IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 93-2341
RAYMOND CARL KINNAMON,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
WAYNE SCOTT, DIRECTOR,
TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL
JUSTICE, INSTITUTIONAL DIVISION,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
( September 15, 1994)
Before GARWOOD, HIGGINBOTHAM, and BARKSDALE, Circuit Judges.
HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
This is a death penalty case from Texas. Raymond Carl
Kinnamon appeals dismissal of his petition for writ of habeas
corpus and denial of a certificate of probable cause by the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. This is
Kinnamon's first federal petition and he attacks his conviction for
capital murder and sentence of death on six grounds. We refuse to
issue a certificate of probable cause and dismiss the appeal.
I
On July 25, 1985 a jury in Harris County, Texas, convicted
Kinnamon of the murder of Ronald Charles Longmire in the course of
an armed robbery of a bar and its patrons. The jury answered
affirmatively the three questions asked in the sentencing
proceeding and on July 30, 1985 the trial court sentenced Kinnamon
to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the
conviction on April 18, 1990. Kinnamon v. State, 791 S.W.2d 84
(Tex. Crim. App. 1990). Instead of filing a petition for
certiorari, Kinnamon filed an application for writ of habeas corpus
in the state trial court. Without a hearing, the state trial court
entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and the Texas Court
of Criminal Appeals thereafter denied relief.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals set out the facts of the
offense:
On Monday evening, December 11, 1984, [Kinnamon] was
one of several patrons seated at the bar in N.J.'s Lounge
in Houston. He had entered the bar several hours
earlier, and, according to witnesses, sat alone,
occasionally playing a video game mounted atop the bar.
At one point he had a brief conversation with the
bartender, Jeannie Marriott. After "last call" had been
announced [Kinnamon] acted as if he was leaving with the
other customers. Before exiting, he told Marriott that
he had to use the restroom, turned and walked back across
the lounge. When [Kinnamon] came out of the restroom a
short time later, waitress Sharon Bryson, and a patron,
Kenny Simmons, were seated at the bar and Marriott was
cleaning up behind the counter. At that point,
[Kinnamon], possessing a firearm, ordered the employees
and remaining patrons, including Ronald Longmire, the
decedent, to put their hands on the bar and refrain from
looking at him. He ordered Marriott to take the money
out of the cash register and place it in a bag. Since no
bag was available, she used Bryson's purse. After
[Kinnamon] took the money, he ordered everyone to proceed
single file to the men's restroom. Ronald Longmire, the
decedent, was apparently at the end of the line, with
[Kinnamon] following. As the people were proceeding to
the rest room, [Kinnamon] asked them for their jewelry.
As they were trying to remove their rings and watches,
[Kinnamon] asked Longmire "what is that in your pocket?"
to which the decedent responded "nothing, just my
driver's license." A shot was fired, then a second
almost immediately thereafter. The record indicates that
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the second shot entered the decedent's back from the left
side at an angle. Longmire apparently fell to his knees.
At this point, Sharon Bryson, the waitress, escaped
through a rear exit, and in so doing activated a burglar
alarm. The bartender, Jeannie Marriott, was pulled into
the walk-in cooler by Kenny Simmons. About that time, a
third shot was fired. Simmons later testified that while
he and Marriott were in the cooler, someone attempted to
enter from the outside by pulling on the door handle to
the cooler. Meanwhile, Bryson fled to a nearby
convenience store and telephoned the police.
Approximately ten minutes after the shooting,
Marriott and Simmons came out of the cooler and saw
Longmire wandering aimlessly through the bar, muttering
incoherently and bleeding profusely from the gunshot
wound. When the police arrived, Marriott directed them
to Longmire, who by that time was dazed and seated on the
floor in a corner. Longmire was rushed to the hospital
and died a short time later.
[Kinnamon] was identified in a photo array by the
eyewitnesses to the offense. Some two weeks later, he
was apprehended at his Houston residence and placed under
arrest.
Kinnamon v. State, 791 S.W.2d at 86-87.
II
Kinnamon contends that his counsel was ineffective in not
requesting jury instructions on the lesser included offenses of
murder and involuntary manslaughter. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals held that "the evidence did not authorize the submission of
a murder instruction on a lesser included offense . . ." 791
S.W.2d at 96-97. This court examined similar contentions in
Cordova v. Lynaugh, 838 F.2d 764 (5th Cir. 1988). This court
acknowledged that murder was a lesser included offense of capital
murder, explaining: "The specific issue is whether a rational jury
could have found that Cordova murdered Hernandez but that it was
not in the course of the robbery." Id. at 769. No rational jury
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could have simultaneously voted to convict Kinnamon of murder and
acquit him of robbery. Indeed, that is not his argument, as we
understand it. Rather, he argues that a rational jury could have
concluded that he lacked the intent to kill and was only guilty of
felony murder. The state replies that the evidence would not
permit a rational jury to acquit of capital murder and convict of
felony murder; thus, the trial court would have denied a request
for any such instruction. As the state put it, "Given [that the
fatal shot was a second shot] and the close proximity of Kinnamon's
gun to the victim, the jury could only have found that Kinnamon had
the conscious objective or desire to . . . cause the death of
Longmire," citing Tex. Penal Code 6.03(a) (Vernon 1974) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
The state habeas court pointed to the "overwhelming evidence
showing that [Kinnamon] specifically intended to kill the
deceased." It concluded that Kinnamon could not in any event meet
the second prong of Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687
(1984). We also are not persuaded that had counsel requested an
instruction on the lesser offense of felony murder, the outcome
would have been different. Kinnamon's lawyer, Guerinot, at the
opening of his summation told the jury: "There is probably but one
issue in this case, and there is only one, and you folks are going
to decide it, and that is the issue of identity." Guerinot's co-
counsel also told the jury: "Now, identity, as I said, is the
issue." In rebuttal, the prosecution pointed out to the jury that
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the defense rested on identity, not an absence of an intent to
kill.
III
Kinnamon contends that the jury charge allowed the jury to
convict of capital murder without finding a specific intent to
kill. The jury, he argues, could have concluded that he intended
to shoot but not to kill. His trial objection to the charge made
the point, but the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rejected the
contention on direct appeal. That court agreed that capital murder
is a "result of conduct" offense and "not only must an accused be
found to have intended to engage in the act that caused the death,
he also must have specifically intended that death result from that
conduct. The mere intent to pull the trigger of a firearm will not
satisfy the statute". 791 S.W.2d at 88-89 (citation omitted). The
Court found, however, that read in the context of the full charge,
the language "was irrelevant with respect to [Kinnamon's] culpable
mental state." 791 S.W.2d at 89. In another case, the Texas Court
later overruled this holding, concluding that "it is error for a
trial judge to not limit the definitions of the culpable mental
states as they relate to the conduct elements involved in the
particular offense." Cook v. State ___ S.W.2d ___ (1994) (slip op.
at 12).
Kinnamon argues that he should have the benefit of this change
in Texas law and that this court ought to certify to the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals the "question" of whether he was harmed
by the error. He further argues that not according him the benefit
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of the change deprives him of due process and is cruel and unusual
punishment. We are unpersuaded.
As a federal habeas court, our question is "'whether the
ailing instruction by itself so infected the entire trial that the
resulting conviction violates due process,' not merely whether 'the
instruction is undesirable, erroneous, or even "universally
condemned."'" Henderson v. Kibbe, 431 U.S. 145, 154-55 (1977)
(citation omitted). Looking at the charge as a whole and in the
context of trial, including the arguments of counsel, there is no
reasonable likelihood that the jury applied the construction in a
constitutionally impermissible way. The trial court instructed the
jury (emphasis added):
Before you are warranted in convicting the
defendant, Raymond Carl Kinnamon, of capital murder, you
must find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt not
only that on the occasion in question the defendant,
Raymond Carl Kinnamon, was engaged in the commission or
attempted commission of the felony offense of robbery, if
any, of Ronald Charles Longmire, as defined in this
charge, but also that during the commission of the
robbery or attempted commission thereof, if any, the
defendant, Raymond Carl Kinnamon, shot Ronald Charles
Longmire with a gun with the intention of thereby causing
his death. Unless you find from the evidence beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant, Raymond Carl
Kinnamon, on said occasion, (according to Tex. Crim.
App., 791 S.W.2d at 88) specifically intended to cause
the death of Ronald Charles Longmire when he shot him
with a gun, if he did shoot him with a gun, you cannot
convict him of the offense of capital murder.
Now, if you find from the evidence beyond a
reasonable doubt that on or about the 11th day of
December, 1984, in Harris County, Texas, the defendant,
Raymond Carl Kinnamon, did then and there unlawfully
while in the course of committing or attempting to commit
the robbery of Ronald Charles Longmire intentionally
cause the death of Ronald Charles Longmire by shooting
Ronald Charles Longmire with a gun, then you will find
the defendant guilty of capital murder.
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The prosecutor did not attempt to exploit any uncertainty in
the charge. Significantly, as we explained, Kinnamon's contention
at the guilt phase was that the state had arrested the wrong man--
the issue was identity. There was no error of constitutional
magnitude.
IV
Kinnamon contended on direct appeal that the prosecutor
misstated the difference between "intentional" and "deliberate" in
its use of use of hypotheticals in voir dire. The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals held that Kinnamon had not preserved the error for
appeal because he had not used all his preemptory challenges and
had not requested an additional one. Kinnamon unsuccessfully
argued to the district court that the procedural bar was not
applicable. He adds here the alternative that counsel was
ineffective in not preserving the error.
We are asked to review the state law question presented by the
decision to apply the bar to these facts--that the Texas courts
erred in holding that misleading statements were subject to the
requirement that preemptory challenges be exhausted. There are
substantial reasons why we should not do so, but we need not rest
here.
The effort to show legal cause to escape the procedural bar--
counsel's ineffectiveness--was not made in the federal trial court
and so we will not listen. Even if we were to do so, it is
apparent that the tactical choices behind a decision to exhaust
challenges are barren ground indeed for second-guessing counsel.
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Finally, the second prong of Strickland, again, is insurmountable,
given the focus at trial upon identity. Relatedly, we find nothing
in the trial court's rulings at voir dire or elsewhere that impeded
Kinnamon's ability to defend on the basis of an absence of intent
to kill.
V
Kinnamon argues that allowing the jury to consider in the
sentencing phase evidence of other robberies committed after the
charged offense denied him due process and equal protection. This
contention is contrary to settled law of this circuit, and this
panel lacks the authority to change it. Milton v. Procunier, 744
F.2d. 1091, 1097 (5th Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1030
(1985).
VI
Kinnamon argues that under the Texas sentencing procedures,
the jury was unable to give effect to his mitigating evidence. He
argues that the jury could have concluded that the victim resisted
the robbery and with the escalating events his shooting of Longmire
was born of panic, not malice. Such evidence, the argument
continues, was relevant to the jury's assessment of moral
culpability but the jury was offered no means to reflect its
consideration in its verdict. We reject the contention. The jury
could have given effect to such a view of the crime in its answer
to the first question of whether the killing was deliberate, or in
the second question of future dangerousness. Whether or not we add
its answer to the question of whether Kinnamon acted in response to
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any provocation by the victim, this "mitigating" evidence was
within "the effective reach of the sentencer". Graham v. Collins,
113 S. Ct. 892, 902 (1993).
VII
We reject Kinnamon's last point, attacking the admissibility
of the in-court identifications of Kinnamon. He concedes that the
district court applied the correct legal standard but urges that it
gave insufficient weight to the accuracy of the witnesses' prior
identifications of the accused, factor three of the five-factor
test announced in Neil v. Biggers, 409 U.S. 188, 199 (1972).
Regardless of the weighing by the district court, each of the
witnesses testified that the in-court identification rested on
observations at the crime scene and not on pre-trial displays. We
find no error.
The application for a certificate of probable cause is denied
and this appeal is dismissed.
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