DANIEL LEWIS LEE v. T. J. WATSON, Warden, and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
No. 20-2128
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
DECIDED JULY 10, 2020
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Terre Haute Division. No. 2:19-CV-00468-JPH-DLP — James Patrick Hanlon, Judge. SUBMITTED JULY 9, 2020
Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and EASTERBROOK and BARRETT, Circuit Judges.
SYKES, Chief Judge.
Daniel Lewis Lee and his codefendant, Chevy Kehoe, were members of the Aryan Peoples’ Republic (a/k/a Aryan Peoples’ Resistance), a white supremacist organization founded for the purpose of establishing an independent nation of white supremacists in the Pacific Northwest. In January 1996 Lee and Kehoe traveled from the State of Washington to the Arkansas home of William Mueller, a firearms dealer who owned a large collection of guns and ammunition. There they overpowered Mueller and his wife, Nancy, and questioned their eight-year-old daughter Sarah about the location of Mueller’s guns, ammunition, and cash. After stealing about $30,000 worth of weapons and $50,000 in cash and coins, Lee and Kehoe shot all three victims with a stun gun, placed plastic bags over their heads, and sealed the bags with duct tape to asphyxiate them. They then taped rocks to the three victims and threw them into the Illinois Bayou. The bodies were discovered six months later in Lake Darnelle near Russellville, Arkansas. United States v. Lee, 374 F.3d 637, 642 (8th Cir. 2004).
Lee and Kehoe were indicted in federal court in the Eastern District of Arkansas on three counts of capital murder in aid of racketeering,
The Eighth Circuit affirmed Lee’s convictions and death sentence. 374 F.3d 637 (8th Cir. 2004); 274 F.3d 485 (8th Cir. 2001). Lee pursued a full round of collateral review under
In July 2019 the United States scheduled Lee’s execution for December 9, 2019. Two months later he filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under
In our order vacating the stay, we explained that Lee’s likelihood of success on the merits was “slim” because both claims—Brady claims alleging suppression of exculpatory evidence and Strickland claims alleging ineffective assistance of counsel—are “regularly made and resolved under
Our order vacating the stay had no immediate effect because Lee’s sentence was subject to a separate injunction entered in litigation in the district court for the District of Columbia involving a broader challenge to the federal execution protocol. While that litigation proceeded, the district judge in this case denied Lee’s
On June 29, 2020, the Supreme Court denied certiorari in the Execution Protocol case under the name Bourgeois v. Barr, No. 19-1348, 2020 WL 3492763. Three days later a panel of this court issued a decision affirming the denial of a
Purkey holds unambiguously that under Webster and earlier circuit precedent,3 a
Wesley Purkey filed a
We rejected that argument, explaining that “nothing formally prevented [Purkey] from raising each of the three errors” in his
statute, not federal common law. 2020 WL 3603779, at *11. The “pertinent statute is
This case is indistinguishable from Purkey. Lee raised a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel in his
Lee’s Brady/Napue claim fares no better. As we explained in our December 6 order, the alleged “newly discovered” evidence on which this claim rests was known to Lee and is contained in the publicly available court record in Lee’s 1990 Oklahoma murder case and thus was available with reasonable diligence. Accordingly, the evidence is neither newly discovered under Webster nor was suppressed within the meaning of Brady. The Savings Clause does not apply;
In sum, it follows directly from Purkey and our earlier decision in this case that Lee’s
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED; STAY MOTION DENIED.
