Chicago Tribune

By STEVE MILLS, KEN ARMSTRONG and DOUGLAS HOLT
Tribune Staff Writers

First of two parts.

AUSTIN, Texas — Under Gov. George W. Bush, Texas has exe­cut­ed dozens of Death Row inmates whose cas­es were com­pro­mised by unre­li­able evi­dence, dis­barred or sus­pend­ed defense attor­neys, mea­ger defense efforts dur­ing sen­tenc­ing and dubi­ous psy­chi­atric tes­ti­mo­ny, a Chicago Tribune inves­ti­ga­tion has found.

While cam­paign­ing for pres­i­dent, Bush has expressed con­fi­dence in the fair­ness and accu­ra­cy of the death penal­ty sys­tem in Texas, the nation’s busiest exe­cu­tion­er. He has said he sees no rea­son for Texas to fol­low Illinois’ lead by declar­ing a mora­to­ri­um on executions.

But an inves­ti­ga­tion of all 131 exe­cu­tions dur­ing Bush’s tenure found that the prob­lems plagu­ing Illinois are equal­ly pro­nounced in Texas and that addi­tion­al flaws under­mine the state’s admin­is­tra­tion of soci­ety’s ultimate punishment.

While Texas’ death penal­ty sys­tem has come under increas­ing scruti­ny since Bush announced his can­di­da­cy, the Tribune inves­ti­ga­tion is the first com­pre­hen­sive exam­i­na­tion of every exe­cu­tion dur­ing his admin­is­tra­tion. The Tribune exam­ined tri­al tran­scripts, legal briefs, appel­late rul­ings and lawyer dis­ci­pli­nary records, and it inter­viewed dozens of wit­ness­es, lawyers and judges.

The inves­ti­ga­tion found that:

With their clien­t’s life at stake, defense attor­neys in 40 cas­es pre­sent­ed no evi­dence what­so­ev­er or only one wit­ness dur­ing the tri­al’s sentencing phase.

In at least 29 cas­es, the pros­e­cu­tion pre­sent­ed dam­ag­ing tes­ti­mo­ny from a psy­chi­a­trist who, based upon a hypo­thet­i­cal ques­tion describ­ing the defen­dan­t’s past, pre­dict­ed the defen­dant would com­mit future vio­lence. In most of these cas­es, the psy­chi­a­trist offered this opin­ion with­out ever exam­in­ing the defen­dant. Although this kind of tes­ti­mo­ny is some­times used in oth­er states, the American Psychiatric Association has con­demned it as uneth­i­cal and untrustworthy.

While cap­i­tal cas­es make the great­est demands on defense attor­neys, the lawyers in these cas­es do not always rep­re­sent the legal com­mu­ni­ty’s best. In 43 cas­es, or one-third, a defen­dant was r rep­re­sent­ed at tri­al or on ini­tial appeal by an attor­ney who had been or was lat­er dis­barred, sus­pend­ed or oth­er­wise sanc­tioned. Though most were pun­ished after they han­dled these cas­es, their dis­ci­pli­nary records raise ques­tions about their suit­abil­i­ty for such a complex job.

In at least 23 cas­es, the pros­e­cu­tion’s evi­dence at tri­al or sen­tenc­ing includ­ed a jail­house infor­mant — a form of tes­ti­mo­ny so unre­li­able that some states warn jurors to view it with skep­ti­cism. The preva­lent use of jail­house infor­mants in cap­i­tal cas­es was one of the cen­tral prob­lems Gov. George Ryan cit­ed when he declared the mora­to­ri­um in Illinois.

In at least 23 cas­es, the pros­e­cu­tion pre­sent­ed a visu­al com­par­i­son of hairs, a kind of evi­dence so inex­act that it is restrict­ed or barred in some jurisdictions.

In many of these 131 cas­es, jus­tice has been shaped by wit­ness­es, experts and lawyers of questionable merit.

They include a foren­sic sci­en­tist who was tem­porar­i­ly released from a psy­chi­atric ward to pro­vide incrim­i­nat­ing tes­ti­mo­ny in a cap­i­tal case; a pathol­o­gist who has admit­ted fak­ing autop­sies; a psy­chi­a­trist, nick­named Dr. Death,” who was expelled from the American Psychiatric Association; a judge on the state’s high­est crim­i­nal court who has been rep­ri­mand­ed for lying about his back­ground; and a defense attor­ney infa­mous for sleep­ing during trials.

Yet all 131 of these cas­es cleared every hur­dle designed to pre­vent flawed cas­es from pro­ceed­ing to exe­cu­tion — from the tri­al court through appeals to the governor.

Since rein­stat­ing the death penal­ty in 1976, Texas has exe­cut­ed 218 men and women, far more than any oth­er state and about a third of the coun­try’s total. Many of the con­demned were clear­ly guilty and even admit­ted their crimes, apol­o­giz­ing in final state­ments short­ly before they were executed.

At the same time, sev­en con­demned inmates have been exon­er­at­ed in Texas, and ques­tions of inno­cence linger in some cas­es where inmates have been exe­cut­ed or still sit on Death Row.

As gov­er­nor, Bush has the final say on whether a death sen­tence is car­ried out, even though most cas­es were tried long before he took office in 1995. By his own account, Bush is loath to sec­ond-guess jury ver­dicts, and he almost always defers to review­ing courts to set­tle whether the tri­al was fair.

In indi­vid­ual cas­es, he can grant clemen­cy — life in prison — upon the rec­om­men­da­tion of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles or grant a one-time, 30-day reprieve. Bush has exer­cised each pow­er once. He also can order an investigation.

Bush declined to be inter­viewed for this arti­cle. His crim­i­nal jus­tice pol­i­cy direc­tor, Johnny Sutton, said the gov­er­nor views his role as that of a safe­ty valve.”

Sutton said Bush care­ful­ly reviews each case, weigh­ing two ques­tions he con­sid­ers crit­i­cal: Is there any doubt about guilt? And, have courts reviewed all the legal issues in the case?

We have a sys­tem in place that is very care­ful and that gives years and years of super due process to make sure that no inno­cent defen­dants are exe­cut­ed and that the defen­dant received a fair tri­al,” Sutton said. We think we have a good crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem in Texas. It’s not per­fect, but it’s one of the best around.”

In 1995, Bush signed a bill designed to speed the pace of exe­cu­tions. He lat­er opposed a leg­isla­tive pro­pos­al to ban the exe­cu­tion of men­tal­ly retard­ed defen­dants, say­ing he believes that deci­sion should be left to juries. The mea­sure ulti­mate­ly died. Bush also vetoed a mea­sure that leg­is­la­tors called a mod­est effort to improve legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion for the indigent.

After a Tribune inves­ti­ga­tion that exposed flaws in the state’s cap­i­tal sys­tem, Illinois Gov. Ryan in January imposed the nation’s first mora­to­ri­um. The gov­er­nors of Indiana and Maryland have since ordered stud­ies of their death penal­ty sys­tems. Measures have also been pro­posed in Congress to reform or sus­pend the fed­er­al death penalty.

Clemency denied
With cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment emerg­ing as a major nation­al issue, it like­ly will become part of the pres­i­den­tial cam­paign. The pre­sump­tive Democratic nom­i­nee, Vice President Al Gore, also sup­ports the death penal­ty, but he has nev­er held an office where he would autho­rize an exe­cu­tion or grant clemency.

The case of David Wayne Stoker, exe­cut­ed June 16, 1997, illus­trates many of the prob­lems in Texas’ death penalty system.

The star wit­ness was paid by a crime-stop­per pro­gram and had drug charges against him dropped. The dis­trict attor­ney’s inves­ti­ga­tor and the police gave false tes­ti­mo­ny. Stoker’s lead attor­ney sur­ren­dered his law license less than two years after Stoker’s tri­al and plead­ed guilty to crim­i­nal charges. Stoker’s oth­er court-appoint­ed attor­ney had been a lawyer less than a year.

Stoker’s case was so trou­bling for Thomas Moss, a Bush appointee to the Board of Pardons and Paroles, that he vot­ed to grant Stoker clemen­cy — one of only two times he has favored com­mut­ing a death sen­tence. In a let­ter to one of Stoker’s sis­ters, Moss said he believed there was the pos­si­bil­i­ty that [Stoker] was innocent.”

The board usu­al­ly denies clemen­cy requests without dissent.

Stoker, a car­pen­ter and handy­man, was con­vict­ed and con­demned for the 1986 mur­der of a con­ve­nience store clerk in Hale Center, a small, dusty town just north of Lubbock. The gun­man shot the clerk three times and stole $96.

Five months lat­er, Carey Todd, a man pros­e­cu­tors described lat­er as a low-life scum drug deal­er,” went to police and impli­cat­ed Stoker. He also gave police the mur­der weapon. One month lat­er, author­i­ties arrest­ed Stoker, who had an assault con­vic­tion and, accord­ing to his own lawyer, was involved in drugs.

To defend Stoker’s life, a dis­trict court judge appoint­ed Ronald Felty and Gary A. Taylor.

Felty, the lead lawyer and a for­mer pros­e­cu­tor, lat­er gave up his law license in the face of dis­ci­pli­nary action. Felty forged the sig­na­tures of two clients on a set­tle­ment check, then pock­et­ed the mon­ey, records show. He also plead­ed guilty to felony charges for forg­ing a judge’s sig­na­ture on a court order and fal­si­fy­ing a gov­ern­ment doc­u­ment. He was sen­tenced to 5 years of community service.

Taylor had been a lawyer only 11 months when Stoker stood tri­al in October 1987.

Stoker’s lawyers alleged that although the jury did not know it, Todd had ample motive to lie.

Under ques­tion­ing by the pros­e­cu­tor, Todd said he received noth­ing for his tes­ti­mo­ny. But, accord­ing to court records, Todd was fac­ing drug and weapons charges in near­by Potter County. On the day he tes­ti­fied, those charges were dropped. Moreover, he received a $1,000 crime-stop­pers reward passed on to him by the Hale County dis­trict attorney’s office.

Stoker’s appel­late attor­neys found doc­u­ments that, they say, indi­cate the charges were dropped against Todd in exchange for his tes­ti­mo­ny. Those doc­u­ments include a tele­phone mes­sage show­ing that Hale County District Atty. Terry McEachern called a Potter County pros­e­cu­tor regard­ing Todd’s case. The oth­er pros­e­cu­tor not­ed in his court file, Dismissed: this defen­dant helped Terry McEachern D.A. solve a murder case.”

Hale Center’s police chief, Richard Cordell, tes­ti­fied there was no local crime-stop­pers’ group but was forced to acknowl­edge on the wit­ness stand that he was, in fact, one of the group’s founders.

Riley Rogers, an inves­ti­ga­tor for the dis­trict attor­ney’s office, took the stand and denied any knowl­edge of the $1,000 pay­ment. The appeals team lat­er uncov­ered bank records that linked the $1,000 pay­ment to him.

In a recent inter­view, McEachern denied that Todd’s drug charges were dropped in exchange for his tes­ti­mo­ny, but he acknowl­edged Todd received reward mon­ey with the help of his office.

Yes, the record indi­cates that that hap­pened,” McEachern said. Is that of sub­stan­tial impor­tance? I don’t know whether I wore white socks or blue socks on that day, and I real­ly don’t think it matters.”

Todd tes­ti­fied that Stoker had giv­en him the mur­der weapon fol­low­ing the shoot­ing. Stoker nev­er dis­put­ed he had the gun at one point; he said he got it from Todd, who asked him to repair it. Stoker said he then returned the gun.

Two oth­er pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness­es, Ronnie Thompson and his wife, Debra, tes­ti­fied that Stoker bragged about the murder.

Ronnie Thompson, who works cot­ton and corn fields in Hale County, has main­tained for years his state­ment to police and his tes­ti­mo­ny were false — the result of pres­sure from his wife, who had become roman­ti­cal­ly involved with Todd and was angry at Stoker.

I told McEachern I did­n’t mean to sign it,” Thompson said of the police state­ment. He said, It’s too late. You signed it.“ ‘

McEachern denies pres­sur­ing Thompson to testify untruthfully.

Debra Thompson stuck by her tes­ti­mo­ny in a brief inter­view, while Todd, who works as a labor­er for an irri­ga­tion com­pa­ny, declined to comment.

Prosecutors claimed a shell cas­ing found in Stoker’s car also linked him to the mur­der, but Stoker did­n’t own the car when the crime occurred. He bought it months lat­er, accord­ing to records unearthed by his appellate attorney.

During sen­tenc­ing, McEachern called Dr. James P. Grigson, the psy­chi­a­trist nick­named Dr. Death.” Although Grigson nev­er exam­ined Stoker, he tes­ti­fied Stoker was a sociopath who would absolute­ly” be violent again.

Grigson was one of the state’s most feared wit­ness­es, but Felty assigned the inex­pe­ri­enced Taylor to cross-exam­ine him. With Stoker’s life in the bal­ance, Felty put on only one wit­ness at sen­tenc­ing: Stoker’s moth­er. She tes­ti­fied briefly about the most super­fi­cial aspects of the Stoker family.

Felty, who works as a super­vi­sor at Home Depot, defend­ed his work. When we went to tri­al, we were a hell of a lot bet­ter pre­pared than the D.A.‘s office,” Felty said.

McEachern said he had no doubt he pros­e­cut­ed the right man. Twelve jurors believed [the wit­ness­es] were cred­i­ble and reli­able,” he said.

Sutton, Bush’s crim­i­nal jus­tice aide, said the courts had an oppor­tu­ni­ty to review all these issues on appeal and found they did not mer­it a new tri­al. He described the evi­dence against Stoker as very strong” but not overwhelming.

In recent inter­views jurors said that had they known of the prob­lems with the Stoker case, they might have reached a different verdict.

I don’t know that we would have believed every­thing,” said juror Myron Grisham. Knowing [Todd] was paid or he got a deal, I would have had a hard­er time believ­ing his testimony.”

Said Wanda Carter: If we had known some of these things, I’m sure it would have weighed on us.”

Police Chief Cordell acknowl­edged there was no direct tie” between Stoker and the crime.

I was real­ly sur­prised we did what we did with the amount of evi­dence we had,” he said.

Attorneys under a cloud
The ros­ter of attor­neys who have defend­ed the 131 men and women exe­cut­ed under Bush includes con­vict­ed felons, dis­barred and sus­pend­ed lawyers, and attor­neys who were inex­pe­ri­enced or whose work was inept, accord­ing to the Tribune’s investigation.

At least 43 of those 131 defen­dants were rep­re­sent­ed at tri­al or on their ini­tial appeal by a lawyer who had been or was lat­er pub­licly sanc­tioned for mis­con­duct by the State Bar of Texas. Trial and the ini­tial — or direct — appeal are the two stages of a crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ing where dis­trict court judges are called upon to appoint coun­sel for indigent defendants.

In 34 of those 43 cas­es, the sanc­tioned attor­ney was dis­barred, sus­pend­ed or giv­en what is called a pro­bat­ed sus­pen­sion.” A pro­bat­ed sus­pen­sion allows the lawyer to con­tin­ue prac­tic­ing if cer­tain require­ments are met — for exam­ple, seek­ing drug treat­ment or pay­ing resti­tu­tion to vic­tim­ized clients. In the oth­er nine cas­es the attor­ney was reprimanded.

The mis­con­duct includ­ed lying to clients and judges, accept­ing mon­ey to pur­sue a case and then ignor­ing it, repeat­ed­ly miss­ing fil­ing dead­lines, and attempt­ing to fix a criminal proceeding.

Although most of these attor­neys were dis­ci­plined after han­dling the death penal­ty case in ques­tion, at least sev­en had been sanc­tioned before try­ing the case or han­dling the appeal.

Though hav­ing a dis­ci­pli­nary record does not auto­mat­i­cal­ly mean an attor­ney han­dled every case poor­ly, it rais­es ques­tions about an attor­ney’s skills or integrity.

Without a vig­or­ous defense, cer­tain­ty when apply­ing the death penal­ty is all but impos­si­ble. That’s why Illinois’ nascent reform efforts have focused on min­i­mum stan­dards for defense attor­neys — stan­dards sim­i­lar to those already adopt­ed by at least a dozen oth­er states for death penalty representation.

Most of the sanc­tioned attor­neys in Texas were appoint­ed by local judges to rep­re­sent defen­dants too poor to hire their own lawyer. Last year, Bush vetoed a bill that would have allowed coun­ties to take that pow­er away from elect­ed judges, who have been crit­i­cized by leg­is­la­tors for appoint­ing friends, cam­paign con­trib­u­tors and attor­neys who rush cas­es to verdict.

The bil­l’s intent, accord­ing to its spon­sor, was to cre­ate a sys­tem where appoint­ments would be made by a pan­el moti­vat­ed more by the qual­i­ty of defense than the speed of tri­als or cronyism.

Under the bill, which passed the Texas leg­is­la­ture unan­i­mous­ly, coun­ties would have been allowed to trans­fer appoint­ment pow­er to an author­i­ty cre­at­ed by coun­ty com­mis­sion­ers. The bill also would have allowed rur­al coun­ties to band togeth­er and estab­lish region­al pub­lic defend­ers’ offices with attor­neys who spe­cial­ize in crim­i­nal defense. Few coun­ties in Texas cur­rent­ly have a pub­lic defender’s office.

Under lob­by­ing from the judges whose pow­er was being threat­ened, Bush vetoed the bill, say­ing judges are bet­ter able to assess the qual­i­ty of legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion.” Sutton, Bush’s aide, con­tend­ed the bill would not have applied to capital cases.

Texas Senate President Rodney Ellis, a Houston Democrat who spon­sored the bill, said it was, indeed, intend­ed to apply to the death penal­ty as well as oth­er criminal cases.

Ellis, a sup­port­er of the death penal­ty, has autho­rized three exe­cu­tions when Bush was out of state. He said the num­ber of dis­ci­plined attor­neys who han­dled death penal­ty cas­es rein­forces the need for reform.

That says the lawyers have not been the crown jew­els of the legal pro­fes­sion,” he said. That kind of sta­tis­tic should embar­rass every right-thinking Texan.”

But Sutton said a dis­ci­pli­nary record does­n’t auto­mat­i­cal­ly mean a defense attor­ney is incapable.

Lawyers such as Jose Luis Pena epit­o­mize the role that poor rep­re­sen­ta­tion has played in the state’s death penalty cases.

Although an attor­ney for only 17 months, Pena was appoint­ed by Judge Darrell Hester in 1985 to defend Davis Losada, accused of rap­ing and mur­der­ing a 15-year-old San Benito girl.

Pena lat­er admit­ted that his work suf­fered from a con­flict of inter­est because he had briefly rep­re­sent­ed the key wit­ness against Losada. That wit­ness’ tes­ti­mo­ny was cru­cial to the pros­e­cu­tion’s case, but Pena asked him only three ques­tions on cross-exam­i­na­tion — and even then, it was the same ques­tion asked three times. Pena said in an affi­davit that he lim­it­ed his ques­tion­ing to avoid delv­ing into areas he and the wit­ness had dis­cussed while attor­ney and client.

Losada was found guilty, and when it came time to plead for his clien­t’s life, Pena deliv­ered a dis­joint­ed and brief argument.

Ladies and gen­tle­men,” Pena began, yes­ter­day when I was talk­ing to you all the lights went out. I don’t know. Maybe that was a mes­sage. Today it rained. Maybe that was a mes­sage. Maybe the rain drops are the key issues, but that’s what you have to decide today.”

Those ini­tial remarks typ­i­fied his argu­ment, which ram­bled and failed to mount a per­sua­sive case for his client.

Pena added lat­er: The sys­tem. Justice. I don’t know. But that’s what y’all are going to do.”

Losada was sen­tenced to death in 1985 and exe­cut­ed in 1997.

Three years before Losada’s exe­cu­tion, Pena was dis­barred for pock­et­ing mon­ey that belonged to clients, dis­ci­pli­nary records show.

I think the judge knew I would take the case and maybe dis­pose of it quick­ly,” Pena said recent­ly. I think he thought per­haps I would roll over and play dead.”

Hester said he appoint­ed Pena because he had han­dled oth­er cas­es in his court­room and per­formed com­pe­tent­ly. He said there were few qualified attorneys.

You des­per­ate­ly look for suf­fi­cient­ly able peo­ple for these cas­es,” he said. I think he did a quite credible job.”

Pena is one of eight defense attor­neys involved in the 131 cas­es who were later disbarred.

Three court-appoint­ed attor­neys were lat­er con­vict­ed of felonies. Stoker’s attor­ney, Felty, is one. Another was impris­oned for sex­u­al­ly assault­ing two teenage girls. The third, who became a pros­e­cu­tor, was con­vict­ed in con­nec­tion with an extortion plot.

Some attor­neys in the 131 cas­es have lengthy dis­ci­pli­nary records. One was sanc­tioned eight times, two oth­ers sev­en times and one six times, records show.

Ronald Mock, who has been dis­ci­plined five times, rep­re­sent­ed three defen­dants at tri­al who have been exe­cut­ed under Bush.

Mock and anoth­er attor­ney, Walter Prentice, have each served jail time after being held in con­tempt for mis­han­dling crim­i­nal cas­es. Like Mock, Prentice has rep­re­sent­ed three defen­dants exe­cut­ed under Bush. In each case, Prentice was appoint­ed to han­dle the defen­dan­t’s direct appeal.

One of the most noto­ri­ous crim­i­nal attor­neys in Texas nev­er was sanctioned.

Joe F. Cannon, a Houston attor­ney who died two years ago, was infa­mous for sleep­ing dur­ing tri­als and speed­ing through cas­es to please judges with heavy back­logs, accord­ing to affi­davits filed by oth­er attor­neys. Cannon was the court-appoint­ed attor­ney for three men exe­cut­ed under Bush.

In Willie Williams’ case, Cannon’s appoint­ed co-coun­sel at tri­al was Mock. Among oth­er laps­es not­ed by fed­er­al courts, Cannon and Mock nev­er checked the full writ­ten state­ment of an eye­wit­ness whose tes­ti­mo­ny could have been help­ful to the defense.

After Williams was sen­tenced to death, Cannon and a sec­ond attor­ney — who would lat­er be diag­nosed as men­tal­ly ill and sus­pend­ed in Virginia — were appoint­ed to han­dle William’s direct appeal. They filed a three-page brief in which they said they had reviewed the tri­al and con­clud­ed there were no issues worth argu­ing, essen­tial­ly rais­ing a white flag.

Mock has been harsh­ly crit­i­cized by oth­er attor­neys on appeal. A spe­cial inves­ti­ga­tor appoint­ed by a judge con­clud­ed that Mock’s work was so poor in one death penal­ty case that it con­tributed to a break­down in the adver­sar­i­al sys­tem of justice.”

I know I have rep­re­sent­ed these folks to the best of my abil­i­ty,” Mock said recent­ly. I’m a good lawyer. It ain’t brag­ging if you can do it.”

He tried 19 cap­i­tal cas­es, Mock said, and in 16 the defen­dant was sen­tenced to death. He said the state’s resources over­whelmed his own. You real­ly had no chance,” he said.

One Mock client, Gary Graham, is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed lat­er this month in a case where Mock has been crit­i­cized for doing little work.

In 22 of the cas­es where a defen­dant has been exe­cut­ed under Bush, the defense pre­sent­ed no wit­ness­es dur­ing sen­tenc­ing, court records show. In 18 oth­ers, the defense pre­sent­ed only one wit­ness. One defense attor­ney who put on no case what­so­ev­er lat­er tes­ti­fied that he did­n’t know he was allowed to present witnesses.

Many defense attor­neys did not present evi­dence of a defen­dan­t’s brain dam­age, low IQ or child­hood abuse — the kinds of fac­tors that Illinois and many oth­er states con­sid­er mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors to be used in pleas for mercy.

Texas long employed a sen­tenc­ing scheme that in effect turned such fac­tors against defen­dants. Evidence of brain dam­age, a his­to­ry of abuse or a defen­dan­t’s youth could be used by pros­e­cu­tors to argue that a defen­dant would be more like­ly to com­mit future vio­lence — one of the key fac­tors jurors con­sid­ered in decid­ing on the death penalty.

But respond­ing to a U.S. Supreme Court deci­sion, Texas changed its sen­tenc­ing rules in 1991, ask­ing jurors to take into account any evi­dence that might reduce the defen­dan­t’s moral blameworthiness.”

Records show that of the 131 inmates exe­cut­ed under Bush, 115 were sen­tenced before the new law took effect, mean­ing they were con­demned at tri­als where jurors were restrict­ed in con­sid­er­ing a defen­dan­t’s back­ground as cause for mercy.

Terry Washington was exe­cut­ed in 1997. His attor­neys nev­er pre­sent­ed evi­dence to the jury show­ing Washington had been born with fetal alco­hol syn­drome and was brain-dam­aged and men­tal­ly retard­ed. He could­n’t count or tell time, and was described as hav­ing the men­tal capac­i­ty of a 7‑year-old.

Dr. Death’ tes­ti­fies
In the annals of the death penal­ty in Texas, few fig­ures have proved as con­tro­ver­sial as James Grigson, a Dallas psy­chi­a­trist who came to be known among defense attor­neys and the media as Dr. Death.”

Grigson was rep­ri­mand­ed twice in the ear­ly 1980s by the American Psychiatric Association, then expelled from the group in 1995 because it found his tes­ti­mo­ny uneth­i­cal and untrust­wor­thy. In his hey­day from the mid-1970s through the late 1980s, Grigson helped send scores of peo­ple to Texas’ Death Row.

Grigson repeat­ed­ly claimed that he could pre­dict that defen­dants would be vio­lent again — even though in many of those cas­es Grigson nev­er even exam­ined the defen­dants. Instead, he respond­ed to hypo­thet­i­cals posed by pros­e­cu­tors in which they described a defen­dan­t’s criminal history.

This type of psy­chi­atric tes­ti­mo­ny played a crit­i­cal role in the cas­es of at least 29 defen­dants exe­cut­ed in Texas since Bush became gov­er­nor. Grigson tes­ti­fied in 16 of those cases.

Grigson said recent­ly that over his career he has tes­ti­fied in 166 cap­i­tal cas­es in Texas, all but nine for the prosecution.

With his folksy charm, Grigson made things easy for juries. He mea­sured defen­dants on a 1‑to-10 scale, with 10 rep­re­sent­ing the worst kind of sociopath. He placed many there — and some past that point, up to 12, 13, even 14.

On ques­tions of future dan­ger­ous­ness, Grigson also offered guar­an­tees. He tes­ti­fied that Bernard Amos most cer­tain­ly” would be vio­lent in the future, though he did not examine him.

James Clayton was absolute­ly cer­tain” to be a repeat offend­er, Grigson told a jury. Asked by a pros­e­cu­tor if William Little would be vio­lent in the future, Grigson left no room for doubt. It’s an absolute,” he tes­ti­fied. It’s not 99.5 or 99.8. It’s absolute­ly 100 per­cent sure.” Grigson had­n’t exam­ined Clayton or Little, either.

Some jurors say Grigson’s tes­ti­mo­ny had a sig­nif­i­cant impact. You could­n’t help but lis­ten to what he was say­ing. [He’s] a doc­tor. He had a lot of influ­ence on what we decid­ed,” said Myron Grisham, one of the jurors in Stoker’s case.

Another psy­chi­a­trist, E. Clay Griffith, often tes­ti­fied along the same lines as Grigson — mak­ing pre­dic­tions with­out exam­i­na­tions. Danny Lee Barber was a 10 plus” on a scale of 1 to 10. Griffith tes­ti­fied that James Fearance would be at the high­est num­ber, how­ev­er you’re going to judge it.” David Wayne Spence, Griffith tes­ti­fied, was as severe, in my opin­ion, as one can get.”

Such bold pre­dic­tions some­times mis­fired. Grigson, who had tes­ti­fied dur­ing the pun­ish­ment phase of Randall Adams’ 1977 tri­al, described Adams as a severe sociopath.” Adams had no pri­or crim­i­nal record and even­tu­al­ly was freed from Death Row, thanks in large part to the doc­u­men­tary, The Thin Blue Line.”

Grigson has made a career of tes­ti­fy­ing in crim­i­nal cas­es. He charges $150 an hour, and in the 1980s he was in such demand from pros­e­cu­tors that he usu­al­ly earned more than $150,000 a year, accord­ing to court records.

The con­tro­ver­sy sur­round­ing Grigson made him less attrac­tive to pros­e­cu­tors. He now only tes­ti­fies in one or two cap­i­tal cas­es a year, although he remains busy with oth­er court cases.

In an inter­view, he defend­ed his work. I feel like I real­ly have helped the image of psy­chi­a­try rather than hurt it,” Grigson, 68, said. I’ve real­ly brought psy­chi­a­try out of the clouds.”

Although the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled this kind of psy­chi­atric tes­ti­mo­ny admis­si­ble, it has been repeat­ed­ly crit­i­cized by other courts.

Just last month, Judge Emilio Garza of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit sharply crit­i­cized the use of hypo­thet­i­cal psy­chi­a­try in a Texas case.

[W]hat sep­a­rates the exe­cu­tion­er from the mur­der­er is the legal process by which the state ascer­tains and con­demns those guilty of heinous crimes,” Garza wrote. If that process is flawed because it allows evi­dence with­out any sci­en­tif­ic valid­i­ty to push the jury toward con­demn­ing the a ccused, the legit­i­ma­cy of our legal process is threatened.”

Unreliable evi­dence
Nationally, tes­ti­mo­ny from jail­house infor­mants — inmates who pro­vide incrim­i­nat­ing tes­ti­mo­ny about oth­er inmates, often in exchange for spe­cial treat­ment — has con­tributed fre­quent­ly to the con­vic­tion of defen­dants who were later cleared.

Such tes­ti­mo­ny played a role dur­ing the guilt or sen­tenc­ing phase of at least 23 cas­es in which a defen­dant was exe­cut­ed under Bush.

Seven jail­house infor­mants tes­ti­fied against David Wayne Spence at his 1984 tri­al for his alleged role in a triple slay­ing in Lake Waco. The cred­i­bil­i­ty of all sev­en infor­mants, or snitch­es, was suspect.

One tes­ti­fied Spence admit­ted the mur­ders dur­ing a jail­house con­ver­sa­tion, though Spence was not locked up at the time he allegedly confessed.

Several lat­er con­tend­ed that inves­ti­ga­tors fed them details of the crime, showed them crime-scene and autop­sy pho­tos, and the state­ments of other witnesses.

Court records show that they also claimed to have received spe­cial priv­i­leges, from unlim­it­ed cig­a­rettes to unsu­per­vised vis­its with wives or girl­friends. Moreover, some got what jail­house infor­mants usu­al­ly want most — rec­om­men­da­tions for leniency.

Several lat­er recant­ed, adding fur­ther ques­tions to a case that already had troubling flaws.

Other sus­pects had impli­cat­ed them­selves by brag­ging to oth­er peo­ple about the mur­ders, although defense attor­neys were not giv­en that evi­dence. Physical evi­dence found at the crime scene failed to impli­cate Spence. Even top police offi­cials on the case said they doubt­ed Spence was guilty.

Still, he was exe­cut­ed in April 1997.

Despite its unre­li­able his­to­ry, anoth­er form of evi­dence, visu­al hair com­par­isons, was used by pros­e­cu­tors in at least 23 cas­es where a defen­dant has been exe­cut­ed under Bush, court records show.

A recent study exam­ined 62 con­vic­tions nation­al­ly where a con­vict­ed defen­dant was cleared by DNA and found that in 18 pros­e­cu­tors had used hair analy­sis to help win the original conviction.

In Texas, one of the most fre­quent­ly used experts in hair cas­es has been Charles Linch. In cas­es where a defen­dant has been exe­cut­ed under Bush, pros­e­cu­tors used Linch’s hair com­par­i­son results twice. In a third instance, Linch tes­ti­fied about oth­er forensic evidence.

The Dallas Morning News report­ed last month that Linch had been com­mit­ted in 1994 to a psy­chi­atric ward due to con­cerns about his depres­sion and drink­ing. Linch was con­sid­ered a dan­ger to him­self or oth­ers, but he was tem­porar­i­ly released to pro­vide incrim­i­nat­ing hair-analy­sis tes­ti­mo­ny against Kenneth McDuff, who was exe­cut­ed in 1998.

The pros­e­cu­tion did not dis­close Linch’s sta­tus to the defense, even though Linch’s res­i­dence in a psy­chi­atric ward might have been used to chal­lenge his credibility.

Linch, who now works in a crime lab in Virginia, said in an inter­view that his stay in a psy­chi­atric ward does not under­mine his trust­wor­thi­ness as a foren­sic exam­in­er. He said he was clin­i­cal­ly depressed. So I took a break,” he said. I think it’s a lot more egre­gious when peo­ple don’t know when to take a break.”

Autopsy evi­dence also has proved prob­lem­at­ic in Texas, thanks to a pathol­o­gist who worked through­out West Texas.

Dr. Ralph Erdmann, who fre­quent­ly tes­ti­fied in cap­i­tal cas­es, plead­ed no con­test in 1994 to sev­en felonies tied to fal­si­fied evi­dence and botched autop­sies, and sur­ren­dered his med­ical license. He once claimed to have exam­ined organs that had been removed in surgery years before the vic­tim’s death. He also claimed to have exam­ined a wom­an’s brain — but there was no inci­sion in her head.

A spe­cial inves­ti­ga­tor appoint­ed to exam­ine the alle­ga­tions against Erdmann con­clud­ed that if the pros­e­cu­tion the­o­ry was that death was caused by a Martian death ray, then that was what Dr. Erdmann reported.”

Erdmann tes­ti­fied in six cas­es where defen­dants have been exe­cut­ed under Bush.

Two exe­cu­tions halt­ed
Since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in 1976, Texas gov­er­nors — both Republican and Democratic — have been reluc­tant to halt or suspend executions.

Bush has been no dif­fer­ent. He has pro­vid­ed relief twice to Death Row inmates.

Earlier this month, Bush grant­ed a reprieve to con­demned pris­on­er Ricky McGinn, sen­tenced to death for the mur­der and rape of his 12-year-old step­daugh­ter, so DNA test­ing can be con­duct­ed. And two years ago, Bush com­mut­ed the death sen­tence of Henry Lee Lucas to life in prison, say­ing he had doubts that Lucas had com­mit­ted the mur­der for which he faced execution.

Under state law, Bush also can order the Board of Pardons and Paroles to con­duct addi­tion­al inves­ti­ga­tion of a case. The board has 18 mem­bers, all appoint­ed by Bush.

The board­’s pro­ce­dures have come under harsh crit­i­cism, with one fed­er­al judge call­ing them appalling.” The board­’s mem­bers do not hold pub­lic meet­ings while review­ing cas­es, vote by fax and don’t pro­vide rea­sons for their decisions.

Two years ago, Bush dis­cour­aged a leg­isla­tive effort that would have required the board to hold pub­lic meet­ings while con­sid­er­ing clemen­cy requests. That pro­pos­al nev­er passed the legislature.

In his auto­bi­og­ra­phy, Bush says he will sec­ond-guess a jury’s ver­dict if new evi­dence emerges that the jury never heard.

But new evi­dence isn’t always enough.

In the case of James Beathard, who was exe­cut­ed last year for his role in a 1984 triple mur­der, the pros­e­cu­tion’s key wit­ness recant­ed his tes­ti­mo­ny after tri­al, cast­ing addi­tion­al doubt on the case against him. Three mem­bers of the parole board had rec­om­mend­ed clemen­cy for Beathard.

In Jerry Hogue’s case, a law-enforce­ment offi­cer urged Bush’s office to order DNA test­ing before Hogue’s 1998 exe­cu­tion, say­ing he believed it might help resolve lin­ger­ing ques­tions about Hogue’s con­vic­tion for a 1979 mur­der. In Stoker’s case, his attor­ney pre­sent­ed Bush a lengthy and detailed peti­tion for clemen­cy, care­ful­ly out­lin­ing new­ly dis­cov­ered evi­dence that, the lawyer said, showed Stoker might well be innocent.

In the cas­es of Beathard, Hogue and Stoker, Bush denied their requests for a reprieve. He did not order addi­tion­al inves­ti­ga­tion or request new tests, as he did in halt­ing McGinn’s exe­cu­tion. Sutton said that in those three cas­es the gov­er­nor had no doubt the defen­dant was guilty.

All three declared their inno­cence to the end. In a writ­ten state­ment that Stoker released through a prison chap­lain after his exe­cu­tion, he thanked his friends, fam­i­ly and pen-pals for their support.

He also thanked his lawyers for all of their work, say­ing they had done a good job.

Then Stoker addressed the victim’s family.

I am tru­ly sor­ry for your loss … but I did­n’t kill anyone.”