The State of Texas brings this appeal under article 44.01 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1 challenging an order granting Benjamin DeLeon habeas corpus relief on the basis of double jeopardy. DeLeon was indicted for capital murder for allegedly suffocating his infant son. 2 After defense counsel discovered during trial that the State had not made pretrial production of evidence he believed to be Brady material, 3 defense counsel moved for a mistrial. Believing defense counsel to be correct, the trial court declared a mistrial. The court thereafter barred the State from reprosecuting DeLeon for the death of his son by granting DeLeon’s petition for habeas corpus. By two points of error, the State contends the trial court erred in granting the mistrial, and in granting habeas corpus relief on the basis of double jeopardy. For the reasons expressed below, we will reverse.
The record reveals that on February 3, 1995, DeLeon called 911 claiming his infant son had collapsed. Resuscitation efforts by responding paramedics failed to revive the child and he was later pronounced dead. The following day, Dr. Jerry Spencer, Chief Medical Examiner for Lubbock County, performed an autopsy on the child which revealed signs of asphyxia and thus he was initially inclined to rule the death a homicide. However, because the child had an abnormal heart, he contacted Dr. Harry Wilson, a pediatric pathologist, sending Dr. Wilson the heart and tissue samples for evaluation. Based upon an independent examination, Dr. Wilson concluded the heart abnormality could have resulted in a “sudden unexpected death,” and thus his initial opinion was that the child died of natural causes. Based on the conflict between Dr. Wilson’s findings and his own, Dr. Spencer officially ruled the manner of death as undetermined. However, Dr. Sparks B. Veasey, III, Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for Lubbock County, formed an opinion based upon his review of the X-rays, slides and photographs, that the cause of death was asphyxia, most likely the result of a homicide. On June 14, 1995, DeLeon was indicted for capital murder.
At the behest of an assistant district attorney, and in an effort to strengthen the
The record reflects that defense counsel knew as early as December 1996 that Dr. Wilson had changed his opinion regarding the cause of death from natural causes to suffocation. However, it was not until Byers took the stand during the first day of trial on June 4, 1997, that defense counsel learned the State was in possession of a transcription of the recorded telephone conversations revealing Dr. Wilson’s change in testimony. 5 While Byers was testifying, the State presented defense counsel with a transcript of those conversations. 6 At the conclusion of Byers’s testimony, the court granted a twenty minute recess, during which defense counsel presumably had time to review the transcript. Thereafter, Dr. Spencer testified to his rationale for ruling the manner of death undetermined. He acknowledged asking Dr. Wilson to evaluate the child’s heart, and relayed how Dr. Wilson had initially expressed an opinion that the child died of natural causes.
Doctor Wilson was the sixth witness to testify. He agreed that the child’s heart was abnormally large and that instead of two coronary arteries, it had only one, and he believed the condition was capable of causing “sudden unexpected death.” However, after reviewing the information Byers had provided him, he felt there was “very strong evidence of some type of pressure event consistent with suffocation” thereby causing him to believe the child’s death was not the result of natural causes.
Before cross-examining Dr. Wilson, defense counsel requested, and the court granted, a ten minute recess. On cross-examination Dr. Wilson acknowledged the telephone conversations with Byers, but claimed he had changed his opinion after reviewing all the material in the case, and not because he was influenced by either Byers or the district attorney. After a brief redirect and recross, Dr. Wilson was excused without objection.
Doctor Veasey was the last witness to testify on June 4. He opined that the victim did not die as a result of a heart defect, but that the manner of death was most likely homicide caused by asphyxia.
It was not until trial resumed the following day that defense counsel moved for a mistrial based upon the State’s withholding of Brady material. Defense counsel argued that the State intentionally violated DeLeon’s due process rights by failing to disclose in a timely manner the transcription of the telephone conversations between Byers and Dr. Wilson. 7 Agreeing with defense counsel that the State had committed prosecutorial misconduct by violating Brady, the court granted the motion for mistrial, and on October 14, 1997, granted DeLeon’s petition for writ of habeas corpus, decreeing that he be released from custody and that jeopardy barred the State from reprosecuting him in this case.
In reviewing a decision of a habeas court, we examine the findings in the light most favorable to the ruling and uphold the decision absent an abuse of discretion.
Ex Parte Primrose,
Mistrials are an extreme remedy for curing prejudice occurring during trial. Bauder v. State,
With this in mind we turn to the question of whether the trial court was required to grant DeLeon’s motion for mistrial after it was revealed during trial that the State had failed to make pretrial disclosure of a transcript of three recorded telephone conversations between two of the State’s witnesses regarding the manner of death of DeLeon’s son. In answering this question, we examine the due process requirements of Brady.
In order to ensure the accused a fail* trial, the State has an affirmative duty under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to turn over exculpatory or impeachment evidence favorable to the defendant which is material either to guilt or to punishment.
Kyles v. Whitley,
When however, as in the instant case, the State waits until trial to disclose
Brady
material, the inquiry is whether the defendant was prejudiced by the delayed disclosure.
9
United States v. McKinney,
758
As previously noted, defense counsel knew as early as December 1996 that Dr. Wilson had changed his opinion from death by natural causes to suffocation. Defense counsel therefore had at least partial knowledge of the evidence contained in the transcript before the trial began, and anything he did not already know was supplied to him by the State early in the trial while Byers was on the stand. Our review of the record reveals that defense counsel cross-examined Byers, and subsequently Dr. Wilson, utilizing what he could from the transcript to impeach their credibility. 10 Because defense counsel obtained the evidence early enough in the trial to cross-examine both Byers and Dr. Wilson, we conclude he had adequate time to effectively utilize it.
In support of our conclusion, we point to defense counsel’s failure to either seek a recess or move for a continuance after obtaining the transcript. The opportunity to request a continuance once
Brady
material is disclosed at trial adequately protects due process.
Yates,
When defense counsel was provided with a copy of the transcript during trial he did not object or in any manner complain of the State’s failure to have previously produced the transcript. More importantly, before cross-examining Byers, defense counsel did not request a recess or move for a continuance in order to examine the transcript, instead he simply proceeded.
See Yates,
Because we are convinced that the State’s disclosure during trial of the transcript did not hinder defense counsel’s ability to effectively use the evidence, no due process violation occurred.
See United States v. Coleman,
Having found that DeLeon’s due process rights were not violated as a result of the State’s mid-trial production, we hold the trial court was not
required
to grant the mistrial, and thus, it abused its discretion in subsequently granting habeas corpus relief.
12
Bauder,
Accordingly, the order granting habeas corpus relief is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 44.01 (Vernon Supp.1998).
. Under Texas Penal Code Annotated Section 19.03(a)(8) (Vernon 1994), a person commits capital murder if he murders an individual under the age of six.
.
Brady v. Maryland,
. The tape recording of Byers's and Dr. Wilson's conversations was delivered to the district attorney's office where it was transcribed on 22 pages of standard reporter’s record.
. Byers was the fourth witness to testify for the State. He was preceded by the custodian of the 911 tapes, a paramedic who responded to the scene, and a police detective who investigated the death.
. Byers’s testimony established that the district attorney's office was aware of the tape recorded telephone conversations prior to a May 23, 1997 pretrial hearing during which defense counsel had requested written or oral statements which could be material to guilt or punishment.
.Although it is evident from the record that the trial court conducted pretrial discovery hearings, the record does not contain an order setting forth a discovery deadline for the disclosure of Brady material.
. Double jeopardy under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution does not bar successive prosecution for the same offense when the earlier proceeding was terminated at the defendant’s request unless the prosecutor deliberately set out to provoke the defendant’s motion for mistrial.
Oregon v. Kennedy,
. The determination of materiality under the standard Brady analysis requires an examination of the probable impact the suppressed evidence would have had on the outcome of trial in light of all the other evidence. This analysis is unworkable in a situation such as the one presented here where the court declared a mistrial before all the evidence was presented and an outcome had been reached.
. Other than revealing that a prosecutor went to El Paso to visit Dr. Wilson, and confirming that the State provided him with additional information in an effort to persuade him to change his opinion, the transcript contains many references to incriminating information but no exculpatory evidence.
.
See also Cohen
v. State,
. We are not to be understood as holding that the trial court abused its discretion in granting the mistrial, but only that because the court was not required to grant the mistrial, it abused its discretion in subsequently granting habeas corpus relief.
