Bader v. Warden, NHSP

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedMay 28, 2003
DocketCV-02-508-JD
StatusPublished

This text of Bader v. Warden, NHSP (Bader v. Warden, NHSP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bader v. Warden, NHSP, (D.N.H. 2003).

Opinion

Bader v . Warden, NHSP CV-02-508-JD 05/28/03 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Seth Bader

v. Civil N o . 02-508 JD Opinion N o . 2003 DNH 090 Warden, New Hampshire State Prison

O R D E R

The plaintiff, Seth Bader, seeks habeas corpus relief, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, from his conviction on charges of conspiracy to commit murder and first degree murder in the death of his former wife and from his sentence to a life term without the possibility of parole. He makes five claims in support of his habeas petition and moves for summary judgment as to three of the claims. The Warden moves for summary judgment as to all five claims. Bader moves to hold his fifth claim in abeyance pending discovery.

Background

Seth Bader did not include a factual statement in support of his motion for summary judgment or in opposition to the Warden’s motion.1 See LR 7.2(b). Instead, Bader submitted his own

1 Bader is represented by counsel, and before his conviction, he was a member of the bar in this state. affidavit in support of his objection to the Warden’s motion for summary judgment to dispute certain facts included in the Warden’s factual statement. The following background is taken from the parties’ properly supported factual information and from State v . Bader, 808 A.2d 12 (N.H. 2002).

Seth Bader and Vicki Bader were married in 1991 and divorced in 1994. They had two adopted children, Joseph and Matt, and one biological child, Sam. Joseph Bader, who was born in 1982, is Seth Bader’s biological cousin as well as his adopted son. The Baders’ divorce and custody proceedings were not amicable. Issues pertaining to the financial settlement and custody of the children were in litigation when Vicki Bader was killed.

After the divorce, Seth Bader had a relationship with Mary Jean Martin, who became his fiancée. Both Bader and Martin told others that they wanted Vicki dead. Sandro Stuto testified that Martin hired him and others to terrorize Vicki by shooting the windows in her house with a BB gun, slashing her tires and threatening her, and planting a pipe bomb in her mailbox. Martin negotiated with Stuto to kill Vicki but refused to pay the price Stuto demanded. Martin then hired Stuto to dispose of Vicki’s car after she was murdered.

Joseph Bader was twelve years old at the time of the divorce and fourteen years old when Vicki was murdered. He lived with

2 Seth Bader, along with his brothers Matt and Sam. Joseph testified that Seth dictated hateful notes for Joseph to send to Vicki as part of his effort to resolve the custody and support payment dispute in his favor. Joseph also broke into Vicki’s house and killed her pet parakeets at Seth’s direction.

Joseph testified that Seth planned to murder Vicki by shooting her. In preparation for the murder, Joseph and Seth drove to a secluded wooded area in Waterboro, Maine, and dug a hole to use as a grave. Seth told Joseph that he was to make sure that Vicki went into the house, take care of Sam while the shooting occurred, and then help bury Vicki’s body in Maine. Seth showed Joseph the guns that would be used in the shooting--a “Thompson Contender,” with a removable barrel, that Seth would use, and a shotgun for Stuto. The guns were stored in the basement of Seth’s house. Seth told Joseph that he would use the Thompson Contender to kill Vicki because he could change the barrel. Seth planned to have Stuto as a backup in case Seth missed when he tried to shoot Vicki.

Vicki came to Seth’s house on August 2 4 , 1996, to drop off their son, Sam, after her visitation with him. Martin had taken the Baders’ other son, Matt, shopping. Joseph testified that, as directed by Seth, he met Vicki outside and took Sam, telling Vicki that Seth wanted to see her inside the house. Inside the

3 house, Stuto waited with a shot gun in the study, watching her arrive from the window. Seth waited in the kitchen area, also armed with a gun. After Stuto heard Seth’s gun discharge, he called Joseph to come in with Sam. Joseph took Sam upstairs and locked him in the bedroom with a child gate. When Joseph came back downstairs, he found Vicki lying on the floor in the kitchen, bleeding from her head and appearing to be dead. Both Seth and Stuto had guns. Seth directed Joseph and Stuto to clean up and to put a garbage bag over Vicki’s head to keep the blood contained while he took the guns to the basement. Seth returned with the barrel from his gun and the spent casing from the shot fired. Seth, Stuto, and Joseph carried Vicki’s body to Seth’s Jeep and put the body in the back, covered by the cargo screen.

Martin returned with Matt, but soon left, taking Matt and Sam. Stuto drove away in Vicki’s car and left i t , as planned, in a “bad area” with the keys and the windows open, so that it would appear to have been stolen.

Seth and Joseph left in the Jeep to bury the body. Joseph buried the body in the pre-dug grave in Waterboro, Maine, while Seth buried the gun barrel and spent casing. Seth’s cellular telephone records indicate calls on the evening of August 2 4 , 1996, from the calling area that includes Waterboro, Maine. On

4 the return trip, they stopped at a mall to buy new clothes. On April 1 0 , 1997, Joseph led the police to the site where Vicki Bader was buried. Using a metal detector and directions from Joseph, the police also found a gun barrel and live ammunition buried in the area. They did not find a spent casing. The ammunition and gun barrel fit Seth’s Thompson Contender gun.

The state filed a juvenile delinquency petition against Joseph in November of 1997, based on his participation in the conspiracy to murder Vicki Bader. In December of 1997, the state and Joseph entered a plea agreement as to the juvenile petition.

Seth Bader was arrested in April of 1997 and charged with murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the death of Vicki Bader. The administrator of Vicki’s estate brought a wrongful death claim against Bader in New Hampshire state court. The administrator sought and Judge Murphy granted an ex parte attachment on Bader’s assets and an injunction to keep him from spending the assets. The attachment was later modified by agreement of the parties.

Judge Murphy was also assigned to the criminal case against Bader and set bail at $750,000. Bader contends that he could not make bail because of the attachment on his assets. Bader petitioned the New Hampshire Supreme Court for a writ of habeas corpus, challenging the bail order. The petition was denied. In

5 October of 1997, Bader’s new counsel in the civil case moved for summary judgment and to vacate the attachment. Judge Murphy recused himself from the civil case in November of 1997 “‘in light of the allegations contained in [the] defendant’s

pleadings.’” Bader, 808 A.2d at 19 (quoting Judge Murphy). In a later clarification, Judge Murphy indicated that he had recused himself “‘because of a writ of habeas corpus that was filed on [the defendant’s] behalf, which I thought contained all kinds of misstatements.’” Id. Judge Murphy continued to preside in the criminal proceeding against Bader.

The criminal trial was held from March 2 4 , 1998, to May 8 , 1998. The jury found Bader guilty on both counts. Joseph Bader and Sandro Stuto, along with others, testified for the state. Mary Jean Martin was called by the defense but invoked her Fifth Amendment privilege not to testify. Bader was sentenced on May 8 , 1998, to life without the possibility of parole, for first degree murder, and to a concurrent sentence of seven and one half to fifteen years, for conspiracy.

A notice of appeal was filed on Bader’s behalf with the New Hampshire Supreme Court. The court accepted the appeal.

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