Duane Buck v. Rick Thaler, Director

452 F. App'x 423
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 14, 2011
Docket11-70025
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 452 F. App'x 423 (Duane Buck 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
Duane Buck v. Rick Thaler, Director, 452 F. App'x 423 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Duane Edward Buck was convicted in a Texas state court of capital murder and was sentenced to death. He is currently scheduled to be executed on September 15, 2011, and seeks a stay of that execution. He challenges two orders from the district court denying relief and seeks a certifícate of appealability (COA) from this court, raising two issues. With regard to Buck’s contention that reasonable jurists could debate the merits of his Equal Protection and Due Process claims, we treat his application for a COA as an application for permission to file a successive habeas petition, and we DENY that application. We DENY a COA with regard to Buck’s contention that reasonable jurists could debate the district court’s disposition of a motion under Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to reopen an earlier judgment entered by the district court denying a petition for habeas corpus relief. We DENY his request for a stay of execution.

I

The facts regarding Buck’s conviction and sentencing are set forth in our previous opinion in this case, 1 and we recount them only briefly here. Buck was convicted by a jury in a Texas state court for murdering Kenneth Butler and Buck’s former girlfriend, Debra Gardner, during the same criminal transaction. Buck entered Gardner’s home, where his sister was visiting, inflicted serious gunshot wounds on his sister, fatally shot Butler, and then chased Gardner into the street as she and her children attempted to flee. He shot and killed Gardner in view of her two children. Buck has never contended that he was not the shooter.

During the punishment phase of his trial, Buck called Dr. Walter Quijano, a clinical psychologist, as an expert witness to testify on the likelihood of Buck’s future dangerousness. On direct examination, Dr. Quijano testified that he had considered several statistical factors when evaluating Buck’s potential for future dangerousness, including but not limited to age, sex, race, social economics, history of violence, and history of substance abuse. Regarding race, Dr. Quijano stated: “It’s a sad commentary that minorities, Hispanics and black people, are over represented in the criminal justice system.”

Dr. Quijano also testified that Buck suffered from dependent personality disorder, which is characterized by an unhealthy reluctance to let go of past relationships, even to the point of violent or destructive behavior. According to Dr. Quijano, however, Buck was unlikely to commit future acts of violence because he would be unable to develop similar dependent relationships in jail. Basing his opinion on a combination of statistical, environmental, *426 and clinical factors listed in his expert report, Dr. Quijano concluded that Buck would not likely pose any future danger to society if he were incarcerated.

On cross-examination, the prosecutor questioned Dr. Quijano regarding the several factors that he had mentioned during direct examination. At one point, the prosecutor — without objection from Buck’s defense counsel — asked Dr. Quijano about his consideration of both race and sex as relevant factors in his future-dangerousness analysis, which led to the following exchange:

Q: You have determined that the sex factor, that a male is more violent than a female because that’s just the way it is, and that the race factor, black, increases the future dangerousness for various complicated reasons; is that correct?
A: Yes.

During closing arguments, Buck’s defense counsel recalled for the jury Dr. Quijano’s earlier testimony that there was “a very low probability that [Buck] would ever commit an act of violence.” In rebuttal, the prosecution also referenced Dr. Quijano’s testimony, stating — again without objection from defense counsel — that Dr. Quijano, “who had a lot of experience in the Texas Department of Corrections, ... told you that there was a probability that [Buck] would commit future acts of violence.” The prosecution made no reference whatsoever to Buck’s race (African-American) or to Dr. Quijano’s use of race as a statistical factor for determining future dangerousness.

Based on the jury’s answers to the special issues submitted regarding punishment, Buck was sentenced to death in 1997. His conviction and sentence were affirmed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in 1998. 2 Buck filed two state habeas petitions, the first of which the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied, and the second of which that court dismissed as an abuse of the writ. Buck pursued habeas relief in federal district court. That court denied relief, and Buck sought a COA from this court. We denied that application in 2009. 3

Buck initiated the present proceedings in September 2011. His most recent filings in the district court and our court recount that in June 2000, John Cornyn, who was then the Attorney General of the State of Texas, made a public statement, released to the press, that in six capital cases, including Buck’s, questioning of an expert witness, Walter Quijano, at the sentencing stage in each of these cases had injected race into the proceedings. Buck asserts that in this same public statement, the Attorney General announced that the State of Texas would not contest equal protection claims in federal courts in those six cases and would not assert any procedural bars to the assertion of such equal protection claims in federal habeas proceedings. At that time, Buck’s request for habeas relief in state court was pending. He did not file his first petition for habeas corpus relief in federal district court until October 14, 2004.

With the exception of Buck’s case, the Attorney General of Texas did not raise procedural bars in federal habeas proceedings to the assertion of claims regarding the testimony of Quijano, and each of the other five individuals received a new trial. When Buck challenged the evidence that was elicited from Quijano, and the State’s use of it, in his federal habeas proceeding, the State contended that this claim was *427 procedurally barred. The State asserted that in Buck’s case, unlike at least two of the other cases, Buck had called Quijano as a defense witness. This, the State argued, distinguished Buck’s case from those in which the State had called Quijano as a prosecution witness. The district court denied habeas relief. We denied his application for a COA. 4

Buck now contends that the State made affirmative misrepresentations and failed to disclose that in at least two of the six cases identified by the Attorney General in 2000, those involving Carl Blue and John Alba, the defendants had called Quijano as a defense witness. Buck contends that the State has omitted any mention of the similarities between Buck’s case and these two cases in which habeas relief was obtained, and that because of the State’s misrepresentations and omissions, the district court and this court were misled.

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452 F. App'x 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duane-buck-v-rick-thaler-director-ca5-2011.