Williams v. Thaler

756 F. Supp. 2d 809, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 124547, 2010 WL 4918972
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 2010
DocketCivil Action H-03-1508
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 756 F. Supp. 2d 809 (Williams v. Thaler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Thaler, 756 F. Supp. 2d 809, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 124547, 2010 WL 4918972 (S.D. Tex. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

NANCY F. ATLAS, District Judge.

Adonius Collier was murdered in 1992. A surviving victim led the police to suspect Nanon McKewn Williams’ involvement in the crime. While Williams fled to California, his co-participant in the shootings, Vaal Guevara, turned himself into the police. Guevara’s self-serving confession became the backbone of a flawed prosecution that led to Williams’ capital-murder conviction three years later. The issue now before the Court is whether trial counsel’s failure to seek expert assistance prejudiced Williams. In light of significant post-trial evidence showing deep flaws in the State’s case against Williams, the Sixth Amendment requires that the Court vacate his capital conviction.

I. BACKGROUND

Williams’ trial in 1995 provides the vantage point for evaluating his ineffective-assistance claims. This Court has elsewhere extensively outlined the crime, trial testimony, and post-trial factual development. [Doc. # 41 at 20-69]. For the purposes of this Memorandum and Order, the Court will only recount the factual background briefly.

In 1992, Williams and Vaal Guevara conspired to steal from two drug dealers while feigning interest in purchasing cocaine. The two dealers — Adonius Collier and Em-made Rasul — traveled to Hermann Park with Rasul’s girlfriend, Stephanie Anderson. Williams and Guevara showed up with Guevara’s neighbor Elaine Winn and their friend Patrick Smith, who until well after trial was only known by the name “Xavier.” While the others waited in the parking lot, Williams, Guevara, Collier, and Rasul went across the street to transact their drug deal unobserved. Those who remained in the parking lot could not see the events that led up to Collier’s murder.

After the men crossed the street, they paired off. Within minutes, Williams and Guevara began shooting at the other men. Rasul fled the scene after Williams shot him in the face and foot with his .25 caliber pistol. Guevara briefly chased Rasul, but apparently rejoined Williams. The police later found Collier lying dead with a massive shotgun wound in his head.

Williams fled the state. Accompanied by his attorney, Guevara turned himself in to the police shortly thereafter. Guevara *811 admitted in his police interviews that he fired his .22 caliber derringer in Collier’s direction.

A less-than-thorough autopsy and a careless forensic investigation led to the controversy now before the Court. When Dr. Tommy J. Brown, an Assistant Medical Examiner for the Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office, performed the autopsy, he removed some shotgun pellets from Collier’s cranial cavity. A mutilated bullet slug — eventually designated “EB-1” — came into evidence with the shotgun pellets. The trajectory and entrance of EB-1 have been perplexing because (1) medical examiners never observed a bullet in the now-destroyed X-ray of Collier’s head and (2) the autopsy does not mention an entrance wound. The police department’s handling of forensic evidence compounded the problems in determining the cause of Collier’s death. Robert Baldwin, a criminalist with the Houston Police Department Firearms Laboratory, identified EB-1 as a .25-caliber slug. Mr. Baldwin would eventually confess that this was an error, but he did so much too late. The autopsy findings and forensic mistakes allowed the prosecution to argue that Williams fired both shots into Collier’s head.

The State of Texas charged Williams with capital murder committed in the course of a robbery. Ms. Loretta Muldrow represented Williams at trial, which took place in 1995. Four of the people who traveled to Hermann Park— Anderson, Rasul, Winn, and Guevara — testified at trial about the events of that evening. Testimony from Anderson, Rasul, and Winn provided some context to the drug deal, but none of them saw Williams shoot Collier. Collectively, these three witnesses clarified who carried which weapon and identified who shot Rasul. Their testimony, however, did not answer significant questions about the events surrounding the murder. 1 Importantly, the *812 witnesses could not identify who fired EB-1. Their testimony could not conclusively provide a sequence for the two shots that went into Collier’s head. They could not give information about Collier’s physiological state before the shotgun injury occurred. The prosecution relied on Williams’ co-defendant Guevara to fill in those gaps.

Guevara had been incarcerated for three years before trial. Although originally accused of capital murder, he pleaded guilty to an illegal investment of drugs charge. Guevara had not received a sentence at the time of trial, but the prosecution had agreed to ten years of incarceration in return for his truthful testimony. Tr. at 28:184-85. Guevara’s testimony minimized his role in the planning and commission of the murder. In fact, Guevara claimed that he first thought that the two other men were robbing him when the shooting first started. Tr. at 28:240. Guevara admitted that he fired shots that night, though he tried to excuse himself as only having acted in self-defense. Tr. at 28:240, 243-44. Only with reluctance did Guevara testify that he had fired shots at both Rasul and Collier. Importantly, Guevara admitted that when he “saw [Collier] coming, he panicked and shot at him.” Tr. at 29:84, 88. Guevara testified that he was certain that he was not the one who killed Collier. Tr. at 28:274-75. The prosecution’s theory of the case, in fact, depended on Guevara’s shot completely missing Collier. Guevara explained that, while chasing Rasul, he heard a loud noise, presumably the shotgun blast, and turned around to see Williams standing over Collier. Tr. at 28:251-52. Guevara provided two critical pieces of information about Collier’s death: after Collier ended up on the ground, Guevara heard him mumbling, Tr. at 29:84, and after the shotgun blast, Guevara saw Collier’s feet move, Tr. at 28:279-81; 29:83. The prosecution maintained that Williams first shot Collier with the .25 caliber pistol and, because he was not yet dead, finished him off with the shotgun.

Guevara’s self-serving testimony, therefore, provided the most important basis for excluding himself as the killer, making the shotgun wound the only fatal injury. Guevara, however, was a difficult witness. He was a criminal, he had fired shots that night, and he obviously tried to minimize his role in the murder. Given Guevara’s problematic testimony, the prosecution adduced some forensic evidence to show that Williams killed Collier. Dr. Brown, the assistant medical examiner who performed the autopsy, provided the State with a basis to argue that the shotgun was the only fatal wound. Dr. Brown testified at trial that, because “[t]here was a red margin around the entrance wound” instead of a “yellow margin,” Collier “had blood pres *813 sure at the time he was shot with the shotgun.” Tr. at 29:101-02. Because his autopsy did not reveal any bullet path for EB-1, and the shotgun blast “shredded” Collier’s brain, Dr. Brown could not provide a sequence for the two shots. Tr. at 29:101-02. Dr. Brown opined that the shotgun blast was the cause of Collier’s death. Tr. at 29:123.

To discount further the chance that Guevara was the killer, Mr. Baldwin identified EB-1 as a .25-ealiber slug.

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Related

Nanon Williams v. Rick Thaler, Director
684 F.3d 597 (Fifth Circuit, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 F. Supp. 2d 809, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 124547, 2010 WL 4918972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-thaler-txsd-2010.