Texas death-row pris­on­er Clinton Young (pic­tured), who came with­in days of exe­cu­tion in October 2017 while pros­e­cu­tors hid evi­dence of his inno­cence, has filed a claim for a new tri­al based upon pre­vi­ous­ly undis­closed evi­dence that an assis­tant dis­trict attor­ney who pros­e­cut­ed him was simul­ta­ne­ous­ly employed by the tri­al judge to pro­vide legal advice in his case. 

In an Application for Writ of Habeas Corpus Seeking Relief from a Judgment of Death, filed August 13, 2020 in Midland County District Court and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Young’s lawyers detailed a 17-year his­to­ry in which Assistant District Attorney Ralph Petty served simul­ta­ne­ous­ly as a full-time pros­e­cu­tor and as a part-time law clerk to Midland County judges. The plead­ing doc­u­ments that Petty’s undis­closed activ­i­ties includ­ed serv­ing as a paid judi­cial clerk on cas­es in which he also was act­ing as pros­e­cu­tor, includ­ing in Young’s case — an arrange­ment the legal blog Law & Crime described as a patent­ly unethical dual-role.” 

The appli­ca­tion alleges that dur­ing that time, Petty was part of the pros­e­cu­tion team that obtained Young’s con­vic­tion and death sen­tence, rep­re­sent­ed the state in oppos­ing Young’s state post-con­vic­tion appeals, and obtained a death war­rant for Young’s exe­cu­tion, all the while act­ing as a legal advi­sor to two judges who presided over Young’s tri­al and post-conviction appeals. 

Young’s request for a new tri­al, his lawyers write, is premised on an irrefutable fact: The tri­al judge over­see­ing Petitioner Clinton Young’s con­vic­tion and death sen­tence employed a Midland County pros­e­cu­tor to be a judi­cial clerk while that pros­e­cu­tor was rep­re­sent­ing the State at Young’s tri­al.” They argue that this and oth­er facts estab­lish a series of state and fed­er­al con­sti­tu­tion­al vio­la­tions — includ­ing improp­er ex parte com­mu­ni­ca­tions, judi­cial bias, and pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct — that void Young’s con­vic­tion and death sen­tence and enti­tle him to a new trial. 

Special coun­sel rep­re­sent­ing the state of Texas in the mat­ter con­ced­ed on August 25 that Young’s con­flict-of-inter­est alle­ga­tion presents an issue of sub­stan­tial mer­it [that] could pos­si­bly be out­come deter­mi­na­tive,” and that he should be grant­ed an evi­den­tiary hear­ing to resolve the issue. 

The Evidence of Prosecutorial Misconduct and Judicial Bias

Young was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for kid­nap­ping and dou­ble mur­der in a 2003 tri­al before Judge John G. Hyde. He has long main­tained his innocence. 

Young’s lawyers first became aware of Petty’s dual role in August 2019, when a new pros­e­cu­tor assigned to the case report­ed a star­tling rev­e­la­tion” that Petty had been paid by Midland District Court judges as a de fac­to law clerk’ on cas­es in which he also had appeared as the pros­e­cu­tor, includ­ing on Young’s case.” Defense coun­sel sub­se­quent­ly obtained doc­u­ments from pub­lic records requests and from the Midland DA’s office detail­ing Petty’s and the court’s con­flict of inter­est. These includ­ed invoic­es Petty sub­mit­ted to the Midland County Courts and records from an IRS audit of the Midland County DA’s office relat­ed to Petty’s dual employ­ment, as well as infor­ma­tion from the record of Young’s case itself.

Young’s appli­ca­tion doc­u­men­t’s that Petty had been paid $7,200 for legal work he per­formed for Judge Hyde on approx­i­mate­ly 20 cas­es dur­ing the course of Young’s 2003 tri­al, while Petty was on the pros­e­cu­tion team seek­ing Young’s con­vic­tion and death sen­tence. He also pre­sent­ed evi­dence that Hyde paid Petty $1,500 in 2006 for legal work on Young’s case, while Young’s first appli­ca­tion for a state writ of habeas cor­pus was pend­ing before Hyde. During that same time, the record of Young’s case showed that Petty authored the State’s plead­ings oppos­ing Young’s appli­ca­tion and appeared, in-per­son, as the pros­e­cu­tor at the 2006 evi­den­tiary hear­ing.” Young alleges that some of the $1,500 may have been deferred pay­ment for work Petty per­formed dur­ing the trial.

Four years lat­er, after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals had autho­rized Young to pur­sue a sec­ond habeas peti­tion, Petty again served both as pros­e­cu­tor and law clerk in Young’s case. This time, Petty’s case was before Judge Robert Moore, who held evi­den­tiary hear­ings in January and July 2010. While Petty rep­re­sent­ed the state in those hear­ings, Judge Moore was pay­ing him for his work as a judi­cial clerk. In his role as pros­e­cu­tor, Petty sub­mit­ted a sug­gest­ed order” that sought to dis­miss the claims the appeals court had autho­rized Young to pur­sue. Judge Moore adopt­ed that order verbatim.

After the fed­er­al courts denied Young’s fed­er­al habeas cor­pus peti­tion, Petty filed a motion before Judge Moore seek­ing a death war­rant for Young’s exe­cu­tion. Judge Moore issued the war­rant and set an exe­cu­tion date of October 26, 2017. Young moved to with­draw the war­rant based upon alle­ga­tions that pros­e­cu­tors had obtained his con­vic­tion and death sen­tence with false or per­jured tes­ti­mo­ny. He argued that gun­shot residue on the gloves of David Page, the key pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness, and affi­davits from four pris­on­ers that Page had bragged about com­mit­ting the killing and fram­ing Young would show that Page was the actual killer.

Judge Moore set a hear­ing date on the alle­ga­tions, but, Young alleges, Petty then filed motions with Moore, with­out noti­fy­ing the defense, to grant use-immu­ni­ty to Page and to appoint Petty to rep­re­sent Page at the hear­ing. Young was able to halt the hear­ing, but not before Midland pros­e­cu­tors had obtained a bench war­rant and moved Page to the coun­ty jail. Documents filed with the court show that Midland District Attorney Laura Nodolf then secret­ly inter­viewed Page, who, Young’s appli­ca­tion alleges, admit­ted that (1) he, not Young, kid­napped [the vic­tim] Samuel Petrey at gun­point, (2) Young nev­er sug­gest­ed to slit Petrey’s throat, (3) he tes­ti­fied false­ly at tri­al when deny­ing he bought a pair of gloves hours before Petrey was shot.” While Petty argued in court against lift­ing the death war­rant, Midland pros­e­cu­tors with­held that exculpatory evidence.

Young received a stay of exe­cu­tion from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on October 18, 2017, which direct­ed the tri­al court to con­duct an evi­den­tiary hear­ing on his false or per­jured tes­ti­mo­ny claim. A new pros­e­cu­tor was assigned to the case, and in August 2019, Young’s attor­ney received the phone call from the Midland District Attorney’s office alert­ing the defense for the first time to Petty’s dual role in the case and the judi­cial con­flicts of inter­est. The Midland DA’s office then moved to with­draw from the case, call­ing the court’s arrange­ment with Petty a direct vio­la­tion” of eth­i­cal rules. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals grant­ed the motion and appoint­ed new coun­sel to rep­re­sent the state. 

Young’s lawyers now argue that he was tried and con­vict­ed in pro­ceed­ings before a biased tri­bunal that shat­tered any sem­blance of due process or an impar­tial pro­ceed­ing.” As a result, they assert, Young’s con­vic­tion and sen­tence are void and a nullity.” 

Young’s lawyers are ask­ing the court to vacate his con­vic­tion so that he can be tried before an impar­tial tri­bunal in accor­dance with Due Process and the Federal and Texas constitution.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Jerry Lambe, Texas Prosecutor Who Sent Man to Death Row Was Simultaneously Clerking for the Presiding Judge, Law & Crime, September 4, 2020; Stewart Doreen, Lawyers seek new tri­al for death row inmate, Midland Reporter-Telegram, September 72020

Read Clinton Young’s state-court Application for Writ of Habeas Corpus and the State’s Response.

Categories: Texas, Prosecutorial Misconduct

Tags: Prosecutorial Misconduct, Clinton Young