John King v. Lorie Davis, Director

883 F.3d 577
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 22, 2018
Docket16-70018
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 883 F.3d 577 (John King v. Lorie Davis, Director) 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
John King v. Lorie Davis, Director, 883 F.3d 577 (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

KING, Circuit Judge:

John William King was convicted and sentenced to death by a Texas jury for the capital murder of James Byrd. After his direct appeal and state habeas applications failed, King sought federal habeas relief. The district court denied King's petition. This court then granted a certificate of appealability on one claim: that King's trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective in presenting the case for King's innocence. We agree with the district court that this claim fails on its merits, and thus we AFFIRM.

I.

This case concerns a high-profile murder in the small town of Jasper, Texas. Early Sunday morning, June 7, 1998, Jasper police discovered the dismembered body of James Byrd, a black man. His torso, legs, and left arm were found on Huff Creek Road in front of a church. The rest of Byrd was found a mile and a half up the road. A forensic pathologist would later testify that Byrd's injuries-cuts and scrapes around his ankles and abrasions covering most of his body-were consistent with having his ankles wrapped together with a chain and being dragged by a vehicle. Byrd's death and dismemberment were caused, according to the pathologist, when he was slung into a culvert on the side of the road.

From Byrd's remains, police followed a blood trail up a logging road. The trail ended at a grassy area where a fight appeared to have occurred. At the grassy area, police found a variety of items, including a cigarette lighter engraved with the words "KKK" and "Possum," three cigarette butts, a can of "fix-a-flat," a CD, a pack of Marlboros, beer bottles, a button from Byrd's shirt, Byrd's baseball cap, and a wrench inscribed with the name "Berry."

Police asked around Jasper to see if anyone saw Byrd on the night he was *582 killed. A lifelong acquaintance of Byrd said he saw Byrd at a party on Saturday night, June 6. Byrd had left the party around 1:30 or 2:00 in the morning, walking alone towards his home. Another acquaintance drove past Byrd, who was walking down the road away from the party. At around 2:30 a.m., after the acquaintance had made it home, he saw Byrd pass, riding in the back of a primer-gray pickup truck. Three white men were in the cab of the truck.

On Monday, a day after Byrd's body was discovered, police stopped a primer-gray pickup for a traffic violation. Its driver was Shawn Berry. In the truck, police found a tool set which matched the wrench found at the grassy area. Berry was arrested. Dried blood spatters under the truck and on one of the tires were discovered and then DNA tested. The DNA matched Byrd's. A substance consistent with fix-a-flat was found inside one of the truck's tires. In the truck's bed, police found a rust stain in a chain pattern.

Police searched Berry's apartment, which he shared with Lawrence Russell Brewer and John William King. They seized the roommates' drawings, writings, clothes, and footwear. Among the items seized were two pairs of "Rugged Outback" sandals, one size 9.5 and another size 10. The size-10 sandals were found in King's room, under his dresser, and next to his photo album. They were stained with Byrd's blood. An FBI forensic examiner, who compared the sandals to footprints at the grassy area, found that either the size-9.5 or -10 sandals could have created some of the prints. Another FBI agent took foot measurements of various suspects. King's feet were size 9.5, Shawn Berry's were 9, Brewer's were 7, and Lewis Berry's, Shawn Berry's brother who stayed sometimes at the apartment, were 10.

The three cigarette butts found in the grassy area were DNA tested. DNA from one butt revealed King as a major contributor, excluded Shawn Berry and Brewer as contributors, and did not exclude Byrd as a minor contributor. A minor contributor, an FBI investigator would explain at trial, deposits a small amount of DNA-say, by taking a single drag off a cigarette.

More physical evidence came to light linking King to the grassy area and the killing. The "Possum" lighter was King's (Possum was King's nickname in prison). Police also uncovered a 24-foot logging chain which matched the rust stains in the bed of Shawn Berry's truck. The chain was found in a covered hole in the woods behind the house of a mutual friend of the roommates. The mutual friend, Tommy Faulk, testified that on June 7, the day Byrd's body was found, King and Brewer showed up unannounced at Faulk's house. They came in Berry's truck. They parked on the side of Faulk's house facing the woods, entered through the back door, stayed for a brief time, and then left. 1 The chain was found the next day in the woods behind Faulk's house.

King, Shawn Berry, and Brewer were charged with capital murder and separately tried. At King's trial, the State introduced all the previously mentioned physical evidence, as well as evidence showing King's violent hatred of black people. During his first stint in prison (which ended about a year before Byrd was killed), King was the "exalted cyclops" of the Confederate Knights of America (CKA), a white-supremacist gang. King's drawings displayed scenes of racial lynching. Several *583 witnesses testified that King would not go to a black person's house and would leave a party if a black person showed up. King also had several prison tattoos. Among them were a burning cross, a Confederate battle flag, "SS" lightning bolts, a figure in a Ku Klux Klan robe, "KKK," a swastika, "Aryan Pride," and a black man hanging by a noose from a tree.

The State also put on evidence of King's larger ambitions. The State introduced King's writings, which indicated that King wished to start a CKA chapter in Jasper. The writings also indicated that King was planning for something big on July 4 (a little less than a month after the killing occurred). In prison, King spoke with other inmates about his goal of starting a race war, and about initiating new members to his cause by having them kidnap and murder black people. He wrote a letter to a friend about his desire to make a name for himself when he got out of prison. A gang expert, who reviewed King's writings, said that King's use of persuasive language showed he sought to recruit others to his cause. The expert also testified that where Byrd's body was ultimately left-on a road in front of a church rather than in the surrounding woods-demonstrated that the crime was meant to spread terror and gain credibility.

King did not testify at his trial. But his version of events was introduced by the State through a letter he sent from jail to the Dallas Morning News. In that letter, King professed his innocence. He explained that his Possum lighter had been misplaced a week or so before he was arrested. He also presented his account of the night, pinning the murder on Shawn Berry and implying that the murder was the result of a steroid deal gone wrong. He admitted that he, Shawn Berry, and Brewer were drinking and driving around in Berry's truck on the night of the killing, but explained that he and Brewer had told Berry to drop them off at the apartment. Heading home, Berry spotted Byrd walking on the side of the road. Berry and Byrd, according to King, knew each other from county jail, and Byrd had sold Berry steroids in the past. After a brief exchange, Byrd hopped in the truck behind the cab.

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Bluebook (online)
883 F.3d 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-king-v-lorie-davis-director-ca5-2018.