Richard Vasquez v. Rick Thaler, Director

389 F. App'x 419
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 2010
Docket08-70034
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 389 F. App'x 419 (Richard Vasquez v. Rick Thaler, 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
Richard Vasquez v. Rick Thaler, Director, 389 F. App'x 419 (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

*421 PER CURIAM: *

Petitioner Richard Vasquez appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2253 & 2254. The district court did, however, issue a certificate of appeala-bility (“COA”) sua sponte on the two issues now before us: (1) whether Vasquez received ineffective assistance of trial counsel when his attorneys failed to investigate and present significant mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of his trial; and (2) whether Vasquez received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel because his attorney labored under an actual conflict of interest arising from the attorneys undisclosed, simultaneous service as a special prosecutor in multiple death penalty cases in the same jurisdiction. Although troubled by the performance of Vasquez’s trial counsel and by the divided loyalties of Vasquez’s appellate counsel, the demanding standard of review imposed by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act 1 (“AEDPA”) ties our hands. We affirm.

I. Facts & Proceedings

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals summarized the facts adduced at trial when it affirmed Vasquez’s conviction on direct appeal. 2 We recount here only those facts that bear on Vasquez’s two elarais of ineffective assistance of counsel (“LAC”).

In 1999, a Texas jury convicted eighteen-year-old Richard Vasquez of the brutal beating death of Miranda Lopez, 3 the four-year-old daughter of Vasquez’s girlfriend, Brenda Lopez, from a prior relationship. Vasquez and Lopez also had a four-month-old daughter, Meagan, and the four of them had lived together with Vasquez’s adoptive parents, who were his paternal aunt and uncle.

During the guilt/innocence phase of the trial, it emerged that Vasquez had been addicted to cocaine and heroin from the age of twelve or thirteen; that his girlfriend, Brenda', was similarly addicted; and that at the time of the murder in March 1998, Vasquez and Brenda were on a prolonged heroin binge in which “ ‘they stopped- caring about themselves, the children, or anything else except drugs. They would leave the children anywhere so that they could go out and steal things in order to buy more drugs.’ ” 4 Throughout the night before the murder, Vasquez and Brenda had argued, and they injected themselves with heroin some time in the early morning hours before falling asleep. When he awoke, Vasquez injected himself with more heroin before driving Brenda to work at around noon, taking the two chil *422 dren with him in the car. On the way, Vasquez became angry with Brenda because he had to stay home and watch the children while she worked. No one was home when he returned, and he telephoned Brenda to ask her where she had hidden the remainder of their drugs. When she refused to tell him, Vasquez became angry and unleashed his frustration on Miranda. She died as a result of severe brain injuries sustained when Vasquez, in a drug-fueled rage, struck her several times in the head. At trial, significant evidence emerged that Miranda had also been severely sexually assaulted before she died, responsibility for which Vasquez denied. 5 A toxicology report revealed cocaine levels in Miranda’s blood that were double the lethal amount for an adult, although neither the doctor nor Vasquez could explain the presence of the drug in her blood.

Vasquez was represented by three attorneys at trial. As part of his defense, Vasquez’s trial attorneys offered the testimony of a psychiatrist, Dr. Carlos Estrada, who informed the jury that Vasquez had been addicted to narcotics from the age of twelve and that his behavior was typical of addicts. Dr. Estrada also testified that, if rehabilitated, Vasquez would not be a danger to society. It later emerged, however, that Estrada had told Vasquez’s attorneys that Vasquez’s medical records and school record were incomplete and that Vasquez appeared to warrant additional neurological testing. Vasquez’s attorneys never requisitioned these additional tests, and no further psychological or neurological evidence was presented to the jury in either phase of his trial.

During the sentencing phase, Vasquez’s counsel called three additional witnesses: Vasquez’s aunt and uncle (his adoptive parents), and his sister, each of whom essentially begged the jury for mercy. Not one of them was asked to disclose any information regarding the role of Vasquez’s biological parents in his life, his ongoing relationship with his biological father, his family’s history of substance abuse and criminality, or any past or present mental disorders that may have affected Vasquez’s childhood or development.

In affidavits submitted in connection with his state habeas petition, Vasquez’s aunt and uncle each stated that none of Vasquez’s attorneys had met with them to discuss possible mitigating evidence, and none prepared the Vasquezes to testify at sentencing. One of Vasquez’s attorneys later admitted that counsel’s only interviews with the Vasquez family to prepare the mitigation case were held in the courthouse hallway during the trial. They never spoke with Vasquez’s biological parents at all. Neither did Vasquez’s attorneys hire a mitigation specialist; rather, the court-authorized investigator they did hire, who had no experience investigating mitigating evidence in capital murder cases, spent just eight and a half hours working on the case, which included time spent traveling 110 miles.

Had Vasquez’s trial attorneys undertaken even a rudimentary investigation of Vasquez’s family and social history, they would have unearthed a frightening portrait of addiction and destruction. Vasquez’s mother drank heavily and regularly during her pregnancy, inflicting Vasquez *423 with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. Vasquez’s father, Ricardo Vasquez, was a drug addict and lifelong foot soldier in the drug trade who spent much of his life in and out of prison for narcotics-related crimes. Ricardo maintained a close relationship with his son, refusing to allow Vasquez’s clean-living aunt and uncle legally to adopt the boy. From the time Vasquez was a child, he witnessed his father using and dealing heroin, often from the front porch of their home. Ricardo took Vasquez with him to rob houses and taught Vasquez how to use and sell heroin. Vasquez began using marijuana when he was ten, and by thirteen he was addicted to heroin and cocaine. Vasquez’s father was not the only corrupting influence: When Vasquez was eight, a paternal uncle who lived nearby was murdered in a drug-related homicide; when Vasquez was nine, another paternal uncle died of a drug overdose; three years later, yet another paternal uncle was murdered in narcotics-related violence.

When, at age fourteen, Vasquez’s aunt and uncle tried to get him help for his substance abuse, Ricardo lured Vasquez back to a life of drugs and drug-trafficking by taking the boy along with him when he made deliveries as a drug runner and when he robbed houses.

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Bluebook (online)
389 F. App'x 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-vasquez-v-rick-thaler-director-ca5-2010.