Reed, Rodney

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 14, 2009
DocketWR-50,961-05
StatusPublished

This text of Reed, Rodney (Reed, Rodney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed, Rodney, (Tex. 2009).

Opinion



IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



NOS. WR-50,961-04 & -05
EX PARTE RODNEY REED, Applicant


ON APPLICATIONS FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

IN CAUSE NUMBER 8701 IN THE 21ST DISTRICT COURT

OF BASTROP COUNTY

Per curiam.

O R D E R



Rodney Reed was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death for the murder of Stacey Lee Stites. We affirmed his conviction and sentence on direct appeal. (1) Reed filed his initial application for a writ of habeas corpus in November 1999, and we denied relief in a written order in February 2002. (2) In February 2001, while his initial application was pending, Reed filed a "Supplemental Claim for Relief on Application for a Writ of Habeas Corpus." We construed that filing as a successive application and dismissed it because Reed's claim did not meet the dictates of Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 11.071, Section 5. (3) Reed then sought federal habeas corpus relief, filing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under Title 28, United States Code, Section 2254. Finding that Reed failed to exhaust all of his claims in this Court, the district court entered a stay in March 2004. (4) Reed filed a second subsequent state application for a writ of habeas corpus in March 2005. We dismissed some of the claims raised in that application under Article 11.071, Section 5 and remanded two of Reed's claims raised under Brady v. Maryland (5) to the district court so that it could hold a live evidentiary hearing. (6) After the case was returned to us, we filed and set it for submission. After an exhaustive review of Reed's Brady claims and gateway-actual-innocence claims under Article 11.071, Section 5(a)(2), we denied relief last month in a published opinion in light of the evidence properly before us. (7)

Taking a piecemeal approach, Reed filed two more subsequent applications while his second subsequent application was pending. (8) In the first of these later applications, Reed contends that the State suppressed evidence that Jimmy Fennell abused his ex-girlfriend, Pamela Duncan. In support of this claim, Reed attached an affidavit from Duncan, sworn to on April 6, 2006, which we considered a part of Reed's gateway-actual-innocence claim on his second subsequent application. As observed in our recent opinion: "Duncan describes Fennell as abusive, possessive, controlling, and extremely prejudiced toward African-Americans. When Duncan broke up with Fennell, he stalked her until he left Giddings; she was afraid for her safety and that of her children." In her affidavit Duncan states, in part:

My friends were not comfortable with Jimmy and they stopped hanging around us, all except for one. He was not very friendly, and made my friends feel unwelcome. My friends also didn't think that he treated me very well. He was very verbally hostile to me, called me some really unpleasant, mean names (describing me, my parents, and the fact that I had kids at a younger age), and would scream at me in public.

Jimmy was extremely prejudiced. Before we started dating, I used to get my hair cut by a black woman. After we started dating, he wouldn't let me go to her anymore, because her salon 'was across the tracks' and 'white women don't go there.' At one point I was considering hiring a black woman to work at the store and Jimmy got really angry. He told me everything he thought about black people (he didn't say 'black people;' he used the N-word) -- that they were all bad, all on drugs, all crocks -- and why I shouldn't hire her. I ended up hiring her and that was a big problem between us for a couple months.

I broke up with Jimmy in September of 1997. Jimmy stalked me for months after that -- until he left Giddings altogether. He would drive by my house, night after night, and shine a spotlight into the house. It got so bad that I finally put tin foil up in my windows, to reflect the light. He would stand outside my house at night, screaming at me, calling me a 'bitch' and other obscenities. He would come by my job at the Circle K, and just sit parked out front, with the headlights shining into the store. He would stay there, sitting in his car and watching me, for anywhere from two minutes to two hours . . . Once he came into the store and wouldn't let me out of the office--we had to call the police to get someone to escort him out, so I could leave. He would hassle any guy I tried to date until it scared them away. For instance, I dated one guy who delivered beer in town. After we started dating, Jimmy sta[r]ted pulling him over and giving him tickets. He got so many tickets he couldn't keep his job anymore.

What Jimmy did after I broke up with him really scared me. It made me feel like I knew what he was capable of, and that made me afraid for me and my kids. It made my parents afraid for my safety. The fact that he was a police officer made it much more difficult. I felt like I was being constantly harassed and threatened, and there was nowhere to go. I finally filed a report with the police, and another officer came and told me that they would make sure he left me alone. A friend of mine later went down to the police station looking for the report I filed, and they couldn't find it. Things got better after I filed the report, and the officer came and talked to me, but the harassment didn't stop altogether until Jimmy moved away from Giddings.



Reed asserts that Duncan's account of her relationship with Fennell is exculpatory for two reasons. First, it supports his theory that Fennell murdered Stacey because it confirms other evidence of Fennell's violent and abusive character and gives an additional explanation of Fennell's motive to kill Stacey--Reed's affair with Stacey coupled with racial discrimination. Second, Reed asserts that Duncan's account would have been valuable impeachment evidence at trial because Fennell testified that he did not have a controlling relationship with Stacey.

Reed maintains that Duncan's account was suppressed by the State because Duncan reported Fennell's abusive conduct to the Giddings Police Department. Reed states that, while the Giddings Police Department was not the primary agency involved in investigating Stacey's murder, it participated in the investigation and should therefore be regarded as part of the prosecution team. Reed further argues that his claim meets the standards of Section 5 because the factual basis was previously unavailable. We disagree. Assuming that the information qualifies as Brady material, (9) Reed has failed to show that, through exercise of due diligence, the information contained in Duncan's affidavit was not available during Reed's trial in 1998 and when he filed his initial application. (10) Therefore, we dismiss Reed's third subsequent application as an abuse of the writ.

In his fourth subsequent application, Reed claims that he is entitled to relief based on newly discovered evidence of actual innocence. (11) He also contends that he is entitled to have the merits of his Brady

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Related

Brady v. Maryland
373 U.S. 83 (Supreme Court, 1963)
United States v. Beers
189 F.3d 1297 (Tenth Circuit, 1999)
Ex Parte Brooks
219 S.W.3d 396 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2007)
Ex Parte Briseno
135 S.W.3d 1 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2004)
Ex Parte Reed
271 S.W.3d 698 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2008)
Ex Parte Staley
160 S.W.3d 56 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2005)
Ex Parte Elizondo
947 S.W.2d 202 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1997)

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Reed, Rodney, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-rodney-texcrimapp-2009.