Donald Thigpen v. Morris Thigpen, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, Willie D. Johnson, Warden, Holman Unit

926 F.2d 1003
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 29, 1991
Docket89-7368
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 926 F.2d 1003 (Donald Thigpen v. Morris Thigpen, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, Willie D. Johnson, Warden, Holman Unit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Thigpen v. Morris Thigpen, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, Willie D. Johnson, Warden, Holman Unit, 926 F.2d 1003 (11th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Chief Judge:

Donald Thigpen appeals from the district court’s refusal to grant a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1988), setting aside his conviction. Thig-pen was convicted of first-degree murder by an Alabama court and sentenced to death under Ala.Code § 13-1-75 (1975) (repealed 1980), which established a mandatory death penalty for those who committed first-degree murder while serving life sentences. 1 After exhausting his remedies in state court, 2 Thigpen petitioned the district court for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging several constitutional defects in his conviction and sentence. 3 The district court set aside his death sentence, finding that section 13-1-75 was unconstitutional under Sumner v. Shuman, 483 U.S. 66, 107 S.Ct. 2716, 97 L.Ed.2d 56 (1987), but upheld his conviction. 4 On appeal, Thigpen raises only one issue: whether the admission of evidence that he was convicted in 1972 of another first-degree murder and received a death sentence, which was later reduced to life in prison, rendered his trial so fundamentally unfair that he was convicted without the due process of law. 5 For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court’s conclusion that Thigpen’s conviction was constitutional.

We organize this opinion as follows. In part I, we outline the facts and discuss the evidence presented at Thigpen’s trial. In part II, we describe the district court’s conclusion that Thigpen’s conviction was valid and present the parties’ claims on appeal. In part III, we conclude that the admission of the disputed evidence did not render Thigpen’s trial fundamentally unfair.

I.

On May 5, 1972, an Alabama jury convicted Thigpen of the first-degree murder of Cassie Davis; he was sentenced to death. On appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reduced his death sentence to life in prison, pursuant to Hubbard v. State, 290 Ala. 118, 274 So.2d 298, 300 (1973), which declared Alabama’s general death penalty statute unconstitutional under Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238, 92 S.Ct. 2726, 33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972). See Thigpen v. State, 50 Ala.App. 176, 277 So.2d 922, 925-26 (Ala.Crim.App.1973).

On April 16, 1975, while Thigpen was serving this life sentence, he and several other prisoners escaped from the William C. Holman Prison, a maximum-security fa *1006 cility. Early in the morning of April 17, Thigpen and another escapee, Pedro Williams, were walking along a dirt road near the prison when they heard a pickup truck approaching and hid in some bushes. When the driver, an elderly farmer named Henry Lambeth, stopped and began loading fenceposts into the truck, either Thig-pen or Williams (or both) attacked Lambeth with an axe or a fencepost and killed him. The two then carried Lambeth’s body to an abandoned house nearby and stole the truck. Shortly thereafter, an Alabama state trooper stopped the truck for speeding and took Thigpen and Williams into custody. Thigpen, who was driving when the two were caught, told the arresting officer that he and Williams had stolen the truck from a man who was feeding cows in a field.

After the arrest, Williams, who was serving fifteen years for robbery when he and Thigpen escaped, gave investigators three separate statements describing Lambeth’s murder; in all three, Williams stated that Thigpen had killed Lambeth and that he had neither assisted in nor intended the murder. Williams gave the first of these statements to Investigator Marlin Brewer and Warden Barney Hardin at Holman Prison on April 17, a few hours after he was taken into custody. Williams said that Thigpen and another escapee, John Griffin, had left Williams hiding in the woods. They returned approximately half an hour later with blood on their clothes and a pickup truck. They told Williams that they had “jumped an old man and beat him up and ... took the truck.” Williams then got into the truck and the three drove away. According to Williams, Griffin soon got out of the truck because he was frightened that the police would stop the vehicle on the interstate. Because it later became apparent that Griffin was not involved in the crime, he was never indicted.

The next day, April 18, Williams was transferred to Fountain Correctional Center, where he gave a second statement to Brewer. Williams told Brewer that Thig-pen, on the morning after the escape, said he wanted to get a car in order to flee the country. When the two walked past a house with two cars outside, Thigpen suggested stealing one of the cars. After Williams warned him that people were likely to be in the house, Thigpen decided to burn the house down. Williams, however, was able to persuade Thigpen to abandon this plan.

After this episode, the two walked along a dirt road. When they heard Lambeth’s truck approaching, they hid in some honeysuckle vines. After Lambeth stopped and got out of the truck, leaving the keys inside, they decided to steal it. According to plan, both emerged from the bushes, and Thigpen distracted Lambeth with conversation while Williams got into the truck. Thigpen, however, deviated from their plan: he took an axe from the truck and killed Lambeth. Thigpen told Williams he had to kill Lambeth because he did not want to leave any evidence. They then carried the body — Thigpen holding Lam-beth’s head and shoulders, Williams holding his feet — to an abandoned house nearby. After this, Williams drove them away in the truck. 6

*1007 Williams made a third statement, also at Fountain Prison, to investigators Brewer and James Dixon, on April 21. In yet another version of the facts, Williams stated that he (Williams) had distracted Lam-beth by walking around him; when Lam-beth turned his back on Thigpen, Thigpen killed him with the axe.

In one of these statements, Williams told Brewer that he had received a letter from Thigpen cautioning him not to talk about the incident. In the letter, Thigpen professed his friendship for Williams, told Williams that the State did not have “anything” on them, advised Williams not to talk to a lawyer unless Thigpen was present, and told Williams to “be cool and live on.” 7

Williams was indicted for first-degree murder. He pled guilty to second-degree murder, pursuant to an agreement with the State, and received a sentence of ninety-nine years in prison before Thigpen was tried. Thigpen was indicted under section 13-1-75, as a person who committed first-degree murder while serving a life sentence.

The primary issues at Thigpen’s trial were whether Thigpen killed Lambeth, or, if not, whether Thigpen intended that Williams should kill Lambeth.

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Bluebook (online)
926 F.2d 1003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-thigpen-v-morris-thigpen-commissioner-alabama-department-of-ca11-1991.