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IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
No. 17-70002 April 23, 2021
Lyle W. Cayce
ANDRE LEE THOMAS, Clerk
Petitioner - Appellant
v.
BOBBY LUMPKIN, DIRECTOR, TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL
JUSTICE, CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS DIVISION,
Respondent - Appellee
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Texas
USDC No. 4:09-CV-644
Before JONES, SOUTHWICK, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
LESLIE H. SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judge:
Andre Lee Thomas, an inmate on death row in Texas, filed a federal
habeas application, arguing that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective in
numerous ways at trial and sentencing. We granted a certificate of
appealability on four of Thomas’s issues. We now AFFIRM.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On March 27, 2004, Andre Lee Thomas broke into the Sherman, Texas
apartment of his estranged wife, Laura Christine Boren. He stabbed his wife;
their four-year-old son, Andre Lee Boren; and one-year-old Leyha Marie
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Hughes, Thomas’s stepdaughter. All three were killed. He then used separate
knives on each victim and attempted to remove their hearts, leaving gaping
wounds in their chests. He believed that by taking their hearts he would “set
them free from evil.” He also stabbed himself three times, but his injuries were
not fatal. Thomas left the apartment shortly thereafter. Later that day, he
went to the Sherman police station and confessed.
In June 2004, Thomas was indicted for the capital murder of Leyha
Marie Hughes, his stepdaughter. He was assigned R.J. Hagood and Bobbie
Peterson as counsel. While awaiting trial, Thomas removed one of his eyeballs.
Years later, he would remove the other and eat it. At trial, Thomas pled not
guilty by reason of insanity, arguing that his actions were because of an acute
psychosis resulting from lifelong mental illness. The State agreed that Thomas
was psychotic but argued his psychosis was voluntarily induced just before the
killings through ingestion of the cough medicine Coricidin. The State
presented expert testimony that high doses of Coricidin can cause irrational
behavior. There is no doubt that Thomas has significant emotional and mental
problems. Their effect on his conviction is a central issue in this appeal.
In March 2005, an all-white jury found Thomas guilty of capital murder
and sentenced him to death. Another significant issue for us is the sufficiency
of the questioning of jurors on their views about interracial marriage, relevant
because Thomas is a black man and his wife was a white woman.
Greater detail about Thomas’s killing of his wife and the children, and
about the trial, is in the opinion affirming his conviction on appeal. Thomas
v. State, No. AP–75,218, 2008 WL 4531976 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 8, 2008).
While his first appeal was pending, Thomas also brought claims under
state habeas corpus procedures. As required under Texas law, Thomas’s
application for relief was filed in the court of conviction. On March 28, 2008,
that court recommended findings and conclusions for consideration by the
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Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.071,
§§ 9(f), 11. On March 18, 2009, the Court of Criminal Appeals “adopt[ed] the
trial judge’s findings and conclusions” and denied all relief. Ex parte Thomas,
No. WR–69,859-01, 2009 WL 693606, at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Mar. 18, 2009).
Thomas filed a federal habeas application under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. On
September 19, 2016, the United States District Court, in a 128-page opinion,
analyzed and rejected all claims. Thomas v. Director, TDCJ-CID, No. 4:09-cv-
644, 2016 WL 4988257, at *1 (E.D. Tex. Sept. 19, 2016) (on Westlaw, the entire
opinion is 86 pages). The district court also denied Thomas’s application for a
certificate of appealability (“COA”). Id. at *86. Thomas filed a timely motion
under Rule 59(e) to alter or amend judgment, but the motion was denied on
December 13, 2016. On January 11, 2017, Thomas filed a notice of appeal.
We granted Thomas’s motion for a COA on four issues. Thomas v. Davis,
726 F. App’x 243 (5th Cir. 2018). We will analyze each of them. After the
initial briefing and just before oral argument, the State submitted notice to the
court of a possible jurisdictional defect in the appeal. We must address
jurisdiction and do so first.
DISCUSSION
I. Potentially late notice of appeal
This appeal fails if the State’s late-discovered possible defect in our
jurisdiction proves valid. The question posed was whether Thomas’s notice of
appeal was untimely. Our answer depends on whether Thomas’s earlier Rule
59(e) motion, which was filed before the deadline for a notice of appeal, tolled
the time for filing the appeal. The answer to that is governed by whether it is
appropriate for the court to examine a Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend a
judgment with the same attention to detail as is required for examining a Rule
60(b) motion. We must review Rule 60(b) motions to see if they are in fact
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though not in form successive applications under Section 2244(b), in which new
claims are presented instead of alleged mistakes, or fraud, or new evidence, or
some other valid basis under Rule 60(b). See Gonzalez v. Crosby, 545 U.S. 524,
532–34 (2005). We extended the Supreme Court’s reasoning to motions under
Rule 59(e). See Williams v. Thaler, 602 F.3d 291, 302–04 (5th Cir. 2010).
Based on Williams, the State in a Rule 28(j) letter argued that we lacked
jurisdiction because Thomas’s Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend the district
court’s judgment was in fact a successive habeas application and did not
suspend the time to file the notice of appeal. FED. R. APP. P. 4.
We were wrong in Williams. After the Rule 28(j) letter was submitted,
the Supreme Court held that Rule 59(e) motions should not be recategorized
as successive applications regardless of their contents. Banister v. Davis, 140
S. Ct. 1698, 1711 (2020). Thomas’s notice of appeal was timely, and we have
jurisdiction.
II. Federal court review of state court decisions
To obtain habeas relief, the prisoner must show that the state court’s
decision “(1) . . . 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) . . . 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). A state court’s decision is contrary to clearly established precedent
if the rule it applies “contradicts the governing law set forth in the Supreme
Court’s cases,” or if the state court confronts facts that are materially
indistinguishable from a decision of the Supreme Court yet reaches a different
result. Wooten v. Thaler, 598 F.3d 215, 218 (5th Cir. 2010) (brackets omitted).
If fair-minded jurists could disagree about whether the state court’s decision
was correct, deference under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
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Act (“AEDPA”) precludes federal habeas relief. Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S.
86, 101 (2011). This deference has also been said to require that a state court’s
legal conclusion “must be more than merely incorrect in order to constitute an
unreasonable application of federal law; it must be objectively unreasonable.”
Miller v. Dretke, 420 F.3d 356, 360 (5th Cir. 2005). We presume the state
court’s factual findings are correct unless rebutted with clear and convincing
evidence. Wooten, 598 F.3d at 218.
The standard of review becomes doubly deferential when, as in most of
the claims raised here, the petitioner is seeking habeas relief for ineffective
assistance of counsel. Richter, 562 U.S. at 105. “The pivotal question is
whether the state court’s application of the Strickland standard was
unreasonable. This is different from asking whether defense counsel’s
performance fell below Strickland’s standard.” Id. at 101. “[E]ven a strong
case for relief does not mean the state court’s contrary conclusion was
unreasonable.” Id. at 102. To obtain federal habeas relief, the petitioner must
prove that the state court’s decision “was so lacking in justification that there
was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any
possibility for” reasonable disagreement. Id. at 103.
The prisoner must prove both deficient performance and prejudice to
succeed on a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel. Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 697 (1984). An attorney’s performance is deficient
if it falls “below an objective standard of reasonableness.” Id. at 688. A
petitioner is prejudiced if “there is a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.” Id. at 694. There is a strong presumption that defense counsel’s
strategic and tactical decisions are “within the wide range of reasonable
professional assistance.” Id. at 689.
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III. Claims allowed by the certificate of appealability
We granted a COA on four claims, which we will discuss in the following
order: (A) the jury was tainted with racial bias, and the state court
unreasonably held that defense counsel provided effective assistance during
voir dire; (B) the state court unreasonably held that defense counsel provided
effective assistance despite their failure to challenge Thomas’s competency to
stand trial; (C) the state court unreasonably held that defense counsel provided
effective assistance despite their failure to present an expert in pharmacology
to rebut the State’s evidence that Thomas’s psychosis was voluntarily induced;
and (D) the state court unreasonably held that defense counsel provided
effective assistance, despite their failure to prepare and present an effective
mitigation case at sentencing. Thomas, 726 F. App’x at 243.
A. Racial bias on jury
We granted a COA on a two-part claim regarding racial bias, that “the
jury was tainted with racial bias, and the state court unreasonably held that
defense counsel provided effective assistance during voir dire, despite their
failure to challenge the biased jurors.” Though the claims are related and
merged at times in briefing, to the extent possible we analyze them separately.
1. Was the jury tainted with racial bias?
Thomas emphasizes to this court that “his jury included three jurors who
admitted that they harbored bias against ‘people of different racial
backgrounds marrying and/or having children.’” As we previously discussed,
attitudes about interracial marriage were explored because the defendant
Thomas, who is a black man, married Laura Christine Boren, a white woman.
Though Thomas killed his wife and their own interracial child, Andre Jr., the
murder for which he was tried was that of Leyha Marie, his wife’s child by her
later relationship. The briefing does not indicate the race of that victim, nor
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does it raise any issues about race having affected the trial beyond juror
attitudes about an interracial marriage and the couple having a child together.
Evidence on this claim comes both from answers on a jury questionnaire
and from voir dire. The following are the relevant parts of the questionnaire:
103. What is your church or spiritual affiliation’s position on
interracial marriages?
104. Do you (___) Agree or (___) Disagree with this position?
Please tell us why you feel this way:
105. The Defendant in this case, Andre Thomas, and his ex-wife,
Laura Boren Thomas, are of different racial backgrounds. Which
of the following best reflects your feelings or opinions about people
of different racial backgrounds marrying and/or having children:
(___) I vigorously oppose people of different racial
backgrounds marrying and/or having children and am not
afraid to say so.
(___) I oppose people of different racial backgrounds
marrying and/or having children, but I try to keep my
feelings to myself.
(___) I do not oppose people of different racial backgrounds
marrying or being together, but I do oppose them having
children.
(___) I think people should be able to marry or be with
anyone they wish.
PLEASE TELL US WHY YOU FEEL THIS WAY: [blank provided].
The only one of the three contested jurors to check the first block on
Question 105 was Marty Ulmer, indicating he “vigorously oppose[d] people of
different racial backgrounds marrying and/or having children and [was] not
afraid to say so.” In the blank provided for explanation, he wrote that he did
not “believe God intended for this.”
Ulmer was the only one of those three jurors who was questioned on voir
dire specifically about racial attitudes. Counsel asked how Ulmer would feel
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about sitting on a capital case where the black male defendant was accused of
killing his wife, a white female. He answered,
Well, I think — I think it’s wrong to have those relationships, my
view, but we are all human beings and God made every one of us.
And, you know, as far as — I don’t care if it is white/white,
black/black, that don’t matter to me. If you’ve done it, you are a
human being, you have got to own up to your responsibility.
Q. So, the color of anyone’s skin would not have any impact or
bearing upon your deliberations?
A. No, not according to that, no.
Q. Okay.
A. Not whether they were guilty or innocent.
Defense counsel then asked again whether Ulmer would take into account the
defendant’s or victim’s race in deciding whether to impose the death penalty.
Ulmer answered: “No, I wouldn’t judge a man for murder or something like
that according to something like that, no, I would not.”
Another juror, Charles Copeland, checked the option on the
questionnaire that his church’s position was that there “should not be”
interracial marriage, and Copeland indicated he agreed with that view. In
response to Question 105, Copeland checked the option that he “oppose[d]
people of different racial backgrounds marrying and/or having children, but
[he] tr[ied] to keep [his] feelings to [himself].” Copeland was not specifically
questioned about these answers. When the court asked him during voir dire if
he could “make up [his] mind solely upon the evidence” presented, Copeland
answered that he could.
The final relevant juror is Barbara Armstrong. She indicated that her
church or spiritual affiliation did not have a position on interracial marriage,
and she added: “It is not the church[’s] place to have a position on matters such
as this.” Like Copeland, she checked the option on Question 105 that she
opposed interracial marriage and such couples having children but tried to
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keep those feelings to herself. She added her own explanation: “I think it is
harmful for the children involved because they do not have a specific race to
belong to.” Armstrong was not questioned about her answers at voir dire. The
court asked whether she could assess the case based only on the evidence
presented in the courtroom, and she stated that she could.
All three of those jurors were accepted, as defense counsel made neither
a for-cause nor a peremptory challenge to exclude any of them. There was also
an alternate juror who expressed misgivings about interracial marriage, but
because she was dismissed before deliberations began, we do not discuss her.
Thomas also refers us to one final piece of evidence related to juror bias.
As the prosecutor completed his argument before jurors began their
deliberations on Thomas’s sentence, he may have alluded to race:
Are you going to take the risk about him asking your daughter out,
or your granddaughter out? After watching the string of girls that
came up here and apparently could talk him into — that he could
talk into being with him, are you going to take that chance?
We are uncertain if it is completely fair to characterize this as injecting a racial
component into deliberations, in part because we do not know the race of the
other witnesses and also because it is the kind of argument that could well be
made in a case in which race was not a factor. Further, Thomas’s COA is not
broad enough to include a direct challenge to the prosecutor’s words or its effect
on the trial.
In order to understand the claims about juror racial bias presented in
state court, we examine the state habeas application. Counsel filed 44 claims
for relief in state court. The only one relevant for jury bias itself (as opposed
to ineffectiveness of counsel on the issue) was Claim 20, which stated that the
“presence of jurors opposed to interracial relationships deprived Mr. Thomas
of a fair trial.” Thomas argued that the presence of racially biased jurors
“raises overwhelming concerns that significant racial bias affected the
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decision-making process in Mr. Thomas’s capital trial.” He also contended it
was “highly likely that the views of the four impaneled jurors who opposed
interracial marriage prevented or substantially impaired ‘the performance of
[their] duties as [] juror[s] in accordance with [their] instructions and [their]
oath.’”
The only relevant fact findings by the state habeas court were these:
All members of Mr. Thomas’s jury were white.
There is no evidence that the jury’s decision was racially
motivated.
No objection was ever made by the Applicant to the
purported racial bias of any juror that was seated.
There were no legal conclusions about jury racial bias other than as to the
effectiveness of counsel. We will address counsel effectiveness in the next
section of the opinion. The above findings and conclusions were adopted by the
Court of Criminal Appeals. Ex parte Thomas, 2009 WL 693606, at *1.
In his federal habeas application, Thomas asserted “there is no
requirement that Mr. Thomas show that the jury’s decision was racially
motivated, as a showing that a jury was not impartial creates a structural
error.” See Neder v. United States, 527 U.S. 1, 8 (1999); Virgil v. Dretke, 446
F.3d 598, 607 (5th Cir. 2006).
We begin our analysis of the law with essential points: “blatant racial
prejudice is antithetical to the functioning of the jury system.” Pena-Rodriguez
v. Colorado, 137 S. Ct. 855, 871 (2017). It is undeniable “that discrimination
on the basis of race, ‘odious in all aspects, is especially pernicious in the
administration of justice.’” Id. at 868 (quoting Rose v. Mitchell, 443 U.S. 545,
555 (1979)). Any “defendant has the right to an impartial jury that can view
him without racial animus, which so long has distorted our system of criminal
justice.” Georgia v. McCollum, 505 U.S. 42, 58 (1992). If a defendant is denied
the right to an impartial decisionmaker, regardless of the nature of the bias,
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any subsequent conviction is tainted with constitutional infirmity. See Virgil,
446 F.3d at 607. Any juror who “the defendant has specific reason to believe
would be incapable of confronting and suppressing their racism” should be
removed from the jury. See McCollum, 505 U.S. at 58. If a juror should have
been removed for cause, then seating that juror requires reversal. United
States v. Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. 304, 316 (2000).
A defendant’s right to an impartial jury, though fundamental, does not
mean that jurors who have preconceived notions cannot be validly seated. To
the contrary, as the Supreme Court has instructed:
To hold that the mere existence of any preconceived notion as to
the guilt or innocence of an accused, without more, is sufficient to
rebut the presumption of a prospective juror’s impartiality would
be to establish an impossible standard. It is sufficient if the juror
can lay aside his impression or opinion and render a verdict based
on the evidence presented in court.
Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 723 (1961).
Thomas presented his argument on this claim to the state habeas court
in four short paragraphs. Quoting Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.S. 412, 424
(1985), he argued that it was “likely that the views of the four impaneled jurors
who opposed interracial marriage prevented or substantially impaired ‘the
performance of [their] duties as a juror in accordance with [their] instructions
and [their] oath.”
In response to this argument, the state court found “[t]here is no
evidence that the jury’s decision was racially motivated.” That finding is not
directly on point as to whether any juror with a relevant bias that made him
or her unable to be impartial was seated on the jury. Though we can identify
no state-court findings directly on the point of whether a biased juror was
seated, AEDPA deference may still be owed. We also apply a presumption of
correctness where a “finding was necessarily part of the court’s rejection of the
defendant’s claim.” Valdez v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 941, 948 n.11 (5th Cir. 2001)
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(citing Marshall v. Lonberger, 459 U.S. 422, 433 (1983)). Indeed, “determining
whether a state court’s decision resulted from an unreasonable . . . factual
conclusion does not require that there be an opinion from the state court
explaining the state court’s reasoning.” Richter, 562 U.S. at 98. Rather, a
federal court will deny habeas relief “if there was a reasonable justification for
the state court’s decision” in the record. Id. at 109.
The issue before us, then, is whether it was “objectively unreasonable”
for the state habeas court to reject Thomas’s claim that his right to an impartial
jury was violated. See Miller, 420 F.3d at 360. In reviewing whether the state
court erred when it did not find that someone with disqualifying racial
attitudes was seated as a juror, we should consider any “reasonable
justification for the state court’s decision.” See Richter, 562 U.S. at 109. A
necessary implicit finding within the state court’s explicit finding is that no
juror would base his decision on race rather than on the evidence presented.
To rephrase, any bias of a juror could be set aside in determining guilt or a
punishment. We now turn to determine whether that finding was “objectively
unreasonable.” See Miller, 420 F.3d at 360.
In evaluating the state habeas court’s finding and any possible
reasonable justifications, we consider the answers Ulmer gave during voir dire.
The questioning did not cause Ulmer to retreat on his beliefs about interracial
marriage. Still, when asked if “the color of anyone’s skin would . . . have any
impact or bearing upon [his] deliberations,” Ulmer responded, “No, not
according to that, no.” He “wouldn’t judge a man for murder or something like
that according to something like [race], no, I would not.” Ulmer also said that
he didn’t “care if it was white/white, black/black, that don’t matter.”
On that record, the state court found “no evidence that the jury’s decision
was racially motivated.” We consider it a reasonable understanding of that
finding that Ulmer’s answers, if accepted as true, which the state habeas court
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was entitled to do, were clear that his moral judgment would not affect his fact
finding. That would mean that whatever biases this juror brought to
deliberations, they were not ones that would affect his decision on guilt,
innocence, or the ultimate penalty; he certainly stated they would not. See
Irvin, 366 U.S. at 723 (“It is sufficient if the juror can lay aside his impression
or opinion and render a verdict based on the evidence presented in court.”).
We conclude that the state habeas court’s finding that Ulmer could serve as an
impartial juror was not objectively unreasonable.
We now consider the other two relevant jurors. Armstrong and Copeland
disapproved of interracial marriage but not “vigorously,” and they liked to keep
such opinions to themselves. After Ulmer, who was “vigorously oppose[d]” to
interracial marriage, agreed that he could set aside his opinions in determining
guilt, innocence, or a punishment, defense counsel did not question Armstrong
or Copeland about their views on interracial marriage.
Thomas’s argument that racially biased jurors were seated is
unavoidably linked to his claim that counsel was ineffective in its handling of
those jurors at voir dire. Despite our efforts to divide our analysis between the
two, there is inevitable overlap: a counsel’s failure to object to the seating of a
juror who expressed an inability to be impartial is ineffective assistance. See
Virgil, 446 F.3d at 613–614. Here, of course, these two members of the venire
did not make an “unequivocal express[ion] that they could not sit as fair and
impartial jurors.” See id. at 613. We cannot say based on these questionnaire
answers alone that the state habeas court was objectively unreasonable in
concluding that Armstrong and Copeland decided the case solely on the
evidence presented. A different subject is whether their questionnaire answers
expressed a view that required Thomas’s counsel to question them in voir dire,
as was done for Ulmer. To the extent the issue is whether Armstrong and
Copeland could be seated without some further probing by counsel into their
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potential partiality, that is a claim about ineffective representation. We
address that point in the next section.
A few final points about the law. We agree with the dissent that Thomas
has a Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury without overt racial bias.
We interpret the dissent as concluding that Ulmer could not be seated because
of his questionnaire answers showing his opposition to interracial marriage.
We disagree because we find no clearly established law from the Supreme
Court that the state habeas court’s decision contravened. We have already
discussed Supreme Court decisions that jurors who are “incapable of
confronting and suppressing their racism” should be removed from the jury.
See McCollum, 505 U.S. at 58. That is not the same thing as saying any juror
who has expressed even strong opposition to interracial marriage cannot be
seated in a case involving a defendant who did marry someone of a different
race if the person indicates an ability to confront and suppress those opinions.
We conclude that fair-minded jurists could disagree about whether the
state court’s decision was correct as to jury bias, which means that AEDPA
deference is owed that decision. Richter, 562 U.S. at 101. Thomas is not
entitled to relief on the basis that the state court improperly resolved the claim
that any partial jurors were seated.
2. Was defense counsel ineffective in addressing jury bias?
The second issue arising from the jury service of Ulmer, Copeland, and
Armstrong concerns possible ineffective assistance of counsel. This was Claim
21 in Thomas’s state habeas application. Thomas argues that defense counsel’s
representation in jury selection was deficient because “[n]o reasonable lawyer
would have allowed multiple jurors who openly admitted moral opposition to
interracial relationships to be seated in a capital trial of a black defendant
accused of murdering his white wife and interracial child.” At the very least,
Thomas contends that defense counsel should have questioned “them
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regarding their biases.” He asserts that defense counsel asked only minimal
questions of one juror and none of the other two. He claims that the “white
jurors here admittedly harbored a specific bias against black men like Thomas
who disobeyed ‘God[’s] intent[ions]’ and muddied white ‘bloodline[s]’ by
marrying and having children with a white woman.” Prejudice, Thomas
argues, resulted from what was unknown about the jurors’ biases. The state
habeas court determined that Thomas “failed to overcome the presumption
that trial counsel was effective during voir dire questioning.” The court made
no explicit factual findings to support that conclusion.
The issue before this court is whether it was objectively unreasonable for
the state habeas court to conclude that defense counsel’s representation during
voir dire was constitutionally adequate. See Richter, 562 U.S. at 102–03. In
making that determination, we look for any “reasonable justification for the
state court’s decision.” See id. at 109. A presumption of correctness “not only
applies to explicit findings of fact [by a state habeas court], but it also applies
to those unarticulated findings which are necessary to the state court’s
conclusions of mixed law and fact.” Valdez, 274 F.3d at 948 n.11.
Certainly, the jury was questioned about racial prejudice in the context
of this case. All prospective jurors were asked about racial bias, at least in the
questionnaires. They knew this case involved an interracial marriage. The
relevant question is whether defense counsel should have probed further
during voir dire any juror whose written answers were concerning.
Defense counsel questioned Ulmer specifically on his beliefs about
interracial marriage. The questioning did not cause Ulmer to retreat on his
beliefs about such marriages, but when asked if “the color of anyone’s skin
would . . . have any impact or bearing upon [his] deliberations,” Ulmer
responded, “No, not according to that, no.” He stated that he “wouldn’t judge
a man for murder or something like that according to something like [race], no,
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I would not.” Ulmer also said that he didn’t “care if it was white/white,
black/black, that don’t matter.” Under our “doubly deferential” review, Cullen
v. Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170, 190 (2011), the questioning of Ulmer was sufficient,
and the state habeas court was not objectively unreasonable when it concluded
that Thomas did not rebut the presumption of counsel’s effectiveness as to
Ulmer.
We turn next to Copeland and Armstrong. The only voir dire
supplementation of information about Armstrong’s and Copeland’s attitudes
and impartiality was the trial judge’s eliciting that each of them could decide
the case solely on the evidence presented to them at trial. The Supreme Court
has observed that “[g]eneric questions about juror impartiality may not expose
specific attitudes or biases that can poison jury deliberations. Yet more pointed
questions ‘could well exacerbate whatever prejudice might exist without
substantially aiding in exposing it.’” Pena-Rodriguez, 137 S. Ct. at 869 (quoting
Rosales-Lopez v. United States, 451 U.S. 182, 195 (1981) (Rehnquist, J.,
concurring in result)). We do not interpret that language as invalidating the
generic questioning of Armstrong and Copeland. It does, however,
demonstrate the difficulty for counsel.
The state habeas court made no specific factual findings relevant to
jurors Armstrong and Copeland and the effectiveness of counsel regarding
them. The following legal conclusions are on point (we have omitted the
numerous citations to state court decisions):
A trial court has wide discretion in conducting voir dire, and
its rulings are reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. If
the subject could possibly be raised during trial, the attorneys are
entitled to voir dire on that issue. Generally speaking, a voir dire
topic is proper if it seeks to discover a juror’s views on an issue
applicable to the case.
Strickland encompasses the prohibition against second-
guessing counsel’s trial strategy on voir dire. Not every attorney
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will conduct voir dire in the same manner, and, with hindsight,
every attorney may have wished that additional questions were
asked. However, the fact that another attorney might have
pursued other areas of questioning during voir dire will not
support a finding of ineffective assistance.
The applicant has failed to overcome the presumption that
trial counsel was effective during voir dire questioning.
The applicant has not demonstrated that his counsel’s
performance fell below a reasonable objective standard, and he has
not demonstrated that any alleged error prejudiced his defense.
The issue of whether the voir dire questioning satisfied counsel’s
obligations is a mixed question of law and fact. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at
698. Factually, we know what happened. Counsel each asserted that a balance
was struck between the costs and benefits of more specific questioning. We
accept that the state court made factual findings to support its rejection of
relief. See Valdez, 274 F.3d at 948 n.11. The state habeas court’s legal
conclusions, already quoted, emphasize the discretion of counsel on how to
proceed with a criminal defense, including the conducting of voir dire. The
difficult issue is whether the state court made an unreasonable application of
the clearly established law.
The evidence on defense counsel’s decisions about voir dire and about
other issues during trial comes from four affidavits, two from each of the
defense attorneys. According to the briefing, the first affidavits from each trial
counsel were obtained at the initiative of Thomas’s habeas counsel, while the
second pair was obtained by the State a few months later. In each situation,
the procuring party was given affidavits largely supportive of its arguments on
the effectiveness of trial counsel. The earlier affidavit of each attorney seems
to be describing all that counsel did wrong; the later, the many efforts to do
things right. They almost seem to be describing different events. All four
affidavits were presented to the state habeas court.
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The lead attorney was R.J. Hagood. In his June 2007 affidavit, he stated
that his “failure to ask few, if any, follow up questions of the members of the
jury who had indicated on their jury questionnaires that they were opposed to
interracial marriage was not intentional; I simply didn’t do it.” In November
2007, though, Hagood provided an affidavit that said he had carefully
considered how to question prospective jurors:
[Thomas] states that we were ineffective for failing to inquire into
the racial bias of each juror. Strategically, I would never ask
pointed questions regarding racial bias from a juror without a real
basis to do so. Voir dire can be delicate in that you do not want to
alienate a juror who may end up on the jury. Accusing someone of
racism is a good way to do that. Nona Dodson had suggested
several questions to pose to jurors. I followed some of her [advice]
which, based on many years as a trial attorney, I believed would
be useful. I did not take all of her suggestions. In fact, I found
some of those questions offensive and inappropriate to propound
to a rural jury. I cannot recall any questions suggested by Ms.
Dodson that I out-right refused to ask. . . . For those jurors who
expressed some problem with interracial relationships, either [co-
counsel] Ms. Peterson or I questioned them to the extent necessary
for us to request a strike for cause or make a decision to use a strike
against them. Often time, there were much worse jurors upon
whom we exercised our strikes.
Co-counsel Bobbie Peterson Cate also submitted two affidavits. Her
June 2007 statement contained nothing about the decision-making for juror
questioning. Her December 2007 affidavit largely mirrored Hagood’s on this
issue, suggesting careful consideration of how to handle questioning during
voir dire about racial biases.
These are strikingly different representations, between just not thinking
to ask about interracial marriage and making a careful consideration of the
issue. We at least know that sufficient attention was given the issue to create
several written questions for prospective jurors about interracial marriage.
Without doubt, though, Armstrong and Copeland were not asked about their
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No. 17-70002
racial attitudes in voir dire. It could be, as Hagood asserted in his second
affidavit, that he considered the suggested questions, asked some of Ulmer,
but decided to ask none of Armstrong and Copeland. Once the juror who more
“vigorously oppose[d]” than the other two agreed to set aside his bias, Hagood
may have strategically avoided the risk of alienating Armstrong and Copeland.
Hagood also stated in his second affidavit that he had tried many cases
in Grayson County, Texas, in which his clients were “black defendants found
not guilty by all-white” juries. There could be strategic reasons for not further
inquiring into the potential jurors’ feelings about race and interracial
relationships, and the record supports that Hagood was experienced in dealing
with these concerns on voir dire. According to his second affidavit, Hagood’s
decisions were strategic attempts to avoid alienating potential jurors based on
his trial experience in rural areas like Grayson County. Certainly, counsel
must make difficult tactical judgments.
In considering the effectiveness of counsel, we note the differences
between the two who were not questioned, Armstrong and Copeland, and
Ulmer, who was. One distinction is that Armstrong and Copeland indicated
that they did not like to discuss with others their beliefs about interracial
marriage. Copeland and Armstrong also did not indicate that they were
“vigorously” opposed to interracial marriage. Finally, Ulmer was questioned
and seated before Armstrong and Copeland. We must decide whether the state
habeas court was objectively unreasonable to find that Thomas had not shown
ineffective assistance in deciding not to question or strike Armstrong or
Copeland after questioning Ulmer.
Other circuits have emphasized the difficulty defense counsel faces in
deciding how to discover potential racial bias without over-emphasizing it. The
facts of a Third Circuit capital case involved “an interracial sexual relationship
between an African-American man and his white girlfriend” whom the man
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killed. Jacobs v. Horn, 395 F.3d 92, 98, 119 (3d Cir. 2005). The court analyzed
counsel’s failure to ask racial-bias questions as being reasonable if counsel
“believed that probing the jurors’ potential racial prejudices might unduly
emphasize the racial differences.” Id. at 118. The court held there was no
counsel ineffectiveness due largely to the fact that the record did not support
that race had anything to do with why the defendant killed his girlfriend. Id.
There is no such evidence here either. Jacobs did not discuss the need to
inquire about jurors’ potential objections to interracial relationships.
Another example is a capital murder trial conducted in Illinois on facts
similar to those in Jacobs, i.e., the absence of any evidence that there was a
racial motive behind a black man’s killing of a white victim; there was no
questioning of prospective jurors about racial attitudes. Lear v. Cowan, 220
F.3d 825, 829 (7th Cir. 2000). The Seventh Circuit found no ineffectiveness in
the decision to avoid emphasizing the racial component of the facts, as counsel
“testified that he thought he had dealt with the issue adequately by asking
general questions about bias without focusing on race.” Id.
To be clear, the racial issues in the case before us were considered by
counsel and the court as more central than in the two decisions we just
discussed. Though no briefing here has suggestioned that Thomas had a racial
motive for the killings, the district court agreed that the interracial marriage
and the couple having children had potential to affect some jurors’ objective
view of the evidence and justified questioning the venire.
Nonetheless, these other circuits’ opinions support that there is
considerable discretion in deciding how much questioning, if any, is required
even as to possible racial biases. The Supreme Court has said that “inquiry
into racial prejudice at voir dire [is] not constitutionally required [when] the
facts of the case [do] not suggest a significant likelihood that racial prejudice
might infect [the defendant’s] trial.” Turner v. Murray, 476 U.S. 28, 32 (1986)
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(third alteration in original) (quotation marks omitted). The Turner plurality
based its reason for finding voir dire inadequate “on a conjunction of three
factors: the fact that the crime charged involved interracial violence, the broad
discretion given the jury at the death-penalty hearing, and the special
seriousness of the risk of improper sentencing in a capital case.” Id. at 37. We
have those three here, but unlike in Turner, some questions were asked at this
trial about prospective jurors’ racial attitudes.
As we discussed in the juror-racial-bias analysis, this case is also
different from Virgil v. Dretke, in which two jurors “each unequivocally
expressed that they could not sit as fair and impartial jurors.” 446 F.3d at 613.
Failure to challenge for cause or use a peremptory strike was ineffective
assistance where counsel also did not question “either [juror] as to whether
they would be able to set aside their preconceived notions and adjudicate . . .
with an open mind, honestly and competently considering all the relevant
evidence.” Id. If Armstrong and Copeland had unequivocally expressed their
inability to remain impartial, this would be an easier case.
We also have AEDPA, under which we show broad, if limited, deference
to the decision of the state court. That was not an issue in Turner. The
limitations are that facts not be unreasonably determined and that the
Supreme Court’s clearly established law not be unreasonably applied.
§ 2254(d)(1)–(2).
The jurors were questioned about racial prejudices in their
questionnaire, and defense counsel provided a colorable reason not to question
further. The state habeas court approved. Perhaps it applied Strickland
incorrectly, but to be reversed, the state court must have erred unreasonably.
As to legal conclusions, we do not interpret Supreme Court authority as
requiring counsel to have probed further in response to the “dilemma” of what
to do with potential racial bias. Hagood expressed concern that other jurors
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who might serve in place of Armstrong and Copeland were more troubling. The
questionnaire answers could have been interpreted by counsel as not reflecting
the kind of animosities to a black defendant that would motivate them to
convict regardless of the evidence. Counsel also could have viewed further
questioning of the potential jurors about their feelings on interracial
relationships as likely to alienate jurors who would not be struck for cause.
Counsel had experience with black defendants being found not guilty by all-
white juries, and counsel’s actions can be interpreted as mindful of the
potential negative effect of further questioning jurors in Grayson County on
their racial biases. It was not objectively unreasonable for the state habeas
court to hold that defense counsel complied with Strickland.
Thomas is not entitled to habeas relief on the basis of the claim involving
the jurors who expressed opposition to interracial marriage.
B. Ineffective assistance in failing to challenge Thomas’s competency
to stand trial
Thomas argues that his counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge
his competency to stand trial, which was Claim 16 in his state habeas
application. In June 2004, Thomas was declared incompetent to stand trial, a
conclusion that no one challenged. Thomas was then sent to a psychiatric
treatment facility at the Maximum Security Unit of North Texas State
Hospital – Vernon Campus (“Vernon”) for several weeks. While at Vernon,
Thomas underwent a series of tests and examinations. Dr. Thomas Gray, a
clinical psychologist, wrote in his medical report on July 23, 2004, that the test
results “strongly indicated gross exaggeration of [Thomas’s] symptoms.” The
report further provided that the “test results strongly indicate that he had been
exaggerating any symptoms that he may be experiencing at present.” The
report concluded that Thomas was “diagnosed with malingering,” meaning
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No. 17-70002
that “[h]e has clearly exaggerated symptoms that he might be experiencing
and may have even fabricated some symptoms of psychosis.”
In its findings, the state habeas court recognized Dr. Gray’s conclusion
that Thomas was competent to stand trial. It also found that “Dr. [Edward]
Gripon’s testimony that the applicant was competent at the time of trial was
credible.” When Hagood was asked by the trial court after Thomas returned
from the Vernon facility whether he was raising a second challenge to
competency, Hagood answered that he was not “at that time.” The state habeas
court later found that defense counsel should have objected to the competency
finding upon Thomas’s return from Vernon, but it still found that Thomas “was
competent to stand trial.” The court’s legal conclusion that we review is this:
“The record does not support the applicant’s claim that he was incompetent to
stand trial or that his attorney was ineffective for failing to raise the
competency issue a second time.”
Thomas argues that trial counsel’s failure to investigate his competency
after he returned from Vernon was ineffective assistance of counsel. Further,
the failure to investigate was prejudicial because there was a reasonable
probability Thomas would have been found incompetent to stand trial if
counsel had made a challenge at that time. “Counsel could have submitted
evidence of their own interaction with” him or “have obtained a further expert
competency evaluation.”
It is clearly established law that an incompetent person cannot be put on
trial. See Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 171 (1975). A defendant is not
competent unless he has “a rational as well as factual understanding of the
proceedings against him,” and a “sufficient present ability to consult with his
lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding.” Indiana v.
Edwards, 554 U.S. 164, 170 (2008) (emphasis and citation omitted). A
mentally ill defendant can still be competent to stand trial, however. Mays v.
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Stephens, 757 F.3d 211, 216 (5th Cir. 2014). If the defendant has a history of
mental illness, defense counsel has a duty to investigate or request a hearing
on competency. Bouchillon v. Collins, 907 F.2d 589, 597 (5th Cir. 1990).
“[E]vidence of a defendant’s irrational behavior, his demeanor at trial, and any
prior medical opinion on competence to stand trial are all relevant in
determining whether further inquiry is required.” Drope, 420 U.S. at 180. On
collateral review, the question is whether, based on what was then known to
the state trial court, “the failure to make further inquiry into [the defendant’s]
competence to stand trial[] denied [the defendant] a fair trial.” Id. at 174–75.
To succeed on a claim that counsel failed to investigate, “a petitioner
must allege with specificity what the investigation would have revealed and
how it would have changed the outcome of the trial.” Miller, 420 F.3d at 361.
If defense counsel is aware of a fact that would cause a reasonable attorney to
investigate further, then the failure to investigate further is likely deficient
performance. See id. at 364. As we have already stated, there is a strong
presumption under Strickland that defense counsel’s strategic and tactical
decisions fell “within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.”
466 U.S. at 689. Strickland also prohibits this court from evaluating defense
counsel’s choices through the “distorting lens of hindsight.” Id.
We examine the evidence on the attorney’s actions. Hagood admitted in
his first affidavit that he “should have filed an objection to the competency
report and should have urged a new competency hearing” after Thomas
returned from Vernon. His second affidavit, though, sought to justify his not
seeking another hearing:
[W]e did not request a new competency hearing. The reason for
this was simple: the applicant was not incompetent when we began
his trial. Although heavily medicated and still suffering from
mental illness, I was able to talk to the applicant and discuss the
case with him. The applicant was able to participate in our
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No. 17-70002
conversations and help me with his defense. In fact, based on some
of our conversations and the applicant’s ability to recall events and
make suggestions, there was no question at that time that the
applicant was competent to stand trial. The trial court specifically
asked me if I was claiming incompetency. I avoided the question
as much as I could, but eventually had to tell the judge that we
were not challenging competency at that time because I had no
new evidence to dispute the findings at Vernon or suggest the
applicant was incompetent.
When Thomas returned from Vernon, the official report was that
Thomas was severely manufacturing and exaggerating his psychotic
symptoms. Based on that report, defense counsel may have understandably
discounted signs in Thomas of potential incompetence. Thomas’s erratic
actions, in light of the medical evaluation, arguably did not place counsel on
notice that further inquiry was needed. It is true that the state habeas court
credited a portion of Hagood’s first explanation — that he should have made a
second competency objection. In deciding if this constituted an unreasonable
factual finding, we accept that the state court could have treated the assertion
in the first affidavit as Hagood’s post hoc realization that he should have done
more, while that in the second affidavit reflects Hagood’s belief the challenge
would not have been successful.
We acknowledge that a reasonable jurist could have concluded that
defense counsel’s dismissal of signs of incompetence and failure to challenge
competency a second time was ineffective representation under Strickland.
We must analyze the decision, though, by applying the standard of whether it
was objectively unreasonable for the state habeas court to conclude that
defense counsel complied with Strickland. In considering the facts known to
defense counsel on the eve of trial, which are the facts the state habeas court
considered, we cannot say that it was objectively unreasonable for the state
court to conclude that defense counsel’s representation complied with
Strickland. Thomas is not entitled to habeas relief on this ground.
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C. Ineffective assistance in rebutting the voluntary-intoxication theory
Thomas argues that defense counsel’s representation was inadequate
because they failed to present “appropriate expert testimony to rebut th[e]
central prosecution theory,” which was that Thomas’s undisputed psychosis at
the time of the killings was self-induced. In Texas, “[v]oluntary intoxication
does not constitute a defense to the commission of crime.” TEX. PENAL CODE
§ 8.04(a). Thomas contends that the cause of his psychosis “was the ‘real fight’
in the guilt phase,” and counsel knew it. The State and another doctor had
both informed defense counsel that they should retain an expert who could
testify about the effects of Thomas’s recreational abuse of dextromethorphan
(“DXM”) contained in the cough suppressant Coricidin. Instead, defense
counsel called two of the State’s experts and also a psychiatrist, though the
latter was not qualified to testify as a pharmacologist. Thomas reasons that
his counsel’s “failure to obtain appropriate expert testimony to rebut the
prosecution’s central theory was deficient” because it allowed the State to
present an unchallenged factual predicate for its main argument. Thomas’s
arguments regarding the ineffectiveness of his counsel in rebutting the
voluntary-intoxication theory were presented as Claims 29, 30, and 31 in his
state habeas application.
Thomas also contends that his counsel’s performance was prejudicial
because “[a]t least one reasonable juror could have decided in light of [other]
witnesses’ expert evaluations that Thomas’s psychosis did not result from
cough medicine or other substances, but from his severe organic mental
illness.” Thomas further argues that the state court applied the wrong legal
standard because it imposed a preponderance of the evidence standard while
Strickland requires only a reasonable probability of a different outcome.
In an effort to demonstrate what further trial counsel could have done,
Thomas in the state habeas proceedings submitted affidavits from three other
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doctors. They supported Thomas’s defense in these ways: Dr. Jonathan
Lipman, an expert in neuropharmacology, would have testified that Thomas’s
psychosis was involuntary and not substance induced; Dr. Myla Young, an
expert in neuropsychology, would have testified that Thomas’s psychosis was
the result of “significant brain dysfunction . . . like that demonstrated in
several neurological, psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders”; Dr.
Ruben Gur, also a neuropsychologist, would have testified that Thomas
suffered from schizophrenia and that his psychosis was organic.
A defense attorney must reasonably investigate possible defenses or
“make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
unnecessary.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691. A decision not to investigate “must
be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the circumstances, applying a
heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.” Id. Again, to obtain
habeas relief, the petitioner must show “a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.” Id. at 694. “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id.
A petitioner for habeas relief has the burden to support both that counsel
was constitutionally ineffective and that prejudice resulted. Rector v. Johnson,
120 F.3d 551, 563 (5th Cir. 1997). The state habeas court here found
insufficient proof “that counsel’s performance was constitutionally deficient
and [counsel] was not acting as a reasonably competent attorney, and his
advice was not within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in
criminal cases.” As to prejudice, the court articulated the correct legal
standard, that “a ‘reasonable probability’ the result would have been different
is merely ‘probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome’ of
trial.” The court then found that Thomas failed to prove that his counsel’s
performance “prejudiced his defense and that based on the opinions of Gur,
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Young, and Lipman there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsels
unprofessional errs the results of the proceeding would have been different.”
To support his argument on this issue, Thomas largely relies on
Draughon v. Dretke, 427 F.3d 286 (5th Cir. 2005). Of course, only the Supreme
Court’s decisions constitute clearly established law under Section 2254(d)(1).
Our review of Draughon, then, is to see whether it precedentially held what
had already been clearly established by the Supreme Court. See Marshall v.
Rodgers, 569 U.S. 58, 64 (2013). We held that habeas relief was warranted
because defense counsel failed to present expert testimony challenging the
main factual predicate of the prosecution’s case. Draughon, 427 F.3d at 296.
Draughon was charged with capital murder; he argued that the killing was
accidental, thus making his intent to kill the primary issue at trial. Id. at 289–
91. A witness testified that she saw the defendant pull a gun and shoot the
victim. Id. at 290. The defense did not counter this testimony with any expert
evidence about the trajectory of the bullet. Id. at 294. In habeas proceedings,
a forensics expert testified that the defendant had not shot the victim directly,
rather the bullet had ricocheted off the ground into the defendant. Id. at 291.
We take from Draughon that the clearly established law from the
Supreme Court is that effective representation requires an attorney to conduct
a reasonable investigation into the law and facts of the case. Strickland, 466
U.S. at 691. We applied that law in Draughon and held that on those facts,
the defense counsel had to hire an expert witness to counter the main factual
predicate of the state. In Draughon, if defense counsel did not put a forensics
expert on the witness stand, then only the defendant could counter that
testimony. 427 F.3d at 297. Thomas argues that his case is like Draughon
because defense counsel failed to retain an expert witness to rebut the State’s
central theory that Thomas’s psychosis was voluntarily induced from his
ingestion of DXM in the Coricidin.
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It is true that Hagood stated in his first affidavit that he “did not do an
independent investigation of the experts.” Whatever Hagood meant by that,
he did offer a psychiatrist, Dr. Edward Gripon, who testified that Thomas’s
psychosis was organic. Dr. Gripon explained that he had reviewed thousands
of pages of documentation on Thomas’s mental condition; interviewed Thomas
multiples times; and reviewed “offense reports, crime-scene photographs,
witness statements, videotapes, audiotapes . . . jail records . . . medical records
. . . treatment records . . . [and] expert reports.” He testified that Thomas had
a chronic schizophrenic condition and was insane at the time of the offenses.
Dr. Gripon rejected that abusing DXM could have caused Thomas’s actions.
In addition, defense counsel talked to two other medical experts who
were ultimately not called to testify. As the state habeas court found, “Dr. Jay
Crowder, a psychiatrist hired by the defense but not called at trial, informed
the defense that he could not rule out the possibility that the psychotic episode
leading up to the murders was induced by his use of a combination of drugs
and alcohol.” Hagood explained that he also had talked to Dr. Richard Rogers
who “indicated that testing showed [Thomas] was manipulative and ‘blew the
top off’ the questions indicating malingering.”
Our concern is not whether counsel at trial could have done more. That
is often, maybe always, the case. Thomas’s counsel did introduce testimony to
contradict the main factual predicate for the State’s theory. Given that defense
counsel presented testimony to counter the State’s main factual predicate, no
deficiency under Draughon exists.
Finally, Thomas also argues that his counsel provided ineffective
representation on expert testimony when they “inexplicably resorted to calling
the prosecution’s experts.” He further writes that “even if that strategy [was]
reasonable . . . the resulting testimony confirms it was not.” Such an argument
fails. “It is all too tempting for a defendant to second-guess counsel’s assistance
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after conviction or adverse sentence, and it is all too easy for a court, examining
counsel’s defense after it has proved unsuccessful, to conclude that a particular
act or omission of counsel was unreasonable.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689.
Hagood explained that he hoped by calling the State’s witnesses he could
“diffuse some of the more damaging testimony against” Thomas. That trial
counsel’s strategy proved unsuccessful cannot be used as a reason to question
the reasonableness of the strategy. Id.
Based on these facts, it was not objectively unreasonable for the state
habeas court to conclude that Thomas had not carried his burden under
Strickland to show defense counsel’s representation was constitutionally
inadequate. Thomas is not entitled to relief on this ground.
D. Ineffective assistance in presenting a mitigation defense
Thomas argues that his trial counsel provided constitutionally deficient
representation at sentencing, which prejudiced him because there was a
substantial probability that a reasonable juror would have reached a different
outcome if the mitigation defense had been adequate. This argument was
presented as Claim 34 to the state habeas court. As we have already stated,
Thomas must show that the state court’s application of the Strickland
standard was objectively unreasonable to his claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel at sentencing, a substantially higher burden.
First, Thomas contends that his trial counsel’s investigation of
mitigating evidence was deficient, which prevented the jury from hearing the
tragic story of his life. The story of his life, he asserts, was filled with “mental-
health issues, abuse, and neglect.” Those problems were compounded with
alcohol and drug abuse. He writes that he attempted suicide at a young age
with no objection from his parents; tragically, his parents encouraged it. He
argues that these facts were well known to his friends and family, that defense
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counsel was deficient by failing both to investigate this personal history and to
present evidence of it to jurors.
Next, Thomas argues that “there is at least a reasonable probability that
one juror would have decided against the death penalty,” and thus trial
counsel’s deficient performance was prejudicial to him. More importantly, he
argues that “the state habeas court’s conclusion that [he] failed to prove
prejudice unreasonably applied clearly established law.” He contends that “the
state court completely ignored what [the other] witnesses would have said and
how their testimony would have altered the picture before the jury at
sentencing.” Ultimately, Thomas asserts that defense counsel’s representation
at sentencing “painted an overwhelmingly incomplete and misleading picture.”
The question before this court is whether it was objectively unreasonable
for the state habeas court to conclude that defense counsel’s representation at
sentencing complied with Strickland. If reasonable jurists could disagree
about the reasonableness of the state court’s decision, then AEDPA precludes
federal habeas relief because “even a strong case for relief does not mean the
state court’s contrary conclusion was unreasonable.” Richter, 562 U.S. at 102.
AEDPA requires deference to the state court’s decision if there is a reasonable
basis for it. Id.
A defense attorney’s obligations in a capital case include conducting a
thorough investigation into potential mitigating evidence. See Wiggins v.
Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 522 (2003). In citing to the ABA guidelines for
performance of defense counsel in death-penalty cases, the Supreme Court
stated that counsel should investigate and consider presenting testimony
about the defendant’s medical history, educational history, employment and
training history, family and social history, prior adult and juvenile correctional
experience, and religious and cultural influences. Id. at 524. “[T]he duty to
investigate does not force defense lawyers to scour the globe on the off chance
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something will turn up.” Rompilla v. Beard, 545 U.S. 374, 383 (2005). At the
same time, defense counsel must begin preparation for sentencing with
adequate time for investigation into the defendant’s background. Williams v.
Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 395 (2000).
We have examined the principal evidence on counsel’s performance that
was presented to the state habeas court. The affidavits from each of the trial
counsel discuss the mitigation case. Some of the information in the affidavits
raises doubts about the preparation of a case for mitigation of sentence.
Hagood’s first affidavit states he met only twice on his own with Shelli Schade,
the person he hired as an expert to prepare the mitigation case, whom the
record shows was recommended to Hagood by the Texas Defender Service.
That recommendation gives at least initial reasonableness to Hagood’s reliance
that Schade knew what to do and would do it. He was “disappointed with the
work” she did and said it could have been either his or co-counsel’s fault for not
“giving her enough direction.” Hagood’s first affidavit indicated some
involvement in the decisions being made, such as rejecting Schade’s suggestion
to seek testimony from two particular family members because Hagood did not
think they would be worth the effort. He was interested in having Thomas’s
mother testify, but “shortly before trial she disappeared.”
Hagood’s second affidavit describes much more thorough preparation.
That affidavit discusses such matters as the witnesses he considered, efforts
he made to prepare useful ones to testify, and judgments he made at trial
regarding the value of their testimony:
The applicant claims that we were not prepared to present
our punishment case. This is patently false. Ms. Peterson and I
spent many months preparing all aspects of the case. I had talked
to several family members regarding the applicant’s background
and childhood.
The applicant’s mother was angry at the applicant for killing
her grandson. Although I could have gleaned useful background
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information from her testimony, I did not do so. She had left the
state and I made no attempt to subpoena her or get her back to
Grayson County, Texas for the trial. I was too afraid of what might
come out of her mouth and further damage she might [do] to the
applicant. I had no intention of putting her on the stand and
preferred that the State not have that opportunity either.
I believed the applicant’s aunt, Doris Gonzales, would be my
primary witness regarding mitigation. When I interviewed her
she was articulate and passionate about the trial and obstacles
faced by the applicant. Once on the stand, however, she collapsed.
She was unable to relate to the jury, despite my best attempts, in
as clear and convincing a manner as she had during trial
preparation.
I had also prepared two of the applicant’s brothers and his
father. They, too, had done a much better job in my office than
they were able to in court. Once I realized that they were not
coming across well, I abandoned my questioning of those three
witnesses.
On appeal here, Thomas emphasizes counsel Peterson’s statement in her
first affidavit that “[l]ate in the trial, Mr. Hagood asked me who we had for the
punishment phase . . . [which was when she] realized that [they] were not
prepared for the punishment phase.” Peterson’s second affidavit gave what
could be seen as a more comprehensive explanation. She restated her earlier
assertions, and described her understanding of what Shelli Schade was
supposed to be doing:
I did not think Mr. Hagood had spoken to any witnesses, I
was not privy to any witness he may have talked to or the reasons
behind much of Mr. Hagood’s strategy at trial.
The applicant’s mother was not cooperative. I procured Kate
Allen with Mr. Hagood’s consent.
I do not know what instructions Ms. Schade was given by
Mr. Hagood. All materials possessed by Mr. Hagood and myself
were available to Ms. Schade. Ms. Schade requested more
documents from me as the trial went on and I provided everything
possible.
Since the state habeas court decision is what we must review, we quote
some of its factual findings on this issue. It largely accepted the assertions
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Hagood made in his second affidavit that we have already quoted.
Importantly, it found that “Hagood spent many months preparing all aspects
of the case. He stated that he had talked to several family members regarding
the applicant’s background and childhood.” It further found that Hagood
believed Thomas’s aunt would be the defense’s principal mitigation witness but
abandoned questioning her because she collapsed on the stand and “was
unable to relate to the jury.” The state court similarly found that Hagood
abandoned questioning of Thomas’s father and brothers when “he realized that
they were not coming across well.” Further, the state court found that “Hagood
was aware of the family background and history of mental problems and
alcohol abuse,” and he “felt that such information to a juror could cut both
ways.”
Other factual findings reflect an acknowledgement by the state court
that counsel had not done all that could have been done. For example, the
court found that counsel “did not initially retain any experts for the mitigation
phase of the case.” “Members of Mr. Thomas’s family, friends and community
leaders were available at the time of Mr. Thomas’s trial to inform counsel,
experts, and jurors about Mr. Thomas’s life. The defense team did not contact
all of Mr. Thomas’ family members. Nor did Ms. Schade draft a social history
or mitigation report.”
We must defer to these factual findings, which are presumed correct,
unless rebutted with clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
Thomas asserts it was unreasonable for the state court to find that Hagood
spent months preparing because some of Hagood’s claims, such as speaking
with Thomas’s family members, were “demonstrably untrue” based on later
evidence that was gathered. As we have stated regarding other claims, though,
Thomas must convince that the state court made “an unreasonable
determination of the facts” by considering “the evidence presented in the State
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court proceeding.” § 2254(d)(2). The record we can consider is only the one
before the state court.
Moreover, it is not only the sentencing-phase evidence that is relevant to
mitigation. As the federal district court pointed out, Hagood had already
presented substantial mitigating evidence during the guilt phase of the trial;
offering the evidence at the sentencing phase would have been cumulative. For
example, Thomas’s father, Danny Thomas, testified about Thomas’s
upbringing and childhood. He testified that Thomas had appeared to have
“mental problems,” describing nervous-breakdown behavior and depression.
Also testifying at the guilt phase was Carmen Hayes, Thomas’s girlfriend
at the time of the murders. She testified that Thomas spoke often about the
book of Revelation and believed that “all women were Jezebels,” meaning that
“women were lustful.” She also testified that two days before the murders,
Thomas said, “God, forgive me for my sins,” before stabbing himself in the
chest, and saying he wanted to “fly with the angels.” He would also put duct
tape over his mouth because “he felt like he was the devil and if he stopped
talking for 24 hours, the world would be right.” Hayes, along with Paul Boren,
Amy Ingle, and Rose Soto Caballero, testified to Thomas’s frequent use of the
term “déjà vu.” Hayes testified that Thomas believed that “God was making
him relive days because he was smoking marijuana [as p]unishment.”
Isaiah Gibbs, Thomas’s lifelong friend, testified about Thomas’s
relationship with his mother, Rochelle Thomas. Ms. Thomas regularly took
her son and Gibbs to church. When Gibbs and Thomas were with “some girl”
she did not like, Ms. Thomas referred to her as “Jezebel.” Gibbs spoke to the
strong influence that she had on Thomas, and how she would give whippings
with belts or shoes to Gibbs and Thomas.
Ingle, Hayes, Bryant Hughes, Boren, and Rae Baird each testified about
Thomas’s religious obsessions. Ingle testified that he cut out the words in
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Revelation to reword it. Hughes testified that Thomas believed the angels
were “bound in hell” and that Thomas wanted to free them. Boren relayed a
story about Thomas’s claiming that “if everyone would just stop and say, peace,
love, that would bring about the end of world.”
The State also called Eric Ross, Thomas’s older brother, at the
sentencing stage. That brother testified to Thomas’s childhood and stated that
he loved his brother. When Thomas finally began presenting mitigating
evidence at the sentencing phase, substantial background information and
mitigating evidence had already been presented to the jury.
The defense called nine additional witnesses for further mitigation.
Included was Danny Ross, Thomas’s brother, who testified about Thomas’s
childhood and how he strove for knowledge as a young student. Ross’s wife
Wendy Ross also testified that she loved Thomas and that he had been there
for her. She testified that Thomas had watched her children for her and that
she never had any fears or concerns about Thomas’s watching her children, but
that his behavior changed in the months leading up to the murders. Thomas’s
aunt Doris Gonzales also testified, describing her visits with Thomas and his
brothers as full of “[l]aughter, happiness, joking, [and] kidding.”
Dr. Kate Allen, a clinical social worker and family sociologist, also
testified for Thomas. In her opinion, Thomas was essentially raised by himself
and his two brothers, suffered from schizophrenia, and had traits of a
borderline personality disorder and antisocial personality disorder. She
further testified that her opinion was that “his mental illness was, by far, the
driving force” of the murders.
The defense had presented much mitigation evidence at the guilt phase,
then supplemented that evidence at sentencing. The state habeas court’s
conclusion that defense counsel complied with Strickland was not objectively
unreasonable.
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Thomas’s case is distinguishable from the cases he cites. For example,
he refers us to Porter v. McCollum, 558 U.S. 30 (2009), to argue that ignoring
pertinent paths of investigation was deficient performance under Strickland.
In Porter, however, defense counsel failed to “obtain any of [the defendant’s]
school, medical, or military service records or interview any members of [the
defendant’s] family.” Id. at 39 (emphasis added). Here, the state court found
that Hagood had spent months preparing and had interviewed various
members of the family. Thus, unlike the defense attorney in Porter whose
failure to investigate prevented him from making a strategic choice about what
to tell the jury, Hagood’s investigation into Thomas’s past allowed him to make
a strategic choice. In his brief on appeal, Thomas writes that because of
defense counsel’s ineffectiveness “the jury never heard . . . that [he] badly
needed medical help from a young age and never received it — a very different
portrait of his humanity and culpability.” To the extent the jury did not hear
this story, it was arguably because Thomas’s counsel made a strategic decision
not to share this story for fear that it would hurt Thomas’s case. Even if that
decision was incorrect and against clearly established law requiring more of
defense counsel, it was not objectively unreasonable for the state court to
conclude that defense counsel complied with Strickland. See Miller, 420 F.3d
at 360. Thomas is not entitled to habeas relief on this claim.
We view the current arguments about the effectiveness of counsel’s
preparation of a mitigation case primarily to present factual questions. The
state habeas court had to make credibility choices, considering all the evidence
before it. Though some of the information in these affidavits makes the
preparation of a case on mitigation appear worrisomely slapdash, Hagood’s
second affidavit shows meaningful effort, with some mistakes and surprises,
but not constitutionally ineffective performance. We cannot conclude that the
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state habeas court made an unreasonable determination of the facts when it
accepted the assertions that it did.
We conclude that Thomas has not overcome the state habeas court’s
factual finding that counsel was aware of Thomas’s extensively troubled past.
Hagood asserts he was making choices about which witnesses to put on the
stand, and the state habeas court found those choices did not make Hagood
ineffective.
AFFIRMED.
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STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
in part:
An all-white jury found Thomas, a black man, guilty of capital murder
and sentenced him to death for killing his wife, a white woman, and two
children, including their interracial child. That jury included three jurors who
acknowledged bias against interracial marriage. Empaneling them—
affirming their capital verdict and death sentence—was objectively
unreasonable, contradicting the clearly established Supreme Court and Fifth
Circuit caselaw aptly summarized in the majority opinion 1:
It is undeniable “that discrimination on the basis of race, ‘odious
in all aspects, is especially pernicious in the administration of
justice.’” [Pena-Rodriguez, 137 S. Ct. 855,] 868 [(2017)] (quoting
Rose v. Mitchell, 443 U.S. 545, 555 (1979)). Any “defendant has the
right to an impartial jury that can view him without racial animus,
which so long has distorted our system of criminal justice.”
Georgia v. McCollum, 505 U.S. 42, 58 (1992). If a defendant is
denied the right to an impartial decisionmaker, regardless of the
nature of the bias, any subsequent conviction is tainted with
constitutional infirmity. Virgil [v. Dretke], 446 F.3d [598,] 607 [(5th
Cir. 2006)]. Any juror who “the defendant has specific reason to
believe would be incapable of confronting and suppressing their
racism” should be removed from the jury. See McCollum, 505 U.S.
at 58. If a juror should have been removed for cause, then seating
that juror requires reversal. United States v. Martinez-Salazar,
528 U.S. 304, 316 (2000).
1 I appreciatively concur in the majority opinion’s resolution of Thomas’s other COA
issues except for whether his counsel was ineffective in addressing jury bias. As to that issue,
because I see AEDPA error under Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 722 (1961), and Parker v.
Gladden, 385 U.S. 363, 366 (1966) (a defendant is “entitled to be tried by 12, not 9 or even
10, impartial and unprejudiced jurors”), denying Thomas his Sixth Amendment right to an
impartial jury, above all a jury without overt racial bias, Pena-Rodriguez, 137 S. Ct. 855, 868
(2017); see also United States v Booker, 480 F.2d 1310, 1311 (7th Cir. 1973) (“if even one
member of the jury harbors racial prejudice against the accused, his right to trial by an
impartial jury is impaired”), I do not reach whether Thomas’s trial counsel, who undertook
either no or negligible voir dire inquiry into jurors’ avowals of actual racial bias, was
constitutionally deficient under Turner v. Murray, 476 U.S. 28, 36–37 (1986), and Mu’Min v.
Virginia, 500 U.S. 415, 431–32 (1991).
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The facts of Thomas’s violent crime are undisputed and the majority
recognizes that racial issues were inextricably bound up with his murders. See
Rosales-Lopez v. United States, 451 U.S. 182, 189–90 (1981). Indeed, the fact
of Thomas’s interracial relationship with his victim was at the crux of the
State’s case, urging the all-white jury to vote for capital punishment:
Are you going to take the risk about him asking your daughter out,
or your granddaughter out? After watching the string of girls that
came up here and apparently could talk him into—that he could
talk into being with him, are you going to take that chance?
Adjudicating this horrific crime would challenge any juror, but it is
constitutionally prohibited for a racially biased juror who “vigorously
oppose[s]” (Juror Ulmer) (or “oppose[s]”—Jurors Copeland and Armstrong)
“people of different racial backgrounds marrying and/or having children.”
As we both celebrate and enforce, the Constitution rests our “criminal
justice system . . . firmly on the proposition that before a person’s liberty can
be deprived, guilt must be found, beyond a reasonable doubt, by an impartial
decisionmaker. The Sixth Amendment provides in part: ‘In all criminal
prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by
an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been
committed.’ Put simply, ‘The right to jury trial guarantees to the criminally
accused a fair trial by a panel of impartial, ‘indifferent’ jurors.’” Virgil v.
Dretke, 446 F.3d 598, 605 & nn. 22, 23 (5th Cir. 2006) (quoting the Sixth
Amendment and clearly established Supreme Court caselaw, including Irvin
v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 722 (1961), and Parker v. Gladden, 385 U.S. 363, 366
(1966) (per curiam)) (alterations in original).
In Thomas’s state habeas proceeding, the state court’s cursory conclusion
about juror bias was that “[t]here is no evidence that the jury’s decision was
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racially motivated.” I agree with the majority that this finding gave no
resolution to Thomas’s structural error claim that jurors with actual,
disqualifying bias were seated. Where I disagree is with the majority’s
compensating inference that Ulmer’s admitted-to racial bias was impliedly
disclaimed by him as a “moral judgment” he “could set aside…in determining
guilt.” Although Ulmer separately stated that he would not let the color of
Thomas’s skin affect his judgment of him, the majority candidly acknowledges
that he never retreated from his “beliefs about interracial marriage.” “Belief”
is dignifying here. Ulmer admitted to racial animus—condemned by the
unanimous Supreme Court one half century ago in Loving v. Virginia as
“odious,” “invidious” and “repugnant”—here against the exact interracial
circumstance of the offense Thomas was sentenced to death for. 388 U.S. 1, 11
& n.11 (1967).
I would apply clearly established Supreme Court law to forbid persons
from being privileged to participate in the judicial process to make life or death
judgment about brutal murders involving interracial marriage and offspring
those jurors openly confirm they have racial bias against. The law rightly
condemned this repugnancy when enacted as law by lawmakers, just as it must
condemn it when we ask citizens to join us as judges.
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