Grayson v. State
Grayson v. State
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 71
Darrell Grayson, the appellant, was indicted for the capital offense involving the nighttime burglary and intentional killing of Annie Laura Orr. Alabama Code Section 13A-5-31 (a)(4) (1975). Both counts of the indictment charged Grayson with breaking and entering with the intent to commit robbery and intentional killing. A jury found Grayson "guilty of the capital offense as charged in Count One and Two of the indictment." After a punishment hearing, the jury "fix(ed) the defendant's punishment at death." After a sentencing hearing, the trial judge followed the jury's recommendation and sentenced Grayson to death by electrocution.
Victor Kennedy was Grayson's accomplice and co-defendant. We affirmed his conviction and death sentence in Kennedy v.State,
"The question whether an indigent defendant is entitled to state-furnished funds for investigative purposes, tests, expert testimony, and other assistance in his defense in criminal cases has been recognized as an ever-growing problem." Annot. 34 A.L.R.3d 1256, Section 2 (b) (1970). In Thigpen v.State,
We recognize that due process and fair play may demand that the accused be furnished with assistance of experts in preparing his defense. Nevertheless, under the facts of this case, the State was not constitutionally required to provide this indigent with the services of expert witnesses. Hobackv. Alabama,
In making his finding of facts, the trial judge found that none of the latent fingerprints found at the scene matched either Grayson or his accomplice, that semen found at the scene could be typed as consistent with that of Grayson, that the blood found on Grayson's shirt was consistent with Mrs. Orr's blood type, and that a hair taken from Grayson's sock at the time of his arrest was consistent with the head hair of Mrs. Orr. At best, the expert testimony could only negate the possibility that Grayson could not have committed the crime. Each expert testified, in effect, that there was no way that the various bodily substances could be positively identified as having come from one particular individual. The record contains no suggestion that the test results were subject to "varying expert opinion" or that there was any question about the validity or accuracy of the tests performed.
Here, the facts show that Grayson requested funds to employ experts. The trial judge granted Grayson's motion "up to the statutory financial limits of Alabama law." See Bailey v.State,
Even those cases which recognize that the effective assistance of counsel embraces the allowance of funds for an indigent defendant to obtain investigative services to assist in the preparation of his defense hold that such an allowance is far from automatic and depends on the circumstances of the particular case.
"Our reflections on this point are congruent with the standard applicable when counsel for an indigent defendant seeks funds to obtain investigative services to assist in the preparation of the defense. While in general effective assistance of counsel embraces such an allowance it is far from automatic and `depends on the facts and circumstances of a particular case', with funds provided when counsel makes a showing of necessity of the specific subjects to be explored and of their likely materiality." United States v. DeCoster,
624 F.2d 196 ,210 (D.C. Cir. 1976).
The circumstances of this case do not support Grayson's contention that his constitutional right to the effective assistance of *Page 73 counsel was violated because he was not afforded funds for the hiring of experts.
"In presenting this claim, appellants assert that if attorneys are underpaid, they cannot satisfactorily perform the constitutional guarantee of right to counsel. However, no facts or data are shown in the record in support of this contention. Moreover, Judge Parker indicated in his June 28, 1978, order that the trial court `has not observed any great disparity between appointed and retained counsel' and notes that `(t)he same attorneys that are appointed are also the ones that are retained.' Addressing a similar contention, the New Jersey court made the following observations in State v. Rush,
46 N.J. 399 ,405-407 ,217 A.2d 441 ,444-445 (1966):"`As to the right of an accused, appellant contends that counsel, if unpaid, cannot by his performance satisfy the constitutional guarantee of the right to the aid of counsel. We know of no data to support a claim that an assigned attorney fails or shirks in the least the full measure of an attorney's obligation to a client. Our own experience, both at the bar and on the bench, runs the other way. A lawyer needs no motivation beyond his sense of duty and his pride.'"
The crime was committed on December 24, 1981. Trial was held May 31, 1982. Between those two dates 13 articles concerning the crime were printed in The Shelby County Reporter. Kennedy was tried in February of 1982. A telephone survey of Shelby County residents was conducted. The pollster admitted that a portion of the residents of the county may not have been included in the survey.
A survey was also conducted before Kennedy's trial. Although the surveys were conducted by different individuals, their findings were similar. Here, the pollster's findings were that 125 people responded and of that number 48.8% had heard, read, or seen reports of Mrs. Orr's death; 30.4% had heard, read, or seen information concerning the arrest of two individuals; 17.6% had heard, read, or seen reports of Kennedy's conviction; 12.8% had heard, read, or seen reports concerning Grayson; and 24% admitted a knowledge of Mrs. Orr or members of her family. This survey does not show either an actual prejudice against Grayson or a community saturated with inherently prejudicial information or feeling.
Further, in qualifying the jury venire, the trial judge asked, "Do any of you have a fixed opinion as to the guilt or as to the innocence of the defendant which will bias your verdict?" and "Do you know anything about the facts of this case?" There was no response to either question.
The constitutional requirement of juror impartiality does not limit jury membership to persons ignorant of the facts *Page 74
and issues involved in the case. Irvin v. Dowd,
In making this determination, we recognize that the crime was extremely atrocious, that Grayson is black and Mrs. Orr is white, that Montevallo is a relatively small community, and that Mrs. Orr is a member of a socially prominent family in that community. All these factors could have caused prejudice among individual jurors or created pervasive hostility within the community. However, the record does not reflect that, and, in fact, refutes Grayson's speculation regarding this issue.
This argument is without merit. "The proper manner for ascertaining whether adverse publicity may have biased the prospective jurors is through the voir dire examination."Anderson v. State,
Grayson criticizes the "Alabama procedure of requiring a defendant to show actual prejudice before a change of venue is granted" as being "inherently unjust and unfair." However, the rule is that an accused must show either actual juror prejudice or pervasive hostility within the community.Franklin v. State,
Here, after all the arguments are made, the fact remains that there has been no showing of inherently prejudicial publicity or circumstances which warrant a finding or presumption of either actual or implicit juror prejudice.
"shall make a list of names drawn, showing the date on which the prospective jurors shall appear and in what court they shall serve and shall enter opposite every name the residence address, and may include for informational purposes to counsel, the occupation of the person and his place of business, and the clerk shall issue a venire list containing the names and information to the sheriff who shall forthwith summon the persons named thereon . . . to appear and serve as jurors. The accuracy of any information which might be furnished to counsel shall not be grounds for challenging a verdict rendered by a jury."
(Emphasis added).
In our opinion, this statute implies that once the list is delivered to the sheriff it shall be available to counsel.
On two separate occasions, the trial judge made specific written findings that Grayson's statements were voluntarily made after knowing and intelligent waivers of his constitutional rights under Miranda v. Arizona,
In reviewing this death sentence, we also make the following findings according to Alabama Code Section
In reviewing the proportionality of Grayson's sentence to death we have considered his argument, presented initially in his reply brief on appeal, that similar crimes throughout this state are not being punished capitally. Grayson's argument is grounded on the fact that recently within this state Jerry D. Hamilton was permitted to plead guilty to noncapital offenses involving the murder and kidnapping of twenty-six-year-old Melissa "Missy" DeVaughn.
Although no information concerning Hamilton is contained in the record of the proceedings below, the events surrounding the Alabama Attorney General's plea bargain agreement with Hamilton were well publicized and have been supplemented by the affidavit of an assistant attorney general. It appears that Hamilton was permitted to plead guilty on the condition that he reveal the location of Mrs. DeVaughn's body, which had not been located after extensive and intensive search efforts by county and state authorities. The Attorney General asserts that, without the body, there was insufficient evidence to prove the corpus delicti of a capital murder because there was no physical or scientific evidence to link Hamilton to the murder. Additionally, part of the plea bargain was that Hamilton would plead guilty to a federal kidnapping charge.
The Hamilton case is factually distinguishable from the one now under review. However, in neither Hamilton's case nor in Grayson's was the sentence imposed in an arbitrary and capricious manner.
We have searched the entire record for error and found none. That search and our review of this appeal convince us that the judgment of the circuit court is due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Darrell Grayson v. State.
- Cited By
- 32 cases
- Status
- Published