State v. Frogge

607 S.E.2d 627, 359 N.C. 228, 2005 N.C. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 4, 2005
Docket413A95-3
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 607 S.E.2d 627 (State v. Frogge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Frogge, 607 S.E.2d 627, 359 N.C. 228, 2005 N.C. LEXIS 29 (N.C. 2005).

Opinion

EDMUNDS, Justice.

In this case, we review the trial court’s determination that defendant did not receive effective assistance of counsel at his second capital sentencing proceeding. Because we find that defendant’s trial counsel provided adequate assistance under the applicable standards established by the United States Supreme Court, we reverse the trial court and order the reinstatement of defendant’s death sentence.

Defendant Danny Dean Frogge was tried twice for the murders of his father and stepmother. At the first trial, evidence was presented indicating that defendant was living with his father and his bedridden stepmother. On the night of 4 November 1994, defendant stabbed his father approximately ten times, then moved to his stepmother’s bed and stabbed her approximately eleven times. Defendant was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder on the basis of malice, premeditation, and deliberation and under the felony murder rule. Details of the offenses are set out in State v. Frogge, 345 N.C. 614, 481 S.E.2d 278 (1997) (Frogge I).

At the sentencing proceeding in Frogge I, defendant testified that he had been drinking heavily the night of the killings. He claimed that he knifed his father only after his father hit him with an iron bar. He further testified that he must have stabbed his stepmother but had no recollection of doing so. The sentencing jury found two statutory mitigating circumstances: that defendant was under the influence of a mental or emotional disturbance at the time of the offense, N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000(f)(2) (2003); and that defendant suffered from an impaired capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law, N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000(f)(6). The jury recommended a sentence of life imprisonment for the murder of defendant’s father and a sentence of death for the murder of defendant’s stepmother.

*230 This Court reversed defendant’s conviction because inadmissible hearsay had been introduced at the trial. Frogge I, 345 N.C. 614, 481 S.E.2d 278. Prior to the retrial, defendant additionally was indicted for robbery with a dangerous weapon based on allegations that he had stolen his father’s wallet the night of the murders. Upon retrial, defendant again was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder. He was also convicted of robbery with a dangerous weapon. Because defendant had been sentenced to life imprisonment at the first trial for the. murder of his father, the State sought the death penalty only for the murder of defendant’s stepmother. The jury at the retrial found four aggravating circumstances, no statutory mitigating circumstances, and six out of ten submitted nonstatutory mitigating circumstances. The jury recommended a sentence of death for the murder of defendant’s stepmother, and the trial court entered judgment accordingly. Defendant appealed, and this Court found no error. State v. Frogge, 351 N.C. 576, 528 S.E.2d 893 (2000) (Frogge II). The United States Supreme Court denied defendant’s petition for writ of certiorari. Frogge v. North Carolina, 531 U.S. 994, 148 L. Ed. 2d 459 (2000).

Defendant thereafter filed a motion for appropriate relief (MAR). The trial court denied several of defendant’s claims and, on 2 August 2002, conducted an evidentiary hearing on the remainder. On 29 October 2003, the trial court entered an order denying defendant’s remaining claims, except one. As to that claim, the trial court determined that defendant had not received effective assistance of counsel pursuant to Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984), and ordered a new sentencing hearing. On 1 April 2004, this Court allowed the State’s petition for writ of certiorari to review the order of the trial court.

The record reveals that defendant was represented by lead counsel Danny Ferguson and associate counsel David Freedman at both Frogge I and Frogge II. Before the trial of Frogge I, they engaged investigator Homer Young. In preparing for that trial, investigator Young interviewed defendant’s family members and submitted reports of those interviews to defense counsel. These reports included information that in April 1990 defendant had been beaten and suffered a significant head injury. At defendant’s first sentencing proceeding, his sisters testified to changes they observed in defendant’s personality after the beating.

Defense counsel retained Dr. Gary Hoover, a clinical psychologist, as an expert witness for Frogge I. During the sentencing pro *231 ceeding, Dr. Hoover testified that he received training through the Reitan Neuropsychological Laboratory pertaining to neuropsychological assessment and thus possessed the “background and training that has to do with the diagnosis of brain behavior relationships vis-a-vis head injuries.” However, Dr. Hoover also acknowledged that he was neither a neurologist nor a medical doctor and was not qualified to conduct a neurological assessment. Although Dr. Hoover had conducted neuropsychological evaluations on patients referred to him by psychologists and neurologists for assessment of head injuries, he did not conduct neurological or neuropsychological testing on defendant. Instead, Dr. Hoover carried out a forensic psychological evaluation in which he reviewed defendant’s psychological records that resulted from his incarceration for murder in the 1980s; interviewed defendant in person three times over a period of several months; reviewed defendant’s school records, hospital records, and correctional system records; reviewed the investigative reports of the instant murders prepared by police and by investigator Young; and interviewed defendant’s family members, friends, and acquaintances.

Dr. Hoover’s forensic evaluation also included consideration of Bowman Gray/Baptist Hospital Medical Center’s records of defendant’s 1990 treatment for his head injury. These records stated that defendant suffered from postconcussive disorder. Relying in part on the known correlation between residual behavior difficulties and head injuries, Dr. Hoover testified that while defendant presented no current evidence of a head injury, the 1990 trauma left defendant with residual mood difficulties. The injury also affected defendant’s cognitive functions and intellectual skills to the extent that, over time, he suffered episodic seizures, slurred speech, disorientation, increased irritability, episodes of paranoia, and an increasingly withdrawn personality. In Dr. Hoover’s expert opinion, defendant suffered from “[d]elirium due to multiple etiologies, substance intoxication delirium, alcohol and mood disorder due to postconcussive disorder.” Specifically, Dr. Hoover was of the belief that the combination of defendant’s heavy consumption of alcohol on the day of the murders and the mood disorder resulting from defendant’s 1990 head injury “were responsible for the explosion into a rage that occurred when [defendant] was provoked by his father.”

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Bluebook (online)
607 S.E.2d 627, 359 N.C. 228, 2005 N.C. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-frogge-nc-2005.