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Clemency Request - Attorneys Working Files Vol. 2 of 5
Working File
March 22, 1991 - July 24, 1991
106 pages
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Case Files, McCleskey Background Materials. Clemency Request - Attorneys Working Files Vol. 2 of 5, 1991. 44ac3c27-5fa7-ef11-8a69-7c1e5266b018. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/a6223e52-1e05-44cd-820f-99e27878285e/clemency-request-attorneys-working-files-vol-2-of-5. Accessed December 04, 2025.
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Case Files: Mc Cle key C031 5 /- ba #9 urd: Clamps ) I st: IM Pin Wor Ling ty (2 of 3 72)
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NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC.
99 Hudson Street © New York, N.Y. 10013 e (212) 219-1900
Contributions are deductible for U. S. income tax purposes
National Office
A A Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title Aes \©. Sua da. — Cepvq Puscic Pefe~nez
PUBL Oe€ernacnr - Proven Seco
AoOTrEss SH iinTTHv ST.
PO Voy “H6003
today’s date Weve, wa ono
number of clients you have or have had on death row
G
1t0 5 Gro 10% 10to15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no > Gf no, skip to question 2)
1a) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
ros —
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
il i
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
; pr SPECIAL ConalEL,
your name/title Reutieh Thon Ls CLATE, MEAGHER 4 Flom
address 414 TH AVENUE ; Nak, A o0aa-3297
today’s date ¢ ( ( [a1
number of clients you have or have had on death row 11096 510 10 \/ 10 to 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no_\/ (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
a
yes
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
National Office
A A Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title 1B Of 1X[ACS op) Cod County nd
AdOress Dod) Arab c Lh y 26 50S. Of ~ Cap Sy J
mr, Yi Joana Corse Coy Aen A
Gop today’s a
number of i 0 have or have had on death row
1105 510 10 10 to 15 over 5X
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question la) no X (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
X
yes no_
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
7)
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NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC.
National Office
Suite 1600
99 Hudson Street
New York, N.Y. 10013
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
(212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance.
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title —im ey [(nSen)
AOO1EsSs | X 53 Vili / wo ice fe
today’s date </ /s |
Please take a few
ac fin Mh dose GC &,
Niles T/ 6064s
number of clients you have or have had on death row
1t09§ DC §t0 10 10 to 1§ over 15
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes
PART II
no [X (if no, skip to question 2)
no
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes_X
COMMENTS:
Contributions are
deductible for U.S.
income tax purposes.
The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part
of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate
Board, program, staff, office and budget.
no
Regional Offices
Suite 301
1275 K Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 682-1300
Fax: (202) 682-1312
Suite 208
315 West Ninth Street
Los Angeles, CA 90015
(213) 624-2405
Fax: (213) 624-0075
A
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery. ( Cg
Xen MN Of 3 Phe 3
your name/title Rob (Maller Hes. Co. Yoda
address \\\\ = & Roe, Seale AOR ANON
today’s date Nog 1 YA)
number of clients you have or have had on death row
1105 5 to 10 10 to 15 88 over 15_}
PART i
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no_X__ Gf no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no...
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes A no A
COMMENTS:
~~
]
ANY VU AN Y IN, le e\ A A ‘ b i Re y » OR
2 “\ ty € (& NO © OL Ves elo er =
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
National Office
A A Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title Michael Millman : Exeeo five Direct, CAP
adoress | EeKer Place, 4% Fler, Lan Frncigco, La. 94105
today’s date 8 [o qi
number of clients you have or have had on death row 1105 5 to 10 10 10 15 over 15
PART I
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no nd (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no...
PART Ii
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
no_v
yes
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
il i
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title Tn net o Reccem ar C hie} Q prec Dept
Jevoda rade FU C X{em da
CE AJ. Corr St. Sue ROC
today’s date an Son Ci y AN $970
Cluogust 1, | 94 ( k
number of clients you have or have had on death row
AOOress
1tos X S$to10 10 to 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question la) no y= (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no_
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
il i
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this gg
eo)
your name/title [Onan te “ K. J Pg) D7
address J 27 Se V 7 sl SYBCRS NV 7
today’s date +4 fl Yi /
number of clients you have or have had on death row 1105 §t0 10 X 10 to 15 over 15
PART I
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits? “/) D
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
node yes
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no J’
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
Ml
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery. 4 ot
Ye Hoven, JURE Be your name/title eis NC ATbo
address poe Rox 1°10 ICA
today’s date $= | 9
number of clients you have or have had on death row
1t05 § to 10 10 to 15 over 15 7
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question la) no / (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no
COMMENTS: Ji (cA H
{
pale 415
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
AL National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title SONAR PLOT, (Hi fsS win{ i
NM SQ 05% 4 {9 3 $\ ~ Son foci <3 (J : ( ay “1
| address
today’s date b), l4
number of clients you have or have had on death row ito§ x 5to 10 10 to 1§ over 15
PART I
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
vd
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) nol (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
<7
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
National Office
A A Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
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Yiewt sf CASI eld sri) STI UFC (Cy
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your name/title SCE DER
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today’s date ¢ _/ 7/
number of clients you have or Save had on Seath row Lh Set FT 3 — ar S29 | (ST 271 wy 7
1t05§ § to 10 10 to 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
V4
yes (if yes, answer question la) no X (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
no \ rd
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes
PART II
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title CoE A. STArFuDd Smt Ter
£3 Poeuas ST 5 MW Avent, Gn. HD T3
AOOTrEesSs
today’s date 3 2 ( [ 99
number of clients you have or have had on death row
1105 510 10 10 10 15 over 15“
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question la) no__X (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes Lr no
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your nameftitle Bruce LedewT2 — fp Lew Pag Uarw
AOOrEess Duguesne EC: Self aT tro
today’s date Sli [a
number of clients you have or have had on death row
tor Pr § to 10 10 to 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits? oa
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no “ (if no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no Fh
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
j \ / p ” fn 7 IC A s
your name/title A. wf H, Cy lina 5 Appellate Aefouse oun el, Uy C
sobtens 1 plik Peli Didi on, WAAARA, OSHG, Big Ul, Lushhigfon
I Aly Verd, Was hivaffon, AC O37
today’s date We fg LI)
number of clients you have or have had on death row
110 5 X § to 10 10 tO 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes___ (if yes, answer question la) no Xi no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes_ no.
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no X
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery. >.
ry /. . Ls Ae iad - Ariane Crys
your name/title Josy=4 8. &7/ bat) Ys Agoellats Dotose
pr Lomadol’ VA 25003 wash D.&)
Address 7/0 Brartle
—,
today’s date 7 / / / 71
number of clients you have or have had on death row 110 § Ta 510 10 10 to 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no vit no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about oe hidden by the state?
yes no
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
National Office
A A Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title Aa 5+ia Mas lan, I As 5 Cs ban Pubs | Oafndon
adoress YTS N. Broa way Bartow, Fl, POBox Gl) 7000p
23950 ~ 10060
today’s date zi] 9
number of clients you have or have had on death row
1t0§ 510 10 ed 10 t0 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no Gf no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no
COMMENTS:
Regional Cffices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title Jean Barcel
:
adoress 20 NST Af e (HA A ve Lo rang
today’s date £ Jr /7 /
number of clients you have or have had on death row O
LE 07067
1t05 5 to 10 10 to 15 over 15 3 a// Trials
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question la) no \ lit no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidencé hidden by the state?
yes no
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
il i
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title DAV } L (A 5 R JH ~N NK ‘E
Rub ke 4 BART
20 NOLTHFAITLW MHVE oo
today’s date WENT OR OGE, IY © Toye
© Shlal
number of clients you nel) 5 have had on death row oO
AVO1esSs
1t05§ § to 10 10 to 15 over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question 1a) no X Gt no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then Shia procedural grounds?
yes no
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
no
yes
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A
National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title Rhonda Lone - Sharp, Chuis{ Deputy ¥D., ToD
adoress Ohe MJ. Capit, Sutte Yoo, 1oDY, 10 Yi, 20
today’s date 8 / 1) 91
number of clients you have or have had on death row
1105 9, § to 10 10 to 15 over 15
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes____ (if yes, answer question la) no Ke no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes_ no.
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
yes no
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
A National Office
Suite 1600
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
SURVEY
Dear Friend,
As you know, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, has an interest in death
penalty cases and appeals. We need your assistance. Please take a few
minutes to fill out this brief survey. Return to Karima Wicks at the
address listed above on this stationery.
your name/title MONA F OSTEML
AOOTress AR) tC WALLET LT. #40
today’s date { | 19
number of clients you have or have had on death row 1to§ stow X 1to1s over 15
PART |
1) Have any of your clients ever won relief twice under federal habeas
corpus review on the merits?
yes (if yes, answer question la) no _ Xf no, skip to question 2)
la) Were any of those cases then overturned on procedural grounds?
yes no.
PART II
2) In your experience, has it ever happened that two or more jurors in a
capital case indicated after sentencing that their verdict would have
been different if they had known about evidence hidden by the state?
no_X
yes
COMMENTS:
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
a
Jace --
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THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
AT
CHAPEL HILL
SCHOOL OF LAW CB# 3380, Van Hecke-Wettach Hall
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599-3380
DATE July 28, 3
C ©19) =)
TO Taoul C adenhesd | Exa. FAX NO. (HoH) < To- 6020
FROM JACK. Bogor
TELEPHONE NO. (419) 962-85/(
This document consists of | + pages including this cover sheet.
If you have any transmission problems please call (919)962-8503.
MESSAGE:
July 28, 1991
TO: Paul Cadenhead
FROM: Jack Boger
RE: McCleskey Clemency -- Excerpts from Judge Forrester Orders
I am attaching pages from two orders entered by Judge Owen Forrester in
the McCleskey case: the first, entered on December 23, 1987, granting habeas
corpus relief on McCleskey's Massiah claim, the second, entered on January 10,
1989, denying the State's motion -- under Rule 59 of the Fed. R. Civ. P. -- to
reopen the judgment.
The circled portions on these se pages are the excerpts I recommend for
your consideration for our final edited version of Judge Forrester's opinion.
In this initial sorting, I have erred on the side of inclusion; there are some
circled lines that seem redundant, and a number that do not represent
favorable findings, but simply give the necessary background for findings that
follow. Please feel free to treat them as raw materials for final editing,
not the finished product.
>
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The petitioner never specifically requested the appointment of a
ballistics expert, nor did he make the showing that this circuit
has held is required by Ake and Caldwell. The state trial court
could hardly have been expected to appreciate the importance of a
ballistics expert to petitioner's case if petitioner himself
neither requested such an expert nor explained the significance
of such an expert to the court.
V. PETITIONER'S NEW CLAIMS.
A. Massiah Claim.
s of Fact.
Petitioner relies primarily on the testimony of Ulysses
Worthy before this court and the recently disclosed written
statement of Offie Evans to support his Massiah claim. Ulysses
Worthy, who was captain of the day watch at the Fulton County
Jail during the summer of 1978 when petitioner was being held
there awaiting his trial for murder and armed ropbery, testified
before this court on July 9 and August 10, 1387... The court will
set out the pertinent parts of that testimony and then summarize
the information it reveals.
n July 9, Worthy testified as follows:
He recalled
"something being said" to Evans by Police Officer Dorsey or
another officer about engaging in conversations with McCleskey
(IT Tr. 147-49).° He remembered a conversation, where Detective
~
Dorsey and perhaps other officers were present, in which Evans
0 -
was asked to engage in conversations with McCleskey (II Tr. 150)
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ater, Evans requested permission to call the detectives (II Tr.
151). Assistant District Attorney Russell Parker and Detective
Harris used Worthy's office to interview Evans at one point,
which could have been the time they came out to the jail at
Evans’ request (1d.).
In other cases, Worthy had honored police requests that
someone be placed adjacent to another inmate to listen for
information (II Tr. 152); such Pequssts usually would come from
the officer handling the case (1d.); he recalled specifically
that such a request was made in this case by the officer on the
case (II Tr. 153). Evans was put in the cell next to McCloskey
at the request of the officer on the case (1d.); "someone asked
[him] to specifically place Offie Evans in a specific location in
the Fulton County Jail 50 he could overhear conversations with
Warren McCleskey," but Worthy did not know who made the request
and he was not sure whether the request was made when Evans
first came into the jail (II Tr. 153-54); he Aid not recall when
he was asked to move Evans (II Tr. 155-56). abe
On August 10, 1987 Worthy testified as follows: Evans was
first brought to his attention when Deputy Hamilton brought Evans
to Worthy's office becauss Evans wanted to call the district
attorney or the police with "some information he wanted to pass
to them" (II Tr. 14). The first time the investigators on the
Schlatt murder case talked to Evans was "a few days" after Evans’
call (III Tr. 16-17). That meeting took place in Worthy's office
(III Tr. 17). Worthy was asked to move Evans "from one cell to
/ Lr
‘=16~
/ cross-examination, Worthy testified as follows: Deputy Hamilton
was not a case officer but was a deputy at the jail (III Tr. 49).
When Worthy testified on July 9 he did not know what legal issues
were before the court (III Tr. 52-53). After his July 9 testi-
mony he met with the state's attorneys on two occasions for a
total of forty to fifty minutes (IXY Tr. 53-54). After his
. “July 9 testimony he read a local newspaper article mentioning him
(311 Tr. 56),
-—— — -
In response to questions from the court, Worthy stated that
he was satisfied that he was asked for Evans "to be placed near
McCleskey's cell," that "Evans was asked to overhear McCleskey
talk about this case," and that Evans was asked to "get some
a2 (information from” McCleskey (III Tr. 64-65). [Worthy maintained
that these requests were made on the date that Assistant
District Attorney Parker interviewed Evans, but he could not
explain why the investigators would have requested a move on the
same day that Evans had already told the investigators that he
was next to McCleskey, that he had been listening to what
McCleskey had been saying, and that he had been asking McCleskey
questions (III Tr. 64).
h
A summary, Worthy never wavered from the fact that someone,
at some point, requested his permission to move Evans to be near
McCleskey. Worthy's July 9 testimony indicates the following
sequence: The request to move Evans, the move, Evans' request to
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> call the investigators, the Parker interview, and other later/
Inteuyiss: jf Wouthy's Sug t 10’ testimohy indjfates/a diffepent
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vans' request to call the senbsticatond, the Parker
/ sequence:
interview,/ the regudest to mo; e Evans Z beputy Hamilsdn, and
other later tmrepalove i) Torry Ss testizony is inconsistent on
Officer Dorsey's role in requesting the move, on whether Deputy
Hamilton requested the move, and on whether the request to move
Evans preceded Evans' request to call the investigators. Worthy
has no explanation for why the authorities would have requested
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. to move Evans after the Parker interview, at which Evans made it
clear that he was already i djzcent to McCleskey's.
S—
All of the law enforcement personnel to whom Worthy informed )
-= Deputy flamilcon) Detectives Dorsey, Jowers and Harris, and
Assistant District Attorney Parker -- flatly denied 5,
requested permission to move Evans or 2aving any knowledge ©
such a request being made [(111 Tr, 65-71: 80-81, 95: 97-98;
102~03; 111-22, 1¥6).7 It is undisputed that Assistant District Attorney Parker met with Evans at the Ful:zcn County Jail on only
one occasion, July 12, 1978, and that =vans was already in the
cell next to McCleskey's at that time (II Tr. 113-14; 71-72). |
‘Petitioner also relies on Evans' twenty-one page statement |
: 2 to the Atlanta Police Department, dat=é August 1, 1978, in |
; ~ support of his claim that the authoriti=ss deliberately elicited |
incriminating informatian from him in violation of his Sixth |
amendment right to counsel. Evans’ statement relates fey
$ = |
tions he overheard between McCleskey and McCleskey's co-defendant
DuPree and conversations between himself and McCleskey from
’ July 9 to July 12, 1978. McCleskey's statements during the
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course of those conversations were highly incriminating. In
support of his argument that the authorities instigated Evans’
information gathering,/’McCleskey points to the methods Evans used
to secure McCleskey' S trust and hereby stimulate incriminating
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Evans sdbeatialy lied to McCleskey, telling him
conversation.
that McCleskey's co-defendant, Ben Wright, was. Evans' nephew;
that Evans' name was Charles; that Ben had told Evans about
] McCleskey; that Evans had seen Ben recently; that Ben was
‘accusing McCleskey of falsely identifying Ben as the "trigger |
man" in the robbery; that Evans "used to stick up with Ben too;"
that Ben told Evans that McCleskey shot Officer Schlatt; and that
Evans was supposed to have been in on the robbery himself.
EPC re Te op Lo a—————
In addition, McCleskey argues that Evans' knowledge that
McCleskey and other co-defendants had told police that co-
defendant Ben Wright was the trigger person demonstrates Evans’
been made Bnet e collusion with the police since that fact had nc phage 2
public at that timet Finally, McCleskey points to two additional
-
pieces of evidence about Evans' relationship with the police:
a — tigi LEE T—
ans testified at McCleskey's trial that he had talked ©
Detective Dorsey about the case before he talked to Assistan
|
District Attorney Parker (Pet. Exh. 16 at 119); and Evans ha
\_acted as an informant for Detective Dorsey before (II Tr. 52-3).
The factual issue for the court to resolve is simply stated:
Either the authorities moved Evans to the cell adjoining
’ McCleskey's in an effort to obtain incriminating information or
they did not. There is evidence to support the argument that
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Evans was not moved, that he was in the adjoining cell fortu-
itously, and that his conversations with McCleskey preceded his
contact with the authorities. North's testimony is often
confused and self-contradictory, it is directly contrary to the
testimony of Deputy Hamilton and Detective Dorsey, it is contrary
to Evans' testimony at McCleskey's trial that he was put in the
adjoining cell "straight from the street” (Trial Tr, 873), and it
is contrary to the opening line of Evans' written statement
which says, "I am in the Fulton County Jail cell # 1 north 14
where I have been since July 3, 1978 for escape." Worthy himself
testified that escape risks where housed in that wing of the jail
(III Tr. 13-14). Moreover, /the use of Evans as mecleskeyN|
(elieses, if it occurred, developed into a complicated scheme to
violate McCleskey's constitutional rights -- its success required
| Evans and any officers involved to lie and lie well about the
circumstances. For these reasons, the state asks this court to
reject Worthy's testimony that someone requested permission to
move Evans next to McCleskey's cell.
After carefully. considering the substance of Worthy's
testimony, his demeanor, and the other relevant evidence in this
case, the court concludes that it cannot reject Worthy's testi-
mony about the fact of a request to move Offie Evans. The fact
that someone, at some point, requested his permission to move
Evans is the one fact from which Worthy never wavered in his two
days of direct and cross-examination. The state has introduced ski evidence that Worthy is either lying or mistaken.
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The lack of corroboration by other witnesses is not surprising;
the other witnesses, like Assistant District Attorney Parker, had
no reason to know of a request to move Evans or, like Detective
Dorsey, had an obvious interest in concealing any such arrange-
ment. Worthy, by contrast, had no apparent interest or bias that
would explain any conscious deception. Worthy's testimony that
: he was asked to move Evans is further bolstered by Evans’
. testimony that he talked to Detective Dorsey before he talked to |
Ll
! }
1 - -—— = il ST : 1 : wh 0
Assistant District Attorney Parker and by Evarns' apparent
knowledge of details of the robbery and homicide Xxnown only to
TS
Once it is accepted that Worthy was asked for permission to
the police and the perpetrators.
. move Evans, the conclusion follows swiftly that the sequence of
events to which Worthy testified originally must be the correct
sequence; 1i.e., the request to move Evans, the cove, Evans'
request to call the investigators, the Parker iaterview, and
of
pe
other later interviews. |There are two other possible con-
be. gs
1 clusions about the timing of the request to move Evans, but
: neither is tenable. First, the request to move Evans could have
: come following Evans' meeting with Assistant District Attorney
Parker, as Worthy seemed to be testifying on Auguss 10 (111 Tr.
20). However, a request at that point would have been non-
~
sensical because Evans was already in the cell adjoining
McCleskey's. Second, it could be that Evans was originally in the
’ cell next to McCleskey, that he overheard the incriminating
statements prior to any contact with the investigators, that
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McCleskey was moved to a different cell, and that the authorities
then requested permission to move Evans to again be adjacent to
McCleskey. As the state concedes, this possibility is mere
speculation and is not supported by any evidence in the record.
Post-Hearing Brief at 53.
oregoing reasons, the court concludes that peti-
tioner has established by a preponderance of the evidence the
following sequence of events: Evans was not originally in the
cell adjoining McCleskey's; prior to July 9, 1978, he was moved,
pursuant to a request approved by Worthy, to the adjoining cell
for the purpose of gathering incriminating information; Evans was
probably coached in how to approach McCleskey and given critical
facts unknown to the general public; Evans engaged McCleskey i=
conversation and eavesdropped on McCleskey's conversations wit:
DuPree; and Evans reported what he had heard between July 9 ang
July 12, 1978 to Assistant District Attorney Parker on July 12.
2. Abuse of the Writ Questions.
The state argues that petitioner's Massiah claim in this
second federal habeas petition is an abuse of the writ because hs
intentionally abandoned the claim after his first state habeas
- -
petition and because his failure to raise this claim in his firs:
federal habeas petition was due to inexcusable neglect. As was
noted earlier, the burden is on petitioner to show that he has
ce
not abused the writ. BAllen, 795 P.24 at 938-39. The court
concludes that petitioner's Massiah claim is not an abuse of the
writ.
re
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was held irrelevant under Massiah whether the informant ques-
1
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tioned the defendant about the crime or merely engaged in general
conversation which led to the disclosure of incriminating
statements about the crime. Id. at 271-72 n, 10. Although the
government insisted that it should not be held responsible for
n the inmate's interrogation of the defendant in light of its
| ; specific instructions to the contrary, the Court held that
ba employing a paid informant who converses with an unsuspecting
inmate while both are in custody amounts to "intentionally
creating a situation likely to induce [the defendant] to make
incriminating statements without the assistance of counsel." Xd.
; at 274.7
ANIONS. ty
Bre,
Given the facts established earlier, petitioner has clearly
established a Massiah ‘violation here. It is clear from Evans’
written statement that he did much more than merely engage
petitioner in conversation about petitioner's crimes. As
discussed earlier, Evans repeatedly lied to petitioner in order
to gain his trust and to draw him into incriminating statements.
Worthy's testimony establishes that Evans, in eliciting the
incriminating statements, was acting as an agent of the state.
This case is completely unlike Kuhlmann v. Wilson, 106 S.Ct. 2616
(1986), where the Court found no Massiah violation because the
inmate informant had been a passive listener and had not de-
liberately elicited incriminating statements from the defendant.
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Here, Evans was even more active in eliciting incriminating
statements than was the informant in Henry. The conclusion is
inescapable that petitioner's sixth amendment rights, as inter-
preted in Massiah, were violated. Ley
conviction the state must "prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
However, "[n]ot every interrogation in violation of the rule
set forth in Massiah ... mandates reversal of a conviction.”
United States v. Kilrain, 566. F.24 973, 8982 (5th Cir. 1978).
Instead, "the proper rule [is] one of exclusion of tainted
evidence rather than a per se standard of reversal if any
constitutional violation hals] occurred.” Id. n. 3, citing
Brewer v. Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 407 n. 12 (1977); United States
y, Hayles, 471 P.24 738, 793, cert. denied, 411 U.s. 969 (5th
Cir. 1973). In other words, "certain violations of the right to
4 :
counsel may be disregarded as harmless error." United States v.
Morrison, 4492. U.S. 361, 365 (198l), citing Chapman v, California,
386 U.S. 18, 2) n. 8 (1967). To avoid reversal of petitioner's
the error complained of [the use at petitioner's trial of his own
incriminating statements obtained in violation of his sixth
amendment rights] did not contribute to the verdict obtained.”
Chapman, 386 U.S. at 24. See also Brown v. Dugger, No. 85-6082,
Slip Op. at 511-12 (11th Cir. November 13, 1987).
———, B ~ ita,
Once the fact of the Massiah violation in this case is
ceo
accepted, it is not possible to find that the error was harmless.
A review of the evidence presented at the petitioner's trial
: a Re I ST ey A FONE eis SX : TE ri dW Ty RT A A I RL op I RT OTE)
NT STOO AA? NAT ATI A 1 Tah el Aine § shade LS rn ie ZL SR LARA Sans OE BAL ROORMIEL WL ae SARI OF AN JTS AR Foe A a A
-
ys ————————CEE
v
[reveals that Evans' testimony about the petitioner's yal
inating statements was critical to the state's case. There were
no witnesses to the shooting and the murder weapon was never
found. The bulk of the state's case against the petitioner was
three pronged: (1) evidence that petitioner carried a particular
| gun on the day of the robbery that most likely fired the fatal
bullets; (2) testimony by co-defendant Ben Wright that petitioner
pulled the trigger; and (3) Evans' testimony about petitioner's
e
o
incriminating statements. As petitioner points out, the evidence
on petitioner's possession of the gun in question was conflictin
and the testimony of Ben Wright was obviously impeachable. The
state also emphasizes that Evans testified only in rebuttal and
r= for the sole purpose of trpeaching McCleskey's alibi defense. But
the chronological placement of Evans' testimony does not dilute
its impact -- "merely" impeaching the statement "I didn't do it"
with the testimony "He told me he did do it" is the functional
equivalent of case in chief evidence of guilt.
For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that peti- \
tioner's sixth amendment rights, as interpreted in Massiah, were
violated by the use at trial of Evans' testimony about the
petitioner's inorivinating statements because those statements
were deliberately elicited by an agent of the state after
petitioner's indictment and in the absence of petitioner's
attorney. Because the court cannot say, beyond a reasonable
: doubt, that the jury would have convicted petitioner without
’.* a
: z : et
°
Evans' testimony about petitioner's incriminating statements,
petitioner's conviction for the murder of Officer Schlatt must be
reversed pending a new trial.?
Unfortunately, one or more of those investigating Officer
Schlatt's murder stepped out of line. Determined to avenge his
death, the investigator(s) violated clearly-established case
law, however artificial or ill-conceived it might have appeared.
In so doing, the investigator(s) ignored the rule of law that
Officer Schlatt gave his life in protecting and thereby tainted
tl.e prosecution of his killer. i
__ obtained using testimony known to be perjured).
i Tri Toa Tie = eT
B. Mooney Claim.
Petitioner's Mooney claim is based upon the state's use at
trial of misleading testimony by Offie Evans, which petitioner
3 a
contends violated his eighth amendment rights and his right to
due process of law under the fourteenth amendmert. See Mooney v.
Holohan, 294 U.S. 103, 112 (1935) (criminal conviction may not be
In particelar,
petitioner contends that the state failed to correct Evans’
misleading testimony regarding his real intersst in testifying
against petitioner, regarding the circumstances surrounding his
cooperation with the state, and regarding petitioner's confession
of having shot Officer Schlatt. Petitioner alleges that the
newly discovered statement of Offie Evans reveals these mis-
leading elements of Offie Evans' testimony at trial.
rn, A . .
> ay . . hi .- . . ola 3 oe ‘ -
iy Rh Ea ET SE
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4 gp—————— — i itn fo ——— at 7% = "Enotes Te a——_— ——— —— . t. Wo. ls, + B l cei Ae eT nl. btetn” lhs ot “a
7 © 6
er Uae ad RA a ah Hs OL Ed
Discovery pursuant to this motion reveals that
respondent made no efforts to locate Evans during the summer of
1987. See, Respondent's Answer to First Interrogatories of
Petitioner, No. 1. “Respondent now contends that the deposition
of Evans shows that he was outside of Atlanta, and respondent
would not have been able to locate him anyway. However, the
affidavits of petitioner's assistants show that Evans' relatives
had seen him at various times during petitioner's search for
him. Therefore, it is unclear where exactly Mr. Evans was at
the time and whether or not he could have been found. Moreover,
it is not good enough merely to say that it would be impossible
to find the evidence. Due diligence is measured by respondent's
knowledge and actions. The- standard under 60(b)(2) is that the
movant exercise due diligence in order to find the relevant
evidence before entry of judgment. Respondent relied on petitioner's actions in seeking Mr. Evans, but made no efforts
of his own. As the court previously noted, petiticner's efforts
did not relieve respondent of any obligation to utilize his own
resources to locate Evans. Movant has not demonstrated the due
diligence prong of the 60(b)(2) standard.
i
[L
s
ce
re
e
r
e
—
—
—
—
=
—
—
re
t
—
—
—
—
3. Evidence is Not Cumulative or Impeaching:
Materiality. wal
Evans' deposition testimony essentially asserts that he
was not moved intentionally to be placed next to McCleskey, and
in fact was not moved at all, and was not an informant. His
testimony goes directly to the issue involved, and therefore ts |
—
8
s
- ¥ > N
- . = Tet
“ey Y 3 rg
> Ce :
a : IE —— TE —
material. However, there are numerous internal contradictions
within the deposition, and contradictions with Evans' previous
statements, or the statements of other witnesses. Also, it is
clear that Mr. Evans has his own motives for denying his status
|
as an informant. He expressed concern several times during his
deposition about newspaper accounts which had labeled him an
Antornant, because that kind of information could get a man killed. Evans Depo., p. 25.
Sr —
4. Likelihood of Producing a Different Result.
a ———
It is unlikely Evans' testimony would produce a
different result. The credibility or believability problems
with his testimony are evident. He has a strong motivation for
saying he was not an informant, not only because of
| Fear tninations from his associates, but also in order to stay in
favor with the police and prosecutors who have used him to
testify in the past. The numerous contradictions within his
deposition also lead the court to the conclusion that his
testimony would not be believable. See Petitioner's Brief in
Response to Respondent's Supplement to Rule 60(b) Motion. In finding a Massiah violation, the court relied on the testimony
of Officer Ulysses Worthy that someone requested his permission
to move Evans to be near McCleskey, Order, December 23, 1987,
p. 18, even in the face of other law enforcement personnel who
denied requesting that Evans be moved or having any knowledge of
such a request. Order, p. 19. The court relied on Worthy's
testimony. and noted that "[t]he lack of corroboration by other
cat AS
a
District Attorney Parker, had no reason to know of a request to
itnesses is not surprising; the other witnesses,
move Evans or, like Detective Dorsey, had an obvious interest in
concealing any such arrangement. Worthy, by contrast, had no
apparent interest or bias that would explain any conscious deception.” Order, p. 22. Therefore, Evans' testimony is not
likely to change the credibility of Worthy's testimony or the
that a Massiah violation occurred.
\ fact that petitioner showed by a preponderance of the evidence
PS oa, ENG for the above reasons, respondent's motion
under 60(b)(2) is DENIED.
B. Rule 60(b)(6).
Rule 60(b)(6) grants federal courts broad authority to
relieve-a party from a final judgment "upon such terms as are
just" provided the motion is made within a reasonable time and
is not premised on one of the grounds in (b)(1) through (b)(5).
Liljeberg v. Health Services Acquisition Corp., v.S, + 56
U.S.L.W. 4637, 4642 (1988). This ground should be applied only
in exceptional circumstances. 1d. The party seeking relief
wnder 60(b)(6) has the burden of showing that absent such
relief, an extreme and unexpected hardship will result.
Oriffin, 722 F.24 at. 680. Respondent contends that in the unusual circumstances of this case, it would serve the ends of
justice to reopen judgment under 60(b)(6). However, respondent
has shown no exceptional circumstances outside those discussed
in the Rule 60(b)(2) motion. There is little likelihood that if
10
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
AT
CHAPEL HILL
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599-3380 .
DATE July 23 1991 ¥ CT)
SCHOOL OF LAW — A CB# 3380, Van Hecke-Wettach Hall
| Nn 0 CL »
TO Yul Caden head FAX NO. (dou) ¢o-L020
FROM Jadk Bogor
TELEPHONE NO. hi 9) 9¢2- gSIC
This document consists of 8 pages including this cover sheet.
If you have any transmission problems please call (919)962-8503.
MESSAGE:
July 23, 1991
TO: Paul Cadenhead
FROM: Jack Boge JCA
RE: Warren McCleskey Clemency -- Draft Opening Statement
Welcome back from your trip to New York. I hope other elements of your
stay were more pleasant than Manhattan's weather.
I've looked over the initial, dictated-but-not-read draft you sent us
last week. It looks very, very promising as an approach to the Board. At
your invitation, I've written some comments directly on the draft itself; they
are, of course, merely suggestions for your consideration.
There is one theme, omitted from this draft, that probably should be
inserted somewhere. (I didn't attempt to find a specific place for it.)
Although ve stress that, had the jurors heard the truth about Offie Evans'
relation to the police, they would not have credited his testimony (and thus
would not have returned a death sentence), we do not underline in this draft,
as Warren himself always has, that he was not, in fact, the triggerman.
We have consistently maintained that, while Warren did talk with Offie
Evans, and eventually dropped his guard, he never told Evans that he had shot
Officer Schlatt, or aver that he "would have shot a dozen officers" if
necessary to get out of the robbery. I think this is an important point.
WITHOUT IT, all we have is OUR technicality (under Massiah v. United States,
the police shouldn't have gathered evidence surreptitiously) to poise against
THEIR technicality (successive habeas petitions will no longer be allowed; the
error vas harmless). WITH IT, we have the argument that the police misconduct
alloved Offie Evans to poison the truth. This transforms our case from one
merely of the insufficiency of the lawfully admitted evidence, into one of the
insufficiency of all the the credible evidence. McCleskey, in other words,
vas not merely convicted and sentenced unlawfully for a crime he (in fact) DID
commit; he was convicted and sentenced wrongfully and erroneously for a crime
he (in fact) DID NOT commit. I don't think it would take a major re-ordering
of your draft to insert this thought into the argument somewhere.
That's the sum of my initial thoughts. I look forward to a second
meeting of our legal team soon. Best regards.
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BEFORE THE i 4 Re)
BOARD OF PARDONS AND PAROLES
STATE OF GEORGIA
Application of Warren McCleskey Application
For a 90-Day Stay of Execution And No.
Commutation of His Sentence of Death
This application is submitted by the undersigned pro
bono counsel who are legally and factually convinced of its
merit. Volunteer counsel here look beyond procedure to
ultimate merits, and urge this Board to do likewise.
The existence of the Pardons and Paroles Board is
based on the legal presumption that some cases having gone all
the way through the judicial system still warrant non-judicial
relief. In a word, where guilt has been affirmed by the
judicial system, and only in those cases, the law rightly
dictates that some do not deserve imposition of the full legal
punishment imposed. If such were not the case, there would be
no need for the Board of Pardons and Paroles.
Clearly, therefore, the Board's duty requires it to
review and, where appropriate, remedy that which the judicial
system, because of different rules, could not. The functions
are different, and the powers of one become operative and
plenary only after the powers of the other are exhausted.
If in legal and divine wisdom there are no cases
worthy of commutation at the end of judicial procedure, the
genius of our law would not entrust such cases to this Board.
The overall question presented, therefore, is whether
non-judicial circumstances in the given case warrant the
ultimate sentence: forfeiture of life.
Warren McCleskey was involved in conspiracy and
ultimate execution of a robbery of an Atlanta furniture store
in May of 1978. This was a crime which he now admits, and for
which he will pay a severe legal penalty. The judicial system
has examined the circumstances and imposed its sentence for
that crime, and we willingly submit to that penalty.
We, therefore, address the Board not concerning Mr.
McCleskey's sentence for robbery, but concerning his conviction
of malice murder and his ultimate sentence of death, for his
alleged role in the fatal shooting of Officer Frank Schlatt,
who was shot by one of the perpetrators as he interrupted the
robbery.
Mr. McCleskey then and now denies that he fired the
fatal shot.
There were no eyewitnesses to the shooting, and the
murder weapon was never found.
The bedrock on which this conviction of malice murder
rests is testimony of one Offie Evans, a convicted felon, who
we now know was placed by police in the cell adjoining the cell
of McCleskey and promised help with pending criminal charges if
he would assist police in obtaining information by which to
convict McCleskey. This project was undertaken by Evans, and
in its execution he admittedly lied in his efforts to gain
McCleskey's trust and obtain statements from McCleskey. For
instance, he told McCleskey that he was the uncle of Ben
Wright, Jr., (a co-conspirator in the robbery) and so forth.
He then reported his conversations to the police, culminating
in his giving convicting testimony at the trial of McCleskey.
Clearly he was an agent of the police in carrying out this
prosecutorial endeavor, but his status as such was never made
known to defense counsel or the jury. Mr. McCleskey then and
now denies that he made statements attributed to him by Evans.
The genius of our law adopts the rule of fairness that
requires the prosecution to reveal not only those facts
indicating guilt, but also those facts which might be helpful
to the defendant. In short, the prosecution must reveal the
whole truth. The State revealed the incriminating portions of
Evans' statement, but at no time revealed to McCleskey's
counsel or to the trial jury the tainted circumstances under
whi wi Vv i nt wi mi
ici i i Indeed, as
late as the appearance of McCleskey's appeal in the Supreme
Court of Georgia, there was no indication of this unwholesome
arrangement with Evans.
Had defense counsel known at that time what has since
been learned, it is uncontradicted that the death penalty would
never have been imposed. It takes a unanimous verdict for
conviction. At least two of McCleskey's trial jurors now state
emphatically that this verdict would never have been returned
had Evans' status been revealed to the jurors.
5105G/bl/13.44
The jury heard evidence from Ben Wright, Jr., the
felon who masterminded this robbery. These jurors state that
Ben Wright was unbelievable, and his testimony totally
disregarded. The evidence on which they based the conviction
and sentence was the testimony of Offie Evans. The jurors saw
him at trial and evaluated him as a witness with no interest in
the case, and with no reason to give damaging testimony except
to establish the truth. There was no indication that his
testimony was given pursuant to an agreement with police that
they would "speak a good word for him" if he would carry out
his assigned mission. Affidavits of two jurors attached hereto
clearly establish that, had they known the truth about Evans,
they would have discounted his testimony. Without that
testimony, they would not have found McCleskey to be the
triggerman in the robbery, and there would have been no death
penalty.
In short, this proceeding would not currently be
before this Board had this simple act of fairness occurred.
According to the jurors who judged and sentenced McCleskey,
his case would have ended at the trial level with at most a
life sentence for felony murder.
When evidence of this police misconduct first came to
light in 1987, McCleskey's counsel began an attempt to address
this issue within the judicial system. As a part of that
endeavor he sought habeas corpus relief through the federal
courts and was assigned to Judge Owen Forrester of the United
States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Judge Forrester is the only Judge in the federal system to
actually hear the evidence of this police misconduct, evaluate
witnesses and enter an Order thereon. That Order dated
19 is attached hereto as Exhibit " ." The substance of
the Order was that Ben Wright was totally unvelievable, and
that Evans' status should have been made available to the jury
in order that the jury might properly evaluate his testimony.
As previously shown, jurors without equivocation state that had
that arrangement been revealed to the jury, the matter would
have terminated there since there would have been no death
sentence imposed.
Appeals through the federal system in this case do not
follow a typical pattern. Generally in such cases the defense
has lost in the courts through the appellate system. Here the
defendant was successful in the District Court and the State
appealed. Significant quotes from the appellate decisions are
instructive on this issue.
5105G/b1/13.44
In these quotes the appellate court surmises that
testimony of Evans was harmless. This is in direct
ntradicti men f jurors wh i h a wh
in effect say that it was not only harmful, it was
rminative. The court in McCleskey v. Kemp, 753 F2d4, 877
(1985) at page 885, admits that Evans' testimony was important
to the prosecution, stating ".....we agree that his (Evans')
testimony added weight to the prosecution's case, we do not
find that it could 'in any reasonable likelihood' have affected
the judgment of the jury." It further stated that the police
offer to "speak a good word" for Evans was insufficient to
amount to a promise to help (yet they did, and his escape case
was dropped). Further, but if it did amount to a promise, it
was harmless since "we find it unlikely that the undisclosed
information would have affected the jury's assessment of Evans’
credibility." (page 884). Contradicting this entirely were
jurors who were charged with assessing his credibility. They
say "... [quote from affidavits]. We therefore have an
appellate court who never saw the witnesses surmising a result
in direct contradiction to jurors who heard the testimony and
diagnosed it as very harmful to the defendant. It was so
damaging that it was the sole basis on which he was sentenced.
Had the simple and complete status of Evans been revealed,
there would have been no surmise by the appellate court, since
there would have been no death sentence.
After the State's first appeal in the federal courts,
and the appellate court's erroneous supposition that Evans’
testimony did not affect the jury, Judge Forrester again heard
the matter on the direct issue of whether McCleskey's so-called
Massiah claim was violated by the police after he was taken
into custody. Again Judge Forrester found that his rights were
violated, and again the State and not the defendant, appealed.
In McCleskey v. Zant, 890 F2d, 342 (1989), the appellate court
acknowledged that this matter is in the discretion of the
district court (Judge Forrester) but that Judge Forrester
"abused its discretion in failing to dismiss a clearly abusive
petition." The effect of this is that the appellate court
never heard the merits of the claim, but dismissed it as an
abusive petition since the issue should have been raised
earlier. The important fact here is that Judge Forrester is
the only federal judge ever to hear the merits of the matters
now presented to this Board, and Judge Forrester on two
occasions agreed with McCleskey's position that the appellate
courts did not consider the merits, but dismissed the petition
on a technical point.
5105G/bl/13.44
Interestingly, even in the second appeal, (at page
351) the court stated "under the harmless error doctrine, the
state must 'prove beyond a reasonable doubt' that the error
complained of did not contribute to the verdict obtained."
[Emphasis added] Thus, clearly under the law when a
circumstance like this appears, the burden is on the state to
show that the wrongful withholding of this helpful information
did not contribute to the verdict obtained. Addressing this
the court went further and stated "in its previous opinion, the
Eleventh Circuit held that the judgment of the jury that
convicted McCleskey was not affected by the lack of
disclosure." Further at page 353 the court said, "..... the
court finds no reasonable likelihood that the jury's imposition
of the death penalty was affected by Evans' testimony."
"....this court finds beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury
would have convicted and sentenced McCleskey as it did even
without Evans' testimony." Therefore, the court found that the
"ends of justice" do not "require us to entertain McCkesky's
claim on the merits," that, had McCleskey's jurors heard the
truth about Offie Evans, no death sentence would have been
imposed. Had the matter rested with the federal district judge
who heard the evidence of misconduct, the death sentence would
have been overturned. But it did not. During several rounds
of appeals by the prosecution, McCleskey's case became a pawn
in a technical legal struggle over the proper role of federal
habeas corpus review; resulting in the Supreme Court of the
United States reinstating the death sentence on procedural
grounds---WITHOUT EVER CONSIDERING whether McCleskey was right
on the merits of his legal claim.
As previously stated, at one point during the appeals,
the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
suggested that, even if true, the evidence of police misconduct
was "harmless" error, since knowledge of Evans' informant
status would not have affected the McCleskey jury.
Yet McCleskey has now obtained clear
evidence--affidavits from the jurors--who directly contradict
the appellate court. The court surmises what conceivably might
have been; the jurors deal with what actually was.
The appellate courts ultimately decided not to
"entertain McCleskey's claim on the merits." Therefore, the
merits of the claim were never considered by anyone except
Judge Forrester, who found them meritorious. We go into detail
here for the purpose of urging on this Board its responsibility
likewise to hear the merits--hear what would have been the
5105G/b1/13.44
outcome had the complete truth been presented, and hear Judge
Forrester's judicial determination, that, aside from some
technical construction in a motion to dismiss, the State
improperly obtained a conviction on the malice murder charge
and its ultimate death sentence.
Again, as stated earlier in this presentation, had
this simple fact been divulged to the jury, there would never
have been appeals and we would not be before this Board. We
therefore ask this Board to look back in time and put in place
that which should have been done in the first instance. When
that is done, McCleskey will serve the sentence and pay the
debt to society he owes for the crime he committed, but he will
not forfeit his life at the hands of a jury who now state they
would never have imposed that sentence had they known the true
facts. Judge Owen Forrester who heard the merits of the
matter, and independently of statements from the jurors,
arrived at the same conclusion.
For technical reasons within the judicial system, a
juror is not allowed to impeach his or her own verdict. In
that system the paper on which a verdict is written is the
ultimate word. However, this Board is not bound by those
restrictions; it can and should hear the truth from angry
jurors who allege they were not given a full deck; and had they
known what was known to the police and withheld from the jury,
the verdict would have been different. There would never have
been the long appeals and we would not be present before this
Board. This Board has the power and duty to rectify the
failure of police to present the whole truth which would have
permitted the jury to judge the credibility of a witness on
which they based the sentence.
In summary, the only two tribunals (the jury and a
federal judge) who heard the facts conclude that the death
penalty was improperly imposed. Other courts dealt with
procedural matters. This Board has both the power and duty to
look beyond procedure to merits. In doing so clemency is
indicated, and this Board should so order.
5105G/b1/13.44
CLA
BEFORE THE Hoamdlosx ve” an
BOARD OF PARDONS AND nepey \ frzhon olf ey
STATE OF cnrennlD Jiolone? 8 ach od.
upon Fr
APPLICATION OF WARREN McCLESKEY APPLICATION une
FOR A 90-DAY STAY OF EXECUTION AND FOR NO.
COMMUTATION OF HIS SENTENCE OF DEATH
BOB REINHARDT, ESQUIRE
1001 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE
TIFTON, GEORGIA 31794
TELEPHONE: (404) 382-6135
COUNSEL FOR
WARREN McCLESKEY
ROBERT H. "BOB" STROUP, ESQUIRE
STROUP & COLEMAN, P.C.
141 WALTON STREET, N.W.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303
TELEPHONE: (404) 522-8500
JOHN CHARLES "JACK" BOGER, ESQUIRE
PROFESSOR
x UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
Cf. —= SCHOOL OF LAW
{Cor © / C. B. #3380
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA 27599
TELEPHONE: (919) 962-8516
CO-COUNSEL FOR
WARREN McCLESKEY
BEFORE THE
BOARD OF PARDONS AND PAROLES
STATE OF
Application of WARREN MCCLESKEY
For a 90-Day Stay of Execution
And for Commutation of His
Sentence of Death
GEORGIA
NO.
KN
X
X
X
X
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INTRODUCTION )
Warren McCleskey, by his unglersigned counsel, applies to the
Georgia Board of Pardons and Pardles, pursuant to Article IV,
Section 11,
1983, 0.C.G.A. 49-9-20, 42-9-42(a
475.3.10 (2) (6) of the Rules of
consideration of his application
of death, imposed by the Superior
October 12, 1978; (ii) for a nine
presently scheduled for the week
consideration of his applicatio
hearing before the full Board, Al
and to be hard through his coynse
for the commutation of his nten
Par. II(a) and (d) of| the Georgia Constitution of
and Chapters 475.2.01 (1) and
this Board: (1) for
For commutation of his sentence
Court of Fulton County on
ty (90) day stay of execution,
of , to permit
(iii) for a full and fair
lowing him to present witnesses
1; and after that review, (iv)
ce of death.
—
SUMMARY OF FACTS
on the morning of May 13, 1978, Warren McCleskey, Ben
in soit am. T whveduchn el.
Shes fue Arincip Haass x to clo
Wright, Jr., Bernard Dupree and David Burney robbed the Dixie
Furniture Store on Marietta Street in Atlanta, Georgia. They
committed the robbery in order to get money for Ben Wright, Jr.
who wanted to leave the Sid of Georgia to avoid being arrested
for an armed robbery whi jecsurred in Buckhead a few weeks
earlier. [od Ol ~~
ory Jenkins (Wright's siritriena) pesnaitdied
Wright; Burney and
a robbery in Buckhead around the end of April, 1978, according to
Burney. Ben Wright, Jr.'S car was recognized in the Buckhead
robbery as the sst~avesdone, and Mary Jenkins was seen driving
it. Ms. Jenkins was apprehended days later driving in the same
vehicle. While being questioned by police, Ms. Jenkins dated
WRIGHT in an attempt to protect herself from being prosecuted.
The Atlanta Police Department issued an arrest warrant for Ben
rigng, IT od in 3 c>- Ds, Ua con 8 Mel
On the 13th of May, Wright, M 7
drove to a jewelry store in Marietta. Ben Wright, Jr. went
inside the store to check it out. Wright decided not to rob it
because it appeared unsuitable. The four then rode around
Marietta looking for another place to rob but couldn't find
anything fitting. Wright decided that Atlanta provided better
opportunities for an armed robbery; therefore, they drove to
Atlanta. Wright, assuming the role of leader, decided to rob
Dixie Furniture Store. Each of the four men was armed.
After "casing" the Dixie Furniture Store, Wright concluded
that it was a good target. Wright told each man what to do.
fie oles fo id dof Yeu Re
y McCleskey was adyised to guard the front half of the store, while
Wright and the pther two men guarded the rear. Wright pressured
everyone into pledging not to tell on each other if any of them
were ever captured.
Atlanta Police Officer Frank Schlatt, responding to a
silent alarm call, entered the front of the store with his
revolver detached from the holster. Circumstantial evidence
suggests that Ben Wright, Jr. QName bo front section of the
store and fired two shots in the direction of Officer Schlatt.
Court testimony revealed that one bullet hit Officer Schlatt in
the chest and deflected off a cigarette lighter in Officer
Schlatt's shirt pocket. The other bullet, which was fatal,
penetrated Officer Schlatt's head through his right eye. Wright
directed everyone to split.
No one else in the store except the robbers and Officer
Schlatt witnessed the shooting; therefore, the only persons who
could testify were Ben-Wrightr—Jer—and-the other robbers. Thoui des, .
Wright, after having killed Atlanta Police Officer Frank
Schlatt, left Georgia and went to Pine Bluff, Arkansas. The
other three men, who had no equal reason to run, continued living
in Metro Atlanta.
Ballistics testing revealed that Officer Schlatt had been
shot by a .38 caliber Rossi revolver. The murder weapon was
never recovered. Nonetheless, trial testimony from expert
witnesses indicated that such a revolver had been Stee in the
6 9 1 ALAN
robbery of a Red Dot grocery store in Southeast Atlanta two
months earlier.
During the Dixie Furniture Store robbery, Wright as
left behind a leather jacket he was wearing that had a laundry
ticket stapled inside one sleeve. The jacket was traced by
Atlanta police to a former owner who related he had given the
jacket to Ben Wright, Jr. several months before. Atlanta Police
launched a massive man hunt for Wright. In the meantime, police
learned the names of Warren McCloskey, Bernard Dupree and David
Burney through Mary Jenkins. Also, police discovered that Wright
had left Georgia.
Evidence suggests Mary Jenkins was an accomplice to the
robbery and murder of Officer Schlatt. Jenkins possibly drove
the get-away4car during the Dixie Furniture Store robbery.
Wright, Burney and other witnesses identified Ms. Jenkins as the
driver in the Buckhead robbery. Furthermore, witnesses vaguely
remember seeing a lady fitting Ms. Jenkins' description in the
car with the four men when Dixie Furniture was robbed. Ms.
Jenkins was never prosecuted for the robbery and murder. Ms.
Jenkins testified against McCleskey, Burney and Dupree.
McCleskey was arrested at his sister's home in Cobb County
in the early morning hours while asleep at his sister's home on
May 31, 1978. David Burney was arrested on the same day at his
girl friend's apartment in Atlanta's Techwood Homes. Bernard
Dupree gave himself up to police at his lawyer's office after
learning he was being sought in connection with the robbery and
murder. Ben Wright, Jr. was arrested months later in Pine Bluff,
Arkansas for a string of robberies and assaults there. When
arrested in Arkansas, he learned that he was wanted for the
murder of a police officer back in Atlanta.
Wright, after being arrested in Pine Bluff, Arkansas was
surprised and angered by the fact that Arkansas authorities knew
he had been involved in the killing of a police officer. Wright
QB umes that the three co-defendants had told on him.
McCleskey and a to robbing Dixie
Furniture, re ye killing Officer Schlatt. True to their
pledge not to finger an accomplice, neither man identified Wright
as the "triggerman."
Atlanta Police officials did not advise Stensret lun
Wright had been Fimgered by his co-defendants as the murderer.
Suspecting that the truth had been told, Wright sought vengeance,
and turned against his three partners. Wright was so moved by
the fact that he had been "told on" that he devised statements
against the three men for the Assistant District Attorney,
Russell Parker, and Atlanta Police Investigators, Welcome Harris,
W. K. Jowers and Sidney Dorsey. WAlthough-Wright-said-Mecleskey
was the "tri "wi ixd i e
Store the day of the-robbery, clearly stated that the shooting
did t i i Jr. went to the front of
the re Subchadde hus cosatiiis )
FEN righ testified in open court that McCleskey had a .38
caliber Rossi nickel-plated revolver---again, the pistol and
)
murder weapon were never found. Mary Jenkins told police and
testified that Wright was seen with the .38 Rossi weeks prior to
the policeman's killing. However, Wright testified that he
himself was armed with a sawed-off shotgun, and that Burney and
Dupree had blue steel pistols.
Wright claimed McCleskey was driving his personal vehicle,
which was used as the get-away-car. Wright further testified
that McCleskey parked his car up the street from the furniture
store and that McCleskey entered the store and "cased" it.
"After McCleskey returned to the car, the robbery was planned,"
Wright testified. In contrast, it is a known fact that Wright
was the ring leader and brain of the group.
According to Wright, in executing the robbery plan,
McCleskey entered the front of the store and the other three
entered through the rear by way of the loading dock. McCleskey
secured the front while he (Wright) and the others rounded up the
employees and customers in the rear and began to tie them up with
tape and forced them to lie on the floor. The manager was forced
by Wright, at gunpoint, to turn over the store's receipts, which
included a watch and six dollars in cash. George Malcom, an
employee, testified that he had a pistol taken from him at
gunpoint by Wright.
PY Wright thad-sivensirss y account of what happened,
Atlanta Police Investigators were convinced that a jury would not
return a guilty verdict against McCleskey based on Wright's
testimony; therefore, police investigators placed a professional
informant named Offie Evans, who used a false name, in the
cellblock next to McCleskey, Burney and Dupree. Evans was in the
Fulton County Jail on a federal warrant awaiting a probation
revocation hearing on charges related to escaping from a federal
halfway house. Evans testified at trial that McCleskey admitted
shooting Officer Schlatt. McCleskey maintains he never made such
a statement to Offie Evans. J Ove Rovresie ;
Thaw = wr| ; odio In @ fedsned jude 7
i ; that Evans was } by Atlanta
in chucked om bh taks
Police Investigators. Evans' testimony reflected too precisely
the shortages in the Prosecution case, indicating that Evans had
help with his story. Furthermore, it was verified in later court
proceedings that Evans was a professional snitch who would
testify on behalf of the prosecution in cases tagged "difficult
Gore? eo get a conviction."
2
) JURA SUMMARY OF POINTS
Warren McCleskey presents herein compelling reasons why
clemency should be granted in his case.
3. Substantial questions exist regarding the identity of
the triggerman.
This is a case where there is overwhelming evidence that
four persons, including Warren McCleskey and possibly Mary Dorsey
Jenkins, participated in an armed robbery at the Dixie Furniture
Store on May 13, 1978. There is very little information
available as to who of those four co-defendants was the
triggerman responsible for the shooting of Frank Schlatt during
that robbery.
The gun which fired the fatal shot was never found; none of
the persons in the store that day saw the shooting. McCleskey
has consistently denied being the triggerman, and the only
persons who identified McCleskey as the triggerman at the time of
the trial were a co-defendant, Ben Wright, Jr., himself a suspect
in light of some of the circumstantial evidence, and Offie Evans,
a subsequently discredited informant.
2% Co-defendants, of equal or greater culpability,
received less severe sentences.
Of McCleskey and his co-defendants, only McCleskey received
the death penalty, along with two consecutive life sentences.
Ben Wright, Jr., the acknowledged ring-leader, received a single
20-year sentence, and has already been released and re-sentenced
in light of subsequent robberies he masterminded. The other two
co-defendants, Bernard Dupree and David Burney, each received a
single life sentence.
Not only is ere a strong suggestion from the
circumstantial idence that Ben Wright, Jr. was the triggerman,
aggravated assaults and a drug charge of which he received life
plus twenty years.
HE
J
thon
3. Jurors involved in McCleskey's trial have indicated
that, had they known of the background of the State's ke
witness, they would have not authorized the death penalty.
This is one of those very few cases in the criminal justice
system wherein the courts have all. but acknoyledged that relief
Lo le UecCens,
is appropriate, but the courts have declined to grant relief.
This should be remedied herein.
At the time of McCleskey's trial, a police informant, Offie
Gene Evans, whose reliability has since been found utterly
lacking, testified before the jury. The jury was never told that
Offie Gene Evans had been promised his freedom in exchange for
his testimony, nor were they told that Evans had been put up to
testifying. Furthermore, the jury was not given the information
which subsequently came to light showing Evans lack of
truthfulness.
Two of the jurors have subsequently indicated that, if they
had known of the circumstances surrounding Evans which are now
known, they would not have imposed the death penalty.
\® 4. The unreliability of an "informant" in criminal court
proceedings.
The problems with reliance on the testimony of a informant
are self-evident. The con-man in prison wants to get out. He
knows that he can get assistance in getting out if he helps the
police make a case. He has a real motive to come up with a
"confession" from a cell-mate, whether it is true or not. One
Court has recently warned of:
10
an unholy alliance between con-artist convicts
who want to get out of their own cases, law
enforcement who are running a training ground
for snitches over at the county jail, and the
prosecutors who are taking what appears to be
the easy route, rather than really putting their
cases together with solid evidence.
Although the courts have not recognized it in McCleskey's
case it is precisely this "unholy alliance" which has left
McCleskey on death row, while the likely "triggerman", Ben
Wright, Jr., has already served his full sentence, and while
Offie Evans, the informant, has long since gotten off free.
5. The State's and Local Community's Position McCleskev's
Death Sentence.
The State was willing to enter into plea negotiations with
McCleskey's counsel, John Turner, which would have resulted in a
life sentence. Because of McCleskey's lack of knowledge
regarding the surprise testimony of the unreliable informant
Offie Wii
Forrester
a1
Noted community leaders have expressed their opinion that
the death sentence herein should be commuted to a life sentence.
Among those persons who have expressed these views are the
following:
Moreover, Fulton County is not a jurisdiction wherein juries
have imposed the death penalty for similar crimes. Since 1973,
sixteen police officers have been shot and killed in the line of
duty, and only in McCleskey's case has a death penalty been
imposed. Similarly, in Fulton County, juries have voted to
impose a death sentence only once since 1984. Plainly, this is
not a case where the death penalty should be imposed.
6. McCleskey's construction of a positive life after a
childhood of deprivation.
Although McCleskey grew up in a family and neighborhood with
very few positive male role models, he has made his life a
positive one, despite this extremely disadvantaged beginning. He
has become a positive influence on death row. He is viewed,
both by prison staff as well as other inmates, as a "peacemaker".
Warren McCleskey is not someone who was given huge
advantages at the start of his life and wasted them away.
Rather, he started out with substantial disaavantagi(, and has
overcome those difficulties to make his life a positive
contribution to those around him.
McCleskey was born March 17, 1945 in an impoverished section
of Marietta, Georgia known as "Skid-row". The street where he
12
grew up featured a number of illegal gambling houses where
residents supplemented their income with the sale of bootleg
liquor to those who came to gamble.
McCleskey, who lived his years from age four to eight with
his aunt, Lois McMutry, in the country west of Marietta, returned
to live with his mother and stepfather at about the age of eight.
He came back to a house where gambling occurred nearly seven days
a week. he and his younger sister, Betty McCleskey Meyers,
served liquor to those present for gambling.
Nor was Warren's childhood blessed by positive role models
with respect to family relationships. His stepfather and mother
quarreled constantly. It seemed that nearly every weekend for
stretches at a time the police would be called to their house.
Warren's stepfather, an extremely jealous man, would accuse
Warren's mother of wrong-doings and threaten to kill her or
physically assault her.
The years of this violence ended as Warren was finishing
high school. One weekend, threatened by her husband, Warren's
mother shot and killed him. She was not prosecuted, as Cobb
County authorities ruled that she had shot i) in self-defense.
7. McCleskevy's Remorse.
NZ McCleskey is truly as 0 2, J injury his
participation in the Dixie Furniture Store robbery has caused the
Le” victim's family. as McCleskey has written:
"0 "There's not a day that goes by that I don't
— think about the victim's family and reflect
Ad on the hurt and pain they've endured. There
. has been a few times when I took the
a 0s= i 13
initiative to make contact with the victim's
family to express my remorse. But each time
I was unsuccessful. I pray for the family
each day, asking God to bless them with their
needs and to fill their hearts with love and
forgiveness.
McCleskey's efforts to establish his own family:
It was at the close of high school that Warren tried to
break away from this disadvantaged beginning and make a life for
himself. He married his high school sweetheart, Gwendolyn
Carmichael, while still in his junior year, and the two of them
went to live with Carmichael's aunt. A daughter, Carla, was born
in 1963; McCleskey graduated from high school in 1964, and found
employment with Lockheed Georgia Company.
His devotion to wife and daughter.
For a number of years, from 1963 until about 1968, Warren
lived with his wife Gwendolyn and daughter Carla in his wife's
aunt's house in Marietta. These were the best years of Warren's
life, at least until that point. Although his job with Lockheed
was a manual labor job, his young family managed economically
because he was not paying rent to live with Gwendolyn's aunt.
They were happy together. Warren was a devoted husband and
father. He remains today a devoted father and grandfather.
In an effort to establish greater independence, Warren and
his wife moved, in 1968, to Peyton Heights Apartments in Atlanta.
It was after that move that Warren's marriage suffered
irreparable damage. Gwendolyn wanted to end the marriage; Warren
14
wanted to continue. She left him a number of times; they tried
to reconcile a number of times.
Stress accompanving the ending of Warren marriage:
Warren was desperate to save the marriage. He believed that
if he bought Gwendolyn nice clothes and lavished her with
expensive gifts, she would come back and stay with him. He did
not know how to save the marriage. The move to Peyton Heights
made this all this all the more difficult. He had to pay rent as
well as keep up the car payments.
Desperate for cash to save his failing marriage, he ran into
a man named Melvin Mann who showed him how to rob a store. After
involving himself in a handful of robberies, Warren was arrested,
convicted in Douglas County and pled guilty to other robberies in
Cobb, Dekalb, Fulton and Polk counties in 1970.
Warren was released from prison in 1977. By the time of his
release, he had been divorced from his wife and had no place to
go. From a halfway house on Ponce de Leon Avenue in Atlanta, he
found work as a waiter at Oliver's in Ansley Square. Then, he
was successful in getting a job at Dover Elevator, where he
worked as a construction worker installing the elevators in the
Richard B. Russell Federal Building in downtown Atlanta.
The Co-Defendants:
It appeared that his struggle for self-sufficiency was about
to be achieved until he encountered Ben Wright, Jr. Wright was
then, and still is, a professional criminal. He is the
mastermind behind all his robberies. Cunning and consumed with
15
sly coldness, Ben Wright, Jr.is a man for who no other person is
indispensable.
REASONS WHY THE BOARD SHOULD COMMUTE
WARREN McCLESKEY'S SENTENCE
2. Significant questions exist regarding the identity of
the triggerman.
This is a case where a death sentence, along with two
consecutive life sentences, was imposed upon Warren McCleskey on
the basis of the prosecutor's argument that Mcclesikey was the co-
defendant who fired the fatal shots.
However, the only reliable information regarding the
identity of the triggerman is circumstantial evidence along, and
the circumstantial evidence suggests one of the co-defendants may
well have been the triggerman.
No murder weapon was never found; none of the Dixie
Furniture Store employees or other persons in the Store during
the shooting actually saw the shooting occur. The prosecution's
argument to the jury was that McCleskey had to have been the
triggerman because he carried a .38 caliber Rossi (the gun the
State believed was the fatal weapon) and because he was the only
co-defendant at the front of the Store when the shooting took
place.
However, there is significant evidence not considered by the
jury which runs counter to this circumstantial evidence. There
was evidence from witnesses in the rear of the Store which
indicated that one of the other defendants had gone to the front
16
of the Store, and was in the front of the Store, at the time of
the shooting.
Witness Ben Lester Tyson made the following statement to
police investigators that was never presented to the jury:
"Then I heard a siren pass the street out
there and then one of the men said, 'Here
comes the police.' And they took off
running, and I think they were going toward
the front door, from the way it sounded to
me. When the running stopped, I heard 'Bam,
Bam, ' meaning, two shots fired and then
everything got quiet." »
Similarly, Witness James Grier, Jr. told the police
investigators the following, which was not disclosed to the jury:
"I forgot to say that after the men marched
us in the storage room, one of the men must
have left cause I only heard two men talking.
I guess they all left cause it got real
) W quiet. About two or three minutes later I
heard two gunshots. i could hear footsteps
like somebody was running off."
Moreover, as to the person carrying the .38 caliber Rossi,
Ben Wright, Jr.'s girlfriend, Mary Jenkins, told police that it
was Wright, not McCleskey, who carried the gun in the weeks
before the shooting.
The other evidence which the jury had before it has since
been discredited. As United States District Judge Forrester has
noted, the credibility of co-defendant Ben Wright, Jr. was
obviously impeachable, given the circumstantial evidence
suggesting he was the triggerman. And, Judge Forrester has
additionally noted that the testimony of the informant, Offie
17
Gene Evans, is not worthy of belief. Here is what Judge
Forrester has said about Evans' testimony before the Court:
"., . .[Tlhere are numerous internal
contradictions within the deposition, and
contradictions with Evans' previous
statements, or the statements of other
witnesses."
The evidence of the State's key witness, then, has been
found to be simply not worthy of belief. Given the substantial
questions which exist regarding the identity of the triggerman,
the Board should grant McCleskey's petition for clemency.
2. Co-defendants, of equal or greater culpability,
received less severe sentences.
Given the substantial doubts regarding his role in the
shooting, there is no basis to justify the disparity in treatment
between McCleskey and his co-defendants. When levels of
culpability are considered, it is clear that persons of equal, or
greater, culpability, received lesser sentences.
As noted, co-defendant Ben Wright, jr. was the master-mind
of the Dixie Furniture Store robbery, a career-criminal, and some
circumstantial evidence strongly suggests, the triggerman. Yet
in reality, he received only a twenty year sentence. He has
served him time, been released, and has already master-minded
other robberies for which he is now serving a life sentence plus
twenty years.
Wright pled guilty in June, 1990, to two armed robberies of
a C & S Banks in October, 1989. The District Attorney who
18
handled those robberies stated, "Subsequent investigation and
statements made by all parties showed that Mr. Ben Wright was the
instigator and the planner of those robberies."
Two other co-defendants, Bernard Dupree and David Burney,
each received a single life sentence. In contrast, McCleskey
received two consecutive life sentences and the death sentence.
The facts of the crime, and the reliable evidence available
simply do not justify such disparities.
Ben Wright, jr. is a man contemptuous of the judicial
system. He boasted to the Warren McCleskey's jury about his
criminal career and he bragged that he would lie whenever
necessary to save his own skin. He admitted that he masterminded
the robbery. Yet he received a twenty-year sentence.
Given the disparities in sentences imposed for the robbery
and shooting at the Dixie Furniture Store, Warren McCleskey's
death sentence should be commuted.
3. Jurors involved in McCleskev's trial have indicated
that, had they known of the background of the State's key
witness, they would not have authorized the death penalty.
That justice was not served during the course of Warren
McCleskey's trial is perhaps best evidenced by the testimony of
two jurors who heard the evidence and voted to impose the death
sentence.
those two jurors have subsequently learned about the use of
the informant, Offie Gene Evans, at McCleskey's trial, and have
come forward to indicate that they would not have voted for the
19
death penalty had they known that the key witness was a police
informant with motivation to lie about his testimony.
Juror Jill Dramer has stated:
« « « Our jury had a hard struggle with the
evidence in this case. We discussed the
issue of guilt or innocence for a long time.
We were able to agree without a lot of
difficulty that all four men, including
Warren McCleskey, had at least participated
in the armed robbery. But the issue of
responsibility for the shooting was
different.
. « « As I said, this was for me a very close
case. It took Evans' testimony for the State
to prove to me, beyond a reasonable doubt,
that McCleskey was the triggerman. Without
Evans' testimony, I definitely would not have
voted for the death sentence, and i believe
at least a few other jurors would have
agreed. .
Let me go further. I knew then that it only
takes on juror to hold out against the rest.
I am certain that had I known that Offie
Evans had an arrangement with an Atlanta
detective =-- if I had heard Evans' testimony
in the state habeas corpus proceedings -- I
would never have voted to impose capital
punishment.
Similarly, juror Robert F. Burnette has stated as follows:
. « « Nobody ever told us abut that [Evans
arrangement with Atlanta police detectives]
during the trial. It puts a very different
light on Evans' testimony. It sounds like he
was probably hoping to get off of his escape
case by testifying against McCleskey. The
jury should have known that, I think. It
changes the State's whole case. . . .
Like I said, we had a hard time deciding who
did the shooting, and a hard time deciding to
impose the death sentence. I've read the
part of the trial transcript where Evans
testified, and I've also read what Evans said
in the state hearing in Butts County. I
would definitely not have voted to sentence
20
McCleskey to death if I had thought he might
have been the triggerman. . .
. « . Knowing now that Evans could have lied
to cover his deal with the detective
definitely could have made a big difference
to me, and to other jurors, I think =-- at
least in deciding to give the death penalty.
4. The State's and local community's position on
McCleskey's death sentence:
The prosecution in this case was willing to entertain plea
negotiations which would have resulted in the imposition of a
life sentence. Because of the unusual circumstances of his case,
most particularly, his lack of knowledge regarding the testimony
of the informant, Warren McCleskey did not pursue plea
negotiations.
Noted community leaders have asked that the Board commute
Warren McCleskey's death sentence to one of life imprisonment.
Included in those appeals are the following:
[inserts quotations here.]
Finally, a review of the treatment of other persons accused
of shooting police officers indicates that, generally speaking,
the Fulton County community does not believe a death sentence is
appropriate under these circumstances. Fulton County is not a
jurisdiction wherein juries have imposed the death penalty for
similar crimes. Since 1973, sixteen police officers have been
shot and killed in the line of duty, and only in McCleskey's case
has a death penalty been imposed. Similarly, in Fulton County,
21
244
juries have voted to impose a death sentence only once since
1984. (See copy of attached article). Plainly, this is not a
case where the death penalty should be imposed.
5. Commutation is appropriate because Warren McCleskey is
now making, and will continue to make, a positive contribution to
those around him.
Warren's life since his conviction in 1978 has been a
remarkable one. He has broken away from the disadvantages of his
childhood, and made a life for himself that is truly commendable.
His role as a "peacemaker" on between death row inmates and
prison guards is a positive point. Warren McCleskey has become a
prisoner on death row who acts as a positive influence with those
with whom he is in contact. This has been a gradual evolution
over time -- while his counselor's notes universally have noted
that he has had no disciplinary problems and his behavior is
appropriate, by 1988 those notes reflect his more positive role
with both staff and other inmates. The counselor's notes for
March, 1988 indicate:
He has continued to maintain a good attitude,
continues regular participation in Chaplain
Bible study program. It also appears that he
has become a "peace maker" in the cell block
according to different sources.
His counselor's notes reflect more than once his positive
influence on those around him:
03/28/89: Client made no request this
reporting period. he has been active in Rec.
(recreation) activities. He continues to be
a positive influence in the cell-block.
22
His counselor's notes also repeatedly reflect his good
relationship with the prison staff. The following entry is
representative:
10/19/89: . . . He continues to cooperate
well with staff and has good relationship
with peers. Subject active in religious
studies and yard.
HIS RELIGIOUS STUDIES
Further evidence that Warren McCleskey is deserving of
commutation of his sentence is reflected in the strong role which
religious belief plays in his life. This is not an eve-of-
execution conversion. His counselor notes from prison indicate
that, since 1981, on a regular basis, he has participated in
Bible study and Chaplain's services.
Moreover, his Bible study has resulted in completion of the
following courses:
- Georgia Baptist Convention, Education Extension
Program, Special Certificate;
- Georgia Baptist State Missions, Education Extension
Program, "Isaiah;"
- Georgia Baptist State Missions, Education, "Hosea"
- United Christian International Bible Institute,
Cleveland, Tennessee, "General Bible Knowledge I;"
- United Christian International Bible Institute,
Cleveland, Tennessee, "General Bible Knowledge II;"
- Source of Light Schools, Bible Correspondence Course
Certificate
CONCLUSION
On behalf of Warren McCleskey, I, Bob Reinhardt, Attorney
for the Defendant, respectfully requests that the Board order
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