White v. Johnson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1996
Docket96-20005
StatusPublished

This text of White v. Johnson (White v. Johnson) 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
White v. Johnson, (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS For the Fifth Circuit ___________________________

No. 96 - 20005 ___________________________

LARRY WAYNE WHITE,

Petitioner-Appellant,

VERSUS

GARY L. JOHNSON, DIRECTOR, TEXAS DEPT. OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, INSTITUTIONAL DIVISION,

Respondent-Appellee.

___________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas ____________________________________________________

March 21, 1996

Before DAVIS, BARKSDALE, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges

DAVIS, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner White applies for a certificate of probable cause

to appeal the district court’s denial of habeas relief. White

claims that his pending execution will violate his eighth amendment

right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment and fourteenth

amendment right to due process of law and that he received

ineffective assistance of counsel. We vacate our stay of White’s

execution and deny White’s application for a certificate of

probable cause.

I.

In June 1979, White was convicted of the March 1, 1977 murder

of Elizabeth St. John at her apartment house, where White worked as a maintenance man. The facts of the crime are accurately set out

in the opinion of the Court of Criminal Appeals originally

affirming White's conviction:

[T]he 72-year-old complainant, Elizabeth St. John, moved from the Austin area to return to Houston, in late February of 1977, about a year after her husband had died. Mrs. St. John moved in with Lavelle Wasson, her friend of 25 years, who owned some apartment complexes. St. John was to occupy number three, an upstairs apartment of the Airline complex which was in front of the Wasson's house.

[White] had been employed by the Wassons to do maintenance work at their Shepard apartment complex. On Monday, Tuesday and part of Wednesday of the first week in March, [White] and Wasson spent their time painting St. John's apartment while she looked on. Her furniture had already been moved in, so they "painted around it."

As the three left the apartment on Wednesday afternoon, St. John pointed out a locking devise she had installed on her door that made it impossible to turn the knob or open the door from the outside, even with a key. Wasson asked [White] to move a box spring mattress that was in a hall corner across from St. John's apartment. [White] said he would carry it out the next day.

[White] asked St. John if she were planning to stay up in the apartment that night; she told him "yes."

Later in the day, St. John returned to Wasson's house to obtain envelopes and paper for writing her children, then headed back to her apartment. [White] also came by Wasson's house to return keys to a storage room. Before he left, [White] told Wasson -- who was also an elderly lady -- "Bell, that sure is a cute jumpsuit. I like what's in it." Wasson passed the comment off. [White] told Wasson he was going back to the Shepard Apartments.

However, before Wasson went to bed at 8:30 or 9:00 p.m., she noticed [White's] car was still parked in the parking lot. She also noticed St. John's car in the lot in front of the complex.

At approximately 10:30 p.m Wasson and her husband were awakened by the tenant across the hall from St. John who reported the mattress in the hall had been "completely engulfed" in flames. After the tenant had doused the flames and reported the incident to the Wassons, they all returned to the hall, pulled the mattress out to a front balcony, threw it down to the ground and poured more

2 water on it.

Wasson at this point noticed [White's] white Valiant was still parked out front. St. John's Pinto, however, was gone. Wasson assumed her friend had gone to visit the people who had moved her to Houston.

Wasson had told St. John she had an early doctor appointment on Thursday, March 3rd, but she would be up to the apartment to measure for blinds after that. When Wasson went to the apartment at 8:30 or 9:00 a.m., she noticed [White's] car was still there and St. John's was still gone.

Because the special lock was still on the door and St. John's car was gone, Wasson became alarmed. She went home and told her husband they needed to see about St. John, that something was wrong. No telephone had been installed in St. John's apartment. Just as the Wassons were leaving, Pat McGill, the manager of Shepard Apartments (and [White's] boss) called and said something that caused Wasson concern about St. John. She told McGill to come over.

About dusk on March 3rd, McGill and Wasson went to St. John's apartment door. Mrs. McGill crawled through a window, accessible from the balcony. She told Wasson, "Bell, she's in there dead." Dave Calhoun and L. E. Doreck of the Houston Police Department Homicide Division were the first officers on the scene. Because of the lock device on the door, the officers had to break it in. The temperature in the apartment was so hot in the March evening, it was "staggering." Calhoun discovered a gas floor heater was on as high as it would go. The apartment was neat; there was no sign of forced entry or a struggle. St. John's body, clothed only in a bra, pullover blouse and stockings which were rolled to the ankle, was covered with a blanket. Upon uncovering the body, Calhoun observed bruises on the chin, neck and throat. When the body was rolled over, the officers found a screwdriver protruding from the lower back.

Eduardo Bellas, M.D., a Harris County assistant Medical Examiner who assisted in the autopsy, would later testify the 92 pound, 5'4" St. John, a woman of "slight" build had died as a result of "two mechanisms of death": asphyxia due to strangulation; and, the penetration of the screwdriver four inches into the diaphragm, liver and right chest cavity. There was no evidence of defensive wounds. Acid phosphates tests and microscopic study of vaginal swabs revealed sexual intercourse had occurred within 24 hours of the discovery of the body. Bellas opined St. John had been stabbed first, then strangled, but stated there was no way to be sure. In addition to

3 the clothing, six gold rings and small diamond stud earrings remained on the body.

At the crime scene, Calhoun was directed to the white Valiant in the parking lot in which [White] had recently arrived after a trip to Florida. The National Crime Information Center (NCIC) computer indicated the car was "wanted." Officer Joe Herrin who was in charge of the mobile crime scene unit, attempted to lift finger prints off of things "the suspect would touch," such as the front door, the screwdriver and the car "that was wanted in another homicide." One print was lifted off a Coors beer can found in the white Valiant.

Homicide Sergeant D. R. James went through St. John's purse which was found in the apartment. Identification and other papers were obtained from the purse, but "nothing of great value." James testified he would have checked the purse for money and valuables, and did not recall finding any money.

Another Homicide Detective, John L. Bonds, went to the scene the following morning, Friday, March 4th, to do follow up investigation. He checked out the missing car which had belonged to the victim and found it registered to her. He entered it into the NCIC, requesting a hold on the vehicle and any occupant for examination of evidence. Norbent L. LeBlanc, a senior latent print examiner, testified none of the prints lifted from the apartment or the Valiant, other than the one off the Coors can, could be identified as [White's}.

Three days later, at 3:23 a.m.

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White v. Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-johnson-ca5-1996.