ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Susan K. Carpenter Jeffrey A. Modisett
Public Defender of Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
Ann M. Pfarr Arthur Thaddeus Perry
Deputy Public Defender Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
Juliet M. Yackel
Special Assistant to the
State Public Defender
Indianapolis, Indiana
SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA
DARNELL WILLIAMS, )
)
Appellant (Petitioner Below ), )
)
v. ) Cause No. 45S00-9303-PD-397
)
STATE OF INDIANA, )
)
Appellee (Respondent Below ). )
APPEAL FROM THE LAKE SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Richard J. Conroy, Special Judge
Cause No. 2CR-133-886-531
A jury found Darnell Williams guilty of the felony murders of John and Henrietta Rease. In accordance with the jury's recommendation, the trial court sentenced Williams to death. On
direct appeal, we affirmed. Rouster v. State, 600 N.E.2d 1342
(Ind. 1992). Williams petitioned for post-conviction relief. The
post-conviction court denied the petition and Williams appeals. He
asserts numerous claims which we consolidate and review as follows:
I. Ineffective assistance of counsel;
II. Systemic defects in the Lake County public
defender program;
III. Williams' pre-sentencing psychological profile;
IV. Errors of fact in direct appeal opinion;
V. Post-conviction due process.
Williams and his co-defendant Gregory Rouster robbed and shot
to death Rouster's ex-foster parents, John and Henrietta Rease.
Rouster, 600 N.E.2d at 1344.
In the late afternoon of August 12, 1986, Rouster learned from a welfare caseworker that the Reases had received a clothing allowance, amounting to around five or six dollars per month, on his behalf. About four hours later, Rouster, Williams, and their girlfriends rode a bus to the Reases' neighborhood. Rouster and Williams entered the home and started to argue with the Reases about the clothing allowance. After a short time, Mr. Rease ordered them to leave. Once out in the front yard, Williams said to Rouster "[d]on't let them do you this way" and "[y]ou know they owe you." (T.R. at 185A.) Edwin Taylor, another teenager living
in the foster-care of the Reases, said "you all have guns . . . go
take the money" and told Rouster and Williams that the Reases had
money on their bedroom dresser. Rouster, 600 N.E.2d at 1345.
Both Williams and Rouster re-entered the home. Williams told
Henrietta to get on the floor. She pleaded with Williams not to
hit Mr. Rease because he had a bad heart. Id. at 1345-46.
Williams replied, "his heart is stronger than mine." Id. at 1346.
Rouster demanded to be told "where's the money at?", and told
Williams to "bring both of them back here." Id. Williams then
said "it's your time." Id. Rouster was heard to say something
like "waste them." Id. Henrietta pleaded "Greg, why are you doing
this?" Id.
The police apprehended Williams after a foot chase which
included a dash across a busy highway intersection. Id. at 1345.
Williams had a pouch containing $232 in cash and a wristwatch at
the time of his arrest. He also had some .30 caliber ammunition.
Id. Several shells of the same caliber and brand were discovered
on the floor of the Reases' home. Id. Tests indicated that John
Rease had been killed with a .32 caliber bullet while a .22 caliber
bullet was found in Henrietta's brain. Id.
When one appeals the negative judgment of a post-conviction
court, the standard is even more rigorous. Petitioners must show
that the evidence as a whole, "leads unerringly and unmistakably to
a conclusion opposite to that reached by the trial court."
Weatherford, 619 N.E.2d at 917.
conviction petition, Williams listed more than sixty alleged errors
to show trial counsel ineffectiveness.See footnote
1
The post-conviction court
considered Williams' claims and concluded that "the allegations
fail to establish that counsel's overall performance was deficient
as measured by prevailing professional norms" and that "the
petitioner has failed to persuade us that the outcome of the trial
or sentencing hearing would have been different but for trial
counsel's performance." (P-C.R. at 1317-18.)
We analyze claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel under the two part test announced in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). To prevail on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, one must show both deficient performance and resulting prejudice. A deficient performance is a performance which falls below an objective standard of reasonableness. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687 (1984); see also Douglas v. State, 663 N.E.2d 1153, 1154 (Ind. 1996). Prejudice exists when a claimant shows "there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome." Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694; see also Cook v. State, 675 N.E.2d
687, 692 (Ind. 1996).See footnote
2
Even if the claimant succeeds in showing a reasonable probability the results would have been different, he must also show his conviction was fundamentally unfair or unreliable. Lockhart v. Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364, 369 (1993). A fair trial has been denied a defendant when his conviction or sentence has resulted from a breakdown in the adversarial process which rendered the result unreliable. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 686; see also Canaan v. State, 683 N.E.2d 227, 229 (Ind. 1997), cert. denied, 118 S. Ct. 2064 (1998). The two prongs of the Strickland test are separate and independent inquiries. Thus, "[i]f it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice . . . that course should be followed." Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697. An appellant/petitioner must offer strong and convincing evidence to overcome the presumption that counsel prepared and executed an effective defense. Burris v. State, 558 N.E.2d 1067, 1072 (Ind. 1990), cert. denied, 516 U.S. 922 (1995).
A. Inadequate Review of Discovery. Williams argues that counsel were ineffective for failing to review fully materials given to them by the State during discovery. Specifically, Williams points to his counsel's failure to realize that a report by State's expert Kimberly Epperson showed that blood found on Williams' shorts was consistent with the blood of either John Rease, Henrietta Rease, or Gregory Rouster. (P-C.R. at 4424; T.R.
at 1852-58; T.R. at 1966-67.) He claims that had his counsel known
about the blood before trial, they could have revealed to the jury
that the evidentiary chain of custody was suspect,See footnote
4
hired a
serology expert to testify that 45% of all people in Indiana have
a blood type which matches that found on the shorts, and hired a
blood splatter expert to refute the State's closing argument about
the significance of the blood. (Appellant's Br. at 30-41.)
Williams believes that these failures fall below an objective
standard of reasonable representation.
Williams also asserts, as he must to succeed under Strickland,
that the blood evidence was determinative regarding his conviction
and, alternatively, his sentence. To bolster this contention,
Williams relies on comments made by the State in its closing
argument, by the trial judge in his findings of fact, and by
Williams' trial counsel in post-conviction testimony. (Appellant's
Br. at 27, 40, 42-43.)
The post-conviction court agreed that counsel's oversight of
discovery materials indicating that blood had been found on
Williams' shorts was difficult to excuse in light of the
significance of the evidence. The court concluded, however, that
the outcome of the trial or sentencing hearing was not affected by
that oversight and thus that Williams had not shown he was
prejudiced by counsel's failure. (P-C.R. at 1321.) The post-
conviction court wrote:
The petitioner takes the position that trial counsel
could have, and should have, obtained the services of
expert witnesses who might have established that the
blood found on the petitioner's shorts got there through
transference from other blood stained evidence or, at
least, was not necessarily evidence that he was present
at the time the victims were shot. He also argues that
the experts would have been able to contradict or
mitigate the trial court judge's determination that there
was significance in the fact that the blood appeared on
the front of the petitioner's garments and on the back of
the co-defendant. Once again, we conclude that evidence
of who actually fired which shots does not make a
difference under the facts of this case. The petitioner
joined his codefendant in a double homicide in the
perpetration of a robbery. He was "an equal partner" in
the crimes, and his participation in the killings - the
true extent of which may never be known - was found by
the supreme court to justify the death sentence.
(Id. at 1322.)
Our review of the evidence presented by Williams and of the
trial record leads us to conclude the post-conviction court was
correct for two reasons: Williams' counsel did inform the jury of
the blood evidence issues Williams raises here, and the evidence
available to the judge and jury would have not been significantly
different if Williams' counsel had hired expert witnesses.
Williams' counsel initiated the adversarial testing process in regard to the blood stain evidence when he addressed the potentially misleading nature of such evidence during his closing argument, saying:
(T.R. at 2550.) Additionally, in his rebuttal of Gregory Rouster's
closing argument, Williams' counsel pointed out to the jury that
they should not rely on the blood patterns found on Williams'
shorts, arguing:
Mr. Lewis [co-defendant Gregory Rouster's counsel] uses
the word splatter the same way the State sought to
introduce evidence of splattering. We do not have a
splatter witness. We did not hear an expert. We have no
testimony from an expert as to what the pattern of blood
means on clothing. That simply, using the word splatter,
does that make that expert testimony, much less
testimony? We have simply been left in the dark on that
matter and there's been no evidence presented.
(T.R. at 2594-95.)
Counsel's arguments were factually supported by the testimony of the State's expert witness on serology, Kimberly Epperson. When asked what she discovered when she analyzed the blood found on Williams' shorts, Epperson said the blood was "consistent with the blood of either John Rease, Henrietta Rease or Gregory Rouster...." (T.R. at 1967.) Epperson acknowledged that a blood type "match" does not indicate that the blood samples derive from the individual in question. She also noted that 45% of the world's population has the O blood type and that Mr. Rease, Mrs. Rease, and Gregory Rouster all had O blood types. Williams' assertion that
trial counsel failed to inform the jury of the actual amount of
blood found on Williams' shorts is made moot by Epperson's
testimony. When Epperson was asked to describe the size and
character of the blood spots found on the shorts, she replied:
"they were small spots of blood . . . [a]pproximately less than one
centimeter in diameter." (T.R. at 1968.)
Counsel's arguments to the jury coupled with the above factual
testimony rendered Williams' trial a reliable adversarial testing
process. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 686. Even if Williams'
counsel had more thoroughly investigated the blood evidence, as his
counsel was able to do for post-conviction, they would have been
unable to provide the jury with any information significantly
different from that actually provided by the State's witness.
Because the evidence Williams argues should have been presented
would not have significantly changed the facts available to the
judge and jurors, Williams was not prejudiced during either the
guilt or sentencing phase of his trial.
B. Motion for Severance. On direct appeal, Williams' counsel claimed the trial court erred in failing to grant Williams' motion to sever. We held that the trial court's denial of Williams' pretrial motion for severance was proper as the motion contained no specific allegations of facts to put the trial court on notice of any mutually antagonistic defenses. Rouster, 600 N.E.2d at 1346. We further concluded that because Williams failed to renew his
motion at the close of evidence the issue was waived on appeal.
Id. (citing Ind. Code § 35-34-1-12(b)). Williams now recasts the
issue as a matter of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Defendants have no absolute right to a separate trial or
severance, but they may ask the trial judge to exercise her
discretion to grant such a motion. Lampkins v. State, 682 N.E.2d
1268, 1272 (Ind. 1997), opinion modified on reh'g, 685 N.E.2d 698
(Ind. 1997). We will find an abuse of discretion when a court
denies a defendant's properly filed motion for separate trials and
the parties' defenses are mutually antagonistic and acceptance of
one party's defense precludes the acquittal of the other.
Lampkins, 682 N.E.2d at 1272 (citing Underwood v. State, 535 N.E.2d
507, 514 (Ind. 1989)). A defendant is not, however, entitled to
a separate trial merely because a co-defendant implicates that
defendant. Lampkins, 682 N.E.2d at 1272.
A substantial portion of both Williams' and Rouster's defense
theories centered around their respective assertions that the other
fired the fatal shots. During the guilt phase, each co-defendant's
arguments regarding who pulled the trigger were of little relevance
because both were convicted for felony murder under Ind. Code § 35-
42-1-1(2). All participants in a robbery or attempted robbery
which results in killing by one robber are deemed equally guilty of
murder, regardless of which participant actually killed the
victim.See footnote
5
Rogers v. State, 262 Ind. 315, 320, 315 N.E.2d 707, 709-
10 (1974). During the sentencing phase, the evidence against
Williams was strong enough to allow the jury to find that any
mitigating factors were outweighed by the State's asserted
aggravating factors.
Additionally, Williams' conduct indicated a reckless indifference to human life. Rouster, 600 N.E.2d at 1350 (citing Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137, (1987)). Williams urged Rouster to rob the Reases by saying, "[d]on't let them do you this way" and "[y]ou know they owe you," (T.R. at 185A), even though originally Rouster had left the home at John Rease's request. Williams and Rouster then re-entered the home. Williams acted in concert with Rouster in robbing the Reases. He told Henrietta to get on the floor and when Henrietta pled with Williams not to hit Mr. Rease because he had a bad heart, Williams replied, "[h]is heart is stronger than mine." Rouster, 600 N.E.2d at 1345-46. Rouster then demanded "where's the money at?" and told Williams to "bring both of them back here." Id. at 1346. Whether or not Williams actually pulled the trigger, he knew that the Reases were going to be murdered and he actively participated in the killings. It was Williams who told the Reases, "it's your time." Id. Rouster was then heard to say something like "waste them." Id. Physical evidence would also have been available against Williams even if a
separate trial had been granted. Blood found on Williams' shorts
was consistent with the blood of either John Rease, Henrietta
Rease, or Gregory Rouster, but not consistent with the blood of
Teresa Newsome, Edwin Taylor, or Darnell Williams. (T.R. at 1966-
67.) Based on this evidence, Williams' sentence would have been
the same even if he had been granted a separate trial.
C. Preparation for Penalty Phase. Williams asserts his
counsel were ineffective during the penalty phase for failing to
present evidence showing his traumatic birth, his hyperactivity,
his placement in special education classes, his violent, abusive,
criminal, and alcoholic father, his chaotic home, the poverty of
his family, and the destitute neighborhood in which he grew up. He
also argues his counsel should have presented evidence showing he
once saved another person's life.
In considering Williams' assertions, the post-conviction court
wrote: "We do not believe that any of this, or all of it together,
would have been found by the jury or the trial court judge to be
mitigating circumstances which were not outweighed by the
aggravating circumstances of multiple intentional murders in the
perpetration of robbery." (P-C.R. at 1326.) The court then
concluded that trial counsel's performance was neither deficient
nor prejudicial. (Id.)
Williams provides no evidence which leads us to a result
opposite that reached by the post-conviction court. The mitigating
factors Williams asserts are entitled to modest mitigating weight,
at most, since none directly affect his culpability. Williams
specifically attempts to focus our attention on his mental state by
arguing that the post-conviction court incorrectly rejected his
claims of attention deficit hyperactivity, alcohol intoxication
delirium, and "borderline" IQ. He asserts his counsel should have
investigated these issues and presented relevant evidence to the
jury. The post-conviction court rejected Williams' factual claims
regarding hyperactivity and alcohol intoxication, (P-C.R. at 1323-
25), and Williams provides us with no evidence which unerringly
contradicts that conclusion. Regarding Williams' IQ claim, even if
we assume the claim is factually valid, we have determined that
such evidence is only of "moderate" weight. Holmes v. State, 671
N.E.2d 841, 850 (Ind. 1996), cert. denied, 118 S.Ct 137 (1997).
Because of the significant weight of the aggravating factors proven
against Williams, there is no reasonable chance that the addition
of this mitigator would have garnered a different result for
Williams at trial.
Williams also argues that his counsel only provided him with a "free form" sentencing hearing strategy similar to the one we found ineffective in Averhart v. State, 614 N.E.2d 924, 930-31 (Ind. 1993). Our review of the record, however, shows that counsel had an adequate sentencing hearing strategy. Counsel elicited from Williams' mother that Darnell was twenty years old and asked her to
tell the judge about Darnell's character. She replied that
Williams was the type of person who often helped others and that he
advised younger teenagers not to drop out of school. Counsel
further questioned Williams' mother regarding his employment. She
replied that Williams had been working at a convalescent home for
close to a year before he was arrested. Counsel also called other
witnesses as well and asked questions relating to additional
mitigating factors. As such, counsel's advocacy easily surpasses
the "free-form" performance we described in Averhart.
D. Inadequate Investigation. Williams says his counsel failed to investigate crime scene evidence adequately. Williams believes that evidence presented by the State inaccurately shows an overturned mattress and the positioning of Mrs. Rease's dead body. He further asserts that this misrepresentation was material since the State used the fact that the Rease's bedroom was ransacked and the mattress was overturned to argue that the robbery of the Rease's was similar to a different robbery allegedly committed by Williams and others about a month before.See footnote 6 (See T.R. at 3118-19.) He asserts that had his counsel adequately investigated, they could have rebutted the State's penalty-phase argument asserting that Williams had a history of prior criminal conduct.
Williams argues the evidence affected the jury's sentence
recommendation. As for the crime scene, however, the post-
conviction court found that the evidence presented by the
petitioner in his attempt to show the body was on the bed or in a
position other than that depicted to the jury was not nearly as
persuasive as testimony given at the post-conviction hearing which
suggested the actual state of the crime scene was properly conveyed
by the State's evidence. The court concluded that the evidence
given to the jury correctly represented the crime scene. (P-C.R.
at 1320.)
Williams' present argument does not lead us unerringly and unmistakably to an opposite conclusion. The testimony of Officer Michael Gault, which Williams relies on to argue that photographic evidence was manipulated, actually tends to support the evidence as it was represented to the jury. During the post-conviction hearing, Officer Gault recounted the scene as he remembered it, stating: "[w]hen we got to the southeast bedroom, I observed the
woman in a position whereas in the old westerns, when they were
slung across the horse . . . ." (P-C.R. at 2036-37.) When asked
what Mrs. Rease was laying across, Gault answered "it could have
been a dresser. . . . I do recall she was at the edge of the
dresser." (P-C.R. at 2037-38.) The post-conviction testimony of
Officer Rita Dorsey Allen also supports the State's argument that
Mrs. Rease was not found on a bed: "I recall her being -- she was
-- her dress was up and she was like sideways, against something."
(P-C.R. at 2249.)
As to the former robbery, there would still be sufficient
evidence for the jury to find that Williams had indeed committed
the crime upon which the State based its claim that Williams had a
significant past criminal history. James Jackson recounted how he
had been robbed by several men, and Ronald King, Jackson's
neighbor, identified Williams as one of the individuals he saw pop
up suddenly from Jackson's home a few minutes before Jackson showed
up at King's home bloody from having been beaten by his assailants.
This testimony much more strongly links Williams to the robbery of
Jackson than does the fact that each victim's home was similarly
ransacked and it is not affected by crime scene evidence found in
the Rease home. Williams was not prejudiced by his counsel's
failure to investigate the crime scene evidence.
Williams also claims that a blood splatter expert could have told the jury that the police had contaminated blood evidence,
which could have possibly provided evidence exculpatory to
Williams. He argues such an expert could have explained to the
jury that it was probable that Mr. Rease was shot before Mrs.
Rease. He advances no argument, however, regarding how his
counsel's failure to hire such an expert caused his trial or
sentence to be unreliable. Accordingly, we see no prejudice.
E. Instructions. Williams argues his counsel were
ineffective for failing to object to certain instructions given by
the trial court. The three instruction errors alleged by Williams
are: (a) the instructions did not inform the jury they were to
weigh each co-defendant's mitigating and aggravating circumstances
separately, (b) the jury should have been instructed on what
sentencing alternatives were available to the judge if they did not
recommend the death penalty, and (c) the instructions failed to
inform the jury that if they found Williams was sufficiently
intoxicated, this finding would negate the intent requirements
inherent in two of the aggravating factors urged by the State.
Williams argues his counsel were ineffective for failing to ask the court to instruct the jury that they were obligated to consider whether the death penalty was appropriate for Williams based solely on his own actions and intent. He argues that without any such instruction the jury could consider evidence entered for
or against co-defendant Gregory Rouster to determine his death
sentence, thereby violating the Eighth Amendment's requirement of
"precise and individualized sentencing." (Appellant's Br. at 110
(citing Stringer v. Black, 505 U.S. 222, 232 (1992)).
When a jury or judge sentences an individual to death, the
Eighth Amendment requires "an individualized determination on the
basis of the character of the individual and the circumstances of
the crime." Zant v. Stephens, 462 U.S. 862, 879 (1983) (emphasis
omitted). In Williams' case, the trial court made it clear to the
jury that Williams was to be sentenced on the basis of his
individual acts and character by instructing them:
The jury may recommend the death penalty be imposed
against defendant, Darnell Williams, only if it finds:
1. that the State has proved beyond a reasonable
doubt the existence of one of the aggravating
circumstances alleged in the charging
information against Darnell Williams, and
2. that any mitigating circumstances that exist
for Darnell Williams are outweighed by one or
more of the aggravating circumstances for
Darnell Williams.
(T.R. at 171A.) This instruction specifically directed the jury
that mitigating and aggravating factors had to exist "for Darnell
Williams" before they could recommend that Williams be sentenced to
death.
The court's procedures complied with the death penalty sentencing statute then in force, Ind. Code Ann. § 35-50-2-9 (West 1986), and thus the court's instructions were within the bounds of Indiana law at the time.See footnote 7 Williams claims, however, that these procedures violated his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process under the Federal Constitution as that right was described in the case of Simmons v. South Carolina, 512 U.S. 154 (1994). In
Simmons, the Court held that "where the defendant's future
dangerousness is at issue, and state law prohibits the defendant's
release on parole, due process requires that the sentencing jury be
informed that the defendant is parole ineligible." Id. at 156.
Williams reads this case for the broad proposition that a
defendant's due process rights are violated whenever the jury is
not instructed on the possibility of concurrent or consecutive
sentences. (See Appellant's Br. at 112-16.)
Williams' argument is unavailing. Simmons was handed down
more than a year after we decided Williams' case on appeal.
Because Simmons was unavailable to either Williams' trial or
appellate counsel, we cannot say their respective performances were
deficient for their failure in making a claim based on Simmons,
even if we accept Williams' reading of that case.
Williams says his trial counsel should have offered a penalty phase instruction informing the jury that, if proven, Williams' intoxication could have negated the intent requirements inherent in two of the three statutory aggravating factors alleged by the State--intentionally killing John and Henrietta Rease during the commission or attempted commission of a knowing or intentional taking of property.
Johnson v. State explained how the intoxication defense should
be considered within the context of death penalty sentencing.
In Indiana, voluntary intoxication can be offered as
a defense to any crime. It follows a fortiori from the
provision of the death sentence statute defining the
aggravating circumstance applicable . . . that voluntary
intoxication [may be] properly asserted . . . as a
defense to . . . aggravating circumstance[s] . . . and as
a mitigating circumstance as well. The basic assumption
underlying the defense is that drug and alcohol
intoxication may be so severe as to prevent a person from
forming a criminal intent, yet not so severe as to
prevent that person from performing acts required to
commit the crime.
584 N.E.2d 1092, 1099-1100 (Ind. 1992) (citations omitted), cert.
denied, 506 N.E.2d 853 (1992). The intoxication defense is still
available to defendants at death penalty sentencing because the
State is required to prove its alleged aggravating factors beyond
a reasonable doubt before the jury may consider them. See Ind.
Code Ann. § 35-50-2-9(a) (West Supp. 1998).
On the other hand, failure to submit an instruction is not deficient performance if the court would have refused the instruction anyway. Such would have been the case here. Each
count of felony murder alleged that Williams killed the victim
while committing or attempting to commit the crime of robbery by
"knowingly or intentionally attempting to take property." (T.R. at
19). The court instructed the jury during the guilt phase that the
State was obligated to show that Williams killed the victims "while
committing or attempting to commit a knowing or intentional taking
of money" from the victims. (T.R. at 117A.) Hearing this
instruction and the court's instruction on intoxication, the jury
found Williams guilty of felony murder. This verdict was
consistent with the considerable evidence that Williams could
communicate, deliberate, and act toward a chosen end during his
encounter with the Reases.
We conclude that the trial court would have refused an
intoxication instruction and that counsel was thus not deficient
for failing to tender one.
Williams asserts he was denied his right to effective
assistance of counsel because of systemic defects within the Lake
County system of providing public defender services for indigent
capital defendants.
The case of United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648 (1984)
provides a narrow exception to the traditional two prong analysis
of Strickland generally used to determine whether assistance of
counsel was effective. Under Cronic, certain circumstances will
negate Strickland's requirement that a defendant prove both
specific errors leading to deficient performance and actual
prejudice. Games v. State, 684 N.E.2d 466, 479 (Ind. 1997),
opinion modified on reh'g, 690 N.E.2d 211 (Ind. 1997).
In these cases, the circumstances which allow courts to find
ineffective assistance speak for themselves and reference to
counsel's actual performance is unnecessary. Cronic, 466 U.S. at
658-59. Here, by contrast, Williams makes some vague comments
about overwhelming caseloads and inadequate training of an
assisting attorney for capital cases, then asserts that his
counsel's alleged inadequate performance shows the Cronic standard
has indeed been met. (Appellant's Br. at 130-32.) The evidence
presented by Williams simply does not come close to triggering
Cronic's presumption of prejudice. We reject Williams' claim for
reasons similar to those elaborated in Coleman v. State, 1998 WL
905019 (Ind.);
Brown v. State, 698 N.E.2d 1132 (Ind. 1998), reh'g
denied; Roche v. State, 690 N.E.2d 1115 (Ind. 1997), reh'g denied
.
Because the facts which follow were discovered after Williams'
post-conviction procedure was concluded, we rely on the information
provided by appellant's brief and on questions which we ordered to
be answered by Judge Letsinger on June 13, 1997.
Williams apparently filled out a psychological questionnaireSee footnote
8
to aid the Lake County Probation Department in compiling his pre-
sentence investigation report. Our pre-sentence investigation
procedure in place at the time required the court to furnish the
defendant with the factual contents gathered through that process
so that he may have a fair opportunity to controvert any included
material. Ind. Code Ann. § 35-38-1-12(b) (West 1986). David
Schneider, a trial attorney who worked on Williams' case, provided
an affidavit in July 1996 which states, however, that he was not
informed at the time of sentencing that Williams had been required
to complete the questionnaire. Schneider also states he was not
given a copy of the questionnaire as it had been answered by
Williams. (Appendix to Appellant's Br. at A-76.) Asked whether
Williams' trial counsel or Williams himself received a copy of the
questionnaire, Judge Letsinger replied:
The questionnaire is an exhibit to the pre-sentence
investigation report. Whenever counsel for the defendant
received his copy of the pre-sentence, which is usually
one (1) or two (2) days before the date of sentencing, he
got a copy of the questionnaire.
We have recently confronted the issue of Judge Letsinger's pre-sentence questionnaire in Matheney v. State, 688 N.E.2d 883 (Ind. 1997), petition for cert. filed. In Matheney, we reviewed the aggravating and mitigating factors absent the psychological questionnaire to determine whether the death sentence was
appropriate. Id. at 909 (citing Lambert v. State, 675 N.E.2d 1060,
1065 (Ind. 1996), cert. denied, 117 S. Ct. 2417 (1997)). Because
the circumstances we confront here are procedurally identical, we
will engage in the same type of review.
The aggravating circumstances charged by the State were that
Williams:
1. Intentionally killed John Rease during the
commission or attempted commission of a knowing or
intentional taking of property . . .
2. Intentionally killed Henrietta Rease during the
commission or attempted commission of a knowing or
intentional taking of property . . .
3. [Has] been convicted of the murder of John Rease and
Henrietta Rease.
(T.R. at 167A.) Because all of these aggravating factors relate
directly and solely to facts present at the time of the crimes, the
psychological questionnaire could not have been used by the judge
in considering or weighing these aggravators. The answers given by
Williams in that document were completely irrelevant to whether any
of the three charged factors existed in fact. We further note, as
fully discussed in our opinion on direct appeal, that there was
substantial evidence proving all three aggravating factors beyond
a reasonable doubt. Rouster, 600 N.E.2d at 1350.
The existence of the third aggravating factor is plain: Williams was convicted of killing more than one person, namely John
Rease and Henrietta Rease. The evidence also supports the
conclusion that Williams intentionally killed the Reases while
engaging or attempting to engage in a robbery even considered in
light of the requirement that accomplice liability is not enough,
that the defendant must be individually culpable for the death of
the victim or victims.See footnote
11
Townsend v. State, 533 N.E.2d 1215 (Ind.
1989), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1020 (1990). Here, this intent is
proven by facts which show that Williams and Rouster acted as a
team in robbing and then killing the Reases. The mitigating
factors which were presented by Williams do not overcome the weight
of these aggravators. Because the three aggravating factors
against Williams were proven by the State beyond a reasonable
doubt, and because the mitigating evidence presented by Williams is
outweighed by these aggravating factors beyond a reasonable doubt,
Williams' sentence stands as it is.
Williams urges that a number of factual errors were made in this Court's decision on direct appeal. The post-conviction court agreed that the direct appeal opinion erroneously stated that
Williams was wearing a blue shirt when he was wearing a red one;
that several rooms had been ransacked when only one had been; and
that "watches" were found in Williams' pouch when Williams was
actually wearing one watch, another watch was in his pouch, and a
watch which belonged to one of the victims was found in Teresa
Newsome's purse. (P-C.R. at 1337-39.) We regret these errors, but
they made no difference in our decision on appeal.
Williams objects to the post-conviction court's exclusion of
four experts he sought to present as witnesses: a forensic social
worker, a nurse, and two attorneys. The forensic social worker's
report and deposition testimony concerned what facts and testimony
counsel might have been able to obtain from a mitigation expert.
The nurse's report concerned possible consequences of birth
complications allegedly reflected in Williams' medical records.
The two attorneys were to testify about lawyer performance.
Expert opinion is appropriate only when it concerns matters not within the common knowledge or experience of an ordinary person and when it would aid the jury. Byrd v. State, 593 N.E.2d 1183, 1185 (Ind. 1992). Admission of expert testimony is generally assigned to the discretion of the trial court; it is reviewed on appeal only for an abuse of discretion. Id. Here, the post-
conviction court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting the
testimony of the two attorneys since the magistrate and the judge
are necessarily very familiar with ineffective assistance of
counsel claims. The State objected to the introduction of the
nurse's testimony on grounds that Williams himself had not proven
that he personally suffered from any of the potential conditions
discussed in the nurse's report. Again, the court did not abuse
its discretion in not allowing such testimony. The court sustained
the State's objection that the evidence offered by the social
worker on behalf of Williams was cumulative. Given the large
amount of evidence already available on Williams' difficult
childhood, we find this was not an abuse of discretion.
Dickson, Sullivan, Selby, and Boehm, JJ., concur.
Question 1: Did you review a questionnaire that was completed by
Darnell Williams in connection with Lake Superior Cause No. 45G02-
133-886-531?
Answer: Yes.
. . . .
Question 3: Did you rely on Williams' responses to the
questionnaire when sentencing him? If so, please explain.
Answer: It is difficult to reproduce thought processes which are
over nine (9) years old. I do not think I relied on any one
answer or series of answers. If I had relied on any answer in the
questionnaire, I would have specifically noted the same in my
written findings. There was no such notation.
Question 5: Was a copy of the completed questionnaire (sic) to
Williams or his counsel? If so, please state when and to whom.
Answer: Yes. The questionnaire is an exhibit to the pre-sentence
investigation report. Whenever counsel for the defendant received
his copy of the pre-sentence, which is usually one (1) or two (2)
days before sentencing, he got a copy of the questionnaire.
(Appendix to Appellant's Br. at A-78 to A-79.)
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