Slaughter v. Mullin

68 F. App'x 141
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 2003
Docket01-6185
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 F. App'x 141 (Slaughter v. Mullin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slaughter v. Mullin, 68 F. App'x 141 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT **

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner-appellant Jimmie Ray Slaughter, a state prisoner, appeals the district *143 court’s decision denying him habeas relief from his two Oklahoma first-degree malice murder convictions and death sentences. A jury convicted Slaughter of shooting, stabbing and mutilating his former girlfriend, Melody Wuertz (Wuertz), and shooting to death their eleven-month old-daughter, Jessica. 1 On appeal, Slaughter contends both that his trial attorneys’ first-phase representation was constitutionally deficient because counsel did not try to implicate a different, alternate suspect and that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s second-phase finding that his killing Wuertz was especially heinous, atrocious or cruel. This court affirms the denial of habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.

I. FACTS

On July 2, 1991, Melody and Jessica Wuertz were each shot twice and killed. The killer also stabbed Wuertz and mutilated her body. Suspicion immediately centered on Slaughter, Jessica’s father, who was at that time embroiled in a contentious paternity and child-support dispute with Wuertz.

Slaughter worked as a nurse at the Veterans’ Administration (VA) Hospital in Oklahoma City. In approximately July 1989, Slaughter, who was married, began an extramarital affair with Wuertz, who also worked at the VA hospital. Slaughter, however, apparently never told Wuertz he was married. In July 1990, Wuertz gave birth to Jessica. Soon thereafter, Slaughter, who was an Army reservist, volunteered for active duty during the Gulf War. He was stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas, about a four-and-a-half-hour drive from Wuertz’s home in Edmond, Oklahoma. Before leaving for active duty, Slaughter remarked to a co-worker that “he was actually glad to be leaving ... and that he was especially glad to get away from Melody because she was getting pushy, and if she kept pushing [him], [he’d] have to kill her.” Trial tr., July 19, 1994, at 81. Slaughter further asserted that he could kill Wuertz without getting caught; “they would know who did it but they would never be able to prove it,” id., July 21,1994, at 122.

In late October 1990, Wuertz discovered Slaughter was married. In fact, she called Slaughter’s wife to tell her about Slaughter’s infidelity. Slaughter was furious with Wuertz for this, but managed to explain to his wife that this must have been a prank call, probably made by one of his former wives. Slaughter later told a co-worker in Kansas that “his wife did not know about” Jessica and “he would do anything to keep [her] from finding out.” Id., Sept. 12, 1994, at 87.

Although Wuertz had previously considered filing a paternity suit against Slaughter, she had not yet done so because she feared that this would drive him away and they would never marry, as she had hoped. Aware now that Slaughter was already married to someone else, Wuertz sought the Oklahoma Department of Human Services’ (DHS) help in collecting child support from him. Slaughter, however, had previously told Wuertz that if she ever pursued such a child-support proceeding, he would kill both Wuertz and the baby. Numerous witnesses testified to Slaughter’s rage stemming from Wuertz’s com *144 mencing those proceedings. On at least one occasion, Slaughter told his then girlfriend in Kansas that he wished Wuertz were dead.

While still in Kansas, Slaughter was able to keep tabs on Wuertz’s progress with the paternity proceedings through another of his paramours, Cecilia Johnson. Johnson was also a nurse at the Oklahoma City VA hospital, and Wuertz’s apparent friend.

Although having signed an affidavit soon after Jessica’s birth admitting he was the child’s father, Slaughter, in response to the paternity proceedings, denied paternity and submitted to blood tests. Those test results established that there was a 99.39% likelihood Slaughter was Jessica’s father. Wuertz received those test results on June 19, 1990. Although DHS mailed those results to Slaughter at Fort Riley, via certified mail, and attempted to have the results served on Slaughter through the fort’s Provost Marshal’s office, Slaughter never officially received those test results. Nevertheless, Wuertz did share the test results with her co-workers. Slaughter testified that Cecilia Johnson, having heard the test results from Wuertz, probably did inform him of those results. Slaughter’s grand jury testimony, Jan. 3, 1992, at 36 (played at trial, see Trial tr., Aug. 29,1994, at 6).

Slaughter called Wuertz during the early morning hours of Sunday, June 30,1991, telling her there was no way that the baby was his, nor was there any way he was going to pay Wuertz anything. Minutes later, Johnson called Slaughter and they talked for over three and one-half hours. Wuertz was afraid to go home that night because she feared Slaughter would be there.

The State theorized that Slaughter wanted to kill Wuertz and Jessica while he was still stationed in Kansas, so he could use that as an alibi. If so, he would soon run out of time to do so. Slaughter would be discharged from active duty within a week, and Wuertz and Jessica were to fly to her parents’ home on July 3 for a two-week visit.

Wuertz and her daughter were killed July 2, 1991. The two medical examiners performing autopsies on the victims estimated they died somewhere between 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., and most likely around noon that day. Several of Wuertz’s neighbors reported hearing what may have been gunshots sometime between 11:30 a.m. and 12:45 p.m. Additionally, neighbors living in the house right next door to Wuertz testified that, at around noon, their dog “went into chaos” and “went ballistic and [was] barking tremendously and was very scared.” Trial tr., Aug. 2, 1994, at 118, 120. This was just before the neighbors heard what may have been a gunshot. The State theorized that the killer had hopped the fence to Wuertz’s backyard, startling the neighbors’ dog.

Wuertz’s neighbors testified at trial that they had not seen any vehicles other than Wuertz’s car at her home that morning. At 12:37 p.m., however, several young teenage boys walking down a street near the victims’ home noticed a man fairly matching Slaughter’s description, in a car parked away from the other houses, next to an open field. The boy walking closest to that car positively identified Slaughter as the man he saw, both in a photo lineup conducted soon after the murders and at Slaughter’s trial, three years later. Further, a second boy also positively identified Slaughter at trial as the man he saw in the car.

Additionally, these two boys described the car they had seen as a bluish-gray, four-door vehicle which also generally matched Slaughter’s car’s description. And, although the second boy specifically *145 identified the car he had seen as a Nissan, and Slaughter’s car was, instead, a Dodge, both boys did pick Slaughter’s car out of a photo lineup soon after the murders.

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Related

Slaughter v. Mullin, Warden
541 U.S. 947 (Supreme Court, 2004)

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