Carl Blue v. Rick Thaler, Director

665 F.3d 647, 2011 WL 6413668
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 2011
Docket10-70025
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 665 F.3d 647 (Carl Blue v. Rick Thaler, Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carl Blue v. Rick Thaler, Director, 665 F.3d 647, 2011 WL 6413668 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

In a habeas proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, petitioner Carl Henry Blue raised twenty-one separate challenges to his death sentence. The district court denied relief. Blue seeks a certificate of appealability for five issues. We will deny the request.

I.

In 1994 a Texas jury found Carl Henry Blue guilty of capital murder, and Blue received a death sentence. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (“the CCA”) affirmed Blue’s conviction on direct appeal in 1996 and denied his first state habeas application in 1999. The following year, the federal district court vacated Blue’s death sentence on the ground that the State’s expert witness had testified during the punishment-phase trial that Blue was more likely to be a future danger to society because he is black. A second punish *653 ment-phase trial took place in 2001. Once again the jury’s answers to the special issues led the district court to sentence Blue to death. The CCA affirmed Blue’s new sentence on direct appeal in 2003 and denied his second state habeas application in 2004. Blue timely filed a skeletal federal habeas petition in 2005. The district court then promptly stayed and abated the proceedings, enabling Blue to assert a claim under Atkins v. Virginia 1 in a third state habeas application. The CCA determined that Blue had not made out a prima facie case for Atkins relief and dismissed his third application as an abuse of the writ in 2007. Blue then returned to federal court, where the district court denied Blue’s petition in its entirety in August 2010.

II.

Blue seeks to appeal the district court’s determinations that he is not entitled to habeas relief on (1) his claim under Atkins v. Virginia that his mental retardation bars his execution; and (2) various claims that the jury instructions at his punishment-phase trial violated the Eighth Amendment. Before a § 2254 petitioner can appeal, he must obtain a certificate of appealability (“COA”). 2 We will issue a COA only if the petitioner “has- made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” 3 Where, as here, “a district court has rejected the constitutional claims on the merits,” a petitioner is not entitled to a COA unless he can “demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find the district court’s assessment of the constitutional claims debatable or wrong.” 4 In death penalty cases, “ ‘any doubts as to whether a COA should issue must be resolved in the petitioner’s favor.’ ” 5

Treating the Aifcms-related issues and the jury-instruction issues in turn, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion by declining to hold an evidentiary hearing nor err by using IQ scores to assess Blue’s general intellectual functioning; that the proper focus now is upon the CCA’s determination of Blue’s general intellectual functioning, a determination entitled to AEDPA deference; and that, in any event, any error would be harmless because Blue does not challenge the district court’s determinations that he has failed to satisfy the other two elements of the test for mental retardation. We also reject the three remaining challenges as foreclosed by circuit precedent: Blue’s challenge to the “moral blameworthiness” language in Texas’s capital-sentencing jury instructions; Blue’s challenge to the failure to assign a burden of proof on the mitigation special issue; and his challenge to the “10-12” Rule.

III.

Blue presented his Atkins claim to the CCA in his third state habeas application. 6 Holding that Blue had “failed to meet his burden to present sufficient specific facts from which, even if true, we could reasonably conclude, by clear and convincing evi *654 dence, that no rational fact-finder would fail to find he is mentally retarded,” 7 requirements of Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article 11.071, § 5(a)(3), the CCA dismissed Blue’s habeas application as an abuse of the writ. 8 Section 5(a)(3) codifies an actual-innocence-of-the-death-penalty exception to Texas’s rule of procedural default. 9

The State unsuccessfully argued to the district court that Blue had proeedurally defaulted his Atkins claim, 10 and did not re-urge procedural default in its response to Blue’s motion for a COA. In short, the state accepts that the CCA decided the merits of Blue’s Atkins claim.

Whether a habeas petitioner is mentally retarded is a question of fact. 11 Under § 2254(d)(2) we cannot grant habeas relief unless the CCA’s adjudication of Blue’s Atkins claim “resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 12 Section 2254(e)(1) supplements § 2254(d)(2) by further providing that “a determination of a factual issue made by a State court shall be presumed to be correct” in a subsequent federal habeas proceeding and that the petitioner “shall have the burden of rebutting the presumption of correctness by clear and convincing evidence.” 13 The clear-and-convincing evidence standard of § 2254(e)(1) — which is “arguably more deferential” to the state court than is the unreasonable-determination standard of § 2254(d)(2) 14 — pertains only to a state court’s determinations of particular factual issues, while § 2254(d)(2) pertains to the state court’s decision as a whole. 15

Section 2254(d)(2) commands substantial deference to the factual determinations made by state courts. 16 It is not enough to show that a state court’s decision was incorrect or erroneous. A petitioner must show that the decision was *655 objectively unreasonable, “a substantially higher threshold.” 17 To clear that threshold, the petitioner must show that “a reasonable factfinder must conclude” that the state court’s determination of the facts was unreasonable. 18 “[A] state-court factual determination is not unreasonable merely because the federal habeas court would have reached a different conclusion in the first instance.” 19

A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 F.3d 647, 2011 WL 6413668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carl-blue-v-rick-thaler-director-ca5-2011.