House v. Bell
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
House v. Bell | ||||||||||||
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Supreme Court of the United States | ||||||||||||
Argued January 11, 2006 Decided June 12, 2006 |
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Holding | ||||||||||||
Post-conviction DNA forensic evidence can be considered in death penalty appeals. | ||||||||||||
Court membership | ||||||||||||
Chief Justice: John Glover Roberts, Jr. Associate Justices: John Paul Stevens, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Samuel Alito |
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Case opinions | ||||||||||||
Majority by: Kennedy Joined by: Breyer, Ginsburg, Souter, Stevens Concurrence/dissent by: Roberts Joined by: Scalia, Thomas Alito took no part in the consideration or decision of the case. |
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Laws applied | ||||||||||||
U.S. Const. amend. IV |
House v. Bell, 547 U.S. 518 (2006), was a United States Supreme Court case challenging the permissibility of new DNA forensic evidence that becomes available post-conviction, in capital punishment appeals when those claims have defaulted pursuant to state law. The Court found that admitting new DNA evidence was in line with a 1995 case, Schlup v. Delo which allows cases to be reopened in light of new evidence.
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[edit] Background and Procedural History
In 1985, Carolyn Muncey was raped and bludgeoned to death in Luttrell, Tennessee, near Knoxville. Her body was found on an embankment, two days later after an extensive search. Paul Gregory House, who was a friend of the Munceys, was charged with the murder. House was on parole and had prior an aggravated sexual assault conviction in Utah [1] Based on circumstantial evidence that House was spotted near the embankment, along with blood on the victim that matched House's blood type, victim's blood on House's jeans, and House's semen on the victim's nightgown and underwear, he was found guilty at trial with aggravating factors that qualified him for capital punishment.
The Tennessee Supreme Court affirmed House's conviction and sentence, describing the evidence against House as "circumstantial" but "quite strong." Later, in a state trial court, House filed a pro se petition for postconviction relief, arguing that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial and objecting to certain jury instructions. At a hearing before the same judge who conducted the trial, the court dismissed the petition, deeming House's trial counsel adequate and overruling House's other objections. On appeal House's attorney renewed only the jury-instructions argument and the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, and both the Tennessee Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of the United States denied review.
House filed a second postconviction petition in state court reasserting his ineffective-assistance claim. After extensive litigation regarding whether House's claims were procedurally defaulted, the Tennessee Supreme Court held that House's claims were barred under a state statute providing that claims not raised in prior postconviction proceedings are presumptively waived.
House next sought federal habeas corpus relief, asserting numerous claims of ineffective assistance of counsel and prosecutorial misconduct.
In November 2002, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reviewed the case in light of new DNA evidence that might exonerate House. The DNA was taken from semen on the victim's clothing that matched her husband, and not House. As well, the blood on House's jeans was found to be splattered on the jeans at the crime laboratory from vials of blood taken at autopsy. [2] Two witnesses also came forward to say that the victim's husband, Hubert Muncey, had confessed to the murder. In light of the new evidence, the Court of Appeals referred the case to the Tennessee Supreme Court, asking it to consider how the state law barring consideration of claims not raised in prior postconviction appeals applies in this situation.
In December 2003, the Tennessee Supreme Court refused to consider whether new DNA evidence presented during death penalty appeals necessitates a new trial, and declined to answer other questions posed. The Tennessee Supreme Court sent the case back to the Federal Court of Appeals. [3] The Federal Court of Appeals narrowly rejected House's appeal on October 6, 2004, in a 8-7 decision with strongly worded opinions from the dissenting judges. [4]
On June 28, 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to take up the case, to reconsider under what circumstances death penalty cases could be reopened in light of new evidence. [5]
[edit] Supreme Court Decision
Generally, claims that have defaulted under state law may not be granted federal habeas corpus review unless the petitioner provides a sufficient explanation for the default and demonstrates that the asserted error prejudiced his or her trial (that is, the error caused a different outcome). This standard, based on the principle of respect for state court judgments, is normally a difficult one for convicted defendants to meet.
The United States Supreme Court recognized a "miscarriage of justice" exception to the above rule for "extraordinary cases" in a 1995 decision, Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298. That decision held that prisoners asserting innocence as a gateway to federal review of defaulted claims must establish that, in light of new evidence, "it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have found petitioner guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."
In House v. Bell, the Supreme Court found that House’s arguments based on new DNA and other evidence were sufficient to meet the Schlup standard.
[edit] DNA Evidence
DNA tests established that the semen on Mrs. Muncey's nightgown and underwear came from her husband, Mr. Muncey, not from House. The State argued that since neither sexual contact nor motive were elements of the offense, this evidence would have not affected the jury’s decision to convict House had it been available at trial. The Supreme Court disagreed, stating that the new DNA evidence was of "central importance." A jury informed that fluids on Mrs. Muncey's garments could have come from House might have found that House traveled to the victim's home and lured her away in order to commit a sexual offense. According to the Court, a jury acting without the assumption that the semen could have come from House would have found it necessary to establish a different motive.
[edit] Bloodstains
The other relevant forensic evidence in House’s trial was Mrs. Muncey's blood found on House's pants. House's attorneys argued that his pants were contaminated with samples of blood taken during Mrs. Muncey's autopsy.
Expert witnesses testified that Mrs. Muncey's blood samples taken during the autopsy were kept in test tubes without preservation and that in such conditions certain enzymes invariably degrade. The matching blood found on House's pants showed similar enzyme decay, in a way that would not have occurred if the victim's blood had come into contact with House's pants while she was still alive.
Other evidence supported this theory. During the investigation of Mrs. Muncey's murder, the doctor who performed the autopsy passed the vials to two local law enforcement officers who transported it to the FBI where further testing occurred. The blood was contained in four vials, evidently with neither preservative nor a proper seal. The vials, in turn, were stored in a styrofoam box, but nothing indicates the box was kept cool. Rather, in violation of proper procedure, the styrofoam box was packed in the same cardboard box as other evidence including House's pants and other clothing. The cardboard box was then carried in the officers' car while they made the 10-hour journey from Tennessee to the FBI lab. Blood vials in hot conditions (such as a car trunk in the summer) can blow open; and in fact, by the time the blood reached the FBI it had hemolyzed, or spoiled, due to heat exposure. By the time the blood passed from the FBI to a defense expert, roughly a vial and a half were empty, though the agent who had analyzed it testified he used at most a quarter of one vial. Blood, moreover, had seeped onto one corner of the styrofoam box and onto packing gauze inside the box below the vials.
The Supreme Court declared that the bloodstains, as emphasized by the prosecution, seemed strong evidence of House's guilt at trial, but that new evidence raised substantial questions about the blood's origin.
[edit] A Different Suspect
In the post-trial proceedings House's attorneys presented evidence that Mr. Muncey, the victim's husband, himself could have been the murderer. House's attorneys produced evidence from multiple sources suggesting that Mr. Muncey regularly abused his wife. Moreover, two witnesses at House's habeas hearing testified that, around the time of House's trial, Mr. Muncey had confessed to the crime. One witness recalled that she and "some family members and some friends [were] sitting around drinking" at her trailer when Mr. Muncey "just walked in and sit down." Muncey, who had evidently been drinking heavily, began "rambling off . . . talking about what happened to his wife and how it happened and he didn't mean to do it." According to the witness, Mr. Muncey "said [he and Mrs. Muncey] had been into [an] argument and he slapped her and she fell and hit her head and it killed her and he didn't mean for it to happen." The witness then said she "freaked out and run him off."
The Supreme Court found this evidence "troubling" but did not decide that it was conclusive. "If considered in isolation, a reasonable jury might well disregard" such testimony, the Court stated. "In combination, however, with the challenges to the blood evidence and the lack of motive with respect to House, the evidence pointing to Mr. Muncey likely would reinforce other doubts as to House's guilt." The Supreme Court not only addressed the issue, but in the end, the verdict was 5-3, which represents that the issue was hard to decide between since the court was divided.
[edit] Holding
Though the Supreme Court did not find that House was conclusively exonerated, it concluded that had the jury heard all the conflicting testimony it is more likely than not that the reasonable juror would not be convinced of House's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, House met the threshold standard set forth in Schlup and his case was remanded for consideration of the constitutional claims that had defaulted due to state law.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Johnson, Rob. "Evidence could aid death row prisoner", The Tennessean, 2002, November 23.
- ^ Johnson, Rob. "Death row inmate weary of waiting for end", The Tennessean, 2002, November 30.
- ^ "State justices decline federal court's questions in death penalty case", Associated Press, 2003, December 4.
- ^ Liptak, Adam. "Execution May Occur Despite Votes Of 7 Judges", The New York Times, 2004, October 7.
- ^ Lane, Charles. "Court May Revise Rule On Death Row Appeals", The Washington Post, 2005, June 29.