Scott, Orian Lee ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                    WR-83,185-11
    COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    Transmitted 11/20/2015 5:00:18 PM
    Accepted 11/23/2015 8:07:40 AM
    CAUSE NO. 20462-HC-4, et al.                                ABEL ACOSTA
    CLERK
    EX PARTE                              §        IN THE DISTRICT COURT
    RECEIVED
    COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    11/23/2015
    ORIAN LEE SCOTT                 §        LAMAR           ABEL ACOSTA, CLERK
    COUNTY, TEXAS
    §        6th JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    APPLICANT'S OBJECTIONS TO TRIAL COURT'S
    FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
    Comes now the Applicant, Orian Lee Scott, by and through his attorney of
    record, Allison Secrest, and pursuant to T.R.A.P 73.4(b)(2), files the following
    objections to the trial court's Order Approving Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
    Law, hereafter referred to as "Findings," which were filed on November 3, 2015.
    I.
    The Applicant previously filed Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
    Law as to Application for Writ ofHabeas Corpus, hereinafter referred to as "Proposed
    Findings" or "Proposed Conclusions." Reference will be made throughout these
    objections to Applicant's proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law which, it
    is respectfully submitted, are fully supported by the record and more accurately
    describe what happened at trial and ultimately result in the conclusion that the
    granting of relief in this matter should have been recommended by the trial court.
    The trial court failed to consider Applicant's Proposed Findings of Facts and
    Conclusions of Law in deciding that Applicant's writs of habeas corpus should be
    denied without the need for a hearing. See Findings at page 18 of the Supplemental
    Clerk's Record. Objection is lodged to the trial court not considering them, for
    summarily agreeing to the State's "Proposed Findings", hereafter referred to as
    "State's Proposed Findings" and for not adopting all of the proposed findings
    submitted by the Applicant to the trial court for its consideration.
    II.
    Trial Court's Findings:
    2 -4. Objection is lodged to the trial court's findings that the sentences had
    discharged for the possession ofchild pornography, sentences for sexual
    performance of a child, and that "no other" sentences were discharged
    as ofNovember 24,2014, according to the September 8,2015 affidavit
    of Charley Valdez.' The factthat the Applicant is no longerin prisonis
    not relevant because he is still being confined and restrained unlawfully.
    The Applicant is on parole and must register for the rest of his life as a
    registered sex offender. He is not allowed to leave the State, nor can he
    leave his assisted living home for a single night. The Applicant must
    comply with the rules of parole, including having to wear a GPS
    monitor. To be entitled to habeas corpus relief, an applicant must
    establish that he was either "confined" or "restrained" unlawfully at the
    time that the application was filed. See Dahesh v. State, 
    51 S.W.3d 300
    ,
    302 (Tex.App.-Houston [14th Dist] 2000, pet. refd). "The terms
    "confinement" and "restraint" encompass incarceration, release on bail
    or bond, release on community supervision or parole, or any other
    restraint on personal liberty." Ex parte Davis, 
    748 S.W.2d 555
    , 557
    (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist] 1988, pet. refd).
    Charley Valdez is employed as the Program Supervisor for the Classification and Records Department of
    the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Institutions Division.
    It has been consistently held that a conviction producing collateral legal
    consequences may entitle one to relief even though he has been
    discharged from confinement on that conviction. To condition his
    entitlement to relief upon another conviction and confinement and then
    invocation of Article 11.07 is to deny constitutional protection against
    "restraint in his liberty" short of confinement. That an applicant is not
    in the actual physical custody of the government at the time of filing
    does not preclude his application nor deprive the trial court of
    jurisdiction to consider it. 12 Ex parte Harrington, 
    310 S.W.3d 452
          (Tex.Crim. App. 2010). It is ofno effect that the Applicant is no longer
    confined to the custody of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice
    because he is still being confined unlawfully by numerous collateral
    consequences stemming from these convictions.
    5(a). Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that John Nix rendered
    effective assistance ofcounsel to the applicant. As has been previously
    argued in the Legal Memorandum and Brief in Support of Application
    for Writ ofHabeas Corpus, and as will be further addressed herein, there
    is no viable strategy in failing to lodge timely, specific objections to
    egregiously improper jury arguments made by the prosecutor. Despite
    knowing that the Applicant did not have any criminal history
    whatsoever, the prosecutor argued that he had abused other boys and
    just had not gotten caught, arguing "[i]s a person like Applicant going
    to move from town to town to town to town after he has been convicted?
    No. Once he's caught or once suspected, he moves to another town."
    (RR 3, 27). (Emphasis added).
    Mr. Nix failed to object to this outrageously false and misleading
    statement. He also failed to object to the prosecutors argument that
    Applicant abused children when he was working as a school teacher,
    "[h] has moved from state to state to state to state to state. He also
    worked as a teacher. You heard him tell the boys that. That ought to
    scare the daylights out ofyou. How many victims, how long ofa trail of
    victims, has he left?" (RR 4, 21).
    In his affidavit, John Nix stated that he "may not have objected because
    it might have drawn the jury's particular attention to the argument." But
    this does not countenance a strategy of not preserving error on appeal
    especially in a very serious case like this one. Without lodging a timely,
    specific objection and obtaining a ruling on the same, not only was error
    not preserved but no curative instruction was provided to the jury by the
    trial court. The fact that the evidence at the guilt/innocence phase was
    strong does not address harm/prejudice at the punishment phase of the
    proceedings due to the unobjected to argument of the prosecutor. It is
    common knowledge that lack of remorse or empathy on the part of a
    defendant aggravates a sentence. Especially on the heels ofnot putting
    on any defense in mitigation of punishment, the comments served to
    prejudice the applicant at the punishment phase of the trial. The
    arguments were "extreme" and manifestly improper. Wesbrookv. State,
    
    29 S.W.3d 103
    , 115 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000). Pointing out that
    Applicant did not call any witness to testify on his behalfthe prosecutor
    argued:
    [Q]uite frankly, what's most telling of all about his
    character is who has come here to testify and tell you what
    a good person he is? If he was really a saint, where are
    those people? Where is a former principle [sic], where is
    a former neighbor, where is anybody to come and tell you
    something about him? They are not here. That speaks
    volumes as to this man's character. That speaks volumes
    to the trail of victims that he's left behind, and you know
    that to be true.
    (RR4,21).
    5(b). During their closing argument in the punishment phase, the prosecutor
    went outside of the record and argued that the Applicant was a sexual
    predator who would have sexually assaulted the complainants,
    " he was a pervert and has been a pervert all of his life. That's what he
    is ... now think about what would have happened if this had continued
    on. There is no question that the boys would have been sexually
    assaulted." (RR 4,33). Judge Lovett commented in front ofthe jury that
    the prosecutor's arguments were "a fair assumption based upon the
    record." (RR 4, 34). In his affidavit, John Nix stated that was not
    ineffective for failing to object to the trial court's comments about Mr.
    Scott because "that comment was attributed to Judge Lovett, who died
    on September 29, 2011." Without lodging a timely, specific objection
    and obtaining a ruling on the same, not only was error not preserved but
    no curative instruction was provided to the jury by the trial court.
    Objection is lodged to the trial court finding that John Nix's failure to
    object to the trial judge's unfair comments "that the prosecutor's
    arguments were a fair assumption based on evidence" was reasonable.
    5(c). Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that it was reasonable for
    John Nix to fail to put on a mitigation case at punishment especially
    based on the facts herein. There was no defense strategy of not calling
    any family members who were willing and available who could have
    testified that throughout the applicant's life he had been a law abiding,
    wonderful brother, was caring, loving, generous, hard working and had
    achieved great success as a school teacher and mentor in all of the
    communities where he served.
    Arguing that he anticipated that the State would call the complainants
    to testify and that their testimony would be painful for the jury to hear
    and he felt that his client's behavior was "repulsive" does not constitute
    a reasonable trial strategy for not putting on readily available mitigating
    evidence. The jury was deprived ofconsidering the testimony from able
    and sympathetic witnesses as to positive character attributes that were
    highly relevant to a fair determination of a sentence in this case. The
    jury had already been thoroughly saturated with the nature ofthe crime.
    What they knew very little about was the good character and worth of
    the applicant.
    The trial court failed to consider that "[t]he sentencing stage ofany case,
    regardless of the potential punishment, is 'the time at which for many
    defendants the most important services of the entire proceeding can be
    performed." Vela v. Estelle, 
    708 F.2d 954
    , 964 (5th Cir. 1983). In light
    of the facts in this case that the underage boys were improperly filmed
    while taking a shower and that the video tapes ofthe boys masturbating
    in the shower were kept by Mr. Scott, the jury desperately needed to
    hear readily available testimony from a host ofgood character witnesses
    who could have provided a far different perspective on the character,
    worth, background, and positive attributes ofthis defendant in assessing
    a fair and just sentence. There simply was no down side in presenting
    the kind of evidence which is reflected in Appendice C- E. (See
    Proposed Conclusion, No. 50). The failure to put on a case in
    mitigation; on behalfofthe applicant was not reasonably likely to render
    reasonably effective assistance; moreover, there is a reasonable
    probability that a less severe sentence would have been assessed in this
    case in the absence of defense counsels' deficient performance.
    5(d). Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that it was reasonable for
    the defense not to object to the stacking of sentences fori 00 years in the
    Texas Department of Criminal Justice on the basis of cruel and unusual
    punishment because, as the State argues, an objection would have been
    futile and was in the discretion of the trial court. Quite to the contrary,
    defense counsel owed their client the fidelity of protecting him from
    egregious error being committed. Even if trial counsel was of the view
    that an objection would have been futile, it was strictly incumbent upon
    him to attempt to preserve the matter for appeal. Frangias v. State, 
    392 S.W.2d 642
    , 656 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). This omission cannot be
    based on a strategy or tactical decision. Courts cannot excuse
    "unreasonable decisions parading under the umbrella of strategy, or
    fabricate tactical decisions on behalf of counsel when it appears on the
    face ofthe record that counsel made no strategic decision at all." Moore
    v. Johnson, 
    194 F.3d 586
    (5th Cir. 1999).
    5(e). Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that there were "non-
    errors on Nix's part (which) could not cause error in their cumulative
    effect." While rare, the "cumulative effect of several instances may
    require reversal, even though no single one considered alone would
    warrant such a result. United States v. Canales, 744 F2d. 413, 430 (5th
    Cir. 1984). See Derden v. McNeel, 
    978 F.2d 1453
    , 1458 (5th Cir.1992)
    (en banc) (holding that claim of cumulative error does not entitle state
    prisoner to habeas corpus relieve unless claim ofcumulative error refers
    to errors, rather than mere unfavorable rulings or events, and the errors
    more likely than not caused a suspect verdict), cert, denied, 
    508 U.S. 960
    , 
    11 S. Ct. 2928
    , 
    124 L. Ed. 2d 679
    (1993). Applicant was denied the
    effective assistance ofcounsel by all ofthe instances where his attorney
    failed to object to the improper and egregious final arguments made by
    the prosecutors, for failing to object to the judge improperly
    commenting on the evidence in front of the jury, for his attorney's
    failure to call a single witness or put forth any favorable evidence in
    mitigation of a less severe punishment during the punishment phase of
    the trial, and for failing to object to the 100 year sentence that Applicant
    received.    All of these instances of ineffective assistance of counsel
    cumulatively infected the trial with unfairness having a prejudicial
    impact on Applicant and denied him the right to a fair trial.
    6.   Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that at all times material
    to the State's prosecution that John Nix rendered effective assistance of
    counsel. InStricklandv. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,104 S. Ct. 2052,80
    L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984), the Supreme Court held that in order to establish
    ineffective assistance ofcounsel, a convicted defendant must show: (1)
    that his trial counsel's performance was deficient, in that counsel made
    such serious errors he was not functioning effectively as counsel, and (2)
    that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense to such a degree
    that the defendant was deprived of a fair trial, "a trial whose result is
    reliable." 
    Id. 466 U.S.
    at 
    687, 104 S. Ct. at 2064
    . Although the entire
    representation must be reviewed, "the right to effective assistance of
    counsel... may in a particular case be violated by even an isolated error
    of counsel if that error is sufficiently egregious and prejudicial."
    Murray v. Carrier, All U.S. 478,106 S. Ct. 2639,2649-2650,91 L. Ed.
    2d 397 (1986), citing UnitedStates v. Cronic, 
    466 U.S. 648
    , 657, n.20,
    
    104 S. Ct. 2039
    , 2046, n.20, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 657
    (1984).
    Mr. Nix should have objected to each of the numerous false and
    meritless arguments that the State made during their final argument
    which were obviously calculated to incite and anger the jury before they
    retired to consider Applicant's sentence. Even one instance ofdeficient
    performance by trial counsel that results in prejudice to his client can
    amount to ineffective assistance of counsel but here Mr. Nix committed
    several errors of omissions by failing to object.
    Why Mr. Nix failed to object to the State's appalling argument that
    Applicant had moved around the country after abusing children in order
    to avoid police detection is beyond comprehension. He did nothing to
    combat the State's supposition that not only was Applicant a bad man
    for having done the acts that the jury had just found him guilty of but
    that he also committed countless extraneous acts that were never even
    alleged, much less proven, beyond a reasonable doubt. By failing to
    object and ask for an instruction to disregard and then moving for a
    mistrial, in these circumstances, cannot be mistaken as a "strategy"
    because it afforded no advantage to Applicant (refusing to indulge
    presumption ofreasonableness as to "tactical" decision that afforded no
    advantage to the defense). 
    Strickland, 104 S. Ct. at 2066
    . Because of
    this, there is a "reasonable probability that, but for counsel's
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different." 
    Id. at 2068.
    7.   Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that the performance of
    Scott's trial counsel was not deficient and should have found that this
    deficient performance caused prejudice to Mr. Scott. With respect to the
    burden of showing prejudice, it is clearly less than a preponderance of
    evidence. As the Fifth Circuit has held,
    [B]oth the performance and prejudice components of the
    ineffectiveness inquiry are mixed questions of law and
    fact." 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 698
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2070. We
    ask if there is a "reasonable probability that, but for
    counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different." 
    Id. at 694,
    104 S.
    Ct. at 2068. Strickland explained that "[t]he result of a
    proceeding can be rendered unreliable, and hence the
    proceeding itself unfair, even if the errors of counsel
    cannot be shown by a preponderance of the evidence to
    have determined the outcome." 
    Id. Belyeu v.
    Scott, 67 F.3d 535,540 (5th Cir. 1995) (emphasis added). The
    record established that there was a reasonable probability that the
    petitioner's sentence would have been significantly less severe had
    defense counsel presented the favorable mitigating evidence to the jury
    Applicant had never been in any legal trouble and was eligible for
    probation but received the maximum possible punishment on each and
    every count. The facts of this case were bad but tempered by
    Applicant's outstanding work history and commitment to serving his
    community as a well-respected teacher for decades, coupled with the
    reality that Applicant had no criminal history and had never so much as
    been accused of anything illegal prior to these charges. The jury
    decided his fate in a vacuum. There was a wealth of favorable character
    evidence that could have been offered by defense counsel from the un
    called character witnesses and the jury did not get to consider any ofthis
    mitigating evidence when they ultimately decided to sentence Applicant
    to the maximum sentence on each and every charge. Unlike in
    Strickland, Applicant did not even touch the boys, much less commit
    murder. What Applicant did was not excusable but there can be no doubt
    that he was prejudiced by trial counsel's deficient performance when the
    sentence that the jury recommended amounted to a life sentence and was
    one that did not fit the crimes that were actually committed.
    8.   Objection is lodged to the trial court's finding that the applicant's writs
    of habeas corpus should be denied.
    Respectfully submitted,
    (UAj.A&KS NUULAJt*Jo
    ALLISON SECREST
    ALLISON SECREST., P.C.
    State Bar No. 24054622
    808 Travis Street, 24lh Floor
    Houston, Texas 77002
    (713)222-1212
    (713) 650-1602 (FAX)
    Email: allison@allisonsecrestlaw.com
    Attorney for Applicant,
    ORIAN LEE SCOTT
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing Applicant's
    Objections to Trial Court's Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law was mailed by
    certified mail to Mr. Gary Young, District Attorney, 119 North Main Street, Paris,
    Texas, 75460 on this 20th day November, 2015.
    CkU      i AA
    ALLISON SECREST