Michael R. O'Rourke v. Roger Endell

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 1998
Docket97-3728
StatusPublished

This text of Michael R. O'Rourke v. Roger Endell (Michael R. O'Rourke v. Roger Endell) 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
Michael R. O'Rourke v. Roger Endell, (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _____________

No. 97-3728 _____________

Michael Robert O'Rourke; Jeff * Rosenzweig, as Next Friend of * Michael Robert O'Rourke, * * Appellees, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the v. * Eastern District of Arkansas. * Roger Endell, Director, Arkansas * Department of Correction, * * Appellant. * _____________

Submitted: April 13, 1998 Filed: July 28, 1998 _____________

Before McMILLIAN, BOWMAN,1 and MURPHY, Circuit Judges. _____________

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

1 The Honorable Pasco M. Bowman became Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit on April 18, 1998. Roger Endell, Director of the Arkansas Department of Correction (the State),2 appeals from the judgment of the District Court granting a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 to Michael Robert O'Rourke, who is in state custody pursuant to a conviction of capital murder under Arkansas state law and who is under a sentence of death. We reverse.

I.

We begin with the facts of the crime for which O'Rourke was convicted and sentenced to death, the murder of his parents on July 28, 1983.

The bulk of the most damning testimony against O'Rourke during trial was elicited from Dennis Meadors, O'Rourke's roommate, lover, and accomplice in the murders. Meadors and O'Rourke met in March 1983, several months before the murders, and it was not long after they met that O'Rourke moved into the mobile home in Russellville, Arkansas, that Meadors was sharing with another individual. Meadors testified that O'Rourke told him early in the summer of 1983 that he wanted to kill his parents in order to inherit money, or to receive money as the beneficiary of his parents' life insurance policies. He also testified that O'Rourke had said he would pay for Meadors to go to truck driving school and would buy him a truck, and that they would

2 At O'Rourke's 28 U.S.C.§ 2254 hearing in the District Court in January 1994, counsel for the Director of the Arkansas Department of Correction indicated that Larry Norris should be substituted for Endell. See Transcript of § 2254 Hearing at 81-82. Further, the District Court in its opinion noted that "Larry Norris is now Director of the Department." Rosenzweig v. Endell, Civil No. PB-C-91-134, Mem. Op. and Order at 1 n.1 (E.D. Ark. Aug. 30, 1997). Apparently, the substitution never was made, as the case comes to us with the caption shown. In fact, in the State's brief on appeal, counsel for the State refers to Endell by name as though he is indeed the proper party. We will assume counsel knows whom she represents, and we will not sua sponte change the caption on appeal.

-2- buy land and build a house. Meadors said that, at least at the time of these discussions, he did not know how O'Rourke would acquire the money to reach these goals.

A few days before the murders, on July 22, 1983, O'Rourke and Meadors purchased a .22 caliber revolver from a pawn shop in Russellville. Meadors was shown as the purchaser of the gun, ostensibly because O'Rourke had a criminal record. Meadors purchased ammunition for the gun elsewhere. Meadors testified that they purchased the gun at O'Rourke's insistence because Meadors allegedly was being threatened by a male acquaintance of a woman with whom Meadors worked. The next day, July 23, Meadors reported the gun stolen from beneath the seat of his unlocked car and, for a reason he could not explain at trial, on July 26 he paid the police department for a copy of the offense report. That same day, the two men headed north in Meadors's car to Table Rock Lake, Missouri, and paid for three days of camping upon their arrival at a campground there. On July 27, they spent the day at Meadors's grandmother's house, which was in Missouri and apparently not far from the campground, doing some yard work for her, and then returned to their campsite.

According to Meadors, O'Rourke woke him at 2:30 a.m. on July 28 threatening him with the supposedly stolen .22 caliber handgun. The two drove from the campsite to the home of O'Rourke's parents in Dardanelle, Arkansas. When they arrived at about 6:30 or 7:00 a.m., they woke Beulah and Francis O'Rourke. Michael O'Rourke took Francis outside, and then shot him twice in the head. Meadors watched the shooting and then went inside the home. O'Rourke followed, telling Meadors to kill Beulah, who was in the kitchen. Meadors hit Beulah several times in the back of the head with a hammer, which he had been carrying but had concealed since their arrival. Meadors testified that Beulah O'Rourke was still alive when she fell to the floor, despite Meadors's bludgeoning, so O'Rourke wrapped her face in plastic wrap in order to suffocate her.

-3- clean up the house, even going so far as to compost material from the after being s in atchback of the elder O'Rourkes' car. They also loaded into the cars variou pieces of evidence they believed to be incriminating, and retrieved , owing in his car. The car with the bodies in it was left in king lot of an apartment complex. En route back to Table Rock Lake, the men d n e gun and the hammer in a water supply lake in Oklahoma; into a river in Arkansas e d somewhere in Missouri. The two went by Meadors's house that night, "[b]ecause [O'Rourke] so uld have an alibi," Trial Transcript at 517 (testimony of Meadors), and the spen one last night at the campsite. The next day, July 29, O'Rourke and Meador went e n went to Meadors's grandmother's house

The bodies of Beulah and Fran midnigh that night. O'Rourke was notified on July 30, and apparently traveled t Oklahoma e elle on August 3, to be certain they had left no incriminating e arrested and charged with hindering apprehension or prosecution. , essentially confessing to the rders e harm him or his family if he did where he and O'Rourke had disposed o

-4- including the gun and the hammer. By August 4, 1983, O'Rourke had been charged with capital murder.3

II.

We move now to the relevant procedural history of the case.

Ernie Witt was appointed by the Yell County Circuit Court on August 19, 1983, to represent O'Rourke.4 During the next three years, several times, O'Rourke was found alternately incompetent to stand trial, and fit to aid in his own defense and proceed to trial. Eventually, in December 1986, O'Rourke was brought to trial, even though he had not spoken to his counsel for at least a year before then and remained mute throughout the trial. In his statements to the jury, Witt essentially acknowledged O'Rourke's participation in the murders; his defense was that O'Rourke was not guilty by reason of mental disease or defect.

The trial, including voir dire, lasted three days. The jury retired to deliberate at 3:30 p.m. on December 3, 1986, and returned with a verdict of guilty of capital murder (the only count on which the jury was instructed) in fifty-three minutes. The sentencing phase of the bifurcated trial was held immediately after the verdict was returned, although neither the prosecution nor the defense offered any additional evidence. The jury returned at 6:13 p.m., after just one hour and eight minutes of deliberation, and recommended a sentence of death, which the court imposed on December 5, 1986. The

3 Meadors never was charged with homicide for his part in the murders.

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Michael R. O'Rourke v. Roger Endell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-r-orourke-v-roger-endell-ca8-1998.