Jimmy D. Pemberton v. James Collins, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division

991 F.2d 1218, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 12414, 1993 WL 151362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1993
Docket91-1327
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 991 F.2d 1218 (Jimmy D. Pemberton v. James Collins, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division) 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
Jimmy D. Pemberton v. James Collins, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, 991 F.2d 1218, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 12414, 1993 WL 151362 (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Jimmy Dale Pemberton appeals the district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief, claiming that his conviction for murder violated the federal Constitution. Pemberton is currently serving a life term in prison for the crime. Convinced that his conviction presents no constitutional error, we affirm. In so doing we reach a question of first impression: whether on habeas review of a state court conviction a federal court may consider a confession admitted at trial but subsequently held inadmissible under state law by a state appellate court. We hold that it may.

I

In the early morning hours of October 11,1982, Helen Gay Pemberton was shot to death outside of her apartment in Dallas, Texas. Her young daughter, Tricia, remained asleep inside the apartment. Police quickly arrested her estranged husband, the petitioner, for the crime. After three days of interrogation, Pemberton signed the following confession:

On Friday, 10/8/82, my wife, Helen Gay Pemberton, called me and told me that she was taking Tricia and leaving. I love Tricia and want to see her so I went to talk to Gay. I went to talk to her Friday and sat, but Gay was not at home. Sunday, I was at home and had gone to bed with Linda Thornbrough [sic], about 10:20 PM. I woke up sometime between 2:30 and 3:30 AM with a bad dream. I saw Gay going over a cliff in the van. I layed there for awhile and went back to sleep with Linda holding me. Later, I woke up about 3:30 AM or 4:00 AM and drove to Gay’s apartment in Linda’s husband’s pickup truck. When I got to Gay’s, I knocked on her door until she answered. Gay let me in and we talked about her leaving with Tricia. I wanted her to leave Tricia with me and she could do what she wanted. Gay said she had met a guy from Stillwell, Oklahoma and she was leaving town. Gay had gone to the bathroom and changed clothes during the time we had been talking. She had on a white blouse and blue slacks. Gay started an argument about her leaving with Tricia. During the argument, Gay pulled a gun that I think she got from her purse. I told her to shoot me. I was on the couch and I got up and went across the coffee table and got the gun away from her. After I got the gun, Gay turned to run out the door and she fell out the doorway. Gay got up and I shot her and she fell and I just kept shooting her three or four times. I may have shot her all six times, I don’t know. I ran out the door and got into the truck and left. I was on Brown Drive going toward Pioneer, after I passed the stop *1221 sign I threw the gun out. I then went back home and went back to bed.

Near Helen Gay’s body, police found a check payable to Pemberton in the amount of $47.87, the exact amount Helen Gay had in her bank account. They also found a note written to “Jimmy” that apologized “for all I have done to you.” The police never found the murder weapon. No fingerprints were found on or near the body. No one witnessed the shooting. There was no physical evidence linking Pemberton to the crime.

Pemberton requested and obtained a state court bench trial. At trial, he claimed that the confession he signed was coerced through numerous acts of physical and psychological abuse. Pemberton testified that when no other officers were present, Officer Cheek, one of the interrogators, graphically described his wife’s fatal wounds. He also testified that when he and Cheek were alone, Cheek showed him gruesome pictures of corpses. He said further that Cheek, apparently in the presence of other officers, banged his (Pemberton’s) head against a utility table and a metal file cabinet. Pemberton, who is white, said that Cheek told him that Helen Gay had sexual relations with blacks and Mexicans. Pemberton also claimed that Cheek threatened to prosecute him for unsolved grocery store robberies in the area.

The state did not call Officer Cheek to rebut Pemberton’s allegations. However, the state did call the other interrogators, who denied that any physical or psychological abuse had taken place. One of them, Officer Dix, testified that of the five times the interrogators interviewed Pemberton, only one session involved Cheek. Dix said that he himself was present during that interview and that no coercion took place. Pemberton confessed to Officer Jobe in the presence of a witness, Rachel Moon. The trial judge admitted the confession into evidence.

Apart from the confession, the state presented circumstantial evidence that Pem-berton had committed the crime. On August 31, 1982, Officer Robert Belmont had been called to Mrs. Pemberton’s apartment to intervene in a disturbance between her and Pemberton. After being told that a restraining order had been issued against Pemberton, Belmont ordered Pemberton to leave. Upon leaving, Pemberton turned to his wife and said, “You divorced me, bitch, and I will kill you and put the kid in an orphanage.”

About a week before the murder Pem-berton asked Linda Thornberry, with whom he was then living, to get him an unregistered gun. He told her he wanted the gun so he could force Helen Gay to leave Texas so she couldn’t testify in a criminal trespass case that she had filed against him. He was also angry because he believed she was pregnant with another man’s baby. He said he would force Helen Gay to write a note admitting that she had been impregnated by a black man. Pemberton also asked Roy Thornberry, Linda’s husband, to loan him a gun.

On the Friday night before the murder, Linda Thornberry came home to find Pem-berton leaving the apartment with a full change of clothes, a tire iron, and a butcher knife. He took these things to a truck, and then came back inside the house, saying, “You’d better try to stop me because I was on my way to kill Gay.” Linda responded that she would call the police and- that Pemberton would have to kill her too. Pemberton replied, “What would be one more life?”

On the Saturday before the murder, Pemberton borrowed Roy Thornberry’s truck. Roy testified that Pemberton was very upset with Helen Gay at this point. Immediately after the shooting, Officer Belmont, remembering Pemberton’s threat of a month before, went to Pemberton’s apartment. There, he found Roy’s truck, its engine still warm and “snapping and cracking.”

Belmont and Officer Ferris kept watch on Pemberton’s apartment for fifteen minutes until Pemberton exited at 5:00 a.m., whereupon Belmont and Ferris arrested him. The officers surmised that Pember-ton had just bathed, because his hair was wet and he smelled of soap. The state theorized that Pemberton had washed in *1222 order to remove any gun powder residue from his skin. Indeed, a hand washing at the police station shortly after the arrest turned up no residue.

After Pemberton’s arrest, Linda and her neighbor, Shirley Pollard, found a note from Pemberton saying he had gone out and would be back soon. Because they were frightened, they destroyed the note. Later, Pemberton threatened to accuse Pollard of arson unless she testified that Linda had murdered Helen Gay.

Finally, over Pemberton’s objection, the trial judge allowed the state to introduce “double” hearsay evidence from a police officer who said that other unnamed police officers told him that unnamed witnesses told them that they saw a brown truck with yellow stripes leaving Helen Gay’s apartment complex shortly after the murder.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
991 F.2d 1218, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 12414, 1993 WL 151362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimmy-d-pemberton-v-james-collins-director-texas-department-of-criminal-ca5-1993.