Holland v. Anderson

439 F. Supp. 2d 644, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46788, 2006 WL 1806471
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedJune 29, 2006
Docket1:98 CV 562B
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 439 F. Supp. 2d 644 (Holland v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holland v. Anderson, 439 F. Supp. 2d 644, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46788, 2006 WL 1806471 (S.D. Miss. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

BARBOUR, District Judge.

This cause is before the Court on Petitioner Gerald James Holland’s Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus. 1 Having considered the Amended Petition, Response, Reply and the record of the proceedings below, as well as supporting and opposing authority, the Court finds that the Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus is not well taken and should be denied.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

This Amended Petition for Writ of Ha-beas Corpus arises out of the conviction and subsequent sentence of death imposed on Petitioner Gerald James Holland for the murder of Krystal D. King. During the course of this case, the Mississippi Supreme Court has published three separate opinions. First, in Holland v. State, 587 So.2d 848 (Miss.1991) (hereinafter “Holland I”), the court affirmed the conviction returned by the jury in the trial court, but reversed the sentence of death. After Holland I was rendered, Holland was again sentenced to death. Second, in Holland v. State, 705 So.2d 307 (Miss.1997) (hereinafter “Holland II”), the court' affirmed Holland’s second death sentence. Holland then filed a Petition for Post-Conviction Relief with the Mississippi Supreme Court. In the third and final published, opinion, Holland v. State, 878 So.2d 1 (Miss.2004) (hereinafter “Holland III”), the court denied that Petition.

The facts of this case were efficiently set forth by the'Mississippi Supreme Court in the Holland cases described above. This Cohrt adopts the following facts from those reported opinions. 2

In September 1986, Gulfport police arrested 49-year-old Gerald James Holland for the murder of 15-year-old Krystal D. King.' The Harrison County Grand Jury subsequently indicted' Holland for capital murder and the underlying felony of rape. Venue changed to Adams County, where a jury in December 1987 found Holland guilty and sentenced him to death. Holland appealed. This Court affirms the conviction, overturns the death sentence, and remands for re-sentencing.

Around 8:00 p.m. on a warm Thursday evening- — September 11, 1986 — 21-year-old Willie Boyer ran into his friend, Krystal King, at the Biloxi Beach Arcade. They “hung out” at the arcade until around 9:30 — at. which time they decided to stroll down to the beach and drink a six-pack of beer. Hours passed; midnight arrived; and the beer ran out. Krystal asked Willie to drive her to a house, unfamiliar to him, located on Burton Avenue in Gulfport. “Jerry” Holland, the appellant in this case, owned this house.

Jerry Holland had not lived in Gulf-port all his life; he grew up in his birthplace, Los Angeles, with his mom, *650 dad, two younger brothers, and a younger sister. His dad worked various jobs — as an electrician, truck mechanic, and other positions involving general maintenance. His mom was a homemaker.

During the latter half of his teen-aged years, Holland moved with his family to Memphis where he completed his high-school education and received a “certificate of credits.” He left home at the age of twenty-one, and survived by working odd jobs. Holland explained: “[A]s I got older, I worked selling shoes, [became a] dental technician, and got into the electrical trade and stayed in it most of the time.” He accumulated over twenty years’ experience as an electrician — with some vocational training in this field. He “lived and worked in different places,” married and divorced twice, fathered five children, and ran afoul of the law. His criminal record includes convictions for burglary, larceny (auto theft), and rape of a child. He received a four-year term in a Texas prison for the rape; however, he served only one year before being paroled in 1976. He moved to Gulfport in 1981. Five years later, his and Krystal’s path crossed.

By that time, in June or July 1986, Holland’s second wife had left him and taken their only child, Ina, with her. He was doing “contract work” on and off, and he had secured a roommate, 21-year-old Jerry Douglas, who introduced him to Krystal.

On the night when Boyer drove Krystal to Burton Avenue, Holland had been drinking. This was not out of character for Holland. He had, as of August 1, become a drinker of at least a “six-pack” of beer a day — which he attributed to his “despondence” over his then-pending divorce. Boyer “remember[s] seeing [Holland] have ... one [beer] the whole time [he] was there,” and he “did not appear ... to be intoxicated or drunk.” Boyer himself “had a little bit of tequila and a beer,” and Krystal abstained completely. Meanwhile, Douglas and 19-year-old Carter Fugate, who had only recently moved in, slept soundly in their bedrooms; they had been in bed since 11:00 p.m.

Boyer and Krystal’s visit lasted for a couple hours — during which time they watched “David Letterman” (a T.V. talk show) and listened to Holland small-talk about his divorce and the “divorce papers” which he had just received in the mail. Around 2:30 a.m., Boyer decided to leave, and Krystal remained behind. That was the last time Boyer saw her alive.

Later in the night — between 3:20 and 3:30 a.m. — a “bump” awakened Douglas:

DOUGLAS: I got up to go to the bathroom and to get a drink of water. I opened my bedroom door, the lights in the house was on, the front door standing wide open.
I heard another noise outside the front door.... [I] looked through the ... door and I saw [Holland] bent over a black object on the ground. I looked at him and asked him, “Jerry, what is going on?” And he looked back up at me and says, “Go back to bed you don’t want to know.”

Vol. IX, at 1401-02. Douglas then went into the kitchen and peered out the window: “I saw him roll[ ] this object into the back of his pick up truck and it made a loud thud sound when it hit the bed of the truck.”

Holland returned to the house and, once inside, Douglas noticed that “he had a wild look on his face, his eyes were very big and glassy looking, and he *651 was shaking.” At that point, Holland confessed: “My God, I killed her [Krystal], I killed her.” Id. at 1402. According to Douglas, Holland then explained that he and Krystal had had sex on the couch — after which she picked up his “razor-sharp” hunting knife located nearby and “started playing with it.” Holland and Krystal “winded up going into his bedroom and she [continued to] play with the knife.” Holland “took the knife from her and the next thing he knew it was in her chest.” “[H]e had stabbed her.”

Douglas noted that Holland changed his story a few minutes later: Holland told him that he and Krystal were “wrestling around on the bed and [she] rolled off the bed and she fell onto the knife.” Holland also told him that “he mutilated the body to cover up the stab wounds” and to “make it look like a sex fiend had done it.” And he explained that he had placed the body in his truck “to ... bury it and try and cover everything up.”

Douglas, under duress, accompanied Holland to bury Krystal’s body.

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Related

Jordan v. Epps
740 F. Supp. 2d 802 (S.D. Mississippi, 2010)
Holland v. Anderson
583 F.3d 267 (Fifth Circuit, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
439 F. Supp. 2d 644, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46788, 2006 WL 1806471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-anderson-mssd-2006.