Lead Opinion
OPINION
¶ 1 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found error in this Court’s independent review of James Lynn Styers’ death sentence. We granted the State’s request for this Court to conduct a new independent review and, following that review, affirm the sentence.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2 A jury found James Lynn Styers guilty of the 1989 murder, conspiracy to commit first degree murder, kidnapping, and child abuse of four-year-old Christopher Milke. State v. Styers, 177 Ariz. 104, 108-09,
¶ 3 The district court denied Styers’ habe-as corpus petition. Styers v. Schriro,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Scope of Review
¶ 4 Before considering the mitigating effect of Styers’ PTSD, we must determine the scope of the task before us. Styers asserts, and our dissenting colleague agrees, that we must remand this case to the trial court for a new resentencing proceeding because this case is now on “direct review,” and under Ring v. Arizona,
¶ 5 New rules of criminal procedure (like the rule announced in Ring) apply retroactively to non-final cases pending on direct review. Griffith v. Kentucky,
¶ 6 In Teague v. Lane, the Supreme Court observed that the “ [application of constitutional rules not in existence at the time a conviction became final seriously undermines the principle of finality which is essential to the operation of our criminal justice system.”
[t]he right to jury trial is fundamental to our system of criminal procedure, and States are bound to enforce the Sixth Amendment’s guarantees as we interpret them[,] ... it does not follow that, when a criminal defendant has had a full trial and one round of appeals in which the State faithfully applied the Constitution as we understood it at the time, he may nevertheless continue to litigate his claims indefinitely in hopes that we will one day have a change of heart.
Summerlin,
¶ 7 Styers nonetheless argues that by reconsidering independent review, we reopen his ease on direct review, and Ring therefore applies. But regardless of what one calls the type of review we now undertake, Ring requires jury findings only of aggravating factors that make a defendant eligible for the death penalty.
B. Independent Review
¶ 8 We must consider whether Styers established that he had PTSD and was affected by it at the time of the murder. See 1988 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 155, § 1(C) (placing burden on defendant to establish mitigating circumstances). Ultimately, we must decide whether the evidence of Styers’ PTSD alters our earlier determination that the mitigating evidence presented in this case is not sufficient to warrant leniency in light of the aggravating factors. See AR.S. § 13-755.
¶ 9 Our earlier opinion affirmed as aggravating factors that the four-year-old victim was younger than fifteen years of age, A.R.S. § 13-751(F)(9),
1. Evidence of Styers’PTSD
¶ 11 The record shows that Styers suffered from PTSD as a result of his military service in Vietnam. See Styers,
2. Weight of Styers’PTSD
¶ 12 When assessing the weight and quality of a mitigating factor, we take into account how the mitigating factor relates to the commission of the offense. State v. New-ell,
¶ 13 Like the defendants in Tucker, Smith, and Ellison, Styers failed to present any evidence that his PTSD affected his conduct at the time of the crime. In fact, the mental health professionals who prepared Rule 11 reports concluded that there was no connection. One wrote that the “relationship” between the PTSD diagnosis and the offense was “nil.” The other reported that he had “little or no information to indicate that Mr. Styers was not of sound mind, [or] did not know what he was doing at the time of the alleged offenses.”
¶ 14 Our decision in State v. Spears,
¶ 15 Styers’ actions in this case were similarly “planned and deliberate, not impulsive.” See id. Styers purchased guns, and he and Roger Scott then took Christopher into the desert and shot him three times in the head. Styers,
3. Propriety of Death Sentence
¶ 16 Because we attribute little mitigating weight to Styers’ PTSD, we find no reason to alter the conclusion reached in Styers’ direct appeal. We therefore hold that Styers’ PTSD, in combination with all other mitigating evidence presented at Styers’ mitigation hearing and previously considered by this Court, is not sufficient to warrant leniency in light of the aggravating factors proven in this case.
III. CONCLUSION
¶ 17 Following our independent review under A.R.S. § 13-755, we affirm the sentence of death.
Notes
. Our dissenting colleague states that § 13-755 applies only on direct review. Dissent at ¶ 22. Although independent review is normally conducted in an appeal from a death sentence, nothing in § 13-755 limits our review to direct appeals. Instead, for murders committed before August 2002, the statute imposes an obligation on this Court to "review all death sentences.” Id. § 13-755(A); see 2002 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 1, § 7(C) (5th Spec. Sess.).
. In 2008, the capital sentencing statutes were renumbered as A.R.S. §§ 13-751 to -759. 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 301, §§ 26, 38-41 (2d Reg. Sess.). Because there were no relevant substantive changes, we cite the current version of the statutes.
. This Court’s earlier opinion states that we "considered all of the proffered mitigation and, like the trial court, [found] it [was] not sufficiently substantial to warrant leniency.” Styers,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
¶ 18 At the State’s request, the Court today independently reviews the death sentence imposed by the superior court and concludes that the mitigation is not sufficiently substantial to warrant leniency in light of the aggravating circumstances. I do not quarrel with the substance of that determination. I have reluctantly concluded, however, that given the procedural morass created in this case by the Ninth Circuit, the Court’s action today is not constitutionally permitted.
¶ 19 In Ring v. Arizona, the Supreme Court held that a jury, not a judge, must find the aggravating circumstances that make a defendant eligible for a death sentence.
¶ 20 But, of course, the denial of certiorari was not the end of the story here. After the United States District Court for the District of Arizona denied habeas relief, the Court of Appeals reversed, ordering the district court to grant the writ (and thus reduce Styers’ sentence from death to life), unless the State corrected a purported “constitutional error” committed during our direct review of Styers’ sentence. Styers v. Schriro,
¶ 21 The district court did not remand this case to us—we are not adjuncts of federal
¶22 What separates me from my colleagues is my analysis of the nature of this “do-over.” The statute mandating independent review of death sentences, A.R.S. § 13-755(A), applies to direct review, not to post-conviction proceedings. Indeed, no one contends that the Court today is exercising Rule 32 post-conviction review jurisdiction, and I am unaware of any other context in which we review criminal sentences other than direct review. But more importantly, independent review is the paradigm of direct review—we determine, de novo, whether the trial court, on the facts before it, properly sentenced the defendant to death. Thus, what the State sought in this case—and what the Court has granted—is a new direct review of the death sentence, designed to obviate a constitutional “error” occurring in the original appeal. Styers’ death sentence is therefore plainly not final; after the conditional writ issued, a death sentence could not be imposed without further action from this Court, and Styers can plainly seek further direct review, through certiorari, from the Court’s reinsti-tution of that sentence today.
¶ 23 Because the Court today engages in direct review of the death sentence, Styers is entitled to a jury trial on aggravating factors unless the original jury made the requisite findings or no reasonable jury could have failed to find them. State v. Ring,
¶ 24 I understand the attraction of the course taken by the Court today. The procedural difficulties in this ease have been caused by what we believe to be an erroneous decision by the Ninth Circuit. A new sentencing proceeding will result in further delay in this 22-year-old case, and given the circumstances of this crime—the brutal and calculated murder of a young child—it seems unlikely that a new sentencing proceeding will produce a different result than the original one. But such a proceeding, in my view, is constitutionally mandated, and will likely bring this ease to conclusion more promptly than the new round of federal habeas proceedings that will inevitably follow today’s decision.
¶ 25 I therefore respectfully dissent.
. The superior court instructed the jury that an element of one of the non-capital crimes charged was that the victim was under fifteen years of age. The jury found Styers guilty of that crime.
