Lesley Warren v. Edward Thomas

894 F.3d 609
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2018
Docket17-4
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 894 F.3d 609 (Lesley Warren v. Edward Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lesley Warren v. Edward Thomas, 894 F.3d 609 (4th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:

A North Carolina jury convicted Lesley Eugene Warren of the first-degree murder of Katherine Johnson. The government sought the death penalty, and at the sentencing phase it introduced evidence that Warren recently had been convicted of murdering two other women. Because of the death sentence he received for one of those convictions, Warren could not be paroled if sentenced to life for the murder of Johnson, and asked the trial court to so instruct the jury. The court declined to give the instruction, and the jury sentenced Warren to death.

Under Simmons v. South Carolina , 512 U.S. 154 , 114 S.Ct. 2187 , 129 L.Ed.2d 133 (1994), a defendant is entitled to inform the jury when the alternative to a death sentence is life in prison without parole, but only if the prosecutor puts at issue the risk that he will be a danger to society if released from prison. The Supreme Court of North Carolina rejected Warren's Simmons claim, holding that the prosecutor in his case had not argued future dangerousness in support of the death penalty, and the district court denied Warren's petition for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 . Because the Supreme Court of North Carolina reasonably applied Simmons to Warren's sentencing, we affirm.

I.

A.

On July 15, 1990, Warren met Katherine Johnson, a 21-year-old college student, at a picnic he was attending with a friend in High Point, North Carolina. Warren and Johnson spent the rest of the day together, first with a group that included Warren's friend and later by themselves. That night, Warren and Johnson went for a ride on Warren's motorcycle, ending up in the middle of a soccer field. There, Warren choked Johnson to death. After hiding Johnson's body in the trunk of her car and abandoning the car in a parking garage, Warren returned to his friend's house and went to sleep on the couch.

Five days later, police arrested Warren on a South Carolina warrant for the murder of a woman named Velma Gray. When questioned, Warren confessed to killing Gray in South Carolina in 1989. He also confessed to killing Jayme Hurley in North Carolina in May 1990. And finally, he confessed to killing his third victim, Katherine Johnson, just days earlier.

In 1996, Warren was tried and convicted of the first-degree murder of Katherine Johnson. By then, he already had been convicted in South Carolina of the first-degree murder of Velma Gray, for which he received a life sentence. He also had pled guilty to the first-degree murder of Jayme Hurley in North Carolina, for which he was sentenced to death. That death sentence meant that under North Carolina law, Warren could not be paroled if sentenced to life for the murder of Katherine Johnson.

B.

At the sentencing phase of Warren's trial, the government sought the death penalty based on a single aggravating factor: that Warren previously had been convicted of another capital felony, see N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-2000(e)(2) (1995), in the form of his two prior murder convictions. As a result, that Warren had killed not just one but three women became a focal point of the prosecutor's lengthy closing argument for the death penalty. Using the horrific details of all three murders, along with evidence from the guilt phase of trial, the prosecutor argued that Warren deserved a death sentence.

Because Warren's Simmons claim turns on the prosecutor's closing argument, we describe it in some detail. The prosecutor began by describing the "depravity" of each of Warren's three murders, J.A. 1735, which he attributed to choices made by Warren: "He could have chosen life. But instead, in all three instances, he chose death," J.A. 1733-and not just any death, but death by slow strangulation, for "no reason" at all, J.A. 1734-35. Warren killed because he liked it, the prosecutor argued, and he felt no remorse.

Then, in a portion of the argument on which Warren focuses for his Simmons claim, the prosecutor invoked the testimony of a psychologist, retained by the defense, who had prepared a social history on Warren. The defense's own witness, the prosecutor argued, described Warren as having a "habit" of killing women, doing it "over and over and over." J.A. 1740. He noted a "pattern" in Warren's behavior, consistently hiding the evidence of his crimes-his victims' bodies-"[i]n the water, in a grave, in a car." J.A. 1741. "What will stop him?," the prosecutor asked, before repeating, "Over and over and over." J.A. 1740.

The prosecutor explained to the jury the aggravating factor on which the government was relying-that Warren previously had been convicted of a capital felony-and offered the first-degree murders of Hurley and Gray as support. The government had introduced detailed evidence of those murders, the prosecutor said, so that the jury could do a "character analysis" of the defendant, to "see whether or not [Warren] deserves to die for what he did." J.A. 1745. The answer, the prosecutor urged, was yes, addressing the defense's mitigating evidence and arguing it was insufficient to reduce Warren's moral culpability for his crimes.

Near the end of his argument-in the other portion on which Warren primarily relies-the prosecutor acknowledged that "[t]he Bible tells us, you know, to turn the other cheek, that ... we should always give people a second chance." J.A. 1760-61. But Warren, he argued, already had been given a second chance, and "chose not to use" it; instead, after murdering Velma Gray, Warren continued to kill. J.A. 1761. "How many more chances do we have to give him?," the prosecutor asked the jury. Id. "One, two, three." Id. Warren, the prosecutor insisted, "is addicted to killing women." Id.

The prosecutor concluded by talking again about the three women Warren had murdered, and showing Johnson's picture to the jury. He told the jury that while it could not bring peace to the victims, it could restore their "dignity." J.A. 1764. To do "justice" for the victims and the community, the prosecutor finished, the jury should recommend death. J.A. 1765.

In an effort to persuade the jury to recommend a life sentence, Warren's lawyers argued numerous mitigating factors. Warren's moral culpability, they contended, was substantially reduced, primarily by abuse during his childhood and serious mental and emotional disturbances in his youth and teenage years.

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Bluebook (online)
894 F.3d 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lesley-warren-v-edward-thomas-ca4-2018.