Archuleta v. Galetka

2011 UT 73, 267 P.3d 232, 696 Utah Adv. Rep. 28, 2011 Utah LEXIS 166, 2011 WL 5840556
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 2011
Docket20070256, 20100791
StatusPublished
Cited by114 cases

This text of 2011 UT 73 (Archuleta v. Galetka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archuleta v. Galetka, 2011 UT 73, 267 P.3d 232, 696 Utah Adv. Rep. 28, 2011 Utah LEXIS 166, 2011 WL 5840556 (Utah 2011).

Opinion

Justice LEE,

opinion of the Court:

T1 In December 1989, Michael Archuleta was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death for the brutal murder of Gordon Ray Church. The case has slowly worked its way through the Utah court system ever since. This opinion consolidates analysis from the fourth and fifth times that this court has entertained appeals by Ar-chuleta. We find none of Archuleta's numerous claims in either of these appeals availing, and we accordingly reaffirm his conviction *241 for first degree murder and sentence of death.

BACKGROUND

I

T2 At the time of the murder, Archuleta lived with co-defendant Lance Wood and their respective girlfriends in an apartment in Cedar City, Utah. On the evening of November 21, 1988, Archuleta and Wood went to a 7-Eleven store in Cedar City, where they met Gordon Church for the first time. After a brief conversation, the three men decided to cruise the town's main street in Chureh's car.

13 Later that evening, the three men drove to a secluded area in a nearby canyon. Church there told Archuleta that he was homosexual. By his own admission, Archule-ta began to engage in a sex act with Church, but then thought better of it. Wood then attacked Church, tackling him to the ground, breaking his arm, and dislocating his elbow.

T4 Archuleta and Wood bound Church with tire chains and a bungee cord. Placing Church in the trunk of his own car, Archule-ta and Wood left the canyon and drove approximately 76 miles north to another seelud-ed area. They removed Church from the trunk and attached battery cables to his testicles and to the car battery in a failed attempt to electrocute him. They inflicted severe blows to Church's head with a tire jack and tire fron. And they inserted the tire iron into Church's rectum, forcing it eighteen inches into his body and puncturing his liver. When Church was apparently dead, Archule-ta and Wood dragged his body up a hillside and attempted to cover the body with tree branches and dirt. Church was found naked from the waist down, with a gag around his mouth and the tire chains wrapped tightly around his neck.

T5 The medical examiner testified at Ar-chuleta's murder trial that Church's face was completely distorted and that the left side of his head was concave due to multiple blows to the jaw, cheek, and eye areas with a blunt instrument. Church also had multiple bruises and lacerations on his body, including puncture wounds in his back consistent with being jabbed with pliers. According to the medical examiner, the cause of death was severe injury to the brain due to multiple blows to the head. A contributing cause of death was the penetrating injury to the liver and abdomen caused by insertion of the tire iron into Church's rectum.

T6 After Archuleta and Wood abandoned Church's mangled body, they drove his car to Salt Lake City in the early morning hours of November 22. While in Salt Lake City, they visited several people. Archuleta had a good deal of blood on his pants, and he and Wood told people they met that they had been hunting and skinning rabbits. The two men hitchhiked back to Cedar City that same day.

17 Upon returning to Cedar City, Wood contacted authorities and informed them of his and Archuleta's participation in the murder. Archuleta was arrested and tried before a jury for the murder of Church in December 1989. The jury convicted Archuleta of first degree murder. Pursuant to statute, a sentencing hearing was then convened, in which the sentencing jury sentenced Archuleta to death.

18 Archuleta appealed his conviction and death sentence to this court, raising numerous claims. After examining his claims, this court affirmed Archuleta's conviction and death sentence on March 25, 1993. Archule-ta filed a petition for rehearing, which this court denied on May 11, 1993. See State v. Archuleta (Archuleta I), 850 P.2d 1232 (Utah 1993).

II

T9 On March 10, 1994, Archuleta filed a petition styled as a Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus and/or for Post-Conviction Relief in state district court. He also filed an amended petition on August 11, 1994. Archuleta's amended petition raised numerous claims that could have been but were not raised at trial or on appeal. Archuleta's petition also included claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel.

T 10 In response, Respondent Hank Galet-ka, the warden of the Utah State Prison, filed a motion to dismiss the petition and a *242 motion for summary judgment. On October 4, 1996, the district court (Judge Lynn W. Davis) granted Respondent's motions. Ar-chuleta appealed the district court's ruling to this court. We reversed in part and remanded in part, concluding that the "district court erred in ruling that the petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which was based on the allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel at trial and on appeal, was barred." Archuleta v. Galetka (Archulet II), 960 P.2d 399 (Utah 1998). The case was accordingly remitted to the district court for a hearing on Archuleta's ineffective assistance of counsel claims.

T11 On June 14, 2002, Archuleta filed a second amended petition, raising forty-three separate claims, many with numerous sub-claims, challenging his conviction and death sentence. In claims one through thirty, Ar-chuleta reasserted claims that he had raised before Judge Davis directly challenging his conviction and sentence. Each of these claims could have been but were not raised at trial or on appeal. In addition, Archuleta raised several claims of ineffective assistance of both trial and appellate counsel. Each of these ineffectiveness claims related to Ar-chuleta's first thirty claims and alleged that trial and appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance for failing to raise those claims at trial or on appeal. Archuleta asked the court to "issue a writ of habeas corpus" and to "discharge[ ] [him] from his unconstitutional confinement and restraint and/or [to] relieve[ ] [him] of his unconstitutional sentence of death."

chuleta's claims. {12 Respondent filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that he was entitled to summary judgment on all of Ar-Respondent asserted that Archuleta's first thirty claims directly challenging various aspects of his conviction and sentence had previously been dismissed by Judge Davis and rejected by this court in II. Respondent asserted that those substantive claims were therefore procedurally barred. With respect to Archule-ta's ineffective assistance of counsel claims, Respondent argued that Archuleta had pleaded insufficient facts to satisfy the standard set forth by the United States Supreme Court in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). Archuleta filed a response to Respondent's motion for summary judgment, opposing summary judgment on his thirty substantive claims and on a majority of his ineffective assistance of counsel claims.

{13 In an August 24, 2004 memorandum decision, the habeas court granted summary judgment for Respondent on the vast majority of Archuleta's claims. The court agreed with Respondent that all of Archuleta's non-ineffective assistance of counsel claims had been rejected by Judge Davis and that they had not been revived by Archuleta II.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 UT 73, 267 P.3d 232, 696 Utah Adv. Rep. 28, 2011 Utah LEXIS 166, 2011 WL 5840556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archuleta-v-galetka-utah-2011.