Lead Opinion
Plaintiff-appellant Danny Joe Bradley (“Bradley”), an Alabama death row inmate, is scheduled for execution on 12 February 2009. He appeals the district court’s order dismissing his 42 U.S.C. § 1988 claims to compel the Defendants-appellees (“Appel-lees”) to produce evidence for DNA testing. Bradley also requests a stay of execution in order to permit resolution of this appeal. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court and DENY Bradley’s motion for a stay of execution as moot.
I. BACKGROUND
Bradley was convicted and sentenced to death in 1983 for the capital murder committed during the rape and sodomy of his twelve-year-old stepdaughter, Rhonda Hardin. See Bradley v. State,
In June 2001, after the Alabama Supreme Court set Bradley’s first execution date, he filed this § 1983 action seeking physical and biological evidence for DNA testing. Rl-1. He also filed a motion for stay of execution in the Alabama Supreme Court, which was granted. See Bradley,
The district court initially dismissed the § 1983 suit “as a second or successive habeas petition filed without the requisite authorization from the Court of Appeals.” Bradley,
On remand, the district court ordered the state parties to file a verified statement of “each piece of evidence capable of DNA testing and whether the evidence is available for testing.” Rl-34 at 2. They also had to account for any evidence that was unavailable by stating their efforts to locate the evidence and the ultimate disposition of that evidence. Furthermore, the court granted discovery to test the state’s assertion that certain evidence had been lost. Bradley was allowed to depose the director of the Alabama Department of
Bradley was also scheduled to depose Faye Ogletree, a forensic scientist who testified at his 1983 trial that she found semen and sperm on swabs of the victim’s rectum, mouth, and stomach, and that the victim’s pants had a stain containing fecal matter, semen, and spermatoza. Rl-39; R3-13, Exh. 1 at Exh. B, Trial Transcript, pp. 247, 264-65. Due to health problems, Ogletree instead submitted a sworn affidavit stating she had no idea where the missing items were presently located or if they had been destroyed. R2-43, Affidavit of Faye Ogletree at 1. Ogletree, who is currently seventy-one years old, attached two letters from her doctors attesting to her inability to be deposed or testify in court. Id. at 4-5.
Although the Appellees were unable to locate the rape kit or the victim’s pants, DNA testing performed on the two bedding items introduced at trial implicated Bradley. In July 2001, the state submitted a report by a forensic scientist, Larry Huyes, finding that the fecal matter and semen stains on a white blanket matched the genetic markers of Bradley and the victim. Rl-16 at 9. These findings were consistent with the September 2001 report of Dr. Edward Blake, Bradley’s handpicked expert. R3-49 at 9-10. Dr. Blake found that Bradley could not be eliminated as the source of the spermatoza on a white blanket and a red, white and blue sheet, and that Rhonda Hardin could not be eliminated as the source of the female DNA commingled with the spermatoza on the blanket. Id. at 9-11. Dr. Blake explained that “it is unlikely that more than one human being has ever possessed this particular genotype array.” Id. at 9. Although Dr. Blake also tested the victim’s pubic hairs and fingernail scrapings, he found no significant debris. Id. at 4-5.
The district court found that Bradley had a constitutionally protected interest in his life but that the due process protection of that interest was diminished by his conviction. R2-51 at 5-6. The court noted that Bradley had been allowed to conduct discovery to determine the location of the requested evidence and that the available evidence which had been tested did not exonerate him. Id. at 6-7. With respect to Bradley’s request for further discovery to depose Faye Ogletree, the district court found “good cause for not submitting an older woman in poor health to questioning about incidents that happened over twenty-five years ago and more than twenty years after she left DFS.” Id. at 8. Additionally, the court reasoned that even if Ogletree could recall where the evidence was kept when she left the DFS, this would not reveal its current location. This was especially true given that numerous people had already searched the only places where the evidence could be, including the DFS labs, the police department, the District Attorney’s Office, and the state courthouse. Id.
The district court concluded that Bradley’s due process rights under Brady v. Maryland,
Additionally, the district court determined that Bradley’s due process rights were not violated under Arizona v. Youngblood,
Bradley filed his notice of appeal in April 2007. R2-53. He contends the district court abused its discretion in denying further discovery and in preventing him from deposing Faye Ogletree. Bradley also argues that the district court misconstrued and improperly relied upon Gray-son in dismissing his § 1983 claims. On 3 December 2008, the Alabama Supreme Court set an execution date for 12 February 2009. At no time has Bradley sought expedited treatment of his appeal. Instead, he filed on 8 January 2009 an emergency motion to stay his execution pending resolution of this appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s decision to deny equitable relief for abuse of discretion. See Arthur v. King,
A plaintiff seeking post-conviction access to DNA evidence in a § 1983 action must show that denial of such access “deprived him of a federally protected right.” Grayson,
The district court correctly applied Grayson in determining that there are no extraordinary circumstances in Bradley’s case entitling him to further post-conviction access to DNA evidence. Although the rape kit results and the victim’s pants are now missing, these items were available prior to trial. Bradley’s post-conviction attacks establish that his trial was fair and there was substantial non-biological evidence of his guilt. See Bradley,
Bradley has likewise not demonstrated a procedural due process violation under Mathews. The risk that he will be erroneously deprived of his potential liberty interest is small. All of his direct and collateral attacks on his conviction and sentence have proven unsuccessful and the post-conviction DNA testing on the bedding items leave little doubt as to his guilt. The value of additional DNA testing must also be weighed against the fact that the requested items, despite extensive searching, cannot be found. Finally, the state of Alabama and the victim’s family have a strong interest in enforcing a criminal judgment and sentence over twenty-five years old. See Jones v. Allen,
Based on the foregoing, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying further discovery or in preventing Bradley from deposing Faye Ogletree. Ogletree ceased working at the DFS in 1986 and stated in her sworn affidavit that “I don’t have any idea” concerning the present whereabouts of the rape kit or the victim’s pants. See R2-43, Affidavit of Faye Ogletree at 1. Although Taylor Noggle, the Director of the DFS, found no documentation that these items had been destroyed, he noted that the Birmingham laboratory had moved twice since 1983 and that “with each of those moves we would have tried to eliminate as much evidence as possible.” R3^48, Affidavit of Taylor Noggle, at 45-46, 62-63. Noggle thus felt “very confident” that the evidence was no longer available. Id. at 63. Searches of the district attorney’s offices, the Piedmont Police Department, and the Calhoun County Courthouse have also proven futile. The district court’s finding that the loss of this evidence did not result from the Ap-pellees’ bad faith is not clearly erroneous.
The Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari in Osborne v. Dist. Attorney’s Office for the Third Judicial Dist.,
III. CONCLUSION
Bradley filed this § 1983 suit seeking access to biological and physical evidence that he hoped he could then use in a habeas proceeding to prove his innocence in the capital murder of his step-daughter. He received access to the evidence the Appellees had in their possession but the DNA testing of that evidence did not exculpate him. He has also received an accounting of the requested items which the Appellees could not find, that of the rape kit and the victim’s pants. There is no evidence of bad faith on the part of the state or that further discovery will unearth these missing items. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying additional discovery and the district court’s judgment of dismissal is AFFIRMED. Bradley’s emergency motion for a stay of execution pending appeal is DENIED as moot.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I agree with the majority’s conclusion that dismissal of Bradley’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action seeking access to evidence for DNA testing was appropriate because Bradley received the relief he originally requested. I do not believe that the majority’s discussion of Grayson has any bearing on this case.
In his § 1983 action, Bradley prevailed “once he ha[d] access to that evidence or an accounting for its absence.” Bradley v. Pryor,
Moreover, I do not find that Grayson v. King,
Furthermore, the facts relied on by this Court in Grayson in denying his quest for DNA evidence bear no similarity to Bradley’s case. Grayson, who had been convicted for capital murder during a burglary, sought access to DNA testing of the victim’s rape kit, which the State refused to release to him. Grayson,
Unlike Grayson, who was denied access to evidence that would not exclude his involvement in the crime of conviction, Bradley has been provided with the relief that he requested in his § 1983 action that he asserts is pertinent to his claim of actual innocence. He was able to perform DNA testing on the evidence that the State had in its possession, namely the bedding items. He also received information from several state officials regarding their knowledge of the whereabouts of the other missing pieces of evidence. There is simply no more available biological or physical evidence to provide to Bradley for DNA testing. Furthermore, he has not presented evidence of bad faith on the part of the State in regard to the loss of the rape kit and victim’s pants.
Accordingly, dismissal of his § 1983 action is appropriate because he obtained all of the relief that he sought, and not because Grayson has any bearing on whether he established a constitutional or federally protected right to that evidence.
