Perry Austin v. William Stephens, Director

596 F. App'x 277
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2015
Docket13-70024
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 596 F. App'x 277 (Perry Austin v. William Stephens, 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
Perry Austin v. William Stephens, Director, 596 F. App'x 277 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

An application for a certificate of appeal-ability (COA) filed by Perry Allen Austin, a Texas death-row inmate, is presently before the court. Austin, without the participation or prior knowledge of his appointed counsel, indicated to our court that he desires to withdraw his appeal. We remand to the district court for the limited purpose of making findings as to whether Austin is presently competent to waive further appeals of his conviction and death sentence, and if Austin is found to be competent, whether such waiver is knowing and voluntary.

I

We briefly recount the facts pertaining to Austin’s conviction, sentencing, and post-conviction proceedings. In September of 2000, while incarcerated for another offense, Austin contacted a Houston police sergeant, offering, in a letter to confess to the murder of D.K., a minor, if Austin would be charged with capital murder and guaranteed the death penalty. D.K. had disappeared in 1992, and his remains were found the following year. Austin was a suspect iri D.K.’s disappearance and murder, but the State did not charge Austin until after receiving the letter in 2001.

Although Austin was initially appointed counsel, he wrote a letter to the state trial court asking to waive counsel and plead guilty and indicated that he would accept a death sentence and would waive all appeals.- The trial court held a Faretta 1 hearing and granted Austin’s motion to *279 proceed pro se. Austin pleaded guilty to capital murder. During the punishment phase, Austin presented no witnesses but briefly cross-examined one witness for the State. In his closing argument, Austin addressed the jury; he stated that he would commit further acts of violence in prison and that there were no mitigating circumstances. The jury answered Texas’s special issues such that the state district court was required to enter a sentence of death under Texas law.

The trial court held a second Faretta hearing in which Austin waived his right to counsel on direct appeal and in state habe-as corpus proceedings. Austin’s conviction and sentence were automatically appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) under Texas law. He filed no brief, and the TCCA affirmed his conviction. 2

The state trial court set an execution date of September 8, 2008. On September 2, 2003, Austin filed a motion to have habeas counsel appointed and indicated he wished to pursue post-conviction relief. The TCCA denied Austin’s motion to file an untimely writ of habeas corpus. 3

On June 21, 2004, Austin timely filed a federal habeas petition. The State alleged that Austin’s claims were proeedurally defaulted, but the federal district court held that the TCCA had applied a new rule, which could not be the basis for a procedural default. However, on August 21, 2012, the federal district court granted the State’s motion for summary judgment on all claims set forth in Austin’s habeas petition. The district court denied a COA.

Austin then filed an application for a COA in this court on December 2, 2013. Briefing on the application is complete.

II

On September 17, 2014, this court received a letter from Austin, acting without his appointed counsel, in which he requested to withdraw his appeal. The full text of this typed letter states:

Greetings,
I am a Death Row prisoner currently residing on the Polunsky Unit in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice while my appeals makes [sic] its [sic] way through the court system.
I wish to drop my appeals but can’t seem to get any type of response nor cooperation. I have informed my attorney of my wishes and according to him, to drop my appeals m[a]y actually prolong the date of my execution because the courts would then request a competency hearing. If. there is any way I could waive the compentency [sic] hearing I would gladly do it. I was given a competency hearing just before my trial, and another just after, but before my direct appeals by the trial court. I was found competent in both of those instances and see no reason for another one.
I have just recently completed the beginners course of the Blackstone Paralegal Institute with a[n] overall score of 99.51%. This is hardly a sign of incompetence. My TDCJ IQ score was 123 and my TDCJ EA Score was 12.9. Again, this is hardly a sign of incompetence. I do have a history of mental *280 health issues, but nothing that can’t be treated satisfactorily with medication and counseling. I chose to abstain from medication and counseling though and so see no reason why my mental health should keep me from dropping my appeals. Also, I recently read a court case in which your court ruled that a person could be mentally ill, but still be competent to be executed because that person was competent during their trial. In that case, that should also be the case in my case/appeals.
Should the information my attorney gave me be correct and by dropping my appeals I could be prolonging my appeals, then I would like to request that you affirm my death sentence, deny my appeals, at which time I would then instruct my attorney to cease all work in my appeals. I would then request the trial court to set an execution date at its’ [sic] earliest possible date.
Thank you for your consideration and I look forward to a favorable response. Sincerely, /$/

We requested that counsel for Austin and for the State respond to Austin’s request to withdraw his appeal.

On October 9, 2014, Austin’s counsel submitted a response that stated that Richard Bourke, one of Austin’s two attorneys, had met with Austin on September 29, 2014. The response said that during the meeting, Austin expressed to counsel that he wished to be executed promptly and desired to end his appeals. Counsel opined in the response that Austin continues to suffer from serious mental illness, and Austin’s contentions in his application for a COA before our court include Austin’s assertion that he was incompetent to stand trial for D.K’s murder and incompetent to waive trial counsel. In the response that this court requested to Austin’s letter seeking to waive further appeals, counsel stated that “[n]othing in Mr. Austin’s letter or the interview ... causes undersigned counsel to [abandon] the legal and factual propositions advanced in” the habeas petition or COA application, but counsel acknowledged that they were “[cion-strained by Mr. Austin’s expressed wishes.” Counsel also indicated that “[consistent with Mr. Austin’s expressed wishes,” counsel would file a motion to expedite consideration of the COA application. After the State filed its response to Austin’s September 17, 2014 letter, counsel for Austin filed a motion for expedited consideration on November 14, 2014.

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Related

Perry Austin v. Lorie Davis, Director
876 F.3d 757 (Fifth Circuit, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
596 F. App'x 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-austin-v-william-stephens-director-ca5-2015.