Tomas G. Ervin v. Michael Bowersox

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 18, 1999
Docket97-1435
StatusPublished

This text of Tomas G. Ervin v. Michael Bowersox (Tomas G. Ervin v. Michael Bowersox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomas G. Ervin v. Michael Bowersox, (8th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 97-1435 ___________

Tomas G. Ervin, * * Appellant, * * v. * * Appeal from the United States Paul K. Delo, Superintendent, Potosi * District Court for the Western Correctional Center; Michael Bowersox, * District of Missouri. Superintendent, Potosi Correctional * Center, * * Appellees. * ___________

Submitted: June 14, 1999 Filed: October 18, 1999 ___________

Before BOWMAN, HEANEY, and FAGG, Circuit Judges. ___________

FAGG, Circuit Judge.

Tomas G. Ervin, a Missouri death row inmate, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition challenging his first-degree murder and robbery convictions. We affirm.

On December 19, 1988, the body of Richard Hodges was discovered in a ditch near Jefferson City, Missouri. Duct tape bound Richard’s hands and covered his nose and mouth. An autopsy revealed Richard had been suffocated to death. The same day, police obtained a warrant to search the Jefferson City home where Richard lived and operated a real estate business with his mother. When officers entered the house, they found the body of Richard’s mother, Mildred, wrapped in garbage bags on the living room floor.

In their search for evidence, police found a note pad beneath a remote control in the bedroom across the hall from the Hodgeses’ office. On the pad’s top sheet, someone had written a license plate number. An officer tore off the top sheet and placed it in a box with other papers. In the garage, police discovered the Hodgeses’ Lincoln Continental was missing and there were bloodstains on the floor near the vacant parking spot. The police found no identifiable fingerprints other than those of the victims and an investigating officer.

On the night of January 14, 1989, the Hodgeses’ Lincoln was discovered burning in the parking lot of a Paducah, Kentucky motel. A week later, their credit cards were found near a dumpster behind a supermarket in Jefferson City. On January 24, officers made a final sweep through the Hodgeses’ home before releasing it to the Hodgeses’ estate. Officers found the note pad with the indentation of a license number, made when someone had written on the sheet above, which other officers had already removed. For the first time, police called in the license number and learned it belonged to an automobile registered to local resident Ervin. Although police did not recognize the name, they decided to question Ervin, and developed a list of his associates, which included a man from Florida named Bert Hunter.

At the request of the police, Ervin came to the Jefferson City police station on February 1. During an interview, Ervin told police officers he did not know the Hodgeses. He also said that in the preceding two months, he had not lent his car to anyone or been on the road where the Hodgeses lived. Ervin said he believed he was traveling around the time of the Hodgeses’ murders on December 15 and had credit card receipts at home to prove it. He also denied having seen or been with Hunter in

-2- December. The officers asked whether they could see the credit card receipts, and Ervin agreed to show them at his house. After following Ervin to his home, the officers entered and saw stacks of receipts on the kitchen table. Over Ervin’s shoulder, an officer saw a Florida license number on one of the gas receipts dated December 21. When police ran the number later, they learned it belonged to Hunter’s car.

On February 17, police executed a search warrant at Ervin’s home and seized a roll of duct tape, credit card receipts, telephone bills, and a newspaper. The newspaper contained an article about the Hodgeses’ murders, with highlighting on text stating the cause of Mildred’s death might have been a heart attack. One of the credit card receipts showed Ervin had paid for medical treatment for Hunter in Jefferson City on December 12, 1988. Telephone records showed that on the day before the Hodgeses’ car was set on fire in Paducah, Ervin had called Hunter in Florida from Malden, Missouri, a town only one hundred miles from Paducah.

On February 22, police brought Hunter back from Florida on a parole violation. They questioned him the next day about the Hodgeses’ murders, and Hunter denied he or Ervin was involved. On March 7, Hunter repeated his denials, but asked about a $10,000 reward offered by the Hodgeses’ estate. The police told Hunter the offer had been revoked. About a week later, on March 15, Hunter told officers he would tell them about the murders if they would put two of his friends on probation and leave another friend alone. Hunter confessed that he and Ervin killed the Hodgeses in a plot to get money. After police obtained a video camera, Hunter refused to put his confession on videotape. When he later pleaded guilty to the murders, the plea was videotaped, and Hunter admitted he and another man killed the Hodgeses and gave a detailed account of the murders, but he refused to say who the man was and specifically denied the man was Ervin.

During Ervin’s trial, however, Hunter explained how he and Ervin murdered Richard and Mildred. According to Hunter, in late November 1988, he visited Ervin

-3- in Missouri. The men were broke and discussed criminal schemes to get money. Hunter suggested robbing a bank, but Ervin wanted to kidnap someone rich from their home and force them to withdraw their money from their bank account. They would then suffocate the victims and dispose of their bodies in a trash incinerator. The men decided to pursue Ervin’s idea and drove around Jefferson City looking for possible targets, but did not choose one before Hunter returned to Florida. On December 4 and 5, Ervin visited Hunter in Florida, where Ervin bought rubber gloves to use when carrying out their plan. The men then returned together to Missouri, where Hunter stayed with Ervin. Hunter was ill with strep throat and Ervin paid for Hunter’s medical treatment on December 12. Despite Hunter’s malady, the men resumed their search for a victim. When they spotted a Lincoln Continental in the Hodgeses’ driveway on December 15, they believed they had found the wealthy prey they sought. Ervin pulled his car into the drive, which was visible from the Hodgeses’ office. Posing as a messenger with an envelope, Hunter went to the door, and Mildred opened it. Hunter forced his way inside with a gun, and Ervin followed him with a sack of tools for their evil plot, including duct tape, rubber gloves, and garbage bags. Mildred panicked and called to Richard for help. He came out of the office and demanded his mother’s release. Richard informed the intruders that his elderly mother had a heart problem, and Hunter told Richard to calm her down. Richard took his mother into a bedroom across the hall from the office and, at Hunter’s direction, bound her limbs with duct tape.

In the meantime, Richard and Mildred told them all their money was tied up in a trust fund and they had none in the bank. They promised they would not call the police if the men would simply leave the house. Richard also told the men that someone from the newspaper was coming by the house soon to pick up an advertisement for the realty company. Alarmed at this prospect, the men started to move quickly. They left Mildred on the bed and took Richard to the living room, where they bound his hands and feet with duct tape. Hearing a noise in the bedroom, Hunter returned and found Mildred standing in front of a dresser. Hunter retaped her,

-4- left her on the hallway floor, and returned to the living room, where Ervin was putting duct tape over Richard’s mouth and nose.

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