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Summary:
James D. Mitchell Jr., 42, an Amarillo police officer, had just
finished his shift and was driving home, still in uniform.
Mitchell saw Hafdahl's car swerve around his truck and watched as it
veered off the road. He stopped to investigate.
When he saw Hafdahl running away, he ordered him to stop. With his
revolver drawn, Mitchell pursued Hafdahl through the yard until
Hafdahl was stopped by a locked gate.
Hafdahl then turned and killed Mitchell at close range with four
shots from his 9 mm semi-automatic pistol. Mitchell never returned
fire.
After shooting Mitchell, Hafdahl fled the scene, only to turn
himself in later that night. Shawn David Terry, 22, was arrested
near the scene of the shooting. Daniel Louis Helgan, 24, was
arrested later in New Mexico.
Dr. Ralph Erdmann, a forensic pathologist, reconstructed the crime
scene at trial and testified that based on the distance and angle
from which each shot was fired, only one shot (the one in Mitchell's
wrist) could have been fired when Mitchell was standing. Daniel
Helgran received a sentence of one year's probation for failure to
stop and render aid.
After Hafdahl's trial, Dr. Ralph Erdmann pleaded guilty to perjury
and tampering with government records in other cases he testified
in.
Final Meal:
A Chef salad with ranch dressing, double meat cheese burger (all the
way), French fries, ketchup, and a chocolate shake.
Final Words:
"All I want to say, I love you. Approximately 28 years ago, I
remember looking down at a bassinet. I saw an angel. I am looking at
her right now. I love you Colleen. Let's get going. The road goes on
forever and the party never ends. Let's rock and roll. Let's go
Warden. Me and you, all of us. Remember Wet Willie. Keep on smiling,
keep smiling. I love you. It's on the way, I can feel it. It's OK
baby, we have a party to go to." Hafdahl's eyes began to close and
he seemed to snore. He then took about six deep breaths and closed
his eyes.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Monday, January 30, 2002
Randall Wayne Hafdahl Scheduled to be Executed.
AUSTIN - Texas Attorney General John Cornyn
offers the following information on Randall Wayne Hafdahl, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 31, 2002.
On April 5, 1986, Randall Wayne Hafdahl was
sentenced to death for the capital murder of peace officer James
Delbert Mitchell, Jr., during the lawful discharge of his duties, in
Amarillo, Texas, on November 11, 1985.
A summary of the evidence
presented at trial follows:
FACTS OF THE CRIME
Shortly after 4:00 p.m. on November 11, 1985,
Amarillo Police Sergeant James Mitchell was driving home from work
when he witnessed an accident.
Randall Hafdahl, who was driving across Texas
with two friends, Shawn Terry and Daniel Helgren, was driving
recklessly and lost control of his car. Hafdahl's car left the
highway, crossed a frontage road, crashed through a wooden fence,
and came to rest in the back yard of a private residence.
Although he was off-duty, Officer Mitchell--who
was still dressed in his police uniform and wearing an unzipped
windbreaker with "Amarillo City Police" and a badge insignia
emblazoned on it-- stopped to render assistance.
Hafdahl, who admitted that he had consumed
alcohol and hallucinogenic mushrooms earlier in the day,
unsuccessfully tried to restart the car. Hafdahl then exited the car
and hid a loaded 9 mm pistol under a jacket he was carrying and
attempted to flee through a gate.
Hafdahl admitted that he first saw Officer
Mitchell as he entered the yard through the downed fence. The
evidence shows that Hafdahl turned from Mitchell and tried to escape
through a gate which he could not unlatch.
Mitchell, who had drawn
his gun, pursued Hafdahl through the yard. According to one
eyewitness, Mitchell identified himself as a police officer and
ordered Hafdahl to stop.
When Mitchell was approximately six feet away
from Hafdahl, Hafdahl turned and fired four shots, hitting Mitchell
each time. Two of the four wounds were mandatorily fatal,
perforating Mitchell's heart and lung. Mitchell never returned fire.
Hafdahl testified at trial that he was not trying
to flee but, rather, trying to hide the gun. He knew the police
would arrive shortly and would discover that he was a convicted
felon in Texas who had stopped reporting to his probation officer.
Hafdahl also testified that although he intentionally shot Officer
Mitchell, he was acting in self-defense and did not realize Mitchell
was a police officer.
Hafdahl believed Mitchell was "an angry motorist"
whom Hafdahl had run off the road. Hafdahl blames this misperception
on the drugs and alcohol, as well as the rapidity with which the
accident and the shooting occurred.
At least nine eyewitnesses to the events
immediately before and after Officer Mitchell's murder testified
that the backyard was visible from the highway, and they could tell
Officer Mitchell was a uniformed police officer. The two passengers
in Hafdahl's car were also able to identify Mitchell as a police
officer.
One passenger stated that he knew without a doubt
that Mitchell was an officer the second he saw him. "[H]e had his
blue uniform, and his gun, so I knew he was a police officer, just
by looking." At least four of the witnesses, including one of the
passengers in Hafdahl's car, saw Hafdahl turn and look at Officer
Mitchell before firing.
One witness in the yard heard Mitchell identify
himself by saying, "Hey halt, halt, stop, police." The evidence
established that at least one of the bullets that hit Mitchell was
shot at a maximum of six feet and could have been closer.
The State presented the testimony of two police
officers, one from Rockwall and the other from Grand Prairie, Texas,
who testified that they had arrested Hafdahl on a warrant for
aggravated kidnapping, but had released him pending investigation by
the FBI.
Hafdahl was never officially charged by the FBI on these
charges; however, the implication from the evidence was that Hafdahl
believed he was wanted on these outstanding charges and killed the
officer to avoid arrest.
Also, one of Hafdahl's companions testified
that in the days before the murder, Hafdahl admitted that he had "jumped
bond" in Dallas, and had begun using an alias and had dyed his hair.
During the punishment phase of trial, the State
presented evidence that Hafdahl had been arrested on Aug. 11, 1980,
in Richardson, Texas, and charged with unlawful carrying of a weapon
and felony theft. The police had been conducting surveillance of
Hafdahl's house on suspicion that the occupants were involved in a
burglary ring.
Hafdahl and another man left the house and got
into a van, which the police subsequently stopped for a traffic
violation. During the stop, Hafdahl was caught trying to shove a
.38-caliber gun under the seat. When the police conducted a search
of the house, they discovered stolen property and narcotics.
Five law enforcement officers from both Texas and
Colorado testified that they knew Hafdahl to have a bad reputation
for being peaceful and law abiding, and reputation for being
dangerous and violent.
During cross examination of one of these officers,
defense counsel elicited details of the kidnapping investigation for
which Hafdahl was arrested in 1982. Hafdahl was charged with
aggravated kidnapping, but he was never indicted.
The officer stated
that the alleged kidnapping victim was forcibly taken from Grand
Prairie, Texas, by Hafdahl and two others, and transported first to
Colorado, then Wyoming, and eventually returned to Texas, where she
escaped.
During that time, the victim claimed she was
beaten, gagged and her life threatened. Hafdahl was not named as one
of the two men who originally kidnapped her from the parking lot,
but the victim's statement listed him as one of nine people who
participated in the course of the abduction.
While in Colorado, Hafdahl worked at a place
called the "Bates Farm." The Bates Farm manufactured
methamphetamines and traded stolen guns and illegal weapons. Hafdahl
was known as the "right-hand-man" and the "enforcer" for the Bates
Farm. He oversaw the entire drug operation, including selling drugs
and collecting debts or money for the sale of drugs. Hafdahl was
known to carry a weapon on a daily basis.
On the night Hafdahl was arrested in Amarillo, he
was arrogant, showed no remorse and claimed to not know why he was
being arrested. During a search of the wrecked car, the police
recovered a gin bottle and beer cans and several pieces of
identification with at least three different names.
In response, Hafdahl presented several witnesses
and family members who testified that they had never seen him do
anything violent, even when provoked. However, on cross-examination,
one relative admitted she had not seen him in the six or seven years
prior to his arrest.
Officer Mitchell had been a police officer for 20
years, 16 of which were spent with the Amarillo Police Department.
At the time of his death, Officer Mitchell was 43 years old. He is
survived by his wife; three children aged, 20, nine, and eight; and
a six-month-old grandson.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
-
November 29, 1985 - Hafdahl was indicted in the
181st District Court of Randal County, Texas, for the capital murder
of James Mitchell, a peace officer acting in the course of his
official duty, on November 11, 1985.
-
April 4, 1986 - A jury found Hafdahl guilty of
capital murder.
-
April 5, 1986 - Following a separate punishment hearing, the court
assessed Hafdahl's punishment at death.
-
June 13, 1990 - Hafdahl's conviction and sentence were affirmed by
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
-
December 17, 1990 - The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied
rehearing.
-
May 28, 1991 - The United States Supreme Court denied Hafdahl's
petition for certiorari review.
-
July 30, 1991 - Hafdahl filed an application for state writ of
habeas corpus.
-
June 1, 1994 - Habeas relief denied by the Court of Criminal Appeals
in an unpublished order.
-
May 22, 1995 - Hafdahl filed a third state habeas application,
denied by Court of Criminal Appeals.
-
May 25, 1995 - Hafdahl filed a petition for federal writ of habeas
corpus in the district court.
-
April 22, 1997 - Hafdahl filed an amended petition for writ of
habeas corpus.
-
December 17, 1999 - The district court denied habeas corpus relief
and all discovery motions.
-
March 14, 2000 - Hafdahl filed a motion for certificate of probable
cause, denied by District Court.
-
August 23, 2000 - U.S. Court of Appeals for Fifth Circuit granted
certificate of appealability.
-
May 15, 2001 - After briefing and oral argument, the Fifth Circuit
denied Hafdahl's requested relief.
-
June 20, 2001 - The Fifth Circuit denied rehearing.
-
September 18, 2001- Hafdahl filed a petition for writ of certiorari
in the United States Supreme Court.
-
November 26, 2001- The United States Supreme Court denied Hafdahl's
petition for writ of certiorari.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
Hafdahl was arrested on charges of aggravated
kidnapping and spent seven days in jail in Grand Prairie, Texas.
Hafdahl was never convicted on these charges.
In 1970, Hafdahl was arrested on charges of
misdemeanor theft and shoplifting, in Houston, Texas.
In 1975, in Tarrant County, Texas, Hafdahl
received a probated sentence of 10 years for the delivery of LSD.
In 1980, in Richardson, Texas, Hafdahl was
arrested for unlawful carrying of a weapon. According to the
arresting officer, the charges were dismissed because Hafdahl could
not be found.
Randall Wayne Hafdahl
Sr.
Txexecutions.org
Randall Wayne Hafdahl Sr., 48, was executed by
lethal injection on 31 January in Huntsville, Texas for the murder
of a policeman.
In November 1985, a car carrying three men
swerved off of a highway and into the back yard of a private
residence. The car was driven by Randall Hafdahl, then 32. According
to his trial testimony, Hafdahl was drunk and "pretty messed up"
from eating hallucinogenic mushrooms. Unable to restart his car,
Hafdahl grabbed a pistol and tried to run away.
James D. Mitchell Jr., 42, an Amarillo police
officer, had just finished his shift and was driving home, still in
uniform. Mitchell saw Hafdahl's car swerve around his truck and
watched as it veered off the road.
He stopped to investigate. When
he saw Hafdahl running away, he ordered him to stop. With his
revolver drawn, Mitchell pursued Hafdahl through the yard until
Hafdahl was stopped by a locked gate. Hafdahl then turned and killed
Mitchell at close range with four shots from his 9 mm semi-automatic
pistol. Mitchell never returned fire.
After shooting Mitchell, Hafdahl fled the scene,
only to turn himself in later that night. Shawn David Terry, 22, was
arrested near the scene of the shooting. Daniel Louis Helgan, 24,
was arrested later in New Mexico.
Under Texas law, murder of a police officer in
the line of duty is a capital offense, but only if the killer knows
that the victim is a police officer. At his trial, Hafdahl admitting
shooting Mitchell, but said he did not know he was a policeman.
He said that he only tried to leave the yard in
the first place in order to get to a telephone to call a wrecker.
When he heard a voice behind him, he turned and saw a man with a gun.
Fearing for his life, he shot him four times in rapid succession.
He said he only realized Mitchell was a policeman
as he was falling to the ground. He said that Mitchell was wearing a
windbreaker that concealed much of his uniform.
The prosecution, however, depicted the killing as
one that Hafdahl committed knowingly. They said that Hafdahl's first
shot hit Mitchell in the wrist and disarmed him, then he continued
to advance on the uniformed officer and pump rounds into him while
he was on the ground.
The question of whether Hafdahl knew Mitchell was
a policeman centered around three questions: 1) Was Mitchell
visually identifiable as a policeman? 2) Did Mitchell verbally
identify himself as a policeman? 3) Did Hafdahl see or hear Mitchell
before shooting him?
The prosecution offered substantial evidence that
Mitchell was visually identifiable as a policeman. They pointed out
that Mitchell's police-issue windbreaker was marked, "Amarillo City
Police" and bore a badge insignia.
At least eleven witnesses, including Terry and
Helgran, testified that they recognized Mitchell as a policeman from
his uniform. The prosecution also presented witnesses who testified
that they heard Mitchell yell, "stop, police!" and similar warnings.
The most hotly disputed question, therefore, was whether Hafdahl saw
or heard Mitchell before shooting him.
Mitchell himself testified that his senses were
numbed from the drugs and alcohol in his system. He heard someone
yelling at him, but he couldn't understand, and wasn't even sure
whether the man yelling at him was the same man who was chasing him,
or one of his companions.
Shawn Terry testified that he saw Hafdahl shoot
Mitchell four times in rapid succession. Daniel Helgran testified
that he was removing the license plate from the wrecked vehicle when
the shots were fired. He also said in a sworn statement that the
shots were fired in rapid succession. The prosecution, however, used
the testimony of Dr. Ralph Erdmann, a forensic pathologist, to
reconstruct the crime.
Erdmann testified that based on the distance and
angle from which each shot was fired, only one shot -- the one in
Mitchell's wrist -- could have been fired when Mitchell was standing.
The other three, including the two fatal ones through the heart,
were fired when Mitchell was already down. In addition, the
prosecution brought four witnesses who said that they saw Hafdahl
turn and look at Mitchell before shooting him.
Hafdahl had a previous conviction for delivery of
LSD. He received a sentence of ten years' probation. Testimony at
the punishment phase of his trial indicated that Hafdahl had
previously overseen a methamphetamine production operation in
Colorado. He had also been charged with aggravated kidnapping and
had a warrant out for his arrest at the time of Mitchell's killing.
He had dyed his hair and began using the aliases Robert Moore and
Jack Douglas Cone. Prosecutors said that Hafdahl knew that if he was
caught by Mitchell, he would be arrested and tried for kidnapping.
A jury convicted Hafdahl of capital murder in
April 1986 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed his conviction and sentence in June 1990.
He was originally scheduled to be executed in
July 1995, but received a stay. Four the next 4½ years, Hafdahl won
various motions to keep his case open. In August 2000, the U.S.
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed to hear his case. After
briefing and oral argument, the Fifth Circuit denied his appeal in
May 2001. Hafdahl did not win any proceedings in state or federal
court after that.
Daniel Helgran received a sentence of one year's
probation for failure to stop and render aid. After Hafdahl's trial,
Dr. Ralph Erdmann pleaded guilty to perjury and tampering with
government records in other cases he testified in.
In an interview on death row, Hafdahl retold his
account of the shooting. "I believed him to be a driver who was
coming at me angry because I hit him with my car," he said. In
another interview, he said,"I started to turn around, and I saw
someone standing at the other end of the fence, but I couldn't
hardly see him. ... There was a gun, I could see that real clear."
Mitchell didn't say anything, Hafdahl said. "Now, I been shaken down
by police officers plenty of times in my life, and they ever do
something like that, they always tell me, 'Put your hands on your
head. Get on the ground.' - something," Hafdahl said. "They don't
just run up on you. And when he ran up on me ... I just spun around
and clipped him down. It was just Pow! Pow! Pow! Pow! And as he's
falling, and he's going to the ground, I realized right then who he
was."
Hafdahl said he felt remorse for the killing
since the night it happened. "I wish I could give the Mitchells back
what they lost. I wish I could give Mitchell back what he lost, but
I can't," he said.
At his execution, Hafdahl released a written last
statement that criticized the law enforcement and prosecution
officials involved in his case, by name. He accused them of planting
evidence and lying at his trial in order to secure his conviction.
The next part of his statement read, "And to the
Mitchell family: I truely am sorry for the tragedy that took place
on Nov 11, 85. Thats all I can give you. Thats all I will give you.
Because today your making my family and loved ones a victim just as
you have cried to the world you were in this tragedy. I did not
deliberately shoot James Mitchell. I had no premeditation in my
thoughts when I spun around and fired, no matter how many fantasy
motives Clayton and Sherrod fabricated. So today my family becomes a
victim. You know, the truth sets you free, and the truth is, if your
loved one had acted with any professionalism at all, he would be
alive today! And thats all I got to say about it."
Hafdahl also made an oral last statement, in
which he expressed affection for his daughter. After telling her and
other friends that he loved them, he lifted his head from the death
chamber gurney and shouted into the microphone, "The road goes on
forever and the party never ends." He screamed, his faced turning
crimson. "Rock 'n Roll!" he shouted.
After this, he regained his composure and the
lethal injection was begun. "It's on the way. I can feel it. Take me
home. We got a party to go to," Hafdahl said. His voice rose again
and he shouted "Remember Wet Willie. Keep on smiling. Keep on
smiling." His eyes closed and he began to snore. He took about eight
breaths and then stopped. Eleven minutes later, he was pronounced
dead at 6:48 p.m.
ProDeathPenalty.com
The defendant showed no remorse as 47th District
Judge David Gleason scheduled his lethal injection for murdering an
Amarillo police officer.
After Gleason set Jan. 31 as the execution date,
Randal Wayne Hafdahl said, "Sounds good to me." "That reveals his
demeanor and attitude from the beginning," Randall County Criminal
District Attorney James Farren said. "He's showed complete disdain."
Jurors sentenced Hafdahl to death April 7, 1986,
for murdering Amarillo Police Department Sgt. James Mitchell who was
42 at the time of his death in 1985.
Shortly after 4:00 p.m. on November 11, 1985,
Randal Wayne Hafdahl shot and killed Sergeant James D. Mitchell, Jr.,
of the Amarillo, Texas police department. Hafdahl had been driving
across Texas with two friends.
Hafdahl, who admits that he had been consuming
alcohol and hallucinogenic mushrooms earlier in the day, was driving
recklessly and lost control of his car.
The car left the highway, crossed a frontage road,
crashed through a wooden fence around a private residence, and
eventually came to rest in the backyard. When the car would not
start, Hafdahl took a loaded 9mm pistol from the glove box, hid it
under his coat, and attempted to flee.
He testified that he wanted to hide the gun
because he knew the police would arrive soon and discover that he
was a convicted felon (for possession of a controlled substance) who
had stopped reporting to his probation officer.
Sergeant Mitchell was driving home from work when
he witnessed the accident. He was still dressed in his police
uniform and was wearing an unzipped windbreaker with "Amarillo City
Police" and a badge insignia emblazoned on it. Hafdahl testified
that he first saw Mitchell when the officer entered the backyard
through the downed fence.
At that point, Hafdahl turned from Mitchell and
tried to escape through a gate, which he could not unlatch. Mitchell
pursued Hafdahl across the yard and, according to one eyewitness,
identified himself as a policeman and ordered Hafdahl to stop.
Mitchell apparently had his police revolver drawn, although he never
fired a shot.
When Mitchell had almost caught up with him,
Hafdahl turned and shot Mitchell four times from approximately six
feet away. Hafdahl was then indicted for the capital offense of
murdering a police officer.
The critical issue at trial was whether Hafdahl
knew that Mitchell was an officer. Hafdahl testified that he
believed Mitchell was an angry motorist whom Hafdahl had run off the
road. Hafdahl contends that, because he was under the influence of
drugs and the events took place so quickly, he did not realize
Mitchell was a police officer until after he had fired the fatal
shots. As the district court observed, however, the State put on
extensive evidence that Hafdahl must have known that Mitchell was an
officer.
First, a worker who was only 20 to 25 feet from
the crime scene, testified that Mitchell identified himself as a
police officer as he approached Hafdahl. Numerous witnesses
testified that Mitchell was gesturing and yelling at Hafdahl but
that they were too far away to hear what he was saying. When asked
whether Mitchell had ever identified himself as an officer, Hafdahl
replied, "I can't say if he did or he didn't. All I can say is I
didn't hear him."
Second, twelve witnesses, most of whom had
stopped on the highway, testified that they immediately recognized
Mitchell as a police officer because of his uniform.
One of Hafdahl's traveling companions, who was
still in the car when Mitchell entered the yard, testified that
Mitchell's police uniform was plainly visible and he knew Mitchell
was an officer " the second I saw him. . . . No doubt in my mind."
As noted above, Hafdahl admits that he saw Mitchell when he entered
the backyard through the downed fence. The State argued that Hafdahl
would have noticed the police uniform and the Amarillo City Police
windbreaker.
Third, Hafdahl shot Mitchell at close range and
could not have failed to notice Mitchell's uniform. Although the
estimates varied somewhat, two ballistics experts from the Federal
Bureau of Investigation testified that Hafdahl was no more than six
feet from Mitchell when he fired the shots, and one of Hafdahl's
companions testified that Hafdahl was approximately three to five
feet from Mitchell. Even if one assumed that Hafdahl had not noticed
Mitchell's uniform when he entered the yard, the State suggested,
Hafdahl surely would have seen the uniform before firing the fatal
shots from such close range.
To further establish that Hafdahl was close
enough to know that Mitchell was an officer, the State called, among
others, Ralph Erdmann, a forensic pathologist. The crux of Erdmann's
testimony was that (1) Hafdahl shot Mitchell four times with a
semiautomatic 9mm pistol; (2) the first two shots were non-fatal
wounds to the abdomen and arm; (3) Hafdahl moved closer to Mitchell
while firing, although it was not clear how quickly the shots were
fired; (4) both the third and fourth shots to the chest were
mandatorily fatal; and (5) judging from the gunpowder stippling
specks on Mitchell's face, Hafdahl was approximately two and a half
feet from Mitchell when the final shot was fired.
Erdmann explained to the jury that many of the
assumptions underlying his conclusions were drawn from the reports
and conclusions of the investigating officers.
His testimony often indicated that the autopsy
results were "consistent" with the officers' theories. To support
its argument that Hafdahl intentionally killed Mitchell, the State
put on evidence that Hafdahl had a motive to avoid apprehension. Two
Texas officers (one from Rockwall, the other from Grand Prairie)
testified that they had arrested Hafdahl on a warrant for aggravated
kidnapping and turned the case over to the FBI.
During the guilt phase, neither officer testified
about the details of the alleged kidnapping. Neither officer
purported to know how the FBI had resolved the case. The implication
was that Hafdahl might have believed he was a wanted man and,
consequently, that he killed Mitchell in order to evade capture.
The jury convicted Hafdahl of capital murder on
April 4, 1986. During the sentencing phase, the State requested the
death penalty and introduced additional evidence as to the three
required "special issues": (1) Whether Hafdahl deliberately killed
Mitchell; (2) whether Hafdahl's response to Mitchell's provocation,
if any, was unreasonable; and (3) whether Hafdahl would probably
commit criminal acts of violence in the future. Erdmann was not
called to testify further, but the police officers testified in more
detail about the kidnapping arrest.
The jury then sentenced Hafdahl to death on April
7, 1986. The execution date being set followed the end of 16 years
of appeals. A 10-man team of Randall County Sheriff's deputies and
bailiffs guarded the courtroom. The entire Justice Building in
Canyon also was under heavy security provided by deputies and Canyon
police officers.
Hafdahl, 48, wore shackles on his ankles, and his
wrists were locked to a chain around his waist when Sheriff Joel
Richardson brought him into the courtroom.
Mitchell suffered multiple gunshot wounds Nov.
11, 1985, when he was returning home from work and stopped to
investigate a traffic accident involving a car that skidded off the
interstate and into the back yard of a residence.
"The first shot struck Sgt. Mitchell's wrist and
disarmed him, he was helpless," Farren said. "Hafdahl continued to
approach and executed him. He continued to pump rounds into Sgt.
Mitchell. If he is willing to kill a police officer, he certainly is
not afraid of you or me."
The three occupants of the wrecked car were
fleeing the scene when Hafdahl was stopped by a fence gate that
would not open. According to trial testimony, Mitchell, who was
wearing his uniform, ordered Hafdahl to stop.
Under questioning from one of his defense
attorneys, Hafdahl testified at his trial that he was "pretty messed
up" on hallucinogenic mushrooms and gin the afternoon he killed
Mitchell.
He admitted shooting the officer with a 9mm semi-automatic
pistol but said he did not know Mitchell was a policeman. "I heard
somebody coming up behind me, and I just spun around and started
firing," Hafdahl said. Five officers from Texas and Colorado,
testifying for the state, told the court they knew Hafdahl to be a
difficult individual to deal with.
During cross-examination by the defense, 1 of
these officers told the court about a 1982 kidnapping incident in
which Hafdahl was charged. He was never indicted for the kidnapping.
The officer said the alleged kidnapping victim was taken forcefully
by Hafdahl and two accomplices from Grand Prairie to Colorado and
then transported to Wyoming. She eventually escaped and told police
she had been beaten, gagged and had her life threatened.
Colorado police reports said while there, Hafdahl
worked as an enforcer at a methamphetamine operation known as Bates
Farm.
The report said Hafdahl oversaw the entire drug
operation and he was known to carry a weapon at the farm on a daily
basis. Ken Farren, chief deputy in the Potter County Sheriff's
Department, worked for about 12 years with Mitchell and attended
Friday's hearing. "Hafdahl said in the courtroom it was fine with
him, and today is fine with us," Ken Farren said. "Jim was somebody
I could lean on. It's time for justice to be served."
The widow and daughters of slain policeman James
Mitchell came to Canyon to see a judge set the execution date for
the killer of their husband and father. "After 16 years it's about
time. We have been through it every step of the way, and I'm looking
forward to reaching a conclusion. It has taken a toll on my family,"
said Ellen Mitchell Stone, the widow of Amarillo Police Department
Sgt. James Mitchell. "My girls were 8 and 9 when their father was
killed. Now, they have graduated from college, are married and have
jobs."
State and federal appeals kept the case from
reaching a resolution. Jurors sentenced Randal Hafdahl, now 48, to
death April 7, 1986, for murdering Mitchell, who was 42 at the time
of his death in 1985.
At the hearing, Judge David Gleason set Jan. 31
as the date an executioner will give Hafdahl his lethal injection. "It's
a shame their whole lives have been exposed to this bureaucracy.
There was never any doubt he did it. He admitted it on the stand,"
Ellen Mitchell Stone said. "It just let his attorney manipulate the
system with reams and reams of motions. It is time it came to an end."
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Randall Hafdahl - Scheduled Execution Date and
Time: 1/31/02 7:00 PM EST.
Randall Hafdahl is scheduled to be the third
person executed in Texas this year. Hafdahl was convicted of
shooting off-duty police officer James Mitchell, who was
investigating a traffic accident involving Hafdahl. Texas already
has scheduled six executions between Jan. 9 and the first week of
March.
Hafdahl’s case prompted some members of the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals to oppose his death sentence, citing
inappropriate and prejudicial evidence presented at trial. Judge
Teague noted in his dissent, “I must find that the trial judge
clearly erred in admitting into evidence testimony that went to the
extraneous offense of aggravated kidnapping.”
This comment refers to the admission of evidence
during trial that linked Hafdahl- unindicted and not under suspicion
– to an FBI investigation of an unrelated kidnapping charge that was
three years old. Judge Teague argued that this was inherently
prejudicial and he urged that Hafdahl’s sentence be vacated and a
new trial ordered. Clearly, Hafdahl’s constitutional rights were
suspended by the State of Texas.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals split 3-2 on
the decision in Hafdahl’s case. Let the State of Texas know that
sending a person to death on the vote of one judge violates human
rights and threatens the constitutional rights of us all.
Randall Wayne Hafdahl
Canyon News
By Karla Abernathy Thetford - Canyon News staff.
"Sounds good to me," was Randall Wayne Hafdahl's
response when he was told when his life would end. Hafdahl, also
known as Jack Douglas Cone, was sentenced to die by lethal injection
on Jan. 31, 2002 at 6 p.m. Hafdahl remained calm during the hearing
Friday, showing little emotion as presiding judge David Gleason set
the execution date.
Hafdahl was found guilty of capital murder by a
Randall County jury on April 7, 1986, and sentenced to death for the
1985 murder of Amarillo police officer Sgt. James Mitchell.
On the night of Nov. 11, 1985, Mitchell
approached a vehicle that had skidded off of the road. As he
approached the vehicle, he was shot in the hand leaving him
powerless, according to Ken Farren, an APD officer at the time of
the shooting. Hafdahl opened fire again killing the officer.
Farren said he was in the office when he got the
call that an officer was down. At that moment a search was launched
with the help of surrounding police departments to find the killer.
After approximately eight hours Hafdahl and one of his accomplices
were in custody. A third suspect was captured a short time later.
Hafdahl has continued to appeal the court's decision over the last
16 years, but officials now believe he has run out of options.
"Mr. Hafdahl's death is the only appropriate
verdict in this case," District Attorney James Farren said. "I think
he is finally out of options and on Jan. 31 justice will finally be
done." That day will help to bring closure for Ken Farren and
Mitchell's family. "The family has had 16 years of suffering…After
16 years, it is time for this to be over," Ken Farren said.
Mitchell's wife and two daughters were present at the hearing, and
did not wish to speak to the media.
Ken Farren added that this was another
bittersweet reminder of the danger law enforcement officials place
themselves in everyday. "He (Mitchell) was dedicated to protect and
serve the community," Farren said. "James Mitchell sacrificed
everything. He died out there. Officers put their lives on the line
everyday." Hafdahl was taken back to Huntsville where he will await
his execution date.
Execution Date Set for Hafdahl
Jan. 31 'sounds
good to me,' killer of police officer says
By Kevin Welch - Amarillo Globe News Online
Saturday, December 15, 2001
The defendant showed no remorse Friday as 47th
District Judge David Gleason scheduled his lethal injection for
murdering an Amarillo police officer. After Gleason set Jan. 31 as
the execution date, Randal Wayne Hafdahl said, "Sounds good to me."
"That reveals his demeanor and attitude from the beginning," Randall
County Criminal District Attorney James Farren said. "He's showed
complete disdain."
Jurors sentenced Hafdahl to death April 7, 1986,
for murdering Amarillo Police Department Sgt. James Mitchell who was
42 at the time of his death in 1985. Friday's hearing followed the
end of 16 years of appeals. A 10-man team of Randall County
Sheriff's deputies and bailiffs guarded the courtroom. The entire
Justice Building in Canyon also was under heavy security provided by
deputies and Canyon police officers. Hafdahl, 48, wore shackles on
his ankles, and his wrists were locked to a chain around his waist
when Sheriff Joel Richardson brought him into the courtroom.
Mitchell suffered multiple gunshot wounds Nov.
11, 1985, when he was returning home from work and stopped to
investigate a traffic accident involving a car that skidded off
Interstate 27 and into the back yard of a residence in the 3600
block of South Austin Street. "The first shot struck Sgt. Mitchell's
wrist and disarmed him, he was helpless," Farren said. "Hafdahl
continued to approach and executed him. He continued to pump rounds
into Sgt. Mitchell. If he is willing to kill a police officer, he
certainly is not afraid of you or me."
The three occupants of the wrecked car were
fleeing the scene when Hafdahl was stopped by a fence gate that
would not open. According to trial testimony, Mitchell, who was
wearing his uniform, ordered Hafdahl to stop. Under questioning from
one of his defense attorneys, Hafdahl testified at his trial that he
was "pretty messed up" on hallucinogenic mushrooms and gin the
afternoon he killed Mitchell. He admitted shooting the officer with
a 9mm semi-automatic pistol but said he did not know Mitchell was a
policeman. "I heard somebody coming up behind me, and I just spun
around and started firing," Hafdahl said.
Ken Farren, chief deputy in the Potter County
Sheriff's Department, worked for about 12 years with Mitchell and
attended Friday's hearing. "He (Hafdahl) said in the courtroom it
was fine with him, and today is fine with us," Ken Farren said. "He
(Mitchell) was somebody I could lean on. It's time for justice to be
served."
Abolish Archives
Death-row inmate Randal Wayne Hafdahl asked a
federal judge Monday to change her ruling rejecting Hafdahl's death-penalty
appeal in the 1985 shooting death of Amarillo Police Sgt. James D.
Mitchell.
Thomas G. Mattson, one of Hafdahl's attorneys,
filed a motion to alter or change U.S. District Judge Mary Lou
Robinson's final judgment in the case. The motion also seeks to
reopen the judgment and expand the court record.
The motion resurrects an earlier defense claim
that then-Randall County Criminal District Attorney Randy Sherrod
allowed discredited forensic pathologist Ralph Erdmann to present
false testimony during Hafdahl's trial.
Erdmann was the main forensic pathologist for
West Texas in the 1980s, handling bodies for 48 counties. Erdmann
pleaded no contest in 1994 to 6 felonies tied to falsified evidence
and botched autopsies in 3 counties. He surrendered his medical
license and was sentenced to 10 years of probation, according to the
Associated Press.
Among other claims, Hafdahl's defense contends
state prosecutors knowingly used false testimony from another
witness and that Judge Robinson's rulings on various aspects of the
case were incorrect. In a ruling last month, Robinson granted a
motion by the state of Texas for summary judgment and rejected a
petition by Hafdahl for a writ of habeas corpus. A habeas corpus
writ orders a person in custody to be brought before a court. It
places the burden of proof on those detaining the person to justify
the imprisonment.
Hafdahl, 46, was sentenced to death April 7,
1986, after Randall County jurors found him guilty of capital murder
in Mitchell's death. Mitchell, 43, was shot Nov. 11, 1985, as he
approached a car that skidded off the highway near a residence. As
the off-duty officer approached the car, Hafdahl and 2 other men got
out of the car, and Mitchell ordered them to stop, according to
court records.
Robinson's ruling states there is little doubt
Hafdahl, a convicted felon wanted for a probation violation, killed
Mitchell by shooting him at the scene. "There is no dispute that
Hafdahl shot Mitchell 4 times or that those shots were the cause of
Sergeant Mitchell's death," the ruling states. "At trial, Hafdahl
contended that he acted in self-defense because he did not recognize
that Mitchell was a police officer and believed that he was an irate
motorist."
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has rejected
earlier appeals filed by Hafdahl in the case, but Robinson granted
Hafdahl a stay of execution in 1995 to review a lengthy appellate
petition filed by his attorneys. The judge's recent ruling reviewed
84 points of alleged constitutional error raised by Hafdahl's
attorneys.
In November, Mitchell's wife, Ellen Mitchell
Stone, and other family members complained about delays in Hafdahl's
execution during a brief protest at Amarillo's federal courthouse.
Earlier, she said her 2 daughters - then 8 and 9 at the time of the
slaying - want Hafdahl executed before they have families of their
own. "That was their father that was killed. Now, they are young
women, married and are graduating from college this year," she said.
"We just want an end to it."
(source: Amarillo Globe-News)
Hafdahl Executed for 1985 Slaying
By Dan Bell - The Huntsville Item Online
January 31, 2002
A convicted cop killer, executed Thursday night
at the Huntsville "Walls" Unit, took his last breath swearing he
acted in self-defense for the shooting death of an Amarillo police
officer.
Dallas County native Randall Hafdahl, 48, was put to death
for the Nov. 11, 1985, slaying of 20-year law enforcement officer
James Mitchell, 43, a husband and father of three. Hafdahl was the
fourth inmate executed by Texas this year.
At 6:02 p.m. Thursday, Hafdahl was led from his
holding cell and strapped to a stainless steel gurney. The execution
was delayed until the attending physician was able to locate a
suitable vein to insert the needle from which the lethal solution of
drugs would flow. Hafdahl chose to ignore the victim's family and
friends.
Instead, he opted to spend his last minutes
focusing on those closest to him. "All I want to say, I love you,"
Hafdahl said, tearing up while looking at his daughter, Colleen
Shepherd.
"Approximately 28 years ago, I remember looking down at a
bassinet. I saw an angel. I am looking at her right now. I love you
Colleen." With his face turning a bright crimson color, Hafdahl
continued in a loud voice. "Let's get going. The road goes on
forever and the party never ends," he said, referring to a song by
Texas musician Robert Earl Keen. "Let's rock and roll," he thundered
into the microphone dangling just above his head. "Let's go Warden.
Me and you, all of us. "Remember Wet Willie," said Hafdahl, possibly
referring to the Southern rock band of the same name. "Keep on
smiling, keep smiling. I love you. "It's on the way, I can feel it,"
Hafdahl said of the lethal drugs entering his body. "It's OK baby,
we have a party to go to." Hafdahl's eyes began to close and he
seemed to snore. He then took about six deep breaths and closed his
eyes. Hafdahl was pronounced dead at 6:48 p.m.
According to court testimony, Hafdahl was driving
drunk and on drugs on the night of the murder, and he was
accompanied by two men, Shawn Terry and Daniel Helgren.
Hafdahl lost control of his vehicle, crashing
through a wood fence before coming to rest in the backyard of a
private residence.
Mitchell, who was off-duty, was still dressed in
his police uniform when he stopped his personal vehicle at the
accident scene to offer assistance. Seeing the approaching officer,
Hafdahl, with a loaded 9 mm pistol hidden beneath his jacket,
attempted to flee through a locked gate. The officer drew his gun
and identified himself to Hafdahl as a member of the local police
department.
When Mitchell was about six feet from the suspect,
Hafdahl turned and fired his pistol four times. Two of the shots hit
Mitchell in the heart and lung area, killing him instantly.
In a Wednesday death row interview, Hafdahl said
the incident was "a tragic incident." "I wish it would have never
happened but the fault lies in both of us," Hafdahl said. "If the
cop had done his job right this (killing) would have never happened."
After Thursday's execution, the husband of
Mitchell's daughter, Dean Clapper, read from a prepared statement. "Tonight's
execution can not begin to erase the years of heartache, grief and
emotional loss that Hafdahl's actions have caused our family,"
Clapper said. "Never to be regained is the innocence of two children,
the loss of childhood memories or recover the loss of a loving
husband and father. "In conclusion, our family has stood together
facing the most evil of individuals. Tonight, we have finally
obtained peace."
IN THE
UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No.
00-10268
RANDAL WAYNE HAFDAHL,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
GARY L. JOHNSON, Director,
Texas Department of Criminal
Justice,
Institutional Division,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal
from the United States
District Court for the
Northern
District of Texas
May 15,
2001
Before
JOLLY, JONES, and BENAVIDES,
Circuit Judges.
E. GRADY
JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
In 1986,
Randal Wayne Hafdahl was
convicted of murder in a
Texas state court and
sentenced to death for
killing a police officer.
The conviction and sentence
were affirmed on appeal.
Hafdahl now seeks federal
habeas corpus relief. He
contends that his
constitutional rights were
violated, both in the guilt
phase and the punishment
phase of his state trial,
when the prosecutor
knowingly used false
testimony of a forensic
pathologist and when the
state court admitted
testimony relating to a
prior unadjudicated
kidnaping offense. The
district court denied his
habeas petition. We granted
a Certificate of
Appealability ("COA") and
now affirm the district
court's judgment.
IA
Shortly
after 4:00 p.m. on November
11, 1985, Randal Wayne
Hafdahl shot and killed
Sergeant James D. Mitchell,
Jr., of the Amarillo, Texas
police department.
Hafdahl
had been driving across
Texas with two friends,
Shawn Terry and Daniel
Helgren. Hafdahl, who admits
that he had been consuming
alcohol and hallucinogenic
mushrooms earlier in the day,
was driving recklessly and
lost control of his car. The
car left the highway,
crossed a frontage road,
crashed through a wooden
fence around a private
residence, and eventually
came to rest in the backyard.
When the car would not start,
Hafdahl took a loaded 9mm
pistol from the glove box,
hid it under his coat, and
attempted to flee. He
testified that he wanted to
hide the gun because he knew
the police would arrive soon
and discover that he was a
convicted felon (for
possession of a controlled
substance) who had stopped
reporting to his probation
officer.
Sergeant
Mitchell was driving home
from work when he witnessed
the accident. He was still
dressed in his police
uniform and was wearing an
unzipped windbreaker with
"Amarillo City Police" and a
badge insignia emblazoned on
it. Hafdahl testified that
he first saw Mitchell when
the officer entered the
backyard through the downed
fence. At that point,
Hafdahl turned from Mitchell
and tried to escape through
a gate, which he could not
unlatch. Mitchell pursued
Hafdahl across the yard and,
according to one eyewitness,
identified himself as a
policeman and ordered
Hafdahl to stop. Mitchell
apparently had his police
revolver drawn, although he
never fired a shot. When
Mitchell had almost caught
up with him, Hafdahl turned
and shot Mitchell four times
from approximately six feet
away.
B
Hafdahl
was then indicted for the
capital offense of murdering
a police officer. Texas law
provides that a person
commits the offense of
capital murder of a peace
officer if (1) that person
knows that the victim is a
peace officer, (2) he
intentionally murders the
peace officer, and (3) the
peace officer is then acting
in the lawful discharge of
an official duty, such as
investigating a traffic
accident. See Tex.
Penal Code Ann. �
19.03(a)(1). The critical
issue at trial was whether
Hafdahl knew that Mitchell
was an officer.
Hafdahl
testified that he believed
Mitchell was an angry
motorist whom Hafdahl had
run off the road. Hafdahl
contends that, because he
was under the influence of
drugs and the events took
place so quickly, he did not
realize Mitchell was a
police officer until after
he had fired the fatal shots.
As the
district court observed,
however, the State put on
extensive evidence that
Hafdahl must have known that
Mitchell was an officer.
First, a worker who was only
20 to 25 feet from the crime
scene, testified that
Mitchell identified himself
as a police officer as he
approached Hafdahl. Numerous
witnesses testified that
Mitchell was gesturing and
yelling at Hafdahl but that
they were too far away to
hear what he was saying.
When asked whether Mitchell
had ever identified himself
as an officer, Hafdahl
replied, "I can't say if he
did or he didn't. All I can
say is I didn't hear him."
Second,
twelve witnesses, most of
whom had stopped on the
highway, testified that they
immediately recognized
Mitchell as a police officer
because of his uniform. One
of Hafdahl's traveling
companions, who was still in
the car when Mitchell
entered the yard, testified
that Mitchell's police
uniform was plainly visible
and he knew Mitchell was an
officer "the second I saw
him. . . . No doubt in my
mind." As noted above,
Hafdahl admits that he saw
Mitchell when he entered the
backyard through the downed
fence. The State argued that
Hafdahl would have noticed
the police uniform and the
Amarillo City Police
windbreaker.
Third,
Hafdahl shot Mitchell at
close range and could not
have failed to notice
Mitchell's uniform. Although
the estimates varied
somewhat, two ballistics
experts from the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
testified that Hafdahl was
no more than six feet from
Mitchell when he fired the
shots, and one of Hafdahl's
companions testified that
Hafdahl was approximately
three to five feet from
Mitchell. Even if one
assumed that Hafdahl had not
noticed Mitchell's uniform
when he entered the yard,
the State suggested, Hafdahl
surely would have seen the
uniform before firing the
fatal shots from such close
range.
C
To
further establish that
Hafdahl was close enough to
know that Mitchell was an
officer, the State called,
among others, Ralph Erdmann,
a forensic pathologist. The
crux of Erdmann's testimony
was that (1) Hafdahl shot
Mitchell four times with a
semiautomatic 9mm pistol;
(2) the first two shots were
non-fatal wounds to the
abdomen and arm; (3) Hafdahl
moved closer to Mitchell
while firing, although it
was not clear how quickly
the shots were fired; (4)
both the third and fourth
shots to the chest were
mandatorily fatal; and (5)
judging from the gunpowder
stippling specks on
Mitchell's face, Hafdahl was
approximately two and a half
feet from Mitchell when the
final shot was fired.
Erdmann explained to the
jury that many of the
assumptions underlying his
conclusions were drawn from
the reports and conclusions
of the investigating
officers. His testimony
often indicated that the
autopsy results were "consistent"
with the officers' theories.
To
support its argument that
Hafdahl intentionally killed
Mitchell, the State put on
evidence that Hafdahl had a
motive to avoid apprehension.
Two Texas officers (one from
Rockwall, the other from
Grand Prairie) testified
that they had arrested
Hafdahl on a warrant for
aggravated kidnaping and
turned the case over to the
FBI. During the guilt phase,
neither officer testified
about the details of the
alleged kidnaping. Neither
officer purported to know
how the FBI had resolved the
case. The implication was
that Hafdahl might have
believed he was a wanted man
and, consequently, that he
killed Mitchell in order to
evade capture.(1)
D
The jury
convicted Hafdahl of capital
murder on April 4, 1986.
During the sentencing phase,
the State requested the
death penalty and introduced
additional evidence as to
the three required "special
issues": (1) Whether Hafdahl
deliberately killed
Mitchell; (2) whether
Hafdahl's response to
Mitchell's provocation, if
any, was unreasonable; and
(3) whether Hafdahl would
probably commit criminal
acts of violence in the
future. Erdmann was not
called to testify further,
but the police officers
testified in more detail
about the kidnaping arrest.
The jury then sentenced
Hafdahl to death on April 7,
1986.
E
The Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals
affirmed his conviction in
1990. See Hafdahl
v. State, 805 S.W.2d 396
(Tex. Ct. Crim. App.
1990)(en banc), cert.
denied, 500 U.S. 948,
111 S.Ct. 2250, 114 L.Ed.2d
491 (1991). Hafdahl
instituted state habeas
proceedings in 1991, but the
Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals ultimately denied
relief in 1995.
In May
1995, prior to the effective
date of the Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty
Act, Hafdahl filed a
petition for a writ of
habeas corpus in the United
States District Court for
the Northern District of
Texas. After limited
discovery was had and the
petition was amended, the
district court thoroughly
and carefully considered all
eighty-four points of error
raised by Hafdahl. The
district court concluded
that Hafdahl was not
entitled to federal habeas
relief and denied the
petition in December 1999.
This
court granted a COA on
August 23, 2000, to
determine whether Hafdahl's
rights were violated -- at
either the guilt phase of
the trial or at sentencing
-- because of (1) Dr.
Erdmann's allegedly false
testimony or (2) the
admission of evidence
related to a prior
unadjudicated kidnaping
offense. We now affirm the
judgment of the district
court.
II
Hafdahl
contends that the State
knowingly used false
testimony from Dr. Erdmann
and thereby denied him due
process of law, both at the
guilt phase of the trial and
at sentencing.
A
The Due
Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment forbids
the State knowingly to use,
or fail to correct, perjured
testimony. See
Giglio v. United States,
405 U.S. 150, 153, 92 S.Ct.
763, 766, 31 L.Ed.2d 104
(1972); Napue v. Illinois,
360 U.S. 264, 271, 79 S.Ct.
1173, 1178-79, 3 L.Ed.2d
1217 (1959). To prove that
the State has denied him due
process of law by relying on
perjurious testimony,
Hafdahl must prove that (1)
a witness for the State
testified falsely; (2) the
State knew the testimony was
false; and (3) such
testimony was material.
Knox v. Johnson, 224
F.3d 470, 477 (5th Cir.
2000). Whether the
prosecutor knowingly used
false and material testimony
is a mixed question of law
and fact, and we therefore
review the district court's
factual findings for clear
error and the conclusions
drawn from those facts de
novo. Creel v. Johnson,
162 F.3d 385, 391 (5th Cir.
1998).
B
Hafdahl
focuses on ten fairly
specific statements that
Erdmann made at trial.
Erdmann testified, to a
reasonable medical certainty,
that (1) he believed he had
determined the sequence of
shots; (2) the first shot
hit Mitchell's left arm and
passed through to his
abdomen; (3) the damage to
his arm prevented Mitchell
from firing his weapon
(Mitchell was evidently left-handed);
(4) Mitchell's gun was
thrown from his left hand to
the right side of his body;
(5) the second shot was a
non-fatal wound to the
abdomen; (6) both the third
and fourth shots were
mandatorily fatal wounds to
the chest; (7) Hafdahl moved
closer to Mitchell as he
fired; (8) Mitchell slumped
to the ground as the final
shots were fired; (9) the
third and fourth shots left
gunpowder burns (or "stippling"
marks) on Mitchell's face;
and (10) test firings of
Hafdahl's pistol indicated
that the last shot was fired
from a distance of two and a
half feet. Hafdahl contends
that each of these ten
statements is false.
Hafdahl
attempts to prove the
falsity of these statements
by comparing Erdmann's 1986
trial testimony to his 1996
deposition.(2)
According to Hafdahl,
Erdmann admitted in 1996
that he could have testified
only as to a "possibility"
of the sequence of shots;
that there was a 30% to 40%
probability that Mitchell
could have returned fire
after being shot in the
forearm; that as a forensic
pathologist, he could not
form an opinion as to
whether Hafdahl advanced on
Mitchell as he fired or as
to how much time elapsed
between the shots; and that
his opinions as to the
gunpowder marks and distance
were speculative and
unconfirmed.
C
Having
carefully reviewed the
record, however, we cannot
say that Erdmann, in
offering his opinion
testimony, testified falsely.
There are two reasons why
Hafdahl's characterization
of Erdmann's testimony is
not persuasive.
(1)
First, at
the beginning of his 1986
trial testimony, Erdmann
explained the basis of his
opinion testimony. He
testified that he had relied
heavily on interviews with
the investigating officers,
FBI ballistics reports,
crime scene photographs, and
other second-hand sources of
information. It is clear
that, in many instances, his
testimony was that the
autopsy results (such as
entry and exit angles of the
bullets) were consistent
with the officers' theory of
what had happened.
Hafdahl
may be justified in
complaining that Erdmann's
investigation was not
sufficiently independent,
but, as this court has
pointed out, the proper
place to challenge Erdmann's
investigative methods and
the strength of his
conclusions is cross-examination
-- not on collateral review.
See Fuller v.
Johnson, 114 F.3d 491,
496-97 (5th Cir. 1997). When
Hafdahl's attorney cross-examined
Erdmann at trial and asked
about the sequence and
frequency of shots, Erdmann
replied that "the only thing
that I can go by is . . .
gathering information,
obtaining this from the
investigating officers" and
then determining whether
that information is "consistent"
with what was discovered
during the autopsy.
Again in
the 1996 deposition, Erdmann
emphasized that he lacked an
independent investigative
staff and that he had to
base his opinions and
conclusions on information
provided by the
investigating officers.
During the deposition, when
Erdmann admitted that the
sequence of shots may have
been different and that he
could not have formed an
opinion on the time that had
elapsed between shots,
Erdmann was referring only
to what he could have known
through the autopsy. Erdmann
thus agreed that the
evidence he had gathered as
a pathologist was, at least
to some extent, consistent
with Hafdahl's
reconstruction of what
happened during the shooting.
In sum,
Erdmann's 1996 deposition
does indeed point out the
limitations of his
investigation. But the mere
fact that much of Erdmann's
1986 trial testimony was
predicated on conclusions
reached by police
investigators does not make
his opinion testimony false.
We think that Hafdahl has
failed to establish that
either Erdmann or the
prosecutor attempted to
mislead the jury about the
nature of his investigation
or the independence of his
conclusions.
(2)
There is
a second reason why
inconsistencies in Erdmann's
deposition testimony are not
indicative that his trial
testimony can be
characterized fairly as
false. During the 1996
deposition, Erdmann
repeatedly told Hafdahl's
attorney that he was no
longer familiar with the
facts of the case. He had
testified at the trial more
than ten years earlier and
had performed numerous
autopsies (he claimed to
have averaged over 300 per
year) until he retired in
1992. He had read over the
transcript of his trial
testimony the day before his
deposition was taken and did
not see the autopsy photos
and report until the first
day of the deposition. He
relied heavily on what the
attorney represented to him.
In sum,
our reading of the nearly
700-page deposition portrays
a pathologist who was no
longer familiar with the
facts of a case, who was not
cognizant of the substance
of his trial testimony, who
relied on the factual
assertions and hypothetical
situations posed by counsel,
and who sometimes agreed
that Hafdahl's attorney's
theory of the case was
consistent with the autopsy
results. Under these
circumstances, the fact that
Erdmann's medical opinions
in 1996 differed somewhat
from his opinions in 1986 (with
regard to whether the damage
to Mitchell's left arm would
have prevented him from
returning fire, for example)
does not establish false
testimony.
We
therefore conclude that
Hafdahl has failed to
demonstrate that Erdmann's
trial testimony was false by
showing particular
inconsistencies with his
deposition testimony. For
the same reasons discussed
above, we also conclude that
none of the other evidence
cited by Hafdahl suggests
that Erdmann's 1986 trial
testimony was false.
D
On a
closely related point,
Hafdahl argues that the
State's reliance on
Erdmann's false testimony
rendered the sentencing
determination unreliable and
thus constitutes a violation
of the Eighth Amendment's
prohibition on cruel or
unusual punishment. See
Johnson v. Mississippi,
486 U.S. 578, 108 S.Ct.
1981, 100 L.Ed.2d 575
(1988). Because we have
determined that Hafdahl has
failed to show that Erdmann
testified falsely, we find
Hafdahl's Eighth Amendment
claim to be without merit.
III
Hafdahl
also contends that his
constitutional rights were
violated when the State was
allowed to introduce
evidence related to a
kidnaping arrest in 1982.
Because different evidence
was presented during the
guilt phase and the
punishment phase, we
consider the arguments
related to each phase
separately.
A
During
the guilt phase of the trial,
the State sought to
introduce evidence of a
prior unadjudicated,
unindicted kidnaping offense
in order to show that
Hafdahl had a motive for
avoiding arrest and shooting
a police officer. Hafdahl
objected that such testimony
was inadmissible as evidence
of bad character. The state
court then heard testimony
outside the presence of the
jury and concluded that,
under Texas law, certain
portions of this "extraneous
offense" testimony could be
presented to the jury for
the limited purpose of
showing that Hafdahl had
motive and intent to elude
Officer Mitchell.
When the
jury was seated again, the
State called two Texas
police officers: Steven
Craighead from Rockwall and
Harold Rhodes from Grand
Prairie. The officers
testified that they had
arrested Hafdahl in 1982 on
a warrant for aggravated
kidnaping and then released
him pending an investigation
by the FBI. The court did
not allow the officers to
testify as to the details of
the alleged kidnaping.(3)
The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals succinctly explained
the purpose and nature of
the officers' testimony.
The
evidence of [Hafdahl's]
arrest for aggravated
kidnaping was introduced to
show the motive appellant
would have to shoot at the
officer. Because appellant
wanted to avoid apprehension
by State authorities, which
could produce a subsequent
investigation and/or
prosecution of the
aggravating kidnaping
charges, he would more
likely than not shoot at the
officer knowing him to be an
officer.
The
existence of a potential
for further investigation,
along with the potential
that federal or State
aggravated kidnaping charges
could occur, is the reason
the evidence was introduced.
The important factor is
appellant's awareness of
this potential along with
his fear of apprehension.
Hafdahl, 805 S.W.2d at
398 (citations omitted).
Hafdahl
argues that this testimony
violated his constitutional
rights for three reasons.
(1)
First, he
contends that the State
denied him due process of
law by knowingly presenting
false and material testimony
related to the kidnaping
arrest. See Knox,
224 F.3d at 477. Hafdahl
contends that the officers
testified falsely because
(1) the officers and
prosecutor knew that Laneda
Simpson, the alleged victim,
had charged that two men (neither
of whom was Hafdahl)
abducted her from her place
of employment and carried
her across state lines; (2)
outside the presence of the
jury, when the court was
considering the
admissibility of the
kidnaping charges to
establish motive, the
officers suggested to the
court that Hafdahl would
have been indicted on
federal kidnaping charges if
he had been found, even
though they possessed the
FBI's "rap sheet" on Hafdahl
that did not even mention
the Simpson kidnaping arrest;
and (3) outside the presence
of the jury, in an effort to
tie the kidnaping charges to
the motive for the murder,
the officers testified that
state kidnaping charges
might still be brought
against Hafdahl, even though
the officers and prosecutors
presumably knew that the
statute of limitations had
run on the charges.
However,
the first two statements
cannot be fairly
characterized as false.
First, although the alleged
victim stated that two men
abducted her, she also said
that a total of nine people
took her to Colorado and
detained her for several
days. Thus, the statement
implicates Hafdahl even if
it does not specify what
acts he might have committed
in the course of this
detention.
The
officers testified only that
Hafdahl had been arrested
because he was alleged to
have participated in the
kidnaping. The officers did
not testify as to the
substance of the victim's
statement or Hafdahl's
involvement during the guilt
phase of the trial. Second,
as to the FBI's involvement,
Officer Rhodes did not
suggest that he knew what
actions the FBI had taken,
could have taken, or would
take in the future. He
testified only that he
turned the investigation and
files over to the FBI.
Furthermore, on the record
of this case, Officer
Rhodes's suggestion (outside
the presence of the jury)
that state kidnaping charges
could still be filed is
essentially immaterial to
the admissibility of the
kidnaping charges. There is
no indication that the judge,
who understood the legal
principles at issue, would
have ruled differently
without the testimony at
issue.
The
question is not Rhodes's
state of mind -- the
question is Hafdahl's state
of mind, and there is no
indication that he thought
the statute of limitations
had run. As the state judge
explained, the important
factor was whether Hafdahl
might have thought that
charges could have been
filed and that he feared
possible prosecution.
The point
was that there was a basis
for this fear because
Hafdahl knew that he had
been arrested three years
before under a different
name and that the crime had
been investigated by the
FBI. Thus, even if we assume
that both Officer Rhodes and
the prosecutor knew that the
limitations period had run (and
there is no clear evidence
that they did), there is no
reasonable likelihood that
Rhodes's testimony on this
point could have affected
the jury's verdict inasmuch
as it was not material to
the admissibility of the
kidnaping charge. See
Kirkpatrick v. Whitley,
992 F.2d 491, 497 (5th Cir.
1993)(holding that a
conviction will be set aside
only if there is a "'reasonable
likelihood that the false
testimony could have
affected the jury's verdict'")(quoting
United States v. Bagley,
473 U.S. 667, 679 n.9, 105
S.Ct. 3375, 3382, 87 L.Ed.2d
481 (1985)).
(2)
Second,
Hafdahl contends that the
State denied him due process
of law because the State did
not make a showing strong
enough that Hafdahl had
actually committed the
offense of kidnaping to
allow its admission as an
extraneous offense to show
motive for avoiding capture;
Hafdahl argues, in other
words, that the prejudice
greatly outweighed the
probative value of this
evidence. See
Story v. Collins, 920
F.2d 1247, 1254 (5th Cir.
1991). If evidence of an
extraneous offense is
wrongly admitted, however,
habeas corpus relief is
proper only if the error is
of such magnitude that it
resulted in "fundamental
unfairness." Blankenship
v. Estelle, 545 F.2d
510, 516-17 (5th Cir. 1977).
Even if
we assume that the victim's
unsworn statement, standing
alone, does not constitute a
sufficiently strong showing
that Hafdahl committed the
offense of kidnaping,
Hafdahl has not shown any
"fundamental unfairness" in
the guilt phase of the trial
resulting from the
prosecutor's presenting this
testimony. As we have
pointed out above, the state
introduced the kidnaping
testimony for the limited
purpose of showing that the
fear of arrest might have
motivated Hafdahl.
Thus, the
only evidence presented to
the jury during the guilt
phase was the mere fact that
Hafdahl was arrested and
then released. The trial
court did not allow the
officers to recount the
potentially inflammatory
details of Simpson's
allegation during the guilt
phase. Furthermore, the
court allowed Hafdahl to
present rebuttal evidence
that he was not in danger of
being prosecuted for
kidnaping. Under these
circumstances, no
fundamental unfairness
resulted from the admission
of the testimony to show
motive.
(3)
Third,
Hafdahl contends that the
admission of the kidnaping
testimony during the guilt
phase violated his rights
under the Sixth Amendment's
Confrontation Clause because
he was not able to
cross-examine the victim of
the alleged kidnaping. But
Hafdahl incorrectly
characterizes the officers'
testimony about the
kidnaping as hearsay. That
Hafdahl was arrested is not
hearsay: Officer Craighead's
testimony -- that he had
personally taken Hafdahl
into custody -- was not
hearsay because it was drawn
from the witness's personal
knowledge. Cf. Fed.
R. Evid. 801(c). Because the
officers did not testify
about what Simpson (the
alleged victim) had told
them about the crime, there
was no Confrontation Clause
violation at the guilt phase
of the trial.
B
After a
determination of guilt for
capital murder, the jury
then had to decide
punishment. The kidnaping
testimony presents a
different question during
this phase of the trial. The
State called Officer Harold
Rhodes to testify and, after
reminding the jury that he
had testified in the case
several days earlier, Rhodes
testified that Hafdahl had a
bad reputation for being
dangerous and violent.
During
direct examination, neither
Rhodes nor the prosecutor
mentioned the alleged
kidnaping. After the initial
cross-examination and
further examination by both
attorneys, Hafdahl's counsel
began asking about Rhodes's
investigation of the alleged
kidnaping. Rhodes testified
that he had taken Laneda
Simpson's statement and
arrested Hafdahl and several
other men. Hafdahl's
attorney then reminded
Rhodes that Simpson had a
boyfriend in Grand Prairie.
Hafdahl's
attorney implied that
Simpson voluntarily went to
Wyoming with seven men and
two women and then, only
after she had returned to
Texas, had she fabricated
the kidnaping story in order
to placate her boyfriend.
Hafdahl's attorney asked
Rhodes, "[W]hen you got to
investigating, after you
took her statement, . . .
didn't you find out that
when she got back down here
from two weeks in Wyoming,
that she was having trouble
explaining to her boyfriend,
the guy she had been living
with, why it was that all of
a sudden she had
unexpectedly taken off from
a parking lot and gone on a
trip to Wyoming for two
weeks?" Rhodes denied that
his investigation revealed
any lying on the part of the
victim.
The
prosecutor then began
further direct examination.
Until this point in the
sentencing hearing, the jury
had heard no testimony
whatsoever relating to the
facts of the kidnaping
allegation. The jury had
heard only the attorney's
suggestion that the story
was fabricated. To get the
flavor of this testimony, we
reproduce the relevant
sections from the further
direct examination of
Officer Rhodes.
Q: What
did [Simpson] say happened
to her?
A: She
said that she had been
forcibly taken from a
location in Grand Prairie.
Q: By
whom?
A: By the
Defendant. . . . And, two
other people. That she was
forcibly taken out of the
State to Colorado, and later
to Wyoming for two weeks.
And, they returned to the
Dallas/Fort Worth area.
Q: Was
there any violence noted?
A: From
the time that she was taken
from the location in Grand
Prairie, she stated that she
was beaten. She tried to
make an escape from the
subjects.
Q: What
happened when she tried to
make an escape?
A: She
was beaten, gagged, and
thrown in a van.
Q: Did
she tell you anything else
that the Defendant in this
case did to her?
A: She
said that if she yelled,
that her life would be in
danger.
On
further direct examination
and cross-examination,
Officer Rhodes testified
that state charges were
never brought against
Hafdahl, that the Grand
Prairie police turned over
the investigation to the FBI
because Simpson alleged that
she had been transported
across state lines, and that
Rhodes never heard from the
FBI again about the
kidnaping investigation.
Hafdahl
contends that Officer
Rhodes's testimony during
sentencing violated his
constitutional rights for
three reasons.
(1)
First,
Hafdahl argues that he was
denied due process of law
during the sentencing phase
because the State knowingly
introduced false and
material testimony regarding
the kidnaping. See
Knox, 224 F.3d at 477.
Hafdahl
points to one obvious
inconsistency between
Officer Rhodes's testimony
and Laneda Simpson's
statement (upon which Rhodes
presumably based his
testimony). In her statement,
Simpson stated that two men
named "Mike" and "Robert"
grabbed her in a parking lot,
put her in a van, and took
her to Colorado and Wyoming.
Among the seven men and two
women who were traveling
together was "Robert # 2, .
. . AKA Blue Eyes," who was
later determined to be
Hafdahl. (Hafdahl's alias at
the time was "Robert Eugene
Moore.")
It is
undeniable, then, that
Officer Rhodes was incorrect
when he said that three men,
including Hafdahl, were
alleged forcibly to have
taken the victim from her
place of employment.
Assuming that Rhodes
testified falsely by
suggesting that Hafdahl was
the principal wrongdoer,
Hafdahl has not shown how
this inaccurate testimony
had a material effect on the
jury's verdict. See
Kirkpatrick, 992 F.2d
at 497.
The State
presented considerable
evidence, in addition to the
kidnaping testimony, during
the sentencing phase in
order to show Hafdahl's
propensity for violence and
the likelihood of future
dangerousness. First,
several officers testified
as to Hafdahl's bad
reputation for violence.
Second, an officer testified
that he had arrested Hafdahl
in 1980 for carrying a
concealed weapon, but the
charge was dismissed when
Hafdahl could not be found.
Third, an officer testified
that he had arrested Hafdahl
for felony theft charges
involving stolen weapons.
Fourth, an officer testified
that Hafdahl was the "enforcer"
of a large Colorado-based
drug trafficking ring and
was also involved in
trafficking stolen guns.
Fifth, Shawn Terry, one of
Hafdahl's companions,
testified that Hafdahl was
the "overseer" of the drug
trafficking operation and
occasionally sold the drugs
himself. According to Terry,
Hafdahl's primary
responsibility was
collecting debts owed for
drugs, and, for this reason,
Hafdahl carried a 9mm pistol
in his possession "almost
all the time; if it wasn't
on him, it was somewhere
near." Finally, although it
was not alleged that Hafdahl
personally forced Simpson
into the van, Hafdahl was
alleged to have helped
detain her for two weeks --
evidence that is clearly
relevant to the issue of
future dangerousness.
Therefore,
in the light of all the
evidence presented at
sentencing, we cannot say
that the officer's testimony
that Hafdahl allegedly was
one of three men who
actually abducted the victim
had a material effect on the
jury's decision to impose
the death penalty.
(2)
Second,
Hafdahl argues that Officer
Rhodes's false testimony
about the kidnaping
undermines the reliability
of the death sentence in
this case and thus
constitutes a violation of
the Eighth Amendment's
prohibition on cruel or
unusual punishment. See
Johnson, 486 U.S. at
578. This argument assumes,
of course, that the
officer's statements are
false and that the false
testimony had a material
effect on the jury's
decision to impose the death
penalty. The analysis is
essentially the same as in
the Due Process argument
above, and we therefore find
this argument to be without
merit.
(3)
Third,
Hafdahl argues that he was
denied the opportunity to
cross-examine Laneda
Simpson, the alleged
kidnaping victim, and that
his Sixth Amendment right to
confront witnesses against
him was violated. Hafdahl
correctly points out that
Officer Rhodes's testimony
as to the content of
Simpson's unsworn statement
is inadmissible hearsay.
However,
the mere occurrence of an
evidentiary violation is not
sufficient to establish a
Sixth Amendment violation
because, as the Supreme
Court has explained, the
Confrontation Clause and the
hearsay rule are overlapping
but not coextensive. Ohio
v. Roberts, 448 U.S. 56,
62-65, 100 S.Ct. 2531, 65
L.Ed.2d 597 (1980).
Consequently, the admission
of an out-of-court statement
can pass constitutional
scrutiny if the declarant is
unavailable(4)
and the statement is shown
to be reliable. Idaho v.
Wright, 497 U.S. 805,
814-15, 110 S.Ct. 3139, 111
L.Ed.2d 638 (1990).
To prove
that an out-of-court
statement is reliable, the
State must show that it
either falls within a firmly
rooted hearsay exception or
has other such "particularized
guarantees of
trustworthiness" that
adversarial testing would
add little to its
reliability. Id. at
815, 821, 110 S.Ct. 3139.
We may
assume without deciding that
Simpson's unsworn statement
does not meet this standard
of reliability. Nevertheless,
violations of the
Confrontation Clause are
still subject to harmless
error analysis. See
United States v.
Landerman, 109 F.3d
1053, 1064 (5th Cir. 1997)(citing
Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
475 U.S. 673, 106 S.Ct.
1431, 89 L.Ed.2d 674
(1986)).
In this
case, the question is
whether the court's error in
allowing Rhodes to testify
as to the content of
Simpson's statement was
harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt. Id. To
determine whether the error
was harmless, we consider "the
importance of the witness'
testimony in the
prosecution's case, whether
the testimony was cumulative,
the presence or absence of
evidence corroborating or
contradicting the testimony
of the witness on material
points, the extent of cross-examination
otherwise permitted, and of
course, the overall strength
of the prosecution's case."
Id.
The
prosecution made a strong
case for Hafdahl's future
dangerousness during the
sentencing phase. As noted
above, there was persuasive
testimony about Hafdahl's
prior arrests on weapons
charges and his role as the
gun-carrying "enforcer" of a
drug trafficking ring.
Compared
to this testimony, Officer
Rhodes's summary of
Simpson's statement loses
some of its importance in
establishing Hafdahl's
future dangerousness. Indeed,
the prosecution made only
one reference to the Simpson
kidnaping during his
summation. Additionally, we
must consider that it was
Hafdahl's attorney who, on
cross-examination, opened
the door about the details
of the kidnaping when he
implied that Rhodes did not
find Simpson's account of
the kidnaping credible.
To be
sure, there is no other
evidence corroborating
Simpson's account of the
kidnaping except for the
arresting officers'
testimony that Hafdahl was
generally known to have a
bad reputation for violence.
But considering these
foregoing factors,
especially the overall
strength of the
prosecution's case
establishing Hafdahl's
future dangerousness, we
conclude that the alleged
violation of the
Confrontation Clause
constitutes harmless error
beyond a reasonable doubt.
IV
For the
reasons set forth above,
Hafdahl is not entitled to
federal habeas corpus relief.
The district court's
judgment denying habeas
relief to Randal Wayne
Hafdahl is
A F F I R
M E D .
*****
1. Two
points deserve further
comment. First, the evidence
of the prior kidnaping
arrest was not necessary to
prove that Hafdahl intended
to kill Mitchell. The State
offered the kidnaping
testimony for the sole
purpose of providing a
motive for the crime.
Although a motive to commit
a crime is relevant to the
question of intent, these
concepts should not be
confused: "Whereas motive is
the inducement to do some
act, intent is the mental
resolution or determination
to do it." Black's Law
Dictionary 813 (7th ed.
1999).
Second,
the State presented other
evidence of motive beside
the kidnaping arrest. As
noted above, Hafdahl
admitted that, as a
convicted felon, he did not
want to be found in
possession of a weapon. More
relevant, perhaps, is the
testimony of Hafdahl's
companion, Daniel Helgren,
who stated that Hafdahl, in
the days before the murder,
had admitted to recently
jumping bond in Dallas, had
begun to use a new alias
("Jack Douglas Cone"), and
had dyed his hair.
2. To a
much lesser extent, Hafdahl
also relies on Erdmann's
report to a police sergeant,
admissions made by the
State, and affidavits of
other forensic pathologists.
3.
Outside the presence of the
jury, the prosecutor
stipulated that Hafdahl was
never indicted for the
kidnaping charge. Also
outside the presence of the
jury, the officers said that
state kidnaping charges
could still be filed.
4. The
prosecutor explained that
Simpson could not attend
Hafdahl's trial because
complications from her
pregnancy prevented her from
traveling. Hafdahl does not
contest this point.
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