Title: Barton v. State

State: missouri

Issuer: Missouri Supreme Court

Document:

SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI 
en banc 
WALTER BARTON, 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
Appellant, 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
v. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
No. SC93371 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
STATE OF MISSOURI, 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
Respondent.   
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CASS COUNTY 
The Honorable R. Michael Wagner, Judge  
 
Opinion issued May 13, 2014 
 
 
This is an appeal from a Cass County circuit court judgment overruling Walter 
Barton's Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief after his conviction and sentence to 
death for the 1991 murder of Gladys Kuehler. 
Because Barton was sentenced to death, this Court has jurisdiction over his appeal.  
Mo. Const. art. V, sec. 10; Order of June 16, 1988.   
Factual and Procedural Background 
 
Gladys Kuehler was found dead in her home in 1991.  An autopsy revealed that 
Kuehler was stabbed more than 50 times, including through her open right eye, 11 times 
in the left side of the chest, three times in the right side of the chest, twice in the neck, 
and 23 times in the back.  There were two large slash wounds across the victim's neck 
and two X-shaped slash wounds to the abdomen through which the victim's intestines 
protruded.  The full details of the crime are set forth in State v. Barton, 240 S.W.3d 693 
(Mo. banc 2007) (Barton III).  The relevant facts are summarized here. 
 
The victim, who was 81 years old, was the manager of a mobile home park in 
Ozark, Missouri, and lived in a trailer she owned there.  Barton regularly frequented the 
park, but had not been around for about a week before the murder.  On the day of the 
murder, Barton came to the trailer of Carol Horton.  Horton reported that Barton was in a 
"happy-go-lucky" mood, talking and dancing to music on the radio.  At around 2:00 p.m., 
Barton went to the victim's trailer to ask if he could borrow $20, and he returned about 
10-15 minutes later.  Between 2:00 and 3:00 p.m., several people had contact with the 
victim, including her granddaughter, Debbie Selvidge, who called the victim at around 
2:30 p.m.   
 
At around 3:00 p.m., Barton told Horton he was going to go back to the victim's 
trailer to pick up a check she was going to write for him.  At around 3:15 p.m. the mobile 
home park's owner called the victim's trailer.  A man answered the telephone, and the 
owner asked to speak with the victim.  The man hesitated and then said that she was in 
the bathroom. 
 
At around 4:00 p.m., Barton returned to Horton's trailer and asked to use her 
restroom.  After a while, Horton noticed that Barton had been in the restroom for a while, 
and Horton had not heard the toilet flush.  She went to check on him and found Barton at 
the sink washing his hands.  Barton said that he was washing his hands because he had 
been working on a car.  Horton testified at trial that Barton was in the restroom for a total 
of around ten minutes.  Horton also noted that Barton's mood had changed and that he 
was now distant and seemed to be in a hurry.  After he washed his hands, Barton asked 
Horton to take him to his car, but she said she could not because she was going to the 
victim's trailer.  Barton urged Horton not to go, stating in a strong voice that the victim 
was taking a nap.  Horton went anyway and knocked on the victim's door at around 4:15.  
Horton received no answer. 
 
Meanwhile, the victim's granddaughter, Debbie Selvidge, called the victim at 4:00 
p.m. because the two watched the same television program together while talking on the 
telephone every day.  When the victim did not answer, Selvidge went to the trailer to 
check on her grandmother.  She knocked for quite some time but received no answer.  
 
After not hearing from the victim for several hours, Selvidge and Horton contacted 
the police.  The officer called a locksmith and then left to answer another call.  Once the 
locksmith opened the victim's door, Selvidge, Horton, and Barton all entered the victim's 
trailer.  Once inside, Selvidge began to walk down the hallway leading to the bedroom 
when Barton said, "Ms. Debbie, don't go down the hall."  Selvidge noticed the victim's 
clothes in the bathroom and the toilet lid up, which she considered unusual.  She then 
entered the victim's bedroom and found the victim lying, practically nude, on the floor 
between the bed and the closet.  The bed sheets were soaked with blood, the victim had 
been stabbed numerous times, and her throat had been cut from ear to ear.  
 
Upon finding the victim, Selvidge bent down to touch her, but Horton told her not 
to do so.  Selvidge then went back into the hall and pushed past Barton.  Barton then said, 
"Let me see," and looked over Horton's shoulder into the bedroom.  The testimony at trial 
indicated that he never got close to the body or the blood in the bedroom.  Barton did not 
 
3
get upset when he saw the victim, did not show any emotion, and went to comfort 
Selvidge. 
 
The police officer returned shortly thereafter and, upon seeing the victim, cleared 
the scene, called for help, and began questioning everyone present.  Upon being 
questioned, Barton told the officer that the only time he had been at the victim's trailer 
was to ask to borrow money between 2:00 and 2:30.  But Barton later spoke with a 
highway patrol investigator and told him that he was the one who answered the telephone 
call in the victim's trailer at around 3:15.  The investigator then took Barton into custody. 
 
At that point, the officer noticed what appeared to be blood on Barton's shirt.  
Barton responded that he got the blood on him when he slipped while pulling Selvidge 
away from the victim's body.  Selvidge later reported that Barton had not pulled her back 
from the victim and that nobody had fallen in the room.  The police also noticed that 
neither Selvidge nor Horton had any blood on them and that there was no wet blood to 
slip on where the witnesses were standing in the room.  
 
Tests conducted on Barton's clothing revealed that the blood on his shirt, blue 
jeans, and boots was human blood.  DNA tests conducted on the blood from the shirt 
showed that it came from the victim.  A blood spatter expert opined that some of the 
blood on Barton's shirt was consistent with stains created by "medium-to-high energy 
impact," meaning the blood was ejected from the source by a blow or "transfer of energy" 
and not by simply rubbing up against already-present blood.  
 
At some point after the murder, Barton was incarcerated in the Lawrence County 
jail, where inmate Katherine Allen was serving meals and doing laundry.  Allen testified 
 
4
at trial that, from time to time, she served Barton his meals and that on several occasions 
they got into arguments during which he threatened to kill her "like he killed that old 
lady."  
Barton first went to trial shortly after the 1991 murder.  That first trial ended 
abruptly when the court granted a mistrial at Barton's request, following his allegation 
that the prosecution had failed to endorse any witnesses.  State v. Barton, 936 S.W.2d 
781, 782 (Mo. banc 1996).  Barton's second trial began in 1992, and the circuit court 
granted a second mistrial when the jury could not reach a verdict.  Id.  Barton's third trial 
took place in 1994.  The jury convicted Barton of first-degree murder, and the circuit 
court sentenced Barton to death.  This Court reversed the conviction, holding that the 
circuit court erred in sustaining a prosecution objection to Barton's closing argument.  Id.  
Barton was tried a fourth time, again resulting in a conviction and death sentence.  
Barton appealed, and this Court affirmed the conviction and sentence.  State v. Barton, 
998 S.W.2d 19 (Mo. banc 1999).  Barton filed a Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction 
relief.  Following a prolonged proceeding that involved a per curium opinion by this 
Court remanding the case for additional findings, Barton v. State, 76 S.W.3d 280 (Mo. 
banc 2002), the circuit court vacated Barton's conviction, and the State took no appeal.  
After the circuit court vacated his second conviction, Barton's fifth trial took place in 
March 2006.  During the penalty phase of Barton's fifth trial, the State introduced 
evidence of Barton's past convictions and victim impact testimony from Selvidge.  
Defense counsel called two witnesses whom Barton had met through a prison ministry 
 
5
and Barton's wife, whom he married after the murder.  Each witness testified about the 
impact that Barton's execution would have on their lives. 
 
The jury found the requisite aggravating circumstances and recommended a 
sentence of death.  The circuit court sentenced Barton in accordance with the 
recommendation, and this Court affirmed the conviction and sentence.  Barton III, 240 
S.W.3d 693.   
 
Barton timely filed the Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief at issue.  The 
circuit court appointed counsel, and counsel filed an amended motion.  Following an 
evidentiary hearing, the circuit court made findings of fact and entered a judgment 
overruling Barton's motion. 
     
Standard of Review 
 
This is an appeal from the circuit court's judgment overruling Barton's post-
conviction motion.  This Court reviews Barton's claims for the limited purpose of 
determining whether the circuit court clearly erred in making its findings of fact and 
conclusions of law.  Rule 29.15(k); Johnson v. State, 333 S.W.3d 459, 463 (Mo. banc 
2011).  A judgment is clearly erroneous when, after reviewing the entire record, the court 
is left with the definite and firm impression that the motion court made a mistake.  
Baumruk v. State, 364 S.W.3d 518, 525 (Mo. banc 2012).  This Court presumes that the 
motion court's findings are correct.  Id. 
 
 
 
 
6
Analysis of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims 
 
Barton raises 13 points on appeal.1  Ten of Barton's claims allege that he received 
ineffective assistance of counsel.  "In order to prove that his counsel was ineffective, a 
movant must show that counsel's performance did not conform to the degree of skill, 
care, and diligence of a reasonably competent attorney and that movant was thereby 
prejudiced."  Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 463 (internal quotation marks omitted).  "To 
demonstrate prejudice, a movant must show that, but for counsel's poor performance, 
there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the court proceeding would have 
been different."  Id.  "This Court presumes that counsel acted professionally in making 
decisions and that any challenged action was a part of counsel's sound trial strategy."  Id.  
 
Most of Barton's ineffective assistance of counsel challenges relate to trial strategy 
decisions made by his counsel during both the guilt and penalty phases of his trial.  
"Ineffective assistance of counsel will not lie where the conduct involves the attorney's 
use of reasonable discretion in a matter of trial strategy, and it is the exceptional case 
where a court will hold a strategic choice unsound."  State v. White, 798 S.W.3d 694, 698 
(Mo. banc 1990); see also Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 467; State v. Heslop, 842 S.W.2d 72, 
77 (Mo. banc 1992).  
 
"Reasonable choices of trial strategy, no matter how ill-fated they appear in 
hindsight, cannot serve as a basis for a claim of ineffective assistance."  Anderson v. 
State, 196 S.W.3d 28, 33 (Mo. banc 2006).  "Where counsel has investigated possible 
                                             
 
1 Barton's claims have been reordered, and some have been combined under a single heading, for 
the sake of clarity and readability.  
 
7
strategies, courts should rarely second-guess counsel's actual choices."  Id.  "[S]trategic 
choices made after thorough investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options 
are virtually unchallengable[.]"  Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 690 (1984).  "It 
is not ineffective assistance of counsel to pursue one reasonable trial strategy to the 
exclusion of another reasonable trial strategy."  Anderson, 196 S.W.3d at 33.    
 
While each claim will be addressed individually, this Court notes at the outset that 
the circuit court, after the evidentiary hearing on Barton's 29.15 motion, found that: 
Trial counsel in this case were both well experienced and well prepared. 
They had reviewed the previous testimony of the witnesses, including their 
testimony in post-conviction proceedings. They expressed a desire to get 
certain witnesses off the witness stand as expeditiously as possible, and to 
focus on the issues they deemed crucial to the defense. Thus, the legal 
presumption that trial counsel had specific reasons for not raising certain 
issues, or not engaging in specific areas of cross-examination, is 
particularly appropriate in assessing the conduct of [Barton's] trial 
attorneys. 
 
Barton's trial counsel testified that their trial strategy was to focus on the important 
details and not on every single discrepancy that was not significant to their defense.  Trial 
counsel also indicated that they purposely chose not to use certain witnesses who had not 
been persuasive in Barton's prior trials.  The circuit court found that all of counsel's trial 
strategy was reasonable.  
Cross-Examination of Debbie Selvidge 
 
Barton claims the motion court clearly erred in overruling his post-conviction 
motion because he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that effective counsel 
would have impeached Debbie Selvidge with her prior inconsistent statements regarding 
what time she called the victim on the afternoon of the murder and for how long they 
 
8
spoke.  Barton contends that Selvidge testified at his fifth trial that she called the victim 
at 2:30 p.m. and spoke with her for 20-25 minutes, but at his past trials she had always 
testified that she called between 3:00 and 3:30 p.m.  Barton suggests that the 
prosecution's case depended on a strict timeline in which the murder must have occurred 
at sometime between 3:00 and 4:00 p.m., and that had his counsel impeached Selvidge 
with her prior inconsistent statements, it would have damaged the prosecution's timeline 
of the victim's murder by reducing the time that Barton would have had to kill the victim.   
 
The mere failure to impeach a witness does not entitle a movant to relief.  State v. 
Phillips, 940 S.W.2d 512, 524 (Mo. banc 1997).  Generally, this Court presumes that 
counsel's decision not to impeach a witness is a matter of trial strategy.  Id.  In proving 
that counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach a witness, Barton "has the burden of 
showing that the impeachment would have provided [him] with a defense or would have 
changed the outcome of the trial, and [he] must also overcome the presumption that 
counsel's decision not to impeach was a matter of trial strategy."  Id.   
 
As previously noted, the motion court found that Barton's trial counsel were 
experienced and well prepared.  During the evidentiary hearing on Barton's motion, his 
trial counsel testified specifically that they planned to get Selvdige off the stand as 
quickly as possible.  Counsel testified that Selvidge was an emotional witness and that 
"everyone was scared of what could come out of her mouth."  Counsel also testified that, 
because Selvidge was the victim's granddaughter, she would be difficult to cross-examine 
and that bad things could happen.  The motion court found this testimony to be credible 
and found that trial counsel's strategy was sound. 
 
9
 
The motion court did not clearly err in rejecting this claim of ineffective assistance 
of counsel.  Barton's counsel made a strategic decision not to cross-examine Selvidge due 
to her status as a "victim" of the murder.  The witness was emotional, and counsel were 
concerned that cross-examination could have distinct negative consequences.  Given 
these findings, Barton has not met his burden to overcome the presumption that counsel's 
decision not to impeach was a matter of trial strategy.  While Barton's suggestion that 
counsel should have impeached Selvidge might have also been a reasonable trial strategy, 
counsel is not ineffective for pursing one trial strategy to the exclusion of another.  
Anderson, 196 S.W.3d at 33. 
Failure to Call Michelle Hampton 
 
 Barton claims that his counsel were ineffective in failing to call Michelle 
Hampton to testify about when she saw Barton on the evening of the murder.  Barton 
asserts that Hampton would have testified that she saw Barton working on Carol Horton's 
deck from 4:00 to 4:20 p.m.  Carol Horton lived in a trailer across the street from 
Hampton.  Barton argues that Hampton's testimony would have undermined the timeline 
the State attempted to establish during trial, and as a result, the jury would have acquitted 
him. 
 
"Ordinarily the choice of witnesses is a matter of trial strategy and will support no 
claim of ineffective assistance of counsel."  State v. Harris, 870 S.W.2d 798, 816 (Mo. 
banc 1994).  This is because "strategic choices made after thorough investigation of law 
and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually unchallengeable."  Id. 
 The motion 
 
10
court found that the decision not to call Hampton was a matter of sound trial strategy.2  
The motion court noted that Hampton needed to review her prior testimony in order to 
remember when she saw Barton and that Hampton actually testified at the evidentiary 
hearing that she saw Barton working on Horton's deck sometime around 4:00 or 4:20, not 
necessarily starting at 4:00.  At the evidentiary hearing, one member of Barton's trial 
team testified that he knew that Hampton had testified at previous trials, but he could not 
remember exactly why they did not call her.  Also at the evidentiary hearing, Barton's 
counsel testified that one of their decisions was to avoid the same things that had failed in 
the previous trials, including calling the same witnesses.  Counsel testified that they 
reviewed the old trial transcripts, that they made a conscious decision about which 
witnesses to call, and that they made their decisions concerning which witnesses to call 
based on the effectiveness, or lack thereof, of their prior testimony.  
 
The motion court did not clearly err in rejecting this claim of ineffective assistance 
of counsel because Barton did not overcome the presumption that trial counsel's decision 
not to call Hampton was a matter of reasonable trial strategy.  Hampton's credibility 
certainly would have been an issue given her testimony that she needed to review prior 
transcripts to remember the exact times that she saw Barton working on the deck.
 
Moreover, Barton has not explained why, even if Hampton had seen him working 
                                             
 
2 The motion court also found that Barton waived this claim because he did not ask Horton if she 
saw blood on Barton when she saw him at 4:00.  The amended Rule 29.15 motion argued that 
counsel was ineffective for failing to call Horton because Horton would have testified that she 
saw Barton at 4:00 p.m. and did not notice any blood.  However, the amended motion made clear 
that the significance in failing to call Horton was the missed opportunity to disrupt the State's 
timeline for the murder.  The motion court, therefore, erred in concluding that the claim was 
 
11
on the deck at 4:00 p.m., Hampton's testimony is inconsistent with the State's theory that 
the murder occurred sometime between 3:00 and 4:00 p.m.  Therefore, Barton has not 
demonstrated that Hampton's testimony would have provided him with a viable defense.  
Again, while it might have been a reasonable trial strategy to call Hampton to testify, 
counsel is not ineffective for pursing one reasonable trial strategy to the exclusion of 
another.  Anderson, 196 S.W.3d at 33.    
Failure to Impeach Carol Horton 
 
Barton claims that the motion court clearly erred in overruling his post-conviction 
motion because he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that effective counsel 
would have impeached Carol Horton with several prior inconsistent statements.  
This Court presumes that counsel's decision not to impeach a witness is a matter of 
trial strategy.  Phillips, 940 S.W.2d at 524.  In proving that counsel was ineffective for 
failing to impeach a witness, Barton "has the burden of showing that the impeachment 
would have provided [him] with a defense or would have changed the outcome of the 
trial, and [he] must also overcome the presumption that counsel's decision not to impeach 
was a matter of trial strategy."  Id.  
The motion court found that Barton "presented almost no evidence at the hearing 
that would refute the legal presumption that trial counsel made sound, strategic decisions 
about the scope of the cross-examination regarding Ms. Horton."  The motion court also 
                                                                                                                                                 
 
waived.  However, the motion court also ruled on the merits; therefore, this claim is addressed on 
the merits here.  Because it lacks merit, this Court does not remand for further findings. 
 
12
found that trial counsel "had reviewed all previous transcripts and was familiar with the 
file and the record."  The court stated: 
A review of the record and the evidence leaves this Court firmly convinced 
that Movant was not prejudiced by the alleged failure of defense counsel to 
establish these inconsistencies. Because of the passage of time, it is 
reasonable to expect that minor details of the events of that day will be 
forgotten or remembered slightly different. 
 
Trial counsel states that their strategy was to focus on the important 
details and not on every single discrepancy that was not significant to their 
defense. Such a strategy was sound and trial counsel were effective in their 
representation of the Movant. 
 
 
Barton first argues that his trial counsel should have impeached Horton with her 
prior inconsistent statements concerning Barton's changed demeanor.  At Barton's final 
trial, Horton testified that, on the morning of the murder, Barton was in a jovial mood and 
that he was dancing to music from the radio.  Horton testified that, after Barton returned 
from the victim's trailer around 4:00 p.m., his mood had changed and he seemed distant 
as if he were in a hurry.  Barton argues that, at a prior trial, Horton stated that Barton was 
"calm," rather than distant and that she had also indicated that his mood had not changed.  
Barton argues that trial counsel should have impeached Horton with these inconsistencies 
because the prosecution ultimately used Barton's changed demeanor as evidence of his 
guilt.  This point is without merit because Barton's trial counsel did impeach Horton on 
this issue using statements she made at one of Barton's previous trials.  Counsel cannot be 
ineffective for "failing" to do something that counsel actually did.3 
                                             
 
3 Barton's reply brief attempts to change his argument to an argument that counsel was 
ineffective because the impeachment concerning Barton's demeanor "failed badly."  This 
argument was not included in the amended Rule 29.15 motion; therefore, it is waived on appeal.  
Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 471.    
 
13
 
Barton next argues that his trial counsel should have impeached Horton with her 
statements, made at prior proceedings, that Barton said he had been working on a car to 
explain the length of his hand washing.  This point is without merit because Horton made 
the same statement at Barton's most recent trial.  When Horton testified about going to 
check on Barton after he had been in her bathroom for an extended period of time she 
said that "[h]e seen me standing there and just said that he had been working on a car and 
he was washing his hands."  
Barton also argues that Horton testified at prior trials that Barton told Horton his 
car was broken down, but that at the final trial, Horton testified that she did not know of 
any problems with his car.  Barton argues that, had counsel impeached Horton on this 
issue, the jury would have acquitted him.  In light of Barton's counsel's testimony that 
they did not wish to impeach on every single discrepancy and the finding that counsel 
had reviewed all transcripts relating to Horton, Barton has not overcome the presumption 
that the scope of cross-examination on this issue was a matter of trial strategy.  
Furthermore, Barton was not prejudiced by the failure to impeach on this issue.  The jury 
heard that Barton claimed to be working on a car.  Whether that was his car is not 
relevant to that statement, and Barton does not claim that Horton ever said he had been 
working on his own car.  Therefore, Barton has not proven that the outcome of his trial 
would have been different but for the failure to impeach Horton on this issue. 
 
Lastly, Barton argues that his counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach 
Horton regarding the length of time that he was washing his hands.  At Barton's last trial, 
Horton testified that Barton washed his hands for ten minutes after returning to her trailer 
 
14
at around 4:00 p.m.  At prior trials, Horton had testified that Barton was only washing his 
hands for four to five minutes, but at every proceeding, Horton testified that Barton was 
washing his hands for an unusually long time.  Nevertheless, Barton argues that 
impeaching her with her prior statements would have demonstrated that Horton was 
unable to accurately report how long Barton washed his hands.  However, Barton's 
counsel testified that had the time difference been vital, they would have impeached on 
the issue.  As stated previously, the motion court found that Barton's counsel were well 
prepared and, as a matter of trial strategy, did not wish to bring up every minor 
discrepancy.  Therefore, Barton fails to overcome the presumption that his counsel's 
decision not to impeach Horton was a matter of trial strategy. 
 
None of these arguments regarding counsel's impeachment of Horton indicate that 
counsel's strategy was unreasonable; they merely demonstrate that there was an 
alternative trial strategy available.  Pursuing one reasonable strategy to the exclusion of 
another does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.  Therefore, the motion court 
did not clearly err in finding that counsel was effective in their cross-examination of 
Horton. 
Failure to Object During Closing Argument 
 
Barton claims that the motion court clearly erred in overruling his post-conviction 
motion because he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that effective counsel 
would have objected to an alleged misstatement of the evidence by the prosecutor during 
closing argument.  This issue involves statements Debbie Selvidge made to two police 
officers shortly after the murder.  On the date of the murder, Selvidge told Officer 
 
15
Hodges that Barton had pulled her back from the victim's body.  Hodges testified that he 
asked Selvidge if Barton pulled her back from the body and she said that he had.  The day 
after the murder, a second officer, Officer Isringhausen, went to interview Selvidge.  
Officer Isringhausen testified that Selvidge told him that she did not get past the victim's 
feet, but had bent over and then Barton had pulled her back from the room.  Selvidge said 
that no one had fallen in the room.  
 
At closing arguments, the prosecutor argued: 
 
Walter Barton claimed originally to Hodges that he slipped, and 
remember this, he never talked about having blood on him until he went to 
the law enforcement facility and the trained law enforcement people 
noticed the blood.  You saw the jeans.  You saw the boots.  You saw the 
shirt.  The shirt looks dirty, quite frankly, and time has faded some of it, but 
none of the witnesses before they went to law enforcement ever saw blood.  
Not the lady we went over to have dinner with.  None of them did, but the 
trained law enforcement saw it, and after they saw it, they asked him about 
it, and he had to come up with a story.  He thought quick on his feet.  I 
slipped in the blood.  I was pulling the lady back.  The witnesses all 
testified he never went in the room. 
 
Now, the one witness, Debbie - - Carol [sic] Selvidge got confused.  
She did tell Hodges the night of the murder when she's upset that her 
grandmother had just been murder that, yeah, that's probably what 
happened.  The next day, she told Cpl. Isringhausen at the time, no, he 
never pulled me back.  He got blood on himself and didn't know he had, 
and then he is trying to cover for it. 
 
Barton argues that the prosecutor deliberately misstated the evidence when he argued that 
Selvidge told Isringhausen that Barton did not pull her back.  Barton argues that he was 
prejudiced by this misstatement, and that had his counsel objected to the misstatement, 
the outcome of this trial would have been different. 
 
"An attorney's failure to object during closing arguments only results in ineffective 
assistance of counsel if it prejudices the accused and deprives him of a fair trial."  Zink v. 
 
16
State, 278 S.W.3d 170, 187 (Mo. banc 2009).  "Generally, failure to object during closing 
argument is not error, but rather a function of trial strategy."  State v. Clemons, 946 
S.W.2d 206, 228 (Mo. banc 1997).  To prevail on a claim that counsel was ineffective for 
failure to object at closing argument, a movant must prove that the failure to object was 
not a matter of trial strategy and that the failure to object was prejudicial.  See State v. 
Clay, 975 S.W.2d 121, 135 (Mo. banc 1998).  "Counsel will not be deemed ineffective 
for failing to make nonmeritorious objections."  Id.  Moreover, because the jury is 
instructed that the lawyers' arguments are not evidence, prejudice is unlikely to result 
from the failure to object to statements made in closing argument. 
When evaluating whether the failure to object was strategic, this Court is mindful 
that: 
In many instances seasoned trial counsel do not object to otherwise 
improper questions or arguments for strategic purposes.  It is feared that 
frequent objections irritate the jury and highlight the statements complained 
of, resulting in more harm than good. 
 
State v. Tokar, 918 S.W.2d 753, 768 (Mo. banc 1996).          
 
The evidence presented at the hearing on Barton's Rule 29.15 motion supports the 
circuit court's finding that the failure to object to this argument was not ineffective 
assistance of counsel.  At the evidentiary hearing, defense counsel testified that he 
listened to the closing arguments and made conscious decisions concerning whether to 
object.  Counsel further testified that one of the prosecutors in this case "was somebody 
who I don't think could even foster the intent to try to mislead or do something, so 
probably he would get more slack from us."  Counsel also testified that objecting to a 
 
17
statement during closing argument raises the risk of highlighting it to the jury.4  Barton, 
therefore, has not overcome the presumption that counsel was acting pursuant to a proper 
trial strategy.     
 
The motion court did not clearly err in finding that Barton received effective 
assistance of counsel based on counsel's failure to object to the prosecutor's closing 
argument.   
Failure to Call Blood Spatter Expert 
 
Barton claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because effective 
counsel would have called a blood spatter expert to rebut the testimony of the State's 
blood spatter expert.  Barton argues that, had his counsel called a blood spatter expert, the 
expert would have confirmed Barton's story regarding how the victim's blood got onto his 
shirt and the outcome of his trial would have been different.   
 
At the trial, the State called a blood spatter expert to testify that several of the 
blood stains on Barton's shirt were consistent with medium to high velocity impact 
spatter.  The expert testified that this type of spatter can come from the blood being 
propelled through the air after something impacts the blood, i.e., that the spatter was 
consistent with stabbing or striking a victim. Instead of calling a spatter witness of their 
                                             
 
4 The motion court also found that the argument was not improper.  The motion court made a 
finding that the prosecutor was arguing that no one had gone into the room and that no one ever 
testified that Barton had been in the room with the exception of Selvidge's single statement to 
Officer Hodges in which Selvidge stated that Barton had pulled her away from the body.  In her 
statement to Officer Isringhausen, Selvidge stated that she had been pulled away from the room.  
The motion court found that the distinction was clear, and that while the prosecutor indicated that 
Selvidge told Isringhausen that no one had pulled her back, it was clear from the argument that 
the prosecutor meant to suggest that no one ever pulled her back from the body, i.e. no one ever 
 
18
own, defense counsel thoroughly cross-examined the State's expert, attempting to 
undercut his conclusions and his credentials.  Counsel also used the cross-examination of 
the State's expert to attempt to discredit the entire field of blood spatter analysis, calling it 
a "junk science."  Barton now claims that, rather than attempting to discredit the State's 
expert and blood spatter analysis altogether, counsel should have called their own 
witness. 
 
"Generally, the selection of a witness and the introduction of evidence are 
questions of trial strategy and are virtually unchallengeable."  Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 
463-64.  "[D]efense counsel is not obligated to shop for an expert witness who might 
provide more favorable testimony."  Id. at 464.   
 
At the motion hearing, defense counsel testified that they consulted with a blood 
spatter expert and, after the consultation, decided against using any expert at all.  Two 
members of Barton's trial counsel attended a conference called "Life in the Balance," 
which focused on issues involving defending criminal cases in which the prosecution 
seeks the death penalty.  Counsel testified that one member of Barton's trial team spoke 
with one of the presenters, who was an expert on blood spatter analysis, about Barton's 
case.  Counsel testified that she showed the expert a number of things from Barton's file 
and that the expert indicated that there appeared to be three different types of blood stains 
on Barton's clothing.   
                                                                                                                                                 
 
went into the room.  The fact that the prosecutor could have been more precise in his argument 
does not negate its propriety given the larger context of the statement. 
 
19
 
After this consultation, counsel decided that as a matter of strategy they would not 
call a blood spatter expert.  Counsel feared that additional expert testimony could be 
inconsistent with Barton's story regarding how the blood got onto his clothing.  Counsel 
also feared that, if they hired the expert, the State could bring out the three different types 
of stains through the defense expert, undercutting Barton's story.  Counsel's preferred 
strategy was to focus only on the high velocity stains cited by the State's expert.  One 
member of Barton's trial team had previous experience with the State's witness and 
thought that he did not seem particularly credible on the stand.  Counsel feared that 
calling their own blood spatter exert would support the State's expert.  Moreover, counsel 
testified that their theory of the case was that whoever committed the crime would have 
been covered in blood. 
 
Also at the motion hearing, Barton called two blood spatter experts.  The first 
allegedly was the expert who Barton's trial counsel spoke to at Life in the Balance.  That 
expert testified that he did not remember speaking with Barton's trial counsel and that he 
would need around 30 hours to render an opinion on the case.  The second expert was 
Stuart James, whom Barton alleges his counsel should have called to testify.  James 
testified that the number of spots was insufficient to establish a high velocity impact 
pattern.  James also testified that those same spots were not transfer stains, but that they 
had to have been airborne when they came in contact with Barton's shirt.  James 
confirmed the State's expert's testimony that the stains were consistent with high velocity 
impact spatter, but said that the number of spots was insufficient to establish a pattern. 
 
20
 
The motion court found that Barton's counsel was not ineffective, specifically 
finding that the testimony of Barton's counsel was credible and that James' testimony was 
not particularly credible.  The motion court found that Barton's counsel had adequately 
looked into whether it was advisable to hire an expert and made a reasonable 
determination that an expert would do more harm than good.       
 
Based on this record, Barton has not carried his burden of proving either that 
counsel's investigation of blood spatter experts was insufficient or that counsel's decision 
not to call a blood spatter expert was a matter of trial strategy.  Defense counsel's 
testimony demonstrates that they conducted a thorough investigation and specifically 
decided that calling an expert would be detrimental to the defense.    
 
Therefore, the motion court did not clearly err in finding that Barton received 
effective assistance of counsel based on counsel's failure to call a blood spatter expert.   
Failure to Request a Mistrial 
 
Barton claims that his trial counsel was ineffective for failure to request that the 
circuit court declare a mistrial because the prosecution did not present testimony from 
three jailhouse witnesses whom the prosecution claimed, in its opening statement, would 
testify.  Barton claims he was prejudiced by the prosecution's assertion in its opening 
statement that two of the uncalled witnesses would testify that Barton admitted killing the 
victim and that the third uncalled witness would testify that Barton had threatened one of 
the uncalled witnesses after he testified against Barton.  This claim was not raised in 
Barton's amended Rule 29.15 motion, and therefore, it is, waived.     
 
21
 
"In any actions under Rule 29.15, any allegations or issues that are not raised in 
the Rule 29.15 motion are waived on appeal."  Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 471.  
Additionally, "[p]leading defects cannot be remedied by the presentation of evidence and 
refinement of a claim on appeal."  Id.  "Furthermore, there is no plain error review in 
appeals from post-conviction judgments for claims that were not presented in the post-
conviction motion."  McLaughlin v. State, 378 S.W.3d 328, 340 (Mo. banc 2012).5   
Failure to Call Penalty Phase Witnesses 
 
Barton claims that the motion court clearly erred in overruling his Rule 29.15 
motion because he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that his counsel failed to 
call a number of witnesses in the penalty phase of his trial.  Specifically, Barton alleges 
that his counsel should have called a doctor to testify that, due to a brain injury, Barton 
was predisposed to violent impulsive acts and that his counsel should have called several 
of Barton's family members to testify that Barton had an abusive past and became 
predisposed to violent acts following a head injury. 
 
The decision of whether to call a witness is presumptively a matter of trial strategy 
and ordinarily will not support a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.  Harris, 870 
S.W.2d at 816.  To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to 
call a witness in the penalty phase of a trial, a defendant must show that: (1) counsel 
knew or should have known of the existence of the witness; (2) the witness could be 
                                             
 
5 Barton's point relied on is an attempt to alter his argument on appeal from the claims alleged in 
his amended Rule 29.15 motion.  His amended motion alleged that counsel was ineffective for 
failing to object to the prosecution's opening argument.  The motion court denied the point, in 
part, because Barton "never actually identifies what the appropriate objection would be, or what 
relief trial counsel should have requested." 
 
22
located through reasonable investigation; (3) the witness would testify; and (4) the 
witness's testimony creates a reasonable probability that the defendant would not have 
been sentenced to death.  See Deck v. State, 381 S.W.3d 339, 346 (Mo. banc 2012).  
"When a defendant challenges a death sentence ... the question is whether there is a 
reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the sentencer ... would have concluded that 
the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death."  
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695.     
 
Barton argues that the decision not to present a number of witnesses was not 
reasonable trial strategy and that, had these witnesses been presented, the jury would not 
have sentenced him to death.  At the motion hearing, defense counsel testified that their 
main strategy in the penalty phase was to focus on residual doubt concerning whether 
Barton was actually guilty of the crime.  Counsel testified that it was their desire to avoid 
presenting any witnesses whose testimony would have made it more likely that Barton 
committed the crime.  Counsel felt that the prosecution's case was fairly thin and decided 
that Barton's best chance of avoiding death would be to use any of the jury's remaining 
doubt of Barton's guilt to their advantage.  Counsel also testified that Barton did not want 
to present any witnesses to beg for his life.  Counsel also wanted to avoid presenting 
witnesses who had testified at prior trials and had not been persuasive.  The motion court 
found that this was a reasonable trial strategy.  This Court agrees. 
 
Rather than demonstrating that his counsel's trial strategy was unreasonable, 
Barton has provided an alternative trial strategy.  Instead of focusing on residual doubt, 
Barton claims that his counsel should have presented evidence that Barton was prone to 
 
23
violent outbursts due to a brain injury sustained when he was a child and evidence that he 
suffered from limited intellectual functioning, possibly due to fetal alcohol syndrome.  
To support this alternative strategy, Barton suggests that his counsel should have 
presented testimony from Dr. Merikangas, who testified at the evidentiary hearing.       
Dr. Merikangas testified that it was his opinion that Barton suffered some impulse control 
issues due to a brain injury suffered when Barton was young.  Dr. Merikangas had 
testified at several of Barton's prior proceedings.  Barton's counsel had access to his 
previous testimony.  The motion court found that the decision not to call Dr. Merikangas 
was a deliberate choice and not due to counsel's failure to investigate.  The motion court 
also found that much of Dr. Merikangas' testimony was difficult to believe, not 
particularly persuasive, or "seemed to defy common sense and logic."  
 
Barton also argues that his counsel should have called a number of his family 
members, many of whom would have testified that Barton had an abusive childhood and 
that he became unpredictable after sustaining a head injury.  Testimony from each family 
member was presented at the motion hearing, mostly by affidavit or deposition testimony.  
Many of the family members admitted they had not been in contact with Barton for many 
years, and some even thought he had already been executed.  Some of the testimony 
regarding Barton's upbringing was contradictory.  Two of these family members were 
called at Barton's fourth trial, and counsel had access to their prior testimony.  Counsel 
also had access to the affidavits of other family members, which had been presented at 
previous proceedings.  The motion court found that, "[N]one of these witnesses offered 
any compelling evidence or information that would have altered the outcome of the trial."  
 
24
Moreover, the court reemphasized that it was Barton's counsel's trial strategy not to recall 
the same witnesses who had been unpersuasive in the past. 
The motion court did not clearly err in determining that Barton received effective 
assistance of counsel.  Barton's trial counsel specifically stated that their strategy was to 
use the jury's residual doubt of Barton's guilt to argue against the death penalty.  Such a 
strategy was reasonable.  Barton has not demonstrated that his counsel's strategy was 
unreasonable, only that a reasonable alternative strategy existed.   
Penalty Phase Closing Argument 
 
Barton claims that the motion court clearly erred in overruling his Rule 29.15 
motion because he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that his counsel's penalty 
phase closing argument was rambling and incoherent to the point that it became 
prejudicial.  Barton argues that trial counsel did not argue mitigating evidence but, 
instead, argued that the death penalty was morally repugnant.   
 
During the penalty phase, trial counsel presented testimony from three witnesses: 
two women Barton had met through a prison ministry and Barton's current wife, whom 
Barton met when she began sending him letters as part of a pen pal organization.  Each of 
these three women testified that Barton was an important part of her life and that each 
would miss Barton very dearly if he were to be executed.  His wife testified that Barton 
had been a positive influence on her son and that he too would find Barton's execution 
difficult to bear.  On cross-examination of these witnesses, the prosecution's questioning 
attempted to cast doubt on how much these witnesses would miss Barton by asking if 
they were ever afraid of him or if they knew what he had done.   
 
25
 
Defense counsel's closing argument made use of both the testimony of the 
witnesses and the prosecution's cross-examination.  Defense counsel's argument 
suggested that the death penalty was morally repugnant and ignored the feelings of the 
three witnesses who testified on Barton's behalf.  Counsel argued that the jury should 
consider the testimony of the three witnesses in determining whether death was 
appropriate.  Specifically, counsel stated:  
I want to talk to you about what mitigating circumstances are.  Mitigating 
circumstances are things that aren't listed.  They are simple human things. 
… [Barton's wife] loves her husband.  [Barton's stepson] loves his 
stepfather.  Those are mitigating circumstances. ... You can find that 
[Witness] loves [Barton] like a son. ... [T]o suggest that she is not right 
somehow because she believes this man has a value, that she is somehow 
inferior, that her feelings of loss are somehow inferior because she loves 
this man, that is a repugnant stance to take. 
 
Defense counsel coupled this individualized evidence with a plea for mercy.  
Mercy is a valid sentencing consideration.  See Zink, 278 S.W.3d at 188 (holding that 
prosecutors may discuss the concept of mercy because "mercy is a valid sentencing 
consideration").  Counsel argued that the jury should show mercy because Barton had 
people who cared for him, because the death penalty was immoral, and because the jury 
should be "better" than the "Walter Bartons of the world."   
 
Counsel's closing argument was not an unreasonable strategy under all the 
circumstances.  This is particularly true in light of evidence presented by the prosecution 
that Barton had been involved in two prior incidents involving violent acts against 
women and in light of the incredibly grisly nature of the victim's murder.  Moreover, 
 
26
counsel was armed with the knowledge that the argument Barton now asserts his counsel 
should have made proved unsuccessful in previous trials.   
Failure to Investigate "Crooked Stuff" Note 
 
Barton claims that the motion court clearly erred in overruling his Rule 29.15 
motion because he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that his counsel failed to 
investigate a letter they received from Larry Arnold, a witness who had testified at 
previous trials, stating that Arnold had some information concerning "crooked stuff in the 
handling of witness[es]."  Barton argues that, if his counsel looked into the "crooked 
stuff," counsel would have found that a former prosecutor had made a deal with Arnold 
that allowed Arnold to have conjugal visits with his girlfriend in exchange for his 
testimony against Barton.  Barton asserts that he was prejudiced because, had this 
information been presented to the circuit court, the court would have considered it 
prosecutorial misconduct and either dismissed his case or imposed sanctions against the 
prosecution.6 
 
In every criminal case: 
counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a 
reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.  In 
any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not to investigate must be 
directly assessed for reasonableness in all the circumstances, applying a 
heavy measure of deference to counsel's judgments. 
 
  Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691.  A claim for ineffective assistance of counsel based on 
counsel's alleged failure to investigate will be successful only if the movant can show:  
                                             
 
6 Arnold did not testify at Barton's final trial.  Therefore, Barton's claimed prejudice is limited to 
the alleged prosecutorial misconduct.   
 
27
(1) that counsel's failure to investigate was unreasonable and (2) that the movant was 
prejudiced as a result of counsel's unreasonable failure to investigate.  See State v. Butler, 
951 S.W.2d 600, 608-610 (Mo. banc 1997) (finding counsel ineffective for failure to 
investigate because counsel did not conduct a reasonable investigation and the movant 
was prejudiced); Sanders v. State, 738 S.W.2d 856, 858-861 (Mo. banc 1987) (finding 
that counsel's decision not to conduct further interviews with a potential witness was 
reasonable and that the movant was not prejudiced).    
 
At the evidentiary hearing, Barton presented deposition testimony of Arnold and 
the live testimony of Arnold's former girlfriend.  Barton also presented a number of 
letters sent by Arnold to his former girlfriend, which Barton alleged proved that Arnold 
and his former girlfriend had conjugal visits.  Both Arnold and his former girlfriend 
testified that they were permitted to visit one another in private in exchange for Arnold's 
testimony against Barton.  Each testified they had sex during these visits. 
However, as the motion court found, their testimony conflicted in a number of 
significant ways.  While Arnold testified that the prosecutor had agreed to allow them to 
have sex in exchange for his testimony, his former girlfriend testified that Arnold never 
requested that they be allowed to have sex, only that they "not be[] stared at" when they 
had visits together.  Arnold's former girlfriend also testified that the point of the privacy 
was only to visit, but that they managed to have sex during some of these visits.  
Additionally, while Arnold testified that they had sex four or five times, his former 
girlfriend testified that they had sex "quite a few times."  Arnold's former girlfriend also 
testified that she and Arnold were allowed to have private visits pretty regularly but did 
 
28
not have sex every time.  Arnold did not mention any private visits other than the four or 
five allegedly conjugal visits.  Moreover, each witness had a conflicting account of one 
particular visit that allegedly occurred in the courthouse following Arnold's testimony in 
one of Barton's trials.   
 
The motion court found that neither Arnold nor his former girlfriend were 
credible.  The motion court specifically found "nothing that Mr. Arnold asserted in his 
deposition to be credible" and that any claim that Arnold was granted conjugal visits with 
his girlfriend in exchange for testimony was "untrue."  This Court defers to "the motion 
court's superior opportunity to judge the credibility of witnesses."  State v. Twenter, 818 
S.W.2d 628, 635 (Mo. banc 1991).  Based on its credibility findings, the motion court 
found that Arnold was permitted to have visits with his former girlfriend, but he never 
was promised conjugal visits.  The motion court also found that Arnold and his former 
girlfriend "may have had sexual encounters during her visits, but it was not pursuant to 
any agreement with the State."   
Even if the letters are considered—which, at best, create an inference of an 
intimate relationship—the motion court did not clearly err in finding that there was no 
sex for testimony deal with Arnold in light of its credibility determinations.  Absent the 
testimony of these two witnesses, the only potential evidence Barton presented to indicate 
this alleged deal had taken place were the letters Arnold sent to his former girlfriend.   
 
Even assuming that reasonable counsel should have investigated this matter 
further, Barton was not prejudiced because the motion court determined that the alleged 
prosecutorial misconduct never occurred.   
 
29
Brady Claims 
 
 
Barton raises two claims that his due process rights recognized under Brady v. 
Maryland have been violated.7  "Under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963), due 
process is violated where the prosecutor suppresses evidence favorable to the defendant 
that is material to either guilt or punishment."  Anderson, 196 S.W.3d at 36.  Under the 
disclosure requirements of Brady, the prosecutor is required to disclose impeachment 
evidence as well as exculpatory evidence.  United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 676 
(1985).   
 
A Brady claim has three components: 1) the evidence at issue must be favorable to 
the accused, either because it is exculpatory, or because it is impeaching; 2) the evidence 
must have been suppressed by the State, either willfully or inadvertently; and 3) prejudice 
must have ensued.  Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 281-82 (1999).    
 
In the many cases that have followed Brady, the terms "prejudice" and "material" 
have been used interchangeably.  As a result, evidence is only prejudicial if it is material, 
and evidence is only material, for the purpose of Brady claims, if the defendant was 
prejudiced by its nondisclosure.  According to these cases, evidence is material, i.e., 
prejudicial, only if "there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed 
to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different."  Id. at 280.  "The 
question is not whether the defendant would more likely than not have received a 
                                             
 
7 Along with each of these Brady claims, Barton asserts that the prosecution violated the 
disclosure requirements of Rule 25.03.  This claim was not included in Barton's amended Rule 
29.15 motion.  Barton's amended motion claimed only that the failure to make these disclosures 
violated Barton's right to due process guaranteed under Brady.  Because Barton's claim under 
 
30
different verdict with the evidence, but whether in its absence he received a fair trial, 
understood as a trial resulting in a verdict worthy of confidence."  Id. at 289-90.  The 
materiality inquiry is not simply a matter of whether, after discounting the inculpatory 
evidence, there remains sufficient evidence to support the conviction.  Id. at 290.  
"Rather, the question is whether the favorable evidence could reasonably be taken to put 
the whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict."  Id.  
 
Barton first claims that the prosecution failed to disclose that Selvidge had been 
convicted of two misdemeanors between Barton's last two trials.  At the evidentiary 
hearing, Barton presented evidence that Selvidge pleaded guilty to third-degree assault in 
2002 and that she was convicted of violating a protective order in 2003.  Each of these 
convictions occurred before Barton's final trial, but after all of Barton's other 
proceedings.  Each conviction is a misdemeanor.  The prosecution testified that it was 
unaware of the convictions and that it had run a search of MULES, a state wide database 
provided by the Missouri Highway Patrol, which indicated that Selvidge had no 
convictions.  Barton's counsel testified that they did not remember seeing that Selvidge 
had any convictions, but they believed that they had not.     
 
Barton alleges that, had his counsel known that Selvidge had two prior 
convictions, they would have been able to use them to impeach Selvidge.8  Barton argues 
                                                                                                                                                 
 
Rule 25.03 was not raised in the amended motion, that claim is waived.  Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 
471. 
8 Barton also alleges that, had his counsel known about the convictions, they could have 
investigated the underlying conduct and used that conduct to undermine Selvidge's character.  
However, "a witness may not be impeached by evidence that his or her 'general moral character 
is bad' or that his or her 'general reputation for morality' is bad."  Mitchell v. Kardesch, 313 
S.W.3d 667, 677 (Mo. banc 2010).  Instead, impeachment with character evidence is limited to 
 
31
that, if Selvidge had been impeached with these convictions, her testimony that Barton 
did not touch her on the day of the murder and her testimony that Barton told her not to 
go down the hallway would have been significantly undermined, leading to a reasonable 
probability of a different result. 
 
The motion court stated that, even assuming that the convictions were not 
disclosed and were not known to the defense, it was "nevertheless firmly convinced that 
these records would not have changed the outcome of the trial."  The motion court found 
that, while convictions may be used to impeach a witness, Selvidge's two misdemeanor 
convictions would not seriously impeach her credibility.  The motion court found that the 
only truly disputed portion of her testimony was whether Barton ever pulled her back 
from the room and that, while Selvidge's testimony was important, these two convictions 
would not have altered the jury's assessment of Selvidge.  The court also found that the 
prosecution had made a diligent effort to find any prior convictions. 
 
The motion court did not clearly err.  Even assuming that Barton has shown the 
first two elements of a Brady claim—favorable evidence and suppression—this Court, 
like the motion court before it, is firmly convinced that disclosure of Selvidge's 
convictions would not have altered the outcome of the trial.  The motion court did not 
clearly err in finding that these particular misdemeanor convictions are unlikely to have 
seriously undermined Selvidge's credibility.   
                                                                                                                                                 
 
the witness's character for truthfulness and veracity.  Id.  Therefore, Barton's argument that he 
could have impeached Selvidge with evidence of her bad overall character is without merit and 
borderline frivolous.   
 
32
Moreover, two other witnesses—Carol Horton and the State's blood spatter 
expert—corroborated Selvidge's account.  Horton testified at trial that no one went into 
the victim's bedroom and that Barton did not pull Selvidge back from the room.  Horton 
also testified that Barton told Selvidge not to go down the hallway.  The blood spatter 
expert testified that there were a number of stains on Barton's shirt that could not have 
gotten there simply by rubbing up against wet blood.  The blood spatter expert testified 
that the spatter was also inconsistent with Barton slipping into the blood. 
This corroborating testimony is significant because it serves to minimize any 
damage that might have been done to Selvidge's credibility by the introduction of her 
prior misdemeanor convictions.  The introduction of Selvidge's prior convictions simply 
would not have "put the whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence 
in the verdict."   
 
The record, therefore, provides strong support for the conclusion that Barton 
would have been convicted and sentenced to death even if Selvidge had been impeached 
with her prior convictions.  Given the nature of her offenses and the corroborating 
testimony, Selvidge's prior convictions were not "material to either guilt or punishment," 
and Barton was not prejudiced by their alleged suppression.    
 Barton's next Brady claim alleges that the prosecution failed to disclose an alleged 
statement by Horton indicating that she heard a radio playing in the victim's home at 4:15 
but did not hear it later that day.  Barton alleges that the statement was found in the form 
of notes contained within the prosecutor's file.  Barton argues that these notes are from an 
interview with Horton, and had the notes been disclosed, Barton would have been able to 
 
33
impeach Horton's testimony that she heard nothing at 4:15 or refresh her recollection.  
Barton argues that, had this been done, it would have so disrupted the timeline of the 
murder that Barton would have been acquitted.  
There are two problems with Barton's claim.  First, Barton has failed to prove that 
the notes are actually notes of an interview with Horton.  At the hearing on Barton's 
amended Rule 29.15 motion, the State stipulated that the notes were from the prosecutor's 
files.  Barton presented no other evidence about the notes.  As the motion court found, 
"[t]he author of the notes, as well as the basis for the information contained in the notes, 
is unknown and unexplained."  Moreover, the motion court found that it did not know if 
"the notes were from an actual interview with Ms. Horton, were the unknown author's 
summary of police reports, were his/her summary of the preliminary hearing testimony, 
or were the unknown author's personal recollections of what the evidence was or would 
be."  As already noted, to prevail on a Brady claim, Barton must show that the allegedly 
suppressed evidence is exculpatory or impeaching.  While Barton claims that he could 
have used the notes to impeach Horton, he has not shown how.  There is no evidence to 
support Barton's assertion that these notes are a prior statement of Horton's, and Barton 
has not demonstrated how these notes could be used to refresh Horton's recollection.             
 
Second, even assuming Barton can demonstrate that the notes are from an 
interview with Horton, Barton already had access to Horton's statement that she heard a 
radio.  In her testimony during a 1992 preliminary hearing, Horton made the same 
statement—that she thought she heard the victim's radio playing when she went to check 
on her at 4:15.  "Brady applies where, after trial, the defense discovers new information 
 
34
that the prosecution knew at trial.  If the defense knew about the evidence at the time of 
trial, no Brady violation occurred."  Gill v. State, 300 S.W.3d 225, 231 (Mo. banc 2009) 
(citation omitted).  Barton argues that the true significance was that Horton did not hear a 
radio later in the day.  However, Horton has repeatedly testified that the trailer was silent 
when she went to check on the victim.     
 
Therefore, because Barton has failed to demonstrate that the notes could have been 
used to impeach Horton, and because he already had all the information contained in the 
notes available to him at the time of the trial, the motion court did not clearly err in 
overruling Barton's Rule 29.15 motion on this ground. 
Delay Between Sentencing and Execution 
 
Barton's final point argues that the delay of more than 20 years in carrying out his 
death sentence violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual 
punishment and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.  Barton did not 
raise this Eighth Amendment claim in his amended Rule 29.15 motion.  His amended 
Rule 29.15 motion alleged that it was cruel and unusual punishment to execute him due 
to his alleged diminished capacity, a claim that has not been raised in this Court.  As 
previously stated, any allegations not raised in the Rule 29.15 motion are waived on 
appeal.  Johnson, 333 S.W.3d at 471.9 
 
                                             
 
9 Even if Barton had not waived his claim that the delay between sentencing and execution 
constituted cruel and unusual punishment, Barton has cited no authority to advance his argument.  
The cases that he claims support this proposition are Valle v. Florida, 132 S.Ct. 1, 1 (2011) 
(Breyer, J., dissenting from denial of stay); Knight v. Florida, 528 U.S. 990, 993 (1999) (Breyer, 
J., dissenting from denial of certiorari); and Lackey v. Texas, 514 U.S. 1045, 1045 (1995) 
(Stevens, J., memorandum respecting the denial of certiorari).  None of these cases supports 
Barton's position.  They serve only to indicate that, at one point, one or two justices of the United 
 
35
 
36
                                                                                                                                                 
On the other hand, Barton alleged in his amended Rule 29.15 motion that the delay 
between his sentencing and execution violated his rights to due process.  The argument 
section of Barton's brief involving the delay focuses entirely on the waived Eighth 
Amendment claim.  The only cases that Barton cites that even remotely relate to the due 
process clause are Lankford v. Idaho, 500 U.S. 110 (1991), and Woodson v. North 
Carolina, 428 U.S. 280 (1976).  Each of these cases discusses the propriety of sentencing 
procedures, but neither case addresses the delay between sentencing and execution.  This 
claim, therefore, lacks merit. 
Conclusion 
 
After reviewing the record as a whole, this Court determines that the motion 
court's findings and conclusions are not clearly erroneous.  Therefore, the judgment is 
affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
___________________________ 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Zel M. Fischer, Judge 
 
All Concur.  
 
States Supreme Court thought that the topic was worthy of discussion.  Moreover, as Justice 
Thomas' opinion concurring in the denial of certiorari in Knight pointed out, every case to have 
addressed this claim on the merits has rejected it.  Knight, 528 U.S. at 992-93, 993 n.4 (Thomas, 
J., concurring in the denial of certiorari).