Douglas Alan Roberts v. Doug Dretke, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division

356 F.3d 632, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 311, 2004 WL 46603
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2004
Docket02-51339
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 356 F.3d 632 (Douglas Alan Roberts v. Doug Dretke, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division) 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
Douglas Alan Roberts v. Doug Dretke, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, 356 F.3d 632, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 311, 2004 WL 46603 (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner Douglas Alan Roberts (“Roberts”) seeks a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on his claims that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance in his Texas death penalty trial, wherein he was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. 1 Roberts contends that his trial attorney, Steven Pickell (“Pickell”), rendered ineffective assistance of counsel because of his deficient preparation, including (1) his failure to adequately prepare for trial, specifically his failure to hire an investigator and interview witnesses for trial including Roberts’s family members about testifying as mitigating witnesses in the punishment phase of Roberts’s trial; (2) failure to properly develop evidence of Roberts’s mental illness; and (3) his failure to make adequate use of Roberts’s court-appointed psychiatrist. Roberts maintains that the state court decision holding that Pickell satisfied the minimum standard of performance required of an attorney representing a capital client who is known to have mental health problems is an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law, and that the district court’s conclusion to the contrary is at least debatable among jurists of reason.

I

Before trial, Roberts advised Pickell of his desire to be convicted and sentenced to death. Pickell filed several pre-trial motions on Roberts’s behalf, including a motion for expenses for a mental health expert, which the court granted to the extent of $1,000. A court-appointed psychiatrist, Dr. Michael Arambula (“Dr. Arambula”), conducted a “mental status examination” of Roberts. Pickell did not ask Dr. Aram-bula to investigate Roberts’s family history, compile a social or psychiatric history of Roberts, or evaluate the potential mitigating evidence. The purpose of Dr. Ar-ambula’s mental status examination of Roberts was, simply, to ascertain whether Roberts was competent to direct his trial strategy towards death.

In preparing his report, Dr. Arambula relied exclusively on his own clinical interview with Roberts, the police reports, and the victim’s autopsy report. Dr. Arambula was not, however, furnished with any other medical records, such as the record of Roberts’s treatment for “psychiatric problems” and “suicide ideation,” which occurred less then one year before the crime at issue in this case. Nor was Dr. Aram-bula made aware of a head injury Roberts had suffered as a child. In his report, which was furnished to Pickell, Dr. Aram-bula concluded that Roberts did not suffer from any significant degree of depression, and that “[t]he most salient issue in Douglas Roberts’s history is his addiction to crack cocaine.” 2 Dr. Arambula concluded *635 that, in seeking the death penalty for himself, Roberts was simply exercising his “right” to choose death over life. 3

At various stages of the trial proceedings, Roberts and Pickell held “defense conferences” outside of the presence of the trial court and the prosecutor. These conferences, which Pickell transcribed, provide a record of Roberts’s direction of a trial strategy towards death: Roberts instructed Pickell to excuse venire members who expressed any reservations about assessing the death penalty; not to “fight the death penalty” or ask for a life sentence in the closing argument; not to request a jury instruction on the parole laws, not to contact Roberts’s family members about the trial or subpoena them as mitigation witnesses for the punishment phase; not to call Dr. Arambula or any other mental health expert as a mitigation witness at the punishment phase, not to request that the jury be instructed that its failure to reach a decision on punishment will result in a life sentence; and not to present any evidence that would “help the jury answer [the punishment] questions in such a way that a life sentence would result.” Consistent with Roberts’s instructions, Pickell accepted venire members who were favorable to the death penalty; struck venire members opposed to the death penalty; conducted no individual voir dire to rehabilitate venire members who had initially indicated they were opposed to the death penalty; 4 did not interview Roberts’s family members before trial; called no witnesses at the guilt/innocence phase of the trial; called no witnesses at the punishment phase; did not request a jury instruction on the parole laws; and made no argument in favor of a life sentence.

On direct appeal, Roberts argued that Pickell rendered ineffective assistance by complying with Roberts’s self-destructive orders and directions. Roberts maintained that Pickell should have ignored his directions where those directions worked to Roberts’s detriment. The court rejected this argument. It reasoned that, in every instance where Pickell followed Roberts’s self-destructive instructions, Pickell had advised a contrary course of action, but Roberts had “disregarded that advice and directed his counsel to comply with the requests and orders.” The court concluded that Roberts “cannot now claim his trial counsel was ineffective for complying with [Roberts’s] own orders and requests on the conduct of his defense.”

On state habeas review, Roberts claimed that Pickell rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. Roberts argued that Piekell’s *636 failure to request a competency hearing; to furnish Dr. Arambula with copies of his psychiatric records; school records and other background information; and to furnish the trial court with a copy of Dr. Arambula’s report constituted ineffective assistance. The court found that Pickell failed to make Roberts’s previous medical records available to Dr. Arambula and failed to advise Dr. Arambula of a head injury Roberts suffered as a child. However, the court also found that Pickell “did not observe, during the course of his pretrial meetings with the defendant or at any other phase of his investigation,” evidence to support “incompetency or insanity.” It reasoned that Pickell’s “lay” observations in dealing with Roberts, taken together with his prior experience, led him to believe that there was no reasonable expectation that it would be of any value to raise issues of incompetency or insanity. The court thus concluded:

The actions and demeanor of the defendant through these proceedings did not raise an issue as to require or necessitate a competency hearing. The failure of trial counsel, Mr. Pickell, to request a competency hearing, was not error nor did it amount to ineffectiveness of counsel.

On federal habeas review, Roberts re-urged his state-court claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Roberts argued that Pickell rendered ineffective assistance by (1) failing to request a competency hearing for Roberts; (2) refusing Roberts’s request for an EEG; (3) failing to adequately investigate Roberts’s background; (4) failing to request a full neuro-physical evaluation of Roberts; (5) failing to adequately prepare Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
356 F.3d 632, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 311, 2004 WL 46603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-alan-roberts-v-doug-dretke-director-texas-department-of-criminal-ca5-2004.