Obie Weathers, III v. Lorie Davis, Director

659 F. App'x 778
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 2016
Docket15-70030
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 659 F. App'x 778 (Obie Weathers, III 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
Obie Weathers, III v. Lorie Davis, Director, 659 F. App'x 778 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge: *

Obie Weathers III (“Weathers”) was convicted and sentenced to death for a murder committed during the course of a robbery of a San Antonio tavern. His conviction was affirmed on direct appeal, and, after exhausting his remedies in state court, Weathers filed a federal habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, claiming, among other points of error, that he is intellectually disabled 1 and therefore ineligible for execution under Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 122 S.Ct. 2242, 153 L.Ed.2d 335 (2002). The district court rejected the petition in a lengthy and detailed opinion. Weathers now seeks a certificate of appealability (“COA”) under 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2) to advance his Atkins claim. For the following reasons, we DENY the application for a COA.

BACKGROUND

Factual Background & Trial Proceedings

After a crime spree involving a string of burglaries, theft, one murder, and one sexual assault of an elderly man over the *780 course of just a few months, one evening in February, 2000, Weathers entered Pierce’s Ice House, a tavern in San Antonio, Texas, wielding a handgun and concealing his face with a pillowcase with eyeholes cut out. Weathers informed the patrons that he intended to rob the ice house, but he told the three black men present to remain calm because he only wanted to rob the white individuals. Weathers robbed the white patrons, then ordered a waitress at gun point to empty the cash register. While the waitress was carrying the till to Weathers, she stumbled and Weathers pointed his gun at her head. At this time, one of the bar patrons, Ted Church (“Church”), swung at and grabbed Weathers. In the ensuing struggle, Weathers shot Church twice in the head and once in the abdomen. Weathers fled with over two-hundred dollars, but he was apprehended eleven days later and confessed to this and other crimes. Church was rushed to the hospital and underwent multiple surgeries, but he died weeks later from irreparable damage to his pancreas caused by the gunshot wound.

Weathers was indicted for the murder of Church on June 1, 2000, and a jury convicted him of capital murder in under three hours. After three days of testimony at the punishment phase of the trial— where the jury heard testimony from the prosecution about Weathers’s lengthy record of involvement in criminal conduct over a five year period from November 1995 to February 2000, as well as defense testimony from five character witnesses— they sentenced him to death.

Postconviction Proceedings

1. Direct Appeal & First State Habeas Petition

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence. Weathers v. State, 2003 WL 22410067 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 22, 2003). Weathers filed an application for a writ , of habeas corpus in state court in April 2003, asserting twenty-one grounds for relief, omitting an Atkins claim. After an evidentiary hearing, the state trial court recommended denying the application and the Court of Criminal Appeals adopted the recommendation. Ex parte Obie Weathers III, 2006 WL 2615531 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 13, 2006).

2. Second State Habeas Petition

In September 2007, Weathers filed a federal habeas petition, but moved to stay and hojd his cause in abeyance pending state court exhaustion of an Atkins claim. Weathers’s second state application received an evidentiary hearing over five days in May and August 2013.

a. The Evidence Before the State Habeas Court 2

In support of his intellectual disability claim, Weathers presented the testimony of psychologist Dr. Joann Murphey, who *781 examined Weathers for intellectual disability in 2011, after he had been on death row for ten years. She performed an IQ test on Weathers in May 2011 using the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-IV (“WAIS-IV”), on which he scored a 58. Dr. Murphey doubted the accuracy of this result because she believed that Weathers was exhibiting psychotic symptoms, and she recommended that the Bexar County jail medical staff evaluate and possibly medicate him. See Weathers v. Stephens, 2015 WL 5098872, at *37 (W.D. Tex. Aug. 31, 2015). After Weathers was put on anti-psychotic medication, Dr. Murphey tested him again in August 2011, and he scored a 65. Id. Dr. Murphey acknowledged that Weathers was administered an IQ test in 2008 and scored a 79. She was critical of this score, however, because the score was obtained using an older IQ test—the WAIS-III (because the WAIS-IV had not been released yet). Id. at *54. Further, Dr. Murphey argued that the score of 79 was appropriately adjusted downward to a 73 by the doctor who administered it pursuant to the so-called Flynn effect. 3 Id. Based on these scores, Dr. Murphey concluded that Weathers has significantly sub-average intelligence.

Dr. Murphey also concluded that Weathers suffered from certain adaptive functioning deficits. To make this determination, she asked Weathers’s mother, sister, grandmother, a former teacher, a childhood friend, a neighbor and church youth leader, and a former employer to rate Weathers in the categories of: communication, community use, functional academics, home living, health and safety, leisure, self-care, self-direction, and social. Id. at *38. After reviewing those ratings, as well as affidavits and other documents such as some of Weathers’s academic records, Dr. Murphey concluded that Weathers exhibited adaptive deficits in the areas of communication, functional academics, and social skills. Id. at *39.

Weathers also presented the testimony of his sixth grade reading teacher and his high school home economics teacher. The sixth grade teacher testified that Weathers lacked the capacity to read, possessed a poor vocabulary, did not complete reading and writing assignments, and was working at a second grade level while in her class. On cross-examination, however, this teacher had no explanation for why she gave Weathers grades of 87 and 85 for the two semesters he was in her class. Id. at *40. His high school home economics teacher similarly testified to Weathers’s educational struggles, noting that he had difficulty reading materials written at the eleventh and twelfth grade levels, wrote at the fifth grade level, often did not turn in assignments, was exempted from state-wide testing because of his poor reading skills, 4 and earned a 64 in her class, but was performing below that level. Id.

Weathers’s mother also testified on her son’s behalf.

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Related

Obie Weathers, III v. Lorie Davis, Director
915 F.3d 1025 (Fifth Circuit, 2019)
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Sixth Circuit, 2018

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Bluebook (online)
659 F. App'x 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obie-weathers-iii-v-lorie-davis-director-ca5-2016.