Fairchild v. Trammell

784 F.3d 702, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 6761, 2015 WL 1843529
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2015
Docket13-6030
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 784 F.3d 702 (Fairchild v. Trammell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairchild v. Trammell, 784 F.3d 702, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 6761, 2015 WL 1843529 (10th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

HARTZ, Circuit Judge.

An Oklahoma jury found Defendant Richard Fairchild guilty of child-abuse murder in the first degree and recommended the death penalty, which the trial court imposed. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) denied relief on all claims presented on direct appeal and in Defendant’s original application for postconviction review. After the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma denied relief on all claims presented in his application for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Defendant appealed to this court. In that appeal we addressed his claim that his counsel had been ineffective in failing to investigate and present mitigation evidence at the sentencing stage of his trial. We vacated the district court’s judgment and remanded to give Defendant the opportunity to exhaust in state court the “far more specific and powerful” ineffective-assistance claim he had raised in his § 2254 application but had not previously presented to the OCCA. Fairchild v. Workman, 579 F.3d 1134, 1147 (10th Cir.2009). After the OCCA denied Defendant’s second application for state postconviction relief on procedural grounds, the federal district court determined that the OCCA’s procedural bars were valid and that Defendant had not overcome them by demonstrating cause and prejudice or a fundamental miscarriage of justice. Defendant now returns to this court, seeking relief on his § 2254 claims or, at least, an evidentiary hearing on his ineffective-assistance claim. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Crime of Conviction and Sentence

Defendant was charged in November 1993 with child-abuse murder in the first degree for the death of Adam Broomhall, his girlfriend’s three-year-old son. In his prior appeal to this court, we summarized *707 the OCCA’s description of the facts of the crime as follows:

In November 1993, [Defendant] was living with Stacy Broomhall and her three children in Midwest City, Oklahoma. On November 13, 1993, [Defendant] and Ms. Broomhall drank beer most of the afternoon and evening. [Defendant] consumed approximately twelve beers between 2:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. That evening, they drove to Ms. Broom-hall’s mother’s house in north Oklahoma City and continued to drink. By the time they were ready to leave, [Defendant] and Ms. Broomhall were too intoxicated to drive, so Ms. Broomhall’s seventeen-year-old sister, Charity Wade[,] drove them home. Ms. Wade had intended to spend the night at Ms. Broom-hall’s house. But she decided not to do so after [Defendant] made a sexual advance toward her. Instead, Ms. Wade put Ms. Broomhall’s three children to bed and called a taxi to take her home. While Ms. Wade waited outside for the cab, [Defendant] retrieved a baseball bat and told her that, “if someone other than a cab driver came to pick her up, he was going to beat him to death.” When Ms. Wade left in the cab, some time before 10:30 p.m., Ms. Broomhall’s three-year-old son Adam was asleep in his own bed.
Roughly three hours later, Adam woke up crying and got out of bed. His mother was asleep, and [Defendant] told Adam to “hush it up.” When Adam persisted, [Defendant] hit him several times, rupturing the inside of his upper lip and his left ear-drum, and he held Adam’s chest and then buttocks against a hot wall heater causing severe second-degree grid-patterned burns. [Defendant] told a detective several days later, “I think I pushed him up against the heater and held him up there,” and, “The more he screamed, the more I just kept on hitting him.”- When [Defendant] threw Adam against the drop-leaf dining table, he stopped breathing.
[Defendant] woke Ms. Broomhall and called 911. Adam was rushed to the hospital, but the head injury had caused severe hemorrhaging and swelling, and he died later that morning, never having regained consciousness. Examination indicated that Adam had sustained approximately twenty-six blows to his body, including several to his head. In a written statement to the police, [Defendant] claimed that Adam was running in the house and “ran right into the table.”

Fairchild, 579 F.3d at 1137-38 (citations omitted).

B. The Trial

Although Defendant argued (unsuccessfully) that he should be permitted to present defenses based on his intoxication at the time of the crime, trial counsel indicated outside the jury’s presence that he and Defendant agreed that nothing could be done to avoid a guilty verdict and that his client-approved strategy was to save Defendant’s life. At the sentencing phase, defense counsel presented mitigation testimony by Defendant and three others — his ex-wife’s daughter, who spoke of him as her “daddy,” R., Vol. III (Tr. of Jury Trial Proceedings (Tr.), Vol. VI at 1305, State v. Fairchild, No. CF-93-7103 (Okla.Cnty., Okla.Dist.Ct. Jan. 18, 1996)); his older half-brother, who spoke of Defendant’s ill treatment as a child, the family history of alcoholism, and Defendant’s own alcoholism; ’ and a psychiatrist, Dr. John Smith, who conducted a psychiatric interview of Defendant shortly before he testified, about two years after Adam’s death.

The mitigation evidence focused primarily on Defendant’s history of alcoholism and “explosiveness” when drunk. Tr., Vol. V at 1226. We describe the evidence in some detail because it was the principal disputed *708 issue at trial and the source of Defendant’s most troublesome issue in this court — his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel arising from counsel’s failure to investigate and present evidence of organic brain damage.

Dr. Smith testified that Defendant’s difficulties began with unresolved grief over the death of his mother, who was killed by an alcoholic in a car accident when Defendant was 15; and he diagnosed Defendant as having dysthymia (persistent mild depression) arising from that event. See id. at 1224. He also diagnosed Defendant with acute brain syndrome secondary to alcohol addiction. See id. at 1226-27. He expressed his opinion that Defendant would not have killed Adam “had he not been chronically affected by and acutely affected by the ingestion of alcohol,” id. at 1226, and that he did not intend to kill the child, see id. at 1228. He explained that Defendant’s “brain was clearly damaged from intoxication.” Id. at 1234. When, however, he was asked by the prosecutor whether Defendant had any brain trauma, he did not answer directly but referenced a history of unconsciousness 1 from fighting. See id. at 1245. The prosecutor then elicited that Dr. Smith had seen no evidence of seizure disorders, see '

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Bluebook (online)
784 F.3d 702, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 6761, 2015 WL 1843529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairchild-v-trammell-ca10-2015.