Dan Patrick Hauser is a Florida death row inmate. Hauser’s execution was scheduled for 6:00 p.m., August 22, 2000; however, at 2:05 p.m. that same day, the district court granted a stay of execution. The state has filed with this court a Notice of Appeal and Motion to Vacate Stay of Execution and, alternatively, Motion to Dismiss any appeal by Capital Collateral Regional Counsel (“CCRC”) and Crawford. Hauser has also personally filed a Motion to Vacate Stay of Execution in this
I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts
The facts are taken verbatim from the Florida Supreme Court’s decision affirming Hauser’s conviction and sentence of death:
Hauser was indicted for first-degree murder, pled nolo contendere, and stipulated to the following facts. Melanie Rodrigues, an exotic dancer at Sammy’s on the Island in Fort Walton Beach, left work at 2 a.m., January 1, 1995, and did not report for work later that day. Her partially nude body was found two days later beneath a bed in Room 223 of the EconoLodge near Sammy’s. She had been strangled. Motel records showed that Room 223 had last been rented to Hauser, and when he was arrested the following month in Nevada, Hauser told police that he had been in Fort Walton Beach at the time of the murder, had visited several bars that night, but could not recall the latter part of the evening because he had been too drunk. Rodri-gues’ car keys, house key, and underpants, were found in his truck. Additionally, his fingerprint was found on a cigarette package next to her body.
At the plea hearing, Hauser admitted his guilt and the judge accepted his plea. Prior to sentencing, Hauser submitted a written request to meet with Investigator Griggs. When Griggs went to the jail, Hauser handed him a handwritten note containing the following statement:
On Dec. 31st at around 4:00 p.m. I started going to the local bars looking for a girl I could get to come back to my room. I went to • all the strip joints in the area, but spent most of my time at Sammy’s on the Island. When I first went to Sammy’s I noticed one girl who seemed new and a little uneasy. So I kept up with what she was doing. For a few hours I had her and a couple other girls dance for me and also sat at the stage. I left and started going to the other clubs and bars, but there wasn’t anything going on anywhere else so around 12:00-12:30 am I went back to Sammy’s. I knew Satin had to have cash, I had given her around $100-150 during the night. After watching her for a while I knew if there was going to be anyone who I could get back to my room this would be the one. She was small, easy to overpower and new yet still making money.
For the next few hours I had her and a couple of other girls dance for me, then at around 2:00-2:30 I asked her if she wanted to make a couple hundred dollars to come back to my hotel room with me....
... We went inside and she took off her clothes and started to dance, after dancing for awhile she came over to where I was sitting on the bed and grabbed at my pants, so I stood up and took off my clothes and we got onto the bed and had sex. We lay in bed for awhile then she got up and danced a little longer then had sex again. She lay next to me for around 30-45 minutes then said she had to get going home. So I stood up at the end of the bed and asked her to give me a hug. I was standing there in front of her thinking this is my last chance, if I want to kill her I am going to have to do it now! So just as we pulled apart I put my hands around her neck and threw her on the bed. I came down on top of her waist and pinned down her arms with my elbows. I put only enough pressure so she could not scream. I wanted to*1319 watch the fear in her eyes. I let up so she could take a breath and just stared at her while she started to lose consciousness, then let her breathe again and said well this is it. I put as much pressure as I could and Held it until she gave this shake and her body tensed up then went limp. To make sure she was dead I didn’t let go for awhile. I put my ear to her chest to make certain I couldn’t hear a heart beat.
Hauser v. State,
B. Procedural History
Hauser filed a waiver of all collateral and/or post-conviction relief proceedings, and the circuit court appointed attorney Robert A. Harper to represent Hauser. Hauser, pro se, filed a motion to dismiss Mr. Harper as his counsel and requested permission to proceed pro se. The circuit court appointed a competency expert, Dr. James Larson, Ph.D., a psychologist, to evaluate Hauser and submit a written report. The circuit court then conducted a Faretta
On October 20, 1999, the circuit court appointed John Conan Harrison to represent Hauser in his clemency proceedings. The court conducted a hearing on Hauser’s motion to dismiss court appointed counsel. On January 4, 2000, the court, finding that there had been no change in circumstances since the previous hearings, granted Hau-ser’s motion to dismiss. The court found that Hauser had sufficient present ability to proceed pro se and represent himself in a competent manner. On July 18, 2000, Hauser submitted correspondence to the Florida Supreme Court and CCRC expressing his continued desire to represent himself. Florida Governor Jeb Bush signed Hauser’s death warrant on June 29, 2000.
On August 1, 2000, the Florida Assistant Attorney General filed a notice of filing and request for hearing asking the circuit court to conduct a Faretta-type hearing to determine if Hauser should continue to be allowed to proceed pro se. On the same day, Hauser filed a motion for summary judgment and dismissal of the state’s request for a hearing, stating that his letters to the Florida Supreme Court and CCRC were “to inform them that any move to subvert my choice to represent myself’ would, in his opinion, violate his constitutional right to represent himself.
In an August 3, 2000, order, the circuit court again found Hauser competent to proceed pro se. The court found that Hauser was “articulate in his written expressions with a rational and factual understanding of the proceedings.” Specifically, the circuit court found that Hauser “has the capacity to appreciate the allegations against him, has an appreciation for the range and nature of the possible penalties that may be imposed upon him, understands the adversarial nature of these proceedings and the appellate process, and has the ability to disclose facts pertinent to these proceedings.” The court noted that Hauser has never vacillated or wavered from his desire to represent himself. Therefore, the court concluded that Hau-ser “has made a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary decision to waive his right to representation and is competent to proceed Pro Se.”
On August 16, 2000, purporting to act on behalf of Hauser, Gregory C. Smith from the CCRC, and Hauser’s biological mother, Zainna Fawnn Crawford, filed in the Florida Supreme Court, a “Motion For Stay Of Execution, Permission To Initiate Belated Appeal Or Other Proceedings,
On August 18, 2000, the CCRC filed a “Notice to Court” stating that it had discovered several significant factual and legal matters that were not disclosed to the state circuit court in its prior considerations concerning Hauser’s competency to waive post-conviction representation and proceedings. The CCRC requested that the circuit court take any action it deemed appropriate, including appointment of a special counsel to present this significant evidence to the court. The state filed a response, arguing that the CCRC has no standing to file anything purportedly on Hauser’s behalf. The state further argued that Hauser’s competent assertions of his right to self-representation preclude any counsel from pleading on his behalf. The state noted that Hauser has been consistent over the past three years in asserting his right of self-representation and in making a knowing and intelligent waiver of his right to post-conviction counsel and proceedings.
The circuit court conducted a telephone conference on August 21, 2000, on the CCRC’s “Notice to Court.” Participating in the telephone conference were Hauser, his “stand-by” counsel Mr. Flowers, CCRC Special Assistant Capital Collateral Counsel Mr. Timothy Schardl, and Assistant Attorneys General Mr. Albert H. Grinsted, III, and Mr. Steve White. Mr. Schardl conceded that his office has no standing to file any pleadings on Hauser’s behalf. He stated, however, that standing is not an issue because the CCRC did not request any relief in its “Notice to Court.” Mr. Schardl stated that he felt an obligation to bring to the court’s attention the significant psychological information contained within the pleadings CCRC previously filed in the Florida Supreme Court.
During the telephonic hearing, Hauser objected to the CCRC’s attempt to present evidence on his behalf. He mentioned that the evidence the CCRC wished to submit was really “tools for mitigating issues for conviction or mitigation of the sentence, and as such, my decision to bring them before the Court.” In response to the court’s questions, Hauser acknowledged that he knew he would be put to death by lethal injection and he understood all the ramifications of the' legal issues and defenses that he might have. Hauser further stated that all the evidence and arguments that CCRC presented are items “that should be my right to present in mitigation of either conviction or sentence.” He succinctly stated the issue: “I think the issue here is am I competent right now to make this decision, not if any of these facts are true or false.” Following the telephone conference, the circuit court dismissed the CCRC’s “Notice to Court,” finding that CCRC does not have standing to proceed on Hauser’s behalf. The circuit court stated that it was bound by the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Hauser v. Moore,
The CCRC and Zainna Fawnn Crawford, as next friends of Dan Patrick Hau-ser, then filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition in federal district court on August 21, 2000. In the petition, CCRC and Crawford allege five claims for federal court review. The state filed a response and the district court granted a stay of execution,
II. DISCUSSION
We must first consider whether we have the authority to vacate the district court’s stay. The standard of'review of a' stay of execution issued by a district court is abuse of discretion. See Delo v. Blair,
This is a first petition case, filed by someone purporting to act as the condemned inmate’s next friend, not by the inmate himself. In Lonchar v. Thomas,
In Bowersox v. Williams,
From the Supreme Court’s Lonchar, Bowersox, and Delo decisions we draw the rule that we should vacate a stay of execution issued by a district court against the wishes of the death row inmate where continuation of the stay is not necessary in order to determine that those who sought the stay lack standing because the inmate is competent under the standards set down in established precedent. We do understand the position in which the district court found itself two days ago when the petition was filed the day before Hauser’s scheduled execution. This was similar to the district court’s situation in Alabama v. Evans,
Now we must consider whether CCRC and Crawford have standing to proceed on Hauser’s behalf. The Supreme Court set forth the requirements for “next friend” standing in Whitmore v. Arkansas,
First, a “next friend” must provide an adequate explanation — such as inaccessibility, mental incompetence, or other disability — why the real party in interest cannot appear on his own behalf to prosecute the action. Second, the “next friend” must be truly dedicated to the best interests of the person on whose behalf he seeks to litigate, and it has been further suggested that a “next friend” must have some significant relationship with the party in interest.
We have reservations that CCRC and Hauser’s biological mother, who gave Hau-ser up for adoption, are “truly dedicated to the interests” of Hauser. CCRC did not enter these proceedings until recently and has never represented Hauser at his request. As Hauser himself stated, CCRC and Crawford’s efforts appear to be motivated solely by their own desires to block imposition of the death penalty in an “attempt to define justice as they see fit.” The most logical “next friend” is Hauser’s court-appointed counsel, Mr. Flowers; however, Hauser has expressed a desire that Mr. Flowers not file anything on , his behalf.
In any event, for the reasons that follow, we conclude that CCRC and Crawford cannot establish that Hauser is unable to pursue his own cause due to mental incompetency. The record establishes just the opposite. In Rees v. Peyton,
In Ford II, we affirmed the district court’s findings that petitioner was competent to dismiss his § 2254 petition, discharge his counsel, and be executed. The petitioner suffered from depression and a personality disorder, thought he was going to sit at God’s left hand and be an important person, stated that he had many ■wives, concubines, and children whom he had visited in various parts of the world, and that he had once ‘Visited Heaven.”
Therefore, the district court in Ford II found that Ford, like Lonchar, “understood the ‘bottom line’ of his legal situation — that he must continue to engage in the review process or be executed — and that he was able to make a rational choice among these options.” Ford II,
In this case, the facts establishing Hau-ser’s competency are even stronger than those establishing Ford’s competency in Ford II. Hauser clearly satisfies LonchaFs second and third prongs. The state trial court on several occasions determined that Hauser is competent to proceed pro se due to his repeated statements that he wished to proceed pro se; his letters to the court expressing his wishes; and his statements during the telephonic hearing that he understood the ramifications of his wish to proceed pro se, that he knew he would be executed by lethal injection, and that the evidence CCRC wanted to submit was really evidence of mitigation. The trial court concluded that Hauser “has the capacity to appreciate the allegations against him, has an appreciation for the range and nature of these proceedings and the appellate process, and has the ability to disclose facts pertinent to those proceedings.” August 7, 2000, Order at 3. In reaching its conclusion, the trial court considered Dr. Larson’s report. Moreover, during the Faret-ta hearing, Hauser acknowledged that he had a GED and took two semesters of pre-law college courses.
These subsidiary findings, and the ultimate decision that Hauser is competent, are factual in nature and are entitled to a presumption of correctness. See Demosthenes v. Baal,
Based on the foregoing, we vacate the district court’s August 22, 2000, order granting a stay of execution.
STAY VACATED.
Notes
. Faretta v. California,
. In an abundance of caution, however, the circuit court appointed attorney Michael A. Flowers as "stand-by” counsel to provide Hauser any legal advice if he so requested.
. See Lonchar,
