Beatty v. Collier

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2022
Docket4:22-cv-03658
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Beatty v. Collier, (S.D. Tex. 2022).

Opinion

November 04, 2022 Nathan Ochsner, Clerk UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS HOUSTON DIVISION

TRACY LANE § CIVIL ACTION NO. BEATTY, § 4:22-cv-03658 Plaintiff, § § § vs. § JUDGE CHARLES ESKRIDGE § § BRYAN COLLIER, et § al, § Defendants. § OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION AND DISMISSING ACTION Plaintiff Tracy Lane Beatty is a Texas death-row inmate scheduled for execution on November 9, 2022. He filed a civil-rights complaint under 42 USC § 1983 on October 22, 2022. Dkt 1. He sues three defendants in their official capacity as representatives of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, who will be referred to collectively here as TDCJ. The pending motion by Beatty for a preliminary injunction is denied. Dkt 6. This action is dismissed. 1. Background Beatty strangled his 62-year-old mother two days before Thanksgiving in 2003. A jury convicted him of capital murder. He was sentenced to death and has been on death row since 2004. He has also actively challenged his conviction and sentence in state and federal court for the past eighteen years. a. Related litigation Beatty has already unsuccessfully sought federal habeas relief. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas appointed Thomas Scott Smith to represent Beatty in August 2013. Beatty v Director, No. 4:09-cv-00225-SDJ, Dkt 69, *1 (ED Tex filed August 5, 2022) (unopposed motion to appoint counsel). Smith remains lead counsel to date. Id at *1. The Eastern District of Texas denied habeas relief in July 2013. Beatty v Director, TDCJ-CID, 2013 WL 3763104, * 17 (ED Tex 2013). The Fifth Circuit denied Beatty’s request for a certificate of appealability. Beatty v Stephens, 759 F3d 455 (5th Cir 2014). Beatty has subsequently raised a number of issues in federal court. He’s also twice faced execution dates. See In re Beatty, 2020 WL 1329145 (Tex Crim App 2020); Ex Parte Beatty, 2015 WL 6442730, at *1 (Tex Crim App 2015). The matters in this lawsuit involve Beatty’s preparation for an upcoming execution date on November 9, 2022. A Texas state district court set that execution on June 10, 2022. Dkt 1 at 4. This means that Beatty has had 152 days to prepare for his execution. Attorneys representing an inmate under an execution date must act quickly and zealously. “If an execution date is set, post-conviction counsel should immediately take all appropriate steps to secure a stay of execution and pursue those efforts through all available fora.” ABA Guidelines for the Appointment and Performance of Counsel in Death Penalty Cases 10.15.1 (rev ed 2003). Beatty’s counsel began an investigation in early August assertedly to serve two purposes: (1) to support habeas litigation by investigating a claim that intellectual disability prevents his execution under Atkins v Virginia, 536 US 304 (2002); and (2) to present evidence in support of clemency. Dkt 1 at 7. Any investigation into clemency faced a deadline that required any such application to be filed at least 21 calendar days before a scheduled execution. 37 Tex Admin Code § 143.43. But an inmate seeking successive state habeas relief doesn’t face any statutory deadline. In his response to the show-cause order, Beatty claims that he acted within the “expected timeline” and “was within the normal range for conducting Ford- or Atkins- related evaluations prior to a scheduled execution.” Dkt 10 at 5. Counsel confirmed at hearing that Beatty doesn’t anticipate (at least at present) raising any incompetency- to-be-executed claim under Ford v Wainwright, 477 US 399 (1986). Lead counsel sought help to investigate mental-health issues. On August 5, 2022, Beatty filed a motion for “the assistance of co-counsel to represent [him] in pursuing remedies that are still available to him.” Beatty v Director, No. 4:09-cv-00225-SDJ, Dkt 69, *2 (ED Tex filed August 5, 2022). The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas appointed the Federal Public Defender’s Office for the Northern District of Texas to serve as co- counsel under 18 USC § 3599. Order Appointing Co- Counsel, Beatty v Director, No. 4:09-cv-00225-SDJ, Dkt 70 (ED Tex, filed August 9, 2022). Beatty argues that he “has never had an in-person evaluation by a mental health expert conducted by a member of his defense team, including at trial and all subsequent post-conviction proceedings.” Dkt 1 at 7. The record is at slight variance, to the extent that the Fifth Circuit has noted that his “trial defense team explained in a hearing that it had obtained the assistance of a psychiatrist and a psychologist but that neither would testify because each believed Beatty to be a future danger to society.” Beatty, 759 F3d at 460.. Regardless, no attorney for Beatty has raised any mental- health concerns in his appellate or post-conviction legal challenges. His counsel at hearing on the present motion confirmed this. Counsel arranged for evaluations by two experts, being Doctors Bhushan Agharkar and Daniel Martell. Beatty retained Dr. Agharkar to conduct a neuropsychiatric evaluation and Dr. Martell to conduct a neuropsychological evaluation. The complaint lists various factors that encouraged counsel to seek out those examinations, including Beatty’s life-long treatment for a skin disorder which is co-existent with impaired cognitive functioning, a head injury at age five, taking anti-psychotic medication for decades, using medication for people with bipolar disorder, and more-recent psychological treatments in prison. Dkts 1 at 6–7 & 6 at 2. Beatty’s counsel at hearing emphasized in particular an acute mental-health episode (visual and auditory hallucinations) that happened in May 2022, for which he’s since taken medication used to treat the symptoms of schizophrenia. TDCJ approved both examinations. In late August or early September 2022, both experts informed counsel that Beatty’s hands would need to be unrestrained by handcuffs for portions of their examinations. Dkt 1-1 at 7, 9–10. But as recently observed by the Fifth Circuit, “Beginning in 2021, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice started allowing an inmate to be unshackled during an expert evaluation only when a court order has been obtained.” Beatty v Lumpkin, 2022 WL 16628396, *5 (5th Cir 2022) (Richman, Chief Judge, concurring). This isn’t the product of any official written policy. Dkt 1-1 at 5. TDCJ instead has an informal policy that “[f]or security and liability purposes . . . the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) will only allow an inmate to be unshackled during an expert evaluation upon showing of a court order.” Respondent’s Unopposed Motion to Compel the Texas Department of Criminal Justice to Unshackle Petitioner’s Hands During Expert Evaluation, Washington v Lumpkin, No. 4:07-cv-721, Dkt 226 (SD Tex filed Feb 15, 2022). Beatty hasn’t requested any order from the state courts that would allow for examination without handcuffs. He instead argues that it’s been standard practice for attorneys to request orders from federal courts, which he asserts are routinely granted. On September 2, 2022, Beatty filed a motion in his closed federal habeas action in the Eastern District of Texas. That motion relied on a single statutory argument that counsel are “unable to discharge their responsibilities to Mr. Beatty under [18 USC] § 3599 if he is unable to participate in the upcoming expert evaluations.” Opposed Motion to Compel the Texas Department of Criminal Justice to Unshackle Petitioner’s Hands During Expert Evaluations, Beatty v Director, No. 4:09-cv-00225-SDJ, Dkt 72, *2 (ED Tex, filed September 2, 2022).

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Bluebook (online)
Beatty v. Collier, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-collier-txsd-2022.