Demarest v. Price

905 F. Supp. 1432, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17666, 1995 WL 692914
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedNovember 20, 1995
Docket91 N 827
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 905 F. Supp. 1432 (Demarest v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demarest v. Price, 905 F. Supp. 1432, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17666, 1995 WL 692914 (D. Colo. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

NOTTINGHAM, District Judge.

Petitioner Richard S. Demarest, a state prisoner in the custody of the Colorado Department of Corrections, seeks a writ of ha-beas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254 *1436 (West 1994). In October 1981, Demarest was convicted of first degree murder in Jefferson County, Colorado, District Court and sentenced to life imprisonment. Demarest argues, inter alia, that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial. The matter is now before the court on the “Recommendation of United States Magistrate Judge,” filed April 23,1993, and supplemented August 4, 1995, in which the magistrate judge recommends that the court grant De-marest’s petition for habeas relief. I find and conclude that Demarest did not receive effective assistance of counsel at trial, and, on that ground, I grant his petition for writ of habeas corpus. Because my assessment depends upon comparing the actual course of trial events with what likely would have happened had counsel performed competently, a detailed examination of the facts and procedural history of the case in the state courts is necessary.

FACTS

1. The Murder of Ronald H. Hyams

On February 9, 1981, Ronald H. Hyams was brutally murdered at his home in Evergreen, Colorado. (Tr. of Trial at 38 [Prosecution’s opening statement], Colorado v. Demarest, No. 81 CR 259 [Jefferson County Dist. Ct.] [hereinafter “Tr. of Trial”].) Hyams shared his home with Demarest, a friend of thirteen years, and Carol Lee Held, another close friend. (Id. at 203, 246 [Held’s Test.].) Calling from a neighbor’s house, Demarest reported Hyams’ murder to the Jefferson County Sheriffs Department in the early afternoon of February 9, 1981. (Id. at 117 [dispatcher’s Test.].) In a panicked, sobbing voice, he told the emergency operator that he had discovered Hyams’ body and that it looked as though he had been murdered. (People’s Ex. 63 [Demarest’s call to sheriffs department (Feb. 9, 1981)], Demarest [No. 81 CR 259].) After calling the sheriff, De-marest ran back to his house and collapsed under a tree in the front yard, next to the gravel driveway. (Tr. of Trial at 99, 103 [Test, of workman at house the day of Hyams’ murder].) Paul McCoy, another neighbor, saw that Demarest was in distress, helped him sit under the tree, and waited with him for emergency personnel. (Id. at 103.)

When members of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department arrived, they found Hyams’ body in his downstairs bedroom. (Id. at 61 [Deputy Petier’s Test.].) Hyams’ head was wrapped in a blue bathrobe, and his uncovered neck revealed puncture wounds in the throat and collar bone area. (Id. at 166 [Deputy Manwaring’s Test.].) After performing an autopsy on Hyams’ body, the State’s pathologist concluded that Hyams died from “the combined effects of trauma to the head and to [sic] blood loss from the stab wounds in the left neck and from the complication of strangulation of the neck.” (Id. at 638.)

Demarest suffered an emotional breakdown after Hyams’ murder. The neighbor who waited with him for emergency personnel described Demarest as “obviously distraught” and in shock. (Id. at 192.) Emergency personnel took Demarest from the house to the Evergreen Medical Center. (See id. at 218 [Carol Lee Held’s Test.].) Demarest’s second roommate, Held, was called to the medical center and found De-marest on a stretcher in an ambulance there. (Id.) He was shivering, and his hands were cold. (Id.) That night, after he had returned home, Demarest grew unresponsive to Held’s attempts to talk with him. (See id. at 227.) He fell into a trance, squeezing up his body, and clenching and releasing his hands, according to Held. (Id. at 227-28.) Frightened, Held called the sheriff’s department for help. (People’s Ex. 114 [Held’s call to sheriffs department (Feb. 10, 1981) ], De-marest, [No. 81 CR 259].) The officers responding to Held’s call found Demarest lying on the floor in a fetal position, tightening his muscles, and clenching his fists. (Tr. of Trial at 289-90 [patrol sergeant’s Test.].) Demar-est did not respond to the officers’ questions and made only guttural sounds. (Id. at 290.) The officers took Demarest back to the Evergreen Medical Center, (id. at 231), and, from there, he was transferred to St. Anthony’s Hospital and placed in the psychiatric ward, (Evidentiary Hr’g Tr. at 172 [filed Nov. 7, 1994] [Dr. Rehg’s Test.]). Police placed De-marest on a seventy-two-hour hold at St. Anthony’s in order to enable doctors to detain and treat him as an individual felt to be gravely disabled or a danger to himself or *1437 others. (Id. at 173.) At St. Anthony’s, Dr. William Rehg diagnosed Demarest with adult situational reaction, a disorder caused by acute stress, and treated him with various prescriptive drugs, (id. at 174, 178), some of which have the possible side effect of mental confusion, (id. at 104 [toxicologist’s Test.]). Dr. Rehg released Demarest on February 11, 1981. (Id. at 179.) Demarest returned to his house, joining Held and Hyams’ family members and friends who were staying there. (Tr. of Trial at 457 [Hyams’ sister’s Test.].)

Almost immediately, the Jefferson County Sheriffs Department suspected Demarest as the perpetrator of the grisly slaying. Deputies questioned Demarest three times, once in the ambulance at Evergreen Medical Center the day of the murder (on Demarest’s first visit to the medical center), once at the sheriffs office the evening of the murder, and a third time at the sheriffs office on February 12, 1981, after Demarest’s release from St. Anthony’s Hospital. Throughout the interrogations, Demarest maintained his' innocence. (See Pet’r’s Ex. N [Tr. of Feb. 9, 1981, interrogation], Ex. 0 [Tr. of Feb. 12, 1981, interrogation].)

During the interrogation on the evening of the murder, Demarest told deputy sheriffs that he had found Hyams’ body after going home to look for him. (Pet’r’s Ex. N. at 10-11.) Demarest said that he had been to Hyams’ dentist to pick him up from an appointment. (Id. at 9-10.) Upon learning that Hyams was not there, he had gone home to find him. (Id.) Demarest said he had borrowed Hyams’ car that morning and wanted to return it in time for Hyams to get to a two o’clock appointment that day with a realtor in Boulder, Colorado. (See id. at 8-9.) When the deputies asked why he had scratches on the backs of his hands, Demar-est told them that, in a state of profuse grief after discovering Hyams’ body, he had pounded his fists into the gravel driveway while waiting for emergency personnel to arrive. (See id., tape 3 at 1.) 1 When asked about scratches on his face, Demarest replied that he had scratched his face at the Evergreen Medical Center that afternoon. (See id., tape 3 at 1-2.) Deputies also asked Demarest why he had changed shirts the morning of the murder. (Id.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
905 F. Supp. 1432, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17666, 1995 WL 692914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demarest-v-price-cod-1995.