The Lake Waco Triple Murders
Evidence of Malice from Appellant Pardo’s Deposition
Appellant Pardo states that he published the letter to Judge Allen and the Capital
Watch article and that he approved of and takes credit for everything
that’s in it. [CR 6: 1182]. He admits that the publications accuse Appellees of
committing crimes in the investigation and prosecution of the Spence and Deeb
cases. [CR 6: 1198]. Appellants contend in their briefs that “a great amount of
investigation went into the writing of the March 1997 Capital Watch,”
yet, Appellant Pardo admits that he did not even read the transcripts of the
Spence and Deeb trials upon which he bases his allegations. [CR 6: 1172]
[Pardo’s Amended Brief at 19].
If Appellants had read the trial transcripts their preconceived storyline
would have been contradicted. Appellant Pardo paints Spence as a mere petty
criminal who was wrongfully and illegally framed by the Appellees. [CR 1: 145]
[CR 5: 1010-17]. If Pardo had not ignored the trial transcripts he would have
known that Spence was a violent criminal predator who had committed two
separate violent, sexual assault crimes involving the use of a knife within
only a few weeks of the Lake Waco Murders. [CR 5: 1093-1121] [CR 6: 1153-63].
About a month after the Lake Waco Murders, Lisa Kader was raped by David
Spence. [CR 5: 1051]. Her testimony in the trial was chilling, not only because
of what was done to her, but also because of its similarity to the Lake Waco
Murders. [CR 5: 1093-1121]. Kader testified that Spence raped her, that he
rubbed a knife across her chest and taunted her with it in a sadistic manner
while he referred to himself in the third person as “Chilly.” [CR 5: 1066]. He
told her not to fear “the Reaper.” [CR 5: 1058]. She testified that Spence
slapped her, pulled her hair, cursed her calling her a bitch and a cunt and
that he bit her about her shoulders and breasts so hard that she cried out even
though she was afraid her cries would anger him more. [CR 5: 1067, 1072,
1093-98, 1106-11]. Two weeks later, when she finally got the courage to tell
the police about it, the bite marks were still visible on her breast. [CR 5:
1096-97].
Kader testified that when Spence was finished beating, slapping, biting,
cursing, humiliating and raping her, that he rolled off of her and masturbated
on himself. [CR 5: 1111]. If Appellant Pardo had not ignored the trial
transcripts and autopsy reports he would have noticed the remarkable
similarities between this rape and the Lake Waco Murders. [CR 3: 587-632]. The
female victims of the Lake Waco Murders had bite marks on their breasts. [CR 7:
1223] [CR 16: 3083]. Jill Montgomery’s nipple was bitten off. [CR 7: 1223].
Although the female victims had been sexually assaulted, no semen was found in
them. [CR 3: 587-632] [CR 7: 1221-32].
Six weeks after the Lake Waco Murders occurred Darvin Pack was brutally
attacked by David Spence and Gilbert Melendez. [CR 6: 1129, 1135]. He was
slapped, beaten and cursed. His head was stuck in a toilet and the toilet was
flushed repeatedly until he was afraid he would drown. [CR 6: 1154-63]. He was
kicked numerous times in the head. [CR 6: 1161]. Spence threatened that if Pack
did not perform oral sex on Gilbert Melendez that Spence would cut his Adam’s
apple out and eat it. [CR 6: 1154-57]. When Pack resisted, Spence cut him four
times on the arms and legs. The scars were large and visible two years later
when Pack testified in the punishment phase of Spence’s Lake Waco Murder
prosecution. [CR 6: 1158].
At the time of trial on the Lake Waco Murders, Spence had already been
convicted and sentenced by a jury to ninety years for the sexual assault on
Darvin Pack. [CR 6: 1130, 1179]. Appellant Pardo never looked at the transcript
of the Pack sexual assault case however, which was, in every detail,
contradictory of his preconceived storyline. [CR 6: 1179]. In Capitol Watch,
Pardo described the gruesome events surrounding the Pack sexual assault as
follows: “Although the case was (sic) involved a fight between several men it
was classified as a “sexual assault.” [CR 5: 1011].
Also readily available for inspection and review was the testimony of Daryl
Beckham. [CR 9: 1886-1953]. Beckham was a fellow county jail inmate of Spence.
[CR 9: 1900]. Beckham underwent hypnosis by Texas Ranger Bob Prince and
recalled, in detail, conversations he had with Spence in which Spence confessed
that he had committed the Lake Waco Murders. [CR 9: 1939-43]. Beckham testified
that while Spence was relating his involvement in the killings that Spence grew
more and more excited, explaining with vivid detail and gestures how he
“stabbed them and stabbed them and just couldn’t stop stabbing them.” [CR 9:
1902-11]. Then Spence would retire to his bunk and masturbate. [CR 9: 1939-43].
Appellants purposefully ignored this evidence because it did not fit their preconceived
storyline.
Further information available from the transcript, which contradicted
Appellants’ preconceived storyline, was plentiful. A brief review of the
transcript or even the Fifth Circuit’s opinion would have provided a litany of
facts unsupportive of Appellants’ intended libel. [CR 5: 981-98]. Pardo admits
he did not read the transcript of the habeas corpus proceedings held in Judge
Black’s Court [CR 6: 1183] and he never read any of the appellate decisions
which put to rest many of his allegations. [CR 6: 1191]. Furthermore, he never
spoke to any of the twenty-four jurors who convicted Spence. [CR 6: 1192].
Shortly after the murders, Spence told Regina Ann Rosembaum and others that
he had taken some girls to LakeWaco and raped them; no
other similar crime was reported to the police. [CR 5: 987-88] [CR 9: 1782-83].
Spence also told David Puryear that he had committed the Lake Waco Murders and
was glad he had done so. [CR 5: 988] [CR 10: 1971-72]. Contrary to Pardo’s
assertions, however, Puryear has never recanted. [CR 5: 989].
Spence made general admissions of guilt to other people. He told his
neighbor, Dorothy Miles, that he “might have killed somebody” and that he “cut
somebody.” [CR 5: 1001] [CR 9: 1760-61]. Miles testified that Spence appeared
“troubled” and “depressed” during July and August of 1982, the period right
after the murders were committed, but before the Darvin Pack incident. [CR 9:
1748-63]. Regina Rosenbaum testified that in late July or early August of 1982,
Spence recounted to her how he and “some friends” had gone to Lake Waco, come
across some “chicks,” tied them up and raped them. [CR 5: 987-88] [CR 9:
1782-83]. Todd Childers testified that Spence told him he had been at LakeWaco
the night of the murders. [CR 5: 996] [CR 10: 401-02]. Clifford Oliver
testified he remembered Spence saying he had “been with Tony” the night of the
murders. [CR 5: 996]. This is evidence that only reckless men would have
ignored in their search for the “truth.” HBO v. Harrison,
983 S.W.2d 31, 43 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1998, no pet.).
Appellants state in Capitol Watch, that “the autopsies performed on the
three teens made no mention of bite marks.” [CR 5: 1012]. Appellants further
state in Capitol Watch that Detective Salinas, who claims to have been present
at the autopsies, noticed no bite marks. [CR 5: 1012]. However, Appellants
recklessly ignored the trial transcripts of the pathologist expert, Dr.
Gilliland, who testified unequivocally that there were bite marks on the
two female victims. [CR 7: 1462-1497]. Pardo’s choice of facts, selective
extrapolation, purposeful avoidance of the truth, and adherence to his
preconceived, inherently improbable storyline, is ample evidence of actual
malice. Connaughton, 109 S.Ct. at 2698.
Appellants state erroneously in Capitol Watch: “Even though…Deeb’s insurance
agent, Alex Sanchez, would testify that Deeb knew the insurance policy would
not pay off in the event of murder or suicide, the prosecution continued on
with it’s theory.” [CR 5: 1011] [CR 15: 3031]. This is totally false. If
Appellants had not ignored the trial transcript they have known that Deeb did
believe that the policy would pay off if Gail was murdered. [CR 10: 2103-13].
Also, the testimony of Kareem Quasem leaves no doubt that Deeb told Quasem that
he would be “rich” if they had killed the right girl, but that they had killed
the wrong girl. [CR 8: 1633-35, 1642, 1652, 1659, 1681, 1729] [CR 11: 2325-27].
Deeb also told Christine Jewel that Franks had been murdered, before the bodies
were ever discovered. [CR 11: 2329]. All this information was easily available,
yet purposefully ignored by Appellants. This intentional disregard for the
facts constitutes some evidence of malice. Connaughton, 109 S.Ct. at
2698.
Appellants state in Capitol Watch: “Detective Price was assigned to the
(Juanita White) case, developed an early suspect and then made an arrest. But
her suspect would later be released without her knowledge.” [CR 5: 1016]. This
is patently false. Not only is it false, but Jan Price never even said that in
any of her testimony. [CR 5: 1034-49]. Appellants imply that Simons and some of
the other Appellees wrongfully released a suspect and framed Williams and
Washington as they had framed Spence. [CR 5: 1016]. Appellants would have
known, had they not purposefully ignored Price’s testimony, that the only
arrest that Price was involved in was that of Joe Sidney Williams who was later
convicted of the crime. [CR 5: 1036-48].
In her sworn testimony one year and five months after the Juanita White
murder, Detective Price listed eight possible suspects she had developed. Benny
Carroll, the suspect they referred to, was not one of them. The following are
excerpts of her testimony:
DETECTIVE JAN PRICE, having been first duly sworn by the Court, testified
as follows:
DIRECT EXAMINATION BY MR. REAVES:
Q. You were the person in charge of the investigation for Waco Police
Department?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Okay. In the course of your investigation did you develop any suspects?
A. There were several possible suspects that we had leads on that we had to
check out.
Q. Okay. Do you recall who those were?
A. There were several. I received some information that Calvin Washington,
Joe Sidney Williams, Donald Ervin - -
Q. Donald - - I’m sorry?
A. Ervin.
Q. Okay.
A. There were several people calling in saying that there were people
bragging about certain people doing it. There was a Ricky White, Richard
Watson, there were several other names that came up. I’d have to refer to my
report.
Q. Detective Price, if I could ask you to look through that report and see
if there were any other suspects that you identified and attempted to develop
leads on, other than Donald Ervin, Ricky White, Richard Watson, Calvin
Washington and Joe Sidney Williams.
A. There was a man by the name of Larry Howard, James Jackson. That’s all I
believe I can find.
Q. Okay. Did you ever receive any information on Waymond Dotson?
A. Later on in the investigation his name was mentioned that he might have
been there or know something more about it.
Q. Okay. Was he developed as a possible suspect?
A. I would say so, yes.
Q. Okay. How long were you involved in this investigation or are you still
involved in it?
A. I - - we turned the whole case over to the District Attorney’s office and
that is when I ended my part of the investigation.
Q. Okay. Approximately when was that?
A. It was probably in the summer of ‘86. I can’t recall the exact date.
Q. Okay. Did you do any further investigation after that time?
A. I don’t believe I did.
Q. Okay. So is it fair to say that the reports and the statements that you
furnished to the District Attorney’s office included what you had done up to
the time you turned the case over to them?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. In the course of your investigation of this particular offense, did
you develop any other evidence which may have - - may tend to have been
exculpatory or may have tend to shown that Joe Sidney Williams either was not
involved in the offense or not involved in the murder?
A. Myself, in the physical evidence I couldn’t come up with anything.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. PETERSON:
Q. Ms. Price, in your discussions with Mr. Reaves about possible suspects at
the beginning of your investigation, is it unusual to have several possible
suspects at the beginning of an investigation of a murder trial?
A. No, sir, it’s not unusual.
Q. Is there any - - was there any evidence that - - concerning the specific
people you mentioned in your report, the possible suspects that in any way were
exculpatory, that in any way says that Joe Sidney Williams did not do it?
A. I can’t think of any. [CR 5: 1036-48].
Certainly, if Detective Price had a viable suspect in Benny Carroll at the
time of White’s death or at any time prior the verdicts in the case, she would
have said so when she was being questioned under oath about it a year and a
half after the murder. Although she listed eight possible suspects, Benny
Carroll was not one of them. If Benny Carroll wasn’t even a suspect, how is it
possible that the D.A.’s office failed or refused to prosecute him? Yet
Appellants state it as a “fact,” purposefully avoiding all other sources to the
contrary, including Detective Price’s own sworn testimony. [CR 5: 1036-48].
Appellants criticize the Juanita White murder trial by referring to it as an
episode of the “Twilight Zone.” [CR 5: 1016]. The fact remains, however, that
the teeth marks of Joe Sidney Williams were found on the dead body of Juanita
White. [CR 5: 950]. The odontology testimony in that case has never been
discredited in any way.
Pardo never looked at any of David Spence’s written statements. [CR 6:
1178]. He also never spoke with Kareem Quasem, Christine Jewel (Christine Jewel
gave a statement to Texas Ranger George Turner and testified in court that the
towel used to bind the victims belonged her and Spence and that Spence had been
keeping it in his car), [CR 11: 2332], Ray Payne or Jimmy Cooper or read any of
their statements or testimony, [CR 6: 1178] which would have contradicted his
preconceived story line by implicating Spence in a murder for hire scheme gone
awry. [CR 8: 1626-1740] [CR 10: 2120-2133] [CR 11: 2321-2332]. “Spence’s
statements to Ray Payne about the murder of “Gayle” and his loud arguments with
Deeb about that murder implied that he knew of sinister plans or plans gone
awry relating to Gayle Kelley. Quasem heard Deeb and Spence frequently discuss
whether Gayle Kelley ought to be killed for insurance.” Spence v.
Johnson, 80 F.3d at 1004, n. 12. [CR 5: 996].
Pardo never spoke with Attorneys Kettler, Youts or Gobel, nor did he ever
read any of the transcripts reflecting how they represented their clients,
Anthony and Gilbert Melendez. [CR 6: 1172, 1191]. Yet Pardo’s article describes
them as some of “the worst court appointed attorneys.” [CR 5: 1011].
Pardo did not interview Attorney Dick Deguerin, who represented Deeb in his
retrial, to learn that Deeb’s defense theory was that David Spence did in fact
commit the crime, but that Deeb did not hire him to do it. [CR 6: 1191].
Interviewing the attorneys would surely have contradicted Appellants’
preconceived story line, which implies that Deeb’s acquittal is evidence of
Spence’s wrongful conviction.
Pardo claims in his article that Gilbert Melendez received royalties from
the book Careless Whispers in order to help persuade him to testify
falsely. Yet Appellants never bothered to ask Carlton Stowers, the author,
Taylor Publishing, the publisher, Vic Feazell,
Truman Simons or Ned Butler whether it was true, nor did Appellants bother to
check Melendez’s financial records at the prison to ascertain whether he had
deposited any money. [CR 6: 1192]. Feazell’s affidavit establishes that,
“Gilbert Melendez never received any royalties nor any other form of payment
from the Plaintiffs herein or from anyone else that we are aware of for
anything related to Gilbert Melendez’s testimony in the Lake Waco Murder cases
nor anything else of which the Plaintiffs are aware.” [CR 5: 943]. Furthermore,
if Appellant Pardo had asked, Feazell would have told him so and would have
suggested ways he could verify the facts. [CR 5: 943]. Pardo never contacted
Appellee Feazell about anything contained in his Capitol Watch article or the
letter to Judge Allen. [CR 5: 943].
Furthermore, Appellant Pardo “didn’t do anything” to verify that Gilbert
Melendez in fact got “easy time.” [CR 6: 1192]. Pardo implies that Appellees
Feazell and Butler,
with the aide and assistance of Judge Allen, intimidated a witness and
concealed evidence by stating in his article: “when Judge Allen ruled that he
would allow the prosecution to ask questions about the woman’s sex life,
Catherine Breiten decided not to testify.” [CR 6: 1013-14]. Appellant Pardo,
however, did not read the in camera transcripts of Breiten’s testimony
that contradict his preconceived storyline. [CR 6: 1193]. Appellant Pardo
failed to check this obvious source that was readily available to him, yet he
admits he knew “the affair” the prosecution was going to be allowed to ask
Breiten about was between herself and her son-in-law, Ronnie Breiten, whom she
was threatening to implicate in the Lake Waco Murders if he did not resume the
“affair” with her. [CR 6: 1193]. The prosecution never requested that they be
allowed to ask Breiten any questions about her personal affairs other than the
threats of reprisal she had made against her son-in-law and the reason
therefore. [CR 11: 2141-83]. Appellants would have known this had they not
ignored the evidence.
Nevertheless, Pardo chose to mischaracterize the incident as the prosecution
intimidating a witness by threatening to “ask questions about the woman’s sex
life.” [CR 5: 1014]. This is yet another good example of “the use of selective
verification and extrapolation from that selective verification.” It
demonstrates Appellants’ consistent choice of “facts,” and resolution of
inferences, in a light most damaging to Appellees, and it constitutes actual
malice. The truth of this episode would not have fit into Appellants’
preconceived storyline.
Appellant Pardo never spoke with Detective Nicoletti, the detective who
eliminated Tab Harper as a suspect. [CR 6: 1193]. Yet, Appellants state in
Capitol Watch: “Tab Harper was never officially dismissed as a suspect.” [CR 5:
1013]. This is a flat lie that could have easily been checked out. Furthermore,
Judge Black of the Southern District of Texas and the Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals, after reviewing all of the police reports and depositions from the
habeas corpus proceeding, rejected the claim that Tab Harper was a viable
suspect:
We reject this claim; information in the police reports, even if admissible
evidence does not undermine confidence in the jury’s verdict. While Spence’s
argument accepts as true all of the reports that tried to link Harper to the
murders, it ignores contradictory reports. The investigating officers, whose
depositions are in the federal habeas record, unanimously concluded that the
murders were not drug related, that they were not consistent with Harper’s
prior criminal behavior, and or that he had an alibi. Harper was well known as
a bully, and the officers testified that whenever a high-profile crime occurred
locally, young people would call the police station and associate Harper with
the incident. Harper was brought to the police station and questioned about the
Lake Waco murders, but then released for lack of evidence….the police could not
find any persons who would verify that Kenneth was a drug dealer or a customer
or supplier of Tab Harper. The police unanimously concluded the murders were
not drug-related, because of their viciousness and the fact that the bodies
were not hidden or disposed of. Spence’s assertions that Koehne Park was a
location known for teenager drug use and that Jill had cashed her paycheck
before going to the park hardly raise an inference that Kenneth was murdered
because of drugs….The police set no store by the reports of Tab Harper’s
involvement after they investigated it; there is no reason to suspect defense
counsel could have challenged their work based only on innuendo from the police
reports. Spence, 80 F.3d at 998-99.
Appellant Pardo states: “James Russell Bishop failed a lie detector test
when questioned about the murders.” [CR 5: 1013]. This is another fabrication.
If Appellants had checked with the Waco
policemen who attended that attempted polygraph, they would have learned, if
they didn’t know already, that Bishop was unable to complete the polygraph
because of the amount of medication he was on at the time. [CR 2: 438, 446].
Furthermore, Bishop was eliminated as a suspect on other grounds by the Waco
Police Department. [CR 5: 997].
Most revealing of Appellants’ reckless disregard for the truth is the fact
that Appellant Pardo neverexaminedany of the exhibits
admitted into evidence in the Spence trial. [CR 6: 1196]. This outright refusal
to examine the trial exhibits cannot be dismissed or excused as “editorial
choice,” as Appellants would have this Court hold. The examination of trial
exhibits is so basic to any objective investigation into a criminal conviction
that Appellants’ refusal to do so can only be classified as malicious and
reckless. HBO, 983 S.W.2d at 43.
Pardo claims he was not aware that Jesse Ivey gave a statement implicating
David Spence before Ivey even met Appellees Simons, Feazell, or Butler. [CR 6: 1196]. If
Appellants had not purposefully ignored the transcripts of the trial, of which
they are so critical, however, they would have been forced to confront the fact
that Jesse Ivey gave a statement to prison officials implicating Spence in the
Lake Waco Murders long before Ivey was brought to McLennanCounty,
and long before he met Appellees. [CR 5: 949].
Although Appellants blatantly and maliciously accuse the prosecution of
wrongly withholding Brady material from the defense, Pardo admits that he was
not aware that Judge Allen conducted an in camera Brady inspection [CR 6:
1198-99] and that the decision of what evidence to produce was the Judge’s, not
the prosecution’s. [CR 15: 3014-16]. Similarly, in camera Brady inspections
were conducted by Judge Tom McDonald during Spence’s second trial, and by Judge
John McLean during the Deeb trial. Prior to trial in each case, all three
judges received a complete copy of everything and it was all reviewed on
appeal. [CR 15: 3015].
Even though Appellant Pardo makes selective use of polygraph results in his
article in order to bolster his preconceived story line, he testified in his
deposition that he did not know that Gilbert Melendez had failed a polygraph
when he denied involvement in the Lake Waco Murders and, that he had passed
another polygraph when he admitted involvement in the Lake Waco Murders. [CR 5:
943-44] [CR 6: 1199]. Appellant Pardo “doesn’t recall” whether he had been told
that Tony Melendez had failed a polygraph in which he had denied involvement in
the murders. [CR 6: 1199]. However, it would not have mattered to Pardo whether
he knew or not because when asked in his deposition if it would have been
relevant to him he said “No.” “It would not have been relevant.” [CR 6: 1200].
Obviously, this information did not fit into Appellants’ preconceived
storyline. This blatant disregard for the truth constitutes malice. Connaughton,
109 S.Ct. at 2698; Gertz, 680 F.2d at 539. It is another example of the
malicious manner in which Appellants chose the “facts” they used in the article
and letter; how they ignored the true facts and sources which would not support
their libelous statements, resolved obvious ambiguities in a light most
damaging to Appellees, purposely avoided the truth and failed to check obvious
sources. Connaughton, 109 S.Ct. at 2698; Rebozo, 637 F.2d at 382.
A quick interview with any of the Appellees or any source not a perennial
fount of negativism and bias toward Appellees would have revealed the existence
of the polygraphs on the Melendez brothers as well as the other facts
contradictory of Pardo’s libelous storyline. [CR 5: 493]. Appellant Pardo
admits however, that he would not have put this information in his
Capitol Watch article. [CR 6: 1200].
Q. If Tony Melendez denied involvement in a polygraph and failed that,
showing that he, in fact, was involved, was that relevant information that you
would have placed in the Capitol Watch in March 1997?
A. Not in my opinion, no. [CR 6: 1200].
In a Constitutional malice inquiry, this is a “smoking gun” –
purposively avoiding the truth, choosing facts and resolving inferences in a
light most damaging to Appellees, and a steadfastly clinging to a preconceived
storyline that flies in the face of the true facts. Connaughton, 109
S.Ct. at 2698.
Although Pardo is critical of the testimony of Gilbert and Tony Melendez and
alleges that they lied at the behest of Simons, he admits that he never
read their trial testimony. [CR 6: 1201]. If he had bothered, he would have
possessed facts that, would have run afoul of his preconceived storyline and,
would have explained the “inconsistencies” he attacks the Plaintiffs over. [CR
12: 2399-2508] [CR 13: 2515-2719]. Appellants either purposefully avoided this
readily available source or knew the contents thereof and intentionally ignored
it. Either way, it equates to malice. Connaughton, 109 S.Ct. at 2698.
After all, two separate juries believed the testimony of Gilbert Melendez and
one jury heard the testimony of Tony Melendez and believed him. Obviously,
there was evidence worth investigating if Appellants were at all interested in
printing the “truth.”
If at all interested in a fair, true and impartial account of a judicial
proceeding, Appellant Pardo would not have purposefully ignored the Fifth
Circuit’s opinion. [CR 6: 1191]. The Fifth Circuit found as follows:
Spence argues Gilbert’s trial testimony was perjured because he told an
extravagant tale in his 1993 federal habeas deposition concerning how
then-deputy sheriff Simons helped him fabricate his statements, changing the
details of the murders allegedly to match revelations in the ongoing
investigation. The district court was unpersuaded that perjury had been
promoted and so are we….
Third, the differences between Gilbert’s and Tony’s trial testimony only
concern details of their involvement in the murders, leading even Spence, in
his appellate brief, to concede their similarity in relating the basic course
of events. Spence’s hideous cruelty permeates the testimony of each man in
graphic and startlingly parallel particulars, e.g. Spence’s systematic
torture of Jill, the tag team rapes of both girls, Spence’s insistence that
Kenneth watch as he raped Jill, and Spence’s gleefully sitting Kenneth’s body
upright at SpeeglevillePark. From the
discrepancies in Gilbert’s and Tony’s testimony, one could more reasonably
conclude that there was no fabrication (emphasis added). If Simons and
Feazell had masterminded a conspiracy falsely to convict Spence, surely their
efforts would have been to harmonize the brother’s versions of the murders as
closely as possible. Spence v. Johnson, 80 F.3d at 997.
Although Appellant Pardo accuses Simons of obtaining perjured testimony and
Feazell and Butler
of knowingly putting it before the jury, Pardo refused to listen to the tape
recordings of those confessions that show that Gilbert Melendez was not coached
or intimidated. [CR 6: 1204]. These tapes were easily available to Appellant as
were all the other documents, transcripts and exhibits in the case. [CR 5:
947].
Furthermore, Pardo never spoke to, or even tried to contact, Attorney Aubrey
Williams who represented Gilbert Melendez early in the proceedings. [CR 6:
1205]. If he had, Appellant would have learned that Gilbert Melendez, on more
than one occasion, confessed his involvement in committing the Lake Waco
Murders with David Spence. [CR 6: 1205]. This information would not have fit
into Pardo’s preconceived storyline, so once again he intentionally and
knowingly refused to consider it.
Appellant Pardo never took the time to read the Fifth Circuit’s assessment
of his allegations before printing them in Capitol Watch or delivering the
letter to Judge Allen accusing Appellees of committing crimes. [CR 6: 1000].
The Fifth Circuit previously rejected any notion of any such crimes having been
committed. Spence v. Johnson, 80 F.3d at 997. The difference between the
Fifth Circuit’s published conclusions and Appellants’ published conclusions
however, is that the Fifth Circuit considered all of the available evidence
while Appellants purposefully ignored relevant portions of it. The Fifth
Circuit was interested in ascertaining the truth while Appellants were
interested in avoiding the truth. This is clear evidence of malice. Connaughton,
109 S.Ct. at 2698.
Appellants viciously attacked the odontology evidence; the honesty and
integrity of Dr. Homer Campbell, and the honesty and integrity of the
prosecutors who sponsored the odontology evidence. [CR 5: 1012-13]. However,
Appellants ignored Dr. Campbell’s qualifications and background as a respected
expert in the field of odontology. [CR 6: 1205]. More importantly, Appellant
Pardo admits he never even read the odontology testimony, he never looked at
the exhibits and, he didn’t realize that Spence had his own expert odontologist
testify at both trials. [CR 6: 1202]. Had Appellants not ignored this evidence,
they would have learned that Spence’s expert, Dr. Jerry Vail, testified that
the marks on the victims were human bite marks and that they may have been made
by Spence, but not to the exclusion of everyone else. [CR 5: 992] [CR 7: 1410]
[CR 15: 3014].
Although Pardo criticizes and maligns the odontology evidence and Dr.
Campbell, he never contacted Dr. Campbell. [CR 6: 1205]. Appellant Pardo
labeled Dr. Campbell a fraud and a conspirator, but he admits in his deposition
that he didn’t read the Fifth Circuit opinion or any of the trial testimony.
[CR 6: 1191]. If he had, Pardo would have known about Dr. Vail and that Pardo’s
allegation that “the exact same evidence used by Dr. Campbell (was sent) to
five leading dental experts” (the “blind panel”) was utterly false. [CR 5: 992]
[CR 7: 1342-1460] [CR 14: 2745]. The “blind panel” did not receive the exact
same evidence used by Dr. Campbell. [CR 14: 2745]. They only received a few
poor quality five by seven photographs, not the enhanced photos used by Dr.
Campbell. [CR 14: 2745].
The late Judge Tom Bartlet of Marlin, Texas,
used to say: “It’s easy to express an opinion when you are not burdened by a
knowledge of the facts.” That is precisely what happened with the “blind
panel.” They had not been given all of the facts.
If Appellant Pardo had bothered to ask Dr. Campbell or Vic Feazell about the allegations before labeling
the Appellees criminals and conspirators, he would have learned that Dr.
Campbell’s findings had been presented for peer review and that Dr. Lowell
Levine of New York, had confirmed Dr. Campbell’s findings as had another
respected forensic odontologist. [CR 5: 994]. The Fifth Circuit commented: “Even
Spence’s rebuttal expert in this field could not rule out the possibility that
Spence’s teeth caused the wounds…” Spence v. Johnson, 80 F.3d at 995.
Appellant Pardo also purposefully ignored the fact that the odontology
evidence in the Juanita White murder case proved the bite marks on Juanita
White’s dead body belonged to Joe Sidney Williams. [CR 5: 932, 950]. That
testimony has never been discredited in any way other than through implication
by comparing it to the false statements made about the odontology evidence in
the Spence case.
Appellant Pardo implies that the witness, James Jordan, may yet recant his
testimony against Spence, yet Pardo admits he has never spoken with James
Jordan. [CR 5: 1012]. Appellant Pardo’s statement concerning James Jordan is
therefore an intentional and blatant fabrication intended solely to bolster his
preconceived storyline that Appellees fabricated testimony and convinced
witnesses to lie under oath. Jordan
was no longer in prison at the time he testified against Spence and, therefore,
he had nothing to gain by testifying. Spence v. Johnson, 80 F.3d at
1003. Furthermore, on appeal, Spence never attacked the testimony of James
Jordan, to whom Spence confided not only his guilt but also striking details of
the offense and the possible motive of jealousy. Spence v Johnson, 80
F.3d at 1003.
Appellant Pardo never asked Vic Feazell
or any other credible source about the allegations of conjugal visits by
inmates in the D.A.’s office. [CR 5: 943-46]. If he had, he would have obtained
convincing evidence that it never happened. [CR 5: 944]. The D.A.’s office was
small and crowded and so busy with traffic, even on weekends, that the
allegations are impossible. [CR 5: 944]. The only office with a couch was the
personal office of Feazell. [CR 5: 944]. That office was kept locked when
Feazell was not present and neither Simons nor Butler possessed a key. [CR 5: 944]. The
library had a glass pane in the door and most of the other offices housed more
than one lawyer and were incapable of being locked. [CR 5: 944]. However,
Appellant Pardo took the word of biased sources, Ivey and Mikel, without ever
obtaining a shred of corroborating evidence or balancing his story with a
denial.
Evidence of Malice From Appellant McLemore’s Deposition
Appellant McLemore did nothing more than Pardo to check the reliability of
their sources. [CR 6: 1213-36]. McLemore engaged in a systematic effort to
purposely avoid the truth; failed to check obvious sources; and used selective
verification and extrapolation from that selective verification. [CR 6: 1215,
1218, 1220, 1223]. McLemore resolved every obvious ambiguity in a way most
damaging to Appellees; he knew his sources had a bias; he concocted a
preconceived storyline, and his choice of facts, and resolution of inferences,
was solely designed to support his preconceived storyline. He ignored all other
facts, inferences, sources, records, and information that did not fit neatly
within the preconceived storyline. By definition therefore, McLemore acted with
malice in writing the Capital Watch article. Connaughton, 109
S.Ct. 2698.
McLemore testified in his deposition that Pardo reviewed and approved the
Capitol Watch article and that the whole thing was Pardo’s idea. [CR 6: 1215].
He never interviewed or tried to contact any of the odontologists on the “blind
panel.” [CR 6: 1215]. Moreover, McLemore did not know what photos the “blind
panel” was provided or what they reviewed, yet he recklessly and maliciously
writes that they reviewed the “exact same evidence.” [CR 6: 1220].
McLemore admits that it was “possible” that Gilbert Melendez’s polygraph
results “might have been significant” [CR 6: 1221] although his boss, Pardo,
disagrees. [CR 6: 1220]. Gilbert Melendez failed one polygraph when he denied
involvement in the Lake Waco Murders and passed another when he admitted his
involvement. [CR 5: 943]. Even though McLemore admits that the polygraph might
have been significant, he and Pardo chose not to include that information in
the Capitol Watch article although they reference other polygraphs of other
individuals in order to bolster their preconceived storyline. [CR 5: 1010-27].
Even though Capitol Watch states that “new evidence shows that Spence may
have been a convenient scapegoat,” McLemore admits that it is possible there
was no new evidence. [CR 6: 1223]. The fact is there was no “new evidence.” The
Fifth Circuit had already concluded that these allegations were unfounded. [CR
5: 981-98]. McLemore admits that all the affidavits provided to him and Pardo
had already been used in the federal habeas proceeding. [CR 6: 1224]. McLemore
was also aware that Ms. Breiten admitted that she “made up” the story about her
son-in-law. [CR 6: 1224]. Yet he intentionally failed to mention in the Capital
Watch article that Breiten had recanted. [CR 6: 1227].
In summary, it is clear that Appellants intentionally and blatantly refused
to conduct even a basic investigation before accusing the Appellees of criminal
conspiracy. Appellants claimed to have conducted an extensive investigation
into a wrongful criminal conviction, yet they refused to even read the trial
transcripts or view the exhibits. Instead, they concocted a preconceived
storyline and purposefully avoided every fact, record and source to the
contrary. This cannot be considered “editorial choice” by any stretch of
the imagination, and the result leaves the ordinary reader with the overall
impression that Appellees engaged in a criminal conspiracy to frame David
Spence for capital murder.
Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to Appellees, taking as
true all inferences in favor of Appellees and disregarding all evidence to the
contrary, it is clear that genuine issues of material fact exist with regard to
malice and the reckless disregard for the truth of the statements published by
Appellants. Accordingly, this Court should overrule Appellants’ issue number
three.
Document Keywords: David Spence, capital murder, lake murders, capital
punishment, death penalty, Vic Feazell,
Truman Simons, Gilbert Melendez, Lake Waco Murders, Careless Whispers, Fred
Dannen, Jill Montgomery,. Triple murders.
Fifth Circuit
Court of Appeals Opinion on David Wayne Spence Capital Murder
SPENCE v. JOHNSON
David Wayne SPENCE, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Gary L. JOHNSON, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice,
Institutional Division, Respondent-Appellee.
Nos. 94-20212, 94-20213.
United States
Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
March 29, 1996.
Petitioner, who had been convicted of two murders and
sentenced to death, sought habeas corpus relief. The United States
District Court for the Southern District of Texas, Norman W. Black, Chief
Judge, denied relief, and petitioner appealed. The Court of Appeals,
Edith H. Jones, Circuit Judge, held that: (1) state did not violate
Brady; (2)state did not knowingly present false testimony, and (3)
errors, taking cumulatively, did not violate fundamental fairness of
trial.
Affirmed.
1. Habeas Corpus [key] 842, 846
In habeas corpus case, Court of Appeals reviews
district court's legal conclusions de novo, applying same standard as
district court, and its factual conclusions for clear error.
2. Criminal Law [key] 700(2.1)
To establish Brady claim, habeas petitioner must
demonstrate that prosecution suppressed evidence, evidence was favorable
to petitioner, and evidence was material, that is, there is reasonable
probability that, had evidence been disclosed to defense, result of
proceeding would be different; "reasonable probability" is probability
sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.
See publication Words and Phrases for other judicial
constructions and definitions.
3. Criminal Law [key] 700(3)
When nondisclosed evidence is merely cumulative of
other evidence, no Brady violation occurs.
4. Criminal Law [key] 700(4)
Information state had not disclosed concerning witness
who had accepted plea bargain to avoid facing death penalty was not
material, as required to support defendant's claim of Brady violation,
where witness' testimony was supported by other evidence, undisclosed
evidence was cumulative of other evidence impeaching witness, and state
presented other evidence of defendant's guilt.
5. Criminal Law [key] 700(4)
State did not violate Brady by not disclosing state's
initial "overtures" of immunity to witness; even if state's
overture might have influenced witness' decision to make his initial
statements, that effect could hardly be considered material to jury's
consideration of his truthfulness after they learned of his plea bargain.
6. Criminal Law [key] 700(4)
State did not violate Brady by not disclosing that
deputy sheriff and district attorney orally promised they would not
oppose witness' release on parole from his two concurrent life sentences
in prison; fact that such promises were made was not material, since no
reasonable jury would have believed witness fabricated his testimony,
incriminating himself and his brother in kidnapping, rape and murder, and
pleaded guilty to two life sentences in prison based on oral promises
that two individuals would not oppose his parole efforts some time in the
distant future.
7. Criminal Law [key] 700(4)
State did not violate Brady by failing to disclose
that witness received unsupervised visits with his girlfriend while in
jail; even if allegations were true, no reasonable jury would have
believed that witness fabricated his testimony and statements given over
the course of two and half years just to receive a few conjugal visits.
8. Criminal Law [key] 706(2)
State did not knowingly present false testimony about
murders, despite conflicting sworn statement in witness' own federal
habeas deposition; it was unlikely that witness had any incentive to
fabricate testimony incriminating himself and his brother for multiple
murders, kidnappings and rapes.
9. Criminal Law [key] 706(2)
State did not knowingly present false testimony of
witness that murder defendant told him to draw on bandana a picture of
knife and two girls like the victims; affidavit on which defendant based
his assertion related inadmissible hearsay, and witness' failure to tell
police about the bandana when initially interviewed did not prove he lied
at trial, but only that he may have been reluctant to get involved when
first approached.
10. Criminal Law [key] 700(3)
Undisclosed police department reports that might have
implicated other persons in murders were material, for Brady purposes.
11. Criminal Law [key] 700(3)
State's nondisclosure of police report implicating
another individual as a suspect in murders did not undermine confidence
in jury's verdict, as required to establish Brady violation; suspect was
well-known as a bully, and officers testified that whenever high-profile
crime occurred locally, young people would call police station and
associate suspect with the incident.
12. Criminal Law [key] 700(3)
Undisclosed police reports suggesting that murder
victim was in debt over drugs and was a "known drug associate"
of another individual were not material, as required to support Brady
claim, and would not have supported defense theory that murders reflected
failed drug deal.
13. Criminal Law [key] 700(2.1)
Determination of whether evidence withheld by
prosecution was material, for Brady purposes, must be made collectively,
not item-by-item.
14. Criminal Law [key] 700(3, 4)
Considered cumulatively, evidence withheld by state,
including benefits to state's witness for testifying and police reports,
was not material, as required to support defendant's Brady claim.
15. Habeas Corpus [key] 742
To receive evidentiary hearing, habeas corpus
petitioner must allege facts which, if proven, would entitle him to
relief.
16. Constitutional Law [key] 268(10)
Habeas Corpus [key] 490(5)
Admission of testimony by state's forensic
odontologist at state trial did not violate fundamental fairness under
due process clause, as required for habeas corpus relief; this
evidentiary issue was fully and competently aired in state courts.
U.S.C.A. Const. Amend. 5.
17. Habeas Corpus [key] 688
In habeas corpus action, district court did not abuse
its discretion in refusing to admit expert reports filed by defendant
after court's discovery deadline, without explanation.
18. Habeas Corpus [key] 447
Cumulative error doctrine provides relief only when
constitutional errors committed in state trial court so fatally infected
trial that they violated trial's fundamental fairness.
19. Habeas Corpus [key] 753
In determining whether cumulative error doctrine
provides relief, court must review record as a whole to determine whether
errors more likely than not caused a suspect verdict.
20. Habeas Corpus [key] 480, 490(5), 491
Defendant was not deprived of fundamentally fair
trial, as required for relief under cumulative error doctrine, by state's
non-disclosure of evidence, admission of allegedly perjured testimony and
admission of testimony by state's forensic odontologist.
21. Habeas Corpus [key] 480
Any error by district court in applying materiality
standard under Brady was harmless.
22. Criminal Law [key] 700(4)
State did not violate Brady by failing to disclose
that inmates who testified against defendant were given special
privileges in exchange for their testimony; finding that most of the
witnesses had not received such privileges was not clearly erroneous, and
inmates who did receive undisclosed privileges were effectively
cross-examined by prosecution.
23. Habeas Corpus [key] 491
Recanting affidavits and witnesses are viewed with
extreme suspicion.
24. Criminal Law [key] 942(2), 958(4)
District court, faced with motion for new trial
predicated on contention that witness has provided recanting affidavit,
must compare trial record with affidavit of recantation and determine for
himself whether affidavit is worthy of belief.
25. Criminal Law [key] 700(4)
State's failure to disclose certain privileges granted
to some inmate witnesses was not material, as required for defendant to
establish Brady violation, given voluminous amount of testimony and
evidence against defendant.
26. Criminal Law [key] 706(2)
There was no support for defendant's claim that state
induced fabricated testimony of inmate witnesses, and even if two
witnesses testified falsely and even if district court incorrectly
employed outcome-determinative approach to materiality of their
testimony, no constitutional error occurred, as it was not reasonably
likelihood [sic] that witnesses' [sic] would have affected jury's
judgment.
27. Criminal Law [key] 700(3)
Undisclosed information supporting defendant's theory
that victim was murdered over drugs was not exculpatory or material, as
required to support defendant's Brady claim; other evidence eliminated
individual who allegedly threatened victim over drug debts as a suspect.
28. Criminal Law [key] 700(3)
Inadmissible evidence may be material under Brady.
29. Criminal Law [key] 700(3, 4)
Considered cumulatively, undisclosed evidence,
including special privileges given to inmate witnesses, police reports
and evidence of victim's alleged status as drug user, did not undermine
confidence in jury's verdict, as required to support defendant's Brady
claim.
30. Habeas Corpus [key] 441
Taking his arguments as a whole, defendant was not
deprived of fundamentally fair trial, as required to support his claim of
cumulative error; undisclosed evidence was not material, defendant could
not establish his claims regarding police reports and state's admission
of expert's testimony did not violate Eighth Amendment. U.S.C.A. Const.
Amend. 8.
----------
Appeals from the United
States District Court for the Southern
District of Texas.
Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, and DAVIS and JONES, Circuit Judges.
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
In 1982, David Wayne Spence tortured and stabbed to
death three teenagers in Waco,
Texas. He has been
convicted and sentenced to die for two of the murders in Texas courts and
has been denied habeas corpus relief by the federal district court.
Spence now seeks relief from this court. We find no reversible error and affirm.
I. FACTS
On the morning of July 13, 1982, Jill Montgomery and
Raylene Rice drove to Waco to pick up and
cash Jill's paycheck from the FortFisherRangerMuseum and to meet
their friend Kenneth Franks. Later that day, the three drove to KoehnePark,
located on the banks of LakeWaco. They were
never seen alive again by their loved ones. Their bodies were found in a
wooded area of SpeeglevillePark, across the lake from KoehnePark,
a day later. Their last moments are recorded in the record of the two
trials.
After arriving at the park, Kenneth, Jill, and Raylene
encountered Spence and his cohorts, Anthony (Tony) and Gilbert Melendez.
The six "hung out" together for some time drinking beer and
smoking marijuana joints. After a few hours, in the evening, Spence
persuaded the group to go to a convenience store and buy more beer. En
route in his car, Spence attempted to grab Jill's breast. When she
resisted, they argued heatedly. Spence then warned Kenneth and Jill he
was going to "get even" with them "for some dope that he
[Kenneth) had burned me for." Kenneth denied he had
"burned" Spence for anything.
Instead of driving to the convenience store, Spence
turned and drove back into a wooded area in KoehnePark.
After everyone got out of the car, he produced a knife and in vile terms
ordered Jill and Raylene to undress. The girls immediately complied.
Spence then forced Jill to walk with him to another part of the park.
Gilbert ordered Raylene to get into the car. Gilbert then raped her.
Spence told Anthony to bring Kenneth, forcibly, to
where he was with Jill, so that Kenneth could watch him rape Jill. Spence
forced Jill to the ground, sat on her legs, and rubbed her breasts with
his knife. He then raped her while Kenneth and Anthony watched. After
Spence finished, Anthony traded places with him and raped Jill. Spence
marched Kenneth back to the car where he raped Raylene.
After this rape, Spence returned to Jill. He cut her
breasts and repeatedly stabbed her. At some point, Spence bit off one of
Jill's nipples. He then handed his knife to Anthony, telling him to stab
Jill. When Spence believed that Anthony was not properly stabbing her,
Spence took back his knife and finally inflicted the lethal wounds.
Spence then returned to the car and stabbed Kenneth to
death. After this second murder, Spence grabbed Raylene and repeatedly
stabbed her. He also ordered Tony to stab her. He then bit her body
several times and rammed a piece of wood --which he referred to as his
"lovestick" -- into her vagina.
While Spence remained with the bodies, Anthony and
Gilbert drove to Spence's mother's home and exchanged the car for
Gilbert's pick-up truck. During their absence, Spence bound the bodies.
When the Melendezes returned, the trio threw the bodies into the back of
the truck and, at Spence's direction, drove to SpeeglevillePark.
They dumped the dead teenagers' bodies apart from each other in an
off-the-road area. In placing Kenneth's body, Spence boasted to Tony that
the police "were going to freak out when they find this boy because
he will be sitting up." Spence and the Melendez brothers divided up
several hundred dollars Spence had taken from Jill's wallet.
The tortured bodies of Jill, Raylene, and Kenneth were
found the next day.
From the federal habeas record, it transpires that
intensive investigation of the highly publicized murders yielded no clear
suspects, leading the Waco Police Department to reduce the case to
inactive status in September. That is to say, the department no longer
committed extraordinary resources to the case. One dogged police officer,
Truman Simons, volunteered to pursue the investigation and continued to
work on it even after he changed jobs and became a jailer employed by the
McLennanCounty Sheriffs Office. After
January 1993 [sic], a newly elected district attorney, Vic Feazell, encouraged the investigation. By
late March 1993 [sic], Simons persuaded Gilbert Melendez to confess his
involvement and that of Spence in the crimes. Gilbert and Anthony Melendez,
Spence and Muneer Deeb were indicted for the capital murders in November
1983. Spence was tried first in McLennan County for killing Jill, while
his second capital murder prosecution was moved to BrazosCounty.
The evidence in the two trials differs somewhat, as will be described
below.
II. JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS
In July 1984, Spence was convicted in the 54th JudicialDistrictCourtofMcLennanCounty for the
capital murder of Jill Montgomery. Following a separate punishment
hearing, the jury affirmatively answered the court's special issues
required by the former Texas
Code of Criminal Procedure Article 37.071. Accordingly, the court
sentenced Spence to death. The Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Spence's conviction and sentence, Spence
v. Texas,
795 S.W.2d 743 (Tex.Crim. App.1990) (en banc), cert. denied, 499 U.S. 932,
111 S.Ct. 1339, 113 L.Ed.2d 271(1991). Spence then filed an application
for a writ of habeas corpus with the convicting court. The court adopted
the State's response as its findings and recommended relief be denied.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied relief based on the trial
court's findings, Ex parte Spence, Application No. 15,346-03 (Dec. 12,
1991).
In September 1985, Spence was convicted after a change
of venue in the 85th JudicialDistrictCourtofBrazosCounty for the
capital murder of Kenneth Franks. Again, after a separate punishment
hearing, Spence was sentenced to death. The Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed his conviction and sentence, Spence v.
Texas, No. 69,554 (Tex.Crim.App.1990),
cert. denied, 501 U.S.
1239,111 S.Ct 2875, 115 L.Ed.2d 1038 (1991). Spence's application for a
writ of habeas corpus was denied by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals based
on the trial court's recommendation. Ex parte Spence, Application No.
15,346-03 (Dec. 12, 1991).
In December 1991, Spence filed federal petitions for
writ of habeas corpus regarding each conviction and sentence. The
petitions were assigned to one judge. After reviewing his allegations in each
case, the court denied the petitions in separate opinions and orders
dated April 29, 1992. Spence filed a voluminous motion to alter or amend
the judgments. The district court consolidated its proceedings and
ordered an evidentiary hearing on Spence's allegations that the State had
suppressed material exculpatory evidence. The parties agreed the best way
to develop the evidentiary record was through depositions and affidavits,
followed by massive briefing and oral argument. Numerous depositions were
taken and numerous affidavits submitted. After the hearing, the district
court re-entered, with very brief opinions, its earlier judgments denying
habeas corpus relief.
This court granted certificates of probable cause to
appeal, heard consolidated oral argument, and treats both cases in this
opinion. For convenience, the claims raised in the Kenneth Franks case
are discussed first, followed by the Jill Montgomery case issues.
III. DISCUSSION
[1] This court reviews the district court's legal
conclusions de novo, applying the same standard as the district court,
and its factual conclusions for clear error. Amos v. Scott, 61 F.3d 333,
337-38 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ---, 116 S.Ct. 557, 133
L.Ed.2d 458 (1995) (citations omitted). "A finding of fact is
clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the
reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with a firm and definite
conviction that a mistake has been committed." In re Henderson, 18 F.3d 1305, 1307 (5th Cir.), cert denied,
--- U.S.
---, 115 S.Ct. 573,130 L.Ed.2d 490 (1994) (internal quotations and
citations omitted).
A. Spence's Claims Regarding Kenneth Franks's Murder
Critical to evaluating Spence's claims is a general
understanding of the evidence offered at the trial for capital murder of
Kenneth Franks.
By the time of the Kenneth Franks trial, both Gilbert
and Tony Melendez had agreed to testify for the state, each having pled
guilty to two life sentences while the third capital murder indictment
hung over their heads. The State introduced expert evidence identifying
Spence as the source of Jill's bite injuries. The State also offered
incriminating statements Spence had made to Regina Rosenbaum and inmate David
Puryear. Spence's defense was predicated on the lack of conventional
demonstrative evidence connecting him to the crime; the internal and
mutual inconsistencies in the testimony and statements of Gilbert and
Tony Melendez; the asserted lack of corroborating evidence for the
Melendez brothers' version of events; and the unreliability of the
State's forensic odontology evidence. The defense also sought to show
that Gilbert's truck was inoperable on the night of the crimes and that
people present in Koehne Park that evening did not recall seeing Spence's
group with the victims.
Challenging the constitutionality of his conviction,
Spence contends that (1) the State failed to disclose some benefits
Gilbert Melendez received for his testimony; (2) the State knowingly
presented perjured testimony from Gilbert and David Puryear; (3) the
State suppressed Waco Police Department reports from citizens who
believed they possessed evidence linking other persons to the murders;
(4) the federal district court erred in not granting a hearing on the
reliability of the State's odontology evidence; and (5) the district
court failed to evaluate the cumulative effect of the above violations.
1. Gilbert Melendez's Testimony
Spence argues that the State violated Brady v.
Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963), by failing
to disclose certain privileges and benefits Gilbert Melendez received in
exchange for his testimony. The standards for a Brady violation are well
settled. In Brady, the Supreme Court held that "the suppression by
the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates
due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or punishment,
irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution." Id. at 87, 83
S.Ct. at 1196-97. The Court further established in Giglio v. U.S., 405 U.S. 150, 154-55, 92 S.Ct.
763, 766, 31 L.Ed.2d 104 (1972), that:
"when the reliability of a given witness may well be determinative
of guilt or innocence, nondisclosure of evidence affecting credibility
falls within the general rule of Brady.... Here, the Government's case
depended almost entirely on [one witness's] testimony. [The person's]
credibility as a witness was therefore an important issue in the case,
and evidence of any understanding or agreement as to a future prosecution
would be relevant to his credibility and the jury was entitled to know of
it."
Id. at
154-55, 92 S.Ct. at 766.
[2] To establish a Brady claim, a habeas petitioner
must demonstrate that (1) the prosecution suppressed evidence, (2) the
evidence was favorable to the petitioner, and (3) the evidence was
material. U.S. v. Ellender, 947 F.2d 748, 756 (5th Cir.1991) (citations
omitted). In assessing the materiality of suppressed evidence, the
Supreme Court explained that "evidence is material only if there is
a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the
defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different." U.S. v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667,
682, 105 S.Ct. 3375, 3383, 87 L.Ed.2d 481 (1985). "A 'reasonable
probability' is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome." Id.,
at 682, 105 S.Ct. at 3383. Recently, the Court further observed that a
"reasonable probability" of a different result is shown when
the non-disclosure "could reasonably be taken to put the whole case
in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the jury
verdict." Kyles v. Whitley, --- U.S. ---, 115 S.Ct. 1555, 1566, 131
L.Ed.2d 490 (1995) (footnote omitted). "[A] showing of materiality
does not require demonstration by a preponderance that disclosure of the
suppressed evidence would have resulted ultimately in the defendant's
acquittal." Id.
at ---, 115 S.Ct. at 1566. Finally, the materiality inquiry is applied to
"the suppressed evidence collectively, not item-by-item." Id. at ---, 115
S.Ct. at 1567.
[3] Fifth Circuit decisions have expanded upon these
statements, holding that "[t]he materiality of Brady evidence
depends almost entirely on the value of the evidence relative to the
other evidence mustered by the State." Smith v. Black, 904 F.2d
950,967 (5th Cir.1990), judgment vacated on other grounds, 503 U.S. 930,
112 S.Ct. 1463, 117 L.Ed.2d 609 (1992). "[W]hen the testimony of a
witness who might have been impeached is strongly corroborated by
additional evidence supporting a guilty verdict, the undisclosed evidence
is generally not found to be material." Wilson v. Whitley, 28 F.3d
433,439 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ---, 115 S.Ct. 754,130
L.Ed.2d 653 (1994). Similarly, when the undisclosed evidence is merely
cumulative of other evidence, no Brady violation occurs. See Allridge v.
Scott 41 F.3d 213, 218 (5th Cir.1994), cert. denied --- U.S. ---,
115 S.Ct. 1959, 131 L.Ed.2d 851(1995).
[4] Regarding Gilbert Melendez, Spence complains that
the State failed to disclose that (a) Gilbert's initial cooperation was
induced by the prosecution's insinuation that he could be granted
immunity from prosecution for truthfully assisting the state; (b) the
then-district attorney Feazell and investigator Simons orally promised
not to oppose Gilbert's release on parole; and (c) Gilbert received
special privileges with his girlfriend while in the McLennan county jail
leading up to his trial testimony. Because the State does not deny the
nondisclosure of this information, the issue before this court is whether
the evidence is material. Like the district court, we conclude it is not.
Before addressing Spence's specific allegations, it is important to set
forth several overriding considerations against finding the undisclosed
evidence to be material. First, Gilbert's testimony was supported by
other evidence presented at Spence's trial. Gilbert's
eyewitness-testimony was closely corroborated by his brother Tony, whose
testimony has not been attacked at all by Spence. It was also consistent with
the State's autopsy reports, [footnote: 1. Gilbert testified, for
instance, about Spence's use of the "lovestick", which
inflicted injury consistent with the vaginal injuries observed on
Raylene.], the testimony of Regina Ann Rosenbaum and David Puryear
[footnote: 2. At Spence's direction, Puryear, a fellow inmate, decorated
a bandana for Spence with pictures of a blonde and a brunette girl, like
the victims, and a knife.], and the odontological evidence [footnote: 3.
We later address Spence's challenges to some of this evidence and his
contention that Gilbert's and Puryear's testimonies were fabricated.].
Second, the undisclosed evidence is cumulative of
other evidence impeaching Gilbert. Gilbert admitted at trial his prior
convictions for assault with intent to murder and aggravated sexual
assault, both of which resulted in prison terms. Gilbert further
testified that he had been charged with three counts of capital murder
for the deaths of Jill, Raylene, and Kenneth. He stated that he had received
two life sentences in prison in exchange for his testimony against
Spence, and that he had accepted the plea bargain to avoid facing the
death penalty. Also at trial, Spence's lawyer questioned Gilbert
extensively about inconsistencies between his testimony and statements
made to investigators about the crimes in March and April, 1983. Gilbert
conceded that portions of his previous statements relating details of the
murders had not been true, in part because he was initially concealing
his brother's role. Thus, the jury was amply informed about Gilbert's
criminal record, his inconsistent statements, and his motives for
testifying. Defense counsel emphasized Gilbert's untrustworthiness in
closing arguments.
Third, the State presented other evidence of Spence's
guilt. Most prominent was the testimony of Tony Melendez to essentially
the same gruesome facts of the murders. Consistent with the Melendez
brothers' testimony of the manner of the victims' deaths, the Dallas
County medical examiner testified that Jill, Raylene, and Kenneth had
sustained multiple stab wounds and that the bite marks on Jill's and
Raylene's bodies had been inflicted near the time of their deaths. Also,
the State presented evidence that Spence had made general admissions of
guilt soon after the murders. A few weeks after the murders, he told Regina Ann Rosenbaum and others present in his
apartment that he had taken some girls to LakeWaco
and raped them; no other similar crime was reported to police. Spence
told David Puryear that he had committed the LakeWaco
murders and was glad he had done so. Further, the State's forensic
odontological expert concluded that the bite marks on Jill's and
Raylene's bodies were inflicted by Spence. Even Spence's rebuttal expert
in this field could not rule out the possibility that Spence's teeth
caused the wounds, although he believed there was too little evidence to
support a firm conclusion.
[5-7] Keeping in mind the general state of the
evidence, we address Spence's specific Brady arguments regarding Gilbert
Melendez. [footnote: 4. Repeatedly, Spence asserts that because the
federal district court did not specifically address certain underlying
facts related to his claims, e.g. the potential offer of immunity to
Gilbert or the photos of Gilbert and his girlfriend in the D.A.'s office,
the court did not adequately analyze the case. We strenuously disagree.
The court took extraordinary measures in permitting Spence to embark on
voluminous discovery pursuant to his motions for new trial after the
court's first opinions in these habeas cases were written. Detailed
additional briefing was undertaken. The court held a hearing on the
post-trial motions and then concluded that his original opinions were
still valid. The record reflects the court's efforts to uncover, not
obfuscate, the facts. That his conclusions on rehearing do not mirror the
vehemence of Spence's arguments is no criticism of their ultimate
accuracy.]
(i) Spence contends that the State violated Brady by
not disclosing its initial "overtures" of immunity, which
induced Gilbert to testify against him. This argument is unpersuasive.
As the federal habeas testimony shows, the State's
initial immunity offer to Gilbert was based on his telling the complete
truth about the murders. Gilbert admits that he did not tell the complete
truth in his early statements and thus foreclosed any chance of immunity.
Having misled the police in his early statements, Gilbert was left with
two choices: he could refuse to cooperate and face prosecutions for
capital murder, or he could plea bargain and avoid the death penalty.
Gilbert chose the latter course and explained his plea bargain to the
jury. Even if the state's overture toward immunity might have influenced
Gilbert's decision to make his initial statements, that effect could
hardly be considered material to the jury's consideration of his
truthfulness after they had learned of his plea bargain. Any hint that
Gilbert might have originally falsely incriminated himself had vanished.
(ii) Spence next argues the State violated Brady by
not disclosing that Truman Simons, then a deputy sheriff, and Vic Feazell, then the district attorney of
McLennan County, orally promised they would not oppose Gilbert's release
on parole from his two concurrent life sentences in prison. The state now
concedes that such oral promises were made and have been complied with by
those two individuals. Nevertheless, the fact that such promises were
made is not material on the record before us. No reasonable jury would
have believed Gilbert fabricated his testimony -- incriminating himself
and his brother in kidnapping, rape, and murder -- and pleaded guilty to
two life sentences in prison based on oral promises that two individuals
would not oppose his parole efforts some time inthe distant future. Such
promises were hardly a guarantee that Melendez would be paroled, nor did
they bind future McLennanCounty officials.
(iii) Spence's last assertion, concerning the State's
failure to disclose that Gilbert received unsupervised visits with his
girlfriend while in the McLennan County jail, is also without merit. Even
if the allegations are true, no reasonable jury would have believed that
Gilbert fabricated his testimony and statements given over the course of
two and a half years, from March 1983 to trial in September 1985, just to
receive a few conjugal visits. This evidence is not material.
2. Perjury Allegations
Spence contends the State violated Napue v. Illinois,
360 U.S. 264, 79 S.Ct. 1173, 3 L.Ed.2d 1217 (1959), by failing to correct
perjured testimony given by Gilbert and David Puryear. In Napue, the
Supreme Court held that a prosecutor's knowing use of, or deliberate
failure to correct, perjured testimony, violates a defendant's Fourteenth
Amendment rights. 360 U.S.
at 271, 79 S.Ct. at 1178-79. However, the Supreme Court also established
that a defendant will only receive a new trial if there is a reasonable
likelihood that evidence of the perjury would have affected the guilty
verdict. U.S. v.
Agurs, 427 U.S.
97, 96 S.Ct. 2392, 49 L.Ed.2d 342 (1976). We conclude the district court
did not clearly err in finding that neither Gilbert's nor Puryear's trial
testimony was perjured. Further, we conclude that Spence's claims, even
if proven, would have not have affected the jury's verdict.
a. Gilbert's Testimony
[8] Spence argues Gilbert's trial testimony was
perjured because he told an extravagant tale in his 1993 federal habeas
deposition concerning how then-deputy sheriff Simons helped him fabricate
his statements, changing the details of the murders allegedly to match
revelations in the ongoing investigation. The district court was
unpersuaded that perjury had been promoted, and so are we. First, as has
been repeated, Gilbert's trial testimony incriminated himself and his
brother for multiple murders, kidnappings, and rapes, for which they each
received two life sentences in prison. The third capital murder
indictment remains outstanding. It seems highly unlikely that Gilbert,
having accepted such consequences as these, would retain any incentive to
fabricate his testimony about the murders.
Second, that Gilbert's 1993 deposition was given under
oath is not dispositive. His trial testimony was also sworn. Given these
conflicting sworn statements, the district court did not clearly err in
finding the trial testimony more convincing. The Fifth Circuit has often
noted that "[r]ecanting affidavits and witnesses are viewed with
extreme suspicion by the courts." May v. Collins, 955 F.2d 299, 314
(5th Cir.), cert denied, 504 U.S.901, 112 S.Ct. 1925, 118 L.Ed.2d 533
(1992) (internal citations and quotations omitted).
Third, the differences between Gilbert's and Tony's
trial testimony only concern details of their involvement in the murders,
leading even Spence, in his appellate brief, to concede their similarity
in relating the basic course of events. Spence's hideous cruelty
permeates the testimony of each man in graphic and startlingly parallel
particulars, e.g. Spence's systematic torture of Jill, the tag team rapes
of both girls, Spence's insistence that Kenneth watch as he raped Jill,
and Spence's gleefully sitting Kenneth's body upright at SpeeglevillePark. From the discrepancies in
Gilbert's and Tony's testimony, one could more reasonably conclude that
there was no fabrication. If Simons or Feazell had masterminded a
conspiracy falsely to convict Spence, surely their efforts would have
been designed to harmonize the brothers' versions of the murders as
closely as possible. Fourth, as Gilbert's testimony was corroborated by
other evidence presented at Spence's trial, the probability that the
state knowingly presented false testimony further diminishes.
b. David Puryear's Testimony
[9] Spence contends Puryear's trial testimony that
Spence told him to draw on a bandana a picture of a knife and two girls
-- one blonde like Raylene and one brunette like Jill -- was perjured.
[footnote: 5. Spence's brief does not charge that Puryear lied in quoting
Spence's admission that he committed the LakeWaco
murders.] We conclude the district court's factual finding that Puryear
did not commit perjury is not clearly erroneous. Spence bases his
assertion on an affidavit from Puryear's former brother-in-law, Steve
Moore, stating that Puryear told Moore
he had lied at Spence's trial. [footnote: 6. Contrary to Spence's
assumption, the district court did not make a factual finding that Moore's account was
the correct version of events or that Puryear lied at Spence's trial.]
Not only does this affidavit relate inadmissible hearsay, but the record
shows Puryear wrote an unsolicited letter to prosecutor Ned Butler
stating his willingness to testify against Spence. Puryear's letter
asserted he was not seeking any "deal" for his testimony.
Spence's argument that Puryear committed perjury because he did not tell
the Waco
police about the bandana when initially interviewed is also not
dispositive. The omission does not prove he lied at trial, but may only
demonstrate he was reluctant to "get involved" when first
approached. See Smith v. Black; 904 F.2d at 961.
3. Police Reports
Spence contends that the State violated Brady by not
disclosing Waco Police Department reports that might have implicated
other persons in the murders, and that the district court applied
erroneous standards in evaluating this argument. We reject these
contentions.
a. Standard of Materiality
[10] Before considering materiality, we address the
district court's legal approach. The district court concluded that the
undisclosed evidence was not material because under Texas law it would not have been
admissible at trial. The Fifth Circuit has expressly found otherwise in
Sellers v. Estelle:
In addressing the issue of materiality, the Magistrate
found that [statements in police reports] would have been inadmissible,
hence these reports were immaterial. Such a conclusion is unwarranted.
First, by enabling the defense to examine these reports, [the petitioner]
may have been able to produce witnesses whose testimony or written
statements may have been admissible. Second, the evidence here suppressed
was material to the preparation of the petitioner's defense, regardless
of whether it intended to be admitted into evidence or not. 651 F.2d
1074, 1077 n. 6 (5th Cir.1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 927,
102 S.Ct. 1292, 71 L.Ed.2d 472 (1982) (citations omitted). Nonetheless,
the court's error was harmless, as will be seen.
Second, Spence contends the district court erred in
interpreting Brady's materiality standard as a result-oriented inquiry.
The Supreme Court recently clarified that Brady is not a sufficiency of
evidence test:
Bagley's touchstone of materiality is a
"reasonable probability" of a different result, and the
adjective is important. The question is not whether the defendant would
more likely than not have received a different verdict with the evidence,
but whether in its absence he received a fair trial, understood as a
trial resulting in a verdict worthy of confidence. A "reasonable
probability" of a different result is accordingly shown when the
Government's evidentiary suppression "undermines confidence in the
outcome of the trial."
Kyles, --- U.S. at ---, 115 S.Ct. at 1566 (internal quotations and
citations omitted). Taken as a whole, the district court's opinion did
not narrow the Brady standard. The court's analysis begins, at page 2, by
quoting Bagley to require a petitioner "to show that the suppressed
evidence is material in that 'there is a reasonable probability that had
the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding
would have been different' (emphasis added and citation omitted)."
We have no reason to believe the court deviated from this standard simply
because he repeated it in a shortened version later in the opinion,
doubtless, it seemed needlessly repetitious to include the entire Brady
materiality formula in discussing each of Spence's claims.
Spence focuses on undisclosed police reports that
implicated Terry ("Tab") Harper as a suspect, and suggested
that a drug deal motivated Kenneth's murder. [footnote: 7. Spence also
contends the state violated Brady by not disclosing police reports
containing statements by persons in KoehnePark
the night of the murder stating that they did not see Spence or the
Melendez brothers or hear any screams. This evidence is not material
because, at most, it would have been cumulative of defense testimony at
trial from several people who had visited the park and neither noticed
the defendants nor heard screams.]
b. Reports on Terry "Tab" Harper
[11] Spence contends the State violated Brady by
suppressing Waco Police Department reports indicating Terry
"Tab" Harper was a suspect. We reject this claim; information
in the police reports, even if admissible evidence, does not undermine
confidence in the jury's verdict. While Spence's argument accepts as true
all of the reports that tried to link Harper to the murders, it ignores
contradictory reports. The investigating officers, whose depositions are
in the federal habeas record, unanimously concluded that the murders were
not drug-related, that they were not consistent with Harper's prior
criminal behavior, and/or that he had an alibi. Harper was well-known as
a bully, and the officers testified that whenever a high-profile crime
occurred locally, young people would call the police station and
associate Harper with the incident. Harper was brought to the police
station and questioned about the LakeWaco
murders but then released for lack of evidence. Spence highlights reports
made to the police by two witnesses to whom Harper allegedly bragged
about killing someone, but the reports furnish no other
"evidence" of Harper's involvement. In short, had Spence been
given these police records and presented his theory regarding Harper at
his trial, the State could have countered with other facts exonerating
Harper. Thus, nondisclosure of the Tab Harper reports does not undermine
confidence in the jury's verdict; the information
is not material.
c. Kenneth Franks's Alleged Drug Use
[12] Spence next argues the State violated Brady by
failing to disclose police reports suggesting that Kenneth Franks was in
debt over drugs and was a "known drug associate" of Harper.
These reports, inadmissible by themselves, are not material and would not
have supported a defense theory that the murders reflect a failed drug
deal. Spence's argument again ignores reports and evidence that
contradicted his drug deal theory. The autopsy report indicated no
evidence of drugs in Kenneth's body, and the police could not find any
persons who would verify that Kenneth was a drug dealer or a customer or
supplier of Tab Harper. The police unanimously concluded the murders were
not drug-related, because of their viciousness and the fact that the
bodies were not hidden or disposed of. Spence's assertions that KoehnePark was a location known for
teenage drug use and that Jill had cashed her paycheck before going to
the park hardly raise an inference that Kenneth was murdered because of
drugs.
d. Cumulative Effects of Suppressed Information
[13,14] Kyles reminds us that the determination of the
materiality of withheld evidence must be made "collectively, not
item-by-item." Kyles --- U.S. at ---, 115 S.Ct. at
1567. So that no misunderstanding arises, we have considered cumulatively
the significance of the withheld evidence -- Gilbert Melendez's benefits
for testifying, police reports on Tab Harper, reports on Kenneth Franks's
status as a drug user and on KoehnePark witnesses --
against the state's total case on Spence. In stark distinction to the
result of such a comparison in Kyles, the defense does not profit here.
The strength of Tony Melendez's testimony is unchallenged, while that of
Gilbert is only somewhat weakened. Spence's statements against penal
interest to Rosenbaum and Puryear remain unassailed, while the status of
hotly contested bite injury testimony is not changed. Without credible
support, the Kenneth Franks-as-drug-dealer scenario could easily have
backfired on the defense as a shoddy tactic to blacken the victim's
reputation. The police set no store by the reports of Tab Harper's
involvement after they investigated it; there is no reason to suspect
defense counsel could have challenged their work based only on innuendo
from the police reports. The KoehnePark witnesses
would have repeated testimony that came out at Spence's trial through
other visitors to the park. Kyles presents a wholly different picture on
the cumulative effect of withheld testimony. As the court summed up the
withheld evidence there:
But confidence that the verdict would have been
unaffected cannot survive when suppressed evidence would have entitled a
jury to find that the eyewitnesses were not consistent in describing the
killer, that two out of the four eyewitnesses testifying were unreliable,
that the most damning physical evidence was subject to suspicion, that
the investigation that produced it was insufficiently probing, and that
the principal police witness was insufficiently in-formed or candid.
--- U.S.
at ---, 115 S.Ct. at 1575. The jury, the Court believed, might
legitimately have been led to wonder whether Kyles or his erstwhile
friend "Beanie," the voluntary police informant, was best
situated to have committed murder. In this case, the withheld
"evidence" is of a decidedly less significant cast, and, even
if disclosed, it would not have undermined Tony's testimony and other
evidence already recited. We do not believe that the cumulative effect on
Spence's defense of withheld information was reasonably likely to have
affected the jury verdict.
4. Odontological Evidence
Spence argues that the district court erred in not
holding a hearing on his challenge to the admission of testimony by the
State's forensic odontologist, Dr. Homer Campbell, and that it erred in
excluding Spence's expert reports challenging Dr. Campbell's testimony.
We reject these arguments.
[15] To receive an evidentiary hearing, a habeas
corpus petitioner must allege facts which, if proven, would entitle him
to relief. Lavernia v. Lynaugh, 845 F.2d 493, 501 (5th Cir.1988). "The
court need not blindly accept speculative and inconcrete claims as the
basis to order a hearing." Id.
(internal quotations and citations omitted). "Nor is a hearing
required when the record is complete or the petitioner raises only legal
claims that can be resolved without the taking of additional
evidence." Id.
[16] Spence contends that, because he submitted
materials challenging Dr. Campbell's methodology and conclusions, the
district court should have held a hearing to determine whether the admission
of Dr. Campbell's testimony violated the Eight Amendment's requirement of
"heightened reliability" under Johnson v. Mississippi, 486 U.S.
578, 108 S.Ct. 1981, 100 L.Ed.2d 575 (1988). Johnson is, however,
inapplicable to the instant case. In Johnson, the Supreme Court vacated
the death sentence because the jury had been allowed to consider evidence
that was false. Id. at 585, 108 S.Ct. at 1986 (emphasis added).
[footnote: 8. Furthermore, in Johnson, the Supreme Court specifically
noted that the false evidence was "the sole piece of documentary
evidence of any relevance to [the State's] sentencing decision." Id. at 585, 108
S.Ct. at 1986. In the instant case, much other evidence demonstrated
Spence's guilt.] In the instant case, Spence does not raise a question
over whether Dr. Campbell's testimony is false, but rather over what
weight the jury should have accorded his testimony. Spence's argument
that Dr. Campbell had misidentified the remains of another woman likewise
does not expose his testimony against Spence as false.
Spence is simply trying to relitigate this aspect of
his defense eleven years too late. At trial, Spence introduced his own
forensic odontologist, Dr. Gerald Vale, a leading expert in the field.
Dr. Vale spiritedly criticized Dr. Campbell's methodology and
conclusions, although, critically, Dr. Vale admitted he could not rule
out Spence's teeth as the source of the bite marks. Because this
evidentiary issue was fully and competently aired in the state courts, no
violation of fundamental fairness under the due process clause has been
shown. Bailey v. Procunier, 744 F.2d 1166, 1168 (5th
Cir.1984).
[17] Alternatively, Spence argues that the federal
district court erred in excluding reports from five other expert
odontologists who concluded that Dr. Campbell's testimony was unreliable.
But because Spence filed these reports after the district court's
discovery deadline, without explanation for his untimely filing, the
district court did not abuse his discretion in refusing to admit the
reports.
5. Cumulative Error Doctrine
[18,19] Finally, we reject Spence's argument that he
is entitled to relief for the "cumulative errors" in his trial.
The cumulative error doctrine provides relief only when the
constitutional errors committed in the state trial court so "fatally
infected the trial" that they violated the trial's "fundamental
fairness." Derden v. McNeel, 978 F.2d 1453, 1457 (5th Cir.1992) (en
banc), cert. denied, --- U.S.
---, 113 S.Ct. 2928, 124 L.Ed.2d 679 (1993). "Few defendants,
however, will succeed in demonstrating on collateral review that their
prosecutions merited such condemnation.... We therefore have defined the
category of infractions that violate 'fundamental fairness' very
narrowly." Id.
(citations omitted). In determining whether the cumulative error doctrine
provides relief, we must "review the record as a whole to determine
whether the errors more likely than not caused a suspect verdict." Id. at 1458.
[20] In the instant case, Spence cannot demonstrate he
was deprived of a fundamentally fair trial. First, the undisclosed
evidence undermining Gilbert Melendez's credibility is not material. The
jury would not have reasonably believed Gilbert falsely incriminated
himself in the murders, for which he accepted two life sentences in
prison. Second, Spence failed to establish his claims that Gilbert's
testimony was fabricated or that the state knowingly presented false
testimony of Puryear. Third, Spence failed to establish that police
reports mentioning other suspects could reasonably undermine the jury's
verdict. Fourth, the admission of Dr. Campbell's testimony did not
violate the Eighth Amendment or due process. Fifth, the trial record
reviewed as a whole does not suggest the jury's verdict is suspect.
Therefore, we affirm the district court's judgment
denying Spence habeas corpus relief regarding his conviction and sentence
for Kenneth Franks's murder.
B. Spence's Claims Regarding Jill Montgomery's Murder
Because the evidence at this trial was different from
that in the later capital murder trial, a brief summary is necessary to
place Spence's claims in perspective. No eyewitness or codefendant
testimony was offered in the first prosecution; Gilbert and Antonio [sic]
Melendez had not yet pleaded guilty. Instead, the state built its case
around the theory of a failed murder-for-hire plot spawned by Muneer
Deeb, co-owner of a Waco
convenience store, to avenge his jealousy over 16-year-old Gayle Kelley.
Evidence suggested that Spence, Deeb's friend, was persuaded to attempt
to kill Gayle so that Deeb could cash in an accidental death insurance
policy Deeb had recently purchased on Gayle. Murder victim Kenneth Franks
was in fact a close friend of Gayle and an antagonist of Deeb; had Gayle
not unexpectedly been placed on restriction at the Methodist Home in Waco, she testified, she almost certainly would have
been at LakeWaco with Kenneth
on the fatal evening. Other testimony suggested that Gayle resembled
victim Jill Montgomery and that Spence, though he knew of Gayle from
Deeb, did not necessarily know her on sight.
As the defense rightly pointed out, no hair or fiber
evidence from the victims was ever tied to Spence or his automobile. The
only forensic evidence against him was the hotly disputed testimony of
the state's odontologist that Spence's teeth produced the bite injuries
on Jill and Raylene. Instead, the bulk of the state's case rested on
incriminating statements from Spence himself.
About 1:30 a.m. the night of the murders, Spence told
two acquaintances that he had been at the lake or that he had been with
Tony earlier that evening. After the murders, Spence appeared depressed,
was drinking heavily and obliquely confessed to his friend Dorothy Miles
that he cut someone and might have killed someone. Witnesses who
contributed to the murder-for-hire theory included Karim Qasem, the
co-owner of the convenience store with Deeb, and Spence's co-worker Ray
Payne and his wife. Spence and Deeb argued loudly in front of Payne and
Qasem about the murder of a girl named Gayle later in the summer, 1992:
Spence was accusing Deeb because he incorrectly thought the victim was
Gayle Kelly. Spence told Regina Rosenbaum
within a few weeks after the LakeWaco murders that he and his
friends had raped two girls out at LakeWaco.
Significant reinforcement of the state's case was
provided by seven men who were inmates with Spence, five of them in the McLennanCounty jail from September 1982 to
March 1983, and two others, Snelson and Ivy, at TDC later. At trial, the
inmate witnesses all testified to highly incriminating statements of
various sorts made by Spence, and they all denied receiving any promises
or inducements to testify. Inmate David Puryear described the bandana
Spence asked him to decorate and said that Spence told him he had
committed the LakeWaco murders and
enjoyed doing it. Spence's defense consisted of an attack on the
weaknesses of the murder-for-hire theory, eg. the fact that the
accidental life insurance policy would not pay Deeb in the event of
Gayle's murder, and the possibility that Spence knew Gayle on sight and
could not have accidentally killed Jill instead. Spence's attorneys tried
to minimize the incriminating effect of statements to Dorothy Miles, Regina Rosenbaum
and David Puryear. They vigorously cross-examined the inmate witnesses
about the likelihood of deals received from the prosecution. They showed,
for instance, that Jennings
just happened to keep notes of his conversations with David Spence -- and
David Spence only -- on a legal pad in his cell. They intimated that
Sypho had received a more lenient sentence than he ought to for being a
four-time felony convict. They suggested that Jordan had been let out of
prison soon after he gave a statement against Spence. And they used Puryear's
testimony about the bandana, among other things, to intimate that Truman
Simons was planting rumors in the McLennanCounty jail that effectively
acquainted many of the inmates with facts about the LakeWaco
murders and enabled them to concoct stories about Spence. Finally, they
pointed out the patent inconsistencies between the testimony of Snelson
and Ivy concerning their motive for talking with Spence about the crimes.
[footnote: 9. The defense attempted to offer testimony that two other
men, James Bishop and Ronnie Breiton [sic], could have committed the
murders. This attempt fell apart because Breiten's accuser, his
stepmother, testified outside the presence of the jury one day and,
recanting her earlier statements, refused to testify at all the next day.
The state trial court was not persuaded that the defense had offered
evidence sufficient to connect Bishop or Breiten to each other, much less
to the LakeWaco murders.]
Regarding his capital conviction for Jill Montgomery's
murder, Spence principally contends that (1) the State failed to disclose
that inmates testifying against him received special privileges in
exchange for this cooperation; (2) the State knowingly presented false
testimony from the inmates; (3) the State suppressed evidence implicating
other persons in the murders; and (4) the district court failed to
evaluate the cumulative effectof the above violations. He also repeats
the argument, dealt with above, that the federal district court erred in
not granting a hearing on the admission of the State's forensic
odontologist's testimony.
1. Inmate Witnesses
Spence contends that the State violated Brady by
failing to disclose that the inmate witnesses were given special
privileges for their testimony against him, and that the district court
applied erroneous standards in evaluating the materiality of this
suppressed evidence.
[21] In its opinion in this case, more than in the
companion case, the district court seems to emphasize a result-oriented
approach to materiality under Brady. As we have noted, Kyles
re-emphasized that the proper question is whether there is a reasonable
probability that the suppressed evidence could have affected the verdict.
Kyles, --- U.S.
at ---, 115 S.Ct. at 1566. To the extent the district court erred in
applying the standard, however, the error is harmless. Spence also
contends the district court erred by conducting a "piecemeal"
analysis of his Brady claims. While it is true that Brady violations must
be considered for their cumulative effect on the jury verdict, Lindsey v.
King, 769 F.2d 1034 (5th Cir.1985) [sic]. Spence's piecemeal argument is
erroneously premised on his contention that all seven inmate witnesses
received undisclosed privileges for their testimonies. The district court
rejected Spence's claims concerning Puryear and Sypho, and Spence omits
to mention that he did not assert that James Jordan ever received
undisclosed benefits or privileges. The magnitude of cumulative Brady
error is much smaller than Spence would have us believe.
[22] Spence alleges the State violated Brady by
failing to disclose that the inmates who testified against him were given
special privileges -- such as conjugal visits, the ability to keep food,
alcohol, and drugs in their jail cells, access to "free world"
food and cigarettes, recommendations of leniency, and assistance in
gaining admission into the Federal Witne