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Clayton Robert Adams v. State
387 P.3d 153
Idaho Ct. App. U
2016
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Background

  • Adams was convicted by a jury of second‑degree murder and aggravated battery after an altercation in which he stabbed two men; one died. He claimed self‑defense at trial.
  • On direct appeal his convictions and sentences were affirmed; he later filed a pro se post‑conviction petition alleging multiple instances of ineffective assistance of counsel and sought funding for an investigator to locate two witnesses.
  • The district court granted limited relief on unrelated post‑conviction claims (a resentencing) but summarily dismissed the ineffective‑assistance claims and denied the investigative‑services motion and a motion for reconsideration; Adams appealed.
  • Key disputed claims on post‑conviction review: denial of funds/investigator to locate witnesses; counsel’s failure to object to paramedic opinion testimony; counsel’s failure to pursue pretrial or independent DNA testing of victim’s clothing; counsel’s failure to call two witnesses and alleged concession in closing argument.
  • The district court allowed post‑conviction DNA testing; the additional testing detected only the deceased victim’s DNA on swabs and did not show transfer from the surviving victim.

Issues

Issue Adams' Argument State's Argument Held
Motion for investigative services to locate two witnesses Denial was abuse of discretion; investigator needed to find witnesses who would support self‑defense Motion was untimely, conclusory, lacked good cause or details about prior efforts; would cause unjustified delay Denial affirmed: district court acted within discretion given delay, lack of foundation, and risk of fishing expedition
Failure to object to paramedic’s opinion that surviving victim had a stab wound Counsel ineffective for not objecting to opinion testimony by non‑expert; prejudiced defense Paramedic had sufficient training/experience to qualify under I.R.E. 702; failure to object was a tactical choice Dismissed: testimony was admissible under I.R.E. 702; counsel’s failure to object deemed strategic, not deficient
Failure to seek independent DNA testing pretrial (and post‑conviction testing results) Counsel should have tested deceased victim’s clothing to show transfer (or absence) of surviving victim’s DNA, supporting self‑defense and impeachment Post‑conviction testing (granted later) showed only deceased’s DNA; results limited and do not prove exculpatory theory; even if favorable, other trial evidence still supports conviction Dismissed: limited DNA results do not create reasonable probability of different outcome; counsel not shown deficient or prejudicial
Failure to call two witnesses / alleged concession in closing argument Witnesses would have corroborated that others were aggressors; counsel conceded manslaughter in closing without consent Plaintiff offered only hearsay/speculation about witnesses; closing argument statements were tactical, preserved self‑defense theory and sought to mitigate charge Dismissed: no admissible evidence of witnesses’ testimony or availability; closing was strategic and did not abandon self‑defense or concede guilt improperly

Key Cases Cited

  • Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (establishes deficient performance and prejudice test for ineffective assistance of counsel)
  • Cronic v. United States, 466 U.S. 648 (recognizes rare circumstances where prejudice may be presumed for breakdown in adversarial process)
  • Murphy v. State, 143 Idaho 139 (discovery/funding requests in post‑conviction proceedings governed by trial court discretion; no fishing expeditions)
  • Raudebaugh v. State, 135 Idaho 602 (post‑conviction discovery requires court authorization and is limited to protecting substantial rights)
  • Cook v. State, 157 Idaho 775 (failure to object is evaluated by whether testimony was arguably admissible and whether decision was tactical)
  • Roman v. State, 125 Idaho 644 (standards for summary dismissal of post‑conviction petitions)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Clayton Robert Adams v. State
Court Name: Idaho Court of Appeals - Unpublished
Date Published: Nov 4, 2016
Citation: 387 P.3d 153
Docket Number: Docket 42920
Court Abbreviation: Idaho Ct. App. U