Michelle Byrom v. Christopher Epps, Commissioner

518 F. App'x 243
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
Docket11-70026
StatusUnpublished

This text of 518 F. App'x 243 (Michelle Byrom v. Christopher Epps, Commissioner) 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
Michelle Byrom v. Christopher Epps, Commissioner, 518 F. App'x 243 (5th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Michelle Byrom (“Byrom”) was charged with capital murder following the death of her husband, Edward Byrom, Sr. (“Edward”). The jury found Byrom guilty, and the state court judge sentenced her to death. Byrom’s appeal and petition for post-conviction relief were both denied by the Mississippi Supreme Court. Thereafter, Byrom petitioned for federal habeas relief on twelve separate grounds. The district court denied Byrom’s petition, but granted her request for a certifícate of appealability (“COA”) on five claims: (1) *245 whether evidence was improperly suppressed; (2) whether Byrom had statements taken in violation of her privilege against self-incrimination; (3) whether the trial court failed to consider all mitigating evidence; (4) whether her waiver of a jury sentencing was valid; 1 and (5) whether counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate and present all available mitigating evidence. In addition to appealing most of those claims for which a COA was granted, Byrom has moved for an expanded COA on two issues considered by the district court: (1) whether the exclusion of jailhouse letters from Byrom’s son as a discovery sanction violated Byrom’s rights; and (2) whether Byrom received ineffective assistance of counsel when her trial attorney committed a discovery violation, thereby causing the exclusion of her son’s jailhouse letters. For the reasons that follow, we deny Byrom’s motion for an expanded COA and deny her habeas petition.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On June 4,1999, Byrom was admitted to the Iuka Hospital in Iuka, Mississippi with double pneumonia. Her admission was part of a recurring series of illnesses caused in part by substance abuse and self harm. 2 She was dropped off at the hospital by her husband, Edward, who then returned home. Later that day, responding to a 911 call from Byrom’s son, Edward Byrom, Jr. (“Junior”), police found Edward slumped over a coffee table in the family’s home. Edward had been shot four times in the chest with his own nine-millimeter pistol. After questioning By-rom and Junior in the hours after the murder, the police came to believe that Byrom had hired one of Junior’s friends, Joey Gillis (“Gillis”), to murder Edward in exchange for $15,000 of Edward’s life insurance policy. All three individuals — By-rom, Junior, and Gillis — were subsequently arrested.

By all accounts, the Byrom household was a particularly discordant place. By-rom and Edward frequently fought about money-related issues, and Junior would sometimes intervene when the fights escalated. Edward was physically, sexually, and verbally abusive to Byrom. He often abused Junior as well, generally in response to Junior’s partying, drinking, and drug use. Byrom and Edward themselves drank frequently, and it appears the family’s fights were worse when alcohol was involved. Junior claims that, in the six months leading up to Edward’s murder, the family would engage in heated arguments that involved yelling and cursing at least twice a week. Byrom also suffered verbal, physical, and sexual abuse as a child at the hands of her stepfather, which resulted in her leaving home at around age fifteen.

According to Byrom and Junior, Edward frequently withdrew into the family’s entertainment room when he was home, often eating and sleeping there. That room, which had shag carpet on the walls and black plastic over the windows, had functioned as a sound studio at one point. However, Byrom claims that Edward had more recently used the room to indulge his addiction to pornography. As part of that *246 addiction, Byrom alleges that Edward forced her to engage in sexual acts, some of which he videotaped. Byrom’s claims were partially substantiated by videotapes recovered by police.

Byrom claims that Edward’s recurrent threats and abuse prevented her from leaving him. Instead, she arranged to have Edward murdered. Junior testified that Byrom approached him about having Edward murdered sometime in May 1999, after a particularly rowdy party at which Edward became belligerent and abusive to both Byrom and Junior. Junior testified that, approximately one week before the murder, he asked his friend, Gillis, about murdering Edward. Gillis would either commit the murder himself or find someone else to do it and would receive $15,000 in exchange. After two failed attempts, Edward was murdered on June 4, 1999.

Although the precise order of Byrom’s and Junior’s initial interviews with police is disputed, it seems that police became suspicious of Junior at the crime scene and took him into custody for questioning as a result. 3 An investigator from the Mississippi Highway Patrol went to the hospital, to interview Byrom, but police did not suspect Byrom’s involvement at the time; they went to ask about weapons in the home and the relationship between Edward and Junior. However, Junior made suspicious statements during his interview with the police, which prompted them to return to the hospital at around 10:47 p.m. to question Byrom further. It was during that interview that Byrom began implicating herself, Junior, and Gillis in a murder-for-hire plot. On October 21, 1999, Byrom was indicted under Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-19(2)(d), which criminalizes murder perpetrated by a person who has been offered or who has received anything of value for committing a murder, as well as all parties to the murder.

During their incarceration, Byrom and Junior exchanged a number of letters. In at least two of these letters — letters that police did not intercept — Junior accepts complete responsibility for Edward’s murder and disclaims the existence of a murder-for-hire conspiracy. In one of the letters, Junior claims he alone murdered Edward and that he did so for purely personal reasons. In the other letter, Junior describes the murder in detail. Defense counsel came into possession of the letters some time before trial. Then, at Byrom’s pretrial hearing in October 2000, defense counsel alluded to the existence of letters, acknowledging the possession of materials intended for use as impeachment evidence against Junior if he testified consistently with the prosecution’s murder-for-hire theory. 4 Defense counsel was told to produce the material or risk its exclusion at trial. Counsel refused.

At trial, Junior testified against his mother in support of the prosecution’s murder-for-hire theory. During cross-examination, defense counsel attempted to impeach Junior using the first letter to suggest that there was no murder-for-hire plot. The prosecution objected because the letter had not previously been disclosed. Byrom’s attorney claimed that the applicable rule did not mandate pretrial *247 disclosure since Junior and the letter were not part of the defense’s case-in-chief. The court recessed for the day to consider the issue, and the prosecution was given an opportunity to question Junior about the letters.

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Bluebook (online)
518 F. App'x 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelle-byrom-v-christopher-epps-commissioner-ca5-2013.