Browning v. State

91 P.3d 39, 120 Nev. 347, 120 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2004 Nev. LEXIS 45
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 2004
Docket39063
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 91 P.3d 39 (Browning v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. State, 91 P.3d 39, 120 Nev. 347, 120 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2004 Nev. LEXIS 45 (Neb. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

In 1985, appellant Paul Lewis Browning robbed and stabbed to death Hugo Elsen at Elsen’s jewelry store in Las Vegas. Browning was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. This is his timely first petition seeking post-conviction relief, pursuant to former NRS 177.315-.385 (equivalent to a post-conviction habeas petition). The district court denied the petition, finding that Browning received effective assistance of counsel and that his other claims were procedurally barred.

*352 This appeal raises numerous claims. The primary issue is whether Browning’s appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the aggravating circumstance of depravity of mind. We conclude that counsel was ineffective in this regard, requiring us to vacate Browning’s death sentence and remand for a new penalty hearing. We otherwise affirm the district court’s order.

FACTS

On November 8, 1985, Hugo Elsen was stabbed to death during a robbery of his jewelry store in Las Vegas. His wife, Josy Elsen, was in the back of the store when he was attacked. Hearing noises, she went into the showroom and saw a black man wearing a blue cap squatting over her husband holding a knife. She fled out the back door to the neighboring store and asked the employees there to call the police. She and a neighboring employee, Debra Coe, then returned to the jewelry store where Coe placed a pillow under Elsen’s head and covered him with a blanket. Two to four minutes later help arrived. Elsen soon died, after giving a very brief description of the perpetrator as a black man wearing a blue cap with loose curled wet hair. Debra Coe also described a man she had seen leaving the vicinity: he was wearing a blue cap, blue jacket, Levi’s, and tennis shoes; was about 27 years old and about six-feet tall; and had hair a little longer than the cap he was wearing and a mustache. Another witness, Charles Woods, identified a person he saw leaving the vicinity as a black man wearing a dark or blue cap and dark trousers, about six-feet tall, and weighing about 180 pounds.

Shortly after the crimes, Randy Wolfe approached police and told them that a man was in Wolfe’s nearby hotel room with a large amount of jewelry. The police went to the room and found Browning with the jewelry. Browning was arrested and taken to Coe and Woods for a showup identification. They identified Browning as the man they saw leaving the vicinity of the crimes.

At trial, Vanessa Wolfe, Randy Wolfe’s wife, testified for the State to the following. She returned to her hotel room on the day of the crimes and found Browning taking off his clothes. He had a coat, which was either on the floor or on the bed. On the bed was a lot of jewelry with tags, which she helped cut off. Browning asked Vanessa to help him get rid of some of the jewelry and said he thought he had just killed somebody. She helped Browning by throwing the tags and his hat in a nearby dumpster. Browning gave her a knife to dispose of. Instead, she put the knife in a pizza box in a closet under the stairs. The officers assigned to Browning’s case testified that they retrieved all of this evidence from the places that Vanessa described. Randy Wolfe also testified that when he went into his hotel room, Browning was sitting on the *353 bed and said that he just robbed a jewelry store and thought that he had killed a man. Investigators found Browning’s fingerprints in the jewelry store.

Browning was convicted, pursuant to a jury trial, of first-degree murder with the use of a deadly weapon, robbery with the use of a deadly weapon, burglary, and escape. At the penalty hearing, the State presented detailed evidence of his prior felonies for robbery with the use of a knife. Browning’s mother testified as a mitigating witness. She stated that Browning attended private school as a child, was a very good student and president of the student council, and was very athletically inclined, winning medals in cross-country. She had marital problems, and she and Browning moved to Washington, D.C., where he worked as a doorman for the United States Congress and took paralegal classes at the Library of Congress. After Browning left high school, she had not had much contact with him, but she knew that he was very remorseful for the crimes. Browning spoke in allocution and stated that his involvement with drugs was the reason he was implicated in the crimes. He apologized for the pain that the Elsen and Browning families had suffered. He stated that he did not want to die and that he was innocent.

The jury found five aggravating circumstances: the murder was committed while Browning was engaged in a burglary; the murder was committed while he was engaged in a robbery; he was previously convicted of a felony involving the use or threat of violence; the murder was committed while he was under a sentence of imprisonment; and the murder involved depravity of mind. The jury did not find any mitigating circumstances and returned a sentence of death.

This court affirmed Browning’s conviction and sentence. 1 In May 1989, he timely filed his first petition for post-conviction relief. He filed a supplemental petition the next month. In June 1996, he filed an amended petition, and in October 1999, he filed a revised second amended petition. The district court conducted an evidentiary hearing in 1999 and dismissed the petition on December 7, 2001. 2 This appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

Applicable legal standards for review of this case

A petitioner for post-conviction relief is entitled to an eviden-tiary hearing only if he supports his claims with specific factual al *354 legations that if trae would entitle him to relief. 3 He is not entitled to such a hearing if the factual allegations are belied or repelled by the record. 4 The petitioner has the burden of establishing the factual allegations in support of the petition. 5 Also, an appellant must “present relevant authority and cogent argument; issues not so presented need not be addressed by this court.” 6

A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel presents a mixed question of law and fact, subject to independent review. 7 To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, a claimant must show both that counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. 8 To show prejudice, the claimant must show a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s errors the result of the proceeding would have been different. 9

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.3d 39, 120 Nev. 347, 120 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2004 Nev. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-state-nev-2004.