On Veterans Day, the Death Penalty Information Center will release a new report about vet­er­ans and the death penal­ty, explor­ing the last­ing effects of mil­i­tary ser­vice and explain­ing why mil­i­tary expe­ri­ences mat­ter when vet­er­ans inter­act with the legal sys­tem. This arti­cle shares the sto­ry of one death-sen­tenced vet­er­an, Frederick Mendoza. 

Frederick Mendoza enlist­ed in the Marine Corps in 1967 as a basic rifle­man and served over 18 months in Vietnam. He was on the front lines of some of the most hor­rif­ic com­bat, par­tic­i­pat­ing in long range patrols where his unit was attacked by ground troops and snipers. In recog­ni­tion, he was award­ed the Republic of Vietnam Cross for brav­ery in com­bat, and the Combat Operation Ribbon

On death rows across the United States, at least 200 mil­i­tary vet­er­ans await exe­cu­tion — one of every sev­en exe­cut­ed peo­ple in the mod­ern death penal­ty era has been a veteran. 

As the Vietnam war came to a close in 1975, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) was not yet rec­og­nized by the psy­chi­atric com­mu­ni­ty as a spe­cif­ic diag­no­sis. Recognition and study of Vietnam vet­er­ans’ psy­cho­log­i­cal dis­tress led to ear­ly diag­noses like Vietnam Syndrome” and Post-Vietnam Syndrome,” which in turn led to the devel­op­ment of the offi­cial PTSD diagnosis. 

Like many oth­er Vietnam vet­er­ans, Mr. Mendoza returned home but was haunt­ed by the war. He devel­oped hal­lu­ci­na­tions and intru­sive thoughts of Vietnam, caus­ing out­bursts and result­ing in bar fights. He self-med­icat­ed by drink­ing heav­i­ly and began using metham­phet­a­mines, even­tu­al­ly attempt­ing sui­cide twice. The Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) assigned him a 100 per­cent dis­abil­i­ty rat­ing due to his Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), which meant he suf­fered from total occu­pa­tion­al and social impair­ment as a result of his military experience. 

In 2007, Mr. Mendoza was arrest­ed and charged with sex­u­al assault and mur­der, and pros­e­cu­tors sought a death sen­tence. His pre­tri­al hear­ings were infect­ed with due process vio­la­tions, pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct, and mis­han­dled DNA evi­dence. Three Latine peo­ple were pre­emp­tive­ly exclud­ed from serv­ing on the jury by the pros­e­cu­tion. Mr. Mendoza also did not have the effec­tive assis­tance of a com­pe­tent lawyer. Before the guilt phase of his tri­al began, Mr. Mendoza plead guilty, fol­low­ing the advice of his coun­sel who assured him that the jury would be less like­ly to impose a pun­ish­ment of death dur­ing the sen­tenc­ing phase if he entered a guilty plea. 

Mr. Mendoza’s coun­sel then failed him again by not prepar­ing ade­quate­ly for the penal­ty phase of this cap­i­tal tri­al. While defense coun­sel did tell the jury that Mr. Mendoza was a Vietnam vet­er­an who had PTSD, he pre­sent­ed few mean­ing­ful details about Mr. Mendoza’s actu­al expe­ri­ence, or the extent and effects of Mr. Mendoza’s men­tal ill­ness. For her part, the tri­al pros­e­cu­tor told the jury not to con­sid­er Mr. Mendoza’s PTSD diag­no­sis as mit­i­gat­ing, indi­cat­ing that her own grand­fa­ther had been men­tal­ly affect­ed by war but had nev­er­the­less suc­cess­ful­ly rein­te­grat­ed into soci­ety. The pros­e­cu­tor also improp­er­ly invoked the equal and exact jus­tice” instruc­tion, sug­gest­ing that the jury should not show Mr. Mendoza mer­cy because he showed no mer­cy to his vic­tim. The jury, with­out any mean­ing­ful infor­ma­tion about the specifics of Mr. Mendoza’s com­bat ser­vice and the nature of his men­tal ill­ness, sen­tenced him to death. 

After years of legal appeals, a judge in 2018 approved an agree­ment to resen­tence Mr. Mendoza to life with­out parole. Mr. Mendoza was 71 years old at the time of the agree­ment

The jury heard evi­dence of Fred’s PTSD-based 100% dis­abil­i­ty rat­ing, but few specifics about the ter­ri­ble events Fred endured as a Marine with 18+ months of com­bat ser­vice in Vietnam,” Mr. Mendoza’s attor­ney said. This, com­bined with many oth­er errors includ­ing those relat­ed to DNA evi­dence, caused his death sen­tence to be fun­da­men­tal­ly unre­li­able. This hard-fought and extreme­ly rare agree­ment helps treat a com­bat veteran fairly.” 

Mr. Mendoza died in prison on January 8, 2021. He was 74 years old. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Mendoza v. State 381 P.3d 641 (2012); Scott Sonnera, Nevada Judge Vacates Death Sentence for Vietnam Vet, Associated Press, June 29, 2018; Convict Solutions, Vietnam Veteran’s Death Sentence Vacated by Court, (2018); Death Penalty Information Center, Battle scars: Military vet­er­ans and the Death Penalty, (2015); David Ferrara, Death Sentence Vacated for Las Vegas Veteran in Rape, Murder, Las Vegas Review-Journal, June 282018