Gary Mal Austin v. Lane McCotter Director, Texas Department of Corrections

764 F.2d 1142, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 30825
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 1985
Docket84-1643
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 764 F.2d 1142 (Gary Mal Austin v. Lane McCotter Director, Texas Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary Mal Austin v. Lane McCotter Director, Texas Department of Corrections, 764 F.2d 1142, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 30825 (5th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

POLITZ, Circuit Judge:

Once again we review the dismissal of Gary Mai Austin’s petition for federal ha-beas, 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We earlier remanded for an evidentiary hearing on a Brady claim, Austin v. McKaskle, 724 F.2d 1153 (5th Cir.1984). Reviewing this remand record against the backdrop of the state record, we find no merit in the Brady assignment; nor do we perceive any validity to a potential ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim. Accordingly, we modify the district court’s judgment to provide for dismissal with prejudice on both the Brady *1143 issue and the ineffective assistance issue and, as modified, affirm.

Facts

Austin and Henry Stiehl were charged with aggravated robbery of a supermarket in Lubbock, Texas, during which they wore masks and waved rifles. Austin pleaded guilty but chose to be sentenced by a jury. During the trial the prosecutor offered evidence to show that the robber riding in the passenger seat, identified as Austin, made several violent and threatening gestures toward pursuing police officers and similar gestures and comments to two hostages taken during the escape attempt. An officer and a hostage both said Austin was the robber in the passenger seat, but Austin insisted he was the driver. During closing arguments the prosecutor urged the jury to consider the threatening gestures and comments by the passenger-robber as aggravating factors in assessing Austin’s sentence.

Years after his conviction was affirmed by Texas’, highest criminal court, 565 S.W.2d 72 (Tex.Crim.App.1978), Austin claimed to have discovered evidence showing that the prosecutor had withheld proof that Austin was actually the driver. This evidence was in the form of a fingerprint card showing that Robert Mathews was an alias used by Austin and that a citation had issued and a fingerprint card had been prepared showing that Mathews was the driver of the getaway vehicle.

On appeal to this court after a denial of federal habeas relief based on review of the state record alone, we remanded for an evidentiary hearing on the Brady issue. We found no merit in any other issue raised, including an ineffective-assistanee-of-counsel claim.

On remand the magistrate conducted a hearing at which Austin, the prosecutor, and Austin’s defense counsel at the state trial all testified. The magistrate found that Austin’s defense counsel had had access to the file of the district attorney before the trial and had been given all Brady material at least by the time of cross-examination of relevant witnesses. The magistrate noted that Austin’s only plausible argument related to the ineffective assistance claim. He recommended that Austin’s petition be dismissed without prejudice to Austin’s bringing another ha-beas petition raising that sixth amendment claim. The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendations.

The evidence developed at the evidentia-ry hearing after remand, against the background of the state sentencing trial, establishes that Austin and Stiehl, men of similar age and size, were both wearing face masks, toboggan caps, and sweaters at the time of the robbery and when they were arrested. When apprehended after a high-speed chase, the driver gave an alias, identifying himself as Robert James Mathews. The passenger said he was Robert Lynn Shafer. The police records contain a card bearing a set of fingerprints and the signatures of Austin and Robert Mathews. The handwriting is similar; Austin says both signatures are his. This card identifies Mathews as the driver. Austin maintained that the prosecution never disclosed this evidence to his counsel.

The record of the evidentiary hearing supports the magistrate’s findings that Austin’s counsel was fully aware of the existence of the police reports and their contents, including the fingerprint card, and that at the time of cross-examination he had those papers in his possession. The evidence also establishes that there was a great deal of confusion at the time of the arrest, confusion which Austin’s defense counsel appropriately sought to capitalize on, but we find no evidence of false testimony; nor do we find proof of any attempt to offer perjured testimony.

At the evidentiary hearing, Austin’s trial attorney made abundantly clear that he had had access to the police reports, including the much-touted fingerprint card, at the time of trial, but that he had made a strategic decision not to use them. Counsel’s comments set forth that decision and his reasons for choosing that trial strategy:

*1144 They did not give me the actual pieces of paper, they were read to me, I did recall and I do recall the business about the aliases and about Matthews and Shafer, and one of the reasons I remember that is that even though this was an aggravated case and it might not have made any difference, I didn’t want to bring up anything about the use of an alias because I thought the use of an alias, itself, was an aggravating circumstance. I knew it was going to come out at the trial and would probably be an issue, but I did not want to go into it myself, but to avoid it if possible, and I was aware of the use of aliases in the reports when we went to trial. Now, as to when I actually had the pieces of paper, I am certain in my own mind that I had the offense report available to me for cross-examination in the courtroom. I feel — knowing that this case is tried under Alton Griffin’s administration, I feel positive that I did not have a photographic copy of it prior to trial but only at the time the witness was passed, but I knew about the contents all along____
Okay. That will require me to answer about three separate things, but the first answer is, first, I have no recollection of having fingerprints available to me in my file. The second answer is, [as appointed] counsel, I had no one available to me in the way of a private fingerprint examiner to match up the latent prints or the — pardon me — the known prints on the fingerprint card at the Sheriff’s office with my client’s prints. The other thing was I am not sure that I would want to do that and further tie up the state’s case with so much certainty. The other thing was Mr. Aimesworth [one of the hostages] was a particularly pathetic witness and one that the jury would certainly sympathize with. I felt that I could not help Gary by vigorously cross-examining Aimesworth. I thought it would merely evoke the jury’s sympathy for the victim more than it was. It would appear to me, aggravated, would merely inflame the jury. This was a case where less was more, I could not have helped Gary by pounding, ad infini-tum, about these fingerprints or these aliases in front of the jury. It had to be very, very limited and I had to be as courteous as I possibly could with Mr. Aimesworth and not do anything to incur further sympathy for him.

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Bluebook (online)
764 F.2d 1142, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 30825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-mal-austin-v-lane-mccotter-director-texas-department-of-corrections-ca5-1985.