NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0183n.06
No. 18-3101
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
RICHARD BAYS, ) Mar 30, 2020
) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
Petitioner-Appellant, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE
) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
WARDEN, CHILLICOTHE CORRECTIONAL ) COURT FOR THE
INSTITUTION, ) SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
) OHIO
Respondent-Appellee. )
)
)
BEFORE: GIBBONS, KETHLEDGE and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
JULIA S. GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. In December 1995, Bays was convicted of aggravated
murder and aggravated robbery and sentenced to death by a three-judge panel in Greene County,
Ohio. After exhausting his state remedies, in 2008 Bays filed a habeas corpus petition with the
United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. The district court denied Bays’s
petitions on all claims but granted Bays a certificate of appealability on five issues.
On appeal to this court, Bays argues that his confession was involuntary and his lethal
injection claims are cognizable in a habeas corpus proceeding. We disagree. First, the officer’s
accurate recitation of potential penalties faced by Bays did not constitute an implied promise of
leniency that might cause Bays to involuntarily confess, and the Supreme Court of Ohio’s factual
determinations regarding his confession were not unreasonable. Second, this court’s precedent in
No. 18-3101, Bays v. Warden Chillicothe Correctional Institution
In re Campbell, 874 F.3d 454 (6th Cir. 2017), forecloses Bays’s argument that his lethal injection
claims are cognizable in habeas rather than as a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
We affirm the district court’s denial of Bays’s petition.
I.
In 1995, Bays was convicted of aggravated robbery and aggravated murder of Charles
Weaver. A three-judge panel in Greene County, Ohio sentenced him to death. On direct appeal,
State v. Bays, 716 N.E.2d 1126, 1131–33 (Ohio 1999), the Ohio Supreme Court made the
following findings of fact:
On November 15, 1993, appellant, Richard Bays, robbed and murdered
Charles Weaver. Bays was convicted of aggravated murder with a death
specification and sentenced to death.
Seventy-six-year-old Charles Weaver lived in Xenia with his wife Rose.
On November 15, 1993, Weaver’s daughter, Betty Reed, went to her parents’ house
to see if they needed anything. Betty Reed and Rose Weaver decided to do some
shopping and left the house together sometime between noon and 12:30 p.m.
Between 1:30 and 2:30 that afternoon, Iris Simms (who lived near the Weavers’
house) saw a slim man in his late twenties, with shoulder-length brown hair, walk
onto Weaver’s porch and approach the door.
Howard Hargrave, an acquaintance of Richard Bays, was standing around
with two other people on Xenia’s Main Street that afternoon when Bays approached
him, out of breath, and asked whether Hargrave “knew anyone that had any drugs.”
According to Hargrave, Bays appeared “nervous” and “kept looking around.”
Hargrave noticed a red stain on Bays’s T-shirt that looked like blood.
Betty Reed drove her mother home at about 5:30 p.m., accompanied by her
son Michael. Dusk had fallen, and Betty noticed that no lights were on in the house,
not even “a flicker of a television set.” This was unusual enough that she and her
son decided to escort Mrs. Weaver inside.
Michael Reed went in first. Turning on a light, he saw his grandfather’s
wheelchair standing empty. He then entered the kitchen. There he found Mr.
Weaver lying on the floor. Michael told his mother to call 911.
Paramedics arrived in response to the 911 call, found Mr. Weaver dead, and
summoned Xenia police officers to the scene. Officers found a shattered plastic
tape recorder and a large, square-shaped battery charger with blood on it. The
bedroom was in extreme disarray—a “total shambles,” Betty Reed later testified—
with drawers pulled out and their contents dumped on the floor. The bedroom had
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not been in that condition when Betty Reed and Mrs. Weaver left the house that
afternoon.
Weaver’s body was taken to the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office.
The ensuing autopsy showed that Weaver had suffered two stab wounds to the chest
and three incised wounds on the neck. He also had several contusions, abrasions,
and lacerations on top of his head, consistent with blows from a square, blunt object.
The deputy coroner conducting the autopsy concluded that Weaver died of “a stab
wound to the chest and blunt impact injuries to the head.”
On November 16, the day after the murder, Xenia police detective Daniel
Savage decided to interview Richard Bays.
At first, Bays told Savage that he had not been at Weaver’s house on the
day of the murder. However, Savage told Bays that someone had seen him there
and that “if his [Bays’s] prints matched the ones on Mr. Weaver’s front door, then
I [Savage] would be asking him to explain it.” Bays then admitted that he had been
at Weaver’s house around 2:00 p.m. on November 15. He said he had coffee with
Weaver, chatted, and left by 2:15.
However, an inconsistency in Bays’s statement aroused Savage’s curiosity.
Bays told Savage that Weaver had been sitting in his wheelchair during Bays’s visit
and had not taken out his wallet. Yet Bays had also said that Weaver had the wallet
in his back pocket during the visit. If Weaver was sitting in the wheelchair, Savage
wondered, how could Bays have known that the wallet was in Weaver’s back
pocket?
On November 19, an informant told Savage that Weaver’s killer had
dropped the wallet, along with some clothing he had worn during the crime, into a
storm sewer near Bays’s house. Based on this information, Savage and Detective
Daniel Donahue interviewed Bays again on November 19. During this interview,
Bays confessed to killing Weaver.
Bays told the detectives that he went to Weaver’s house after smoking some
crack. He asked Weaver to lend him $30, but Weaver said he had no money.
So Bays picked up the battery charger and hit Weaver on the head with it twice.
When the battery charger’s handle broke off, Bays started to run away, but then
Weaver shouted that he was going to call the police. Bays then picked up a portable
tape recorder and went back to hit Weaver on the head with it. The blow shattered
the recorder, so Bays dropped it and attacked Weaver with a sharp kitchen knife.
Bays admitted that he cut Weaver’s throat and thought that he stabbed him in the
chest.
Weaver fell out of his wheelchair, and Bays took the wallet from Weaver’s
back pocket. Weaver’s wallet contained $25 cash and $9 worth of food stamps.
Bays then went into the bedroom and dumped out the contents of the drawers. Then
he fled. He subsequently bought crack with Weaver’s $25.
Bays told the detectives that he threw Weaver’s wallet down the storm
sewer at the northwest corner of Second and Monroe Streets, along with the T-shirt
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No. 18-3101, Bays v. Warden Chillicothe Correctional Institution
and glove he had worn during the murder. At the end of Bays’s statement, Savage
placed him under arrest.
When detectives searched the storm sewer at Second and Monroe, they
found the T-shirt, glove, and wallet, just as Bays had said. Betty Reed, who had
given that wallet to her father, identified it in court.
While held in the county jail, Bays discussed his crime with another inmate,
Larry Adkins. Adkins testified that Bays had told him that he “hit [Weaver] with a
battery charger” and when Weaver fell from his chair, Bays “took his wallet and
* * * stabbed him in the chest. Then he was almost on his way out and he turned
around and cut [Weaver’s] throat * * * to make sure he wasn’t alive.”
The Ohio Supreme Court affirmed Bays’s conviction and sentence and held that his
confession to police was voluntary. Bays, 716 N.E.2d at 1137. Bays filed several post-conviction
petitions for relief. See State v. Bays, No. 2014-CA-24, 2015 WL 2452324 (Ohio Ct. App. May
15, 2015).
In 2008, Bays filed his first habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C § 2254. The petition
raised numerous claims including, as relevant to this appeal, that Bays’s confession was
involuntary and should have been suppressed. A magistrate judge held an evidentiary hearing and
determined that the petition should be denied. The district court granted Bays’s certificate of
appealability (“COA”) on his claim that his confession was involuntary. Bays filed for leave to
file a second amended habeas petition. The district court granted the motion, and Bays filed an
amended petition raising four claims challenging the constitutionality of Ohio’s lethal injection
protocol. The district court denied Bays’s lethal injection claims, finding them precluded by In re
Campbell, 874 F.3d 454 (6th Cir. 2017), but it expanded the COA to include these claims. We
denied Bays’s request to expand the COA.
II.
“We review a district court’s denial of a habeas petition de novo.” Mitchell v. MacLaren,
933 F.3d 526, 531 (6th Cir. 2019) (citing Cleveland v. Bradshaw, 693 F.3d 626, 631 (6th Cir.
2012)). “The district court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error, and its legal conclusions
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on mixed questions of law and fact are reviewed de novo.” Id. (citing Gumm v. Mitchell, 775 F.3d
345, 359–60 (6th Cir. 2014)).
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), “a court considering
a habeas claim must defer to any decision by a state court concerning the claim, unless the state
court’s judgment: (1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to clearly established federal law as
determined by the United States Supreme Court; (2) involved unreasonable application of clearly
established federal law as determined by the United States Supreme Court; or (3) was based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the state court.”
Schreane v. Ebbert, 864 F.3d 446, 450 (6th Cir. 2017) (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), (2)). “A state
court’s decision involves an unreasonable application of federal law if the state-court decision
identifies the correct governing legal principle in existence at the time, but unreasonably applies
that principle to the facts of the [petitioner’s] case.” Pouncy v. Palmer, 846 F.3d 144, 158 (6th Cir.
2017) (internal quotations omitted) (quoting Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170, 182 (2011)).
“A state court decision involves ‘an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented in the State court proceeding’ only if it is shown that the state court’s presumptively
correct factual findings are rebutted by ‘clear and convincing evidence’ and do not have support
in the record.” Matthews v. Ishee, 486 F.3d 883, 889 (6th Cir. 2007) (first quoting 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d)(2), then quoting id. § 2254(e)(1)).
III.
On appeal, Bays challenges the district court’s denial of his habeas petition. His claims
before this court are: (1) his inculpatory statements were improperly admitted at trial; (2) Ohio
cannot constitutionally execute him because the only manner available under the law to execute
him violates his Eighth Amendment, Due Process Clause or the Privileges or Immunities Clause
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of the Fourteenth Amendment, or Equal Protection Clause rights; and (3) Ohio cannot
constitutionally execute him because Ohio’s violations of federal law constitute a fundamental
defect in the execution process, and the only manner of execution available for execution depends
on state execution laws that are preempted by federal law. For the following reasons set forth
below, we find no basis for granting habeas relief.
A.
Bays argues that the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision was based on unreasonable factual
determinations. Bays also challenges the admissibility of his confession on the grounds that the
police’s implied promises of leniency coerced him into making an involuntary statement in
violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
1.
Bays first argues that the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision was based on an unreasonable
determination of the facts and therefore should receive no deference by this court under 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d)(2). Specifically, Bays points to the court’s (1) conclusion that Savage’s statements were
not implied promises of leniency; and (2) finding that Bays did well in school until he began
engaging in substance abuse. Bays has not provided clear and convincing evidence that these
factual findings are unsupported by the record. Matthews v. Ishee, 486 F.3d 883, 889 (6th Cir.
2007).
The conclusion that Savage did not promise leniency is reasonable. Bays points to
statements by Savage informing Bays that he was facing “a possible death penalty case” and that
“withholding the truth . . . could only hurt him and not benefit him.” CA6 R. 26, Appellant Br., at
19 (quoting DE 152-1, PageID 5839–40). Despite Bays’s contention, it is not clear that the
detective’s statements regarding the different penalties constituted an implied promise of leniency
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and, even if it did, “promises to recommend leniency and speculation that cooperation will have a
positive effect do not make subsequent statements [by the defendant] involuntary.” United States
v. Binford, 818 F.3d 261, 271 (6th Cir. 2016) (quoting United States v. Delaney, 443 F. App’x 122,
129 (6th Cir. 2011)). Further, courts have repeatedly held that it is not coercive for police to inform
the defendant accurately of the potential penalties that he faces. See United States v. McNeal, 862
F.3d 1057, 1064 (10th Cir. 2017) (collecting cases). Here the record supports the state court’s
determination that Savage did not promise that Bays would not receive the death penalty in return
for a confession. The state court’s view of the facts was not unreasonable.
The Ohio Supreme Court’s finding that Bays “did well in school until be began engaging
in substance abuse” is also reasonable. Specifically, this finding is supported by Dr. Burch’s
testimony as an expert during Bays’s mitigation hearing and expert report. Burch testified that,
based on Bays’s academic records, he did well in school until about fourth grade when he began
to drink alcohol. There is no testimony prior to this line of questioning consistent with Bays’s
argument that Burch’s testimony was limited or modified such that Bays only did well in school
for someone who suffered from cognitive deficits. The court’s finding that Bays “did well in
school until he began engaging in substance abuse” is reasonable in light of Burch’s report and
testimony.
2.
The primary issue before us is whether the Ohio Supreme Court unreasonably applied
federal law to conclude that Bays voluntarily confessed. The Ohio Supreme Court based its
conclusion that the confession was voluntary on its assessment of the totality of the circumstances.
State v. Bays, 716 N.E.2d 1126, 1136–37 (Ohio 1999). The district court correctly denied Bays’s
habeas petition because it was not contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly
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established federal law for the Ohio Supreme Court to hold that Bays voluntarily confessed. Upon
weighing the totality of the circumstances surrounding the confession, it was objectively
reasonable for the Ohio Supreme Court to hold that investigators did not overbear Bays’s will
when obtaining his confession.
Under clearly established Supreme Court law, “certain interrogation techniques, either in
isolation or as applied to the unique characteristics of a particular suspect, are so offensive to a
civilized system of justice that they must be condemned under the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.” Miller v. Fenton, 474 U.S. 104, 109 (1985); see also Rogers v.
Richmond, 365 U.S. 534, 540–45 (1961). The “tactics for eliciting inculpatory statements must
fall within the broad constitutional boundaries imposed by the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee
of fundamental fairness.” Miller, 474 U.S. at 110. To determine whether the will of the defendant
was overborne at the time he confessed, courts must consider the totality of the circumstances
surrounding the confession, “both the characteristics of the accused and the details of the
interrogation.” Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 226–27 (1973); Withrow v. Williams,
507 U.S. 680, 693–94 (1993). “Factors considered in assessing the totality of the circumstances
include the age, education, and intelligence of the defendant; whether the defendant has been
informed of his Miranda rights; the length of the questioning; the repeated and prolonged nature
of the questioning; and the use of physical punishment, such as deprivation of food or sleep.”
McCalvin v. Yukins, 444 F.3d 713, 719 (6th Cir. 2006) (citing Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 226); see
also Withrow, 507 U.S. at 693–94 (collecting factors).
Bays argues that the state court acted contrary to established precedent by failing to
consider his limited intellectual capacity when determining whether his confession had been
influenced by an implied promise of leniency. Contrary to Bays’s contention, the Ohio Supreme
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Court correctly analyzed the voluntariness of Bays’s confession under the totality of the
circumstances and reasonably held that Bays’s confession was voluntary. As the Ohio Supreme
Court noted:
Bays went to the station voluntarily. He was interrogated for only twelve minutes
before confessing. He was in his late twenties and had been arrested before. There
was no evidence of physical abuse or deprivation. Savage did raise his voice when
he thought Bays was lying and may have hit the table as well, but there was no
evidence of any direct threats. Bays heard his Miranda rights, acknowledged that
he understood them, and signed a waiver, the validity of which is not challenged
here. Savage testified that Bays was calm and did not seem nervous.
Bays, 716 N.E.2d at 1137. The court also noted the factors weighing against voluntariness,
including the fact that Bays was misled “as to the strength of the evidence” and had a “low IQ and
childhood head injuries,” the court concluded that “the factors pointing to voluntariness far
outweigh those negating voluntariness.” Id. The court analyzed the totality of the circumstances,
including Bays’s limited intellectual capacity in determining whether his statement was voluntary.
Under the deference required by AEDPA, and given the factors supporting a finding that Bays’s
confession was voluntary, the decision of the Ohio Supreme Court was a reasonable application
of federal law.
B.
Bays’s other claims for relief relate to the alleged unconstitutionality of Ohio’s lethal
injection protocol. Bays argues that the district court erred in holding that his lethal injection
claims were not cognizable in a writ of habeas corpus. The government contends that Bays’s
claims are foreclosed by this circuit’s precedent in In re Campbell, 874 F.3d 454 (6th Cir. 2017).
We agree.
This court has considered at length which procedural vehicle plaintiffs must use to bring
method-of-execution claims. In Adams III, an Ohio death row inmate challenged Ohio’s lethal
injection protocol under the Eighth Amendment. Adams v. Bradshaw (Adams III), 826 F.3d 306,
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308 (6th Cir. 2016). The court resolved Adams III on procedural grounds as Adams failed to
include this claim in his initial habeas petition, but the court proceeded to discuss, in dicta, the
appropriate vehicle to bring the claim. Id. at 320–21. Adams generally argued that “[d]eath by
lethal injection constitutes cruel and unusual punishment and denies due process under the state
and federal constitutions” because shifting protocols “engender[] fear and mental anguish . . . .”
Id. at 318–19. The court distinguished Hill v. McDonough, 547 U.S. 573 (2006), explaining that
“Adams’s case is distinguishable from Hill because Adams argues that lethal injection cannot be
administered in a constitutional manner, and his claim ‘could render his death sentence effectively
invalid.’” Id. at 321. Thus, the court concluded that “to the extent that Adams challenges the
constitutionality of lethal injection in general and not a particular lethal-injection protocol, his
claim is cognizable in habeas.” Id.
In Campbell, a state prisoner challenged the constitutionality of Ohio’s lethal injection
protocol as erratic and unpredictable and alleged that any method of execution was
unconstitutional in light of his deteriorating physical condition. 874 F.3d at 464–65. The court
recognized that “the law on this subject is not clear and has been the subject of several recent,
published decisions by this Circuit and the Supreme Court,” and therefore, “pause[d] at the outset
to clarify the standard.” Id. at 460. Noting that, in Glossip v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726 (2015), “the
Court expressly refused to countenance the possibility that a state could be left without any lawful
means of execution,” Campbell held that “[n]o longer can a method-of-execution claim impair a
death sentence itself.” Id. at 462. Campbell concluded that, because Glossip “barred all habeas
petitions challenging ‘a particular application of a particular protocol to a particular person’ as
unconstitutionally painful,” such method-of-execution claims are cognizable only under § 1983
Id. (citing In re Tibbetts, 859 F.3d 403, 406 (6th Cir. 2017)). As to Campbell’s second challenge,
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the court rejected Campbell’s analogy to competency claims and held that “Glossip makes clear
that a prisoner cannot invalidate his death sentence simply by asserting that every method offered
by state statute will be unconstitutionally painful.” Id. at 465–67.
While Bays contends that we should follow Adams III’s approach, Campbell forecloses
Bays’s habeas claims regarding the alleged unconstitutionality of Ohio’s lethal injection protocols.
Campbell correctly noted that Adams III’s holding rested on procedural default and its subsequent
discussion of the substantive claim was not necessary to that holding and, thus, not binding. Id. at
463–64. Campbell’s holding is binding and decisively disposes of Bays’s claims for relief.
Campbell explains that, although Ohio may only permit execution by lethal injection today, “[t]he
Ohio legislature could, tomorrow, enact a statute reinstating the firing squad as an alternative
method of execution.” Id. at 465. A court order “would not impair the validity of Campbell’s
death sentence,” and therefore, a method-of-execution claim is not cognizable in habeas. Id.
Bays’s argument that his claims attack his death sentence itself because Ohio does not currently
allow other methods of execution is unavailing under Campbell’s reasoning. Bays’s claims
challenging the application of lethal injection as causing an unconstitutional amount of severe pain
and suffering are method-of-execution claims properly brought under § 1983, not habeas.
Bays’s argument distinguishing Campbell’s procedural posture is similarly unavailing.
Campbell indicated that “all method-of-execution claims” challenging a particular application of
a particular protocol to a particular person should be pursued under § 1983, 874 F.3d at 462–63,
and the procedural posture of Campbell does not limit its application only to method-of-execution
claims brought in subsequent habeas proceedings.
IV.
We affirm the district court’s denial of Bays’s habeas petition.
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