Sasser v. Hobbs, No. 02-3103 (8th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CasePetitioner, convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death, appealed the district court's dismissal of his federal habeas petition. The district court did, however, grant a certificate of appealability on several issues. The court concluded, inter alia, that the district court's legal errors meant that the district court had not answered the question Atkins v. Virginia required it to answer: under Arkansas law, did petitioner prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he had significant limitations in adaptive functioning in at least two of the relevant skill areas. The court dismissed the claims petitioner attempted to raise for the first time on appeal; affirmed the district court's dismissal of petitioner's remaining claims with the exception of his Atkins claim and the four ineffective assistance claims meriting a hearing under Trevino v. Thaler; vacated the district court's denial of relief on these four claims; vacated the district court's finding that petitioner was not mentally retarded under Atkins; reversed the denial of a hearing on the four potentially meritorious ineffective assistance claims; and remanded for further proceedings, including a hearing on the four ineffective assistance claims and a new Atkins finding under the appropriate standard.
Court Description: Prisoner case - Habeas. For the court's prior opinion in this Arkansas death penalty case, see Sasser v. Norris, 553 F.3d 1121 (8th Cir. 2009). In determining that Sasser was not mentally retarded, the district court misconstrued Arkansas's standards for determining retardation by reading a strict "IQ score requirement" into the Arkansas statute defining mental retardation and by not considering all evidence of Sasser's intellectual functioning; further, the district court misunderstood the relationship between "a significant defecit or impairment in adaptive functioning" under Ark. Code. Ann. Sec. 5-4-618(a)(1)(A) and the DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria; because of these errors, the district court did not answer the question Atkins requires it to answer - under Arkansas law did Sasser prove by a preponderance of evidence that he had significant limitations in adaptive functioning in at least two of the skill areas set out in the statute; combined with an error in the timing of the proof, these errors left this court unable to safely say that it would be unreasonable to find Sasser mentally retarded; the finding that Sasser is not mentally retarded is vacated, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings under the correct legal standard; applying Trevino v. Thaler, 133 S. Ct. 1911 (2013), Arkansas did not "as a systematic matter" afford Sasser meaningful review of his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal, and Sasser is entitled to an evidentiary hearing with respect to four of his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing; Sasser was not entitled to habeas relief on his claim regarding an incomplete instruction on attempted rape and kidnapping.
The court issued a subsequent related opinion or order on February 26, 2014.
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