Daniel Lewis Lee v. T. J. Watson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2020
Docket20-2128
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Lewis Lee v. T. J. Watson (Daniel Lewis Lee v. T. J. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Lewis Lee v. T. J. Watson, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 20-2128 DANIEL LEWIS LEE, Petitioner-Appellant, v.

T. J. WATSON, Warden, and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondents-Appellees. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Terre Haute Division. No. 2:19-CV-00468-JPH-DLP — James Patrick Hanlon, Judge. ____________________

SUBMITTED JULY 9, 2020 — DECIDED JULY 10, 2020 ____________________

Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and EASTERBROOK and BARRETT, Circuit Judges. SYKES, Chief Judge. Daniel Lewis Lee and his codefendant, Chevy Kehoe, were members of the Aryan Peoples’ Republic (a/k/a Aryan Peoples’ Resistance), a white supremacist organization founded for the purpose of establishing an independent nation of white supremacists in the Pacific Northwest. In January 1996 Lee and Kehoe traveled from the 2 No. 20-2128

State of Washington to the Arkansas home of William Mueller, a firearms dealer who owned a large collection of guns and ammunition. There they overpowered Mueller and his wife, Nancy, and questioned their eight-year-old daugh- ter Sarah about the location of Mueller’s guns, ammunition, and cash. After stealing about $30,000 worth of weapons and $50,000 in cash and coins, Lee and Kehoe shot all three victims with a stun gun, placed plastic bags over their heads, and sealed the bags with duct tape to asphyxiate them. They then taped rocks to the three victims and threw them into the Illinois Bayou. The bodies were discovered six months later in Lake Darnelle near Russellville, Arkansas. United States v. Lee, 374 F.3d 637, 642 (8th Cir. 2004). Lee and Kehoe were indicted in federal court in the Eastern District of Arkansas on three counts of capital murder in aid of racketeering, 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(1), and related crimes. In May 1999 they were convicted by a jury in a joint trial, and the district judge scheduled separate penal- ty phases. United States v. Lee, 274 F.3d 485, 488 (8th Cir. 2001). Kehoe’s case went first, and the jury returned a ver- dict of life in prison without release. Id. In Lee’s sentencing proceeding, prosecutors introduced evidence of his in- volvement as a teenager in a 1990 murder in Oklahoma. In that earlier homicide, Lee severely beat the victim and forced him down a manhole into a sewer, then gave a knife to his cousin, who repeatedly stabbed the victim and slit his throat. Lee and his cousin were charged with first-degree murder, but Lee’s case was resolved with a guilty plea to robbery with a suspended sentence, which the government charac- terized in its argument to the jury as a “gift” from Oklahoma prosecutors. Also, as relevant here, in cross-examination of Lee’s psychological expert, the government elicited testimo- No. 20-2128 3

ny about Lee’s future dangerousness—specifically, a psycho- logical test known as the Hare Psychopathy Checklist- Revised, which the government’s expert had administered to Lee and yielded a score in the psychopathy range. Lee’s jury returned a verdict of death. The Eighth Circuit affirmed Lee’s convictions and death sentence. 374 F.3d 637 (8th Cir. 2004); 274 F.3d 485 (8th Cir. 2001). Lee pursued a full round of collateral review under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 raising multiple grounds, including ineffec- tive assistance of trial counsel. 715 F.3d 215 (8th Cir. 2013). He filed many subsequent requests for collateral relief, but all failed on the merits or for lack of the authorization re- quired by 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3) and § 2255(h). See, e.g., No. 4:97-cr-00243-02-KGB, 2020 WL 3625732 (E.D. Ark. July 2, 2020); No. 4:97-cr-00243-02-KGB, 2020 WL 3618709 (E.D. Ark. July 2, 2020); 960 F.3d 1023 (8th Cir. 2020); No. 19-2432 (8th Cir. Nov. 4, 2019); 792 F.3d 1021 (8th Cir. 2015). In July 2019 the United States scheduled Lee’s execution for December 9, 2019. Two months later he filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the Southern District of Indiana, where he is confined in the Terre Haute federal prison. He requested a stay of execution but later withdrew that request. The district judge nonethe- less stayed Lee’s execution. We vacated the stay order because § 2255(e) bars a § 2241 petition with a limited excep- tion for claims for which a motion under § 2255 is “inade- quate or ineffective to test the validity of” the prisoner’s detention; the exception is customarily referred to as the “Savings Clause.” Lee’s § 2241 petition raised two challenges 4 No. 20-2128

to his death sentence: a Strickland claim 1 for ineffective assistance of trial counsel during the sentencing phase and a Brady/Napue claim 2 based on evidence that was supposedly newly discovered. The former claim attacked counsel’s failure to adequately object to the government’s cross- examination of the defense psychologist regarding the psychopathology test; the latter was premised on a docu- ment in the court record in Lee’s 1990 Oklahoma murder case that current counsel contends sheds some light on why the case was resolved as a robbery. In our order vacating the stay, we explained that Lee’s likelihood of success on the merits was “slim” because both claims—Brady claims alleging suppression of exculpatory evidence and Strickland claims alleging ineffective assistance of counsel—are “regularly made and resolved under § 2255,” so the remedy by motion cannot be called “inade- quate or ineffective” for purposes of the Savings Clause. Lee v. Watson, No. 19-3399, 2019 WL 6718924, at *1 (7th Cir. Dec. 6, 2019). We considered and rejected the possibility that Lee’s case might satisfy the standard established in Webster v. Daniels, which holds that § 2255 may be inadequate or ineffective if the provision for successive collateral attacks in § 2255(h) does not permit a prisoner to present newly dis- covered evidence that “existed before the time of the trial” but was unavailable “despite diligence on the part of the defense.” 784 F.3d 1123, 1140 (7th Cir. 2015) (en banc). In Webster the newly discovered evidence had a bearing on

1 Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). 2Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963); Napue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264 (1959). No. 20-2128 5

whether the prisoner was “categorically and constitutionally ineligible for the death penalty” under the Supreme Court’s decisions in Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304

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