Thanos v. State

622 A.2d 727, 330 Md. 77, 1993 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1993
Docket45, September Term, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 622 A.2d 727 (Thanos v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thanos v. State, 622 A.2d 727, 330 Md. 77, 1993 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1993).

Opinion

MURPHY, Chief Judge.

This direct appeal in a capital murder case raises a number of issues surrounding the trial, sentencing proceeding, and death sentence imposed upon appellant John Frederick Thanos.

I

On August 31, 1990, eighteen-year-old Gregory Allen Taylor, Jr. picked up Thanos, who was hitchhiking, in a rural area of Worcester County. Inside Taylor’s car, Thanos removed a sawed-off rifle from his duffle bag and ordered Taylor to drive to a remote wooded area. When Taylor protested and begged for his freedom, Thanos shot Taylor three times in the head. Taylor died as a result of these wounds. Thanos then fled in Taylor’s vehicle. Police apprehended Thanos in Delaware, where he admitted to various crimes including Taylor’s murder. Thanos led detectives to Taylor’s body, then confessed to the murder on videotape.

The State charged Thanos with several crimes, including murder in the first degree, and announced its intention to seek the death penalty. Thanos was tried in the Circuit *82 Court for St. Mary’s County. 1 At the guilt-innocence phase of the trial, Thanos did not cross-examine any of the State’s witnesses, nor did he offer any witnesses or evidence of his own. The court (Kaminetz, J.), sitting without a jury, found Thanos guilty of first degree premeditated murder, felony murder, robbery with a deadly weapon, robbery, use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, and theft of property having a value over three hundred dollars.

At the subsequent sentencing proceeding before Judge Kaminetz, sitting without a jury, Thanos offered four witnesses in mitigation of his sentence: a psychiatric social worker, a psychiatrist, and a psychologist who were all familiar with Thanos’s background and psychiatric history, and a corrections official who knew Thanos’s history of institutional placements. The psychiatric witnesses established that Thanos came from an extremely dysfunctional family. They testified that Thanos’s father had a history of mental illness and regularly abused his son both physically and emotionally. The elder Thanos also sexually abused his daughter, appellant’s sister. In 1965, at age fifteen, Thanos was first incarcerated for auto theft in the Maryland Correctional Institution, where, according to the corrections official, other inmates seized on Thanos’s small stature to abuse and sodomize him. Thanos was imprisoned three more times, for auto theft, rape, and robbery, between 1966 and 1990, spending almost all of those years in prison.

The medical witnesses testified that Thanos was diagnosed as schizophrenic at age seventeen, a diagnosis which later evolved into borderline personality disorder. They said that Thanos has self-destructive tendencies, gender identification disturbance, and that he most loses his ability to control his actions when under stress. The witnesses also testified Thanos attempted suicide numerous times while in prison.

*83 At the conclusion of the sentencing proceeding, the court weighed the aggravating and mitigating circumstances of Thanos’s murder of Taylor in accordance with Maryland Code (1957, 1992 Repl.Vol.) Art. 27, § 413(h). By a preponderance of the evidence, the court found the mitigating circumstance delineated in § 413(g)(4) to apply, namely, that Thanos’s capacity “to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired as result of mental incapacity, mental disorder or emotional disturbance.” The court also recognized the following additional mitigating circumstances under § 413(g)(8): (1) the appellant is a product of a dysfunctional family; (2) early suggestions for mental health intervention for the appellant and his family were not followed; (3) the appellant was emotionally and physically abused as a child; (4) the appellant was inappropriately incarcerated in an adult correctional facility as a juvenile; and (5) the appellant was entitled to, and received, the mercy of the court.

On the other hand, the court found beyond a reasonable doubt that the aggravating circumstance in § 413(d)(10) also existed, namely, that Thanos “committed the murder while committing ... a robbery____” Finding this aggravating circumstance to outweigh the mitigating ones, the court sentenced appellant to death. 2

Thanos appealed under the provisions of the Code, Art. 27, § 414(a) and Maryland Rule 8-306(c)(l). He asserts that the trial court committed reversible error for the following eight reasons: (1) the court failed to inquire into his competency to stand trial; (2) the court allowed him, as opposed to his counsel, to decide when he would allocute; (3) he did not *84 knowingly and intelligently waive his right to testify; (4) he did not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waive his right to be sentenced by a jury; (5) the court allowed him to waive his right to a jury trial, over his counsel’s objection; (6) he did not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waive his right to a trial by jury; (7) the court admitted improper expert opinion evidence; and (8) the court failed to grant relief for discovery violations. We shall address these assertions seriatim.

II

Thanos argues first, and most strenuously, that the trial court erred in failing to inquire into his competency to stand trial. It is well established that criminal defendants in state courts have a Fourteenth Amendment due process right not to be tried while they are incompetent. As Chief Justice Burger explained for the Supreme Court:

It has long been accepted that a person whose mental condition is such that he lacks the capacity to understand the nature and object of the proceedings against him, to consult with counsel, and to assist in preparing his defense may not be subjected to trial.

Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 171, 95 S.Ct. 896, 903, 43 L.Ed.2d 103 (1975), citing Blackstone’s Commentaries. See also Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375, 86 S.Ct. 836, 15 L.Ed.2d 815 (1966); Trimble v. State, 321 Md. 248, 582 A.2d 794 (1990).

Pursuant to this constitutional rule, Maryland Code (1982, 1990 RepLVol., 1992 Cum.Supp.) § 12-103(a) of the Health-General Article specifies:

If, before or during a trial, the defendant in a criminal case appears to the court to be incompetent to stand trial or the defendant alleges incompetence to stand trial, the court shall determine, on evidence presented on the record, whether the defendant is incompetent to stand trial.

The Code defines “incompetent to stand trial” as “not able: (1) to understand the nature or object of the proceeding; or *85 (2) to assist in one’s defense.” Id., § 12-101(e). A defendant must, in other words, have “present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding — and ...

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Bluebook (online)
622 A.2d 727, 330 Md. 77, 1993 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thanos-v-state-md-1993.