ferguson surrender. FBI Agent Thomas
Yunessa, armed with an assault rifle, and Dallas Police
Officer P.T. Barnum, armed with a shotgun, crouched
behind a toppled coke machine in the hall outside the
room. Officers Edmonds, Luke Robertson, and Harold Rice,
as well as Detectives Charles Hallam, John Landers, and
Jack Baird of the Dallas Police Department, were also
present at the inn. Ferguson voluntarily surrendered.
Morrow then fired his .38 revolver. Law enforcement
7
officers fired weapons and Morrow subsequently
surrendered.
Special Agent Richard T. Garcia of the FBI interviewed
Crouse after the robbery and shooting at First Texas.
Special Agent H. Lamar Meyer interviewed Nancy Galloway
and Jan Noble regarding the events at First Texas.
IV
We must deny a COA for Morrow’s first claim that the federal
district court erred in applying a presumption of correctness to
the state habeas findings because they rested on the papers filed
and not on testimony at an evidentiary hearing. The presumption of
correctness under AEDPA is accorded adjudications by state courts.
If the state has rejected a petitioner’s habeas claim on its
merits, it has adjudicated the claim. The AEDPA requires that we
presume correct the habeas court’s findings of fact unless the
petitioner “rebut[s] the presumption of correctness by clear and
convincing evidence.”18 This is so even if the hearing was a
“paper” hearing and may not have been full and fair.19
V
Morrow contends that the state did not disclose evidence
favorable to his defense in violation of its duty set out in Brady
v. Maryland,20 and Kyles v. Whitley,21 and that it used false
18
28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
19
Valdez v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 941, 950-51 (5th Cir. 2001),
cert. denied, 537 U.S. 883 (2002).
20
373 U.S. 83 (1963).
21
514 U.S. 419 (1995).
8
testimony knowing it to be false, a denial of his due process
rights as described in Giglio v. United States.22 Morrow did not
seek a certificate of appealability on the latter claim from this
court. We read this assertion in his brief as a variation of his
request for a certificate of appealability on his second issue,
“whether the state suppressed favorable evidence that denied
appellant due process of law and a fair trial.” To the extent it
is anything more, it is not before us and we will not treat it as
a separate issue.
A
A prosecutor must disclose evidence favorable to an accused if
it “is of sufficient significance to result in the denial of the
defendant’s right to a fair trial.”23 It is material “if there is
a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to
the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.”24 It is not whether the result would have been
different. Rather, it is whether given the non-disclosures of
material evidence the verdict is less worthy of confidence. In
defining the scope of the duty of disclosure, it is no answer that
a prosecutor did not have possession of the evidence or that he was
unaware of it. Rather, the prosecutor “has a duty to learn of any
22
405 U.S. 150 (1972).
23
United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 108 (1976).
24
United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985).
9
favorable evidence known to the others acting on the government’s
behalf in the case, including the police.”25
With these general and settled principles, we turn to the
specific contentions.
B
The claim of suppressed or undisclosed evidence relates to
three sets of fact questions at the trial:
1) Morrow’s mental state at the time of the two robberies,
specifically whether he was “high” on drugs or alcohol.
2) The manner of the fatal shooting inside the bank as it bore
on whether it was intentional and deliberate.
3) Relatedly, the manner of Morrow’s flight from the First
Texas Bank after the fatal shooting, specifically as it bore on his
emotional state.26
1
As detailed in its opening statement and voir dire, the
defense maintained that Morrow was guilty only of felony murder,
not capital murder, because he was so intoxicated on drugs and
alcohol that he could not form the intent to kill and that the
shooting of Frazier was an accident. The prosecutor’s response, as
reflected in his summation, was that Morrow might have been “high,”
25
Kyles, 514 U.S. at 437.
26
That is, whether he was upset and crying or cavalier --
“satisfied,” “demonstrated a don’t care attitude” or “laughing.”
10
but it was on “fear” or a “murder high.” With these opposing
stances at trial, the State called Jean Blum, an employee of
Metropolitan Bank, who testified that Morrow was not intoxicated on
drugs or alcohol. She denied telling police officers a different
story, explaining that she told Officer K.D. Edmonds that Morrow
was “high like on adrenaline,” “excited with the thrill of what was
going on.” Joena Bailey Shipley, an employee of Metropolitan,
testified that Morrow was not drunk out of his senses, that he did
not stagger or slur his words. Officer Jack Baird, present at
Morrow’s arrest, testified that Morrow appeared “high” on drugs or
adrenaline, and prompted by the prosecutor, accepted that Morrow
could have been on a “murder high.”
Morrow’s Brady argument here is that the following five
documents were not disclosed:
an FBI report reflecting that Jean Blum told Agent Nelson
Borrero that Morrow, while at Metropolitan Bank, had
bloodshot eyes, a “wild look,” and appeared to be “on
drugs” or intoxicated;
an FBI report reflecting that Jo Brown told an agent that
Morrow was “high” at First Texas;
an FBI teletype reflecting that witnesses at Metropolitan
Bank said that Morrow was “high” on drugs or alcohol;
an FBI memo reflecting that witnesses at both banks said
that Morrow was “high” on drugs or alcohol; and
an FBI report prepared by agent David Cutcomb reflecting
that Morrow had slightly slurred speech and “wide” eyes
when he was arrested.27
27
The state does not contest its duty to disclose these
documents on the basis that they were possessed by the FBI. We
11
Morrow argues that with these documents he could have
impeached these witnesses regarding the level of Morrow’s
intoxication; that they were material to Morrow’s intent to kill
Frazier; that the state habeas judge erroneously narrowed the
prosecutor’s duty of production to admissible evidence and was
clearly in error in crediting a state prosecutor’s affidavit that
the documents were produced over affidavits of defense counsel in
both trials that they were not.
An FBI report of Agent Borrero indicates that Ms. Blum told
him that Morrow had “somewhat bloodshot” eyes and that he
“[a]ppeared to be on drugs or intoxicated, and had a wild look in
his eyes; a very excited person.”28 An FBI agent commented that Jo
Brown, a bank teller, indicated that Morrow was “high,” “shouted
obscenities,” and “ranted and raved.”29 FBI Agent Cutcomb recorded
that Morrow “spoke in a manner such that his words were slightly
slurred” and that he “widened his eyes while speaking.”30 An FBI
teletype records that unidentified witnesses at Metropolitan
accept that there was a duty of disclosure on the facts of this
case but express no opinion in that regard. See United States v.
Antone, 603 F.2d 566 (5th Cir. 1979); Moon v. Head, 285 F.3d
1301,1309-10 (11th Cir. 2002); United States v. Upton, 856 F.Supp.
727, 749-50 (E.D.N.Y. 1994).
28
Habeas Exhibit C.
29
Habeas Exhibit D.
30
Habeas Exhibit G.
12
believed Morrow to be high on drugs or alcohol.31 Finally, an FBI
memorandum records that unidentified “[w]itnesses at both bank
robberies advised that [Morrow] was apparently high on drugs or
alcohol at the time of instant bank robbery.”32
The magistrate judge below concluded that the exhibits were
not material by the measures of Brady and Kyles; that “the jury
would have reached the same result had they considered the exhibits
related to the intoxication issue.” Her opinion recounts at length
the extensive testimony regarding intoxication, including that of
Morrow, Officer K.C. Edmonds, Officer Norton, and others.
Significantly, Officer Edmonds interviewed witnesses Joena Bailey
Shipley, Jean Cullum Blum, W.L. Miller, and Carol Fritchie at
Metropolitan. The variances between their statement to Edmonds and
at trial was explored by counsel. Ultimately, the magistrate judge
concluded that the “allegedly withheld documents...[were]...merely
cumulative to the intoxication issue and not material within the
meaning of Brady and its progeny.” We agree.
To place the issue of intoxication into its factual setting at
trial, it is important that Morrow plead guilty to the robbery of
the Metropolitan Savings & Loan and to attempted capital murder of
the police officers who arrested him at the Park City Inn. These
pleas of guilty were to offenses having an element of
31
Habeas Exhibit E.
32
Habeas Exhibit F.
13
intentionality and were put before the jury by Dan Hagood, the
prosecutor, in his cross-examination of Morrow. This left Morrow
confessing that he was sober enough in his first robbery, minutes
before the fatal shooting in the second robbery - where he claims
he was stoned. Yet he was again sufficiently sober a short while
after the homicide to have the intent to kill arresting officers.
With his claims of intoxication now tightly sandwiched between
another bank robbery and shooting, Morrow attempted to explain in
his trial testimony that he did not intend to shoot Frazier;
rather, concerned that the cocked .38 pistol he had trained on
Frazier at a distance of two feet might accidentally discharge, he
testified that he attempted to uncock the gun by lowering the
hammer with his thumb while releasing it by pulling the trigger.
The detailing at trial of his thought processes while attempting
this maneuver was plainly in tension with his claim that he was so
drunk that he had no intent to kill and even more so his pleas of
guilty to the first robbery and to attempting to kill the arresting
officers a short while after the second robbery with its fatal
shooting. Evidence of some impairment is relevant to the claim
that the shooting was accidental, but evidence that he was so drunk
as to lack cognitive awareness was undercut by his detailed
explanation of how the shooting occurred. On this record accidental
shooting was Morrow’s only arguably plausible defense to capital
14
murder.33 Perversely, the government’s contended-for description
of his condition - that he was pumped up on adrenaline - lies more
comfortably with Morrow’s claim that he did not intend to fire at
all, and that Morrow was high on something was hardly an issue at
trial.
We turn now to the second set, the manner in which the
shooting occurred.
2
Morrow complains that two FBI reports and a supplemental
report of the Dallas Police Department were not disclosed.34 Morrow
urges that disclosure of these reports would have enabled him to
impeach the testimony of Brown and Crouse that Morrow’s shooting of
Frazier appeared deliberate.
The State called only one witness, Jo Brown, to describe the
shooting of Mr. Frazier. Brown testified that when Morrow entered
the bank, Frazier approached him, asking if he could be of help;
that Morrow had a big gun in his right hand and a smaller one in
his left. Brown’s account of the shooting was graphic, telling the
jury that Morrow picked up the money bag with his left hand, turned
his head slightly, raised the .38 pistol very deliberately and shot
Frazier in the face as he stood two feet away. In her words, it
33
The trial judge charged the jury on Morrow’s defense of
voluntary intoxication, although he was not entitled to it under
state law.
34
Habeas Exhibits D & I, and a supplemental report of the
Dallas Police Department, Habeas Exhibit T.
15
“was as deliberate as anything I have ever seen”; there was a
“slight pause” before he pulled the trigger. Finally, she
testified that Morrow “turned around and very calmly walked out
with a springy little step right up on the balls of his feet with
a smirky little look on his face” – a “satisfied look,” and an “I
don’t care attitude.”
Two of the reports discuss Brown’s observations.35 According
to Morrow, the Dallas Police Department report compromises her
trial testimony because it does not state that Brown saw the
shooting. He also argues that the FBI report contains the notes
that he could have used to impeach Brown regarding her testimony on
how the shooting occurred.36
The magistrate judge found that these three reports were not
material because none of them indicated how the shooting occurred.
We agree. That the exhibits lacked the same level of detail as her
trial testimony did not make them material.
The defense called Kathy Knoebber Crouse. According to an FBI
report, Crouse told Agent Garcia that Morrow held the smaller gun
in his right hand and the larger one in his left and she did not
recall which gun fired the shot and did not know where the money
bag was, whether the money bag was on the counter or in Morrow’s
35
Habeas Exhibits D and T.
36
Habeas Exhibit D.
16
hand when the shot was fired.37 Although not completely clear,
Crouse’s trial testimony suggests that Morrow fired the gun in his
right hand and the gun in his left was the smaller one.
Q. Okay. So he reaches into that opening with his left hand
and that is to grab the money bag, right?
A. Yes.
Q. And that gun is still right here, isn’t it?
A. Yes, it was.
Q. Okay. And all sort of in one movement – all in this one
movement, the gun was fired, wasn’t it?
A. No, he reached forward and then he leaned back and as he
was standing, he raised his arm and his hand went from
being down at waist level up to Mark’s head and he shot
him.
As we have recounted, Morrow testified at trial that the gun
discharged accidentally as he tried to uncock the hammer on the gun
in his right hand while he reached for the bag of money with his
left; that he was hysterical and crying when he returned to his
car. Officer Rice testified for the State in rebuttal that after
proper warnings, he interrogated Morrow who told him that he shot
Frazier when he pulled a lighter from his pocket which he mistook
for a pistol; that Morrow never suggested in the interview that the
shooting was accidental.
The magistrate judge concluded that any inconsistencies
between the documents not produced and the trial testimony were not
material alone or collectively. We agree. That Crouse stated in
37
Habeas Exhibit I.
17
the report that Morrow held the smaller gun in his right hand and
the larger in his left, but reversed this description during trial
is a minor difference at best, unlikely to affect the verdict. The
other inconsistencies between the report and Crouse’s trial
testimony are similarly inconsequential. Significantly, nothing in
the report casts doubt on Crouse’s testimony that the shooting did
not appear accidental. Even if Morrow had cross-examined Crouse
based on the report, there is no reasonable probability that the
outcome would have changed. We turn to the third set, the manner
in which Morrow departed First Texas Bank.
3
Morrow claims that the State failed to disclose three FBI
reports38 and an FBI teletype report39 material to the manner in
which he departed First Texas. Relatedly, Morrow claims that a
supplemental offense report of Dallas Police Officer Leslie Myer40
and an FBI report of Agent Lamar Meyer41 were material to the
testimony of Jan Noble, a trial witness who testified about
Morrow’s departing in an automobile and his demeanor at the time.
The magistrate judge found, and we agree, that the FBI
teletype report - an account of a witness who observed Morrow run
38
Habeas Exhibits D, I, and J.
39
Habeas Exhibit E.
40
Habeas Exhibit T.
41
Exhibit K.
18
from the bank and enter a late model Oldsmobile - was not material
because it did not ascribe the report to an identified witness;
that both witnesses to events immediately outside Metropolitan
Savings and Loan, Wong and Holmes, testified that Morrow ran from
the bank to the car.
The other two documents are more problematic. The reports of
Agent Meyer’s interview of Nancy Gallaway42 and an FBI report of
Kathy Crouse’s statement43 are not fully consistent with their trial
testimony. Both told agents that Morrow ran out the front door of
First Texas and at trial testified that he just walked out, not
looking perturbed. But the difference would have offered little to
the defense. The other evidence, notably Morrow’s own testimony,
was that Morrow walked from the door.
Finally, Morrow points to additional reports of Special Agent
Lamar Meyer that were not disclosed. The first report was that:
Jan Noble works in the office suite 240 that is above the
bank and she was able to look out on Berkshire and
observe the male AP [arrested person] get into a red and
white vehicle, she wrote down the partial license number
of SWY.
The second report of Meyer made on the date of the offense44 reads
as follows:
Noble stated that her place of business is located above
the First Texas Savings Association on the third floor,
42
Exhibit J.
43
Exhibit I.
44
Habeas Exhibit K.
19
and that [at] approximately 4:40 p.m. she left her office
and was outside the building unlocking the door of her
personal automobile parked near the front entrance to the
First Texas Savings. Noble continued that before she
could enter her car she observed an automobile pull out
very fast from in front of the Savings Association front
door and headed in her direction. As the vehicle passed,
traveling very rapidly, she saw a woman driving and a
white male seated in the passenger side. She described
the white male as being in his late twenties or early
thirties, with brown curly hair. She could not further
describe the person driving other than being a white
female. She described the vehicle as a red, older car
with a white top, bearing Texas license plate SWY. Noble
stated that she could not recall the last three digits of
the license plate.
Jan Noble testified at trial that she worked as a realtor in
the bank building and was leaving for her car when she heard a
shot. She got into her car, arranged her things, and then learned
as she looked back that a car blocked her exit. The male passenger
bent down as if he were putting something down or picking something
up; when he looked up, their eyes met, and he was laughing and
smiling, which “chilled” her. She watched him for a brief period,
perhaps 30 to 60 seconds, until the car entered traffic. Because
the car “whipped around” in a dangerous manner, she felt that
something was wrong and obtained a partial license plate number.
When she arrived at her destination, having seen police cars
traveling toward the scene with flashing lights, she called First
Texas, learned of the robbery, and went to the bank to describe the
car to the officers. On the following day, she identified a photo
of Morrow as the man she had observed.
20
Keith Jagmin, defense counsel, cross-examined Noble in detail
about what she had seen and her opportunity to distinguish laughter
from crying. He developed that Ms. Noble in testimony in another
trial had difficulty identifying Morrow although she had identified
him from a picture display shortly after the robbery.
In assessing the materiality of the FBI reports of their
interview of Jan Noble, it bears mention that the State placed
great value on Noble’s testimony. Her testimony was accented in
the State’s summation at both the guilt and punishment stages of
the trial. In his summation at the guilt stage, the prosecutor
reminded the jury of the detailed cross-examination of Noble,
referring to the “contempt in his [Jagmin’s] voice” as
demonstrating belief that Noble was either mistaken or a liar. The
prosecutor concluded that she did not forget what she saw and
probably never would. Defense counsel responded that he was not
saying that Noble was a liar, only that she was wrong, as Morrow
was crying rather than laughing. That did not end it. In
rebuttal, another prosecutor argued:
Why the goal line stand with Jan Noble? Well, she is so
critical to the defense because she tells you everything
you need to know about Ricky’s true character. If you
believe Jan Noble, this man is a dead man. She tells you
everything you need to know about Ricky Morrow. She
tells you that he obtained pleasure, it was a thrill, it
was fun, it was something to laugh about, leaving that
boy dying in his own blood there on that floor.
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This prosecutor then repeated that the defense could not permit the
jury to believe Noble because she spoke “so much about [Morrow’s]
character.”
Summing up at the punishment stage, the prosecutors argued
that Noble’s testimony showed that Morrow took pleasure in the
murder, that he acted deliberately while in full control of his
faculties, and that he shot Frazier “because he wanted to kill him,
because he rejoiced in killing him, because he took pleasure in
killing him.”
The magistrate judge concluded that withholding these exhibits
45
violated no duty of disclosure. She explained:
Although the report of Officer [Leslie] Myers appears to
indicate that Noble made her observations from her office
and such indication is contrary to her trial testimony
and [H. Lamar] Meyer’s FBI report, the Court does not
find this discrepancy material to Morrow’s defense.
Morrow himself testified that he believed that “no doubt”
Noble “was in the parking lot and no doubt she was
backing up, no doubt she was looking back, as she said.”
In addition, the FBI report which indicates that Morrow’s
“vehicle passed” Noble “traveling very rapidly,” is not
45
The state does not concede that the documents relating to
Noble’s testimony were not disclosed. The state habeas judge
adopted the state’s proposed finding that these documents were
produced, resolving the conflict between the affidavits of defense
counsel and the prosecutor in favor of the state. This finding
taxes the deference we are mandated to accord state adjudications
including credibility findings by judges who have never heard any
evidence in the case. It is, however, the law of this circuit. If
the exhibits were produced as urged by the State and found by the
habeas court, the claim becomes that defense counsel was
ineffective in not making use of them to impeach Jan Noble. This
potential collision of prosecution theories perhaps explains the
State’s reluctance to rest on the finding that they were produced.
That they were not material would defeat both the Brady and
ineffectiveness of counsel claims.
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inconsistent with her trial testimony that when Morrow’s
vehicle left the scene, it “went forward very rapidly.”
Noble mentioned twice at trial that the vehicle moved
away quickly. More importantly, the fact that the
reports do not mention Noble’s observation of Morrow’s
demeanor does not render them inconsistent with her trial
testimony. The reports do not indicate that she did not
observe Morrow’s demeanor[;] they simply do not address
the issue at all.
The state also argues that the documents at best were relevant
to the punishment phase and given the nature of the charged crime
and Morrow’s criminal record, including his record in confinement
post-trial, the failure to produce could not have shaken confidence
in the outcome – the death sentence.
VI
We ultimately agree with the State and the federal district
court that no Brady violation has been shown. Viewed singly and
cumulatively, the documents assertedly withheld were not material
in the sense of Brady as explicated in Kyles and were at best
cumulative.
That said, as we move from consideration of each isolated
piece of evidence and survey the entire trial picture, the
cumulative impact of the failure to produce the documents held by
the FBI - assuming that there was a failure - has given us pause.
The most powerful argument for their materiality is that they would
have given defense counsel the ability to remind the jury of the
frailty of recollection of startling and frightening events; that
it should be cautious in resting its life or death decision upon an
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unskeptical acceptance of such recollection – coming years after
the events.
The materiality of the documents – what use might have been
made of them and its flip side, the injury suffered by their
absence - must in the end be a judgment call, resting on a firm
grasp of the entire record and an intimacy with the factual play,
the narrative drama of the trial. Inevitably, how we see it is a
product of our mastery of the details and our own experience.
In widening our view to bring the full trial into focus, we
return to two aspects of the claim of non-production. The first is
the testimony of Jan Noble – that Morrow sat in his car outside the
First Texas Bank laughing. The prosecutors wanted that testimony
– a curtain closer to a brutal murder. Defense counsel, sensing
its bite, fought to contain it, skillfully developing Ms. Noble’s
earlier misidentification. The withheld documents could also have
pointed out that the reports of the FBI of her account, brief as
they were, made no mention of Morrow’s demeanor. That the quick
explanation may well have been that she was not asked about it
would not drain the omission of all worth. It had residual value.
And if we locked our gaze here, Morrow’s claim that the documents
were material would have purchase. But there was much more -- more
than Morrow’s able trial counsel could fend off. Morrow’s effort
to portray himself as a robber who would not shoot – distraught
over the “accidental” shooting – cannot survive his criminal
history, including his plea of guilty to attempted capital murder
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of the officers trying to arrest him within hours of the shooting
of Mr. Frazier at First Texas and his plea of guilty to robbing the
Metropolitan Savings & Loan minutes before moving on to First
Texas. Nor for that matter does a robber who would not shoot need
to so carefully load and practice firing his weapons.
Our review of this trial has left us with the firm view that
any failure by the State prosecutor to obtain and produce the FBI
materials in no measure lessens our confidence in the jury’s
decisions. Morrow has been well represented by court-appointed
counsel in two trials and in habeas proceedings, including those
before this court. Two juries have spoken and many courts. In
short, Morrow has received his due as a person charged with a
capital crime.
We reject Morrow’s Brady claims on their merits and refuse a
certificate of appeability for his two remaining contentions for
essentially the reasons found by the magistrate judge and adopted
by the district court.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND DISMISSED IN PART.
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