This сase was first decided on March 19, 1994, when a jury found petitioner Damien Echols guilty of brutally murdering three eight-year-old boys in West Memphis on May 5, 1993. Echols appealed these capital murder convictions, and this court, on December 23, 1996, in a 77-page opinion in appellate case number CR94-928, affirmed that conviction. Sеe Echols v. State,
Echols then pursued his timely petition for postconviction reliefin the trial court pursuant to Ark. R. Crim. P. 37.5. See Echols v. State,
During the period this court was considering Echols’s Rule 37 proceeding, Echols had also filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis on February 27, 2001, asking this court to reinvest jurisdiction in the trial court. Our court ruled it would consider Echols’s writ of error coram nobis petition as a separate case under appellate case number CR94-928 (the docket number for Echols I, decided on December 23, 1996). Flowever, this court directed that both cases, CR94-928 and CR99-1060, be submitted and orally argued on the same date. Following separate oral arguments in both cases on October 2, 2003, our court first issuеd its opinion on October 16, 2003, denying Echols’s error coram nobis petition. As previously set out above, this court affirmed and entered its decision on October 30, 2003, denying Echols relief under Rule 37. In sum, this court’s mandates in CR94-928 and CR99-1060 were final on November 13, 2003, and December 11, 2003, respectively. Consequently, Echols’s requests for postconviction rеlief under Rule 37 and for writ of error coram nobis are final unless Echols can successfully establish grounds for this court to recall its mandates in either case number CR94-928 or CR99-1060. 2
On October 29, 2004, Echols filed the instant motion to recall the mandate and his second motion to reinvest jurisdiction in the trial court to consider a petition for writ of error coram nobis. In his motion and the accompanying brief in support, Echols advances two primary arguments in support of his request to recall the mandate and his error coram nobis petition: 1) he alleges that the jury received and considered extraneous information — specifically, the confession оf Jessie Misskelley — during deliberations at his trial, thus undermining the fundamental fairness of the trial process; and 2) certain members of the jury harbored an impermissible bias against him, in violation of his Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Echols first argues that this court wields the inherent power to recall its mandates and cites Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 5—3(d) and Robbins v. State,
Although his first contention is that this court should recall its mandate under Robbins, Echols makes no showing that he has satisfied any of these three factors, other than the fact that his case, like Robbins’s, invоlves the death penalty. In Engram v. State,
Here, as noted above, Echols can satisfy only one of the three Robbins criteria — his is a death penalty case. In Robbins, this court stressed that the death penalty “is a unique punishment that demands unique attention to procedural safeguards,” Robbins,
In addition to his request to recall the mandate, Eсhols also asks this court to reinvest the trial court with jurisdiction to consider his petition for writ of error coram nobis. As noted above, this is his second such petition. The essence of his argument is that he was denied a fair trial, because his jury considered extraneous, improper, and unadmitted evidence against him in arriving at its cоnviction and death sentence; this alleged error, he claims, caused his jurors to harbor an impermissible bias against him. He further argues that those errors are “fundamental in nature and are founded on facts which would have prevented rendition of the judgment if known to the trial court, and which, through no negligence or fault of the dеfendant, were not brought forward before rendition of the judgment.”
We begin with a discussion of the fundamental principles of error coram nobis. The writ of error coram nobis is an extraordinary writ, known more for its denial than its approval. Cloird v. State,
We have held that a writ of error coram nobis was available to address certain errors of the most fundamental nature that are found in one of four categories: 1) insanity at the time of trial, 2) a coerced guilty plea, 3) material evidence withheld by the prosecutor, or 4) a third-party confession to the crime during the time between conviction and appeal. Cloird, supra; Penn v. State,
Although there is no specific time limit for seeking a writ of error coram nobis, due diligence is requirеd in making an application for relief. Echols,
At the outset, it should be noted that the basis for Echols’s claim — i.e., that the jury considered improper and extraneous information in its consideration of his guilt — does not fall within any of the four cаtegories of errors for which error coram nobis constitutes appropriate relief. Although Echols maintains that his claims regarding jury-deliberation irregularities and impermissible jury bias should fall within the ambit of error coram nobis, this court has specifically declined to extend the writ to remedy a case involving allegedly misleading responses by a juror during voir dire. See Davis v. State,
It has been more than ten years since Echols’s conviction. This fact clearly demonstrates that Echols did not exercise due diligence in bringing his claims to light — especially in view of the fact that the point on which he relies (the jury’s alleged consideration of Misskelley’s confession) was known to the court, the prosecutor, and to Echols’s defense team at the time of trial. In his memorandum brief, he points out that, during trial, the trial court denied his motion for mistrial when one of the police witnesses inadvertently mentioned Misskelley’s statement. At that time, the court stated, “I suggest . . . that there isn’t a soul up on that jury оr in this courtroom that doesn’t know Mr. Misskelley gave a statement.” Thus, Echols should have been aware from the time of his trial and conviction of the possibility that the jury might have been aware of and considered this extraneous information. 3
For these two reasons — coram nobis is not applicable to address and correct the errors that allegedly occurred here, and Echols failed to exercise due diligence in raising these claims — we decline to reinvest the trial court with jurisdiction to consider Echols’s petition for writ of error coram nobis. 4
Before we conclude this opinion, we must comment on the DNA testing Echols requested pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 16-112-201 et seq. (Supp. 2003). Although Echols first filed his motion for DNA testing in September of 2002, the motion is still pending in the circuit court, and the proceeding has remained unresolved since that time. We wish to impress upon the trial court, the State, and Echols’s attorneys that this matter needs to be resolved. Although we understand that there arе significant constraints and pressures upon the State Crime Laboratory, we also stress that this case has been going on since 1996, and there is a need for finality in this matter. Indeed, in our last per curiam opinion granting an extension, we declined to issue an open-ended stay. Instead, we granted a stay for a period of sеventy days from the date of the opinion rendered on June 19, 2003. We therefore encourage the parties and the court to take action to ensure that the DNA testing is addressed and concluded.
Notes
Echols initially became eligible to file a petition on January 13,1997, the date this court entered its mandate following his direct appeal. This court granted his motion to stay the mandate so he could petition the Supreme Court.
Since these mandates have issued, three attorneys who practice law in San Francisco, California have filed motions in this court seeking permission to practice by comity pursuant to Rule XIV of the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar. The attorneys have associated Deborah R. Sailings of Cauley, Bowman, Carney & Williams as local counsel.
For the purpose of considering Echols’s new motions, this court grants comity. We note that these attorneys have submitted an order purportedly signed by Circuit Judge David Burnett, but the order has no file marks. In addition, we note that Echols hаs had as many as six attorneys in these prior proceedings and appeals, but none of the prior attorneys appear to be active or of record in the pending motions.
Indeed, Echols raised the issue of the jury’s improper consideration of the fact of Jessie Misskelley’s statement during trial; as noted аbove, he moved for mistrial, which was denied, and he assigned error to this ruling on appeal. In addition, Echols raised a somewhat similar argument in his Rule 37 appeal, wherein he claimed that his trial counsel was ineffective during voir dire for failing to adequately question jurors regarding pretrial publicity and their knowledge of Misskelley’s сonfession. Thus, essentially the same arguments he now attempts to raise in a petition for writ of error coram nobis were known to him prior to this point in time. Thus, Echols has failed to comply with the due diligence facet of error coram nobis, as he could have presented these facts at trial.
However, even if we were to permit the trial court to reconsider this case, Echols’s claim of juror misconduct is extremely untimely. It is true that this court held in Larimore v. State,
In addition, jurors are presumed to be unbiased and are presumed to follow the instructions given to them by the court. See Kelly v. State,
Finally, Echols’s attempt to prove that his jury considered the Misskelley statement is improper. Ark. R. Evid. 606(b) precludes inquiry into a juror’s state of mind during deliberations; the rule only permits inquiry into whether any external influence or information could have playеd a part in the jury’s verdict. Davis v. State,
