Steven Woods v. Rick Thaler, Director

399 F. App'x 884
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 25, 2010
Docket09-70027
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 399 F. App'x 884 (Steven Woods 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
Steven Woods v. Rick Thaler, Director, 399 F. App'x 884 (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Steven Michael Woods was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in Texas state court. The district court denied Woods’s petition for writ of habeas corpus but granted Woods a certificate of appealability on three issues: (1) whether his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to fully investigate and present certain mitigating evidence; (2) whether his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to investigate or present evidence to challenge the reliability of his alleged inculpatory statements; and (3) whether he was denied his right to the assistance of counsel during custodial interrogation when inmate Gary Don Franks elicited information from Woods while he was incarcerated. Woods raises only the first issue in the instant appeal, thus we address only the issue of whether trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance during the punishment phase of Woods’s trial.

Woods argues that the state court and district court erred in denying relief for this claim without allowing evidentiary development. He asks this Court to vacate the district court’s denial of relief and remand the case for further evidentiary development. He argues that the district court incorrectly applied precedent from the Strickland-Wiggins line of cases when it (1) did not consider all material evidence in evaluating the prejudice prong of his Strickland-Wiggins claim; (2) denied an evidentiary hearing and relied on the state court findings of fact and conclusions of law, which resulted from a procedurally inadequate paper hearing; and (3) failed to *886 focus on the possible influence of omitted mitigation evidence upon the individual jurors.

We find that the state court determination of ineffeetive-assistance-of-counsel claim is not objectively unreasonable, and thus we affirm the district court’s denial of habeas relief on this claim. Additionally, we do not find that the district court abused its discretion in denying an eviden-tiary hearing given that the state court habeas proceedings were full and fair.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The district court set forth the relevant facts in this case:

Early in the morning of May 2, 2001, two golfers driving down Boyd Road at the Tribute Golf Course near The Colony, Texas, found the bodies of Ron Whitehead and Beth Brosz. Both had been shot in the head and had their throats cut. Whitehead was dead; Brosz was still alive but after receiving medical care, she died the next day. That evening, police received several anonymous tips that Woods was involved in the killings, along with one Marcus Rhodes. Detectives interviewed Woods, who admitted to being with the victims the night before their bodies were found. He said that he and Rhodes had agreed to lead Whitehead and Brosz to a house in The Colony owned by someone named “Hippy,” but that their two vehicles became separated during the trip, so he and Rhodes returned to the Deep Ellum section of Dallas. Woods was not arrested as a result of his interview. Detectives then interviewed Rhodes, and after a search of his car revealed items belonging to Whitehead and Brosz, Rhodes was arrested.
Woods left the Dallas area, traveling to New Orleans, Idaho and California, where he was finally arrested. Several witnesses testified that before the killings he told them about his plan to commit the murders, and after the killings, he told them about his participation in them.

Woods v. Quarterman, No. 6:06-CV-344, 2009 WL 2757181, at *1 (E.D.Tex. Aug.26, 2009). On April 18, 2002, Woods was indicted for capital murder for the killing of more than one individual in the same criminal transaction, for which he was found guilty by a Denton County jury.

During a separate punishment hearing, the State, in addition to evidence about the circumstances of the crime and Woods’s moral culpability, presented evidence that Woods was involved in the murder of another individual in California one-and-a-half months prior to the murders of Whitehead and Brosz; that Woods got into a fight with another inmate in the Denton County Jail; that Woods, Rhodes, and two other accomplices planned to rob a clothing store in Deep Ellum; that Woods may have planned to murder a woman who was coming to pick up vials of “acid” to sell; and that Woods made “bottle bombs” as a juvenile.

Woods’s attorneys, Jerry Parr and Derek Adame, presented only the expert testimony of Robin Neely, a licensed master’s social worker with an advanced clinical practitioner certification and a licensed marriage and family therapist. Neely had reviewed records from the defendant’s four hospitalizations at Haven-wyck Hospital and St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, all occurring when the defendant was between the ages of thirteen and eighteen. The records included family and social histories taken at that time. She testified that Woods’s behavioral problems — including drug use, continuing self-injurious behaviors such as cutting himself, minor sexual assault, and eventu *887 ally antisocial behavior — stemmed from a horrible upbringing that was filled with physical and emotional abuse by his father; devoid of any structure, support, or affection from his mother; and completely lacking in any sort of accountability for his actions. Neely testified that if the family or the juvenile justice system had addressed his behavioral problems and provided for ongoing treatment earlier in his lifetime, Woods could have reversed his downward spiral into drug abuse and self-injurious and antisocial behavior.

After hearing both sides, the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that (1) there was a probability that Woods was a continuing threat to society; (2) Woods actually caused the death of the victims, intended to kill the victims, or anticipated that the lives of victims would be taken; (3) there was no sufficient mitigating circumstance to warrant a sentence of less than death after taking into consideration the circumstances of the crime and the evidence of Woods’s character, background, and personal moral culpability. In accordance with state law, the trial judge sentenced Woods to death. On direct appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (“CCA”) affirmed Woods’s conviction and sentence. See Woods v. State, 152 S.W.3d 105 (Tex.Crim.App.2004). The Supreme Court denied certiorari. See Woods v. Texas, 544 U.S. 1050, 125 S.Ct. 2295, 161 L.Ed.2d 1092 (2005).

Woods then presented fifteen allegations challenging the validity of his conviction and sentence in his application for state post-conviction relief. The same state trial judge who had presided over Woods’s trial, Lee Gabriel, considered Woods’s application for state habeas relief. Without holding an evidentiary hearing, Judge Gabriel made seventeen pages of findings of fact and made six conclusions of law, including the conclusion that Woods was not denied the effective assistance of counsel during any phase of the trial. Among the findings of fact that the trial court made as to Woods’s claim that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance during the punishment hearing were the following:

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399 F. App'x 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-woods-v-rick-thaler-director-ca5-2010.