Edward Elmore v. Jon Ozmint

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 2012
Docket07-14
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Edward Elmore v. Jon Ozmint, (4th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

Filed: December 12, 2012

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 07-14 (4:04-cv-22310-DCN)

EDWARD LEE ELMORE,

Petitioner – Appellant,

v.

JON OZMINT, Director, South Carolina Department of Corrections; HENRY MCMASTER, Attorney General, State of South Carolina,

Respondents - Appellees.

O R D E R

The Court amends its opinion filed November 22, 2011,

as follows:

On page 2, attorney information section, lines 6-8,

the names of “Marta K. Kahn, THE LAW OFFICE OF MARTA K. KAHN,

LLC, Baltimore, Maryland; John Henry Blume, III, CORNELL LAW

SCHOOL, Ithaca, New York” are added as counsel for Appellant.

For the Court – By Direction

/s/ Patricia S. Connor Clerk PUBLISHED

EDWARD LEE ELMORE,  Petitioner-Appellant, v. JON OZMINT, Director, South Carolina Department of  No. 07-14 Corrections; HENRY MCMASTER, Attorney General, State of South Carolina, Respondents-Appellees.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at Florence. David C. Norton, District Judge. (4:04-cv-22310-DCN)

Argued: September 22, 2010

Decided: November 22, 2011

Before WILKINSON, KING, and GREGORY, Circuit Judges.

Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge King wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge Gregory joined. Judge Wilkinson wrote a dissenting opinion. 2 ELMORE v. OZMINT COUNSEL

ARGUED: J. Christopher Jensen, COWAN, LIEBOWITZ & LATMAN, PC, New York, New York, for Appellant. Donald John Zelenka, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Diana L. Holt, DIANA HOLT, LLC, Columbia, South Carolina; Marta K. Kahn, THE LAW OFFICE OF MARTA K. KAHN, LLC, Baltimore, Maryland; John Henry Blume, III, CORNELL LAW SCHOOL, Ithaca, New York, for Appellant. Henry D. McMaster, Attorney General, John W. McIntosh, Chief Dep- uty Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GEN- ERAL OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellees.

OPINION

KING, Circuit Judge:

For nearly thirty years, Edward Lee Elmore, a mentally retarded handyman, has been behind bars, mainly on South Carolina’s death row, for the January 1982 murder of Dorothy Edwards, an elderly woman who had sporadically employed him. The 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition now on appeal, however, is part of Elmore’s very first effort to secure federal habeas corpus relief. The antecedent state proceedings — encompass- ing three trials and related appeals over eight years, followed by another fourteen years of state postconviction relief ("PCR") litigation — were, to say the least, excruciatingly protracted. And, unfortunately, these federal habeas proceed- ings have been prolonged, in part because of our stay of this appeal to await further state court action.

In these federal proceedings, the district court denied Elmore relief on multiple claims, previously exhausted in the South Carolina courts, challenging the constitutionality of his convictions for murder, criminal sexual conduct, and bur- glary, as well as his death sentence. The district court also ELMORE v. OZMINT 3 declined to stay the federal litigation pending a final state determination of Elmore’s unexhausted claim that, because he is mentally retarded, his execution is prohibited by the Eighth Amendment under Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002). The first oral argument in this appeal, conducted on March 21, 2008, focused primarily on the stay issue. Shortly thereaf- ter, on March 24, 2008, we entered our own stay, abating any further federal action while Elmore exhausted his Atkins claim in the state courts. Nearly two years later, on February 1, 2010, the state PCR court granted Elmore relief on that claim, vacating his death sentence and ordering that a life sentence be imposed instead. On March 10, 2010, the respondents — Jon Ozmint, Director of the South Carolina Department of Corrections, and Henry McMaster, the State’s Attorney Gen- eral — advised us that the state PCR court’s Atkins ruling would not be further contested. The following day, March 11, 2010, we lifted our stay. Finally, on September 22, 2010, we heard additional oral argument on the issues remaining before us, i.e., those involving claims relating to the constitutionality of Elmore’s convictions, rather than his now-vacated death sentence.

Having scrutinized volumes of records of Elmore’s three trials and his state PCR proceedings, we recognize that there are grave questions about whether it really was Elmore who murdered Mrs. Edwards. And we are constrained to conclude — notwithstanding the demanding strictures of § 2254(d) — that Elmore is entitled to habeas corpus relief on his Sixth Amendment claim of ineffective assistance of counsel prem- ised on his trial lawyers’ blind acceptance of the State’s foren- sic evidence. All told, Elmore’s is one of those exceptional cases of "‘extreme malfunctions in the state criminal justice systems’" where § 2254 may appropriately be used to remedy injustice. Harrington v. Richter, 131 S. Ct. 770, 786 (2011) (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 332 n.5 (1979) (Stevens, J., concurring in the judgment)). Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s judgment denying relief and remand for the court to award Elmore a writ of habeas corpus 4 ELMORE v. OZMINT unless the State of South Carolina endeavors to prosecute him in a new trial within a reasonable time.

I.

Elmore is alleged to have raped and murdered Mrs. Edwards and burglarized her Greenwood, South Carolina resi- dence on the night of Saturday, January 16, 1982. Elmore, an African-American who was then twenty-three years old, per- formed odd jobs in the area to earn money. Mrs. Edwards, seventy-five years old and white, was a wealthy widow who resided alone. She had hired Elmore several times — most recently on December 30, 1981 — to wash the windows and clean the gutters of her home. On Monday, January 18, 1982, the local police were alerted by Mrs. Edwards’s neighbor, Greenwood County Councilman Jimmy Holloway, that he had just discovered Mrs. Edwards’s body in her bedroom closet. Holloway immediately identified Elmore as a possible suspect and said that Elmore’s name could be found in Mrs. Edwards’s checkbook register. The following day, Tuesday, January 19, 1982, investigators matched a thumbprint on the exterior frame of the back door into the Edwards home — the murderer’s likely entrance point — to Elmore. Relying on the thumbprint, the police obtained a warrant to arrest Elmore for Mrs. Edwards’s murder. Elmore was arrested early the next morning, Wednesday, January 20, 1982, and has been impris- oned since that time.

The following is a summary of the extensive procedural history of this matter.

• The first trial was conducted in the Court of Gen- eral Sessions for Greenwood County on April 12- 19, 1982, within three months of Elmore’s arrest. He was found guilty and sentenced to death.

• On November 1, 1983, the Supreme Court of South Carolina reversed Elmore’s convictions, ELMORE v. OZMINT 5 vacated his death sentence, and remanded for a new trial because the trial judge had improperly entered the jury room during the sentencing phase of the trial, without counsel for either the State or the defense; requested periodic reports on the status of jury deliberations, in "violation of elementary hornbook law"; and directed a "highly prejudicial" and "unjustifiably coercive" supple- mental instruction at a juror who was apparently voting against the death penalty. See State v. Elmore, 308 S.E.2d 781, 785-86 (S.C. 1983).

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