Robert Fratta v. Lorie Davis, Director
Opinion
Robert Fratta moves for a certificate of appealability ("COA") to appeal the denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C § 2254. Because his claims are procedurally defaulted and he cannot overcome the default, the motion is denied.
I.
Fratta was convicted of capital murder in 1997 for the murder of his wife Farah Fratta. 1 He was granted federal habeas corpus relief in 2007. 2 He was again convicted and sentenced to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ("TCCA") affirmed on direct appeal and denied his state habeas petition. 3 Fratta then filed a petition for habeas relief in federal court, asserting nineteen grounds. The district court denied the petition, finding three claims unmeritorious and the other sixteen procedurally defaulted and unexhausted. 4
According to the state, Fratta employed Joseph Prystash to murder Farah. Prystash in turn employed Howard Guidry to carry out the murder, with Prystash serving as the getaway driver. Prystash's girlfriend, Mary Gipp, provided testimony linking the three men together and to the murder. 5
II.
"A [COA] may issue ... only if the applicant has made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right."
Fratta essentially requests we issue COAs on five questions: (1) whether Texas law regarding hybrid representation is an independent and adequate state law ground to default claims; (2) if his claims are defaulted, whether he overcomes that default with a showing of actual innocence; (3) whether his claims are exhausted; (4) whether there was insufficient evidence for conviction; and (5) whether the indictment was constructively amended via an allegedly erroneous jury instruction. Because Texas law regarding hybrid representation is an independent and adequate state ground such that Fratta procedurally defaulted his insufficiency and constructive-amendment claims, and that Fratta cannot overcome default with a showing of actual innocence, we need not reach requests three through five.
III.
The adequacy and independence of a state procedural rule are reviewed de novo.
Reed v. Scott
,
Fratta contests the adequacy of Texas's hybrid-representation bar.
8
In
*229
1977, the TCCA announced, in a case involving the defendant's right to cross-examine a witness himself, that "[t]here is no constitutional right in Texas to hybrid representation partially pro se and partially by counsel."
Landers v. State
,
In his appellate brief, Fratta cites several cases to illustrate that the hybrid-representation rule is not regularly applied. In those cases, the state court peeked at the pro se brief to determine whether it "reveals [an] error which should be considered in the interest of justice." 11 In two of the cases, the court made no reference to what claims the pro se brief alleged, 12 and Fratta provides no indication that the defendants raised claims similar or identical to Fratta's. And, three of the cases Fratta cites do not involve claims similar to his. 13
*230 In response to this panel's request for supplemental briefing on "whether Texas state courts have regularly applied the hybrid-representation bar to claims identical or similar" to Fratta's, Fratta identifies six intermediate appellate cases 14 involving insufficiency claims where the court noted the hybrid-representation bar and chose to invoke its discretion to peek at the petition in the interest of justice. 15 As to Fratta's claim of improper amendment of the indictment, he identifies three similar cases. 16
*231
Though Fratta points to a handful of cases over the last thirty years that raise claims similar or identical to his, those few exceptions-all but one by intermediate appellate courts
17
-"do[ ] not render the rule inadequate."
18
"[A]fter all, 'regularly' is not synonymous with 'always' and 'strictly' is not synonymous with 'unanimously.' "
Amos
,
Fratta does not show that reasonable jurists would disagree with the district court's ruling that his claims are procedurally defaulted. We thus need not reach either the exhaustion issue or the merits "unless [Fratta] can demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice" or can "demonstrate that failure to consider the claims will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice."
Coleman v. Thompson
,
IV.
Fratta requests we grant a COA on whether he demonstrated a fundamental miscarriage of justice by raising a meritorious actual-innocence claim under
Schlup v. Delo
,
A defendant must show "new reliable evidence ... not presented at trial."
Schlup
,
Fratta proffers, as "new reliable evidence," ballistic testing that he claims excludes, as the murder weapon, the .38 Charter Arms caliber revolver that he purchased. The ballistics report states,
Examinations have been completed on these items and it was determined that the submitted fired lead bullets and fragments contain insufficient definite and consistent individual characteristics to effect an identification. Test fired bullets fired in the [Charter Arms .38 caliber revolver] were found [to] bear inconsistent characteristics from the barrel.
That report was made in March 1995 and was known to Fratta before the second trial. In fact, Fratta attempted to introduce the report at trial, but it was ruled inadmissible hearsay.
This court has yet to weigh in on the circuit split concerning what constitutes "new" evidence. The nature of the split over "new" is based on whether the evidence must be "newly discovered" or "newly presented." 20 We still need not weigh in on that discussion because the ballistic report is not "new" under either standard. Fratta possessed the report at the time of his second trial, and he presented it to the court, even though it was ultimately ruled inadmissible. 21
Regardless, even assuming that the ballistics report was "new," that new evidence is not "so strong" that it undermines our confidence in the jury's verdict. We are allowed to weigh that "new" evidence against "old" evidence, even old inadmissible evidence, because "the emphasis on 'actual innocence' allows the reviewing tribunal also to consider the probative force of relevant evidence that was either excluded or unavailable at trial." 22
Prystash, the "middleman," confessed that Fratta solicited him to kill Fratta's wife and provided him a gun to do so, and that he in turn solicited Guidry to perform the act. Though that confession was deemed inadmissible at trial, we can consider it at this stage for the reasons articulated above. Further, Gipp testified at the *233 second trial that Prystash was friends with Fratta; Fratta began calling Prystash in the weeks and days leading up to the murder; Prystash and Guidry (her next door neighbor) were friendly; Prystash "talk[ed] to [her] about killing Farah Fratta"; Prystash told her what day he would kill Farah (Wednesday, the day Farah was murdered); Prystash told her he was "the middle man to find someone that would kill Farah"; Prystash left with Guidry the evening of the murder; she saw Prystash and Guidry return together on the evening of the murder; she saw Prystash stash a gun the evening of the murder; Prystash told her "they had killed her"; and Prystash was promised a jeep "for his part in this murder."
No reasonable jurist would disagree that Fratta fails to prove actual innocence. He thus cannot overcome procedural default, and we need not reach his other requests.
The motion for a COA is DENIED.
We refer to Robert Fratta as "Fratta" and Farah Fratta as "Farah."
Fratta v. Quarterman
, No. CIV.A. H-05-3392,
See
Fratta v. State
, No. AP-76,188,
The district court provided alternative holdings, rejecting each of the sixteen procedurally defaulted and unexhausted claims on the merits.
For more detailed histories,
see
Fratta v. Davis
, No. 4:13-CV-3438,
Glover v. Cain
,
"Where a petitioner contends a state procedural rule is not strictly or regularly followed, he must show 'that the state has failed to apply the procedural bar rule to claims identical or similar to those raised by the petitioner himself.' If he does not make this showing, a procedural default exists and 'the petitioner is deemed to have forfeited his federal habeas claim.' "
Frazier v. Dretke
,
It is clear from the opinion that the state court refused to review the relevant claims only because of the hybrid-representation rule. Thus, the independence prong is not disputed.
See
Fratta
,
Fratta also proffers a convoluted theory that his pro se briefs were not "hybrid" because he was requesting to proceed
pro se
and had a right to do so under Texas law. We have reviewed the filings Fratta identifies. They request only that the TCCA also accept his
pro se
filings and that he receive a hearing "for appointment of new counsel." Nothing there suggests that he wanted to proceed solely
pro se
. Instead, his filings suggest unhappiness with his current counsel, that he is entitled to effective counsel, and that he desires different counsel. Further, a request to proceed
pro se
in Texas must be clear and unequivocal, and it most certainly was not here.
See
Hathorn v. State
,
See
Rudd v. State
,
See also
Ex parte Bohannan
,
Johnson v. State
,
Evans v. State
,
See
In re State ex rel. Villalobos
,
Two other intermediate appellate cases were mentioned in Fratta's briefing in the district court. Both reviewed claims were neither similar nor identical to Fratta's claims here.
Tones v. State
, No. 03-04-00288-CR,
See
Jefferson v. State
, No. 05-15-00477-CR,
The other two cases cited by Fratta in his response letter either do not involve hybrid representation or do not raise similar claims.
See
Anderson v. State
, No. 13-96-124-CR,
See
Newton v. State
,
Fratta points to one other intermediate appellate court case that reviewed an improper amendment of the indictment claim.
Robertson v. State
,
In the district court, Fratta also cited
Campbell v. State
, No. 01-98-00570-CR,
See
Dugger v. Adams
,
In response to our request for further briefing, the Director noted that since 1995 the TCCA has refused to review
any
pro se briefs where the defendant is represented by counsel.
See, e.g.
,
Ex parte Medina
,
Amos
,
Schlup
,
See
Wright v. Quarterman
,
See
Moore v. Quarterman
,
Schlup
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Robert Alan FRATTA, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Lorie DAVIS, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Correctional Institutions Division, Respondent-Appellee.
- Cited By
- 18 cases
- Status
- Published