Eggers v. Alabama

212 F. Supp. 3d 1130, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140136, 2016 WL 5339686
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 21, 2016
Docket2:13-cv-1460-LSC
StatusPublished

This text of 212 F. Supp. 3d 1130 (Eggers v. Alabama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eggers v. Alabama, 212 F. Supp. 3d 1130, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140136, 2016 WL 5339686 (N.D. Ala. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND ORDER

L. Scott Coogler, United States District Judge

I. Introduction

Petitioner Michael Wayne Eggers (“Eg-gers”) is an Alabama death row inmate who has filed recurrent requests to withdraw his appeal of this Court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition, discharge his appointed counsel, and be executed. After examining the entire record in this action, this Court is of the opinion that Eggers’s requests are due to be granted.

II. Procedural History1

Eggers originally permitted his appointed counsel, John Palombi and Leslie Smith of the Middle District of Alabama Federal Defenders Office, to litigate his § 2254 petition in this Court. However, throughout the course of these proceedings he has repeatedly expressed disagreement with appointed counsel’s litigation strategy, sought to have different counsel appointed, and asserted claims for habeas relief in his own numerous and voluminous pro se filings. He has also at times indicated his desire to abandon his habeas petition and waive all appeals, but his requests to do so were noncommittal and ambiguous. This Court refused to appoint new counsel for Eggers but allowed him to file a pro se amended petition for habeas relief in addi[1132]*1132tion to the petition submitted by appointed counsel. On November 25, 2015, this Court denied the petitions and dismissed the action. (Docs. 134 & 135.) On December 22, 2015, Eggers filed a pro se “Motion to Appoint Successor Counsel Who Shall Effectively Waive All [His] Appeals,” in which he asked to be allowed to “move forward with his state sanctioned execution without any further undue delays.” (Doc. 136.) On December 23, 2015, Eg-gers’s appointed counsel filed a motion for reconsideration of the Memorandum of Opinion and Order denying the petition (doc. 137), which the Court granted in part and denied in part on January 8, 2016 (doc. 138). On January 11, 2016, Eggers filed a pro se “Motion for a Final Order” in which he asked this Court to furnish him a copy of its final order so that he could send it to the Alabama Supreme Court “to expedite [his] execution.” (Doc. 139.) Eggers also contemporaneously filed a pro se “Waiver/Notification/Motion to Expedite Execution” in the Alabama Supreme Court. Respondent (hereinafter “the State”) responded to that pleading in the Alabama Supreme Court on January 29, 2016, stating that it “had no objection to his waiver of future state [or, presumably, federal] court appeals.”

In light of Eggers’s pro se requests to discharge counsel and waive all further appeals, on February 1, 2016, Eggers’s appointed counsel filed a motion to extend the deadline to file a notice of appeal on Eggers’s behalf and requested a hearing on Eggers’s competence to waive appeals (doc. 140), which the Court granted (doc. 141). Thereafter, Eggers’s appointed counsel filed a protective notice of appeal with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, explaining that Eggers’s competency to waive further appeals is currently being litigated in this Court and could not be resolved by the extended appeal deadline. (Doc. 144.) The Eleventh Circuit remanded the action to this Court for the limited purpose of conducting the competency hearing. (Doc. 154.)

On April 8, 2016, this Court held an evidentiary hearing to determine whether Eggers is mentally competent to make the decision to forego further collateral review, dismiss his attorneys, and be executed. At the hearing, the Court heard from Dr. Ken Benedict, a psychologist retained by appointed counsel, Dr. Glen King, a psychologist retained by the State, and from Eg-gers himself. The Court also admitted into evidence, among other things, Eggers’s Alabama Department of Corrections (“ADOC”) file, Dr. Benedict’s psychological evaluation report dated October 17, 2014, and Dr. King’s psychological evaluation report dated April 5, 2016.

In the weeks after the hearing, the Court received briefs from appointed counsel, the State, and Eggers. Appointed counsel’s brief argued that Eggers is not competent to waive his appeal or undertake self-representation because he suffers from psychotic delusions and requested that the Court appoint a person as next friend to prosecute the appeal in Eggers’s stead. (Doc. 156.) Before the State’s brief was due, Eggers filed two pro se pleadings: a “Pro Se Response to Competency Hearing and Brief in Support Submitted by A/C and State” (doc. 157) as well as a “Summary Argument to Eggers Response to Competency Hearing, Appointed Counsel and State of Alabama” (doc. 158). In these pleadings, Eggers argued that he is competent, that he should be allowed to discharge his appointed counsel and proceed pro se, and that he should be allowed to waive all appeals and proceed immediately to execution. However, he also indicated dissatisfaction with the Court’s treatment and ultimate denial of the claims for relief in support of his § 2254 petition that he had asserted in a pro se capacity. His pleadings led the Court, in an abundance [1133]*1133of caution, to order Eggers to file a pleading indicating whether (1) he would desire to appeal any of the grounds for habeas relief that he asserted in a pro se capacity, or any other grounds, if the Court should allow him to discharge appointed counsel and appeal pro se, or (2) he truly wished to withdraw and waive all future appeals in their entirety. (Doc. 160.) In his May 5, 2016, response, Eggers stated that he “simply withdraws and waives all future appeals in their entirety.” (Doc. 161.)' The State subsequently filed its brief arguing that Eggers is competent to waive all appeals and discharge his counsel because he is not suffering from a severe mental illness, is aware of all of the options available to him, and has made a rational choice among them. (Doc. 162.) Since then, Eg-gers has filed several pleadings indicating that he is anxious for the Court to rule on his request to withdraw his appeal. (Docs. 163,165,169, and 171.)2

III. The Psychological Evaluation Reports and the Testimony Elicited at the Competency Hearing3

A. Dr. Benedict

Dr. Benedict was first retained by Eg-gers’s appointed counsel in 2014, in support of a motion asking the Court to declare Eggers incompetent to proceed in this action or to conduct a competency hearing. (Doc. 44.) Appointed counsel argued at the time that Eggers’s numerous pro se filings raised questions about his ability to make rational decisions about his case. In support, they offered Dr. Benedict’s October 17, 2014, psychological evaluation report of Eggers, in which he described, among other things, the results of four separate interviews he conducted with Eggers at Donaldson Correctional Facility on May 22 and 23, 2014, and August 28 and 29, 2014. However, the Court denied counsel’s motion for a competency hearing, acknowledging that if a death penalty petitioner whose competency is in question wishes to dismiss his § 225⅛ petition in its entirety, the Court must first ensure that the petitioner is competent to make that decision, but finding that because Eg-gers had filed pleadings indicating that he did not wish to abandon his federal habeas petition but instead wished to proceed pro se

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Bluebook (online)
212 F. Supp. 3d 1130, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140136, 2016 WL 5339686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggers-v-alabama-alnd-2016.