Whatley v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 19, 2021
Docket20-363
StatusRelating-to

This text of Whatley v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison (Whatley v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whatley v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison, (U.S. 2021).

Opinion

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FREDERICK R. WHATLEY v. WARDEN, GEORGIA DIAGNOSTIC AND CLASSIFICATION PRISON ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT No. 20–363. Decided April 19, 2021

The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied. JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, dissenting from denial of certiorari. A jury sentenced petitioner Frederick R. Whatley to death the morning after watching him reenact a murder while wearing unnecessary leg irons and manacles. When the State called Whatley to the stand during the sentencing proceeding, his attorney waved away the prosecutor’s con- cerns about the visible shackles, then sat silent when the prosecutor handed Whatley a fake gun and asked him to reenact the murder for which he had just been convicted. Defense counsel’s unreasonable failure to object to What- ley’s shackling was plainly prejudicial under this Court’s precedent. I would grant the petition, summarily reverse, and remand for a new sentencing proceeding. I Following Whatley’s conviction for robbing and killing the owner of a Georgia bait shop and liquor store, the State asked the jury to impose a sentence of death. The sentenc- ing proceeding involved just one day of evidence. The State relied on two, conceded statutory aggravating circum- stances: Whatley committed the murder (1) during an armed robbery, Ga. Code Ann. §17–10–30(b)(2) (Supp. 2019), and (2) after having “escaped from [a] place of lawful confinement,” §17–10–30(b)(9), because he had walked away from a halfway house to which he had been paroled a few months earlier. The State further showed that Whatley had prior convictions for forging a check, threatening a man 2 WHATLEY v. WARDEN, GEORGIA DIAGNOSTIC AND CLASSIFICATION PRISON SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

with a shotgun and taking his wallet, and simple assault. Finally, the State elicited testimony from a sheriff ’s deputy that Whatley once wondered aloud whether he would miss the Super Bowl while in custody. Electronic Case Filing in Whatley v. Upton, No. 3:09–cv–00074, Doc. 7–9, (ND Ga., July 28, 2009) pp. 15, 22 (ECF). This, the State argued, proved Whatley felt no remorse for his crimes. ECF Doc. 7– 11, at 31. Defense counsel called a number of Whatley’s friends and family, followed by Whatley himself. Whatley had worn shackles throughout the guilt phase, but the court took care to ensure the jury did not see the restraints. See, e.g., ECF Doc. 7–5, at 110, 135–138. When defense counsel called Whatley to testify at sentencing, the prosecutor sensibly asked if the court needed to “take the jury out before he takes the stand” in light of the “chains” and “shackles on him.” Defense counsel waved off the prosecutor’s concern. “Well, he’s convicted now,” he shrugged, referencing the jury’s earlier guilty verdict. The trial court echoed that con- clusion: “He’s been convicted.” ECF Doc. 7–9, at 106. The court never found that the restraints were even necessary, much less that there was no way to hide them from the jury. Whatley hobbled to the witness stand. His leg irons and cuffs were in plain view. He testified for several hours in those restraints. Among other things, Whatley contested the State’s version of the shooting for which he had been convicted. The State claimed that Whatley tried to execute the witnesses to his crime after the storeowner gave him the money, shooting the owner in the chest and nearly shooting an employee but hitting the counter instead. The storeowner, mortally wounded, pulled his own gun. What- ley ran, and the two exchanged shots in the parking lot be- fore the owner died. Whatley, however, testified that the storeowner pulled a gun immediately after giving him the money, and Whatley reflexively fired a single shot that hit the counter before running away. The owner gave chase, Cite as: 593 U. S. ____ (2021) 3

and Whatley killed him during the shootout outside. On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked Whatley to “step down” from the witness box to demonstrate his ver- sion of events. The prosecutor handed Whatley a “toy pis- tol,” noting, “Now, this is not the type of gun you had that day. I hope you’ll understand why I don’t want to give you a real gun.” ECF Doc. 7–10, at 13. He told Whatley to “show this jury how you held a gun on [the victim] and told him to give you that money. Now, you go ahead and show them. You pretend I’m [the victim]. You pull the gun on me and show them how you did it.” Id., at 14. With no objection from his attorney, Whatley reenacted the armed robbery and shooting, shuffling around the courtroom with shackles on his legs and waving the gun around with cuffs on his wrists. The prosecutor maintained a running com- mentary. See ibid. (“Show me how you pointed it at him”); id., at 15 (“I want you to point the gun at me just like you did him that day”). He ended his cross-examination shortly thereafter. Id., at 19. Defense counsel never objected. The next morning, the prosecutor argued in closing that the jury should sentence Whatley to death primarily be- cause he posed a severe threat of future violence. See, e.g., ECF Doc. 7–11, at 20 (“[I]f you think that a guard gets be- tween him and life and he won’t kill a guard, you’d better think again”). The court gave no curative instruction about Whatley’s shackling. The jury deliberated for 90 minutes before recommending the death penalty. On direct appeal, the Georgia Supreme Court found that Whatley forfeited his claim that his visible shackling vio- lated his due process rights because his lawyer affirma- tively waived any objection despite the prosecutor’s stated concerns. Whatley v. State, 270 Ga. 296, 302, 509 S. E. 2d 45, 52 (1998). Whatley then filed a state habeas petition, arguing that his trial attorney’s failure to object to his unnecessary shackling constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. The 4 WHATLEY v. WARDEN, GEORGIA DIAGNOSTIC AND CLASSIFICATION PRISON SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

Georgia Supreme Court rejected the petition. Whatley v. Terry, 284 Ga. 555, 571–572, 668 S. E. 2d 651, 663 (2008). While acknowledging that unnecessary shackling is pre- sumptively prejudicial when an objection is properly pre- served, the court held that defendants retain their burden to show prejudice when they claim trial counsel was inef- fective for failing to object. Ibid. The court summarily con- cluded that Whatley had not made that showing. Ibid. Whatley filed a federal habeas petition, arguing that the state court’s denial of his ineffective-assistance claim was contrary to and an unreasonable application of clearly es- tablished federal law. The Eleventh Circuit disagreed. 927 F. 3d 1150, 1184–1187 (2019). The court explained at length why Whatley was not entitled to a presumption of prejudice, and then determined in one short paragraph that Whatley’s “violent criminal history” and failure to “turn things around,” together with the crimes at issue, rendered the shackling “trivial.” Id., at 1187. Judge Jordan dissented. In his view, the state court’s rul- ing might have been reasonable “had the shackles merely been visible to the jury when Mr. Whatley walked to the witness box. Or if the trial court had given a curative in- struction to the jury about the restraints. Or if Mr. Whatley was not forced to re-enact the murder in front of the jury while the prosecutor played the role of the victim. Or if the prosecutor had not explicitly made Mr. Whatley’s future dangerousness a key theme in favor of his request for death.” Id., at 1193. But with these facts taken together, prejudice was “undeniable.” Ibid. II To succeed on an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, Whatley must show that his counsel’s deficient perfor- mance prejudiced him. Strickland v.

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Whatley v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whatley-v-warden-georgia-diagnostic-and-classification-prison-scotus-2021.