Criminal Injustice Independent Weekly

By BOB BURTMAN

No one’s sur­prised to find drug addicts, thieves and sex offend­ers in crim­i­nal court­rooms. Just not sit­ting in the defense coun­sel’s chairs. But in North Carolina, those fac­ing the death penal­ty have often been rep­re­sent­ed by lawyers with nasty legal trou­bles of their own – includ­ing drug addicts, thieves and sex offenders.

Douglas Osborne was appoint­ed to han­dle the tri­al of cap­i­tal defen­dant Kenneth Neal in 1996. Osborne, a for­mer Rockingham County pros­e­cu­tor, had served a year in prison after his 1990 con­vic­tion on a child pornog­ra­phy charge – a crime that scan­dal­ized the com­mu­ni­ty. Neal got the death penal­ty; lat­er, juror Pam Williams tes­ti­fied in an affi­davit that hav­ing Osborne as his lawyer sealed Neal’s fate. I do not feel that Kenneth Neal could have done any worse than to have Mr. Osborne as his attor­ney,” Williams wrote. As a jury we knew about Mr. Osborne’s pornog­ra­phy offens­es because we talked about them dur­ing delib­er­a­tions.” Last year, the state added anoth­er line to his rap sheet after Osborne neglect­ed to file four years’ worth of state tax returns.

Terry Collins was dis­barred in 1998 after plead­ing guilty to forg­ing birth cer­tifi­cates to help his DWI clients fraud­u­lent­ly obtain dri­vers licens­es, for which he served jail time. Collins rep­re­sent­ed five inmates cur­rent­ly on death row. In the case of Frank Chandler, Collins appar­ent­ly failed to dis­close that he and his co-coun­sel had pre­vi­ous­ly rep­re­sent­ed a key pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness in var­i­ous felony charges (unbe­knownst to Chandler), a con­flict of inter­est that may be grounds for rever­sal. All five inmates claim that Collins did not pro­vide an adequate defense.

David Tamer sur­ren­dered his law license in 2000 for mis­ap­pro­pri­at­ing client funds, includ­ing those of death-row inmate Blanche Taylor Moore. Tamer lat­er plead­ed guilty to felony embez­zle­ment and received a sus­pend­ed sen­tence. The dis­bar­ment fol­lowed a three-year sus­pen­sion levied in 1994 for eth­i­cal vio­la­tions and oth­er mis­con­duct. He also had a his­to­ry of men­tal prob­lems that impaired his abil­i­ty to ser­vice his clients: In the weeks before Tamer was to argue an appeal on behalf of death-row inmate Willie Fisher (exe­cut­ed last year), he was hos­pi­tal­ized for depression.

According to a report just released by the Common Sense Foundation, Life and Death Lottery: Capital Defendants and the Lawyers Who Fail Them,” those cas­es are appalling­ly typ­i­cal. No few­er than 35 inmates cur­rent­ly on death row – one out of every six – were rep­re­sent­ed by lawyers who have been dis­barred, sus­pend­ed or oth­er­wise dis­ci­plined by the state. That list does­n’t include at least four inmates who have already been exe­cut­ed. Michael McDougall, for exam­ple, had the mis­for­tune of hav­ing Jerry Paul appoint­ed to his case. A judge who reviewed McDougall’s appeal found that Paul had act­ed uneth­i­cal­ly or even crim­i­nal­ly” while defend­ing his client.

It also does­n’t include lawyers who have thus far escaped sanc­tions for their behav­ior. Tom Portwood admit­ted to drink­ing half a fifth of rum every evening while rep­re­sent­ing three clients on tri­al for their lives. One week­end while on appoint­ment to defend Nathan Bowie, Portwood reg­is­tered a .43 blood alco­hol con­tent, a near-lethal lev­el, after being test­ed in con­nec­tion with a car crash. Portwood has claimed that his alco­holism did­n’t inter­fere with his per­for­mance, but he was also in the midst of a crum­bling mar­riage and was being pur­sued by the IRS for $100,000 in back tax­es. Serious doubts about his work in all three cas­es have made headlines.

Nor does the list include those who, through no fault of their own, were inca­pable of doing the best job for their clients. Tim Merritt was dying of can­cer dur­ing the tri­al of Bobby Lee Harris and took pre­scrip­tion drugs to ease his severe pain; his co-coun­sel was so alarmed at Merritt’s errat­ic and dam­ag­ing behav­ior that on one occa­sion he asked him, Whose side are you on?”

The courts have occa­sion­al­ly acknowl­edged that crim­i­nal defen­dants are enti­tled to at least the sem­blance of a defense. In North Carolina, at least sev­en cas­es have been over­turned on bad-lawyer claims since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in 1977. In revers­ing the con­vic­tion of Thomas Jack Brown, a Lumberton judge found 36 botch­es by his lawyer, Ertle Chavis. While a thor­ough defense takes hun­dreds of hours to pre­pare, Chavis spent few­er than 40.

But judges have been quite stingy with such rul­ings, part­ly because the bur­den of proof is tough to meet: Defendants must show not only that the lawyer’s work was sub­stan­dard, but that it had a bear­ing on the out­come of the case. Judges in North Carolina also are well aware that a record of over­turn­ing cap­i­tal con­vic­tions does­n’t look very attrac­tive on elec­tion resumés. How else to explain the lack of judi­cial sym­pa­thy for Russell Tucker, whose own attor­ney, David Smith, freely admit­ted sab­o­tag­ing his defense by delib­er­ate­ly miss­ing a fil­ing dead­line because he believed his client should die?

It goes with­out say­ing that all the attor­neys in ques­tion were appoint­ed by judges to rep­re­sent poor defen­dants who could not afford to hire their own. Until recent­ly, court-appoint­ed lawyers were gross­ly under­paid and often inex­pe­ri­enced – David Junior Ward, for exam­ple, was assigned two attor­neys with zero cap­i­tal mur­der tri­als under their belts. Lead coun­sel DeLyle Evans spe­cial­ized in real estate trans­ac­tions and had pre­vi­ous­ly han­dled one mur­der charge that was resolved before tri­al. Evans with­drew from the case because he lacked the abil­i­ty to do the job, but a judge reap­point­ed him, say­ing he could­n’t find any­one else. Ward was sen­tenced to death and his appeals failed in large mea­sure because of the lawyers’ admit­ted lack of legal knowledge.

It also goes with­out say­ing that judges would nev­er accept any­thing less than the best for their own defense. If the stan­dard was, would I allow this per­son to defend a mem­ber of my fam­i­ly, then judges would look at the qual­i­ty of rep­re­sen­ta­tion much dif­fer­ent­ly than they do,” says Bob Hurley, who in his role with the state’s Indigent Defense Services assigns attor­neys to poten­tial death-penalty cases.

In 2000, the state leg­is­la­ture cre­at­ed Indigent Defense Services to fix some of the worst prob­lems with the sys­tem of court appoint­ments. The agency began oper­at­ing last year, and Hurley says the change has already made a dif­fer­ence. The worst lawyers have been weed­ed out, and access to resources has been improved. I think it’s a very impor­tant first step,” he says.

The num­bers back him up. This year, juries have hand­ed down only five death sen­tences. In 2001, the fig­ure was 14, down from 18 the year before. There’s no ques­tion that the qual­i­ty of appoint­ments has improved,” says Hurley.

Still, he says, it’s too ear­ly to say the prob­lem has been fixed. A lack of funds near­ly drove many of the best lawyers from the pro­gram before the leg­is­la­ture added some cash in the wan­ing days of the ses­sion, and bud­getary con­cerns remain. A short­age of qual­i­fied attor­neys plagues cer­tain parts of the state, and the abil­i­ties of the attor­neys on his eli­gi­bil­i­ty list vary great­ly. It’s not a list of the best and bright­est in North Carolina,” he says.

And the repair efforts do noth­ing to help those already on death row who had to take what­ev­er lawyer they were giv­en and were dealt the dead man’s hand. The aston­ish­ing num­ber of death-row inmates who had malfeasant and incom­pe­tent lawyers rais­es seri­ous con­cerns about the legit­i­ma­cy of their con­vic­tions and death sen­tences,” says Hurley. It shows how bro­ken the pre­vi­ous system was.”

So bro­ken that some defen­dants had not one, but two iffy lawyers help shep­herd them to death row. Glen Chapman was assigned both Tom Portwood and anoth­er lawyer with a his­to­ry of alco­hol abuse, Robert Adams. Convicted of neglect­ing to pay his state income tax­es for three years, Adams was also found by the State Bar to have avoid­ed an IRS lien (again for fail­ure to pay tax­es) by fun­nel­ing mon­ey into an account main­tained at Portwood’s office. Since 1991, Adams has been dis­ci­plined six times by the bar.

This is not sim­ply a ques­tion of essen­tial fair­ness, or even whether the defen­dants were guilty or inno­cent of their crimes. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that the con­sti­tu­tion­al right to a lawyer means an effec­tive lawyer, which one might rea­son­ably assume excludes drug addicts and crim­i­nals. Until judges – or the state’s elect­ed offi­cials, who should estab­lish a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions until these and oth­er prob­lems with the death penal­ty can be resolved – acknowl­edge that this is not sim­ply a tech­ni­cal ques­tion, North Carolina’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sys­tem stands as a cyn­i­cal exam­ple of crim­i­nal injus­tice at its worst.