EX PARTE RAYMOND GEORGE RILES, Applicant
NOS. WR-11,312-01 & WR-11,312-04
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS
April 14, 2021
ON APPLICATIONS FOR WRITS OF HABEAS CORPUS FROM CAUSE NO. 224779 IN THE 179th CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT HARRIS COUNTY
SLAUGHTER, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which RICHARDSON and YEARY, JJ., joined.
DISSENTING OPINION
Autonomy is a fundamental right that should be afforded to everyone. Our Constitution was designed to protect autonomy. But there are some instances when a person does not have the mental capacity to make the best decisions for himself. Civil law addresses these matters with guardianships; allowing someone to act in the best interest of the intellectually-disabled person under the supervision of a court. Such supervision by the court helps to ensure that the guardian is, in fact, acting in the best interest of the individual.
For more than forty years, Applicant Raymond George Riles has been incarcerated under a sentence of death for a capital murder he committed in 1974. During that time, he has been examined by mental-health professionals on numerous occasions and has been consistently found incompetent to be executed because of his severe mental illness. Habeas counsel has now filed the instant application for a writ of habeas corpus seeking a new punishment trial on Applicant‘s behalf. Counsel claims that Applicant was sentenced under a pre-Penry sentencing scheme that was constitutionally inadequate because it did not allow jurors the opportunity to give mitigating effect to the extensive evidence of Riles’ mental illness presented at trial.1 The Court grants this relief, and I agree that Applicant‘s position is meritorious. But the Court grants relief without knowing whether Riles had the capacity to consent to habeas counsel‘s representation, whether Riles had a legal guardian or someone acting under a power of attorney who could consent to such representation, or whether habeas counsel took it upon himself to address what he believed was a legal injustice but which may not be in Riles’ best interest.
According to the instant application, Applicant has been evaluated during his decades on death row by at least four mental-health experts on numerous occasions. The application contains as exhibits five psychiatric evaluations dated 1988, 1991, 1993 (two
The standard for competency to be executed is whether a person understands that he is to be executed, that the execution is imminent, and the reason he is being executed.
conduct after the lawyer has communicated adequate information and explanation about the material risks of and reasonably available alternatives to the proposed course of
The Court‘s decision to grant relief on the instant application will result in Riles being taken off death row. In the ordinary case, such an outcome would be considered universally positive for an applicant. But for Riles, it means he will be transferred into the custody of the Harris County Jail, where he will await a new punishment hearing. Based on Riles’ history of incompetence, before the trial court can conduct a new punishment hearing, it will need to possibly appoint new counsel (unless habeas counsel is planning to continue representing Riles in the trial court) and will need to order a competency evaluation to determine whether Riles is competent to stand trial. Given Riles’ mental health history, he will likely again be held incompetent. Such an incompetence finding will result in Riles’ transfer to a state hospital in an attempt to restore his competency. If Riles’ competency is restored for purposes of a punishment-only retrial—a possibility that seems unlikely given the circumstances—at best, he will receive a life sentence with the
To be clear, I wholeheartedly believe that incompetent inmates should have the right to zealous legal representation for their post-conviction proceedings. I further believe that
In this case, we do not have affirmative proof that Riles (or anyone else with legal authority) consented to or even had the ability to consent to habeas counsel‘s representation. On that basis alone, I would not grant relief at this juncture but would instead remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings. Specifically, the trial court should address the question of whether Applicant had capacity to and, in fact, did consent to this litigation. If he did not, perhaps the trial court would consider referring the matter to a probate court to determine whether a guardian ad litem, attorney ad litem, or both should be appointed to ensure that this litigation serves Applicant‘s best interests. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
Publish
