United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FIFTH CIRCUIT November 15, 2005
Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
No. 04-70009
DONALD ANTHONY MILLER,
Petitioner-Appellee,
versus
DOUG DRETKE, DIRECTOR, TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS DIVISION,
Respondent-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
Before BARKSDALE, GARZA, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
RHESA HAWKINS BARKSDALE, Circuit Judge:
In 1982, Donald Anthony Miller was convicted in Texas state
court of capital murder and sentenced to death. In 2004, federal
habeas relief was conditionally granted for sentencing, the
district court concluding that the State violated due process by
withholding evidence, in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S.
83 (1963) (due process violation for prosecution to suppress
favorable material evidence) (Brady-claim). It denied relief for
the other claims, including the same Brady-claim as applied to
guilt/innocence. For those claims, a certificate of appealability
(COA) was denied by the district court.
1
The State appealed. Seeking leave to cross-appeal, Miller
requested a COA from this court on three claims; it was denied.
Miller v. Dretke, 404 F.3d 908 (5th Cir. 2005).
Therefore, at issue is the State’s appeal from the conditional
relief on sentencing. Any suppressed evidence was not material for
sentencing. JUDGMENT VACATED; RELIEF DENIED.
I.
(The following is in large part a repetition of the facts in
our first opinion. Id. at 911-12.) On 2 February 1982, Michael
Mozingo and Kenneth Whitt, traveling furniture salesmen, were
approached by Miller, Eddie Segura, and Danny Woods, who feigned
interest in purchasing furniture. After Mozingo and Whitt were
lured to Segura’s house to deliver the furniture, they were robbed,
bound, and gagged. Miller, Segura, and Woods drove Michael Mozingo
and Kenneth Whitt to Lake Houston in Harris County, Texas, where,
with their hands tied, they were murdered by Miller, with a
handgun, and Woods, with a shotgun.
In October 1982, Miller was convicted for capital murder, and
sentenced to death, for murdering Michael Mozingo while in the
course of committing, and attempting to commit, aggravated robbery.
Segura testified against Miller; Woods did not testify. (Before
Miller’s trial, Segura pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery; Woods,
to murder, receiving two life sentences. Post-trial, Segura was
sentenced to 25 years in prison.)
2
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. Miller v.
State, 741 S.W.2d 382 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987) (en banc). The
Supreme Court denied a writ of certiorari. Miller v. Texas, 486
U.S. 1061 (1988).
Miller requested state habeas relief, presenting numerous
claims, but not the pending Brady-claim. The state district court
entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommended
denial of relief on each claim. Ex Parte Miller, No. 350303-A
(232d Dist. Ct., Harris County, Tex. 7 May 1997). The Court of
Criminal Appeals adopted those findings and conclusions and denied
relief. Ex Parte Miller, No. 36140-01 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998)
(unpublished order).
In February 1999, Miller requested federal habeas relief,
raising five claims, including a Brady-claim presented for the
first time. Following an evidentiary hearing in September 2002,
the district court ruled in February 2004 that the Brady-claim was
not procedurally barred and conditionally granted habeas relief for
it, but only for sentencing. Miller v. Johnson, H-99-0405, slip
op. at 24 (S.D. Tex. 2 February 2004) (USDC Opn.). For the other
claims, including the Brady-claim for guilt/innocence, the district
court awarded the State summary judgment and denied, sua sponte, a
COA for those claims. The court stayed its judgment pending
appeal. In short, 22 years passed between the murders and federal
habeas relief being granted.
3
Following our denial of a COA for Miller, Miller, 404 F.3d at
920-21, oral argument was held on the State’s appeal from the
conditional habeas relief. At argument, we ordered supplemental
briefing on the State’s failure to exhaust claim.
II.
The State maintains the district court erred by: (1)
considering Miller’s Brady-claim, because it was not exhausted in
state court; and (2) in the alternative, granting relief on that
claim for his sentence.
Miller’s 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition is subject to the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA).
See, e.g., Penry v. Johnson, 532 U.S. 782, 792 (2001). Generally,
a district court is required by AEDPA to defer to the state
court’s: (1) adjudication of claims on questions of law and mixed
questions of law and fact, unless the state court’s “decision ...
was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of,
clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court
....” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); see Hill v. Johnson, 210 F.3d 481, 488
(5th Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 532 U.S. 1039 (2001); and (2)
factual findings unless they “resulted in a decision that was based
on an unreasonable determination of the facts in [the] light of the
evidence presented in the State court proceeding”. 28 U.S.C. §
2254(d)(2). Concerning the latter point, the state court’s factual
findings are “presumed to be correct”; the petitioner has “the
4
burden of rebutting the presumption of correctness by clear and
convincing evidence”. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
Obviously, because Miller’s Brady-claim was not presented in
state court, such AEDPA deference does not apply in this instance.
The district court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error;
its rulings of law, de novo. E.g., Fairman v. Anderson, 188 F.3d
635, 640 (5th Cir. 1999).
A.
Claims not raised in state court usually cannot be considered
on federal-habeas because they are not exhausted. See 28 U.S.C. §
2254(b)(1)(A). A federal court may consider an otherwise defaulted
claim, however, on a showing of either cause for the default and
prejudice or actual innocence. Bousley v. United States, 523 U.S.
614, 622-23 (1998); Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 298 (1989).
(Miller did not attempt to demonstrate actual innocence.)
Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court ruled
Miller’s Brady-claim was not barred because the cause-and-prejudice
exception was satisfied: the suppressed evidence was not
reasonably available to Miller; and the suppression prejudiced him
for sentencing. USDC Opn. at 20, 24. “Whether a federal habeas
petitioner has exhausted state remedies is a question of law.”
Wilder v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 255, 259 (5th Cir. 2001).
For its non-exhaustion claim, the State maintains the district
court erred in concluding there is no available state corrective
5
process for Miller’s claim and in failing to dismiss the claim
without prejudice to allow him to pursue a successive state habeas
application. On a related point, the State notes that the district
court is barred by AEDPA from granting, but not denying, habeas
relief on non-exhausted claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A).
Miller urges the State should be estopped from now asserting
his claim is not procedurally barred in state court because it took
the opposite position in earlier proceedings in district court.
Miller maintains the State seeks to gain an unfair advantage if the
claim is returned to state court because, if he is denied relief
there, the state court decision will be subject to the above-
discussed AEDPA deference.
As noted, under § 2254(b)(2) we can deny (but not grant)
Miller’s non-exhausted claim. Because we hold Miller is not
entitled to habeas relief on the Brady-claim, we need not decide
whether the district court erred in considering it.
6
B.
“[T]he Constitution is not violated every time the government
fails or chooses not to disclose evidence that might prove helpful
to the defense.” Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 436-37 (1995)
(addressing factors underlying when suppressed evidence is material
for Brady-claim purposes and manner by which such evidence is to be
considered). Therefore, the well-known elements for a Brady-claim
are: (1) the prosecutor suppressed evidence, (2) favorable to the
defense, (3) and material to guilt or punishment. Brady, 373 U.S.
at 87. (Accordingly, “the good faith or bad faith of the
prosecution” is not an element. Id.)
Evidence is material if there is “a reasonable probability
that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of
the proceeding would have been different”. United States v.
Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985) (emphasis added). This
reasonable-probability standard is met if the suppression is
significant enough to undermine confidence in the outcome of the
trial. Kyles, 514 U.S. at 433-34.
In determining whether evidence is material for Brady
purposes, we must consider the cumulative effect of all suppressed
evidence, rather than ruling on each item individually. Id. at
436-37. The district court’s rulings on materiality are reviewed
de novo, because they involve mixed questions of law and fact. See
Felder v. Johnson, 180 F.3d 206, 212 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 528
7
U.S. 1067 (1999); Trevino v. Johnson, 168 F.3d 173, 184 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied, 527 U.S. 1056 (1999).
The murders occurred in February 1982; Miller was convicted
that October. During a pre-trial motion, the prosecutor claimed
Brady did not require his disclosing impeachment evidence, but only
evidence exculpatory to Miller’s guilt. The trial court did not
require disclosure of additional evidence. Miller contends the
State suppressed the following material evidence that it had
generated: (1) statements by Ray McCall in 5 and 20 May 1982
interviews; (2) statements by Archie Morris in a 5 May 1982
interview; and (3) affidavits of four persons who did not testify.
The district court found investigator’s notes from these two
interviews with McCall were suppressed. At trial, McCall testified
as follows. On the night of the murders, McCall, the brother of
Segura’s then girlfriend, Monica McCall, visited Miller’s home
after the murders had been committed. Outside Miller’s presence,
Segura and Woods described the night’s events to McCall. Miller
paid McCall to go to the murder site later that night, to confirm
the bodies were still there; McCall was unable to find them, but
returned with Miller and did so.
In notes from the 5 May interview, an investigator
acknowledged McCall’s not having told the truth on prior occasions.
The district court found these notes raised questions about
McCall’s credibility and were important because McCall corroborated
8
testimony by Segura, who had been present at the murders and was
the State’s key witness. USDC Opn. at 22.
In the 20 May interview, McCall stated: on the night of the
murders, Woods and Segura said nothing about them, but admitted
only to the robbery; and he went home around 9:00 p.m. (mentioning
nothing in the statement about going to look for the bodies either
alone or with Miller). The district court noted McCall’s
statements during this interview differed from his trial testimony
and could have been used for impeachment. Id.
Morris (the grandfather of Ray and Monica McCall, as well as
of Miller’s then girlfriend) was the source for the .38 caliber
handgun used in the murders. The district court found prosecutor’s
notes of Morris’ 5 May statement that he owned only a .22 caliber
handgun had not been given to Miller. At trial, Morris testified:
just prior to the murders (though he could not recall precisely
when), Miller had borrowed from him the .38 caliber handgun used in
the murders; and McCall returned it to him sometime after the
murders. While not specifically addressing Morris’ contradictory
statements, the district court found the suppressed evidence
undermined Segura’s credibility, as well as the value of McCall and
Morris’ corroborating testimony. Id. at 24.
The State concedes suppression of affidavits from four who did
not testify: Robert White, Tommy Holsinger, Tammie Jones, and
Melissa Spears. They had been in a group with Woods on the evening
9
of 2-3 February 1982, after the murders earlier that evening. In
their affidavits, each affiant told police they overheard Woods
brag about the murders. Detective Clampitte was one of the
investigating officers; arrested Miller, Segura, and Woods; and
took the four statements. Miller’s counsel asked the Detective
about the affidavits on cross-examination at trial (Miller’s
counsel knew the names of the affiants without the Detective having
named them); and Detective Clampitte testified about them, but the
trial court refused their being then provided to Miller.
Again, Woods did not testify. White’s affidavit stated Woods
told him that, after one of the victims was hit with a shotgun
blast, “[e]ither Danny [Woods] or the guy with Danny then reached
down into his boot and pulled a .38 pistol and shot the other guy
when he started to run”. White’s affidavit also stated that, when
Woods visited White the day after the murders, Woods denied Miller
was one of the shooters. Jones’ affidavit describes Woods having
possibly said a .45 caliber handgun was used in the murders.
Holsinger’s affidavit suggests Woods took full responsibility for
the murders and left Holsinger with the impression “it was an
everyday thing with him”. The district court found the affidavits
indicated Woods, not Miller, killed both victims and that Segura
was armed. Id. at 23.
Referring primarily to McCall and Morris’ statements, and
applying Brady’s above-described three-part test, the district
10
court ruled: (1) the State withheld evidence; (2) it was favorable
to Miller; and (3) it was material, but only for sentencing. USDC
Opn. at 26. In ruling earlier on the procedural-bar prejudice
element, the district court held: although Miller’s “complicity in
the killings is not seriously disputed”, Miller “challenge[d] his
portrayal as the ringleader and shooter, a role that warranted
conviction for capital murder and imposition of the death
sentence”. Id. at 23 (emphasis added). In ruling on the Brady-
claim, the district court noted: “The analysis for [Brady-]
materiality tracks that of [procedural-bar] prejudice”. Id. at 26.
It held: “the newly disclosed evidence raises significant doubt
about the outcome of the trial, particularly the punishment
assessed”; and “the State’s refusal to disclose material evidence
... vitiated the sentence imposed”. Id.
Following Miller’s conviction, in order to sentence him to
death, the jury was required to, and did, unanimously answer two
special issues in the affirmative:
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 1
Whether the conduct of the defendant that
caused the death of the deceased was committed
deliberately and with the reasonable
expectation that ... death ... would result.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 2
Whether there is a probability that the
defendant would commit criminal acts of
violence that would constitute a continuing
threat to society.
11
TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC., art 37.071(b) (Vernon 1981) (emphasis added).
(Miller’s trial was held before a third special issue for
mitigation was added to the Texas death penalty statute in 1991.
TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC., art 37.071, § 2(e)(1), added by 1991 Tex. Sess.
Law Serv. Ch. 838 (S.B. 880) (Vernon).) Therefore, for those two
answers, at issue is whether “there is a reasonable probability
that, had the [suppressed] evidence been disclosed to [Miller], the
result of the [penalty phase] would have been different”. Bagley,
473 U.S. at 682.
The State maintains: the trial transcript demonstrates that
much of the claimed suppressed evidence was disclosed (again, the
State concedes suppression only of the four affidavits of non-
testifying witnesses); any suppressed evidence provides only
incremental impeachment value and is, therefore, not material; and,
in other words, given the comprehensive evidence of Miller’s guilt
and future dangerousness, even if suppressed evidence had been
disclosed, there is not a reasonable probability the sentence would
have been different.
Keying on all three elements for a Brady claim, Miller
responds: the district court’s determination that evidence was
suppressed is reasonable; the State fails to demonstrate the
suppressed evidence was not favorable; and the district court ruled
correctly that there was a reasonable probability the result of the
12
penalty phase would have been different had the suppressed evidence
been disclosed.
1.
The most substantial evidence at issue is McCall’s lengthy 20
May statement, which was recorded and transcribed. As discussed,
McCall stated: on the night of the murders, Woods and Segura said
nothing about them, admitting only to the robbery; and he went home
around 9:00 p.m. He said nothing about going to look for the
bodies.
Regarding that statement, the State acknowledges that Miller’s
state habeas counsel received only one side of the two-sided
interview tape; but, it maintains Miller’s trial counsel, Rick
Stover, received the tape-recorded and transcribed statement in
their entirety and cross-examined McCall about the statement. In
support of this contention, the State points to Stover’s use of the
term “destruction derby”, found on the second side of the tape, in
cross-examining McCall, demonstrating Stover must have listened to
the entire tape. At the district court evidentiary hearing in 2002
(approximately 20 years after the trial), the prosecutor, Olsen,
testified he gave Stover the tape and probably gave him the
transcript. Although Stover testified at the evidentiary hearing
that he did not remember receiving a transcript of the tape, he
admitted that, based on his review of his cross-examination of
McCall, it was obvious he (Stover) must have heard the tape.
13
Citing numerous comments in the statement that would have been
damaging to Miller, including, inter alia, McCall’s discussion of
Miller’s previous criminal activity, the State questions whether it
would be favorable to Miller. For example, the statement includes
McCall’s description of Miller’s involvement in numerous automobile
thefts, smoking marijuana, selling methamphetamine, and moving the
stolen furniture out of Segura’s house following the murders. The
State points out: Miller claims McCall, in his 20 May statement,
denied having viewed the bodies; but, there is no denial – the
topic is simply absent from the statement.
Given the absence of any denial, and use by Stover, in cross-
examining McCall, of much of the information in the 20 May
statement, the State contends Miller cannot demonstrate suppressed
portions of the statement, if any, were material. Rather,
according to the State, given the extensive corroborative evidence
against Miller, the statement only provided incremental impeachment
value that is not material for Brady purposes. See Edmond v.
Collins, 8 F.3d 290, 294 (5th Cir. 1993). In this regard, the
State points to McCall’s acknowledgment at trial that he had
previously been untruthful.
Miller counters that McCall’s 20 May statement was at least
partially suppressed and was favorable and material. Miller
concedes Stover’s cross-examination of McCall at trial and Stover’s
testimony at the district court evidentiary hearing indicate he
14
received part of the tape. Miller contends, however, that the
district court reasonably found it was suppressed, given the
State’s on-the-record, pre-trial incorrect position concerning its
obligation to produce impeachment evidence and its failure at the
state habeas proceeding to disclose the transcript of the
interview. In addition, Miller maintains Stover failed to cross-
examine McCall about the most damaging portions of the 20 May
interview (McCall’s claim the co-defendants said nothing about the
murders and that he left Miller’s house alone an hour and a half
after arriving and did not return until the next day), something
Stover would have asked about had he received the entire tape or
transcript.
Miller next claims the 20 May interview was favorable because,
as the district court found, it constituted a “hornbook example[]
of impeachment evidence”. USDC Opn. at 26. McCall’s 20 May
statement differed from his trial testimony. Therefore, according
to Miller, it could be used to impeach McCall and was thus
favorable to Miller.
Finally, Miller asserts that the statement is material, based
on several important differences between it and McCall’s trial
testimony and the State’s reliance on McCall’s testimony,
particularly at sentencing. Miller emphasizes especially McCall’s
failure in the statement to mention searching for the bodies on the
night of the murder, either alone or with Miller; instead, McCall
15
claimed he left Miller’s house at approximately 9:00 p.m. Miller
asserts that, according to Stover’s testimony at the district court
evidentiary hearing, McCall’s testimony about seeing the bodies,
including his detailed description of their position and
appearance, was some of the most damning at the trial. Miller
contends the State’s persistent references to McCall’s testimony in
closing argument demonstrates the materiality of any information
that could have been used to impeach him. Given the importance to
the State of McCall’s testimony, Miller contends there is a
reasonable probability that, had it been impeached, at least one
juror would have answered one of the special issues differently.
2.
The transcription of Olsen’s notes from 5 May covers several
interviews, including with McCall and Morris. At McCall’s 5 May
interview, he acknowledged having been untruthful previously,
admitted to helping Segura and Miller dispose of the stolen
furniture, but denied any responsibility for disposing of the .38
caliber handgun. At the district court evidentiary hearing, Stover
testified that, although he could not specifically remember, he did
not believe he received the 5 May notes; he testified they were
material because of their usefulness in impeaching McCall and the
extent to which the State relied on McCall’s testimony.
The State maintains the notes were neither suppressed nor
material. They reflect Olsen’s impression that McCall was not
being truthful. According to the State, because the prosecutor
16
(Olsen) and Miller’s counsel (Stover) questioned McCall at trial
about his prior inconsistent statements, Miller cannot demonstrate
the 5 May interview notes were either suppressed or material.
Miller maintains the 5 May notes from McCall’s interview
demonstrate, inter alia, that McCall met with Olsen many more times
than he admitted at trial and contribute to the defense theory that
McCall pandered to prosecutors. Miller contends the district court
did not err in finding the 5 May notes, in conjunction with other
suppressed evidence, material for sentencing. USDC Opn. at 26.
3.
As discussed, at his 5 May interview, Morris denied having a
.38 caliber handgun, stating he had only a .22 caliber handgun that
he never gave to Miller. At trial, Stover did not question Morris
about these denials. At the district court evidentiary hearing,
Stover testified that, had he been provided Morris’ statement, he
would have impeached him with it and perhaps implied that McCall,
not Miller, was the shooter. The district court determined Morris’
statement was “hornbook ... impeachment evidence” and, together
with other suppressed evidence, its suppression resulted in a Brady
violation for sentencing. USDC Opn. at 26.
The State maintains Miller cannot demonstrate the notes were
suppressed. In the alternative, it contends that, even if Stover
did not receive the notes about Morris’ prior inconsistent
statement, the statement was not material in the light of the
17
following evidence corroborating Morris’ trial testimony: Segura
testified he and Miller stopped at Morris’ house prior to the
murders; McCall testified that, after the murders, he received the
.38 caliber handgun from Miller and returned it to Morris; and,
Morris’ neighbor, Tommy Reyes, testified Morris gave him the gun
for safe keeping after the murders. The gun was found by
investigators at Reyes’ home.
Miller responds that, had Morris’ testimony been impeached,
the jury could only connect Miller to the murder weapon through the
testimony of Segura and McCall, both of whom had motivation to
implicate Miller and to satisfy prosecutors. According to Miller,
Morris’ statement leaves open the possibility Segura obtained the
gun from Morris and supports the defense theory that either Segura
or McCall could have shot Michael Mozingo (the murder for which
Miller was tried). Miller maintains it was not error for the
district court to find Morris’ statement material to sentencing.
4.
As discussed, starting with his cross-examination at trial,
the four affidavits of non-testifying witnesses were covered by
Detective Clampitte, who testified to having taken them shortly
after the murders. The Detective had the affidavits when he
testified and, at one point, refreshed his recollection by
reviewing them. After the Detective testified to having the
affidavits, Stover asked for them; Olsen objected; and the court
sustained the objection. Stover later asked again for the
18
statements, but the trial court again denied his request. The
affidavits were not specifically addressed at the district court
evidentiary hearing.
While the State concedes the affidavits were suppressed, it
maintains: their substance was disclosed to Stover in the offense
reports; and, even if not so disclosed, they were not material.
The State also maintains: the statements are inadmissible hearsay
and thus cannot be material; even if they were admissible, because
they are not inconsistent with testimony at trial that Miller was
a shooter, they could not affect the outcome of sentencing; and,
portions of the affidavits could have been harmful to Miller at
trial.
Miller counters that the affidavits would have been admissible
under the Texas Rules of Evidence, because Detective Clampitte
testified from them and used them to refresh his recollection. See
TEXAS CODE OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURES, Art. 38.24, V.A.C.C.P. (1985) (now
TEX. R. EVID. 106 and 107). The affidavits, according to Miller,
were material, in part due to the manner by which they were
introduced - through the testimony of the homicide detective for
the case: through that testimony, the jury was invited to conclude
Woods had implicated himself and Miller to the four affiants.
Miller contends portions of the affidavits, most importantly
White’s statement that Woods said the other shooter pulled the .38
from his boot, support a conclusion that someone other than Miller
19
was the shooter, because, according to Miller, it was clearly
established at trial that he was not wearing boots at the time of
the murders. Miller also points to White’s statement in his
affidavit that, the day after the murders, Woods denied Miller was
involved. Jones’ affidavit provides Woods may have said a .45 was
used in the murders; Miller claims this supports the possibility
Segura, who was known to have a .45, was also armed. According to
Miller, in evaluating the suppressed affidavits together with the
other suppressed evidence, the district court did not err in
determining at least one juror would have answered the
deliberateness issue differently.
C.
For the three Brady-claim elements, the State maintains the
evidence in issue is not material; in addition, it claims: it did
not suppress evidence, other than the four affidavits; and any
suppressed evidence was not favorable to Miller. In the light of
our holding, infra, that the evidence is not material to the jury’s
answering either of the special issues in the affirmative, we need
not decide whether the evidence was either suppressed or favorable.
(It appears, however, that a substantial portion of it was neither
suppressed nor favorable.)
Again, evidence is material under Brady if there is a
reasonable probability the result of the proceeding (here
sentencing) would have been different had the evidence been
20
disclosed; a reasonable probability is one sufficient to undermine
confidence in the outcome. Kyles, 514 U.S. at 433-34. As
discussed, for determining materiality, the evidence is considered
“collectively, not item by item”. Id. at 436. “We evaluate the
tendency and force of the undisclosed evidence item by item; there
is no other way. We evaluate its cumulative effect for purposes of
materiality separately ....” Id. at 437 n.10 (emphasis added). If
the evidence provides only incremental impeachment value, it does
not rise to the level of Brady materiality. See Drew v. Collins,
964 F.2d 411, 419-420 (5th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 509 U.S. 925
(1993).
1.
First, the evidence from 5 and 20 May interviews with McCall
lacks force in the light of other, overwhelming evidence presented
at trial. For example: (1) Miller admitted to Jimmy Douglass they
had “ripped off” some furniture; (2) Ronald Theiss testified Miller
brought Segura’s car to his shop for repair and repainting and left
new furniture in his front yard at that same time; (3) Segura
testified in great detail about Miller’s shooting both Mozingo and
Whitt; (4) Woods was seen by Robert Fletcher with the victims
immediately before their murders, and Woods was seen in Segura’s
car with two other people around the same time; (5) Miller tried to
sell the stolen furniture soon after the murders; (6) Miller’s
fingerprints were found on a piece of paper in the back of the
21
furniture truck and on one of the stolen tables stored in a
warehouse; (7) Miller and Segura rented a storage unit to store
furniture in the same facility used by McCall soon after the
murders; (8) Morris testified Miller obtained the .38 caliber
handgun from him; and (9) McCall testified Woods and Segura
admitted to robbing the victims. None of this evidence could be
undermined by either of the May statements given by McCall.
Miller contends Stover could have impeached McCall’s testimony
on the basis of his prior untruthfulness. That McCall had been
untruthful previously, however, was presented to the jury because
McCall admitted it on direct examination. Stover also impeached
McCall with this information and questioned McCall’s motivations
for testifying. The jury had the opportunity to weigh McCall’s
credibility and credit his testimony accordingly.
Miller contends McCall’s failure to mention in his 20 May
statement viewing the bodies either alone, or with Miller, on the
night of the murders is particularly probative. However, McCall’s
failure to do so is understandable; and, as the State points out,
it does not make it more or less likely that Miller committed the
crimes for which the death penalty was warranted.
Olsen’s notes of the 5 May interview of McCall are relatively
brief. Most importantly, they contain McCall’s admitting he had
not been truthful previously and his denying having anything to do
with possessing, or disposing of, the .38 caliber handgun after the
22
murders. Again, Miller maintains Stover could have used this
evidence to impeach McCall. However, as noted, both Olsen and
Stover questioned McCall about prior inconsistent statements. And,
Stover elicited an admission by McCall that he only told the State
about Miller’s comments to him after McCall entered guilty pleas on
three new charges. A review of all of McCall’s testimony reveals
that he was thoroughly impeached as dishonest and a criminal.
Because McCall was thoroughly impeached at trial, the notes of the
5 and 20 May interviews have only incremental impeachment value.
2.
Likewise, the 5 May notes of the Morris interview lacked force
in the light of trial testimony about his .38 caliber handgun.
Those notes and Morris’ trial testimony were very brief. That
Morris at first denied owning a .38 could not be said to have
affected the outcome of sentencing, particularly in the light of
evidence corroborating his trial testimony: Segura testified he
and Miller stopped by Morris’ house prior to the murders to obtain
a gun; McCall testified he received the .38 from Miller after the
murders and returned it to Morris at Miller’s request; Morris’
neighbor, Reyes, a witness who had no other connection to Segura,
Miller or McCall, testified Morris gave him the .38 caliber handgun
for safe keeping after the murders; McCall advised investigators
they could find the gun at Morris’ house; the gun was recovered
from Reyes’ garage; and bullets recovered from the bodies were
23
consistent with the .38 recovered from Reyes’ garage. In addition,
as noted, Miller’s then girlfriend was Morris’ grandchild. In his
statement, Morris also stated: “He [did] not know whether ...
[Miller] was able to get a pistol from his house. Perhaps [Miller]
had left or hidden one there earlier. However, he did not remember
seeing [Miller] get a pistol from his house with his permission.”
Obviously, this indicates Miller was, inter alia, very capable of
obtaining a gun from Morris’ home.
3.
Finally, the four affidavits, in many ways, support Miller’s
guilt and do not contradict Segura and McCall’s testimony. None of
the affiants were witnesses to the robbery and murders; their only
knowledge was from Woods’ statements. Given the circumstances
surrounding Woods’ statements to the four affiants, their
reliability is highly suspect. White and Holsinger’s affidavits
reflect most of Woods’ statements were made late at night after
they had smoked marijuana. Conversations forming the basis of
Jones and Spears’ affidavits were in the early morning hours after
drinking in a club with them, White, and Holsinger; and both Jones
and Spears stated in their affidavits that Woods appeared to be
high on narcotics. Moreover, the substance of the affidavits was
presented to a substantial degree to the jury by Miller’s cross-
examination of Detective Clampitte.
D.
24
Having evaluated each item of evidence, we must now evaluate
the cumulative effect for purposes of materiality. Of course, in
doing so, the foregoing discussion of the evidence is in play.
1.
The first special issue required the jury to find Miller’s
conduct that caused Michael Mozingo’s death was both deliberate and
with the reasonable expectation death would occur. Miller
repeatedly contends, and the district court noted, that the
allegedly suppressed evidence undermines Miller’s role as the ring
leader. However, even if he did not have that role, there is
overwhelming evidence he was deeply involved in the robbery and
murders. In other words, his conduct was deliberate. And, given
the overwhelming evidence of Miller’s involvement in the crimes and
of at least two of the participants being armed, it is completely
implausible Miller could have participated and not anticipated
death would occur.
Accordingly, having reviewed the record, and in the light of
the evidence presented to the jury, the brutal nature of the
crimes, and the callousness with which the victims were treated, we
do not find a reasonable probability any juror would have answered
the deliberateness special issue differently, even if all the
allegedly suppressed evidence had been disclosed.
25
2.
The second special issue required the jury to find Miller
would both commit violent crimes and be a continuing threat to
society (future dangerousness). It does not appear that Miller
contends the allegedly suppressed evidence is material for this
special issue. In any event, for all of such evidence, only a
small portion of McCall’s 20 May statement could be said to be even
tangentially relevant to this issue - his statements that Miller
was not violent. This statement, made by Miller’s friend and
admitted partner in crime, could hardly be material.
For example, prior to the murders in early 1982, Miller had
pleaded guilty in March 1980 to stealing a truck, for which he was
sentenced to probation. That October, his probation was revoked,
and he was sentenced to three years in prison when he pleaded
guilty to stealing an automobile while on probation. At the
punishment phase, in addition to these two convictions, testimony
was offered that, after Miller was released from the penitentiary,
he had been involved in an armed robbery of illegal drugs and
another planned drug robbery (additional criminal conduct). The
two convictions and additional criminal conduct occurred between
when Miller was 18 years of age in 1980 and when he committed the
instant murders in conjunction with armed robbery in early 1982.
Accordingly, the State argued to the jury that Miller’s criminal
conduct had progressively become more violent. This additional
26
criminal conduct provided a further basis on which the jury could
have found against Miller on the future dangerousness special
issue.
In sum, given Miller’s criminal history and the nature of the
murders, there is no reasonable probability any juror would have
answered that special issue differently had all the allegedly
suppressed evidence been disclosed; there is no reasonable
probability that such disclosure of evidence would have resulted in
a different outcome at sentencing. Restated, in the light of the
comprehensive evidence bearing on sentencing, even if the allegedly
suppressed evidence had been disclosed, this does not undermine our
confidence that Miller would have still received the death penalty.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the conditional habeas relief
granted Miller is VACATED; and habeas relief is DENIED.
VACATED; DENIED
27
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Unlike the majority, I conclude that, although Miller has not
exhausted his state remedies, denial of relief on the merits under
28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2) is not appropriate because Miller has at
least made a colorable federal claim for relief. I would remand to
the district court with instructions either to dismiss the
proceedings for failure to exhaust or to stay and abey them while
Miller brings his Brady claim before a state habeas court.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
Miller did not present his Brady claim in his state habeas
application because he did not receive the relevant evidence until
after he had filed his federal habeas petition. Texas permits
subsequent applications in death penalty cases in three distinct
circumstances: 1) when the factual or legal basis for the new
claims or issues was not available at the time of the original
petition; 2) when the applicant can show by a preponderance of the
evidence that no rational juror would have found the applicant
guilty but for the violation of the constitution; or 3) when the
applicant can show by clear and convincing evidence that no
rational juror would have answered affirmatively any of the special
issues submitted in capital cases. TEX. CRIM. PROC. CODE ANN. art.
11.071 § 5(a)(1)-(3); see Ex parte Graves 70 S.W.3d 103, 115 & n.49
(Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (stating that Texas has three exceptions to
the general rule against successive habeas petitions and listing
those described above).
The district court erroneously read the first two exceptions
as two elements of a single exception and therefore incorrectly
determined that Miller would have to demonstrate that he could meet
either the first and second exceptions or the third. Because it
concluded that he could not satisfy the second or third exception,
the district court held that Miller had no state forum in which to
bring his Brady claim and that he had therefore exhausted his state
law remedies. This holding was in error because Miller would be
able to bring a subsequent application in Texas court under the
first exception.1
When a federal habeas petitioner brings an unexhausted claim,
the court should either dismiss the proceedings for failure to
exhaust or stay and abey them until a state habeas court has had
the opportunity to hear the claim. Rhines v. Weber, __ U.S. __,
125 S.Ct. 1528, 1534 (2005). Under Rhines, stay and abeyance is
appropriate when the district court finds that: 1) there was good
cause for the failure to exhaust the claim; 2) the claim is not
plainly meritless; and 3) there is no indication that the failure
was for purposes of delay. Id. at 1535. The parties have not
1
Although many years have passed since Miller learned of
the factual basis for his Brady claim, it does not seem that he
would be time barred from bringing it in a subsequent habeas
application. Article 11.071 has detailed scheduling deadlines for
initial habeas applications, but it does not provide such
guidelines for successive applications. See generally TEX. CRIM.
PROC. CODE ANN. art. 11.071.
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briefed the first and third elements, so the district court would
need to make the appropriate findings on remand.2
The second element, however, has been thoroughly briefed, and
I conclude that Miller’s Brady claim is not plainly meritless
because the various pieces of evidence, taken together, could have
raised a reasonable doubt in a juror as to either special
interrogatory. See United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682
(1985) (holding that evidence is material under Brady if there is
a reasonable probability that, had it been disclosed, the result of
the proceeding would have been different); United States v. Sipe,
388 F.3d 471, 478 (5th Cir. 2004) (holding that when there are
multiple Brady violations, the court must analyze the cumulative
effect of the suppressed evidence).
The first piece of evidence at issue is notes and transcripts
from interviews with McCall. Effectively impeaching McCall was
crucial to the defense given the weight the prosecution asked the
jury to place on McCall’s testimony. As the majority points out,
2
I suspect that the cause for Miller’s failure to exhaust
was Texas’s two-forums rule, which would prevent him from bringing
his Brady claim in state court while his exhausted claims were
pending in federal court. See Ex parte Powers, 487 S.W.2d 101
(Tex. Crim. App. 1972). Because Miller did not discover the
suppressed evidence until after he had filed his petition in
federal court in 1999, he would have had to forego federal habeas
review of his exhausted claims if he chose to pursue his Brady
claim in state court. Texas has since lifted its two-forum rule,
which means that the state court could now hear Miller’s claim if
we stayed the proceedings rather than dismiss them. See Ex parte
Soffar, 143 S.W.3d 804, 807 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
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McCall was generally impeached on cross-examination as a dishonest
criminal who was not always truthful with the police during the
course of the investigation. Nevertheless, there is a significant
qualitative difference between evidence that a witness is generally
not truthful and specific evidence that he gave inconsistent
statements with respect to the subject of his crucial testimony.
I disagree with the majority’s position that specific impeachment
material is only of incremental value in light of abundant general
impeachment material. The defense was not able to cross-examine
McCall about his statements in the May 20 interview in which he
specifically denied that Woods and Segura had confessed the murders
to him and made no mention of going to the crime scene with Miller.
Those statements specifically contradicted his trial testimony.
Had the jury been able to hear that in addition to being generally
dishonest, McCall had made specific statements inconsistent with
the heart of his trial testimony, it might have given his testimony
less weight. McCall provided important corroboration of Segura’s
account of the crime, which portrayed Miller as a leader in the
killings, so weakening his testimony could have cast doubt on
whether Miller planned the killings and was an actual shooter.
The second piece of allegedly suppressed evidence was police
notes from interviews with Morris. Morris, who testified that he
had given his .38 caliber handgun to Miller in the days before the
murders, was not impeached with prior inconsistent statements at
all. His testimony provided critical corroboration from someone
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uninvolved with the crime linking Miller to one of the murder
weapons, which showed at sentencing that Miller had orchestrated
the murders in advance. The majority notes that Reyes, Segura and
McCall could corroborate Morris’s testimony. Reyes, however, could
only corroborate Morris’s account of what happened after the
murders, not before, so he could not bolster that part of Morris’s
testimony that was most important at sentencing, i.e. that Miller
procured a weapon days in advance of the murders. Moreover, Segura
and McCall’s corroboration was of limited value because of their
limited credibility. Indeed, Morris’s testimony functioned at
trial to provide credible, disinterested corroboration of their
account of the crime. The majority’s reliance on Segura and McCall
to bolster Morris’s account therefore begs the question.
The third group of evidence at issue consists of affidavits of
four non-testifying witnesses. One affiant, Robert White, stated
that Woods had confessed to the murders and implied that Miller was
not a shooter. Another affiant stated that Woods might have said
that a .45 caliber gun was used. That statement is significant
because McCall testified that Segura kept a .45 in his car, which
was used to transport the victims. The majority concludes that the
affidavits are not material because they are unreliable in that
they were based on conversations that occurred either late at night
or early in the morning after the declarants and Woods had either smoked
marijuana or drank alcohol. I am unconvinced that jurors would necessarily find unreliable a person’s
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recollection of statements heard while intoxicated. In addition, if they focused on Woods’s
intoxication, rather than the affiants’, jurors might find the evidence quite reliable, as intoxication
often makes one less reticent to speak the truth.
The majo rity correctly points out that the jury did not need to believe that Miller was the
ringleader or a shooter to find that he acted deliberately and with the reasonable expectation that the
victim would die, the question of the first interrogatory. On the other hand, a juror could believe that
Miller was complicit in the robberies and also have a reasonable doubt that Miller expected Mozingo
to die during their course. The strongest evidence of Miller’s expectation that Mozingo would die
was: 1) that he procured the gun from Morris, showing that he had planned the murder; 2) McCall’s
testimony portraying Miller as a ringleader in the crime; and 3) Segura’s account of the crime, which
pointed to Miller as a shooter. The suppressed evidence casts doubt on each of these.
Undermining the portrayal of Miller as the ring leader and shooter could have also affected
the jury’s finding that Miller posed a future danger of violent crime, the question of the second
interrogatory. The majority concludes that the exculpatory evidence is not material to this inquiry
given Miller’s criminal history. That history alone, however, does not necessarily suggest that Miller
would go on to commit violent crime in the future. While Miller’s criminal history was becoming
increasingly serious, it did not include episodes of actual violence. Testimony that Miller had a
central role in planing and carrying out the murders, therefore, was by far the best evidence of his
future dangerousness.3 Because the suppressed evidence would have undermined the strongest
3
Admittedly, the jury also heard evidence that Miller
planned to kill Segura for testifying in this case, but that
evidence came from McCall. The exculpatory evidence, as discussed
above, would have allowed the defense to better impeach McCall.
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indicators of Miller’s future dangerousness, it might have caused a juror to find reasonable doubt that
Miller would commit violent crimes in the future.
Based on the above, I find the materiality question to be close. At the very least, Miller’s
Brady claim is not plainly meritless. For that reason, I woul d remand to the district court with
instructions to determine if the first and third prongs of Rhines v. Webber are satisfied and to stay and
abey the proceedings if they are.
The majority dismisses the petition on the merits rather than for failure to exhaust. See 28
U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2) (“An application for a writ of habeas corpus may be denied on the merits,
notwithstanding the failure of the applicant to exhaust the remedies available in the courts of the
State.”). Denial of relief under § 2254(b)(2), however, is “inappropriate” unless “it is perfectly clear
that the applicant does not even raise a colorable federal claim.” Mercadel v. Cain, 179 F.3d 271,
276 n.4 (5th Cir. 1999) (quoting Granberry v. Green, 481 U.S. 129, 135 (1987) and collecting
cases). As demonstrated above, Miller’s Brady claim is at least colorable, so dismissal under §
2254(b)(2) is inappropriate.
Under the AEDPA, our task is to review the state habeas court’s findings and conclusions,
not to make those determinations ourselves. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). In keeping with that scheme,
I would follow Mercadel and allow the state court an opportunity to resolve the factual and legal
issues in dispute. I would further instruct the district court to determine, under Rhines, whether to
dismiss the proceedings or stay and abey them until the state court has had such an opportunity.
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