Spears v. Mullin

343 F.3d 1215, 2003 WL 21916526
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2003
Docket01-6258, 01-6267, 01-6349, 01-6354
StatusPublished
Cited by132 cases

This text of 343 F.3d 1215 (Spears 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
Spears v. Mullin, 343 F.3d 1215, 2003 WL 21916526 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinions

LUCERO, Circuit Judge.

Convicted in the Oklahoma courts of the first-degree murder of Jimmy DeWayne Thompson and sentenced to death, Brian Spears and Dudley Powell each filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition seeking relief from their convictions and sentences.1 After concluding that photographs introduced during the second stage of trial rendered the sentencing stage fundamentally unfair, the federal district court granted relief from both Spears’ and Powell’s death sentences, but denied relief on numerous other claims challenging both defendants’ convictions. We now consider four appeals: the State appeals the district court’s grant of habeas relief from the death sentences, and Spears and Powell cross-appeal the denial of relief on the other claims. Because all four appeals arise out of the same set of facts and present similar issues, we join them for disposition. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253, we take the district court’s view of the issues and affirm.2

I

On the evening of September 21, 1990, the day Thompson died, Thompson, age twenty-two, Spears, age twenty, and Spears’ then girlfriend, Vickie Hensley, were cruising around Pauls Valley, Oklahoma, in Thompson’s truck. At Spears’ request, Thompson purchased alcohol and the three began drinking. During the evening, they drank a cocktail of Kool Aid and Everclear from a gallon milk jug, as well as whiskey and beer. They were joined at various times by Powell, age eighteen, Claiborne Johnson III, age twenty-two, and Mickey Daniels, none of whom had met Thompson before that evening. Sometime after Powell joined the group, Spears began driving the truck because Thompson was intoxicated. During the [1223]*1223course of the evening, they stopped at several places to refresh their supply of alcoholic beverages. Later, they decided to continue imbibing at the Klondike Cemetery, a popular drinking spot.

On the way to the cemetery, Powell and Spears discussed beating Thompson and taking his truck. At the cemetery, all exited the truck. Powell told Spears, Johnson, and Daniels that he was going to “jump” Thompson and that they should join the beating. (3 Tr. at 712.) As the group walked along the cemetery road, Powell hit Thompson in the head with his fist. With the first blow, Thompson fell to the ground, where he lay “moaning” and “hollering.” (4 id. at 942.) Johnson began kicking Thompson, while Powell kicked and jumped on Thompson’s head and chest. At some point, Johnson and Powell began hitting Thompson with their fists. Spears also joined the beating and began jumping on and kicking Thompson on the chest and possibly his head. The beating lasted from three to ten minutes. Neither Daniels nor Hensley participated; after observing the attack for sometime, they returned to the truck.

After the beating, Spears grabbed Powell and Johnson by their arms, produced a knife, and said that they had to kill Thompson because he could testify against them. Each stabbed Thompson several times. Sometime during the stabbing attack, Powell momentarily returned to Thompson’s truck, where Hensley and Daniels had retreated, and told them Johnson had stabbed Thompson in the throat. Powell told them that Johnson intended to take Thompson’s truck to Tulsa and sell it, and that Spears agreed with this plan. Powell then returned to the crime scene.

Powell, Spears, and Johnson subsequently left Thompson’s body and returned to the truck. Spears told everyone to listen to Johnson, who directed them not to say anything about what had happened. Spears then told Hensley and Daniels that if anyone asked them if they had seen Thompson that evening, they should say that Thompson had taken them to a football game and dropped them off after the game.

Upon leaving the cemetery, the group first took Hensley home. The remaining four then went to the home of Johnson’s girlfriend, Lashonda Austin, where Johnson told Austin that they had killed a man that night in self-defense and where Spears confirmed the killing. After leaving Austin’s house, Powell and Johnson dropped off Spears and Daniels. Much later, Johnson took Powell home and eventually parked Thompson’s truck at an apartment building. The following day, Johnson was arrested in a neighboring town while in possession of Thompson’s truck and wallet. Spears and Powell were arrested soon thereafter.3

At trial, the medical examiner, Dr. Larry Balding, testified that Thompson died from blunt-force injury to the head, resulting in a skull fracture and bleeding into and on the brain. According to Dr. Balding, a single blow could have caused the head injury or death. While he did not know the actual number of blows to Thompson’s head, he was certain Thompson sustained more than one blunt-force blow to the body. However, Dr. Balding did not believe that any of the blows to the body would have caused death, either individually or in combination.

Dr. Balding further testified that Thompson received fifty to sixty knife wounds to his head, neck, chest, abdomen, and back. As a result of the stabbing, six [1224]*1224to eight inches of Thompson’s small intestine protruded. Parts of other internal organs were visible through the chest. Apart from what were referred to as two possible peri-mortem knife wounds, all other knife wounds were inflicted post-mor-tem.4 Any potentially fatal stab wounds were delivered post-mortem.

Neither Spears nor Powell testified or presented any evidence at the trial’s first stage. Based on the State’s evidence, the jury found both guilty of first-degree murder.

The State’s second-stage presentation was brief. After incorporating all first-stage evidence, the State presented six photographs of Thompson’s body taken at the crime scene. Spears presented two mitigation witnesses. His sister, Sharlene Flannery, testified that Spears dropped out of school in the tenth grade, that he babysat her children, that he has one child, that she never saw him fight or be so angry that he would hurt or kill someone, and that he regularly attended church. Reverend John Stiger testified that he had ministered to Spears’ family and had watched Spears grow up. He stated that Spears was a normal young man with no prior convictions, who had positively influenced the lives of people in the county jail. Other mitigation evidence emphasized Spears’ youth and his intoxication at the time of the crime.

Powell also presented two mitigation witnesses. His mother, Connie Walls, testified that Powell grew up without a father, experienced rejection from his family, adored his three step-siblings and helped care for them, generally stopped caring when his step-sibling twins’ father kidnapped them, regularly attended church, stopped attending school in seventh grade after being held back due to his learning disabilities, loved music, and has mechanical ability. Rachel Smith, who had known Powell since he was six or seven,.testified that she acted as a surrogate grandmother to him, and he minded her when asked to do so. Other mitigating factors included Powell’s youth, likelihood of rehabilitation, and intoxication at the time of the crime.

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343 F.3d 1215, 2003 WL 21916526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spears-v-mullin-ca10-2003.