Case Information
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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Eugene Williams Gall, Jr., Petitioner-Appellant, v.
Phil Parker, Warden, Respondent-Appellee.
Nos. 91-5502; 94-6376
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky at Covington. No. 87-00056-William O. Bertelsman, District Judge.
Argued: November 3, 1999 Decided and Filed: October 30, 2000 Before: MARTIN, Chief Judge; JONES and GUY, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Erwin W. Lewis, Edward C. Monahan, DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC ADVOCACY, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellant. Rickie L. Pearson, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Erwin W. Lewis, Edward C. Monahan, DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC ADVOCACY, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellant. Rickie L. Pearson, Ian G. Sonego,
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ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellee.
JONES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MARTIN, C. J., joined. GUY, J. (pp. 112-131), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
OPINION
NATHANIEL R. JONES, Circuit Judge. PetitionerAppellant Eugene Gall ("Gall") appeals the denial of his petition for habeas corpus challenging his conviction and death sentence for the rape and murder of a young girl in 1978. There is little doubt that Gall committed the acts in question. Instead, the central issue contested at trial was his mental state at the time of the killing. The case is further complicated by the numerous errors of constitutional magnitude that Gall claims occurred during his trial and appeal, as well as by long-standing confusion regarding the meaning and role of extreme emotional disturbance in Kentucky law. We conclude that Gall's trial, conviction and appeal contravened fundamental constitutional tenets. We are therefore compelled to REVERSE the district court's denial of habeas relief and REMAND for a conditional granting of the writ.
OVERVIEW
This is indeed a tragic case. The primary tragedy is that a young girl's life was taken in the most cruel and grisly fashion. It is also evident that Eugene Gall was the man who cut her life short. And naturally, the death and Gall's culpability engendered an understandably outraged and angry public as well as a prosecution determined to convict. In these situations, it is a court's duty to ensure that amid the tragedy, anger and outrage over hideous acts perpetrated, a fair and constitutional trial takes place. Constitutionally fair trials do not occur whenever a judge, jury and litigants go
A rational trier of fact could have concluded that although Gall was a paranoid schizophrenic, he killed during a period of remission in which he understood the criminality of his actions and was not acting pursuant to an irresistible impulse.
In sum, it is impossible to conclude that the jury gave undue weight to Dr. Chudkow's testimony since all he said was that Gall was competent to stand trial, and the jury observed that for themselves. As the court concludes, the Confrontation Clause issue has been procedurally defaulted and not only has cause not been shown for the default, but, rather, a good reason why the issue was never raised is apparent. The only "fundamental miscarriage of justice" that has occurred is the court's conclusion that despite the jury's verdict to the contrary, Gall must be found not guilty by reason of insanity. [9]
*3 oriented" because the court had to find a way to keep this defendant in custody after vacating his murder conviction, and this was the vehicle for doing so.
It was not the strategy of the government to try to find someone who would say that Gall was a perfectly normal human being. The government was content to counter the defense experts with the facts of the case and what the jury would learn for themselves from observing the defendant. Contrary to what the court concludes, the defendant was better off having Dr. Chutkow testify by deposition than in person. His deposition testimony, which was limited to his involvement in the competency phase of the trial, was of little value. So much was this the case that I firmly believe the defense decision not to raise an objection to the videotape deposition was a strategic decision and a good one to boot. [8]
Dr. Chutkow could only have made his testimony more valuable to the government if he had testified in person. As the court points out-ironically it seems to me-Dr.Chutkow's testimony was of little or no value on the issue of insanity. Nonetheless, the court would elevate its significance through the bald and erroneous conclusion that "Dr. Chutkow provided the only evidence rebutting [the] showing of insanity." This statement shows that, once again, the court simply misses the mark. There were no witnesses to the rape and murder or to Gall's claimed amnesia. The jury was free to draw its conclusion on the issue of insanity from (1) its impressions of Gall's demeanor; (2) testimony from lay witnesses about Gall's emotional and mental state near the time of the crime; (3) expert testimony offering post-hoc clinical conclusions as to Gall's general mental and emotional condition; and (4) conflicting opinions as to the genuineness of Gall's amnesia.
Gall's claim of amnesia was critical to his insanity defense, and a rational trier of fact need not have credited this claim. through the formal process of presenting arguments and examining witnesses. For a trial to be constitutionally sound requires far more: it is a trial where the prosecutor must prove all elements of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt in order to convict; where the prosecutor adheres to certain rules of conduct that guarantee a fair trial and a proper consideration of the defendant's theories and supporting evidence; where the jurors consider only evidence adduced by the parties and that a defendant has had an opportunity to rebut; and where a defendant enjoys the right to cross-examine adverse witnesses. When a state contemplates imposing the ultimate penalty, a constitutional trial requires jury selection procedures that avoid seating a jury predisposed to a death sentence, and also allows each individual juror to give effect to any mitigating evidence. It follows then that the issues raised do not lend themselves to summary treatment.
After painstakingly reviewing each of the issues raised and the extensive trial record, and minutely examining the relevant governing authorities, we agree with Gall that substantial errors occurred. The key issues contested at trial that we treat below involved Gall's mental condition, and specifically whether he was competent to stand trial, whether he was legally insane at the time of the crime, and whether he was under extreme emotional disturbance when he committed the crime. Unfortunately, an array of complicating circumstances-high publicity, Gall's own actions, trial court mistakes, overzealous prosecutorial tactics combined with inexcusable oversights, and poor defense advocacy at various stages-introduced errors into both the guilt and penalty phases of Gall's trial, as well as into his direct appeal in the state courts. Although we reject a number of Gall's arguments, we find some of the errors to have been sufficiently egregious so as to violate fundamental constitutional rights and protections.
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I.
A.
On April 27, 1978, a Boone County grand jury indicted Gall for the rape and murder of Lisa Jansen. In a two-phase trial, the Commonwealth presented considerable evidence that Gall committed the killing, so Gall's mental state at the time of the crime became the trial's central issue. On September 30, 1978, the jury found Gall guilty of murder while engaged in the commission of rape. Finding no mitigating circumstances, the jury recommended the death penalty on October 2, and the trial court entered judgment accordingly on October 6.
Gall directly appealed the conviction on numerous grounds, but the Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed his conviction. See Gall v. Commonwealth,
B.
The Kentucky Supreme Court provided a detailed account of the facts at issue:
At about 7:35 a.m. on April 5, 1978, Lisa Jansen, a 12-year-old schoolgirl, left her home in suburban Cincinnati, Ohio, for school. She was missed very shortly thereafter when she failed to arrive at the home of a
Gall return to society, the jury was already aware that a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity would have its consequences. Furthermore, the prosecutor did not overstate the consequences. As I pointed out earlier, in any post-trial civil commitment proceeding the test is not whether the defendant was insane when he committed the crime, but whether he is insane now. As the Kentucky Supreme Court stated in Gall's appeal: "it cannot be truthfully said that he will be committed, because if he is sane enough to be participating in the trial there is very little likelihood of his being validly found insane immediately thereafter." Gall,
On direct appeal, the Kentucky Supreme Court thought so little of the allegations of prosecutorial misconduct that it spent little or no time in discussing them. Now, on habeas review, with its narrower scope, the majority finds these unobjected to instances of prosecutorial conduct to be sufficient to require a reversal. This hardly affords the decision of the state court the deference that is due.
III.
I now turn, to the best of my ability to follow it, to the tortured path followed by the court to reach its conclusion that there was a violation of Gall's Sixth Amendment confrontation rights sufficient to mandate an acquittal. The government presented the testimony of its only mental health professional, Dr. Chutkow, by videotape deposition. We were not told why this was done. It is clear from the record, however, that Gall's counsel informed the court that if the prosecution did not offer Dr. Chutkow's testimony, he would. In any event, the court concludes that any claim of error was procedurally defaulted and that Gall cannot show cause for the default. Nonetheless, the court then goes on to find the circumstances here qualify for the "fundamental miscarriage of justice" exception because "the Confrontation Clause violation clearly stood in the way of an acquittal for reason of insanity." This result-oriented conclusion simply won't hold water. Not speaking pejoratively, I use the term "result-
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Gall was in a bind in that even though no eyewitness saw him rape and shoot Lisa Jansen, he was positively identified as the perpetrator of the store robbery and police officer's shooting that took place shortly after the time of Lisa's murder. Gall admitted that he remembered the police chasing him and remembered shooting the state trooper, but indicated he could not recall his actions immediately before that. The circumstantial evidence tying him to Lisa's murder was very strong. Under these circumstances, it should not be surprising that the prosecution felt this was a very convenient case of amnesia and argued accordingly. Into this mix came Gall's participation in his own trial. It is clear that Gall was seeking to get a full acquittal on the merits, even though his counsel was relying on an insanity defense. This working at cross purposes was further evidence in the eyes of the prosecutor that insanity was a sham defense in this case. Gall was doing his best to show the jury he was sane and innocent, while the experts called by his attorney were trying to show he was insane. The testimony of the experts thus became critical. Although the prosecutor's attacks on their testimony may have been inartful and at times even inappropriate, they were all for the purpose of trying to keep the jury from confusing the fact that Gall had a mental disease with the conclusion that as a result he was legally insane-a very legitimate goal. As the Supreme Court stated in Barefoot v. Estelle,
To the degree that the prosecutor committed the "I believe" sin, it was clearly harmless error. This was not a case of a prosecutor vouching for some government agent or secret informant's credibility, but, rather, of a prosecutor commenting on the testimony of experts in a field in which the jury knew the prosecutor had no special expertise. In light of the jury's extensive opportunity to see Gall in action, the jury was in a far better position than is usual in a case involving an insanity defense to weigh the testimony of the experts in the context of all the other relevant facts. Although the prosecutor arguably erred when he urged the jury to not let friend she had planned to meet on the way and it was ascertained that she had not gone directly to school. At about 9:25 a. m. that morning Mrs. Connie Puckett, while driving her automobile along Kentucky Highway 16 from Verona, Kentucky, toward her home in Walton, Kentucky, noticed a red jacket lying on the side of the highway near the intersection of Stephenson-Mill Road. She stopped and retrieved it, thinking that probably it belonged to one of the students attending the elementary school at Verona. She was positive that the jacket had not been there when she passed the same place a few minutes earlier on her way to Verona. Upon resuming her trip homeward she observed an open schoolbook lying in the road, stopped and picked it up. It bore the name of Lisa Jansen, and when Mrs. Puckett arrived back in Walton she telephoned the school at Verona. The school principal advised her that no one by the name of Lisa Jansen was enrolled there, but later in the day he called back and told Mrs. Puckett that a television newscast had reported a Lisa Jansen as missing. Mrs. Puckett then reported her discovery of the jacket and schoolbook to the Cincinnati police.
The distance from Lisa's home in Ohio to the Kentucky state line at Cincinnati was 10.9 miles, and from the state line southward via Interstate 75 to the place near Stephenson-Mill Road where her body was found the next morning is 22.6 miles. Gall resided at Hillsboro, Ohio, about 45 miles the other side of the Jansen home.
At about 10:15 a. m. on April 5, 1978, a man later identified as the appellant, Gall, entered a small grocery store at the crossroads village of Gardnersville, 17 miles or so by public roads from the vicinity of StephensonMill Road (which consists of a loop leading off and then back to Highway 16), and robbed the storekeeper and her customers at the point of a .357-gauge magnum stainless-steel revolver. The storekeeper, who was familiar with this type of weapon, observed from the exposed portions of the magazine that it was loaded with
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hollow-point cartridges. As soon as the robber left, she telephoned the local headquarters of the Kentucky State Police and reported the incident. Within a matter of minutes Gall was encountered by Detective Joe Whelan, who turned around and followed, and then by Trooper Gary Carey, who had alighted from his cruiser and was attempting to block the highway. As Carey signaled the driver to halt, Gall shot him once, got out of the Ford and shot him again, and then sped onward with Whelan emptying his gun into the rear of the fleeing car. Almost immediately other police officers took up the chase, and Gall was finally brought to bay when he attempted to make a U-turn in the town of Dry Ridge and one of the troopers rammed his cruiser into the Ford. The . 357 revolver was lying on the floor of the Ford. Also on the floorboard of the Ford automobile the officer found a cigar box and 112.88 \ on his person. Subsequent laboratory tests established that a bullet removed from Trooper Carey's person had been fired from the revolver found in Gall's automobile.
Shortly following his arrest Gall, by reason of his police record, became a suspect in connection with the disappearance of Lisa Jansen. In 1970 he had been charged with several counts of rape and armed robbery in southern Ohio, had been found mentally incompetent to stand trial, and had spent some 19 months in a mental institution at Lima, Ohio, after which he entered a plea of guilty to those charges and spent five years in a state penitentiary at Lebanon, Ohio. He was 31 years of age at the time of Lisa Jansen's murder.
Gall I,
II.
The court also concludes, as another ground for reversing Gall's conviction, that egregious prosecutorial misconduct occurred. I respectfully disagree. I first note that the court's decision to acquit the defendant by reason of insanity subsumes all other errors unless they relate to Gall's insanity defense. Thus, the focus, insofar as alleged prosecutorial misconduct is concerned, must be on the alleged acts of misconduct which bore on the insanity defense. The court does point to several comments made by the prosecutor in closing argument, but in each and every instance the remarks are taken out of context and ignore the very essence of the way this trial unfolded.
Although not always the case, generally when a defendant offers an insanity defense there is little doubt that he committed the crime and the insanity defense is his last resort. Such is the case here. Gall never made a believable claim of innocence, and the majority opinion does not even hint at innocence. Therefore, it is understandable that under these circumstances the prosecutor would bring out his heaviest artillery and direct it at the insanity defense. This certainly is not a license to make improper arguments, but the arguments that were made have to be viewed against the backdrop of the nature of the insanity defense in this case.
To begin with, there is no doubt given Gall's history that any health professional brought in to testify would indicate Gall suffered from a mental disease. This explains why the government did not offer additional psychiatric testimony, a fact that the majority seems to find significant. But just as there are many schizophrenics who function day-to-day in society and commit no crimes, there are schizophrenics who, at the time they commit a crime, are able to distinguish right from wrong and are not acting under an irresistible impulse. In this case, the prosecution's theory was that Gall was faking the inability to remember the events surrounding Lisa Jansen's death. This point is worthy of further elaboration.
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mental condition who never unequivocally said that, on the day of the murder, Gall either didn't understand what he was doing or, if he did, that he was unable to resist the impulse to violate the law. There is no doubt that the "mental disease or defect" prong of the insanity defense was satisfied, but a "snapshot" of Gall's mental condition on the day of the murder was never presented to the jury with any degree of certainty, or in a form they would be compelled to accept. Upon cross-examination by the prosecutor, Dr. Noelker, the defense expert, was unable to specify even one event which might have caused Gall to leave the state of remission he was in and suddenly become legally insane at 8:00 a.m. on the day he murdered Lisa Jansen. Noelker also admitted that because of Gall's claimed amnesia, his mental condition on the day of the murder was difficult to ascertain.
Although the majority concludes on the basis of the expert testimony that Gall was insane on the day of the rape and murder, the jury certainly was not required to reach that conclusion. As the Kentucky Supreme Court points out in its lengthy opinion affirming Gall's conviction, this was an unusual trial in many respects, not the least of which was that Gall acted, at least in part, as his own counsel. The Kentucky court found, and I agree, that some of the so-called bizarre trial tactics indulged in by Gall were actually very clever. [7] The jury had an opportunity to observe the defendant in action in a manner seldom afforded to juries in criminal cases, much less those in which an insanity defense is offered. There is absolutely no rule of law, evidence, or procedure, which would have compelled this jury to find Gall insane. Neither does common sense compel that result. In addition to seeing Gall in action, the jury heard from several persons who had a chance to observe Gall and his demeanor within hours of the murder. The jury was entitled to credit this "snapshot" of Gall and conclude that he appreciated the criminality of his conduct and was able to resist the impulse to commit the murder if he had chosen to do so.
C.
Because Gall challenges numerous aspects of his trial, we will describe in detail the most important elements of that proceeding before addressing his arguments.
1.
The question of Gall's competency to stand trial emerged repeatedly throughout pre-trial proceedings and the trial itself. The day after Gall was arraigned and indicted, the trial court appointed Dr. Robert Noelker, a clinical psychologist, to assess Gall's competence to stand trial. Simultaneously, the Commonwealth hired Dr. Lee Chutkow, a psychiatrist, to determine Gall's legal competence. Dr. Noelker first examined Gall on April 13, 1978. After his appointment by the court, he continued to examine and observe Gall up to and throughout the fall trial. Dr. Chutkow examined Gall on April 30, 1978.
Dr. Noelker presented his views on Gall's competence at a hearing on May 26, 1978. First, Dr. Noelker reported that intelligence tests showed Gall's verbal intelligence to be "in the extreme high end of superior range of development." J.A. at 872. Other tests showed Gall to be "a severely disturbed, emotionally disturbed individual," with a severe "schizophrenic paranoid type" personality disorder-the most severe psychological disorder that can be diagnosed. J.A. at 873-74. Nevertheless, Dr. Noelker concluded that due to Gall's remission from his disorder, he was "absolutely convenced" (sic) that he was competent to stand trial. J.A. at 875. At the hearing, Dr. Noelker also testified that Gall claimed to have no recollection of his activity at the time of the murder. He further stated that such amnesia is rare in personality disorders of Gall's type, but that he had not yet concluded whether Gall had been in an amnesic state for the period in question. The Commonwealth placed into evidence two reports by Dr. Chutkow, who also concluded that he was legally competent. J.A. at 1537. Both Dr. Chutkow's report and Dr. Noelker's testimony described a joint attempt to assess the veracity of Gall's claim of amnesia. When they
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attempted to perform the required procedure, Gall refused, claiming he was a prisoner of war. After the hearing, the trial court issued an order finding Gall competent to stand trial.
On September 13, 1978, the trial court held another pretrial hearing on Gall's competence. Dr. Noelker again stated that Gall "was definitely competent and has been on every occasion that I have seen him." J.A. at 904. He noted, however, that Gall was "less together" and "more anxious" on recent visits than he had been previously. J.A. at 904.
On September 23, 1978, after several days of voir dire, Gall informed the trial court judge that he desired to "take a more active role in [his] defense as far as questioning and crossexamining [] witnesses." J.A. at 635. In a hearing outside of the jury's presence, Gall stated that he understood he would jeopardize his insanity defense by taking part in the trial. Dr. Noelker testified that although he believed Gall remained competent, recent developments-primarily Gall's desire to represent himself-were bringing Gall "very close" to incompetency due to an inability to "assist counsel rationally in preparing and carrying out his own defense." J.A. at 910.
On observing Gall's behavior at trial, Dr. Noelker notified Gall's counsel that he believed Gall was no longer competent. The trial court once again called a hearing, where Dr. Noelker testified that Gall was no longer "capable of rationally participating in his own defense and/or assisting his attorneys in preparing or conducting his defense." J.A. at 915. He concluded that Gall "ha[d] disassociated himself from this trial and [] is participating in it much more as the attorney than the Defendant," J.A. at 915, adding that Gall's appearance of competence was "deceiving." J.A. at 918. Although he had an "excellent" ability to understand the proceedings taking place and the seriousness of their potential consequences, he did not "appreciate them relative to himself" because he now believed he was a defense attorney. J.A. at 921. Recent psychological tests confirmed this finding of incompetence, Dr. Noelker stated. the absence of countervailing evidence the defendant would be entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal. (2) No court can require notice of a defense prior to trial time. (3) The defendant has the burden of proving an element of a case only if the statute which contains that element provides that the defendant may prove such element in exculpation of his conduct.
KY. REV. STAT. ANN. § 500.070.
504.020 Mental illness or retardation
(1) A person is not responsible for criminal conduct if at the time of such conduct, as a result of mental illness or retardation, he lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law. (2) As used in this chapter, the term "mental illness or retardation" does not include an abnormality manifested only by repeated criminal or otherwise antisocial conduct. (3) A defendant may prove mental illness or retardation, as used in this section, in exculpation of criminal conduct.
KY. REV. STAT. ANN. § 504.020. The commentary to states:
The section also adopts the prior law which governed the burden of proof on the issue of insanity. Previously the defendant had to bear that burden; and, subsection (3) of this section continues to require that the defendant prove his insanity.
In concluding Gall was insane, the court relies upon statements by two psychiatrists concerning Gall's existing
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what the majority contends was the then-existing law and instructed the jury appropriately.
In a case in which there is a claim of acting under extreme emotional disturbance and an insanity defense, the difference between the two must be kept clear. The facts surrounding the murder are key to the extreme emotional disturbance defense. The facts surrounding defendant's mental disease or defect are key to the insanity defense. This distinction is critical in this case. Everyone would agree that Gall had mental problems and had previously been institutionalized. Yet, Gall presented nothing that would require or permit the jury to see the crime through his eyes because "no reasonable explanation or excuse" was offered as is required by the statute. At the risk of repeating myself, there has to be something either done by the victim or inherent in the circumstances surrounding the murder that would arouse extreme emotional disturbance and allow the jury to consider whether the defendant acted under such disturbance, which would then allow the crime to be viewed as first-degree manslaughter.
After erroneously concluding that the prosecution failed to prove an element of the crime of murder, the court then goes on to further find Gall was insane when the crime was committed 22 years ago. This finding is made without any discussion of what must be shown under Kentucky law to establish the defense. In Kentucky, a defendant offering an insanity defense bears the burden of proof. The relevant Kentucky statutes provide:
500.070 Burden of proof; defenses
(1) The Commonwealth has the burden of proving every element of the case beyond a reasonable doubt, except as provided in subsection (3). This provision, however, does not require disproof of any element that is entitled a "defense," as that term is used in this code, unless the evidence tending to support the defense is of such probative force that in
At this hearing, Gall explained to the trial judge that he did not agree with his counsel's "insanity only" defense strategy, and requested that the trial continue. He believed the best trial approach was to challenge the circumstantial evidence against him, creating a reasonable doubt as to his guilt. J.A. at 926,930 . The trial judge tentatively concluded that Gall was "extremely capable of assisting his counsel." J.A. at 936. Nevertheless, he ordered another psychiatrist to examine Gall that evening.
The following day, Dr. Kenneth Lanter, a psychiatrist, testified that he found Gall to be "normal" and able to "participate at any degree [in] his defense." J.A. at 842. Specifically, Dr. Lanter found that Gall appreciated his available legal defenses (including the insanity defense); understood the roles of the judge, lawyers and jurors in the trial; appreciated the seriousness of the proceedings and possible penalties against him; and exhibited above-average intelligence. J.A. at 841-45. After hearing this testimony, the trial judge once again concluded that Gall was "qualified mentally and emotionally," was "capable of assisting his counsel and [wa]s able to participate rationally in his own defense." J.A. at 853 . The trial proceeded accordingly.
2.
As the district court found below, the Commonwealth's circumstantial evidence against Gall was "overwhelming." J.A. at 25 . This evidence included: evidence placing Gall near the area where the victim's body was found around the time of the murder; ballistics tests from Gall's gun matching the bullets recovered from the bodies of Jansen and the police officer; red nylon carpet fibers from the car Gall was driving matching the red nylon fibers found on the victim's clothing; matching tire tracks from Gall's car and the tracks taken from the area where the victim's body was recovered; matching blood type between the semen stains on the front seat of petitioner's car and the samples from the victim's body; and a matching hair and blood type between a long hair recovered from Gall's car and the victim's hair.
*10 Due to this strong evidence, the insanity defense and Gall's claim that he was under an extreme emotional disturbance at the time of the killing emerged as critical aspects of the trial. Dr. Noelker testified before the jury that Gall was legally insane on April 5. Dr. John Toppen, another psychiatrist, reached the same conclusion in a deposition entered into evidence. The prosecution rebutted this testimony by presenting a videotape and written transcript of Dr. Chutkow's testimony regarding Gall's mental condition. Arresting officers and eyewitnesses also testified that Gall appeared calm and "normal" when they observed him during and after the 10:15 a.m. store robbery in Gardnersville. Because these assessments form a crucial part of Gall's appeal, we will address them in detail.
First, Dr. Noelker testified before the jury that Gall suffered from a psychotic disorder-"the most severe type of personality disorder that we know." J.A. at 956. Dr. Noelker testified that psychotic disorders of the type Gall suffered are "commonly characterized . . . by a loss of contact with reality[,] by an inability to control one's behavior or thinking, by delusions, hallucinations, by grandiosity and by inappropriate affect of the circumstances he is under." J.A. at 956. Dr. Noelker reached his conclusion after conducting personal examinations and interviews with Gall, examining his troubled past and extensive history of mental illness (including Gall's prior imprisonment and institutionalization), and performing an assortment of tests. An out-of-state firm that conducted a blind assessment of Gall's test results agreed with his finding, and recommended administering psychotic medicine. This bevy of data led Dr. Noelker to conclude that Gall suffered from chronic paranoid schizophrenia, J.A. at 969 , and that he was extremely dangerous and likely to act in a similar manner in an uncontrolled environment. J.A. at 962. He further stated that this type of schizophrenia was incurable, although Gall's behavior only periodically exhibited "the manner [in which] he is accused of acting in this instance." J.A. at 969-70. Dr. Noelker also repeated the crime of murder was the one taken by the trial judge, and that this was demonstrated by the instruction the trial judge gave to that effect.
Stated another way, assuming arguendo that the Kentucky Supreme Court in Gall's direct appeal did place an interpretation on the murder statute that differed from the interpretation it was previously given in Ratliff and its progeny, it makes no difference because the trial court proceeded in a manner consistent with Ratliff. I say "assuming arguendo" because one must not lose sight of the fact that the Kentucky court in Gall concluded that Ratliff was "factually distinguishable" and, as I have pointed out earlier, such was indeed the case.
In addition to being based upon a misinterpretation of the Kentucky murder statute as well as the case law interpreting that statute, the majority's conclusion will not stand up under logical analysis. For example, if a person is charged with murder under the Kentucky statute and all that is offered by way of defense is a claim by the defendant that he was in another state at the time of the murder, there would be no need for the prosecution to offer any evidence of the defendant's mental state. Yet, if, as the majority claims, the absence of extreme emotional disturbance is an element of the crime of murder it would have to be proven in all cases. To merely state this proposition is to show its absurdity. When all of the Kentucky cases dealing with the Kentucky murder statute are read, both those that precede Gall's crime and those that follow, it is clear that when "extreme emotional disturbance" is referenced in the same breath with "element," all that is intended is that once a defendant provides the necessary evidentiary predicate, the prosecution has the burden of proof on that issue.
Thus, the court's analysis concluding that the Kentucky Supreme Court violated due process, proceeds from an erroneous premise as to what the court actually ruled relative to Gall's appeal, as well as a misreading of the earlier cases. The trial judge, in fact, proceeded in a manner consistent with
*11 which could result in an acquittal, but only a defense that allows the defendant to have the jury instructed on the lesser included offense of first-degree manslaughter. Even though he wasn't entitled to it, Gall received the benefit of such an instruction. In short, the trial court actually proceeded as if it were a case in which the defendant was entitled to the instruction on the lesser included offense.
Having found the prosecution failed to prove an element of the offense, the majority next addresses the finding to the contrary by the Kentucky Supreme Court (section III B 2 c of the court's opinion). The court concludes that the Kentucky Supreme Court's decision violated due process by shifting "the burden to defendants to produce evidence of emotional disturbance." There are several things wrong with this conclusion. First, what the Kentucky Supreme Court actually said was:
There is much to be said for the proposition that an emotional disturbance inhering in a mental illness is not the kind of an emotional disturbance contemplated by the statute, in view of its historical development and the expression in the Commentary to the effect that it may be aroused by "any event, or even words," as quoted above. Assuming, however, that a mental disorder, whether or not it amounts to legal insanity, may constitute a reasonable "explanation or excuse" for extreme emotional disturbance, it was incumbent upon the trial court to require the negating of that factor in its instruction on murder, which was done.
Gall,
Gall's counsel also introduced into evidence the deposition of Dr. John Toppen, a psychiatrist who examined Gall on September 25, 1978. Dr. Toppen concluded that Gall had "schizophrenia of a paranoid type and chronic in nature," which he categorized as "severe, certainly in terms of his dangerousness to others." J.A. at 1207-08. Dr. Toppen further testified that Gall was in a psychotic paranoid schizophrenic state when he committed the rape and killing on April 5, 1978, and therefore lacked capacity to conform his behavior to the requirements of the law. J.A. at 1211-12.
Testifying on behalf of the Commonwealth, Dr. Chutkow stated that he did not believe that Gall was suffering from acute paranoid schizophrenia on April 5. Dr. Chutkow also believed that Gall could at times comply his behavior to the requirements of the law. J.A. at 321. He stated that these conclusions were based on Gall's account of the events of April 5 that he remembered, which showed that "[h]e was thinking realistically" and showed none of the "classical symptoms of schizophrenia." J.A. at 319. Moreover, on the day of the examination, "[Chutkow] received nothing from him . . . indicative of schizophrenic symptoms, nor did he have them . . . after he was arrested and put in jail." J.A. at
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- Further, Dr. Chutkow believed that Gall's claim of amnesia was simply a conscious decision to remain silent about the hours preceding his arrest. J.A at 354.
The peculiar circumstances of Dr. Chutkow's testimony warrant close scrutiny. The record is clear that Dr. Chutkow testified by videotape rather than in open court without any explanation or showing that he was unavailable. The prosecution provided no reason for Dr. Chutkow's absence, and at oral argument for this appeal, stated only that it could not recall the reason Dr. Chutkow did not deliver live testimony. In fact, Dr. Chutkow gave the deposition on September 28 in the same courthouse where the trial took place.
Furthermore, Dr. Chutkow acknowledged that the purpose of his 90 -minute examination of Gall months before had been simply to determine if Gall was competent to stand trial, and not if he was legally sane on April 5, 1978. J.A. at 325. As Dr. Chutkow himself stated at the trial deposition and a 1989 deposition conducted for this habeas petition, the brief, onetime session in which he assessed Gall's competency to stand trial in no way approximated the scope, duration and intensity of investigation required to assess a person's legal sanity. Not only did Dr. Chutkow not believe he had investigated Gall's sanity, he did not consider himself to have been testifying as to Gall's sanity. J.A. at 411 ("I did not conduct an examination on his sanity."); J.A. at 412, 413, 414 ("I would have been quite aware if there was a question about sanity, and they didn't ask me that.'); J.A. at 413 ("I really was not aware that [sanity] was the background of the questioning."); J.A. at 426 (stating that it "would not have been proper to make an opinion on his sanity"); J.A. at 427 (stating that he believed the hearing's purpose was to determine competency); J.A. at 435-38 (denying that he stated Gall was insane).
Although we have occasionally described EED as a mitigating circumstance, e.g., Gall v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
Id. at 945-46 (footnote omitted) (emphasis added). Coffey is significant for another reason. It makes clear that when a defendant introduces evidence that he was acting under extreme emotional disturbance, it is not a defense
*13
Similarly, in Edmonds the defendant, who had a "psychoneurotic condition," was infatuated with the woman he murdered. In describing the circumstances immediately surrounding the murder the court stated: "The appellant [defendant] was jealous of Betty [the victim] and on this fateful afternoon was laboring under the impression that she was going out with another man." Edmonds,
As in Ratliff, the issue in Edmonds was the trial court's failure to give a first-degree murder instruction. In finding error in the failure to do so, Edmonds is totally consistent with Ratliff. The predicate, the delusion that the victim was seeing another man, was present and, when coupled with the defendant's mental condition, would require the jury to look at the murder through the eyes of the defendant.
In Gall, the Kentucky Supreme Court did not find that there was insufficient evidence of any predicate which would trigger the extreme emotional disturbance defense, but that there was "no evidence." In my view, this is a factual finding which must be accorded great deference. It also is clear beyond peradventure that it is correct. There was never even a suggestion that the 12-year-old girl, who Gall raped and then shot, somehow in Gall's eyes had done something to provide "a reasonable explanation or excuse" for his actions. The most Gall offers is that he doesn't remember the killing. This might be relevant to his insanity defense, but is not a basis for holding that the "extreme emotional disturbance" provision of the murder statute was called into play.
One additional Kentucky case is worthy of mention although it must be read against the backdrop of the other
6 Even if one were to assume that both Ratliff and Edmonds somehow presented a different view of the Kentucky murder statute than the view expressed in Gall, they would provide no support for the majority's conclusion that the decision in Gall, as it related to the extreme emotional disturbance defense, resulted in an ex post facto violation since both cases were decided after the date of Gall's offense.
Rather, consistent with the purpose of his examination of Gall in April, he believed the questions were aimed at eliciting his views on Gall's competency to stand trial, and nothing more.
II.
This court reviews de novo a district court's refusal to grant a writ of habeas corpus. See McQueen v. Scroggy,
*14
court interpretations of state law generally bind the federal reviewing court. See Caldwell,
Before addressing the merits of his claims, we examine whether Gall has exhausted his state remedies, which he must do to gain habeas relief. See Rust v. Zent,
III.
Gall challenges a number of aspects of the guilt phase of his trial.
A. Legal Competence
Gall argues that his due process rights were violated because he was not competent to stand trial, having lacked sufficient contact with reality to understand the proceedings or cooperate with his attorneys. Gall further argues that the
Id. at 309-10 (emphasis added).
Even under these circumstances, three of the seven Kentucky justices dissented. The language in the dissent is illuminating:
There is no doubt that Clarsie [the defendant] was suffering from a mental disease. She was classified by a psychiatrist as a schizophrenic paranoid. A psychiatrist testified that she might commit a similar offense again and again. If an iota of evidence existed that Clarsie was acting under extreme emotional disturbance I would join the majority in saying that she was entitled to an instruction on first-degree manslaughter. I do not believe it is the function of this or any appellate court to embark on a crusade to find errors where none exist.
Id. at 310. At the risk of stating the obvious, the disagreement between the majority and dissent did not involve whether extreme emotional disturbance was an element of the crime of murder, but, rather, notwithstanding that defendant suffered from a serious mental illness, was there a factual predicate, i.e., provocation, sufficient to even require the jury to look at the killing through the eyes of the defendant.
*15
The defendant in Ratliff believed there was a conspiracy against her, and that the retail store clerk she shot and killed was part of the conspiracy.
Appellant believed the store clerk was a conspirator against her. She testified: ". . . Charlie Gilbert went up and told that woman at the store, the one I shot; he went up there and told her not to sell me nothing out of the store . . ." "They watched me, yes, and got smart with me and they acted like they wanted to bother me the Mullens girl and there's another girl come in from across the street, a little black headed girl, and they both got together there and I thought they was going to jump me." Appellant told state police detective Bellamy, "That lady (the victim) looked at me as if she was going to pull my hair." Appellant had been on medication and had been visiting the local Comprehensive Care Center for some time prior to the shooting for treatment of her mental condition.
Ratliff, 567 S.W.2d at 309 .
In Ratliff there was also psychiatric evidence that the defendant was a paranoid schizophrenic, and a defense of insanity was asserted. Although the court instructed on the insanity defense, it did not give the first-degree manslaughter instruction contemplated by the statute when the facts justify mitigation as a result of extreme emotional disturbance. The conclusion of the Ratliff court was that the instruction should have been given because the defendant thought the victim was conspiring against her, and the jury should have evaluated this delusion based upon defendant's paranoid schizophrenia. Thus, clearly, the court found the necessary predicate provocation to be the defendant's delusion that the victim was plotting against her. Once the predicate provocation is found, then, and only then, the prosecution has the burden of negating extreme emotional disturbance as a mitigating factor. Illustrating this point, the court in Ratliff stated:
In the case presently before us, the prosecution carried the burden to satisfy the jury of the absence of extreme trial court violated due process by allowing him to represent himself at trial.
A state court's determinations on the merits of a factual issue are entitled to a presumption of correctness on federal habeas review. See Demosthenes v. Baal,
1 . The Commonwealth argues that the record fairly supports a conclusion that Gall was competent to stand trial and to represent himself. We agree.
A criminal defendant may not be tried unless he is competent. See Godinez v. Moran,
*16
represent oneself "be asserted by the accused with his 'eyes open'"). There is no constitutional requirement that such a determination be made through a formal hearing and inquiry. Rather, most circuits, including this circuit, adopt a nonformalistic approach, determining the sufficiency of the waiver from the record as a whole. See id. at 249.
2.
The record supports the trial judge's conclusion that Gall was competent to stand trial. The court held a number of separate hearings solely devoted to the question of Gall's competence. At the May 26 hearing, both Dr. Noelker and Dr. Chutkow concluded that Gall was legally competent, and the trial court issued an order to that effect. On September 13, at another pre-trial hearing, Dr. Noelker again testified that Gall was competent. On September 23, after Gall asked to represent himself, Dr. Noelker again stated that he believed-but less decidedly so-that Gall was competent. Finally, after the trial had begun, Dr. Noelker informed the trial court that he believed Gall was no longer competent to stand trial due to a relapse in his condition. Hearing this conclusion, the trial judge questioned Dr. Noelker extensively. He then questioned Gall, discussing trial strategy and inquiring why Gall was resisting the insanity defense. From these discussions, the judge concluded: [M]y own personal assessment is that Mr. Gall has exhibited quite clearly to me an understanding of the nature and the proceedings and the seriousness of the proceedings and my personal belief is that he is extremely capable of assisting his counsel. J.A. at 936. Nevertheless, the judge ordered an additional examination of Gall by Dr. Lanter. Dr. Lanter testified the next day that he, too, found Gall fully competent to stand trial. J.A. at 840-53. After this testimony, the trial judge made his final decision that Gall was competent:
Gentlemen, having heard . . . the testimony of Doctor Lanter, the testimony of Dr. Noelker and of course the
The United States Supreme Court in a case involving this same Kentucky statute stated:
At trial, petitioner attempted to establish the affirmative defense of "extreme emotional disturbance."
[8]
He called as his sole witness a social worker, Martha Elam, who formerly had been assigned to his case. At the request of petitioner's counsel, she read to the jury from several reports and letters dealing with evaluations of petitioner's mental condition. On cross-examination, the prosecutor had Elam read another progress report made while petitioner was institutionalized. The prosecutor then sought to have Elam read from a report of a psychological evaluation made by Doctor Robert J. G. Lange while petitioner was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court after his arrest for Poore's murder. Counsel for petitioner and the prosecutor jointly had moved the juvenile court to order this evaluation under Ky. Rev. Stat. §§ 202A.010-202A. 990 (1977), which, at the time, governed involuntary hospitalization for psychiatric treatment.
[8]
At the time of the offense, the settled law in Kentucky was that this defense was available only where the defendant established two elements: that the defendant had been provoked, and that the defendant had acted in a subjectively reasonable way given this provocation. See Gall v. Commonwealth,
In reaching its conclusion relative to the Kentucky murder statute, the court misreads Ratliff v. Commmonwealth,
*17 in the Kentucky murder statute comes into play only upon a showing of "provocation," with the significant factor being that the jury must evaluate provocation through the eyes of the defendant. If the defendant has a mental illness such that he will see "provocation" where a normal person might not, the jury has to consider this deficiency on the part of the defendant. [5] This is a far cry from the court's holding here that extreme emotional disturbance is at all times an element of the offense of murder that has to be negated even when there is no claim of "provocation" or other "initiating circumstances," much less evidence of it. On this latter point the Kentucky Supreme Court in Gall's appeal specifically held:
While it is true that the "extreme emotional disturbance" phase of the murder instruction did not include the additional statutory language, "the reasonableness of which is to be determined from the standpoint of a person in the defendant's circumstances as the defendant believed them to be," we are of the opinion that the omission was proper. Obviously that particular language is appropriate only when there is evidence suggesting that the emotional disturbance was precipitated by some event or circumstance the defendant believed to exist. In this case there was no evidence to suggest that the appellant's motivation involved any "belief" on his part with regard to the circumstances that induced the alleged emotional disturbance. Ratliff
. Commonwealth, Ky.,
Gall v. Commonwealth,
Likewise, we hold that the trial court undertook a satisfactory inquiry before permitting Gall to serve as cocounsel in his own defense. First, the court's determination that Gall was competent to stand trial also rendered Gall competent to waive his right to counsel. See Godinez,
*18
examining witnesses. J.A. at 645-47, 657-59. After hearing this testimony, the judge concluded: [M]y impression is that Mr. Gall's choice or decision . . . to take charge of his own case is made intelligently and competently and understandingly and knowingly. He certainly has been advised of the possible consequences and I feel confident that he understands that. J.A. at 858 .
Once again, we believe that the record shows that the trial court properly ensured that Gall actually understood the significance and consequences of his decision to represent himself and that his decision was not coerced. See Godinez,
B. Absence of Extreme Emotional Disturbance
Gall contends that his conviction violated due process under In Re Winship,
Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 507.020(1)(a). Nothing in the statute suggests that negating extreme emotional distress is an element of the crime of murder, or that mental illness, short of legal insanity, is a defense. That the court's reading of the statute is erroneous is demonstrated clearly by the Kentucky Supreme Court's holding in Wellman v. Commonwealth,
The contention that mental illness and extreme emotional disturbance are one and the same is without merit. Prior to the adoption of KRS 507.020 (murder) and KRS 507.030 (voluntary manslaughter), the differentiating standard between the two, under the common law, was "sudden heat and passion." The principal change in the statute does not lie in the difference in the definitions between "sudden heat and passion" and "extreme emotional disturbance," if there is such. It lies in the fact that the former requires adequate provocation in the eyes of a reasonable man under the circumstances, while the latter requires the jury "to place themselves in the actors' position as he believed it to be at the time of the act." Gall, supra, at p. 108. Thus, the proper application, and point thereof, of mental illness, like intoxication on alcohol or drugs, is in the test of the effect thereof in considering such factors as events, acts or words as they relate to the particular defendant who contends that he was under extreme emotional disturbance at the time of his act.
In short, mental illness may be considered by the jury in the reaction by a particular defendant when there is probative, tangible and independent evidence of initiating circumstances, such as provocation at the time of his act which is contended to arouse extreme emotional disturbance. It is not such a disturbance when standing alone.
Id. (emphasis added).
Stated another way, and relating the above to the facts of this case, the "defense" or mitigation exception provided for
*19
opinion and will only address the findings with which I take issue. [3]
I begin with what I believe to be the key holding in the courts opinion and the one which I believe is most clearly erroneous. The court concludes that it was the government's responsibility to prove the absence of extreme emotional distress as an element of the offense charged. [4] The court then compounds its error by concluding that mental illness equates with "extreme emotional disturbance" for purposes of the Kentucky murder statute. The applicable Kentucky statute reads in pertinent part:
507.020 Murder
(1) A person is guilty of murder when: (a) With intent to cause the death of another person, he causes the death of such person or of a third person; except that in any prosecution a person shall not be guilty under this subsection if he acted under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance for which there was a reasonable explanation or excuse, the reasonableness of which is to be determined from the viewpoint of a person in the defendant's situation under the circumstances as the defendant believed them to be. However, nothing contained in this section shall constitute a defense to a prosecution for or preclude a conviction of manslaughter in the first degree or any other crime[.]
1.
Under Winship, due process is only satisfied if the prosecution proves every element of a charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt. See
*20
McGhee,
The Winship-Mullaney framework therefore leaves a reviewing court with several duties. First, it must determine whether a given ingredient is an element of the criminal offense. See, e.g., Hoover v. Garfield Hgts. Mun. Ct.,
Although I have started my dissent by drawing attention to the possible dire consequences of the court's decision, this is not the basis of my dissent. Sometimes, as Judge Jones goes to great lengths to point out, judges just have to let the chips fall where they may. At the risk of pushing a metaphor too far, the "chips" in this case are from a tree that does not need to be chopped down.
I.
After analyzing defendant's claims of error as they relate to the guilt phase of the trial, the court rejects the majority of them, including the claim that Gall was not competent to stand trial. I agree with all of those sections of the court's of this section, the court may order the detention of the defendant for a period of ten (10) days to allow for proceedings to be initiated against the defendant for examination and possible detention pursuant to the provisions of KRS Chapter 202A or 202B.
KY. REV. STAT. ANN. § 504.030
*21
CONCURRING IN PART, DISSENTING IN PART
GUY, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part. In this death penalty habeas case, the court concludes that the jury's verdict of guilty should be overturned and the state trial court be ordered to enter a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity. The court styles this relief as the granting of a conditional writ of habeas corpus. The "condition," however, is not the usual one that the state either retry or release the prisoner. Rather, the court first rules that double jeopardy would preclude the retrial of the defendant, an issue that was not raised in this appeal and an issue on which the state has never had an opportunity to be heard. The result of this holding would be to release a person who is undoubtedly guilty of the heinous offense charged and whom the court itself characterizes as likely to commit a similar offense. In order to avoid this result the court next takes the unprecedented step of usurping the role of the trial jury, which rejected the insanity defense, and finds the defendant insane. [1] The state trial court is then ordered to hold an involuntary hospitalization proceeding under Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 504.030 (Banks-Baldwin 1995). [2]
Applying the Jackson standard of review, we conclude that Gall's due process rights have been violated. We do so because the Commonwealth's showing of the absence of extreme emotional disturbance ("EED")-an element of murder in Kentucky at the time - was so lacking that no rational trier of fact could have found the required elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See Jackson,
Applying the Winship-Mullaney inquiry, we find that the absence of EED was an element of murder under Kentucky law for purposes of Gall's trial and appeal. Effective on
*22 January 1, 1975, Kentucky's new murder statute provided that a person is guilty of murder when: (a) With intent to cause the death of another person, he causes the death of such person or of a third person; except that in any prosecution a person shall not be guilty under this subsection if he acted under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance for which there was a reasonable explanation or excuse, the reasonableness of which is to be determined from the viewpoint of a person in the defendant's situation under the circumstances as the defendant believed them to be. However, nothing contained in this section shall constitute a defense to a prosecution for or preclude a conviction of manslaughter in the first degree or any other crime . . .
Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 507.020(1)(a) (emphases added).
In the cases that first addressed the new statute, the Kentucky Supreme Court plainly held that the absence of EED was an element of murder. Specifically, the court held without condition that a "failure to act under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance is an element of the offense of murder." Edmonds v. Commonwealth,
*23
medication or what pressures would cause him to become psychotically obsessional." Id. In an uncontrolled setting, therefore, it was "probable that [Gall] would act again in a similar manner" to the grisly act committed in this case. J.A. at 962 . It was therefore his "strong recommendation" that Gall "never be allowed to become a free member of the society again." J.A. at 970. In 1983, he repeated his diagnosis that Gall would always suffer from a mental disease or defect. J.A. at 1093. At trial, Dr. Toppen reached the same conclusion, explaining the need for Gall to remain in a highly structured environment, whether that be a mental or penal institution. J.A. at 1215. A 1991 examination by another doctor confirmed that Gall is permanently dangerous. J.A. at 629 (concluding that Gall's violent propensities "appear to be the result of a brain dysfunction which unleashes, without apparent internal controls, violent and aggressive behavior").
With this overwhelming showing of Gall's severe mental illness and his high potential for future dangerousness, we condition the grant of Gall's habeas petition on the state's granting him an involuntary hospitalization proceeding, just as he would have been provided if he had been found insane under Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 504.030 (requiring such a proceeding for defendants who are acquitted by reason of insanity). We leave it to that proceeding to determine if Gall meets the guidelines of Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. ch. 202A, which provides for confinement and hospitalization of mentally ill and dangerous persons until a time when they no longer present a danger to themselves or others. As this Court once stated in similar circumstances, we can only hope that the Commonwealth will note the overwhelming evidence that this man is severely mentally ill and highly dangerous and commit him indefinitely on that basis. See Stacy v. Love,
VI.
There can be little doubt that the fact that Gall committed a heinous crime drove the prosecution to secure a conviction statute makes the Absence of 'extreme emotional disturbance' an essential element of the offense of murder." Id. [5]
With the statute and precedent in place, Gall's prosecutors understood their duty to show an absence of EED, announcing that they intended do so in the voir dire and attempting to do so in their closing argument. Equally telling, the trial court instructed the jurors of this burden, informing them that they must find beyond a reasonable doubt that "when the killing occurred, Eugene Gall was not acting under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance." J.A. at 1563. [6] The trial court also demonstrated that absence of EED was an element the prosecution was required to prove when it rejected defendant's directed verdict motion. J.A. at 1560.
Finally, the Kentucky Supreme Court in Gall I said nothing to undermine its clear statements from the two prior years that EED was an element of murder under the new statute. Indeed, the court noted several times that the Commonwealth shouldered the burden of proof on the element, that its burden entailed proof beyond a reasonable doubt, and that when a defendant has presented evidence of EED, a murder instruction was required to include the negating of EED. See Gall I,
*24
court expressly reiterated its prior holdings, stating that "
he absence of 'extreme emotional disturbance' is an essential element of the offense of murder, and the legislature intended the Commonwealth to bear the risk of nonpersuasion on this element of mitigation." Henley v. Commonwealth,
This interpretation was consistent with the text of the statute. First, the legislature included the absence of EED in its affirmative definition of murder. See Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 507.020; cf. Allen v. Redman,
V.
Due to the constitutional violations stated above, this Court is compelled to grant Gall's petition for habeas relief. This Court has broad discretion in fashioning such relief. See Hilton v. Braunskill,
Nonetheless, in looking at the trial record, we think that the overwhelming and undisputed evidence of Drs. Chutkow and Toppen was that Gall was not sane at the time he committed the acts in question. Moreover, the evidence clearly showed that Gall's psychotic condition is permanent, and that he would be extremely dangerous to his fellow citizens if released into free society. Dr. Noelker testified to Gall's dangerousness in the starkest of terms. He stated that Gall's condition was not curable, and " he best that we could hope to do would be to control his condition." J.A. at 970 . Outside of an institution, he explained, this is not possible; "we would have no means of knowing how or when he took his [34] If we believed that there was even a minimally plausible argument that double jeopardy did not apply here, we would certainly provide the Commonwealth an opportunity to make that case, as the dissent suggests. But Burks makes it clear beyond doubt that double jeopardy does apply in this instance.
*25
that a reasonable juror would have likely considered the extraneous information of Gall's parole status in setting his sentence. See Bibbins,
Moreover, the trial court's response to the prospect that the jury was "tainted" was unacceptably weak. He merely advised the jury that "it would be error for this Court to instruct you or comment upon the subject of parole." J.A. at 1638. We agree with Gall that when faced with this question, the judge had a duty to admonish the jury more forcefully that it could not consider parole in its sentence determination-which would have reflected Kentucky law at the time. See Brown v. Commonwealth,
In short, we believe that the jury's extraneous knowledge of Gall's parole status at the time of the killing, and the trial court's failure to respond appropriately to its question regarding parole, inflicted "substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's verdict." Brecht,
We further note that the Kentucky statute was unique among those that incorporated the Model Penal Code's formulation for EED. Statutes introduced EED in one of three ways. First, a number explicitly described EED as an affirmative defense to first degree murder. See Conn. Gen. Stat. § 53a-54a; Haw. Rev. Stat. § 707-702(2); Mont. Code Ann. § 45-5-103; N.Y. Penal Law § 125.27(2); Or. Rev. Stat. § 163.115. Others provided EED as a mitigating circumstance and as part of their definition of manslaughter, but did not mention EED in their definition of murder. See Ark. Code Ann. §§ 5-4-605 &; 5-10-104; Del. Code Ann. § 641; N.H. Stat. Ann. § 630:2, Utah Code Ann. § 76-5205.5. This is how the Model Penal Code proposed it be introduced. See Model Penal Code § 210.3(1)(b). North Dakota introduced EED as a circumstance mitigating murder, class AA felony, to murder, class A felony. See N.D. Cent. Code § 12.1-16-01. Additionally, some states explicitly placed the burden on defendants to prove EED by a preponderance of the evidence. See, e.g., 11 Del. Code Ann. § 641. No statute other than Kentucky's incorporated the Model Penal Code formulation for EED directly into its definition of murder without also stating there or elsewhere that it was an affirmative defense. [8]
*26
b.
Despite the judge's instruction that the government needed to show the absence of EED beyond a reasonable doubt and the jury's verdict that he was guilty, Gall maintains that the prosecution failed to adduce evidence in support of the "absence of EED" element, and that the Kentucky Supreme Court applied an unconstitutional standard in reviewing this sufficiency claim. After closely scrutinizing the record, we must agree.
Even under Jackson's highly deferential standard of review for sufficiency of the evidence, we find that the Commonwealth did not meet its burden of showing an absence of EED beyond a reasonable doubt. First, Gall made an affirmative showing of EED. Although it would be almost ten years before the Kentucky Supreme Court would precisely define EED, cases preceding Gall's trial had provided that a showing of a severe psychotic disorder was sufficient to establish EED. See, e.g., Edmonds,
A defendant's Sixth Amendment rights are put in jeopardy when facts appear before a jury that were not developed at trial. Such extraneous influence may threaten the guarantee of an impartial jury, see Herndon,
We find that Gall's parole status was improper "extraneous" information. Despite the Commonwealth's argument to the contrary, there is no mention in the record that Gall had been on parole when he killed Jansen. The fact that his mother mentioned that he had been previously "released" did not indicate that he was released on parole. Nor did the lawyers, judge or other witnesses reveal that Gall was on parole at the time he committed the offense. With no sources from within the trial indicating his parole status, Palmer's knowledge of Gall's parole status was clearly extraneous information-as he himself stated under oath.
Due to Kentucky rules, counsel never had a chance to "explain" this crucial fact that came before the jury. Although we are not permitted to note Palmer's testimony that the jury considered that fact "very important," we do find
*27
2.
Gall's arguments regarding state law violations are not cognizable on habeas review. [33] Nevertheless, Gall does state a colorable constitutional claim, reviewable under , when he asserts that the juror's consideration of improper extraneous influences violated his Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury, as well as his right of confrontation and cross-examination. At the time, Kentucky did not permit jurors to consider parole as an aspect of their sentencing decision; nor were counsel allowed to discuss parole in their arguments before the jury. Yet Barton conceded at voir dire that he had previously read about Gall's parole status, and Palmer conceded that he knew of Gall's parole during the deliberations, having heard that fact from another juror. This case is thus better cast as one involving the introduction of improper extraneous information into the trial that may have prejudiced Gall's case.
In a habeas petition, when claiming that a trial error violated his constitutional rights, a defendant must show that the error "had substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's verdict." Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Moreover, we find that Gall clearly met the requirement of Ratliff and Edmonds, having introduced the testimony of Dr. Noelker and Dr. Toppen that he suffered from a severe psychotic disorder, and, specifically, from chronic paranoid schizophrenia. Moreover, Dr. Noelker stated explicitly to the jury that Gall was in a state of "extreme emotional disturbance" on April 5. J.A. at 982-83. Dr. Noelker's conclusions were based on Gall's history of severe mental disorders and the tests and interviews Dr. Noelker had administered since the crime, as well as circumstantial evidence of Gall's "aggressive and very bizarre behavior" on the day of the murder. J.A. at 1014. For example, Dr. Noelker stated, "I [can] not explain Mr. Gall's behavior on that morning in question . . . except in terms of extreme mental disorder. . . [T]his defendant had no reason to [] rush helter-skelter about, throwing clothes, belongings, books and whatever all over the highway." J.A. 1014-15. [10] The dissent argues that the Gall I Court distinguished Ratliff. In fact, it was in the context of a separate challenge by Gall that the Gall I Court distinguished Ratliff. As discussed in n. 18, infra, Gall argued that the trial court erred by not reading the portion of the EED instruction that required the jury to examine EED under a subjective standard-considering the circumstances as the defendant believed them to be. The Court distinguished Ratliff because Ratliff had testified about her perception of the circumstances around her, while Gall had not. Hence, the court concluded, the latter portion of the EED instruction was appropriate to Ratliff's case, but not to Gall's. Contrary to the dissent's implicit suggestion, the court did not indicate that Ratliff was distinguishable from Gall because Ratliff involved "initiating circumstances" that Gall had not shown, and that Gall had therefore failed to provide evidence of EED.
*28
Meanwhile, the Commonwealth failed to rebut this showing of EED-in fact, it does not even claim to have done so in the brief it filed with this Court. Dr. Chutkow was the state's prime witness on Gall's mental state. To begin with, the gist of his testimony was that Gall was competent to stand trial-indeed, the sole purpose of his only examination of Gall had been to determine Gall's competency. In Buchanan v. Kentucky,
First, Dr. Chutkow's testimony was narrow, failing to overcome crucial statements made by Dr. Noelker and Dr. Toppen. For example, he stated only that he could not find symptoms of acute paranoid schizophrenia before the onset of Gall's claimed amnesia and that he believed that Gall was legally sane. He did not testify that Gall had no mental disorder whatsoever, nor that he did not suffer from an EED at the time of the killing. Indeed, Dr. Chutkow acknowledged that he could not rule out Gall having chronic schizophrenia-the very form that Dr. Noelker had diagnosed. J.A. at 334-36. He also acknowledged that Gall's behavior during his "POW incident" might suggest a variety of conditions, including depression, psychotic behavior, or
Id. at 636. Finally, even when a juror testifies as to external evidence, that testimony must be parsed of all references regarding "the effect of that information on the juror's mental processes or the jury's deliberations." Bibbins v. Dalsheim,
Using these standards in looking at Palmer's deposition and questionnaire, we conclude that very few of his statements are admissible. First, almost all questions and answers on the questionnaire involved inadmissible "internal considerations" because they involved the "effect" of the knowledge of parole on the jury's deliberations. For instance, the questionnaire asked of "[t]he role parole played in your deliberation?" Palmer answered: "[A] big part." J.A. at 1168. The questionnaire then asked: How important was the fact that Gall was on parole? The answer "Very important." The form then questioned the role publicity played in deliberations, the possible alternative sentences under different hypotheticals, and asked "what convinced [Palmer] of" different conclusions. J.A. at 1168-69. In short, most questions involved paradigmatic internal considerations-the effect of parole and other factors upon Palmer's or any other juror's "mind or emotions as influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from the verdict." Fed. R. Evid. 601(b). Nevertheless, since Gall's parole status was never addressed at trial, see infra, the one question that is admissible as a purely external matter is-"Did you as a juror know Gall was on parole?" Answer: "Yes." J.A. at 1168. Similarly, nearly all of Palmer's deposition comprised inadmissible statements of his and the jury's internal considerations at trial-questions concerning the effect the possibility of parole had on the jury's deliberations. J.A. at 1151-62. The only testimony that involved exclusively external influences was Palmer's acknowledgment, after having looked at his completed questionnaire, that he had known that Gall was on parole when he committed his crime. J.A. at 1155. He also stated that another juror had made him aware of that fact, a statement that was also admissible. J.A. at 1166.
*29 Federal Rule of Evidence 606 establishes what evidence pertaining to jury deliberations a court may consider. [A] juror may not testify as to any matter or statement occurring during the course of the jury's deliberations or to the effect of anything upon that or any other juror's mind or emotions as influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from the verdict or indictment or concerning the juror's mental processes in connection therewith . . . . [A] juror may testify on the question whether extraneous prejudicial information was improperly brought to the jury's attention or whether any outside influence was improperly brought to bear upon any juror.
Fed. R. Evid. 606(b). Tanner further clarified the distinction between "internal" and "external" matters. Examples of impermissible "internal influences 'include the behavior of jurors during deliberations, the jurors' ability to hear or comprehend trial testimony, and 'physical or mental incompetence of a juror'"-generally, the "internal processes of the jury.'" Herndon,
Additionally, Dr. Chutkow stated several times that he had no basis to know Gall's mental state at the time of the killing. For instance, he stated that he had "no knowledge" as to Gall's mental state after the "time from which he claims amnesia," J.A. at 335-36; that he did not know Gall's condition for a "gap of approximately two or three hours," J.A. at 350-51; and that "[f]or a certain interval of time" before the murder, he did not know Gall's feelings, sensations or judgments. J.A. at 355. Importantly, Dr. Chutkow also acknowledged that because he had never considered the more extensive data that Dr. Toppen and Dr. Noelker examined, he could not challenge their conclusions that Gall suffered from chronic paranoid schizophrenia. J.A. at 320, 350-51. Finally, not only did Dr. Chutkow never contradict Dr. Noelker's statement that Gall suffered from EED in committing the killing (he was never asked a question on the presence or absence of EED), Dr. Chutkow expressly acknowledged that because Gall had a background of diagnosed schizophrenia, he "could have been" in a "state of exacerbation" at the time of the crime. J.A. at 352. In sum, none of Dr. Chutkow's statements countered Dr. Noelker's definite conclusions that Gall suffered from chronic paranoid schizophrenia and was under EED at the time of the killing. While Jackson instructs us to give the jury full responsibility to resolve extant conflicts in the testimony in the prosecution's favor, see
Nor do we think that the lay testimony adduced at trial was sufficient to create a conflict over Gall's showing of EED.
*30
The district court relied in part on the testimony of officers and witnesses present at the later robbery that Gall "appeared quiet, not excited, not nervous, and had steady hands and a normal voice" to conclude that the Commonwealth had introduced sufficient evidence on Gall's sanity. J.A. at 26. This included the testimony of one witness, John Wynn, that during the robbery, Gall seemed "nice [and] normal" and did not appear nervous. J.A. at 1287. Although this Circuit does not apply a per se rule barring lay testimony from creating an issue of fact as to a defendant's state of mind, see United States v. Smith,
Id. at 541 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In holding the State's lay evidence insufficient to raise a factual issue over Smith's sanity, the Smith Court reasoned that there was no indication that the lay witnesses were trained to make "the kind of psychiatric evaluations necessary to answer intelligently the questions" regarding sanity, and that there was also no evidence "to indicate that either of these witnesses, in observing appellant, was concerned with his sanity or competence." Id. at 540 . Following similar logic, Kentucky courts have long allowed lay witnesses to testify as
The Commonwealth offers several counter-arguments. First, the Commonwealth contends that statements in the penalty phase of the trial by both of Gall's parents referred indirectly to Gall's parole status, so that it was not "extraneous" information. The Commonwealth next avers that the evidence is not admissible under Fed. R. Evid. 606(b), pointing to the magistrate court's conclusion to that affect and to Tanner v. United States,
1.
Gall is certainly correct when he argues that post-conviction hearings are permissible means to investigate and remedy actual juror bias. See Smith v. Phillips,
*31
would comport with a trial court's "quest" to find jurors who "conscientiously apply the law and find the facts." Witt,
A violation under Witt is reversible error not subject to harmless error analysis. See, e.g., Gray v. Mississippi,
D. Prejudicial Extraneous Information
Gall argues that the post-conviction testimony of another juror ("Palmer") demonstrates that Gall's death sentence was unconstitutional. In a post-conviction questionnaire and again at a deposition conducted as part of Gall's habeas petition, Palmer indicated that he was aware of Gall's parole status when he committed the crime. (Gall alleges that Barton informed other jurors, including Palmer, of that fact). Palmer also indicated that the question of parole-the fact that he committed the crime while on parole, and the potential for parole from a life sentence-played an important role in the jury's decision to render a death sentence. Indeed, the jury
to their opinion of a defendant's mental state, but have consistently emphasized the need for a sufficient basis on which that witness can form her opinion. See Brown
. Commonwealth,
In this case, the lay evidence in question suffers shortcomings equivalent to that in Smith. First, the lay witnesses observed Gall not as he committed the crime in question, but as he committed a robbery at least one hour, and perhaps several hours, after the killing of Lisa Jansen. Second, these witnesses observed Gall for a matter of several minutes at most. As in Smith, their observation that he did not appear abnormal to them in those brief moments carries no probative weight as to the absence of EED. See
*32
Moreover, notwithstanding the fact that Dr. Noelker believed Gall's behavior after the killing was further evidence of both EED and insanity, the Commonwealth theorized at trial that because Gall was attempting to flee the scene of the killing, he must have been sane and not under EED. We rejected just this logic in a prior case, concluding that "any fool faced with fear and foreboding can flee and hide. Such is the nature of even a wild beast." Stacy v. Love,
Finally, we also do not find that the Commonwealth's cross-examination of Dr. Noelker elicited contradictions of his statements under direct examination. The Commonwealth asked a number of questions seeking to show that Dr. Noelker did not talk to key witnesses of Gall's behavior later on April 5 , or examine other key pieces of information, before reaching his conclusions as to Gall's mental state. J.A. at 993-1001. But Dr. Noelker explained that those pieces of information were not necessary to his determination (no other witnesses testified that they were necessary), and that not even Gall's claimed amnesia prevented him from rendering an opinion based on the variety of other available data he had studied. J.A. at . He proceeded to describe that data at great length. When the Commonwealth attempted to press Dr. Noelker as to whether he could truly pinpoint Gall's mental state at 8:00 a.m. on April 5, he responded that he was "as certain as I can be of anything in my profession. . . . As certain as you can be . . . that he was actually there. . ." J.A. at 1017. The cross-examination ended with Dr. Noelker assuring the prosecutor that "any competent mental health professional who has reviewed all of the data that I reviewed could [] and should come to the same conclusion." J.A. at 1034 .
Reflecting the weakness of its overall evidence, the Commonwealth's closing argument also failed to offer a viable argument regarding the absence of EED. It merely offered the erroneous proposition that the defense's failure to prove an insanity defense also meant that the prosecution had
Notwithstanding the deference owed to the trial judge,
[32]
we find that the factual record does not fairly support Correll's exclusion under the standards of Adams and Witt. Correll's discomfort with the death penalty did not appear to " prevent or substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and his oath.'" Id. at 424 (quoting Adams,
The transcript of the voir dire reprinted above shows that juror Colby was questioned in the presence of both counsel and the judge; at the end of the colloquy the prosecution challenged for cause; and the challenge was sustained when the judge asked juror Colby to "step down." Nothing more was required under the circumstances to satisfy the [habeas] statute. . at 430 .
*33
A trial court's decision to strike a juror based on his or her views of capital punishment is a factual determination. Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, such a determination is entitled to a presumption of correctness, to be overturned only if it is not fairly supported by the record viewed as a whole. See Wainwright v. Witt,
We find that the trial court committed reversible error in excluding Correll. Its decision is not supported by the record, and violated clear precedent. In a series of cases beginning with Witherspoon, the Supreme Court has consistently held that the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury is infringed when, through the procedures used to obtain a jury for a particular trial, the trial judge allows the selection of a jury "uncommonly willing to condemn a man to die."
Thus, even when we make all inferences in the Commonwealth's favor, we can not conclude that a rational trier of fact would find an absence of EED beyond a reasonable doubt at the time Gall killed Lisa Jansen. At no point did the Commonwealth rebut Gall's showing that he suffered from chronic paranoid schizophrenia at the time of the killing. Neither did the Commonwealth counter Dr. Noelker's explicit statement that Gall was under EED when he committed the crime. Instead, not only did Dr. Chutkow state that he had no basis to contest Dr. Noelker's findings, but he acknowledged that other disorders, including chronic paranoid schizophrenia, were distinct possibilities, and that Gall could have been in a state of exacerbation. Neither did the one-time, surface-level observations by the lay witnesses create a dispute over Gall's mental state. Because even when viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth, a rational trier of fact could not have found one of the elements of murder beyond a reasonable doubt, Gall's conviction for murder violated due process. c.
Finally, we agree with Gall that when faced with this question, the Kentucky Supreme Court read the Commonwealth's murder statute in a way that violated Winship. On his direct state appeal, Gall alleged that the Commonwealth had not satisfied its burden of proof on the absence of EED. The Gall I Court responded that there was "not a shred of evidence to suggest that [Gall] was acting under the influence of an emotional disturbance . . . , except for the evidence that he suffered from a mental illness from
*34
which the jury could have found, but did not find, that he was insane."
There is much to be said for the proposition that an emotional disturbance inhering in a mental illness is not the kind of an emotional disturbance contemplated by the statute . . . . Assuming, however, that a mental disorder, whether or not it amounts to legal insanity, may constitute a reasonable "explanation or excuse" for extreme emotional disturbance, it was incumbent upon the trial court to require the negating of that factor in its instruction on murder, which was done. That is not to say that once the issue is raised (by evidence sufficient to ground a reasonable doubt) the Commonwealth must meet it with countervailing evidence. Unless the evidence raising the issue [of emotional disturbance] is of such probative force that otherwise the defendant would be entitled as a matter of law to an acquittal on the higher charge (murder), the prosecution is not required to come forth with negating evidence in order to sustain its burden of proof. Otherwise it would never be possible to convict a defendant of murder if there were no eyewitnesses and if, for example, he testifies that he acted in self-defense, or was intoxicated out of his mind, or was acting under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance.
Court rejected Kordenbrock's reliance on more recent state cases (the same cases cited by Gall here) that altered the instructions to be read to juries; it concluded that those cases were not applicable because the Kentucky Supreme Court had "declined to apply the new rule retroactively which means the prosecutor and the judge did not misadvise the jury concerning the division of sentencing authority." Id.
Gall has not successfully distinguished the facts of Kordenbrock from this case. He argues that in Kordenbrock, the jurors were informed that the judge would give great weight to their recommendation, while they were not so advised in the Gall trial. In actuality, the references made in the two cases are almost identical. Both prosecutors downplayed the jurors' role during voir dire. Compare Kordenbrock,
C. Exclusion of Venireman
Gall argues that in dismissing a venireman ("Correll") who was uncertain about his views on the death penalty, the trial court violated Gall's constitutional rights. In particular, Gall argues that because Correll did not meet the standards for exclusion spelled out in Witherspoon v. Illinois,
*35
the death sentence, though not binding on the trial judge, obviously carries great weight."). Given this clear distinction, the conclusion reached in Beck, and not Baldwin, controls this case.
In short, given Mills, McKoy, and the combination of the instructions and verdict form presented to the Gall jury, there was at least "a reasonable likelihood that the jury [] applied the challenged instruction[s] in a way that prevent[ed] the consideration of constitutionally relevant evidence" in rendering a death sentence against Gall. Boyde,
B. Reference To Jury's Sentencing Decision As a "Recommendation"
Gall next argues that both the prosecutor and the trial judge violated his constitutional rights by repeatedly referring to the jury's role in sentencing as a "recommendation," which lessened the jurors' sentencing responsibility and thus violated Caldwell v. Mississippi,
This issue is clearly controlled by Kordenbrock. In that case, petitioner made the same argument Gall makes today: that both the prosecutor and the judge improperly referred to the jury's task as a "recommendation" in violation of Caldwell. See
Given that the absence of EED was an element of murder under Kentucky law-a principle of law that Gall I accepted and that the Kentucky Supreme Court would not overrule for several years-this portion of Gall I directly violates Mullaney and In re Winship. The Gall I regime shifted the burden to defendants to produce evidence of EED "of such probative force that . . . the defendant would be entitled as a matter of law to an acquittal." Id. Without that showing, a defendant is presumed to have acted in the absence of EED. Stated differently, the "absence of EED" element drops out of the state's required burden unless a defendant affirmatively shows EED, even if the defendant has presented sufficient evidence to raise a reasonable doubt about the absence of EED. This is exactly the type of burden-shifting proscribed by Mullaney; indeed, the two cases are markedly similar. In Mullaney, Maine had affirmatively shifted the burden of proof of "heat of passion" to the defendant-requiring that malice aforethought "was to be conclusively implied unless the defendant proved by a fair preponderance of the evidence that he acted in the heat of passion on sudden provocation."
Moreover, the Mullaney Court rejected several of Maine's arguments with reasoning that is relevant to this case. First, it stated that the proof of an element that distinguishes between murder and manslaughter implicates Winship as much as an element that distinguishes guilt from innocence. See id. at 697-98. Second, it rejected arguments identical to those made by the Gall I Court that the burden-shifting is necessary because of the difficulties the prosecution faces in "proving a negative":
No doubt this is often a heavy burden for the prosecution to satisfy. The same may be said of the requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt of many controverted
*36
facts in a criminal trial. But this is the traditional burden which our system of criminal justice deems essential. . . . Nor is the requirement of proving a negative unique in our system of criminal jurisprudence. Maine itself requires the prosecution to prove the absence of selfdefense beyond a reasonable doubt. . . . Satisfying this burden . . . is identical to the burden involved in negating the heat of passion on sudden provocation. Thus, we discern no unique hardship on the prosecution that would justify requiring the defendant to carry the burden of proving a fact so critical to criminal culpability.
Id. at 701-02 (citations omitted).
A close look at Patterson-in many ways the mirror image of this case-further illustrates the Mullaney violation here. In Patterson, the Court reviewed the way in which New York had adopted the same Model Penal Code EED provision into its penal law. Like most other states, see supra n. 3, the New York code explicitly provided that EED was an affirmative defense to murder, and then tasked defendants with proving EED by a preponderance of the evidence. See N.Y. Penal Law § 125.27(2);
Id. at 207. In stark contrast, Kentucky legislators established EED as an element of murder, and "clearly intended the
instructions. See Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 532.025(1)(b) (establishing that the jury shall retire to "determine whether any mitigating or aggravating circumstances . . . exist and to recommend a sentence for the defendant. Upon the findings of the jury, the judge shall fix a sentence within the limits prescribed by law"). The Supreme Court rejected a similar "curing" argument in Beck v. Alabama,
The Commonwealth's attempt to downplay Beck by pointing to Baldwin v. Alabama,
*37
permitted the jury only to consider mitigating factors that it found unanimously. See
Our decision in Mills was not limited to cases in which the jury is required to impose the death penalty if it finds that aggravating circumstances outweigh mitigating circumstances or that no mitigating circumstances exist at all. Rather, we held that it would be the 'height of arbitrariness to allow or require the imposition of the death penalty' where 1 juror was able to prevent the other 11 from giving effect to mitigating evidence.
Id. at 439-40 (emphasis added). That is the same defect introduced by the instructions and jury form in this case. For example, if a single juror believed that Gall had not shown any of three mitigating circumstances listed on the jury form, even if the remainder of the jury firmly believed that all three circumstances did exist, a reasonably likely interpretation of the unanimity instruction would have required the jury to answer "no" to the presence of each mitigating circumstance. Under one interpretation of Instruction V, this result would have required the jury to render a sentence of death; [21] under the alternative, it would have allowed a death sentence. Under either scenario, McKoy is violated.
Similarly unavailing is the Commonwealth's argument that the trial judge's role in the sentencing process "cured" these
Finally, although the Commonwealth could argue (it does not do so here) that the Gall I regime comports with the statement in Mullaney that the government only bears a burden of proof "when the issue is properly presented in a homicide case,"
In short, the regime the Gall I Court constructed in response to Gall's evidentiary review was itself constitutionally infirm under Mullaney. The court should have adhered to Kentucky
*38
law at the time and addressed head-on whether the prosecution met its burden to show the absence of EED beyond a reasonable doubt. In averting this review, the Kentucky Supreme Court violated due process.
3.
In contrast to even the prosecutor's and trial judge's reading of Kentucky law at the time, not to mention the Kentucky Supreme Court's clear interpretation of the murder statute, Judge Guy's dissent contends that the absence of EED was not an element of murder, and that our conclusion that it was "is most clearly erroneous." Post at 114. It also argues that we "compound[]" our error by finding that mental illness equates with EED for purposes of the Kentucky murder statute. See id. After carefully considering the dissent's points and underlying reasoning, we respectfully disagree with both assertions. Indeed, we find the dissent's reasoning to rest on an anachronistic reading of Kentucky law-based on the Kentucky Supreme Court's explicit and non-retroactive re-interpretation of the Commonwealth's murder statute in the years after its Gall I decision. i)
At the risk of repeating our earlier discussion, we first address the dissent's contention that negating EED was not an element of murder. The dissent explains that "nothing in the statute suggests that negating extreme emotional distress is an element of the crime of murder," a proposition we believe is belied by the text of the statute, its clear variation from the other states that adopted the same Model Penal Code murder provision, and, most importantly, the binding interpretation of the highest court in the Commonwealth up until 1985. Post at 115. Further, the dissent points to cases such as Wellman v. Commonwealth,
*39
instruction that all findings must be unanimous, the reasonable juror would also have likely assumed that the fifth question on the form, asking "[w]hat other mitigating factors, if any, do you find," J.A. at 1626 (emphasis added), also required unanimity. As Mills stated regarding a similar part of its verdict form, "[n]o instruction was given indicating what the jury should do if some but not all of the jurors" believed that such a mitigating factor existed. See id. at 379. Just as in both Mills and in McKoy, the Gall instructions made quite probable the disturbing hypothetical of individual jurors finding mitigating factors but being unable to give effect to those factors because of a lack of unanimity. Such a defect constitutes the "height of arbitrariness," and is the "precise defect that compelled the [Court] to strike down the Maryland scheme in Mills." McKoy,
We find this case more clear-cut than Kordenbrock, where this Court, en banc, reversed a death sentence due in part to a Mills violation The Court held that "[b]ecause the jurors ... were told that aggravating factors had to be unanimous, but were not told exactly what role mitigating factors play, it would have been reasonable for them to assume that mitigating factors had to be found unanimously as well."
The Commonwealth's attempts to defend the instructions are unavailing. The Commonwealth's primary argument is to point to Instruction V, which informed the jury that it did not "have to recommend the death penalty" even if it found an aggravating circumstance, or even if it concluded that any one "'defense' or mitigation exception." Post, at 115. Third, the dissent attacks what it believes to be the illogical results of our reading of the law: namely, the "absurdity" of having to prove the absence of EED in all cases. While the modern treatment of EED is perhaps more logically sound and workable, we simply can not agree that the dissent's reading reflects the law applicable to Gall's case; indeed, the Gall I opinion itself did not apply the law the dissent describes. A thorough review of the evolution of Kentucky EED caselaw reveals this.
Following the Commonwealth's incorporation of the Model Penal Code language into its definition of murder in 1974, the first Kentucky Supreme Court cases to explore its meaning were Edmonds, Ratliff, and Bartrug. As stated supra, all three opinions stated without condition or exception that the failure to act under the influence of an EED was an element of the offense of murder. See, e.g., Edmonds,
*40
absence of EED as a clear element: "Murder, under the statute, is an intentional killing where the defendant is not acting under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance." Id.; see also Hayes v. Commonwealth,
This interpretation would soon change. In Wellman, a 1985 case on which the dissent heavily relies, the Kentucky Supreme Court articulated in the plainest of terms that, prior to Gall, absence of EED had indeed been an element of murder, and that Gall had not formally changed that interpretation, although it had perhaps signaled that the change was imminent.
We are continually beset with arguments founded upon "extreme emotional disturbance" despite the articulation of its meaning and impact in [Gall I]. It is our opinion that the principal cause of this problem is the failure of this court, in Gall, to specifically overrule those portions of Ratliff, Bartrug and Edmonds [] which declare that the absence of extreme emotional distress is an essential element of the crime of murder and require the Commonwealth to prove such absence. . . . To the extent that such cases declare absence of extreme emotional distress to be an element of the crime of murder, they are expressly overruled.
Wellman,
The instructions and verdict form from Gall's trial suffer from the same basic defects as those in Mills and McKoy, despite a few wrinkles of difference. Just as in Mills, the questions asked were in a clear "yes" or "no" format; indeed, the form ordered the jurors to "Answer, Yes or No," listing no other alternatives. J.A. at 1625-26. Just as in Mills, then, following the judge's instruction that "[y]our findings and verdict must be unanimous and must be signed by the foreman," a reasonable juror would likely have assumed that to indicate "yes" to one of the enumerated mitigating circumstances, unanimity was required. Otherwise, "no" was appropriate. And just as in Mills, "nothing the judge said dispelled" that inference. Mills,
*41 opposite of "yes," and therefore the appropriate answer to reflect an inability to answer a question in the affirmative. Nothing in the verdict form or the judge's instructions even arguably is construable as suggesting the jury could leave an answer blank and proceed to the next stage in its deliberations.
Id. at 378-79. The Court therefore concluded that the Lockett rule was violated because there was:
a substantial probability that reasonable jurors, upon receiving the judge's instructions in this case, and in attempting to complete the verdict form as instructed, well may have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating evidence unless all 12 jurors agreed on the existence of a particular such circumstance. Under our cases, the sentencer must be permitted to consider all mitigating evidence. The possibility that a single juror could block such consideration, and consequently require the jury to impose the death penalty, is one we dare not risk.
Id. at 384.
[29]
See also Kordenbrock v. Scroggy,
The Court in McKoy,
This line of cases illuminates the flaw in the dissent's contention that the absence of EED was not an element of murder at the time of Gall I. Its reliance on Wellman is in error because that case explicitly overruled the cases holding that the absence of EED was an element of murder-and those were the very cases in place when Gall's trial and appeal occurred, and that Gall I and Henley left in place. Only in Wellman did the Kentucky Supreme Court establish that the absence of EED is not an element of murder, and as we explain infra, we can not apply that holding retroactively to Gall's conviction and appeal. Equally unavailing is the dissent's reliance on Buchanan, since that case relied on Wellman to conclude that EED was an affirmative defense. In sum, the dissent's conclusion that the absence of EED was not an element of murder is based on caselaw that postdated Gall's conviction and appeal, and, it appears, that resulted from the dramatic shift that Gall I triggered due to its clear Mullaney violation. The caselaw applicable to Gall's case was clear that the absence of EED was indeed an element of murder.
[12]
Most recently, in Coffey v. Messer,
*42
ii)
For similar reasons, we also respectfully disagree with the dissent's careful substantive definition of EED, and its requirement that a specific predicate provocation must trigger EED. Specifically, the dissent reads Kentucky law to have distinguished between EED and mental illness or disease that amounts to insanity. "The facts surrounding the murder are key to the extreme emotional disturbance defense. The facts surrounding defendant's mental disease or defect are key to the insanity defense." Post at 124. (emphasis added). According to the dissent, only when a predicate provocation is found to have triggered the killing must the prosecution negate a showing of EED. Again, while the dissent's conception may reflect the law in Kentucky today, this more refined definition is based on caselaw that developed well after Gall I, and that can not be applied retroactively to his case. Again, review of the evolution in Kentucky caselaw on the substantive definition of EED plainly illustrates this point.
First, however, it is important to understand the intent of the Model Penal Code framers when they introduced the concept of EED. The ALI Commentary explains that the "provision includes the common-law doctrine of provocation but is not so limited in its scope." ALI, Model Penal Code and Commentaries, , at 53-54. How far the provision intended to move from the common law was less than clear, however. The Commentary itself acknowledged that it was moving into uncharted waters. The provision, it explained, "sweeps away the rigid rules that limited provocation to certain defined circumstances. Instead, it casts the issue in phrases that have no common-law antecedent and hence no accumulated doctrinal content." Id. at 61. "This development reflects the trend of many modern decisions to abandon preconceived notions of what constitutes adequate
ii) Applying Mills and McKoy
Because they were nearly identical to instructions that the Supreme Court has found to violate Lockett, and more problematic than instructions this Court has found to violate Lockett, we hold that the instructions and verdict form in this case were unconstitutionally defective. A close look at the relevant cases illustrates why this is so.
In Mills,
The Mills Court concluded that a reasonable juror would likely not have interpreted the instructions and jury form to require unanimity before answering "no" to the presence of a mitigating circumstance-but would instead have concluded that the absence of unanimity on "yes" meant the appropriate answer was "no."
The jury was instructed to mark each answer "yes" or "no." Although it was clear that the jury could not mark "yes" in any box without unanimity, nothing the judge said dispelled the probable inference that "no" is the
*43 jury that it "may consider" the murder during the course of a rape as an aggravating circumstance, and that it "may consider" one of a number of enumerated factors (age, emotional disturbance, legal sanity, etc.) or "other circumstances" as mitigating circumstances. J.A. at 1622-23. In Instruction IV, the judge instructed that Gall was presumed to be innocent of the aggravating circumstances "unless you believe from the evidence, and beyond a reasonable doubt, that he is guilty of those crimes." J.A. at 1623. In Instruction V , the judge instructed:
The death penalty shall not be recommended unless you find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that one aggravating circumstance exists.
You shall not recommend the death penalty unless you believe the weight of the aggravating circumstances, if any, exceeds the weight of the mitigating circumstances, if any.
Even though you may find an aggravating circumstance, you do not have to recommend the death penalty.
Even though you may believe any aggravating circumstance outweighs any mitigating circumstance you do not have to recommend the death penalty. J.A. at 1623-24. In Instruction VI, the court stated that "[y] our findings and verdict must be unanimous and must be signed by the foreman." J.A. at 1624 (emphasis added).
Meanwhile, the judge also provided a special verdict form that asked five questions of the jury, based on the instructions given. It asked the following: first, whether Gall had committed the murder while committing rape; second, whether the offense was committed under the influence of extreme or emotional disturbance; third, whether the offense was committed at a time that Gall was legally insane; fourth, whether his age was a mitigating factor; and fifth, whether there were any other mitigating factors. The first four questions instructed the jury to "Answer, YES or NO." J.A. provocation and to submit that question to the jury's deliberation." Id. It further noted that when setting out that the reasonableness of the defendant's action be assessed from the viewpoint of a person in the actor's situation, "the word 'situation' is designedly ambiguous." Id. at 62. "There thus will be room for interpretation of the word 'situation,' and that is precisely the flexibility desired." Id. The ALI added that it sought for courts and juries to focus far more closely on mental infirmities: [The provision] places far more emphasis than does the common law on the actor's subjective mental state. It also may allow an inquiry into areas which have been treated as part of the law of diminished responsibility or the insanity defense.
Id. at 54. In a separate publication, the Code's primary author echoed the ALI Commentary, stating that the new provision permitted a reduction to manslaughter "on the basis of a standard much broader than the concept of provocation as developed at the common law." Herbert Weschler, Codification of Criminal Law in the United States: The Model Penal Code, 68 Colum. L. Rev. 1425, 1446 (1968). "The purpose was explicitly to give full scope to what amounts to a plea in mitigation based upon mental or emotional trauma of significant dimensions, with the jury asked to show whatever empathy it can." Id.
Given the intentional ambiguity of the Model Penal Code, states adopted different approaches in defining EED. Some added additional specificity within the statutes themselves. See, e.g., N.D.C.C. 12.1-16-01 (noting that "[a]n extreme emotional disturbance is excusable . . . if it is occasioned by substantial provocation, or serious event, or situation for which the offender was not culpably responsible"); N.H. Stat. Ann. § 630:2 (requiring "the influence of extreme emotional disturbance caused by extreme provocation"). Most states, however, left the ambiguous language of the MPC unchanged, allowing courts to shape the precise meaning of EED. Several state courts read the new language to eliminate any
*44
provocation requirement, allowing certain showings of mental disease to be sufficient to show EED. The New York Court of Appeals, for instance, found that "tremendous advances made in psychology since 1881" had primarily led to the new EED defense. People v. Patterson,
Faced with the ambiguity of the new murder statute,
[14]
the Kentucky Supreme Court waited more than a decade before it developed a precise substantive definition of EED. At the time of Gall's trial it had yet to lay down a clear definition, and at the time of his appeal, it had stated merely "that we know it when we see it." Edmonds,
We reject Gall's arguments regarding the first two penalty instructions he challenged. First, there is no constitutional prohibition on states' requiring that mitigating circumstances be proved by preponderance of the evidence. See, e.g., Delo v. Lashley,
Gall's challenge of the unanimity instruction does raise a due process challenge cognizable on habeas review. We also find the argument persuasive on its merits.
i) The instructions and jury form
A close perusal of the relevant instructions is necessary to assess an alleged Lockett violation. In Instruction I, the judge informed the jury: "[i]t is now your duty to determine what punishment must be imposed upon [Gall]. You will deliberate and determine whether any mitigating or aggravating circumstances, as are hereinafter defined, exist." J.A. at 1622. In Instruction II, the trial court instructed the
*45
factor, "any aspect of a defendant's character or record and any of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death." Lockett,
Id. (emphasis added). In making this determination, courts should not view instructions in isolation, but "with a 'commonsense understanding of the instructions in the light of all that has taken place at the trial.'" Johnson,
The Court in both Ratliff and Edmonds pointed to the respective defendants' psychological maladies as warranting EED instructions, failing to require the "triggering" event the dissent would demand. In Ratliff, the court stated that "[t]he record is replete with evidence of an emotional disturbance."
*46
nonspeculative evidence" of EED. Id. And as the dissent points out, three dissenting Justices in Ratliff protested just this aspect of the decision, opining that evidence only showing that Ratliff was suffering from a severe mental disease, without more, was not sufficient to qualify as EED. See id. at 310 (Jones, J., dissenting). While this minority view did not prevail at the time (as it would in later years), it helps clarify that the majority was treating Ratliff's mental illness as sufficient to show EED. [16]
Again in Edmonds, the Kentucky Supreme Court relied primarily on psychological evidence to find that an EED instruction was necessary. The court explained that Edmonds had previously been hospitalized for a psychoneurotic condition, and that prior to his alleged killing of a 23-year old woman with whom he was infatuated, he had been taking a self-prescribed and self-compounded medication (a mixture of sodium bromide or alcohol and potassium bromide) that led him to "blank out" and act in a "bizarre manner."
The decision to exercise the power of the States to execute a defendant is unlike any other decision citizens and public officials are called upon to make. Evolving standards of societal decency have imposed a correspondingly high requirement of reliability on the determination that death is the appropriate penalty in a particular case. . . Under our cases, the sentencer must be permitted to consider all mitigating evidence. The possibility that a single juror could block such consideration, and consequently require the jury to impose the death penalty, is one we dare not risk.
Mills,
3.
We therefore address the merits of Gall's Lockett-Mills argument. Lockett and its progeny govern the constitutional limits on how states can guide sentencers' discretion in considering the mitigating circumstances that may convert a sentence of death into a term of imprisonment. As stated supra, the essential rule from Lockett is that the sentencer shall not be precluded from considering, as a mitigating
*47 [or] by the sentencing court, Eddings v. Oklahoma, supra. . . The same must be true with respect to a single juror's holdout vote against finding the presence of a mitigating circumstance.
Additionally, even if arguendo Mills announced a "new rule" as defined by Teague, we find that its holding meets the second of Teague's two "narrow exceptions" to the nonretroactivity of new rules. Lambrix,
Id. And once again, looking back on the case three years later, the Henley Court assessed that the instruction was warranted in Edmonds because of the "strong evidence" of EED: namely, "[t]he appellant had been hospitalized several times for mental problems, and shortly prior to the shooting, he had been taking a self-prescribed and self-concocted medication which affected him mentally."
Given these opinions from the prior two years, it is no surprise that the Gall I Court, when faced with a situation where the primary evidence of EED was that of Gall's mental illness, did not simply reject Gall's argument under the dissent's rationale that Gall did not offer a "provocation predicate." Rather, the Court stated that there is not a shred of evidence to suggest that he was acting under the influence of an emotional disturbance, or that there were any circumstances existing at the time of the killing to provoke or stimulate such a disturbance, except for the evidence that he suffered from a mental illness from which the jury could have found, but did not find, that he was insane. 607 S.W.2d at While the court then stated that "there [was] much to be said for the proposition that an emotional disturbance inhering in mental illness is not the kind of
*48
emotional disturbance contemplated by the statute," consistent with Edmonds and Ratliff, it did not so hold. Rather, for the purposes of the appeal, the court "[a]ssum[ed] that a mental disorder, whether or not it amounts to legal insanity, may constitute a reasonable 'explanation or excuse' for extreme emotional disturbance." Id. Further showing that there was no hard-and-fast provocation requirement, the court stated that the trial court's decision to omit the latter half of the EED instruction was proper because there was "no evidence to suggest that the appellant's motivation involved any 'belief' on his part with regard to the circumstances that induced the alleged emotional disturbance." Id.
[18]
see also Gall II,
Finally, the most telling evidence of the understanding of EED through Gall I is the new direction the Kentucky Supreme Court adopted in subsequent years, acting upon the skepticism it first expressed in Gall I regarding the loose
Applying this two-part inquiry, we find that the decision in Mills did not comprise a "new rule" under Teague. The final decision in Gall's case came in March 1981 when his petition for certiorari was denied. See Gall v. Kentucky,
Under our decisions, it is not relevant whether the barrier to the sentencer's consideration of all mitigating evidence is interposed by statute, Lockett v. Ohio, supra,
*49
challenge the penalty phase instructions in that appeal, Gall had no choice in the matter. "In an RCr 11.42 proceeding, the movant cannot raise issues which were raised and decided on direct appeal." Wilson v. Commonwealth,
2.
The Commonwealth asserts that the rule laid out in Mills v. Maryland,
Although we will discuss the Mills decision in more detail infra, its fundamental holding was that the rule from Lockett had been violated because there was a substantial probability that reasonable jurors, upon receiving the judge's instructions in this case, and in attempting to complete the verdict form as instructed, well may have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating evidence unless all 12 jurors agreed on the existence of a particular such circumstance.
Id. at 384. In McKoy, the Court repeated the Mills holding, stating that the Lockett principle had again been violated because it was clear that a jury had been required to make its decision based only on circumstances it had unanimously found, allowing "one holdout juror to prevent the others from giving effect to evidence that they believe calls for a 'sentence less than death.'" Id. at 439 (quoting Eddings,
*50
see also Cecil v. Commonwealth,
While these later standards indeed resemble the dissent's conception of EED, they also show that that conception did not emerge until after Gall I. Through Gall I and the early 1980s, as McClellan, Henley, Ratliff and Edmonds illustrate, a showing of serious mental illness (and in several instances, a showing of paranoid schizophrenia) had been sufficient to meet the ambiguously defined EED. Because Gall made such a showing, he was entitled to the due process protections of Winship and Mullaney.
iii)
Finally, we wish to articulate the reasons that the dissent's retroactive application of Kentucky Supreme Court decisions that overruled the clear precedent governing Gall I would be improper. First, by applying the more modern definition of EED to Gall's case, the dissent would directly contravene the Kentucky Supreme Court's own determination that the new definition of EED in McClellan was to be applied prospectively. See Smith,
More generally, applying cases such as Wellman and McClellan to Gall's case would defy the underlying purpose of habeas review. The task of a habeas court under
is to assess the constitutionality of a state court conviction. Even with respect to questions of federal constitutional law, habeas review is constrained by robust principles of finality and non-retroactivity. See generally Teague v. Lane,
Although Gall did not object to the instructions at trial, the Commonwealth concedes that he did challenge them on appeal. See Gov't Br. at 28. Thus, it was up to the Kentucky Supreme Court to apply either its procedural rule barring review or to address the merits of the case; if the court clearly and expressly applied its procedural bar to that claim, then federal habeas review is precluded. See Boyle,
After his direct appeal failed, Gall brought his RCr 11.42 appeal. While the Commonwealth decries Gall's failure to
[28] The Gall I Court said the following:
In its instructions the trial court confined the consideration of aggravating circumstances to whether the murder was committed in the course of rape, but allowed the jury to consider four specific mitigating circumstances for which there was some semblance of evidentiary basis and a fifth or catch-all category, "whether or not there are other mitigating circumstances presented through the evidence, not listed above." The instructions made it clear that the jury could not recommend the death penalty unless by unanimous verdict it found beyond a reasonable doubt that the aggravating circumstance existed, but that even in that event, and even though it might believe the aggravating circumstance outweighed such mitigating circumstances it might find to exist, it still did not have to recommend the death penalty.
*51
you may consider are as follows . . ." J.A. at 1622. Second, he challenges the instruction: "Your findings and verdict must be unanimous and must be signed by the foreman," J.A. at 1624, alleging this communicated to the jurors that any mitigating factors had to be found unanimously. Third, he challenges the instruction that jurors needed to find that a mitigating factor existed by a preponderance of the evidence.
Gall argues that these instructions violated both Kentucky law and the Constitution because the jury was prevented from considering and giving effect to mitigating factors in violation of Lockett. The Commonwealth counters by first pointing out that Gall did not object to these instructions at trial, or appeal them in his post-conviction appeal in the Kentucky courts, so that this claim has been lost through default. It also musters a Teague defense, arguing that Gall is improperly seeking the benefit of a "new" constitutional rule. Assuming arguendo that this claim is not invalid, the Commonwealth also contests it on its merits.
On habeas review, errors on instructions are not reviewable unless they deprive a defendant of constitutional due process. See Long v. Smith,
1.
We disagree with the Commonwealth's contention that Gall defaulted this claim. The Commonwealth asserts that because Gall's collateral attack motion in the Kentucky courts did not attack the penalty phase jury instructions, that attack was waived under Kentucky Criminal Rule (KCR) 11.42, which
Mullaney,
*52
habeas review to apply intervening state precedent that explicitly overruled the state law applied in a petitioner's case.
A simple example demonstrates this point. Jackson
. Virginia requires that habeas courts examine whether a rational trier of fact could have found a defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and instructs that such a review be made "with explicit reference to the substantive elements of the criminal offense as defined by state law."
Moreover, constitutional due process would be violated by casting aside Kentucky Supreme Court holdings establishing the absence of EED as an element of murder in favor of later cases overruling those precedents, particularly when the Kentucky Supreme Court itself applied those early cases 1) to Gall's case, 2) to cases heard both before and after Gall I, and 3) to crimes that took place before and after Gall's. No less than in Mullaney itself, applying Wellman's conclusion that absence of EED was not an element of the crime (when Gall I and even later cases accepted that crucial premise) would effectively shift the burden of proof on an element onto Gall, with the only difference being that the Mullaney violation would occur at the collateral review stage. The Supreme Court since Mullaney has cautioned that a state must not be allowed to "manipulate its way out of Winship." Jones,
H. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Finally, Gall argues that he was deprived of his Constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. There were clearly shortcomings in the representation Gall received at trial. But primarily because Gall chose to represent himself, we do not find that the constitutional standard of Strickland was violated. See Faretta v. California,
IV.
Gall also challenges aspects of the penalty phase of the trial.
A. Penalty Phase Instructions
Gall argues that the penalty phase instructions given at his trial violated his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights as defined by Lockett v. Ohio,
*53
There remains the alternative route that default can be excused because our failure to recognize the claim would result in a "fundamental miscarriage of justice." See Coleman,
For the reasons explained supra, we indeed believe that the Confrontation Clause violation likely stood in the way of an acquittal for reason of insanity. Given Dr. Chutkow's statements at his habeas deposition, it is clear that the Commonwealth had no evidence to rebut Gall's showing of insanity at the time of the killing. Dr. Chutkow's short examination had merely assessed whether Gall was competent to stand trial at the time of trial, while the two doctors who examined Gall for the purpose of determining his sanity on the day of the crime both concluded that he was legally insane. It is also clear that the Confrontation Clause violation sparked Dr. Chutkow's misperceptions about his role in the trial, allowing his testimony that Gall was competent to stand trial to be misleadingly used to support the Commonwealth's argument that Gall was legally sane at the time of the crime. In other words, had it not been for the constitutional violation, we believe that it is likely that no reasonable juror would have found Gall guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This case thus poses the question of whether, under Coleman, Schlup and this Circuit's caselaw, a fundamental miscarriage of justice results when a trial error more likely than not stood in the way would allow the Commonwealth to avert Winship in just that way.
Finally, retroactively applying the later Kentucky cases to Gall's habeas petition would also violate the non-retroactivity principle articulated in Bouie v. Columbia,
*54
retroactively alter the definition of crimes"). Moreover, a law that alters the proof necessary to convict a defendant also violates the ex post facto clause. See Wilson v. Yaklich,
These standards make clear that the Kentucky Supreme Court's explicit alterations of its interpretation of EED in cases such as Wellman and McClellan can not be applied to Gall's case. These later cases achieved two things: they held that absence of EED was not an element of murder, and they made a defendant's task considerably more demanding by introducing a precise "triggering" predicate that was articulated in neither the statute nor prior caselaw. Both cases explicitly overruled prior caselaw. Applying these new rules to Gall's case would clearly violate Bouie. Under the most reasonable reading of the statute's plain text-that absence of EED was an element of the crime, with no mention whatsoever of the "triggering" requirement that developed in later cases, and with legislative history suggesting a move away from the precise provocation requirement of the "heat of passion" element-the new conception of EED introduced by the later cases changed the law in ways that were unforeseeable at the time of the acts Gall committed. Beyond the statute itself, Kentucky Supreme Court's earliest interpretations of the statute, its decision to apply this reading retroactively to cases that occurred shortly after the statute came into effect (and prior to Gall's offense), and its explicit acknowledgment that the later cases were directly overruling the prior cases, all support this view. It is also clear that the retroactive application of those cases would substantially disadvantage Gall, both by removing an element of murder, and by making Gall's burden of showing EED substantially more difficult.
While the dissent may not appreciate the critical role Dr. Chutkow's testimony played in the trial, the prosecution has emphasized his testimony as to sanity from the time of the trial through this appeal. The letter the prosecutor wrote to Dr. Chutkow on September 20, 1978 emphasized Dr. Chutkow's critical role: "it [is] absolutely essential that we use you as a witness during the course of this trial to rebut [Dr. Noelker's] anticipated testimony" that Gall was insane. J.A. at 1546. At trial, the prosecution used his words to undermine Dr. Noelker. And before the district court and this Court, respectively, the Commonwealth argued that Dr. Chutkow had concluded that Gall was sane, and that he served as the Commonwealth's insanity expert rebuttal witness. The dissent's assertion that Dr. Chutkow's testimony was of "little value" thus flies in the face of even the Commonwealth's understanding of its own case.
2.
Nonetheless, we cannot agree that Gall has shown cause for his failure to raise the claim previously. Once again, Gall argues that "cause" exists because his trial counsel failed to inform him that they were taking Dr. Chutkow's deposition, and that Gall and his counsel only became aware of the error when Dr. Chutkow was deposed for the habeas proceeding below. He also states that cause exists due to ineffective assistance of counsel. Both arguments are unavailing. First, Gall's original ignorance that Dr. Chutkow was deposed in lieu of direct testimony provides no support for his assertion that he later lacked awareness of that fact, both at trial (when the tape was played to the jury and in front of him), and in preparation for his state collateral appeal. Second, his claim of counsel error as "cause" is insufficient because he has not shown that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective under Strickland v. Washington,
*55 questions of guilt versus innocence and sanity versus insanity. Additionally, had Dr. Chutkow been in court and his role clarified, Gall's defense counsel would have obtained a greater opportunity to challenge the only evidence the Commonwealth had put forth regarding Gall's sanity. There is thus no question that the violation bore a dramatic impact on the outcome of the trial, rendering actual prejudice to Gall's defense.
The dissent fundamentally misunderstands the role Dr. Chutkow's testimony played in this case. With the benefit of Dr. Chutkow's later habeas deposition, the dissent appreciates the fact that Dr. Chutkow himself intended his testimony only to address competency, and thus believes his testimony served "little value" in the trial. But the jury did not view Dr. Chutkow's words in light of his later deposition, as we do now. The prosecutor's questions and Dr. Chutkow's responses were sufficiently ambiguous that the jury would very likely have concluded that Dr. Chutkow had stated that Gall was legally sane. J.A. at 318,321 . Later courts certainly believed that to be the case: the Gall I Court, relying on Dr. Chutkow's rebuttal testimony, concluded that "there was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether Gall was insane at all,"
In the alternative, one could reason that the face of the statute was sufficiently unclear that at the time of Gall's crime, it could be interpreted either as establishing absence of EED as an element (as the state courts initially believed), or as a defense or matter of evidence (as the courts later believed, and as the dissent now believes). When faced with a considerable ambiguity on a facet as critical as a potential element of a crime, a court may rule that such a statute is void for vagueness or, in certain circumstances, it may add a clarifying gloss to that statute and apply it prospectively. But it would once again violate due process to apply that added and unforeseen precision retroactively. See generally Lanzetta v. New Jersey,
In sum, due to constrictions imposed by Kentucky law, the underlying purpose of habeas review, as well as due process limitations articulated in Mullaney and Bouie, we decline the dissent's invitation to apply cases and conceptions of EED that overruled critical premises governing the Gall I decision to Gall's collateral attack of that decision. Rather, we will adhere, as we must, to the Kentucky Supreme Court's conception of EED that preceded the dramatic changes marked by Wellman and McClellan, a conception that the
*56
Gall I court applied to Gall's appeal as well as to crimes that occurred both before and after the crime in this case.
C. Sufficiency of Evidence of Insanity
Gall next argues that his due process rights were violated because the evidence clearly showed that he was insane. Because we hold that Gall can not bring this argument on habeas review, we do not reach its merits.
A state prisoner is entitled to relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 only if he is held "in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States." A challenge to a conviction must therefore do more than pose a question of state law, for such a challenge alleges no deprivation of federal rights and does not merit habeas relief. See Engle
. Isaac,
19
Gall also argues that the decision in Gall I violated Bouie
. Columbia,
Commonwealth proffered him as their so-called "insanity expert rebuttal witness" and used his testimony accordingly, Dr. Chutkow believed merely that he was testifying at a "competency hearing," and that his answers only addressed Gall's competency. This belief arose because he had only examined Gall for competency purposes, because he was taped in isolation rather than seated in front of a live jury, and because of the nature of the prosecutor's questions. J.A. at . Based on this testimony, it is beyond doubt that his presence at trial would have corrected that misperception, making it clear that the Commonwealth was placing him in a far more central role than he realized at the time-if for no other reason than the fact that juries do not determine issues of competency, but resolve the fundamental
Responding to the prosecution's June 8 letter, Dr. Noelker emphasized that given the claimed amnesia and Gall's complicated profile, he had not yet reached a conclusion as to Gall's mental state, and that assessing his sanity would be difficult. He explained, however, that by using various sources of information and by examining Gall further, he would be able to provide an opinion on Gall's mental state by the time of the trial.
After seeing Gall on 10 occasions and reviewing his previous mental history and hospitalization records, Dr. Noelker wrote to the court on September 19. He explained his belief that Gall was legally insane on the morning of April 5, and that his behavior that morning was "primarily controlled" by a "highly psychotic" act that was likely the end-product of a chronic and severe psychopathological disorder. J.A. at 1545. He further suggested that Gall never be considered for release to the open community.
One day later, the Commonwealth prosecutor forwarded Dr. Noelker's letter to Dr. Chutkow, explaining that the conclusions therein "makes it absolutely essential that we use you as a witness during the course of this trial to rebut his anticipated testimony." J.A. at 1546. Dr. Chutkow, despite receiving the letter, testified that he did not respond to the letter, did not meet with prosecutors to discuss the trial or Gall's mental status, and did not seek out or receive additional information on Gall's psychiatric history that was described in Dr. Noelker's report and that would have been necessary to draw conclusions as to Gall's sanity. J.A. at . Nonetheless, he was soon thereafter deposed on videotape, and that testimony was played at trial for the jury.
*57 (quoting excerpts from Attorney General's memorandum of law that "Chutkow's testimony went far beyond merely addressing competency," "Chutkow testified as to why he did not believe Gall was insane," and "Chutkow did not think Gall was insane before or after the crime"). And in its brief filed with this Court, the Commonwealth dubs Dr. Chutkow its "insanity expert rebuttal witness." Commonwealth's Br. at 24 .
But while Dr. Chutkow's rebuttal was the thin reed standing between acquittal based on insanity and a death sentence, he had not in fact conducted an examination of Gall's sanity. [26] Furthermore, as explained supra, while the [25] Dr. Chutkow's habeas deposition and a series of letters between the prosecution and Drs. Noelker and Chutkow illustrate how events unfolded such that Dr. Chutkow was the Commonwealth's sole witness as to Gall's mental state even though he had never actually examined Gall's sanity. On May 4, 1978, Dr. Chutkow wrote the prosecution that after a 90 -minute examination, he had concluded that Gall was competent for trial. J.A. at 1535-36. Dr. Chutkow again wrote the prosecution on May 5, explaining that Gall had refused to undergo a narcoanalytic examination, but concluding that he was still competent. J.A. at 1537. Dr. Chutkow made no mention in either letter as to whether Gall was legally sane or insane at the time of the crime. As he later testified, this was because the examination he conducted had only sought to determine Gall's competency. J.A. at 398.
On June 8, a Commonwealth prosecutor wrote to both Drs. Noelker and Chutkow, asking whether, in light of Gall's claimed amnesia, either doctor could testify as to Gall's mental state at the time of the crime. "I need the benefit of your expert advice in this regard . . ." J.A. at 1538. Both doctors responded to this request. Without further examining Gall, Dr. Chutkow wrote on June 12 that because Gall could not report his memory, "I cannot acquire the most direct information about his mental state." J.A. at 1539. Nevertheless, he opined that he did not believe that he suffered from acute paranoid schizophrenia, and also suspected that the claimed amnesia was either a way to repress painful memories or a fabrication. As he later testified, he made no statement regarding Gall's sanity, and was not prepared to do so. J.A. at 403 . He also had received no additional information between the time of his initial letters and the June 12 letter that would have assisted him in making a sanity determination, and never examined Gall after the initial competency examination. J.A. at 405 . defense raised fully "negates an element" of a crime; a state must then disprove that defense as part of its burden of proof. See id. at 122. A contention that a state failed to disprove this type of defense raises a colorable constitutional claim appropriate for habeas review. See id.
In Kentucky, however, sanity is not an element of murder, and insanity does not negate an element of murder. We thus can not review this claim. First, Kentucky law does not include sanity as an element of murder. Unlike the EED element, §507.020 does not indicate that absence of sanity is a required element of murder. The statute also places the burden of proving legal insanity squarely on a defendant's shoulders. See Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §500.070 (placing burden of proof onto defendants whenever the statute provides that the defendant may prove the element of a case "in exculpation of his conduct"); Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 504.020 (stating that a defendant "may prove [legal insanity] in exculpation of criminal conduct").
[21]
Consistent with the statute, Kentucky courts have consistently concluded that sanity is not an element of murder, that insanity is a defense, and that the burden of proving insanity rests with the defendant. See, e.g., Hayes,
*58
We also reject Gall's alternative argument that we can review the question of sanity because showing the absence of sanity wholly negates the element of intent, placing the burden back on the Commonwealth to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt. Kentucky courts have consistently held that an insanity defense does not negate an element of the crime, and that a showing of insanity does not shift the burden of proving sanity onto the Commonwealth. See, e.g., Edwards,
D. Sitting a "Tainted" Juror
Gall next argues that in rejecting his challenge for cause of one juror ("Barton"), the trial court violated his right to an impartial jury under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. The question of whether a trial court has seated a fair and impartial jury is a factual one, involving an assessment of credibility. See Patton v. Yount,
1.
The Supreme Court recognizes two substantive standards that apply to juror challenges. Gall primarily relies on the standard announced in Marshall v. United States,
Moreover, the violation did not simply surpass harmless error; it also resulted in actual prejudice to Gall because it "worked to his actual and substantial disadvantage, infecting his entire trial with error of constitutional dimensions." Rust,
*59 argument given Gall's active presence and awareness throughout the trial. Because the error was likely known and certainly was reasonably discoverable, and because Gall failed to raise his Confrontation Clause claim on either his direct appeal or in his RCr 11.42 motion, the claim was procedurally defaulted.
A habeas petitioner can only overcome procedural default in two instances. First, he can "demonstrate cause for the procedural default and actual prejudice resulting from the alleged constitutional error." Rust v. Zent,
1 .
We find that the use of Dr. Chutkow's videotaped deposition did indeed violate the Confrontation Clause. In particular, the facts at trial implicate this Court's holding that unless there is a showing of constitutional unavailability, the defendant enjoys a right to confront and examine crucial witnesses "before the jury in open court." Stoner v. Sowders,
25
Reversing a conviction where a witness's testimony was unnecessarily presented to the jury through a videotaped deposition rather than live testimony, this Court in Stoner emphasized that "the deposition is a weak substitute for live testimony, a substitute that the Sixth Amendment does not countenance on a routine basis." Id. at 213. Despite the possible efficiencies of taped depositions, "[t]he Constitution does not allow us to so water down the explicit requirement of live testimony in criminal cases,"
A prosecutor will often prefer to offer deposition testimony because the witness need not be secured for trial and need not be subject to the vicissitudes of cross examination before the constitutional magnitude in the absence of particularly egregious circumstances." Id.
The Supreme Court's decision in Murphy v. Florida,
Analyzing these factors, we believe that the record fairly supports the trial court's conclusion that Barton was impartial. Barton acknowledged at voir dire that he had read about Gall and his alleged crime in the Kentucky Post. J.A. at 206-07. From that article, Barton stated that he knew Gall was from Hillsboro; that Gall had "been accused of similar offenses previously[;] that I was somewhat upset or disturbed that the State Policemen were involved in this to the point that it could have cost another life;" and that Gall had children of his own. J.A. at 207-08. He also stated that he had read that Gall was on parole for one of his past offenses. J.A. at 209.
*60
Despite this knowledge, Barton repeatedly assured defense counsel that this information did not affect his feelings toward Gall or how he would approach the trial. See J.A. at 207-08 ("No, I don't think so once the actual evidence is presented. I don't know how much stock can be put in the Kentucky Post as far as forming an opinion."); J.A. at 209 (stating that his prior knowledge would not make him more inclined to find Gall guilty). Barton likewise assured the judge of his ability to look at the evidence neutrally and lay aside what he had read or heard. Finally, after overruling Gall's motion to strike Barton, the judge instructed him that if he were selected as a juror, he could not discuss what he had learned prior to trial with the jury.
Given this colloquy, this case is analogous to Murphy and Haney, where jurors were not sufficiently partial to warrant reversal. Overall, the voir dire of Barton "indicates no such hostility" toward Gall "as to suggest a partiality that could not be laid aside." Murphy,
G. Sixth Amendment Confrontation Rights
Gall argues that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him because he was not present at the depositions of Dr. Toppen and Dr. Chutkow, and because Dr. Chutkow's testimony was presented by videotape when there was no showing that he was constitutionally unavailable. The Commonwealth counters that Gall failed to raise that claim in the state courts, and that it is therefore procedurally defaulted.
In Kentucky, a party can bring one collateral attack pursuant to RCr 11.42; all claims not brought on the direct appeal or in that collateral challenge are generally defaulted. However, under RCr 60.02 , a defendant can raise a challenge not brought in his RCr 11.42 motion if the errors involved were "unknown and could not have been known to the party by the exercise of reasonable diligence and in time to have been otherwise presented to the court." Gross v. Commonwealth,
*61
testimony, and he mischaracterized crucial aspects of that testimony. He disparaged the very use of an insanity defense as the "last line of defense" and the "M1 Rifle"; he belittled the medical and psychological tools used to support such a defense; and he equated the doctors' testifying about Gall's condition to three blind men "asked to identify an elephant"-"you can imagine the bizarre opinions which they got back." J.A. at 1589 . He then pleaded with the jury not to let Gall loose through the insanity defense. In addition to having no doubt that these tactics were improper, we find that they easily satisfy the criteria of "flagrancy" laid out in Boyle. They clearly misled the jury and prejudiced Gall's defense of insanity. The comments were not accidental or isolated, permeating the Commonwealth's closing argument as well as other portions of the trial. And they involved the central issue of the case. Moreover, as explained infra, the total strength of the evidence rebutting Gall's insanity defense was weak at best, not to mention improperly presented. After a close review of the record, we find that the Commonwealth's misconduct was sufficiently egregious to render the entire trial fundamentally unfair.
Finally, we respectfully disagree with the dissent's conclusion that this prosecutorial misconduct is acceptable when viewed "against the backdrop of the nature of the insanity defense in this case." The dissent explains that, given the strong circumstantial evidence tying Gall to the crime, as well as Gall's clear history of mental illness, the insanity defense was the central issue of the case. It is therefore understandable, the dissent explains, that "the prosecutor would bring out his heaviest artillery and direct it at the insanity defense." We no doubt agree that Gall's sanity was central to this trial, and we, no less than the dissent, would expect the prosecutor to bring out "heavy artillery" against that defense. We also agree that persuading the jury that there is a difference between a mental disease and legal insanity was a "legitimate goal." But because ours is a system of law, the arsenal available to a prosecutor to achieve that legitimate goal is limited to arguments rooted in properly introduced evidence and testimony rather than words and
Finally, unlike in Goins, the trial judge took "appropriate steps" to assure Barton would be impartial, instructing him not to discuss what he had learned with other jurors.
The factor that most strongly supports Gall's argument is that Barton knew of Gall's parole status, adding a potentially inflammatory piece of information about the crime. We do not believe this factor alone outweighed the other indicia of Barton's impartiality. In sum, there is ample support in the record for the trial court's conclusion that Barton could sit on the jury.
E. Impartial Jury
Gall further argues that other factors combined to deny him his right to an impartial jury. Specifically, he argues that widespread pretrial publicity, the court's refusal to change the trial venue, its failure to sequester the jurors during voir dire, and the evidence from voir dire that the publicity "pervaded" the venire, engendered a partial jury and a fundamentally unfair trial. The Commonwealth counters that the jury venire, and the ultimate panel selected, were sufficiently impartial.
In essence, Gall argues that this Court should presume that the trial was unconstitutionally prejudiced, as courts are required to in those cases where an inflammatory, circus atmosphere pervades both the courthouse and the surrounding community. See, e.g., Sheppard v. Maxwell,
*62
inflammatory.'"
In contrast to those extraordinary circumstances where a court must presume prejudice, trials with a lower degree of prejudice-even those with a good deal of pretrial publicity-require a showing that "in the totality of circumstances [the] trial was not fundamentally fair." Id. In recent years, this Court has on several occasions relied on Murphy to find that a trial atmosphere was sufficiently fair to require a showing of actual prejudice. These holdings came despite some factual similarities to cases like Sheppard and Irvin. See, e.g., Nevers,
This case exhibits many, but not all, of the aspects of trials so pervaded with unfairness that courts presume prejudice. We have concluded that other due process violations occurred in this trial, and also that the introduction of extraneous evidence into the jury's deliberations worked actual prejudice into the penalty phase of Gall's trial. We need not make the difficult determination of whether we ought to presume prejudice as well.
F. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Gall argues that a host of prosecutorial statements and tactics violated his constitutional rights. The alleged instances of misconduct include: the violation of Gall's right to remain silent by emphasizing his failure to testify; misrepresentation of evidence; prejudicial statements and
Finally, the prosecution's most egregious misconduct was warning that Gall would go free if found not guilty for reason of insanity. During his closing, the prosecution stated: "Now folks are we going to turn [Gall] loose on society by reason of insanity[?]" J.A. at 1588-89. Seconds later, he repeated: Gall "cannot escape the ends of justice by retreating within the safety of his own skull!" J.A. at 1589. At another point, the Commonwealth stated that if the jury were to believe Dr. Toppen's testimony, "then turn him loose." J.A. at 1581. These statements contravened several related rules of conduct. First, they once again detracted from a fair consideration of Gall's insanity defense by introducing the prospect that such a determination would lead inevitably to Gall's release. See Guidroz v. Lynaugh,
In sum, facing Gall's considerable evidence of insanity and EED, counsel for the Commonwealth chose not to rebut that evidence directly. [24] Instead, he expressed his personal belief as to the weakness and partiality of Gall's expert witnesses' [24] Indeed, as discussed infra, no one examined Gall's mental condition on behalf of the Commonwealth to determine if he was sane on the day of the crime. Dr. Chutkow only examined Gall to see if he was competent to stand trial. This perhaps explains the prosecutor's need to resort to improper tactics in attacking Gall's insanity defense.
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That is the last line of defense. That is like taking an M1 Rifle and lying in your back yard waiting for the Russians to come. When it is that bad folks, it is all over. . . . Now I want to review this cranial defense within the skull of the Defendant . . . . J.A. at 1579-80. He later reminded the jury not to be "hoodwinked into the defense of insanity," J.A. at 1592. Further, his comments were peppered with the type of "knownothing appeals to ignorance" that deprive defendants of their right to a fair consideration of their insanity defense. For instance, the Commonwealth mocked Dr. Noelker's use of a "House, Tree, Person Test" to show insanity as opposed to the Commonwealth's evidence of a "smoking gun." J.A. at 159192. He asked: "[i]sn't that a convenient time to go into a [schizophrenic state]?" J.A. at 1584. And, similar to the elephant analogy, he analogized Dr. Noelker's description of the long-term evolution of Gall's mental state to a simple hypothetical: "If my wife were pregnant eight years ago and she was pregnant one month now, does that mean she was pregnant in March? That is what Dr. Noelker is telling you." J.A. at 1585. At the same time, the prosecutor minimized the testimony of Drs. Noelker and Toppen that Gall could appear both calm and sane to an "untrained observer" even if examinations and tests revealed that he was insane or severely mentally ill: "He may look sane, but folks, he isn't. Now they are telling us folks, 'you can't look and judge for yourself."' J.A. at 1581. He then argued to the jury that because Gall appeared intelligent at trial, he must be sane, and must have been sane on April 4. The tone of these statements was similar to the rhetorical approach the prosecutor took in crossexamining Dr. Noelker and Dr. Toppen, in which he assaulted psychology as an inexact discipline where doctors, applying subjective standards "within themselves" can reach polar opposite conclusions in examining the same individual, J.A. at 984-88, 1221-23, and belittled the tests Dr. Noelker had used in diagnosing Gall. J.A. at 1024 ("Now here is a little one here that I think the jury ought to see. This is one of those little psychological tests."). actions depriving Gall a fair determination of sanity; [22] and a host of other actions that appealed to the passions and prejudices of the jury. Gall argues that these improprieties rendered the proceeding fundamentally unfair.
Although Gall's counsel did not object to these infractions at trial, we are not barred from hearing these claims. A habeas court only adheres to a state procedural bar when the last state court rendering a reasoned judgment on the matter has stated "clearly and expressly" that its judgment rests on that procedural bar. Boyle v. Million,
1. Fifth Amendment Claim
A defendant's Fifth Amendment right against selfincrimination protects him from several types of government misdeeds. First, once a defendant exercises his right to silence after being read his Miranda rights, that post-arrest silence cannot be used to his detriment at trial. See Doyle
. Ohio,
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silent or not to testify are clearly prohibited, indirect comments require a more probing analysis. See Lent v. Wells,
Harmless error analysis applies to Fifth Amendment violations. This "extremely narrow" standard requires reversal only when the state can "demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute in any way to the conviction of the defendant." Eberhardt
. Bordenkircher,
Gall points to two occasions where the Commonwealth improperly referred to his silence at trial. First, an officer testified that Gall "wouldn't talk" after making several statements after his initial arrest. J.A. at 63. Second, the Commonwealth indirectly referred to Gall's silence when it stated to the jury: Gall "sits in this courtroom as you have heard the testimony and he has lied to his parents in every instance and told them he didn't do it. The man has not even acknowledged his wrong, his fault, his crime, he denies them. He denies them to this day." J.A. at 1635.
Despite Gall's contentions, we need not address the question of whether these statements contravened the Fifth Amendment because they comprised harmless error. As discussed supra, there was little dispute over whether Gall committed the crime; the heart of this trial was whether he was emotionally disturbed or legally insane when he did so. Because these references are not material to that issue, even it is not the responsibility of the prosecutor to place that issue before the jury in the form of repeated criticism of the defense in general. . . . To do so could only helplessly confuse the jury. The insanity defense is a policy question that has plagued courts, legislatures, and governments for decades. It is unnecessary to similarly plague []juries.
Garron v. State,
In its closing, the Commonwealth used just such highly prejudicial tactics. Rather than attacking Gall's insanity evidence by pointing to counter-evidence that Gall was sane, the Commonwealth simply assaulted the very use of the defense. As he began addressing the issue, the prosecutor compared the insanity defense to other possible defenses. Other defenses, he emphasized, require "facts," but an insanity defense "is all contained in the skull of the defendant." J.A. at 1579 .
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jury generally has confidence that the prosecuting attorney is faithfully observing his obligation as a representative of a sovereignty, whose interest "in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice will be done." Berger v. United States,
These comments and misrepresentations comprised part of a broader strategy of improperly attacking Gall's insanity defense by criticizing the very use of the defense itself, rather than addressing its evidentiary merits head on. Courts have long castigated prosecutors when their efforts to rebut an insanity defense constitute no more than an attack on the rationale and purpose of the insanity defense itself. As the Supreme Court of Florida articulated:
We believe that once the legislature has made the policy decision to accept insanity as a complete defense to a crime, if violative of his Fifth Amendment rights, they were harmless error.
2. The Closing Argument
In examining alleged prosecutorial misconduct on habeas review, this Court can only provide relief "if the relevant misstatements were so egregious as to render the entire trial fundamentally unfair to a degree tantamount to a due process violation." Caldwell,
We agree that the Commonwealth's closing argument was laced with improper, prejudicial statements. First, prosecutors cannot make appeals to their own personal beliefs and opinions. See Caldwell,
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such comments can convey the impression that evidence not presented to the jury, but known to the prosecutor, supports the charges against the defendant and can thus jeopardize the defendant's right to be tried solely on the basis of the evidence presented to the jury; and the prosecutor's opinion carries with it the imprimatur of the Government and may induce the jury to trust the Government's judgment rather than its own view of the evidence.
United States v. Young,
Despite this prohibition, throughout his closing argument the prosecutor improperly expressed his personal belief about crucial matters before the jury. For instance, the prosecutor declared in closing that he was "not [] convinced that [Gall] isn't just a mean, shrewd, criminal." J.A. at 1591. He again voiced his personal belief when he stated that "I think you can probably be skeptical of" the results of intelligence and psychiatric tests. J.A. at 1584. He echoed this tactic once again when he asked if Gall's explanation of schizophrenia "stretched" the jury's "powers of reasoning? It certainly does mine." J.A. at 1586. Similarly, he clearly expressed his personal belief about the credibility of key witnesses. Of Dr. Noelker, the doctor who had thoroughly examined Gall, the prosecutor stated that "I have known him for along time and I know he is [a fine man]." He then declared that Dr. Noelker was "a man of compassion" whose beliefs "slant[] his opinions which he gives [and] his conclusions that he draws." J.A. at 1583. "He is a man I believe who believes he is standing in . . . between Eugene and his ultimate destiny and I believe that weighs heavily on him. . . ." J.A. at 1583. He also stated that "I thought" aspects of Dr. Noelker's and Dr. Toppen's testimony were "really unusual, really unique." J.A. at 1581 . Finally, the prosecutor summed up his assessment of Gall's psychiatric witnesses and evidence by stating: [Y]ou don't have to believe these guys. You know what it reminds me of? It reminds me of the three blind men who were taken out and they were asked to identify an elephant. One grabbed the trunk, one grabbed the tail, one grabbed the leg and you can imagine the bizarre opinions which they got back on how an elephant looked.
J.A. at
Next, the Commonwealth mischaracterized crucial evidence and testimony pertaining to Gall's showing of EED and insanity. Misrepresenting facts in evidence can amount to substantial error because doing so "may profoundly impress a jury and may have a significant impact on the jury's deliberations." Donnelly,
NOTES
Notes
After I circulated my dissent the majority made revisions primarily aimed at responding to my dissent. After carefully reviewing the revisions, I have concluded no further modification of my dissent is necessary. I have clearly set forth the basis of my disagreement with the court's analysis and to write further would serve no useful purpose.
Significantly, the court rejects Gall's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Gall has an I.Q. of 124 .
Kentucky cases which make it clear that the extreme emotional disturbance language in the murder statute is a term of art and is not intended to apply whenever a person, in the abstract, may be emotionally disturbed as that term is commonly understood. In Coffey v. Messer,
The 1989 deposition elaborated on Dr. Chutkow's testimony in significant detail. Dr. Chutkow concluded that his "dialogue" with Gall in April 1978 "was sufficient for [determining] competency but not for sanity." J.A. at 412. First, he described the vast difference between
emotional disturbance as statutorily defined. The defendant carried the burden to convince the jury that she was legally insane at the time of the commission of the offense. KRS 504.020. If the jury had a reasonable doubt that the defendant had been proved not to have acted under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance for which there was a reasonable justification or excuse under the circumstances as she believed them to be, the punishment they could otherwise assess for murder could have been mitigated by a finding of first degree manslaughter. Of course, if the defense of legal insanity had been believed by the jury the result would have been complete exculpation and not mitigation of punishment.
These standards of review apply because Gall filed his petition for habeas review before April 1996. After that date, the new reviewing standards ushered in by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996), apply.
testimony of Mr. Gall, the Court is of the opinion that the Defendant, Mr. Gall[,] understands very well the nature and consequences of the proceedings against him, he is qualified mentally and emotionally and is capable of assisting his counsel and is able to participate rationally in his own defense. J.A. at 853 . From this record, it is clear that the trial court understood the Dusky standards for competence and carefully ensured that they were met. Because its conclusion is fairly supported by the record, we defer to it.
By "provocation" I do not mean to imply that the victim has to have done something to provoke the defendant. Although such might be the case as in the classic shooting of a spouse found in bed with another, the term, in this context, would include such claims by a defendant as "God told me to shoot this person."
In reviewing an appeal of a state jury's factual finding on an element of a charged offense, this Court asks "whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt." Jackson v. Virginia,
In overturning the defendant's conviction, the court makes the penalty phase of the trial moot. Since the court has addressed this issue, however, I would indicate my concurrence in the result reached on the penalty issue without subscribing to all of the analysis used by the court to reach its result.
This conclusion is also the lynchpin of the court's double jeopardy analysis. Thus, if this conclusion is wrong, the double jeopardy analysis is also wrong, and retrial would not be barred.
Although the court makes reference to the fact that defendant is very dangerous, incurable, and needs to be confined for the rest of his life, that is by no means the compelled result of the Kentucky civil involuntary hospitalization proceedings that will be conducted 22 years after the crime was committed. One can imagine the first thing the defendant will offer in his defense to hospitalization is that the jury found him to be sane, the state contended he was sane, and he, himself, never claimed to be insane. The defendant went so far as to act as his own counsel for much of the trial because he did not agree with his lawyer's urging of an insanity defense. Unless you can commit a person involuntarily in Kentucky for being "crazy like a fox," there is no guarantee that Gall will not walk away a free man as a result of this decision.
The Patterson Court cautioned that "there are obviously constitutional limits beyond which the States may not go" in defining the elements of a crime.
Jago,
See Mullaney,
Although Kentucky now provides that a jury may find a defendant guilty but mentally ill, this verdict was not an option for juries when Gall was tried.
This section reads: 504.030 Disposition of person found not guilty by reason of insanity (1) When a defendant is found not guilty by reason of insanity, the court shall conduct an involuntary hospitalization proceeding under KRS Chapter 202A or 202B. (2) To facilitate the procedure established in subsection (1)
Cases of this type are often complicated by several factors. First, an ingredient can arguably be both an element of a charged crime and of a defense, or the presence of a defense can arguably negate a required element. See, e.g., Rhodes v. Brigano,
Along these lines, the dissent in Patterson fretted that the majority opinion would allow a legislature to shift the burden of persuasion with respect to any factor in a criminal case, "so long as it is careful not to mention the nonexistence of that factor in the statutory language that defines the crime. The sole requirement is that any references to the factor be confined to those sections that provide for an affirmative defense."
factual finding, presumed correct under
review unless Gall proves otherwise by convincing evidence. See Turpin v. Kassulke,
opposite-explicitly mentioning the nonexistence of EED in the statutory language that defines the crime and failing to mention EED as an affirmative defense.
Contrary to even the Kentucky Supreme Court's interpretation of its own caselaw, the dissent opines that these decisions did not establish that a showing of severe mental illness sufficed to present evidence of EED. We address this argument infra.
explicitly asked the judge during deliberations if Gall could be paroled if given a life sentence. The judge responded: "the Court cannot advise you as to either parole or pardon." J.A. at 1638-39. Gall argues that the jury's consideration of his parole status violated both Kentucky law and Gall's constitutional rights.
While they use this evidence to state that there was a genuine issue before the jury on Gall's sanity, neither the district court nor the Commonwealth (in its brief) points to this evidence to rebut Gall's argument that no evidence was presented rebutting his showing that he suffered from EED at the time of the killing.
prosecution to bear the risk of non-persuasion." Bartrug,
Although not a model of clarity, we find that Instruction V could be reasonably read as a two-way command: a command to the jury of what it shall not do (ie. render a death sentence when mitigating circumstances outweigh aggravating circumstances), and a simultaneous command that it shall recommend death on the condition that aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating circumstances. See Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary (1979) (defining "unless" as "except under the condition that" or "under any other circumstance than"). This interpretation would also make most sense of the language "you do not have to" in the third and fourth sentences of Instruction V. If the second sentence of Instruction V did not provide a command as to what the jury was required to do, there would be no reason to assure the jury of what it did not have to do.
the United States Supreme Court, looking only at Wellman and Gall in light of Wellman, concluded that EED was an affirmative defense, not an element of murder. See Buchanan v. Kentucky,
The Court elaborated that the scheme, as reasonably interpreted, would have allowed the following "disturbing" hypothetical: "[a]ll 12 jurors might agree that some mitigating circumstances were present, and even that those mitigating circumstances were significant enough to outweigh any aggravating circumstance found to exist. But unless all 12 could agree that the same mitigating circumstance was present, they would never be permitted to engage in the weighing process or any deliberation on the appropriateness of the death penalty." Id. at 374.
at 1625-26. The fifth question asked them to list any mitigating factors they found. All five questions required the foreman of the jury to sign beneath the answer.
The dissent explains that a predicate provocation encompasses "something either done by the victim or inherent in the circumstances surrounding the murder that would arouse extreme emotional disturbance." Post at 124.
15 The only act that Ratliff claimed the victim committed was that she "looked at me as if she was going to pull my hair." Id. at 309.
Mills and McKoy to see that the principle they were espousing constitutes a watershed procedure "implicit in the concept of ordered liberty." O'Dell,
The dissent points out that the disagreement between the majority and dissent in Ratliff did not involve whether EED was an element of the crime of murder. We agree. The majority plainly stated that the absence of EED was an element of murder, and the dissent did not disagree with this point.
This quote shows that the dissent is in error when stating that the Gall I Court concluded that there was "no evidence" of EED, and that we owe that factual finding great deference. Post at 120. The Kentucky Supreme Court actually stated that there was no evidence of EED "except for" the evidence of mental illness, making clear-consistent with Ratliff and Edmonds-that such evidence was evidence of EED. Rather than stating that Gall had failed to present any evidence, the Gall I Court instead concluded that the burden had never shifted onto the prosecution because Gall had not presented evidence of such probative force that he was entitled to acquittal as a matter of law. Because this burden-shifting was unconstitutional under Mullaney, we owe this finding no deference.
First, Mills and McKoy did not announce a "new rule" as that term is defined by Teague. Under Teague, a new rule is one that "breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the states or the Federal Government. To put it differently, a case announces a new rule if the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant's conviction became final."
Gall has separately challenged this instruction as a violation of due process. Like the Kentucky Supreme Court, we find that the instruction was proper in light of the factual circumstances of the crime, and did not "by itself so infect the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process." Cupp v. Naughten,
Examples Gall mentions include: failing to ask Dr. Chutkow to conduct a sanity exam on Gall and to provide him with the full information he needed to make such a determination; an inappropriate cross-examination of Dr. Noelker and improper closing argument; and informing the jurors that Gall would go free if found not guilty for reason of insanity.
