The petitioner was sentenced to death and after exhausting his state remedies, see
Trueblood v. State,
Upset that his former girlfriend was planning to return to her ex-husband, the petitioner took a gun from his parents’ house, picked up the woman and her two children, who were aged two and a half years and 17 months respectively, in his automobile, shot all three in the head, killing them, then borrowed a shovel from his brother and buried his three victims in a secluded spot. Charged in an Indiana state court with all three murders, he pleaded guilty to murdering the mother but decided to stand trial for the murder of the children. The theory of the defense was that the mother had shot her children and that he then at her request had killed her, a kind of mercy killing. The strategy collapsed when his brother took the stand and testified that the petitioner had confessed all three murders to him. The petitioner then interrupted the trial and pleaded guilty to murdering the children; he did this in order to avoid a jury recommendation of the death penalty. The judge nevertheless sentenced him to death, as he was authorized by Indiana’s death-penalty law to do, Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(d) (“if the trial was to the court, or the judgment was entered on a guilty plea, the court alone shall conduct the sentencing hearing”);
Smith v. State,
The district judge based his grant of relief on a determination that the Indiana courts had in three respects unreasonably applied U.S. Supreme Court precedent, which is the statutory standard for habeas corpus for state prisoners. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
Williams v. Taylor,
Due process as interpreted by the Supreme Court requires that a defendant be advised of the consequences of pleading guilty.
Mabry v. Johnson,
The petitioner in our case was told that he might be sentenced to death for the murder of the children. See
Thomas v. United States,
No decision by the U.S. Supreme Court casts doubt on the soundness of
King,
and it is applicable with particular force here because the petitioner could not have suffered any prejudice from his plea, making its consequences for his sentence for the other murders academic. It is not, so far as matters in this case at any rate, a guilty plea or even a conviction that makes a murder an aggravating circumstance; it is the fact that the crime was committed. Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(b)(8);
Wrinkles v. State,
By the same token we cannot understand how it might be thought either to show a want of professional competence, or to have been prejudicial to the petitioner, that his lawyer did not advise him to refuse to plead guilty and instead stand trial. So his claim of ineffective assistance fails as well.
We also reject the district judge’s conclusion that remarks by the state trial judge at sentencing show he based the death sentence in part on aggravating circumstances that, not being found in the Indiana death-penalty statute, were improper.
Sochor v. Florida,
So in effect the petitioner is contending that if the sentencing judge does more than recite statutory language, the sentence must be vacated on the ground that it was based on improper factors. We disagree. The judge’s responsibility was not exhausted in identifying the presence of one or more of the statute’s aggravating and mitigating circumstances. He not only had to balance them, since he could not impose the death sentence if the aggravating circumstances did not outweigh the mitigating ones; but he had to decide whether to exercise the discretion granted him by the statute not to impose the death penalty even if the aggravating circumstances did outweigh the mitigating ones. Ind.Code §§ 35-50-2-9(e), (k)(2);
Bivins v. State,
It was
after
the judge had found the existence of statutory aggravating circumstances, and had turned to the question whether they outweighed the mitigating circumstances, that he made the remarks in question; and they were germane to that purpose. They showed why the judge thought the balance inclined as it did and why he thought the case inappropriate for an exercise of mercy. They thus promoted the transparency of the sentencing process. It would be unfortunate if judges were forced to clam up at sentencing because any comments they made about the nature of the defendant’s crime that did not pertain directly to a statutory aggravating or mitigating circumstance required
*788
resentencing. Such clamming up is not required by the Eighth Amendment and it would violate Indiana law. “The trial court must find that any mitigating circumstances that exist are outweighed by the aggravating circumstance or circumstances. This evaluating and weighing process should be described in the trial court’s sentencing statement.”
Roark v. State,
We are mindful that in
Wright v. Walls,
Turning to the petitioner’s cross-appeal, we find only one issue that merits discussion. It is whether the petitioner’s trial counsel failed in his duty of effective assistance by failing to accompany the petitioner to the presentence interview by the probation officer assigned to the case; at that interview the petitioner repeated his denial of having murdered the children, despite his having pleaded guilty to those murders too.
The issue of whether the lawyer’s absence from the interview constituted ineffective assistance of counsel was almost certainly waived in the state court system and in any event has no merit. The lawyer’s presence could not have made any difference to his client’s ultimate fate. Even if the lawyer would have prevented him from making an undoubtedly perjurious denial, we cannot imagine what difference that could have made in the sentence. Perjury was the least of the petitioner’s crimes, and there is no basis for thinking it weighed in the judge’s decision to sentence him to death.
After the argument of this appeal, the Supreme Court decided
Ring v. Arizona
, — U.S. -,
For the reasons stated earlier, the petition for habeas corpus should have been denied.
REVERSED.
