WILLIAM LEE THOMPSON v. SECRETARY FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, James Crosby
No. 02-10642
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
February 6, 2003
D. C. Docket No. 01-02457 CV-WPD
Before EDMONDSON, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT and DUBINA, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
In 1976, William Lee Thompson was sentenced to death for kidnaping, raping and murdering Sally Iverson. Thompson‘s case then traveled for many years through the state and federal courts on different prayers for relief. Thompson most recently filed an appeal from the denial of his motion for post-conviction relief and a habeas petition to the Florida Supreme Court. On 13 April 2000, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the trial court‘s summary denial for relief and also denied habeas relief. Thompson v. State, 759 So. 2d 650, 668 (Fla. 2000). Thompson‘s petition for rehearing was denied on 13 June 2000.
Exactly one year after his exhausted claims became final in the Florida courts -- 13 June 2001 -- Thompson filed a petition for habeas relief in the federal courts. In addition to many exhausted claims, Thompson presented two unexhausted claims to the district court. One unexhausted claim related to the recent passage of a Florida statute prohibiting the execution of mentally retarded people.
Thompson moved the district court to hold the federal habeas proceedings in abeyance pending exhaustion of his two unexhausted claims in state court. Thompson recognized his petition was one which impermissibly “mixed” exhausted and unexhausted claims. But Thompson argued he had no choice except to file a mixed petition to meet the one-year filing deadline of AEDPA and to preserve review of the exhausted claims.
To avoid more delay before reaching finality, the district court denied Thompson‘s motion to stay the habeas proceedings. The district court presented Thompson with an election of remedies: abandon the unexhausted claims and proceed on the exhausted claims, or suffer dismissal of the entire petition as a mixed petition. When the district court offered the alternative remedies, it also noted the possibility that the constitutional complaint against executing mentally retarded people might later be a permissible second or successive habeas petition.
Thompson, all the while represented by counsel, made no affirmative election of the remedies offered by the district court; and the district court dismissed without prejudice the mixed petition. Thompson argues on appeal that the district court abused its discretion by refusing to stay the proceedings pending exhaustion of all his claims in state court.2
Even if we assume, for the sake of discussion, that the district court had discretion not to dismiss the mixed petition,3 we conclude there was no abuse of that discretion. This litigation had been going on for decades. In addition, a district court could reasonably believe that these unexhausted claims might properly be brought later in a second or successive petition.4 Given the nature of
AFFIRMED.
