Faye Copeland v. James Washington

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 30, 2000
Docket99-3693
StatusPublished

This text of Faye Copeland v. James Washington (Faye Copeland v. James Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faye Copeland v. James Washington, (8th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

___________

No. 99-3693 ___________

Faye D. Copeland, * * Appellee, * * v. * * James Washington, * * Appellant. * Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri. ___________

No. 99-3694 ___________

Faye D. Copeland, * * Appellant, * * v. * * James Washington, * * Appellee. * Submitted: September 13, 2000

Filed: November 30, 2000

Before HANSEN, HEANEY, and MORRIS S. ARNOLD, Circuit Judges. ___________

HEANEY, Circuit Judge.

Faye D. Copeland was convicted of five counts of first degree murder on a theory of accomplice liability in state court. She was sentenced to death on four of the counts, and on one count she was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. The Missouri Supreme Court upheld her convictions and sentences on direct appeal and denied her claims for post-conviction relief. See State v. Copeland, 928 S.W.2d 828 (Mo. 1996) (en banc), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 112 (1997). On federal habeas review, the district court upheld her convictions, but determined that the penalty phase was constitutionally flawed due to (1) the prosecutor’s improper closing argument and (2) ineffective assistance based on counsel's failure to object to the improper argument. See Copeland v. Washington, No. 97-1123-CV-W-3 (W.D. Mo. Aug. 4, 1999). Accordingly, the district court granted the writ ordering the state to hold a new sentencing hearing or to commute the petitioner’s sentence to life in prison without parole. The state has appealed the reduction in sentence, and the defendant has cross-appealed, seeking a new trial on the basis of numerous claimed errors in the proceedings, including the handling of battered spouse evidence at trial and during the penalty phase, the sufficiency of the evidence of guilt and of the aggravating factors. We agree with the district court that the prosecutor's improper closing argument deprived the petitioner of a fair sentencing hearing, but that she is not entitled to a new trial on the basis of the claimed errors. We therefore affirm the order of the district court in its entirety.

2 I. FACTS

We summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict. The petitioner and her husband, Ray Copeland, were involved in a fraudulent check and cattle-buying scheme that ultimately led to the shootings of five homeless men. See State v. Copeland, 928 S.W.2d 828, 834 (Mo. 1996) (en banc), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 112 (1997). Ray would visit a local homeless shelter and offer transients work. Ray and the petitioner would take the transient to a post office to rent a box, and to a bank to open an account. Ray would then have the transient bid on cattle at an auction and write checks to pay for the cattle. Before the checks would bounce, Ray would quickly resell the cattle. To prevent any investigation of the fraud, Ray would then shoot the transient. It was only when one transient, Jack McCormick, escaped and notified the police that the Copelands were apprehended. See id.

Although Ray was the primary instigator of the scheme, testimony at trial also described the petitioner's knowledge and involvement. The petitioner stored the victims’ clothes in a closet; assisted with the paperwork related to the fraudulent checks; warned McCormick, who had seen what he thought was a human skull near the barn, to stay away from that portion of the property; and tried to cover up any connection between her, the transients, and her husband. Perhaps the strongest evidence was a list of names in the petitioner’s handwriting that had x’s marked next to the victim’s names, and letters written from the petitioner to her husband suggesting the knowledge that something incriminating would show up from the search of their farm. See id. at 835-836. There was no evidence that the petitioner had herself shot anyone; she had no history of violence. Thus, the state’s theory of first-degree murder was predicated on accomplice liability.1

1 In a separate proceeding, Ray Copeland was later convicted and sentenced to death for the murders. He was ill at the time of trial and died in jail a few months later.

3 II. IMPROPER CLOSING ARGUMENT

A. Penalty Phase

The petitioner claims that the prosecutor’s closing argument at the penalty phase of her trial, along with the failure of defense counsel to object to the argument, deprived her of a fair sentencing hearing. We agree. The prosecutor began his closing at the penalty phase by referring to a “television news report . . . about gangs in Los Angeles” and stating that “members of the street gangs were murdering each other” in a violent fight for turf. The prosecutor then went on to state that the gang shootings made his “blood boil,” and that this case made him want to "weep and cry” because it was “the same thing, right here in our backyards.” After a biblical reference to the killings as the “modern equivalent of thirty pieces of silver,” the prosecutor summed up his closing by giving his opinion that “there has never, ever been a more complete and utter disregard for the sanctity of human life as this case . . . [t]he state of Missouri claims from you the ultimate sentence of this case of death. Stand firm.” In his rebuttal argument, the prosecutor emphasized the impact on the victims’ families with a reference to his own young son, as well as the defense attorney’s son. Because the prosecutor’s closing argument in the penalty case was brief, the improper remarks constituted the core of the prosecutor’s closing.

The Missouri Supreme Court held that the comments comparing petitioner’s crimes to the gang shootings in Los Angeles as well as every other crime in Missouri’s history were improper, and that the comments “may arguably have constituted reversible error had a timely objection been raised." State v. Copeland, 928 S.W.2d at 843. The court did not perform a separate analysis for the arguments in the guilt and penalty phases of the trial. Ultimately, the Missouri Supreme Court declined to find that the improper comments in the penalty case reached the level of a “manifest

4 injustice” given the evidence presented against the petitioner at the guilt phase. See id. at 844.

On habeas review, the district court concluded that the prosecutor’s argument had seriously prejudiced the defendant:

Although the evidence of petitioner’s guilt was strong, the case for the death penalty was rather weak. There was no evidence that petitioner personally shot any of the victims. . . . There was substantial evidence that the primary actor in the entire scheme was Ray and that petitioner held a very minor role. In fact, most of the evidence at trial involved Ray’s actions and not petitioner’s. There appears to be no doubt that Ray not only was the scheme's primary actor, but was also its creator. Finally there was substantial evidence that Ray dominated and controlled his wife.

Although these factors would not obviate guilt, they demonstrate that this is far from the typical situation in which a criminal defendant is sentenced to death. Nonetheless, the prosecutor tried to turn this case into such a case and did so by employing improper means. By raising the specter of hapless citizens gunned down by roving criminal gangs, the prosecutor inappropriately drew an analogy to completely different -- significantly more heinous -- criminals. Then, the prosecutor improperly elevated the severity of the crime by (1) assuring the jury that, despite any misgivings it might have about setting the penalty at death, it could be assured that this was the worst crime to ever occur in the state of Missouri, and (2) suggesting that if the worst case ever did not deserve the death penalty, then no case did.

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Faye Copeland v. James Washington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faye-copeland-v-james-washington-ca8-2000.