Jerry Dean King v. Mike Kemna, Superintendent Jeremiah (Jay) Nixon, Attorney, General, State of Missouri

226 F.3d 981, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 23612, 2000 WL 1364206
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 22, 2000
Docket99-2047
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 F.3d 981 (Jerry Dean King v. Mike Kemna, Superintendent Jeremiah (Jay) Nixon, Attorney, General, State of Missouri) 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
Jerry Dean King v. Mike Kemna, Superintendent Jeremiah (Jay) Nixon, Attorney, General, State of Missouri, 226 F.3d 981, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 23612, 2000 WL 1364206 (8th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

HEANEY, Circuit Judge.

Jerry King appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for habeas corpus. We reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

In November 1993, King was living in a trailer behind his brother Dennis’s home. At 4:00 a.m. on November 30, King came to his brother’s door, where Dennis’s wife Viola let him in. King told Dennis that he wanted to rob a bank, produced a .22 caliber pistol, and asked Dennis to load it. Dennis did so and gave the gun back to King, who put it in his pocket.

After jumping around the room in an attempt to prepare for the impending robbery, King asked his brother for a hug as it would be the last time they saw each other. After one hug, King asked for another. During this second hug, King pulled out the gun and shot Dennis under the arm. King ordered Dennis and Viola onto the floor. Dennis then wrestled with King, allowing Viola to escape the house. The brothers’ scuffle led outside, where Dennis was able to seize the gun and throw it in the front yard.

King returned to the house while Dennis ran and hid in a gully. Dennis heard King run down the road, stop near him, then return to the house. Dennis and Viola then heard a second gunshot, saw King run to the house of a neighbor, Kenneth Ruark, and begin to pound on the door. When Ruark opened the door, he saw King with a gunshot' wound in his leg. King told Ruark that Dennis had shot him. Ruark let King inside, and called for help. Five minutes later, Dennis knocked on Ruark’s door, and told him King had shot him. Dennis repeatedly asked King why he shot him, but King did not reply. King accused Dennis of shooting him in the leg.

Prior to trial, King’s first lawyer, Victor Head, moved for a mental evaluation of his client. The motion was granted, and King was examined by Dr. Harold Robb, senior psychiatrist at the Southwest Missouri Mental Health Center. Robb’s subsequent report noted that King had previously suffered a gunshot wound to the head:

[King] reports that he was shot in the head by his cousin 5 or 7 years ago and was in a hospital in Tulsa for 2 weeks at that time. He points to a small, soft spot on the left side of the back of his skull where he said the bullet went three inches into his brain. He does not feel that he suffered any ill effects from this injury, apart from, “I’m doing something, forget sometimes what I’m doing.”

(R. at 130.)

He has had seizures from time to time since then. He reports that he knows when they are coming on and that he may be unconscious for 2 or 3 seconds. The aura or warning signs include shortness of breath and a little spot of light that appears to go from one side to the other. The defendant states that when he is driving and has this feeling, he places his ignition keys on the floor of the car. He also states that he takes Dilantin 100 mg. ■ QID to prevent these seizures.

(R. at 127.) Despite this information, Robb neither reviewed King’s medical records, nor performed a physical examination, instead basing his report solely upon an interview with King, the court’s order directing the examination, the complaint against King, and the police report regarding the- November 1993 incident.

Robb’s report also indicated that King had explained his brother’s shooting as an accident:

[King] says that at time of the alleged offense, he was in the trailer and his brother came, ‘Waking me up ... come up to house for a cup' of coffee.” The defendant went to his brother’s home and “his wife got to talking of bank *984 robbery, doing something crazy.” The defendant thought that his brother was joking. The brother then went to the bedroom and came out ... with a pistol in his hand and was pointing it at the defendant. The defendant then says that he fought with his brother “over pointed gun, gun went off.”

(R. at 128.)

Robb concluded that King was competent to stand trial, and that King did not suffer — at the time of his examination or at the time of the shooting — from a mental illness or defect:

The defendant does not suffer from a mental disease or defect that would cause him to lack capacity to understand the proceedings against him or to assist in his own defense.... It is my opinion, on the basis of the present examination and background information, that at the time of the alleged criminal conduct, the defendant did not suffer from a mental disease or defect that would cause him not to know or appreciate the nature, quality or wrongfulness of his conduct or make him incapable of conforming his conduct to the requirements of the law.

(R. at 126.)

Following Robb’s evaluation, Head was replaced as King’s attorney by Frank Yan-koviz. At trial, King advanced something of a self-defense theory. In disjointed testimony, he contended that Dennis had been trying to get him to help buy and sell children, and that an argument had erupted because King did not want to be involved. 1 According to King, Dennis retrieved a pistol from another room. King testified that he tried to grab the gun, but as he and Dennis wrestled, the gun discharged. King claimed not to have known that Dennis had been shot. King further stated that Dennis followed him outside with a rifle, and that he had been shot in the leg while wrestling Dennis for the rifle.

In 1994, King was convicted of first-degree assault and armed criminal action and sentenced to the maximum penalty, two consecutive terms of life imprisonment. After pronouncing sentence, the trial court inquired into King’s satisfaction with his representation. Although stating he was satisfied with his attorneys’ performance, he indicated that he was unable to remember that he had been represented by Head prior to Yankoviz’s involvement in the case; whether counsel had done anything that King had asked him not to do; the name of the investigator who assisted with the case; and whether or not he had anything to add to his responses so far regarding counsel’s effectiveness. The court found no probable cause that King had received ineffective assistance of counsel.

In June 1995, King — represented by yet another attorney, A. Renae Adamson— filed a Missouri Supreme Court Rule 29.15 motion to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence and judgment. As relevant to this appeal, King contended trial counsel was ineffective for failing, despite knowledge of King’s gunshot wound, to further *985 investigate King’s mental health. At an evidentiary hearing on the motion, King presented the testimony of neuropsychologist Dr. Dennis Cowan and psychiatrist Dr. William Logan, as well as their written evaluations of King’s mental condition. Cowan and Logan believed that Robb’s initial evaluation had been inadequate, and that King in fact suffered from serious mental disabilities. Cowan noted that King exhibited neuropsychological dysfunctions localized in the frontal lobe of his brain, and

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Related

Cravens v. State
50 S.W.3d 290 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
226 F.3d 981, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 23612, 2000 WL 1364206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerry-dean-king-v-mike-kemna-superintendent-jeremiah-jay-nixon-ca8-2000.