Foust v. Houk

655 F.3d 524, 2011 WL 3715155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2011
Docket08-4100
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 655 F.3d 524 (Foust v. Houk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foust v. Houk, 655 F.3d 524, 2011 WL 3715155 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinions

MOORE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CLAY, J., joined. BATCHELDER, C.J. (pp. 546-49), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

OPINION

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Kelly Foust, a death-row prisoner in Ohio, was convicted of murdering Jose Coreano, raping Damaris Coreano, setting the Coreanos’ house on fire, and related offenses. At the mitigation hearing, Foust’s mother, Foust’s father, and defense psychologist Dr. James Karpawich testified on Foust’s behalf. Although their testimony depicted an unpleasant childhood with an emotionally distant and abusive father, their testimony pales in comparison to the horrific accounts detailed in records from Children’s Services and in affidavits from Foust’s siblings. The records and affidavits reveal the squalor of Foust’s childhood home: feces on the walls; vomit on the floor; infestations of lice, cockroaches, flies, and mice; piles of filled garbage bags, filthy clothes, and dirty dishes; little food and frequent utility outages; children who had not bathed for a month; and conditions so vile that a cleaning crew called the residence an “uninhabitable” “pig sty” and refused to return. The new evidence explains how Foust’s mother, not just his father, physi[527]*527cally and emotionally abused Foust by, for example, calling Foust a “worthless piece of shit” when he tried to impress his mother with good grades and a new job. The records and affidavits document rape, incest, and sexual abuse among several of Foust’s siblings. The new evidence also reveals Foust’s attempt to help his younger sister reshape the family’s trajectory.

The three-judge panel that sentenced Foust to death never heard these vivid facts because Foust’s counsel provided ineffective assistance. In preparation for the mitigation hearing, Foust’s attorneys did not interview any potential witnesses. The attorneys did not gather any records from Children’s Services, despite Karpawich’s repeated reminders. The attorneys did not prepare Foust’s parents or Karpawich in advance of their testimony at the mitigation hearing. The attorneys hired Karpawich in lieu of a trained mitigation specialist, even though Karpawich informed the attorneys that he was not a trained mitigation specialist.

For these reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s denial of Foust’s petition on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel at the mitigation hearing. We GRANT a conditional writ of habeas corpus vacating Foust’s death sentence, unless the State of Ohio begins a new mitigation hearing against Foust within 180 days from the date on which this judgment becomes final.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Underlying Crime

After Foust and his girlfriend, Janira Acevedo, ended their relationship, Acevedo began staying at the home of her friends, Damaris Coreano and Cheyla Coreano. Damaris’s and Cheyla’s father, Jose, also lived at the Coreanos’ home. While Acevedo was living with the Coreanos in 2001, Foust broke in to the Coreanos’ home, which led the Coreano family to seek a restraining order. The Coreanos were unsuccessful.

In the morning of March 31, 2001, Foust was “getting pretty wasted” and began looking for Acevedo. State v. Foust, 105 Ohio St.3d 137, 823 N.E.2d 836, 845 (2004). Foust first looked for her at a different home, but when he could not find her, he went to the Coreanos’ home. After entering through an “open basement window,” Foust realized that Acevedo was not at the Coreanos’ home either. Id. Foust found Jose in his first-floor bedroom and struck him “on the head with a claw hammer,” causing Jose’s death. Id.

Next, Foust went upstairs to Damaris’s bedroom, where Damaris was asleep. She awoke while Foust was on top of her with a knife at her neck. When Damaris attempted to grab the knife, “Foust told her not to be a hero because ‘in reality heroes die.’” Id. Foust asked Damaris where “ ‘the money’ ” was located and threatened to kill her if she did not name its location. Id. Damaris did not know what money Foust was referencing. She responded by saying that she had a dollar and telling Foust where her dollar was located.

Foust asked Damaris if she was a virgin, removed her clothes, tied her hands behind her back, and “ordered her to perform oral sex. When she refused, [Foust] pointed his knife at her neck and asked her if she wanted her father to live. Damaris then performed oral sex on him.” Id. Afterward, Foust vaginally raped Damaris “multiple times.” Id. Foust left briefly, returning to vaginally rape Damaris once more. “Damaris asked why he was ‘doing this to a Christian,’ and he replied that if she was a real Christian, she would forgive him. Foust then ordered her to get on her knees and pray out loud for him.” Id. Damaris complied, praying that God would “help [Foust] realize what he was doing. Foust told Damaris to shut up, put her back on the bed, and raped her [528]*528again.” Id. Foust put a shirt over Damaris’s head.

Foust took Damaris to her sister’s bedroom, where, despite having a shirt over her head, Damaris saw Foust steal several items. Foust then took Damaris to the bathroom, where he “tied her hands and feet together with shoestrings” and “tied Damaris to the bathtub leg with a chain belt.” Id. Foust instructed Damaris not to move and Foust left the bathroom. When he returned, he accused Damaris of moving and said “[y]ou think I’m playing with you.” Id. He cut off one of Damaris’s braids, put his knife to her vagina, and “threatened to slice her open if she moved.” Id.

Left alone, Damaris smelled smoke. When she removed the shirt that covered her face, Damaris saw that her house was on fire. ■ Foust had lit fires in the bedrooms of Jose, Damaris, and Cheyla, driven Jose’s car two blocks, parked the car, and walked to a friend’s house. Meanwhile, Damaris escaped from the belt that had bound her to the bathtub. She crawled to her bedroom and used the fire that Foust had lit on her mattress to burn the shoestrings off her wrists and ankles. After extinguishing the fire in her bedroom, Damaris went downstairs and made a futile attempt to locate her father, who she did not know was dead, amid the smoke.

Damaris ran to a neighbor’s home for help. By the time that police and firefighters arrived, the home was “engulfed in flames.” Id. at 846. Damaris identified her assailant as “ ‘Kell/ ” to the police. Id. “Although she was unsure of his last name, she thought it was ‘Foster or something like that.’ ” Id.

B. Prosecution and Preparation for the Mitigation Hearing

Foust waived his Miranda rights and confessed to breaking into the Coreanos’ home, striking Jose with a hammer, and raping Damaris. “However, Foust claimed that he ‘didn’t intentionally want to do any harm’ and said, ‘I really don’t know what I was doing, just trying to find out where Jani[r]a was.’ ” Id. (alteration omitted). Foust pleaded not guilty and was appointed two attorneys — Charles K. Webster and Donald Butler — on April 13, 2001.

After waiving his right to a jury, Foust proceeded to trial on December 12, 2001 before a three-judge panel. Foust “presented no evidence during the guilt phase.” Id. at 847.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
655 F.3d 524, 2011 WL 3715155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foust-v-houk-ca6-2011.