Hopper v. Dretke

106 F. App'x 221
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2004
Docket02-11337
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 F. App'x 221 (Hopper v. Dretke) 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
Hopper v. Dretke, 106 F. App'x 221 (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

DENNIS, Circuit Judge: *

In 1992, George Anderson Hopper was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death for the murder of Rozanne Gailiu-nas. After he exhausted his state remedies, Hopper filed a § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court raising seven grounds for relief. The district court denied Hopper’s petition in its entirety and refused to grant a certificate of appealability (“COA”).

Hopper now seeks a COA on three 1 broad grounds: (1) ineffective assistance of *224 counsel arising from a post-indictment polygraph and custodial interview that resulted in Hopper’s confession to Rozanne’s murder; (2) denial of his constitutional rights to counsel and silence during that custodial interview in violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 2 which would render Hopper’s confession and certain after-acquired corroborating evidence inadmissible; and, (3) due process and confrontation clause violations arising from the lead investigator’s surreptitious entry into a book deal about the case. We grant a COA on Hopper’s ineffective assistance claim to the extent that the two-part analysis in Strickland v. Washington 3 is applicable. We also grant COA on Hopper’s Miranda claims, but deny COA as to all other claims. After a review of the merits, however, we affirm the district court’s denial of habeas relief as to the ineffective assistance and Miranda claims.

BACKGROUND

On October 4, 1983, Rozanne Gailiunas was found unconscious in the bedroom of her home. She had been brutally assaulted and shot twice in the head. Rozanne never regained consciousness and died a few days later. Her murder went unsolved for several years until a tip to the police suggested that Rozanne’s murder was arranged by Joy Aylor, the estranged wife of Rozanne’s boyfriend. Police confirmed that Ms. Aylor paid $5,000 to have Rozanne killed, and were able to trace the money as it passed through the hands of several individuals. Each individual had skimmed a little of the money and passed the remainder along. The last person in this chain was Hopper, who apparently received $1,500 of the original $5,000.

The police began looking for Hopper in the summer of 1988 to discuss Rozanne’s murder. At that time, the police did not know whether Hopper was Rozanne’s killer. All the police knew then was that Hopper was the most recent person to receive the money.

Despite an attempt to flee from justice, Hopper was arrested on December 20, 1988 and arraigned the following day. But counsel was not appointed and Hopper made no request for counsel at that arraignment. On December 22, 1988, and despite his lack of counsel, Hopper contacted Detective McGowan offering to cooperate. Hopper admitted that he had received the money to kill Rozanne, and that he had passed $1,000 of that money on to a drug dealer named “Chip.” Hopper also gave Detective McGowan a description of Chip as well as information regarding Chip’s usual haunts.

Hopper was not appointed counsel until December 27, six days after his arraignment and five days after he first willingly spoke with Detective McGowan and gave the detective the “Chip story.” Jan Hemphill, the appointed counsel met with Hopper several times over the next few weeks as well as with the prosecution. The prosecution informed Hemphill of its intent to seek the death penalty for Joy Aylor as well as the shooter. The prosecution also told Hemphill that it was willing to work with all of the middlemen in the chain to get those two death penalty convictions. The record shows that Hemphill repeatedly advised Hopper of the prosecution’s plans and discussed with him the risks of cooperation. The record also shows that Hemphill advised Hopper that her advice was based on the information that Hopper gave her.

*225 On February 21, 1989, Hopper again contacted Detective McGowan and informed the detective of his intent to cooperate. Hopper also told Detective McGowan that he had spoken with Hemphill and that Hemphill had given Hopper permission to contact the police. Detective McGowan then called the prosecution who verified with Hemphill that Hopper had her permission to talk with the police. The prosecution also secured Hemphill’s consent to give Hopper a polygraph examination, and a blanket consent to talk to Hopper in the future without having to contact her first.

The following day, on February 22,1989, Hopper met with Detective McGowan. Hopper was read his Miranda rights, and after waiving those rights, Hopper completed a six-page written statement detailing and supplementing the story he had previously given to Detective McGowan that inculpated the drug dealer Chip. After this interview, Hopper was told that the story would be verified by a polygraph examination to be scheduled in the upcoming few days.

Hopper was given a polygraph examination on February 27, 1989. Prior to this examination, he was again read his Miranda rights. After being told that the polygraph examination indicated falsity, and after receiving a fresh Miranda recitation, Hopper was questioned by Detective McGowan. The detective asked Hopper to tell the his story once again, starting at the beginning. After Hopper recounted the “Chip story,” Detective McGowan told Hopper that McGowan believed Hopper was not telling the police the entire story. Detective McGowan then showed Hopper a picture of Chip and told Hopper that the police were close to locating Chip. The detective asked Hopper what would happen if the police questioned Chip and Chip passed a polygraph. Hopper said that the investigation would “lead back to me [Hopper]” and asked “Can I go back and think about it?” The detective responded, “Andy, I want the truth now.” After a brief pause, Hopper admitted that he killed Rozanne Gailiunas. He subsequently gave a factually detailed confession, which was both audio and videotaped. This confession, along with corroborating physical evidence, including the gun used to shoot Rozanne, were admitted into evidence at Hopper’s trial. Additionally, testimony regarding an independent confession Hopper made to a jailhouse informant and an admission of guilt in a letter Hopper wrote to a close friend were admitted into evidence along with his police confession. The testimony of the jailhouse informant closely tracked the confession that Hopper gave to the police. The letter admission of guilt was not detailed, but in that letter Hopper wrote “I am the one who killed this person.”

At trial, Hopper vigorously challenged the admissibility of the confession and argued a causation theory to the jury. Hopper’s counsel admitted that Hopper was at the scene when Rozanne was shot and implicitly admitted that Hopper shot her. Using the results of a post-mortem toxicology test showing that Rozanne had a significant amount of Thorazine, a sedative, in her blood when she died, Hopper argued that it was the Thorazine that actually killed her instead of the bullet that entered her brain. 4

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106 F. App'x 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopper-v-dretke-ca5-2004.