Lenz v. True

370 F. Supp. 2d 446, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9608, 2005 WL 1189366
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 20, 2005
Docket7:04CV00347
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 370 F. Supp. 2d 446 (Lenz v. True) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lenz v. True, 370 F. Supp. 2d 446, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9608, 2005 WL 1189366 (W.D. Va. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

JONES, Chief Judge.

Petitioner Michael William Lenz, an inmate at a Virginia correctional facility, was convicted in state court of the capital murder of a fellow inmate and sentenced to death. After unsuccessfully challenging his conviction and the imposition of the death penalty both on direct appeal and in state collateral proceedings, Lenz now petitions for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254 (West 1994 & Supp.2004). For the reasons stated in this opinion, the respondent’s Motion to Dismiss must be granted.

Table Of Contents

I. Facts.453

II. Procedural History. cn co

A. State Proceedings.. ^ cn co

B. Federal Proceedings ^ or

III. Procedurally Defaulted Claim.455

Claims on the Merits IV. cu

Claim I — Presence of a Bible in the Jury Room. en

Claim II — Counsel’s Failure to Object to the Verdict Forms ... m

Claim III — Counsel’s Failure to Object to Use of the Stun Belt fT,

Claim IV — Suppression of Evidence about the Victim’s Criminal History O

Claim VI — Counsel’s Failure to Prepare for the Penalty Phase of Trial M O

1. Claim VI(A) — Counsel’s Failure to Seek Additional Time. O

2. Claim VI(B) — Evidence Regarding the Circumstances of the Offense -O

3. Claim VI(C) — Evidence Regarding Lenz’s Religion. <1

4. Claim VI(D) — Evidence Regarding Lenz’s Background. no

5. Claim VI(E) — Evidence Regarding Lenz’s Mental Illness. CO

6. Claim VI(F) — Failure to Obtain Independent Expert Assistance OO

7. Claim VI(G) — Cumulative Prejudice . QO

Claim VII — Counsel’s Failures on Direct Appeal. CD

Claim VIII — Constitutionality of the Death Penalty in Virginia. Cl

*451 Y. Conclusion.495

In affirming Lenz’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Virginia summarized the facts as follows:

During the early evening of January 16, 2000, the defendant, [Brent H.] Parker, Jeffrey Remington, and three other inmates attended a meeting of a group referred to as the Ironwood Kindred. The meeting occurred in Building J-5, which is a part of the Augusta Correctional Center.
Earl Jones, a correctional officer, was assigned to Building J-5 that evening. Jones permitted the six inmates to enter a room where the meeting occurred. He closed the door, which contained windows, and “secured” the room.
As Jones sat down at his post outside the meeting room and began to “sort through” inmate passes that he had collected, he “noticed a commotion.” Jones “got on” his radio and requested help from other correctional officers because he observed a fight. As Jones walked toward the room where the inmates were meeting, three of the inmates “ran out of the room,” and one of the inmates said, “[t]hey’re stabbing him.”
Jones went to the door and saw “Remington and Lenz stabbing Parker.” Parker was lying “on his back; on the floor, between Remington and Lenz.” Parker “was making a feeble attempt to defend himself.... He had his hands up.” As Parker tried to use his hands to “block” the knives from piercing his body, the defendant and Remington “took their free hand[s]; pushed [Parker’s] hands aside and then stabbed him.” '
Jones opened the meeting room door and ordered the defendant and Remington to stop stabbing Parker. Jones testified, “[t]hey simply looked at me and went back to stabbing him.” Jones used his radio again to request help and asked his fellow correctional officers to hurry because Remington and the defendant “were trying to. kill this guy.” .Jones did not go into the room because Remington and the. defendant had knives, and Jones was unarmed.
Edward V. Houching, a correctional officer, responded to Jones’ request for assistance. When Houching arrived at the meeting room, he saw the defendant and Remington stab Parker between 10 to 15 times as Parker was lying on the floor in a fetal position. Like Jones, Houching ordered the defendant and Remington to stop, but they continued to stab Parker. Parker was not “doing anything to defend himsélf,” and the defendant “was bent over, stabbing [Parker], over and over and over.”
Within a few seconds after Houching arrived at the meeting room, two sergeants and correctional officer John Edward Simmons also responded. Simmons saw the defendant stab Parker six or seven times in an area that extended from Parker’s “underarm” to his waist as Parker was lying on his side on the floor. Simmons also saw Remington stab Parker in the shoulder and back. After a sufficient number of correctional officers arrived at the meeting room, the officers, some of whom were armed with mace, entered the room, and Simmons told the defendant and Remington “to drop” their knives. The defendant placed his knife on a table, and Remington eventually surrendered his knife. The officers placed handcuffs on the defendant .and Remington and escorted them from the area.
Rita K. Dietz, a registered nurse employed at the Augusta Correctional Center, rendered emergency assistance to Parker. When she walked into the ■meeting room to assist him, he was *452 “very pale” and “surrounded by blood.” As she approached him, she noticed that his shirt was soaked in blood. She ripped his shirt off. She testified that “[e]very time I encountered a couple of wounds, I encountered more wounds.” She described Parker’s medical condition as “[v]ery critical.” She placed bandages on his wounds until she “ran out.” She testified,
at that point, the stretcher had arrived. So we took the sheet off the stretcher ... Parker was still alive, and he helped roll onto the sheet. And we lifted the sheet up, which the' one wound, out of the left side, just poured like water; like somebody had turned a faucet on, when we lifted him. And we got him on the stretcher.
Parker was transported by ambulance to the Augusta Medical Center, where he died.
Gregory Price Wanger, the Assistant Chief Medical Examiner for the Western District of Virginia, performed an autopsy on Parker’s body. Wanger testified that Parker had sustained 68 stab wounds and one cut wound, all of which were inflicted upon Parker when he yras alive. Dr. Wanger explained that a stab wound is “shorter on the surface than it is deep” and “implies a thrusting motion[,]” whereas a cut wound “is longer on the surface than it is deep” and “implies a slashing-like motion-.” The stab wounds penetrated Parker’s chest, abdomen, back, left arm, and right forearm.
Dr. Wanger identified 40 stab wounds, “from the upper part of [Parker’s] chest down through the middle and center part of the chest, and into the abdomen.” These wounds all contributed to his death.

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Bluebook (online)
370 F. Supp. 2d 446, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9608, 2005 WL 1189366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenz-v-true-vawd-2005.