In the
Missouri Court of Appeals
Western District
)
IN RE: RODNEY L. LINCOLN )
) WD79854
Petitioner, )
) OPINION FILED: October 11, 2016
v. )
)
JAY CASSADY, Superintendent, )
Jefferson City Correctional Center, )
)
Respondent. )
ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN HABEAS CORPUS
Before Writ Division: Gary D. Witt, Presiding Judge, Cynthia L. Martin, Judge and
Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judge
Rodney L. Lincoln ("Relator") has filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus
requesting the vacation of his 1983 convictions of two counts of first-degree assault and of
manslaughter. Relator asserts that newly discovered evidence clearly and convincingly
establishes that he is actually innocent, a freestanding claim of actual innocence. Relator
also claims that the preponderance of the evidence establishes either the gateway of actual
innocence or of cause and prejudice, permitting review of procedurally barred claims that
Relator was denied a constitutionally adequate trial.
We conclude that Relator would be unable to sustain his burden to establish the
procedurally barred claims that he was denied a constitutionally adequate trial, rendering
it unnecessary to determine whether Relator has sustained his burden to establish a gateway
to review those claims. Because the Missouri Supreme Court has not recognized a
freestanding claim of actual innocence in cases where the death penalty has not been
imposed, we are not at liberty to expand Missouri habeas jurisprudence to permit
consideration of the claim in this case. Accordingly, Relator's habeas petition is denied.
Factual and Procedural Background1
On April 27, 1982, Joanne Tate was found dead in her apartment, lying face down
in a pool of blood. Tate's daughters, M.D. (then age 7) and R.T. (then age 4), were found
in bed, covered in blood, and with multiple stab wounds.
M.D. initially told police that "Bill" was the assailant, and offered other information
about Bill's appearance, where her mother had met and spent time with Bill, and the car
that Bill drove. Sometime later, M.D. identified Relator as the assailant. At trial, M.D.
identified Relator as the assailant. Though Relator is not named "Bill," and did not match
the other characteristics about the assailant first mentioned by M.D., M.D. explained during
cross examination that she initially told people the assailant was named "Bill" because she
was sick and hurt and people kept bothering her for a name.
1
The factual and procedural background is drawn largely, and without further attribution, from Lincoln v.
State, 457 S.W.3d 800 (Mo. App. E.D. 2014).
2
An expert witness testified at trial that a pubic hair found on a blanket in Tate's room
"matched" Relator's hair, and that he had never been involved in a case where a hair
recovered from the crime scene matched to more than one person.
The jury convicted Relator of two counts of first-degree assault and of
manslaughter. Relator was sentenced to a term of fifteen years' imprisonment on the
manslaughter count and of life imprisonment on each assault count, with each term to run
consecutively.
In 2005, Relator successively petitioned for DNA testing pursuant to section
547.035.2 That testing resulted in a stipulated determination that the pubic hair which had
been the subject of expert witness testimony at trial did not, in fact, belong to Relator.
However, Relator's section 547.037 request to be released from prison was denied because
the DNA testing did not establish Relator's innocence, as the "determinative factor" in
Relator's conviction was not the expert hair match testimony, but was instead M.D.'s
testimony, "the key to the convictions." Lincoln v. State, 457 S.W.3d 800, 807-08 (Mo.
App. E.D. 2014).
In November 2015, M.D., then 41, recanted her eyewitness identification of Relator
as the assailant. M.D. claims that she was traumatized and pressured into identifying
Relator as the assailant, and now believes that the assailant was a serial killer whose family
2
Sections 547.035 and 547.037 address post-conviction forensic DNA testing, representing legislatively
authorized relief from a final conviction that is distinct from Rule 91 habeas jurisprudence. McKim v. Cassady, 457
S.W.3d 831, 842 n.22 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015). All statutory references are to RSMo 2000, as supplemented to the
relevant date, except as otherwise noted.
3
owned a Volkswagen repair shop in the area of the crimes. M.D.'s initial reports to the
authorities had said that the assailant worked on her mother's car and drove a Volkswagen.
Based on M.D.'s recanted testimony, Relator petitioned the Cole County Circuit
Court for a writ of habeas corpus asserting his innocence and that he was deprived of a
constitutionally adequate trial. On June 16, 2016, the Cole County Circuit Court denied
Relator's petition.
Relator then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in this court. We issued our
order to show cause to the State, which then filed its response to the writ petition. Relator
filed a reply to the State's response.
Analysis
Rule 91.01(b) authorizes any person "restrained of liberty within this state [to]
petition for a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the cause of such restraint." "[A] writ
of habeas corpus may be issued when a person is restrained of his or her liberty in violation
of the constitution or laws of the state or federal government." State ex rel. Amrine v.
Roper, 102 S.W.3d 541, 545-46 (Mo. banc 2003) (citing State ex rel. Nixon v. Jaynes, 63
S.W.3d 210, 214 (Mo. banc 2001)). "Even though the interests protected by the writ are
fundamental, relief is limited in order to avoid unending challenges to final judgments."
Id. at 546. Entitlement to habeas relief has thus been recognized in Missouri when a
"petitioner raises a jurisdictional issue, can demonstrate 'cause and prejudice,' or in
extraordinary circumstances, when the petitioner can demonstrate that a 'manifest injustice'
would result unless habeas relief is granted." Id. (citing Nixon, 63 S.W.3d at 215; State ex
rel. Simmons v. White, 866 S.W.2d 443, 446 (Mo. banc 1993)). The argument that newly
4
discovered evidence establishes a defendant's actual innocence is a habeas theory that
"turns on [] application of the manifest injustice standard" for habeas relief. Id.
Relator's petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleges: (1) a freestanding claim of
actual innocence; (2) a claim of actual innocence as a gateway to permit review of
procedurally barred claims3 that Relator was denied a constitutionally adequate trial; and
(3) a claim of cause and prejudice as a gateway to permit review of procedurally barred
claims that Relator was denied a constitutionally adequate trial.
Generally speaking, both a freestanding claim of actual innocence and a gateway
claim of actual innocence seek habeas relief based on newly discovered evidence of
innocence. Though the claims have this feature in common, they are otherwise materially
distinguishable.
A freestanding claim of actual innocence presumes that a petitioner received a
constitutionally adequate trial, but argues that it would nonetheless be manifestly unjust to
continue to restrain the petitioner because newly discovered evidence clearly and
convincingly shows "actual innocence that undermines confidence in the correctness of the
[trial] judgment." Id. at 547-48. The newly discovered evidence supporting a freestanding
claim of actual innocence must be of a nature that "no credible evidence remains from . . .
trial to support the conviction." Id. at 548.
In contrast, a gateway claim of actual innocence argues that a petitioner did not
receive a constitutionally adequate trial, and that it would be manifestly unjust not to review
3
Procedurally barred claims are "claims that could have been raised at an earlier stage," as on direct appeal
or in a timely filed post-conviction motion pursuant to Rule 24.035 or Rule 29.15. State ex rel. Amrine v. Roper,
102 S.W.3d 541, 546 (Mo. banc 2003).
5
procedurally barred claims to that effect, where newly discovered evidence demonstrates
actual innocence by a preponderance of the evidence. Id. at 546; see Clay v. Dormire, 37
S.W.3d 214, 217 (Mo. banc 2000) (holding that habeas relief is available where a petitioner
can show "manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice" by showing that "a constitutional
violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent") (quoting
Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298, 327 (1995)). The new evidence supporting a gateway claim
of actual innocence need not negate all of the evidence admitted at trial which supports the
conviction, but must permit the conclusion when considered with all available evidence
that "it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted" the
defendant. Schlup, 513 U.S. at 332 (O'Connor, J., concurring).
The gateway of cause and prejudice requires a petitioner to establish that his failure
to timely raise a claim on direct appeal or in a post-conviction motion was caused by "some
objective factor external to the defense [that] impeded counsel's efforts to comply with the
State's procedural rule." Nixon, 63 S.W.3d at 215 (quoting Murray v. Carrier, 477 U.S.
478, 488 (1986)). "To establish the 'prejudice' necessary to overcome procedural default,
a petitioner . . . bears the burden of showing, not merely that errors at his trial created
possibility of prejudice, but that they 'worked to his actual and substantial disadvantage,
infecting his entire trial with error of constitutional dimensions.'" Id. at 215-16 (quoting
United States v. Frady, 456 U.S. 152, 170 (1982)).
Neither the gateway of actual innocence nor the gateway of cause and prejudice
entitle a petitioner to habeas relief, standing alone. Rather, "gateway" habeas claims at
best entitle a petitioner "to review on the merits of the [petitioner's] otherwise defaulted
6
constitutional claim[s]." Amrine, 102 S.W.3d at 546. Conversely, without proof of a
gateway permitting habeas review of procedurally barred claims, "even the existence of a
concededly meritorious constitutional violation is not in itself sufficient to establish a
miscarriage of justice" supporting habeas relief. Clay, 37 S.W.3d at 217 (quoting Schlup,
513 U.S. at 315-16 (quoting Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390, 404 (1993))).
Relator's Gateway and Procedurally Barred Claims of Constitutional Error
We first address the procedurally barred claims of constitutional error Relator asks
us to review through the gateways of actual innocence or cause and prejudice.
Relator argues that he was deprived of a constitutionally adequate trial because: (1)
the admission of discredited "pseudo-science" expert hair analysis during Relator's trial
violated Relator's due process rights; (2) the State committed a Brady4 violation by failing
to disclose exculpatory evidence, specifically Division of Family Services ("DFS") records
that revealed that M.D., the State's principal witness, was extensively coached before trial,
and was uncertain in her eyewitness identification of Relator; and (3) Relator received
ineffective assistance of counsel because trial counsel did not exploit the fragility of M.D.'s
eyewitness identification of Relator, or adequately investigate evidence (the DFS records)
that would tend to impeach M.D.'s eyewitness identification.
Following an exhaustive review of the habeas record, we conclude that Relator
would be unable to sustain his burden to establish any of his procedurally barred claims,
4
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963).
7
even presuming Relator could establish a gateway allowing a court to review the untimely
claims.
First, Relator claims he was convicted based on discredited pseudo-science in
violation of his right to due process. The evidence which supported Relator's conviction
was limited to two categories: expert witness testimony that a hair found at the crime scene
"matched" Relator's hair, and M.D.'s trial testimony identifying Relator as the assailant
who murdered M.D.'s mother and assaulted M.D. and her younger sister. See Lincoln, 457
S.W.3d at 801, 808. Several years after Relator's convictions, DNA testing established that
the hair about which the expert witness testified at trial did not belong to Relator. Id. at
803-04. Notwithstanding the discredited "hair match" testimony, the Eastern District
concluded that Relator was not entitled to release pursuant to section 547.037 because:
While the post-conviction DNA testing excluded [Relator] as the source of
the pubic hair found on the blanket at the crime scene, the hair evidence was
not the "determinative factor" or "pivotal" to the State's case, and the State
did not "assertively and repetitively" use that discredited evidence as
affirmative proof of [Relator's] guilt. As the motion court found, M.D.'s
testimony was the key.
Id. at 808. Because the jury convicted Relator based primarily on M.D.'s testimony, and
not on the now discredited expert witness testimony, Relator cannot establish that his
conviction violated his due process right to a fair trial.5 See McKim v. Cassady, 457 S.W.3d
831, 848-52 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015) (denying habeas relief despite new scientific evidence
5
To be clear, the results of the DNA testing, and the evolution of science and technology discrediting "hair
match" testimony, could be considered, along with M.D.'s recantation, in determining whether Relator has met his
present burden to establish either the gateway of actual innocence, or a freestanding claim of actual innocence.
That, however, is a different inquiry from whether Relator received a constitutionally sufficient trial.
8
about cause of death where balance of the evidence heard by jury meant that relator could
not establish that no reasonable juror would have convicted him).
Second, Relator argues that the fairness of his trial was infected by Brady violations.
Relator complains that various DFS records (Exhibit 9 to Relator's habeas petition) were
not provided to him before trial, and that these records reflect numerous clinical interviews
of, and role-playing sessions with, M.D. which demonstrate that M.D. was extensively
coached and uncertain in her eyewitness identification. "To prevail in his Brady claims,
[Relator] must satisfy three components: (1) The evidence at issue must be favorable to
him, either because it is exculpatory or because it is impeaching of an adverse witness; (2)
that evidence must have been suppressed by the State, whether willfully or inadvertently;
and (3) he must have been prejudiced." State ex rel. Woodworth v. Denney, 396 S.W.3d
330, 338 (Mo. banc 2013). Here, the DFS records satisfy the first prong of the Brady test,
as they include information that could have been used to impeach M.D. The second and
third prongs are contested, however, as the State argues that it was not obligated to produce
the DFS records, and that in any event, Relator was not prejudiced. We need not address
the second prong of the Brady test as we agree with the State that the third prong cannot
be established.
To demonstrate Brady prejudice:
The question is not whether the defendant would more likely than not have
received a different verdict with the evidence, but whether in its absence he
received a fair trial, understood as a trial resulting in a verdict worthy of
confidence. A reasonable probability of a different result is accordingly
shown when the government's evidentiary suppression undermines
confidence in the outcome of the trial.
9
Id. (quoting Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 434 (1995) (internal quotations omitted)).
The DFS records supplemented information already known to Relator--namely that
M.D.'s original accounts to the authorities had identified the assailant as a man by the name
of "Bill," and had provided information about "Bill" that did not implicate Relator. The
trial transcript reflects that M.D. was extensively cross-examined about her eyewitness
identification of Relator, and impeached by questions that highlighted M.D.'s initial
identification of her assailant as "Bill," with attributes Relator did not satisfy. Despite
aggressive cross-examination, M.D. remained steadfast in her identification of Relator as
the assailant. Though the DFS records would have provided Relator with even more
ammunition to support the line of questioning in fact undertaken at trial, we are not
persuaded that Relator did not receive a fair trial in the absence of this supplemental
impeachment material. The absent records do not undermine our confidence in Relator's
conviction because they cumulate with other, substantial evidence available to Relator on
the same subjects raised by the records. This case is thus to be distinguished from habeas
cases where suppressed evidence revealed a previously unknown basis to impeach a key,
material witness under circumstances where the defendant's trial strategy was likely
implicated. See, e.g., Ferguson v. Dormire, 413 S.W.3d 40, 62-64 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013)
(holding that Brady prejudice was established where an undisclosed interview with wife of
key eyewitness identification witness would have provided a basis to impeach the witness
not otherwise available to defendant); State ex rel. Koster v. McElwain, 340 S.W.3d 221,
252 (Mo. App. W.D. 2011) (holding that Brady prejudice was established where all
10
evidence of reports of domestic violence by victim's estranged husband had been
suppressed by the State).
As an aside, it is noteworthy that Relator claims that the DFS records were made
available to Relator "by the St. Louis Circuit Attorney through discovery during the
litigation of [Relator's] DNA motion." [Habeas petition, p. 78] The DNA motion was
litigated in 2005, ten years before Relator filed his first habeas petition in Cole County
claiming a Brady violation. The significant passage of time between Relator's acquisition
of the DFS records and his first assertion of a Brady violation strongly militate against
Relator's current assertion that the records were prejudicially suppressed.
Third, Relator alleges that trial counsel was ineffective because he failed to exploit
the fragility of M.D.'s eyewitness identification and failed to investigate the DFS records.
As noted, our review of the trial transcript reveals that M.D. was thoroughly cross-
examined by Relator's trial counsel on the very matters cumulatively supported by the DFS
records. Relator has not persuasively demonstrated that he was prejudiced by trial
counsel's alleged failure to further exploit or investigate the fragility of M.D.'s eyewitness
testimony with the DFS records. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)
(requiring proof that trial counsel failed to exercise customary skill and diligence of a
reasonably competent attorney, and that the failure prejudiced a defendant, in order to
establish ineffective assistance of counsel).
Because Relator would be unable to sustain his burden to establish any of the
procedurally barred claims asserted in the habeas petition, we need not further address
whether Relator has established the gateway of actual innocence or of cause and prejudice.
11
Relator's habeas claims that depend for their review on establishing either gateway are
denied.
Relator's Freestanding Claim of Actual Innocence
All that remains of the habeas petition is Relator's freestanding claim of actual
innocence. As noted, habeas relief requires a petitioner to establish that his continued
restraint violates "the constitution or laws of the state or federal government." Amrine, 102
S.W.3d at 545. A freestanding claim of actual innocence presumes that a petitioner
received a constitutionally adequate trial. Id. at 547. Thus, for a freestanding claim of
actual innocence to support habeas relief, a petitioner must establish that his continued
restraint is manifestly unjust because it violates the constitution or laws of the state or
federal government, notwithstanding that the petitioner in fact received a fair trial.
A freestanding claim of actual innocence was first recognized by the Missouri
Supreme Court in Amrine. Since Amrine, however, no reported appellate opinion in this
State has relied on a freestanding claim of actual innocence to afford habeas relief.6 The
current parameters of a cognizable claim remain controlled by Amrine.
In Amrine, three witnesses whose trial testimony led to Amrine's conviction, and to
the imposition of a sentence of death, subsequently recanted their trial testimony. Id. at
548. As a result of the recanted trial testimony, Amrine's case "present[ed] the rare
circumstance in which no credible evidence remain[ed] from the first trial to support the
conviction." Id. In his habeas petition, Amrine did not claim that his trial was
6
In State ex rel. Clemons v. Larkins, 475 S.W.3d 60, 93-97 (Mo. banc 2015), the Supreme Court analyzed
Clemons's freestanding claim of actual innocence, but rejected the claim. Clemons, like Amrine, was a death penalty
case.
12
constitutionally inadequate, but instead claimed a freestanding claim of actual innocence.
Specifically, Amrine claimed that his continued restraint in the face of new evidence of
actual innocence--the recanted testimony--was manifestly unjust. Id. at 545.
To resolve Amrine's claim, the Missouri Supreme Court was required to address
whether it would recognize a freestanding claim of actual innocence as a basis for affording
habeas relief, and if so, the required burden of proof to establish the claim. Id. With respect
to both points, the Supreme Court concluded:
Because the continued imprisonment and eventual execution of an innocent
person is a manifest injustice, a habeas petitioner under a sentence of death
may obtain relief from a judgment of conviction and sentence of death upon
a clear and convincing showing of actual innocence that undermines
confidence in the correctness of the judgment.
Id. at 543 (emphasis added). The Supreme Court's holding, plainly read, recognized a
freestanding claim of actual innocence in cases where the death penalty has been imposed
because the prospect of executing an innocent person, in the face of clear and convincing
evidence of innocence, is a manifest injustice.7 The Court's rationale for reaching this
conclusion is instructive and controlling:
In Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390 (1993), the United States Supreme Court
discussed the viability of a freestanding claim of actual innocence as a basis
for habeas relief in the federal courts. Although the Court determined that
federalism concerns militated against recognizing actual innocence as a basis
for federal habeas relief, the Court assumed for the sake of argument that:
in a capital case a truly persuasive demonstration of actual
innocence made after trial would render the execution of a
defendant unconstitutional and warrant federal habeas relief if
there were no state avenue open to process such a claim.
7
We have previously expressed that Amrine's recognition of the freestanding claim of actual innocence as a
basis for habeas relief may be limited to cases where the death penalty has been imposed. See, e.g., McKim, 457
S.W.3d at 847 n.27; State ex rel. Koster v. McElwain, 340 S.W.3d 221, 230 n.9 (Mo. App. W.D. 2011).
13
Id. at 417. In other words, as Herrera recognized, even if a federal court
were found not to have jurisdiction to review a state conviction and sentence
in the absence of a federal constitutional issue, this would not deprive a state
court from reviewing the conviction and sentence if its own state habeas law
so permitted. The issue now before this Court, then, is whether, in the words
of Herrera, Missouri has left a "state avenue open to process such a claim."
Id. This Court finds that it has done so.
Having recognized the prospect of an intolerable wrong, the state has
provided a remedy. As noted, it is not the remedy set out in Clay [v.
Dormire], for, while the Clay standard is appropriate for cases involving
procedurally defaulted constitutional claims, it fails to account for those rare
situations, such as Amrine's, in which a petitioner sets forth a compelling
case of actual innocence independent of any constitutional violation at trial.
This is all the more true here, where the execution of a potentially innocent
man is at stake, for the death penalty is fundamentally different from other
cases in which innocence is asserted after a fair trial. For this reason,
uniquely under Missouri's death penalty statute, section 565.035.3, this
Court is charged with determining not merely the sufficiency but also the
"strength of the evidence." See State v. Chaney, 967 S.W.2d 47 (Mo. banc
1998). The obvious purpose is to avoid wrongful convictions and executions.
The duty to do so in death penalty cases is, just as obviously, a continuing
one. It is difficult to imagine a more manifestly unjust and unconstitutional
result than permitting the execution of an innocent person. Therefore, it is
incumbent upon the courts of this state to provide judicial recourse to an
individual who, after the time for appeals has passed, is able to produce
sufficient evidence of innocence to undermine the habeas court's confidence
in the underlying judgment that resulted in defendant's conviction and
sentence of death. The writ of habeas corpus is the appropriate means for
Amrine to assert this claim.
Id. at 546-47 (emphasis added).
The Supreme Court thus crafted its recognition of a freestanding claim of actual
innocence around the narrow prospect that it would be a violation of the Court's duties
pursuant to section 565.035.3, and thus, a manifest injustice, to refuse habeas relief where
newly discovered evidence of actual innocence in a death penalty case undermines
confidence in the conviction, notwithstanding a constitutionally adequate trial. Amrine's
14
rationale for recognizing a freestanding claim of actual innocence in such a circumstance
is thus wholly consistent with its statement that habeas relief requires a demonstration that
"the constitution or laws of the state or federal government" have been violated. Id. at 546.
Amrine cannot be read, therefore, to have broadly recognized a freestanding claim
of actual innocence in non-death penalty cases. In fact, in a concurring opinion, Justice
Wolff underscored that "death penalty cases are different. . . . For no other crime is an
appellate court given [the statutory] power" to assess the strength of the evidence to uphold
an otherwise final conviction. Id. at 549 (Wolff, J., concurring). Though Justice Wolff
also stated that "relief by habeas based on actual innocence and manifest injustice is not
limited to death penalty cases," he cited only to the example of post-conviction DNA
testing and possible release described in sections 547.035 and 547.037, a statutory right
that exists independent of habeas jurisprudence. Id. In fact, Justice Wolff's concurrence
observed that "[t]he law usually does not condone recantations; they are not normally
recognized to overturn a lawful conviction and sentence." Id. (citing State v. Harris, 428
S.W.2d 497, 502 (Mo. 1968)).
Moreover, Amrine cannot be read to have broadly recognized a freestanding claim
of actual innocence grounded in the constitutional principle of due process. In fact, Amrine
expressly declined to determine whether the continued incarceration and eventual
execution of a person who clearly and convincingly establishes actual innocence violates
the due process clause of the constitution, resulting in a manifest injustice warranting
habeas relief. Id. at 546 n.3. The Supreme Court explained that because a violation of
state law (section 565.035.3) yields a manifest injustice, it did not need to determine
15
whether it would simultaneously violate the Missouri constitution to incarcerate and
eventually execute an individual who is actually innocent. Id. It thus remains an open and
unanswered question whether either the continued incarceration or execution of a person
who clearly and convincingly establishes his actual innocence after a constitutionally
adequate trial violates due process, warranting habeas relief pursuant to a freestanding
claim of actual innocence.8
Relator's habeas petition presumes that a freestanding claim of actual innocence has
been broadly recognized in Missouri as a basis for habeas relief in all cases. Though
Relator acknowledges this court's previously expressed reservation that Amrine appears
limited to death penalty cases,9 Relator concludes, without analysis, that "nothing in
Missouri law suggests such a dichotomy on the question of innocence." [Habeas petition,
p. 55 n.23] To the contrary, as we have explained, a plain reading of Amrine permits no
other conclusion than that such a dichotomy does exist in Missouri's habeas jurisprudence.
Relator also mistakenly presumes that if his new evidence clearly and convincingly
establishes actual innocence, that alone is sufficient to establish a manifest injustice.
Amrine clearly discredits this proposition, holding that habeas relief requires a
8
Amrine does cite favorably to cases from other jurisdictions where a freestanding claim of actual
innocence as a basis for state habeas relief has been recognized in both death penalty and non-death penalty cases
because continued incarceration or execution would violate principles of due process. 102 S.W.3d at 547 n.4 (citing
People v. Washington, 665 N.E.2d 1330, 1336-37 (Ill. 1996) (not a death penalty case); State ex rel. Holmes v. Court
of Appeals, 885 S.W.2d 389, 397-98 (Tex.Crim.App. 1994) (a death penalty case, the application of which was
expanded on due process grounds to non-death penalty cases in Ex parte Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d 202, 205
(Tex.Crim.App. 1996)); Summerville v. Warden, State Prison, 641 A.2d 1356, 1369 (Conn. 1994) (no discussion
limiting holding to death penalty cases); In re Lindley, 177 P.2d 918 (Cal. 1947) (death penalty case)). However,
Amrine's citation to these cases was for the limited purpose of supporting the conclusion that a "writ of habeas
corpus is [an] appropriate means" to raise a freestanding claim of actual innocence. 102 S.W.3d at 547.
9
See supra note 7.
16
demonstration that "the constitution or laws of the state or federal government" have been
violated. Id. at 545. Relator does not argue that any state or federal statute has been
violated by his continued incarceration in the face of what he argues to be compelling
evidence of actual innocence, and relies solely on a loosely alleged violation of the due
process clause of the constitution.10 We have just explained that our Supreme Court has
yet to recognize a claim that the due process clause is implicated by either continued
incarceration or eventual execution when new evidence of actual innocence undermines
confidence in a conviction obtained after a constitutionally adequate trial. Id. at 546 n.3.
In short, no matter how compelling Relator's argument may be, we are constrained
to afford habeas relief only as authorized. "Even though the interests protected by the writ
are fundamental, relief is limited in order to avoid unending challenges to final judgments."
Id. at 546.
Until the Supreme Court announces that a freestanding claim of actual innocence is
a recognized basis for securing habeas relief because either the continued incarceration or
eventual execution of an actually innocent person violates principles of due process, we
have no authority to presume that Missouri's habeas jurisprudence permits such a claim in
a non-death penalty case.11
10
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides in
pertinent part that "[n]o State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."
Article I, section 10 of the Missouri constitution similarly provides that "no person shall be deprived of life, liberty
or property without due process of law."
11
In State ex rel. Woodworth v. Denney, the Supreme Court observed that Woodworth had asserted a
freestanding claim of actual innocence in addition to Brady claims in his habeas petition. The Supreme Court
generally acknowledged that "a freestanding claim of actual innocence, if shown by [] clear and convincing
evidence, provides grounds for habeas relief without the need to prove any constitutional violation at trial." 396
S.W.3d 330, 337 n.5 (Mo. banc 2013) (citing Amrine, 102 S.W.3d 541). However, because the master in that case
"did not reach the claim of actual innocence, as he found cause and prejudice based on the Brady claims and had
17
We thus deny Relator's freestanding claim of actual innocence.
Conclusion
Relator's petition for writ of habeas corpus relief is denied.12
__________________________________
Cynthia L. Martin, Judge
All concur
considered the newly discovered evidence in regard to the prejudice prong of that claim," the Supreme Court
similarly declined to address Woodworth's freestanding claim of actual innocence. Id. Woodworth was not a death
penalty case. However, the Supreme Court's mere acknowledgement of Woodworth's assertion of a freestanding
claim of actual innocence cannot be fairly read as an implicit expansion of its holding in Amrine.
12
See Rule 84.24(n) (providing that if an appellate "court disposes of a petition for a writ by the issuance of
an opinion, further review of the action shall be allowed only as provided in Rule 83 and Rule 84.17").
In addition, nothing prevents Relator from seeking clemency. "History shows that the traditional remedy
for claims of innocence based on new evidence, discovered too late in the day to file a new trial motion, has been
executive clemency." Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390, 417 (1993).
18