Court Opinion

ID: 4066459
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-29 22:38:50.605106+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:33:53.833884
License: Public Domain

WR-62,593-02
                                                       COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                                                                        AUSTIN, TEXAS
                                                       Transmitted 8/18/2015 3:30:24 PM
                                                         Accepted 8/18/2015 4:03:03 PM
                                                                         ABEL ACOSTA
                         NO. 62,593                                              CLERK
                   Trial Cause No. 762351
                                                         RECEIVED
                                                  COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
EX PARTE                     §          IN THE   TEXAS COURT
                                                         8/18/2015 OF
                              §                     ABEL ACOSTA, CLERK
                             §
BERNARDO ADAN TERCERO         §          CRIMINAL APPEALS

    SUGGESTION FOR THIS COURT TO RECONSIDER ON ITS
     OWN MOTION MR. TERCERO’S SECOND APPLICATION
            FOR HABEAS CORPUS, NO. 62,593-02
                         AND
            MOTION FOR STAY OF EXECUTION

MR. TERCERO HAS AN IMMINENT EXECUTION DATE SCHEDULED ON
                      AUGUST 26, 2015

                                  WALTER C. LONG
                                  Texas Bar No. 24002491
                                  Attorney-at-Law
                                  P.O. Box 41557
                                  Austin, Texas 78701
                                  512-912-0722 (office phone)
                                  512-912-0722 (fax)
                                  waltlong@aol.com
                                         NO. 62,593
                                   Trial Cause No. 762351

EX PARTE                                         §             IN THE TEXAS COURT OF
                                                  §
                                                 §
BERNARDO ADAN TERCERO                             §             CRIMINAL APPEALS

        SUGGESTION FOR THIS COURT TO RECONSIDER ON ITS
         OWN MOTION MR. TERCERO’S SECOND APPLICATION
                FOR HABEAS CORPUS, NO. 62,593-02
                     AND ACCOMPANYING
                MOTION FOR STAY OF EXECUTION

TO THE HONORABLE JUDGES OF THE TEXAS COURT OF CRIMINAL
APPEALS:

       COMES NOW Movant, BERNARDO TERCERO, by and through his pro-

bono counsel, Walter C. Long, and pursuant to the provisions of Article 11.071,

Vernon's Ann. C.C.P., and Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 79.2 (d),1 presents

this his Suggestion for this Court to Reconsider on its Own Motion Mr. Tercero’s

1 Under Tex. R. App. Proc. 79.2(d), this Court, on its own motion, may reexamine the disposition of

an application for writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to Article 11.071. Ex parte Moreno, 245
S.W.3d 419, 420 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (electing to reconsider the applicant’s previously rejected
Penry claim). In appropriate circumstances, the Court has regularly exercised this power. See
Moreno, 245 S.W.3d at 420; see also, e.g., Ex parte Thomas, No. WR-16,556 (Tex. Crim. App. June 9,
2010) (not designated for publication) (agreeing, on the Court’s own motion, to reconsider March
2010 decision denying relief under Penry); Ex parte Hathorn, No. AP-75,917 (Tex. Crim. App. May
14, 2008) (not designated for publication) (agreeing, on the Court’s own motion, to reconsider
September 2006 decision denying relief under Penry); see also, e.g., Ex parte Hunter, No. WR–
69291–01 (Tex. Crim. App. April 25, 2012) (not designated for publication) (treating successive
application for relief under Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 11.071 as suggestion that the Court reconsider
its previous denial of relief on Hunter’s claim under Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002), and
ordering further proceedings); Ex parte Wesbrook, No. WR–52120–02 (Tex. Crim. App. April 4, 2012)
(not designated for publication) (same).

                                                  2
Second Application for Habeas Corpus, No. 62,593-02, and Accompanying

Motion for Stay of Execution, and as grounds therefore, would respectfully show

this Honorable Court the following:

                                          I.

                ILLEGAL CONFINEMENT AND RESTRAINT

      Mr. Tercero is currently being illegally confined and restrained of his liberty

by the State of Texas on Death Row in the Polunsky Unit of the Texas Department

of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, in Livingston, Texas. See Article 11.14,

Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. Copies of the judgment and sentence in this

case are attached as Exhibit 1. Mr. Tercero is scheduled to be executed on

Wednesday, August 26, 2015, at 6:00 p.m. Central time.

                                          II.

                                 INTRODUCTION

      Applicant BERNARDO TERCERO respectfully suggests that this Court

should reconsider on its own motion Mr. Tercero’s pro se application for habeas

corpus and, in particular, the claim within it that trial counsel provided ineffective

assistance of counsel by failing to meaningfully pursue mitigation investigation,

and/or provide other appropriate and necessary relief in the interests of justice.

                                           3
         1. This Court should find that Richard Wheelan's performance as appointed

counsel representing Mr. Tercero under Article 11.071, Texas Code of Criminal

Procedure, did not meet the minimal statutory requirements of representation2

required by Section 3(a),3 because he did not investigate “the factual and legal

grounds for the filing of an application for a writ of habeas corpus,” and filed an

application on May 22, 2002, No. 62,593-01, with no reasonable habeas claims.

Thus, it could be reasonably found that the pro se application filed by Mr. Tercero

on November 29, 2004, was Mr. Tercero’s first application under Article 11.071.

This Court should find that Mr. Wheelan’s failure to meet the requirements of

Section 3(a) should have estopped its own finding that Mr. Tercero himself failed

to meet the requirements of Section 5 in his pro se pleading.

         2. This Court should find that, even under Ex parte Graves, 70 S.W.3d 103

(Tex. Crim. App. 2002), Mr. Wheelan did not provide Mr. Tercero with statutorily

competent counsel within the meaning of art. 11.071, § 2(a).

         3. Or, this Court should utilize the narrow factual scenario of Applicant’s

case to consider modifying Graves to allow restoration of ineffective assistance of

trial counsel claims otherwise defaulted by ineffective state habeas counsel in the
2
  The minimal statutory requirements of representation were completely overlooked by this Court in Ex parte
Graves, 70 S.W.3d 103 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). Graves only provides an interpretation of “competent counsel” in
Section 2(a), Article 11.071 (2000) and does not address nor supersede the Section 3 statutory requirements.
3
  Sec. 3(a) requires: “On appointment, counsel shall investigate expeditiously, before and after the appellate record
is filed in the court of criminal appeals, the factual and legal grounds for the filing of an application for a writ of
habeas corpus.”

                                                           4
same way that Martinez v. Ryan, 132 S. Ct. 1309 (2012), and Trevino v. Thaler,

133 S. Ct. 1911 (2013), allow such claims in federal court. This Court should

reopen Mr. Tercero’s pro se application to authorize review of his ineffective

assistance of trial counsel at punishment claim therein, allowing a full and fair

opportunity to litigate that IAC claim as though presented in the initial state habeas

application. The Court should hold that where habeas counsel’s deficient

performance has forfeited a substantial claim of ineffective assistance of trial

counsel, a subsequent habeas application raising that claim will lie under art.

11.071, § 5.

                                         III.

                           PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1. Initial State Court Proceedings

      Mr. Tercero was convicted of capital murder and received a sentence of

death on October 20, 2000, in the 232nd Judicial District Court of Harris County,

Texas. A motion for new trial alleging State misconduct was denied following a

hearing on December 18, 2000.

      The judgment was affirmed on direct appeal in an unpublished opinion by

this Court on September 18, 2002. Tercero v. State, No. 73,992 (Tex. Crim. App.

                                          5
2002). Tercero’s direct appeal counsel, Sid Crowley, did not file a petition for writ

of certiorari in the United States Supreme Court.

         Mr. Dick Wheelan (now deceased) filed an initial state habeas application in

the trial court on May 22, 2002, in which he raised five record-based 4 claims:

         1. The trial court violated Applicant’s due process rights under the
         Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution by admitting
         irrelevant and prejudicial victim impact and victim worth evidence
         at the penalty phase of the trial.

         2. The trial court violated Applicant’s rights under the Eighth and
         Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution by admitting
         irrelevant and prejudicial victim impact and victim character evidence
         at the guilt-innocence phase of the trial.

         3. Applicant’s right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment
         to the Constitution of the United States was violated in that the fact
         used to increase the maximum penalty for his crime was not charged
         in the indictment.

         4. Trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective under the Sixth and
         Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution by failing
         to object on due process grounds to irrelevant, excessive and prejudicial
         victim impact and victim character evidence during the penalty phase
         of the trial.

         5. The “12-10” Rule of Article 37.071, V.A.C.C.P., which requires
         at least ten “no” votes for the jury to return a negative answer to the first
         or second special issue and at least ten “yes” votes for the jury to return
         an affirmative answer to the third special issue, violates the Eighth
         Amendment of the United States Constitution.

4
 Claims 1-3 and 5 are of the type that must be raised on direct appeal and, absent an allegation of ineffective
assistance of trial or direct appeal counsel, are not cognizable in habeas corpus. Claim 4, although theoretically
appropriate for habeas corpus, needed no factual development beyond the record.
                                                             6
         Petition for Post-Conviction Relief to Vacate Judgment and Sentence, Writ

of Habeas Corpus by a Person in State Custody, Application for Stay of Execution

and Evidentiary Hearing, Ex parte Bernardo Adan Tercero, No. 762351-A, 232nd

District Court, Harris County. State Habeas Record [Court of Criminal Appeals

clerk’s electronic copy; subsequently “SHR”] 000002.

         The State answered Mr. Wheelan’s application on July 11, 2002.

Respondent’s Original Answer, SHR 000077. The State observed to the trial court,

“Applicant raises questions of law and fact that can be resolved by the Court of

Criminal Appeals upon review of official court records and without need for an

evidentiary hearing.” Original Answer at 14, 31; SHR 000090, 000107. However,

the State also asked the trial court to order trial counsel to provide an affidavit in

response to Mr. Wheelan’s fourth claim. Original Answer at 22, 31; SHR 000098,

000107. The court ordered an affidavit and, on March 26, 2004, Mr. Gilbert

Villarreal, lead trial counsel, filed the affidavit. SHR 000116.

         On November 29, 2004, Mr. Tercero filed a pro se motion. Applicant’s

Motion to Amend Petition for States Habeas Corpus [sic], No. 762351-A, Ex parte

Bernardo Adan Tercero, 232nd District Court, Harris County (Exhibit 2).5 In the

5
  This is the document found by this Court to be a successor habeas petition, No. 62,593-02, barred as an abuse of
the writ under Section 5, Article 11.071.
                                                          7
motion, which was drafted by others,6 Mr. Tercero asked this trial court to “order

full discovery to develop matters that are not adequately developed in the existing

record.” Page 2 of motion; Bate stamp 000068 in State habeas record. He stated

that those “matters” included what constituted, in sum, 1) Brady evidence; 2) trial

counsel effectiveness; 3) appellate and state habeas counsel effectiveness; 4) and,

notably, “to allow Applicant a professional investigation into all these unresolved

issues, through instructive court order and to allow a reasonable period of time in

which to amend this application after the investigation has been performed.” Page

3; 000069.          Mr. Tercero’s pro se petition then alleged several “claims”: 1)

essentially a claim that trial counsel were ineffective for failing to investigate a

Vienna Convention; 2) a claim that the State presented false testimony by Adalia

Lima and committed misconduct with her (the claim that was the subject of the

motion for new trial); 3) a claim that the State had withheld evidence that Ms.

Lima saw the conflict between Mr. Tercero and the victim and that the victim had

shot himself by accident; 4) ineffective assistance of trial counsel for failure to

conduct meaningful mitigation investigation; 7 and 5) ineffectiveness of trial

6
 See Declaration of Bill Coble. Exhibit 3.
7
 Claim 4 arguably made sufficient factual allegations: “Applicant states that trial counsel questioning was very
superficial and did nothing to establish any mitigating evidence to have the jury assess life rather than a death
sentence.” Page 6, 000073.
                                                           8
counsel for failure to call Sylvia Cotera to give favorable testimony on behalf of

Mr. Tercero.8

         On December 1, 2004, the State filed proposed findings and conclusions of

law. On December 13, 2004, Mr. Wheelan filed proposed findings and

conclusions. SHR 000124.

         On June 2, 2005, Mr. Tercero filed a motion requesting the court to replace

Mr. Wheelan. Motion for the Appointment of New 11.071 State Habeas Counsel.

SHR 000132. In that motion, Mr. Tercero (or an inmate who assisted him) wrote,

“I am concerned about the quality of the appointed State Habeas Counsel

appointed to represent me in this court, and because I am aware that I may not be

able to obtain Habeas relief on the basis of ineffective assistance of State Habeas

Counsel during the federal proceedings.” Motion at 1; SHR 000133 (emphasis in

original). “To this point, the fact is that State appointed Habeas Counsel, Mr.

Wheelan, has not been functioning as “Counsel”, . . . Mr. Wheela[n]’s conduct is

evasive and is detrimental to this applicant’s case. . . . Mr. Wheelan has denied,
8
  Cotera, in fact, was called by the State and provided testimony damaging to Mr. Tercero. See infra summary of
facts. Strikingly, in trial counsel’s file there is a report by the trial investigator, Rudy Vargas, about an interview he
held with Ms. Cotera on the night before the Motion for New Trial hearing in this case. In that interview, Ms. Cotera
alleged that major State misconduct had occurred in the securing and presentation of her testimony against Mr.
Tercero, see Exhibit 4 (Supplemental Report #2, R.J. Vargas, December 18, 2000). She alleged that her testimony,
which very reasonably affected Mr. Tercero’s conviction sentence, was false. Undersigned is not raising a claim
here, but wishes the Court and the Harris County District Attorney’s Office to know of Ms. Cotera’s statement,
because it is very concerning. Undersigned counsel plans to continue to investigate the issue. Up to now, attempts
to locate Ms. Cotera have been unavailing. It is unknown, as well, why after sharing such material with the trial
investigator, she did not appear at the Motion for New Trial hearing, which was conducted by direct appeal (not
trial) counsel. Mr. Vargas has been contacted by an agent of the undersigned, and has stated he has no independent
memory of this.
                                                               9
and refused to the applicant the oppertunity [sic] to even raise issues concerning

Constitutional violations.” Motion at 4; SHR 000134. Mr. Tercero concluded,

“Based on my conversations, and experience with Mr. Wheelan (Also

conversations with other clients he represents), I do not believe that State

Appointed Habeas Counsel, Mr. Wheelan possesses the requisite background,

knowledge, or experience which would enable him to properly represent me with

due consideration to the seriousness of the possible penalty, and the unique nature

of the litigation.” Motion at 5; SHR 000135. Mr. Tercero prayed that the court

would appoint new counsel or “at the very least appoint a competent CO-counsel.”

Id (emphasis in original). The trial court denied the motion on June 7, 2005. SHR

000130.

      On June 10, 2005, the trial court explicitly adopted the State’s proposed

findings and conclusions of law and recommended that habeas relief be denied.

Order, SHR 000153.

      On November 16, 2005, this Court denied Mr. Wheelan’s application and

found that Mr. Tercero’s pro se Motion (with claims) constituted a subsequent

application barred under Section 5, Article 11.071, and dismissed the five claims

within it as an abuse of the writ. Order, November 16, 2005 (per curiam). This is

the “application” that Mr. Tercero now wishes to have this Court reconsider.

                                        10
2. Federal Court Proceedings

      On October 24, 2006, Mr. Tercero filed a pro se federal habeas petition in

the federal district court in Houston, Texas. In the pro se petition, Tercero carried

forward the issues he had presented in his “Motion” before this Court, dismissed as

an abuse of the writ: trial counsel ineffectiveness in regard to Vienna Convention

rights, false testimony of Idalia Lima, suppressed evidence regarding Lima, and

trail counsel ineffective assistance for failing to engage in a meaningful

investigation of mitigating evidence. On November 10, 2006, Mr. Don Vernay,

court-appointed federal habeas counsel, filed an amended federal petition. Tercero

v. Quarterman, No. 4:06-cv-3384 (S.D. Tex. – Houston). The amended petition

included the claims that had been presented in No. 62,593-02, along with a new

claim that Tercero was ineligible for the death penalty under Roper v. Simmons, 53
U.S. 551 (2005), and claims that state habeas counsel had provided constitutionally

deficient performance and that this Court had “failed to safeguard Tercero’s

statutory right to “competent counsel” on state habeas review.” The case proceeded

tumultuously through the federal district court, where Mr. Tercero made

unsuccessful attempts to fire his federally appointed counsel, Don Vernay, and

filed a number of pro se documents.

                                         11
         The Texas Attorney General answered on June 22, 2007, that Mr. Tercero

had not presented any of his claims in a procedurally correct manner: he had

defaulted in state court the claims arising from No. 62,593-02, and had not

exhausted the remainder. The federal district court stayed the federal proceedings

so Mr. Tercero could return to the state courts to present his unexhausted claims,

particularly the Simmons claim. This Court denied relief on the Simmons claim on

March 3, 2010. Ex parte Tercero, WR-62,593-03 (Tex. Crim. App. Mar. 3, 2010)

(unpublished).          The parties returned to the federal district court, where the

Simmons claim was litigated further. On February 7, 2013, the district court issued

an order denying relief and Certificate of Appealability, stating, [t]he application of

the AEDPA in this case is clear and conclusively bars relief.” Memorandum and

Order, Case 4:06-cv-03384 (S.D. Tex.—Houston Feb. 7, 2013), at 31.

Specifically, the Court found:

         Tercero raised claims two and three, as well as part of claim one, 9 in his pro
         se state habeas application. The Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed
         Tercero’s pro se application as an abuse of the writ. . . . Tercero’s failure to
         present his claims to the state courts in a procedurally adequate manner bars
         federal courts from considering the merits.

Memorandum and Order at 9. The district court recognized that the U.S. Supreme

Court recently had held that a deficient performance by a state habeas attorney

9
  The amended federal petition continued as a part of Claim 1 the claim that trial counsel had been ineffective for
failing to conduct a proper mitigation investigation.
                                                         12
could amount to “cause” forgiving a federal procedural bar when inmates can only

raise Strickland claims on state habeas review. Id. at 10 (citing Martinez v. Ryan,

132 S. Ct. 1309, 1320 (2012). However, the court noted that the Fifth Circuit had

held that Martinez had no application to Texas cases. Id. at 11 (citing Ibarra v.

Thaler, 687 F.3d 222, 227 (5th Cir. 2012)). The court noted that the Supreme Court

had recently granted certiorari review in Trevino v. Thaler, which “will decide

whether Martinez applies to Texas.” Id.        Meanwhile, it stated, Fifth Circuit

precedent “remains binding until the Supreme Court provides contrary guidance.”

Id.

      The federal district court observed that “Tercero complains that his state

habeas attorney is responsible for defaulting all the claims procedurally

unavailable on federal review.” Id. However, the court found that, “[o]f the eight

claims that Tercero faults counsel for not raising, only two relate to trial counsel’s

representation.” Id. One of those was the ineffective assistance of trial counsel

claim for failure to engage in a proper mitigation investigation. The federal court

found that, although Tercero had made the allegation, his pleadings did not

“specify what investigation trial counsel ignored or how it would have impacted

his defense. Tercero has not supported his allegations with affidavits or other

admissible evidence that a reasonably effective attorney would have put before a

                                          13
jury. Tercero has not produced his school or medical records, amassed unpresented

material, or identified unpursued mitigation theories. He has not substantiated any

previously unarticulated legal objections. Tercero has not proven that trial counsel

provided defective representation, much less that habeas counsel should have

raised the defaulted ineffective-assistance claims in his habeas application. . . .

Tercero has not demonstrated cause to overcome the bar.” Id. at13-14. The court

also found that “Tercero’s cursory arguments cannot prove actual prejudice.” Id.

In light of what is presented in this suggestion for reconsideration, appointed

federal habeas counsel provided poor representation, as well. Had Mr. Vernay

investigated the otherwise defaulted IAC-mitigation claim and presented the facts

in support of the claim provided herein to the federal district court and the court

had been motivated to wait for Trevino, it is quite possible that Mr. Tercero would

not be in his current straits. However, the primary default was made by Richard

Wheelan, who conducted no appropriate state habeas factual investigation

whatsoever.

                                        IV.

          INCOMPETENT STATE HABEAS REPRESENTATION

      Prior to the creation of the Office of Capital Writs, indigent state habeas

petitioners in Texas faced a dangerous lottery in the appointment of attorneys to

                                         14
represent them, as many of the attorneys assigned to cases were not competent.

When the Legislature enacted SB 1091 creating the Office of Capital Writs in

2009, the bill analysis described the problem as follows:

      Extensive studies, research by the Texas State Bar, and investigative
      news reports, have revealed pervasive flaws in the quality of legal
      representation for indigent defendants in the state habeas system. For
      example, a review of the state habeas cases decided between 1995 and
      2002 revealed that one out of three death row inmates face execution
      without having their case properly investigated by a competent
      attorney.

Bill Analysis, http://tinyurl.com/loxh58n.

      Richard Wheelan stood out from within the crew of the incompetent. The

Austin American-Statesman extensively studied 11.071 counsel appointments and

reported its findings in a series of articles in October 2006. To identify potentially

incompetent lawyers, the Statesman consulted a dozen leading habeas

practitioners:

      The American-Statesman’s review of the state’s death penalty writ
      system began by identifying 12 leading lawyers within the state’s
      small circle of habeas practitioners. Those attorneys, including law
      school professors and teachers of continuing legal education courses,
      were asked to identify lawyers whose habeas work, in their experience
      and opinion, fell below professional standards.

      Fifteen such lawyers were mentioned at least three times, and copies
      of their writs were obtained from the Austin based Court of Criminal
      Appeals or from other sources.

                                          15
Chuck Lindell, Sloppy Lawyers Failing Clients on Death Row, Austin American-

Statesman, October 29, 2006, at A1. The Statesman found that

      lawyers appointed to handle appeals for death row inmates routinely
      bungle the job, submitting work that falls far below professional
      standards, frequently at taxpayer expense.      Some appeals are
      incomplete, incomprehensible or improperly argued. Others are
      duplicated, poorly, from previous appeals.

Id. Richard Wheelan was cited as among the fifteen for having “submitted a

number of writs copied largely verbatim from a death row inmate’s direct appeal,

even though such claims cannot be considered in a writ of habeas corpus.” Id. Mr.

Don Vernay, who was representing Mr. Tercero in federal court and complaining

to the federal court about Mr. Wheelan around the time of the Statesman article, is

quoted: “People aren’t being executed; they’re being murdered by their lawyers. . .

. I’ve been doing this for 20 years. I’m no wet-behind-the-ears law school

graduate, but I have never seen anything this bad.” Id.

      Mr. Wheelan’s billing for state habeas representation of Mr. Tercero

constitutes “reviewing and reading the record” and “writing the brief” with

mention of one apparent client visit, some interactions with trial counsel, Mr.

Gilbert Villarreal, and a brief interaction with an investigator to prepare and serve

a subpoena. Exhibit 5. The billing records confirm what is apparent on the surface

                                         16
of Mr. Wheelan’s filed application for Mr. Tercero: he did little to nothing that a

competent habeas attorney is supposed to do.

      1. Article 11.071, Section 3, unambiguously requires state
      habeas counsel to conduct extra-record investigation.

      Article 11.071 § 1 establishes “the procedures for an application for a writ of

habeas corpus” following imposition of a death sentence. Pursuant to the plain

terms of the statute, appointed state habeas counsel (“habeas counsel”), before

filing a prisoner’s initial application, “shall investigate expeditiously . . . the factual

and legal grounds for the filing of an application[.]” TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art.

11.071 § (3)(a) (“Section 3”) (emphasis added). Once this investigation is

complete, and the initial habeas application has been filed consistent with the other

procedures delineated in the article, Section 5 essentially forecloses review of

claims raised thereafter.

      Section 3 unambiguously requires that habeas counsel must investigate the

grounds for a habeas application before it is filed. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art.

11.071 § (3)(a) (habeas counsel must “expeditiously” investigate, “before and after

the appellate record is filed,” the “factual and legal grounds” for filing a habeas

application) (emphasis added). See Ex parte Mines, 26 S.W.3d 910, 912 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2000) (art. 11.071 “requires” investigation).

                                            17
       The text is unambiguous, but certain “extratextual factors,” including the

statute’s legislative history, further support the proposition that counsel is under an

affirmative duty to investigate prior to filing an initial habeas application, and that

the Legislature intended this duty to be an integral component of habeas corpus

procedure in Texas. 10

       The legislation was designed to give habeas applicants one “well-

represented” bite at the apple; one chance for the applicant to raise all habeas

issues in his initial petition. See Ex parte Graves, 70 S.W.3d 103, 130 (Tex. Crim.

App. 2002) (Johnson, J., dissenting) (“The idea is this: [y]ou’re going to be able to

fund counsel in these instances, and we are going to give you one very well-

represented run at a habeas corpus proceeding.”) (emphasis added) (quoting

Statement of Rep. Pete Gallego, May 18, 1995). Asked whether Article 11.071’s

faster procedure could result in unjust executions, Representative Gallego, the

author of 11.071, responded that habeas applicants would:

       [G]et lawyers from day one. They get fully-paid investigators. They
       get all of the investigation . . . [and] the point that I’ve been trying to
       make is that . . . everyone . . . will have a fully-paid investigation into
       their claims of innocence, into their claims of procedural . . .
       wrongdoing [and] into any claim they can possibly raise . . . for the
       first time in our history, we’ll actually investigate those claims.

10 This Court may consider certain “extratextual factors” in construing the Code of Criminal

Procedure. See Ex parte Torres, 943 S.W.2d 469, 473 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (citing Texas Gov’t
Code § 311.023).
                                             18
Id. at 18, lines 24-28, 31-32 (emphasis added).

        This is particularly true for claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. The

Supreme Court recently noted in Martinez v. Ryan, 132 S. Ct. 1309, 1317 (2012),

that ineffectiveness claims require “investigative work and an understanding of

trial strategy[,]” which makes them difficult for an applicant to raise unless he can

rely on a court opinion or attorney work product. Moreover, applicants confined in

prison are “in no position to develop the evidentiary basis for [such] a claim . . .,

which often turns on evidence outside the trial record.”11 Id.

        Section 3 therefore must be construed as requiring habeas counsel to conduct

a diligent investigation into ineffectiveness claims prior to filing the initial habeas

application. Otherwise, the entire purpose of the statute is thwarted. Indeed, as the

legislative history reveals, the initial application is a prisoner’s first, and only,

opportunity to fully investigate an ineffectiveness claim. If habeas counsel fails to

conduct a diligent investigation prior to filing an initial application, the applicant

does not receive the one “well-represented” bite at the apple that the legislature

intended.

        An Article 11.071 proceeding provides the first meaningful opportunity to

investigate trial counsel’s performance, which is why this Court considers it the

11
   An applicant such as Mr. Tercero who files pro se pleadings in order to present cognizable claims, when his
attorney is not, should not be treated as strictly as counsel in relation to the requirement to plead facts.
                                                            19
appropriate forum for raising such claims. See, e.g., Mata v. State, 226 S.W.3d
425, 430 n.14 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (“As a general rule, one should not raise . . .

ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal.”) (emphasis in original) (citation

omitted). 12 Thus, if habeas counsel is ineffective, “no state court at any level” will

have the opportunity to review that applicant’s ineffectiveness claim. See TEX.

CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.071, § (5)(a); see also Martinez, 132 S. Ct. at 1316.

Such a result would be patently at odds with the Legislature’s manifest intent.

       The contemporaneous State Bar of Texas practice manual is another

“extratextual source” that confirms 11.071 counsel’s duty to conduct a thorough

investigation beyond the printed trial record. One year after article 11.071 was

enacted, the State Bar of Texas published the third edition of its Texas Criminal

Appellate Manual. One of its chapters was a primer for defense counsel litigating

capital habeas cases. The State Bar Manual confirms that, by 1996, the prevailing

standard of care in capital habeas representation required meaningful investigation.

       The manual begins with “essential ideas to bear in mind” when considering

the habeas corpus litigation; the first two stress the need to investigate:

12 Accord Salinas v. State, 163 S.W.3d 734, 740 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005); Mitchell v. State, 68 S.W.3d
640, 643 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (habeas corpus “is the appropriate vehicle [in Texas] to investigate
ineffective-assistance claims”); Mallet v. State, 65 S.W.3d 59, 62-63 (Tex Crim. App. 2001); Robinson
v. State, 16 S.W.3d 808, 810 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (“a post-conviction writ proceeding . . . is the
preferred method for gathering the facts necessary to substantiate” an ineffectiveness claim);
Thompson v. State, 9 S.W.3d 808, 813-14 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999); Jackson v. State, 973 S.W.2d 954,
957 (Tex Crim. App. 1998).
                                                    20
      1.     State habeas litigation is not the same as a direct appeal.
             Habeas litigation concentrates on developing and presenting
             facts outside the appellate record which, in conjunction with
             facts in the record, raise important constitutional claims. Habeas
             counsel must know the appellate record, but cannot be bound to
             it, or they will offer their clients nothing more than another
             attempt at a direct appeal.

      2.     Writ practice requires investigation. You can’t learn about,
             develop, and present facts outside the record if you don=t
             investigate the case. Investigation for a writ can be as intensive
             as investigation in preparation for trial. This must be so
             particularly where habeas counsel believes that trial counsel
             may have rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. It is
             impossible to accurately evaluate the effectiveness of counsel
             without knowing what the counsel in question knew or could
             have known.

      Id. at 4 (emphasis added).

The State Bar manual repeatedly emphasizes the paramount importance of

extra-record fact development and the use of trained investigators. Id. at 31.

      The State Bar Manual describes three basic methods for investigating the

case. First, habeas counsel must collect a wide variety of records, a “time

consuming” process that is “vital” to begin early, “rather than in the last weeks or

days before [the] application is due.” Id. at 35. The State Bar Manual describes

some of the records that should be gathered in every case: prison records, school

records, medical and mental health records, and criminal records of witnesses.

Second, habeas counsel must “energetically” collect information from all relevant

                                          21
law enforcement agencies “that may have generated information regarding [the]

client. ”Id. at 36. Third, habeas counsel or her investigator must interview potential

witnesses, both those who testified at trial and those who did not, and in person

where possible. Id. at 37.

      The State Bar Manual observed that “it should be clear that the services of

an experienced criminal or habeas investigator are invaluable in efficiently and

comprehensively gathering the information necessary for a writ application.” Id. at

38.   “Other experts will likely be needed, too,” including mental health and

medical experts. Id.

      In sum, the statute that governed Mr. Wheelan’s appointment, the legislative

history of that provision, and the contemporaneous standard of care in capital

habeas proceedings mandated thorough extra-record investigation --- that he

simply did not do --- prior to or after filing the application.

      2. This Court’s decision in Ex parte Graves, 70 S.W.3d 103 (Tex. Crim.
      App. 2002), should be revisited.

      This suggestion for reconsideration is an open invitation to this Court to use

this case in order to revisit Ex parte Graves, 70 S.W.3d 103 (Tex. Crim. App.

2002). Graves addressed the question of the “competence” of habeas counsel

required under Section 2(a) of Article 11.071 without addressing at all the

statutory description of competent performance in Section 3(a) that so clearly
                                           22
reflects the Legislature’s expressed intent that appointed counsel perform in a

manner befitting habeas corpus: in short, that counsel conduct extra-record

investigation. This Court held in Graves that there is no “constitutional or statutory

right to effective assistance of counsel . . . that can form the basis of a subsequent

writ under article 11.071 section 5.” Graves, 70 S.W.3d at 117-18. There is,

however, a statutory right to investigation of the facts. 13 Compliance with such a

duty to investigate could easily be defined as a low bar to reach that, even so, was

not approached by counsel in Mr. Tercero’s case, who for the most part apparently

sat in his office and reviewed and read the record and, then, wrote about the record.

From his billing records, Mr. Wheelan appears to have talked to Mr. Villarreal and

to Mr. Tercero (once). Cases like Mr. Tercero’s do not pose the kind of threat to

finality that concerned the Graves majority: serial writs filed complaining of

incompetence of the attorney on each prior writ. Graves, 70 S.W.3d at 114-115.

The “expeditious investigation of facts” required by Section 3 is something that

could be easily seen on a billing record, but it would have to constitute more than

talking to the client and prior counsel. Mr.Tercero’s case raises the question of

what that performance should look like.

13
  Undersigned counsel, Walter Long, represented Napoleon Beazley along with David Botsford at the time when
this Court accepted the question of competent representation raised by Graves. Beazley was stayed as a companion
case and the undersigned recalls arguing to this Court that there was a pure statutory performance standard in
Section 3, feeling frustrated that Graves’ attorneys were not asserting it in their pleadings.
                                                           23
      Alternatively, Graves should be revisited in light of the U.S. Supreme

Court’s equitable decisions in Martinez v. Ryan and Trevino v. Thaler. In Trevino,

the Supreme Court held that Martinez applies to Texas, because Texas state habeas

proceedings are the first meaningful opportunity to raise a trial ineffectiveness

claim. Trevino v. Thaler, 133 S. Ct. 1911, 1921 (2013). The purpose is “[t]o

protect prisoners with a potentially legitimate claim of ineffective assistance of

trial counsel” from forfeiting review of such claims in state and federal court.

Martinez, 132 S. Ct. at 1315-16. These Supreme Court cases, of course, do not

control this Court’s jurisprudence, but they inform it. Graves relied on Coleman v.

Thompson.    But the U.S. Supreme Court has now concluded that Coleman’s

inflexible procedural default rule caused considerable harm to fair adjudication of

substantial trial ineffective assistance claims of the sort now presented in Mr.

Trevino’s case. The Supreme Court now having modified Coleman with respect to

trial IAC claims, this Court too should revisit its reliance on Coleman in Graves, in

so far as ineffective assistance of state habeas counsel in an initial state habeas

proceeding may serve as an exception to the Section 5 abuse of the writ rule. Such

a limited modification of the law would protect the integrity of the right to counsel

at trial, not open floodgates to unfounded state habeas ineffectiveness claims.

Moreover, the key limitation of Martinez reasonably would apply within this

                                         24
Court’s jurisprudence: the modification to allow a new shot at proving ineffective

assistance of trial counsel would apply only to the initial collateral review

proceeding.   In the instant case, Tercero diligently tried to obtain competent,

appropriate habeas assistance while his state habeas attorney was providing his

deficient representation, by trying to get Mr. Wheelan replaced, by trying to raise

appropriate claims himself from behind bars with no investigator.

      3. Even under the standard of “competent counsel” in Graves, Mr.
      Wheelan was not competent.
      While ignoring Section 3, Graves maintains that the “competent counsel”

required under Section 2(a), Article 11.071, is to be measured by the habeas

lawyer’s “qualifications, experience, and abilities” at the time of appointment,” not

by the lawyer’s “final product of representation.” Graves, 70 S.W.3d at 114. This

Court agreed with Graves that it would be an “empty gesture to appoint

incompetent counsel” and that “a ‘potted plant’ appointed as counsel is no better

than no counsel at all.” Id. It is the case, in fact, that counsel who do not function

as habeas counsel are no better than a potted plant for the sake of their clients’

cases. For all purposes, Mr. Wheelan provided no more help than a potted plant to

Mr. Tercero. Complete lack of relevant performance by state habeas counsel

cannot constitute “competence.”

                                          25
      It is impossible, frankly, to define competence without reference to

minimum standard of counsel conduct. The Texas lawyer disciplinary rules define

competence as “possession of the legal knowledge, skill, and training reasonably

necessary for the representation” of a client.       Cmt. 1, Tex. Disciplinary R.

Professional Conduct 1.01. “Competent representation contemplates appropriate

application by the lawyer of that legal knowledge, skill and training, reasonable

thoroughness in the study and analysis of the law and facts, and reasonable

attentiveness to the responsibilities owed to the client.”           Id.   Competent

representation cannot be separated from competent performance. “Competent

handling of a particular matter includes inquiry into and analysis of the factual and

legal elements of the problem, and use of methods and procedures meeting the

standards of competent practitioners.” Model Rules of Professional Conduct R.

1.1 cmt. 5 (2002). Mr. Wheelan was not “competent” by the standards of ethics as

he failed to make relevant factual inquiry. Although he talked to trial counsel,

probably because he was raising a wholly record-based claim of ineffective

assistance and he apparently talked to the client once, he failed to otherwise begin

a relevant factual inquiry into the case --- relevant to habeas corpus.

      Mr. Tercero was victimized by Wheelan’s lack of “the legal knowledge,

skill, and training reasonably necessary” to represent an indigent state habeas

                                          26
applicant. Because all potentially meritorious --- and actually meritorious (see

below) --- extra-record claims were procedurally barred and dismissed in federal

court without consideration, Tercero’s federal proceedings were almost

meaningless, for absolutely no fault of his own. In fact, Tercero (and/or his inmate

friends) should be given credit for recognizing incompetent counsel at the time and

trying to remedy it with pro se pleadings, especially the motion filed in this Court

in which Mr. Tercero raised a meritorious ineffectiveness claim against trial

counsel for failure to pursue mitigation investigation.

      Mr. Wheelan’s incompetence should be remedied by the provision of one

state habeas proceeding for Mr. Tercero assisted by competent counsel, reopening

the motion to amend that he diligently made on his own behalf long ago that barred

by this Court at that time as an abuse of the writ.

                                          27
                                                       V.

             TRIAL COUNSEL FAILED TO RENDER EFFECTIVE
             ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL AT THE PUNISHMENT
             STAGE OF MR. TERCERO’S TRIAL IN VIOLATION
             OF THE SIXTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS
           BY FAILING TO CONDUCT MEANINGFUL MITIGATION
                           INVESTIGATION14

        A jury cannot make a constitutionally reliable and individualized sentencing

decision without knowing the actual mitigating evidence about the defendant.

Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 206 (1976). Indeed, the importance of mitigating

evidence in capital sentencing proceedings is a fundamental tenet of U.S. Supreme

Court jurisprudence. See, e.g., Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 605 (1978) (the

federal constitution requires that the sentencer “not be precluded from considering,

as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or record and any

circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence

less than death”); Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.S. 104, 110-12 (1982).                                            A

reasonable investigation into potential mitigating evidence in a capital case is thus

an absolute prerequisite to constitutional representation. The core constitutional

principle – that “respect for humanity” requires consideration of information about

the offender – allows for no less. See Lockett, 438 U.S. at 602 (quoting Woodson

14
  This is the fourth “claim” in Mr. Tercero’s “Applicant’s Motion to Amend Petition for States Habeas Corpus [sic],
No. 762351-A, Ex parte Bernardo Adan Tercero, 232nd District Court, Harris County, Exhibit 2, found to be a
successive application and procedurally barred under Section 5 by this Court and given the number 62,593-02 in this
Court’s docket.
                                                         28
v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. 280, 304 (1976)); see also Tennard v. Dretke, 542
U.S. 274 (2004).

      These longstanding requirements for defense representation in a capital case

were not met in Mr. Tercero’s case. Mr. Tercero respectfully moves that he be

given the opportunity to have another first round of habeas solely in order to

litigate the claim he attempted to raise in his pro se motion to supplement his initial

application, while his appointed counsel was providing incompetent representation.

Statement of Facts

      In order for this Court to see how Mr. Tercero has been harmed by trial

counsel’s deficient mitigation investigation, it is important to thoroughly revisit the

facts of the case.

      Guilt/Innocence Phase

      Bernardo Tercero was convicted on October 16, 2000, of the capital murder

of Robert Berger, a tenth grade English teacher at Reagan High School, in

Houston, Texas. Mr. Berger was killed as he was dropping off clothes to be

cleaned at the Park Avenue Cleaners, 4038 South Braeswood, with his three-year-

old daughter Jordan at his side and his wife Melinda Winn Berger witnessing the

event from just outside the store.

                                          29
      Besides Mr. Berger and his daughter Jordan, four other persons were present

in the cleaners at about 7:00 PM, closing time, when the two Hispanic men entered

through the rear door to rob the store: Michelle Johnson, manager and daughter of

the store owner (16 SF 226); Dyesha Alberty, an employee who worked one of the

counters in the front with Ms. Johnson (16 SF 228); Idalia Lima, who had been

employed for about a year by Ms. Johnson to process newly arrived clothes in the

middle of the store (id.; 16 SF 239); and Idalia’s husband Ricardo Denillo Toruno,

whose family had previously worked for the Johnsons in the store (16 SF 239) and

who was married to Idalia.

      Closing the store, Ms. Johnson asked Mr. Toruno to dispose of the day’s

trash in a bin behind the building. He unlocked a burglar-bar door when he exited

the back of the store. Returning from the dumpster, he saw three men standing

behind the bicycle shop next door and felt a little afraid when he heard one of the

men say “follow him” as he approached the rear door. 16 SF. 159. Before he could

secure the door, one of the men put a revolver to his head and ordered him to open

it. 16 SF 159-60. Another darker skinned man also entered. 16 SF 162. The man

with the revolver ordered Toruno and Idalia, his wife, to move aside into the

clothing, and both men went to the front of the store. 16 SF 161-62. Toruno heard

cash registers banging and heard “strikes against the wall” that sounded like a body

                                         30
hitting the wall at the front of the store followed by one or two gunshots,

accompanied by screaming. 16 SF 163, 167, 171. Then, he saw the two men come

back through and leave the store, each with a money drawer in hand, the darker

man commenting that they had “done wrong.” 16 SF 164.

      Dyesha Alberty, a cashier, was tagging clothes at a counter at the front of the

store when Mr. Berger entered with his daughter to drop off clothes and struck up a

conversation with Ms. Johnson at her counter. 16 SF 184-85. Suddenly, Alberty

saw a dark skinned man in dark pants and a sports jacket appear from behind Ms.

Johnson and walk around the counters toward Mr. Berger. 16 SF 186-87. Startled,

Alberty ran toward the back of the store and then heard a gunshot. She had not

seen a gun on the man who had passed her, although he had his hand in his right

jacket pocket. 16 SF 188-90. But she saw another man carrying a gun running

toward her from the back. 16 SF 191. She did not recall hearing any voices or

noises or sounds of struggle before the gunshot went off. 16 SF 194. The “shooter”

and the other man both spoke Spanish, but Alberty made out that they mentioned

“money.” Alberty accompanied them to the front of the store and gave them the

cash drawers. 16 SF 194-95. The men immediately departed through the back door.

Alberty saw Ms. Johnson holding Mr. Berger’s daughter and, jumping over Mr.

Berger, who was lying on the floor, she exited the front door and ran across the

                                         31
street for help, hitting Melinda Berger with the door on the way out. 16 SF 196-97.

On cross-examination, Alberty stated that she did not recall telling police that she

had heard something in Spanish being told to Mr. Berger and that she had heard a

fight taking place. 16 SF 221.

      Idalia Lima’s sister, Marisol Lima, was Mr. Tercero’s girlfriend at the time

of the offense. 17 SF 93-94. Idalia testified that, on an afternoon in March 1997,

she, her sisters Jenny and Marisol, and Mr. Tercero had a meal before church,

during which Mr. Tercero asked questions about her store: when it closed, what

race the manager was, and how much money came in. 17 SF 97. She testified that,

while her sisters were away from the table, Mr. Tercero told her he needed money

and was going to rob the store with another person. 17 SF 98-99. She thought it a

joke, but then she said he threatened that something would happen to her, her

husband (Mr. Toruno, or her child, if she told anyone. 17 SF 99-100. She also

testified that Tercero gave her money the next day to keep quiet and told her he

had killed a man with a gun. 17 SF 112-113. Idalia testified that she initially did

not tell police what she knew, because she was afraid of Mr. Tercero. 17 SF. 111.

      Idalia testified that, after the first man came in the back door, pointing a gun

at her and her husband, Mr. Tercero entered and ran to the front of the store asking

for the manager in English. 17 SF 106. She also heard Mr. Tercero loudly say

                                         32
“give me the money” in English. An argument ensued between Tercero and the

customer, Mr. Berger. She heard the sound of a struggle over the cash boxes. 17 SF

106-07; 136-37. She heard sounds as though one had grabbed the other, and

repeated sounds of collision with the wall. 17 SF 138-39. This went on for what

she described as “five minutes” before she heard a gunshot. 17 SF 139. The man

guarding her and her husband also went to the front. 17 SF 139. Then both men ran

back from the front and out the back door with the cash drawers. 17 SF 107-08.

The next day, Mr. Tercero told Idalia that he had no intent to kill anyone in the

store and “he was trying to wait until there wasn’t anyone in the cleaners.” 17 SF

141. When he ran past her on the way out of the store, she overheard him tell the

accomplice, “I fucked up, I hit him in the head.” 17 SF 142.

      Michelle Johnson, the store manager, testified that, when Mr. Tercero ran to

the front of the store, he passed by her counter and went right up to Mr. Berger,

grabbing him by the arm. 16 SF 242, 245. He said something to Mr. Berger, but

Ms. Johnson could not understand it. 16 SF 243; 17 SF 40. A “scuffle,” “struggle,”

ensued. 16 SF 243-44. The mens’ bodies shifted and moved around as they

grappled. 17 SF 49. The men changed positions throughout the fight. 17 SF 54.

Not having a “clue” what was happening, Johnson stood at her counter. She said

Berger and Tercero were “face to face” and Berger was trying to push off Tercero

                                        33
who was pushing him back toward the front doors. 16 SF 247. This lasted about a

minute. Id. The men continued to struggle always facing each other and, then, she

saw a gun and saw Mr. Tercero shoot Mr. Berger on the back left side of his neck

and Berger fall face-forward to the ground. 16 SF 244; 250-51. Tercero backed up

and went to the rear of the store. 16 SF 252. Johnson then heard someone asking

for money and she retreated to the side holding Jordan, Berger’s daughter. 16 SF

252-53. Ms. Alberty gave the cash drawers to the men who fled out the back door.

16 SF 254. Throughout the battle between Tercero and Berger, Johnson never saw

Mr. Tercero take his hands away from Berger to reload. 17 SF 52. She also did not

know if Berger had fought for the gun, putting his hands on it. 17 SF 52-53.

      Melinda Winn Berger, Mr. Berger’s wife, waited in the car while he and

Jordan went into the store. She testified that, at one point, looking through the store

window, she thought she saw her husband falling, 24 SF 48. She looked again and

thought, “there’s somebody on him,” threw open her car door and heard a gunshot.

24 SF 48-49. She wrestled with the door to the store failing to open it. Then Ms.

Alberty let her in and she accessed her husband, who was bleeding profusely. 24

SF 49-50. Paramedics took Mr. Berger to the hospital and Melinda stayed with him

there until he died the next day. 24 SF 53.

                                          34
      Sylvia Cotera, a young Mexican woman with an eighth grade education,

testified that she had known Mr. Tercero for about a month before the crime. 18 SF

219. He was a friend who “would come over and sleep at [her] house.” Id. She said

that, when they were alone, Tercero told her that “he had shot someone trying to

rob them” at a cleaners. 18 SF 220. Cotera claimed that Tercero gave her various

reasons: (1) he became angry because the man did not have any money, (2)

because a child (Jordan) had seen him; and (3) because the man himself “had seen

his face.” 18 SF 220. She said he expressed “worry” because “there hadn’t been

enough money” in the haul. 18 SF 221. Cotera testified that she did not go to the

police with what she knew because “when the things happened and before”

Tercero had threatened her not to say anything. 18 SF 221. She claimed that he

threatened to burn her apartment along with her children if she told anyone. 18 SF

222. After this conversation, Mr. Tercero stayed with Ms. Cotera at her apartment

for some days. 18 SF 232. He would periodically communicate with her thereafter.

Cotera stated that the only persons she ever talked to about the matters in her

testimony were three police officers who came to her house about a week before

her testimony. 18 SF 229.

      Bernardo Tercero testified that he lived with Marisol Lima and that, when

they were having a hard time economically she suggested that she had worked for

                                        35
a time at a dry cleaner and knew there was a lot of money there. 19 SF 25. She

thought they could get the money easily and there would be no risks. 19 SF 26.

They brought Idalia into the discussion when they went out to eat about one to

three weeks before the crime. 19 SF 27. Idalia and Marisol took Mr. Tercero to the

store and showed him how they would open the back door around 5:35 PM. 19 SF

30. The plan was for one of the women to signal Tercero with a pager when there

were no customers. 19 SF 31. Paged four ones, it would be clear; paged four

zeroes, customers were present and he would need to call Marisol. 19 SF 32. An

acquaintance named “Chilango” (a coconspirator whose real name is Jorge

Gonzales and to date has not been apprehended) expressed interest in joining Mr.

Tercero in the robbery and said he would find the guns. 19 SF 33.

      Mr. Tercero testified that he and Gonzales started waiting behind the

cleaners around 5:30. 19 SF 34. They got the all ones page and saw the back store

door was open. Id. Gonzales entered first, detaining Idalia and Mr. Toruno, and

Tercero followed, going to the front of the store with the pistol Gonzales had

brought him covered in his coat. 19 SF 37-39. Tercero testified that, when he

arrived in front looking for the cash register, no one noticed him. So he took out

his gun, raised it above his head, and moved the slide on it, making a noise. 19 SF

48. He repeated the action, getting attention, and loudly said, “Give me the money”

                                        36
in English. 19 SF 48-49. Tercero then saw Mr. Berger standing in front of Ms.

Johnson’s counter. Berger turned to face Tercero and looked him in the eyes. 19

SF 54. Berger was taller than Tercero and weighed some sixty pounds more. 1 19

SF 83. He started to move slowly and Tercero raised his hand saying “Stop!” 19

SF 53-55. According to Mr. Tercero, he took steps back but Mr. Berger advanced

on him and grabbed for the gun. 19 SF 56. He pushed Tercero with his chest and

they began a struggle that lasted about two minutes before Tercero tired and the

gun went off. 19 SF 60. Tercero was surprised when Berger was shot and fell to

the floor. 19 SF 62-63. Tercero and Gonzales grabbed the cash drawers and fled in

their car from behind the store. 19 SF 64.

           Tercero testified he spent the night with Sylvia Cotera and sold the two guns

the next day. 2 19 SF 65. That same day, Marisol and Idalia demanded to know why

Tercero had killed Mr. Berger. He explained that they had struggled over the

weapon. 19 SF 66. They discussed how the pager plan had gone awry, with

Marisol sending the wrong signal. 19 SF 68. Tercero did not know if, when he

pulled the slide back on the gun, any bullets came out. 19 SF 71. He also said

Gonzales had given him some bullets he had in his pocket. Id. He stated he had not

1
    This testimony about size difference was elicited by the State.
2
  When asked why he kept the guns, although Gonzales brought them to the crime, Tercero stated: “It wasn’t a
decision that we discussed. That’s how these circumstances appeared. And that’s why I was the one that was in the
front.” 19 SF 113.

                                                            37
fired that gun before. 3 Id. Tercero testified that he told Cotera he had been in the

robbery and that there had been a fight. 19 SF 112. He said he did not tell her

anything about a little girl. 19 SF 113. He testified that Cotera’s assertion that he

said he shot Mr. Berger for fear he would identify him was a lie. 19 S.F. 114. He

denied threatening her, Idalia, and/or Marisol. 19 SF 113.

         In addition to fact witness testimony, the State presented forensics testimony

from a pathologist, Tommy Brown, and ballistics examiner, Robert Baldwin.

Brown testified about the autopsy of Robert Berger. 18 SF 82. Powder marks

showed that the shooter was within two feet of Berger when he was shot. 18 SF

3
  The direct testimony is remarkable for the amount of times the prosecution was caused to object to the defense
leading the witness. After six occasions, 19 SF 24,27,29,36,57,59, Assistant DA Ring asked the judge, “Your Honor,
may I have an instruction of Mr. Villarreal discontinue leading his witness?” 19 SF 59. Admonition was given and,
then, trial counsel immediately led Mr. Tercero again, causing Ms. Ring to object to counsel testifying. 19 SF 60.
Moments later, she had to object again, “I object to counsel testifying. Would he please keep it to question and
answer. He’s leading the witness.” 19 SF 69. Right away, another lead. 19 SF 70.

         The cross-examination is remarkable for the amount of times Mr. Tercero appears confused by the
questions. He asks Ms. Ring to speak slower. 19 SF 75. He explains to her that the translator “repeats a little
behind.” 19 SF 75. At one point, Tercero gets very confused when asked if Mr. Berger was facing him when he shot
him. It becomes apparent that this is at least partly the result of translation. 19 SF 97-98.

         Some cross-examination is substantively challenging, such as when Tercero has to explain an assertion that
he did not know if the gun he had was loaded or not, essentially maintaining he just took the weapon Gonzales
handed him without knowing if it would shoot. 19 SF 77-81. Tercero asks Ring, “Use terms that are more civil and
more slowly and I will be able to listen.” 19 SF 78-79.

         In one passage, cross-examination confounds Tercero for no apparent reason, as when he cannot follow the
prosecutor’s attempts to have him show the jury how he passed through the store using an interactive video screen.
He is instructed to touch the screen and a line will appear “as you’ve seen this week.” 19 SF 84. Tercero seems
baffled asking the prosecutor for different photos. 19 SF 85. Ms. Ring retorts, “Sir, this is your testimony, not mine.”
Id. Tercero presses on the screen to show where the cash register was. 19 SF 86. Ring challenges him, “I don’t see
any cash register in this picture.” Id. Tercero insists it was there, about a foot and a half wide. Id. (In closing
argument, the prosecution pointed out that there was no cash register. 20 SF 55-56.) Rummaging through the
photographic exhibits, Tercero tries to show his path through the store, asking the prosecutor for patience. 19 SF 90.
When he finds the photo he thinks will help, Ms. Ring condescends, “Look, sir, it’s not that difficult.” 19 SF 91.

                                                          38
110. Brown opined that, with the wound on the left side toward the back of the

neck and nick the vertebral artery, the shooter would have been either behind Mr.

Berger or would have reached around him. 18 SF 104.

      Robert Baldwin opined that two unfired live rounds found in the store were

from the same gun. 18 SF 150. Baldwin agreed that the bullets could have been

removed from the gun without any attempt at firing. If somebody wanted to

remove a round, “they would simply pull the slide back, [and the] bullet would pop

out” with the same extractor markings. 18 SF 163. Baldwin found that a bullet

could have escaped if one of two persons fighting over a gun were to pull the slide

back. 18 SF 164. Baldwin added that the two rounds could have been ejected at the

same time, with only one pull on the slide. 18 SF 168-69. One of the rounds had an

indention signifying that an attempt to fire it had been made sometime. However,

Baldwin testified that, whenever a gun is unloaded, the cartridges are cycled

through the chamber and take on extraction marks. Police officers, for example,

recycle ammunition, creating extraction marks. 18 SF 172-73. So the live rounds

showed no evidence they had been cycled through Tercero’s gun on the night of

the offense. 18 SF 174. Baldwin concluded he had no way of knowing if either had

been cycled or had fallen out of someone’s pocket. 18 SF 174.

      Guilt/Innocence Charge

                                        39
      The jury was instructed on lesser included offenses of felony murder and

aggravated robbery. For the jury to convict of felony murder, it would need to find

that Mr. Tercero had no intent to cause Mr. Berger’s death. 20 SF 15. For the jury

to convict of aggravated robbery, it would need to find that the gunshot was

accidental. 20 SF 17.

      Guilt/Innocence Argument

      The defense explained to the jury that to find Tercero guilty of capital

murder, it would have to be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that Tercero

“had the specific intention, conscious objective or desire to commit the murder. In

other words, to have Mr. Berger dead.” 20 SF 21. The defense argued that the

proof of specific intent was not met. 20 SF 33-35. The shooting unquestionably

occurred during a struggle. It was not, the defense argued, a case in which the

robber went straight to the cashier and shot. 20 SF 35. Michelle Johnson, Mr.

Berger’s friend, testified there was a struggle and the crime diagrams showed a

struggle that progressed from in front of Ms. Johnson’s counter to the front door.

20 SF 38, 40-41. This was inconsistent with the idea that Mr. Tercero just went up

to Mr. Berger with intent to shoot him. Id. Anticipating that the State might argue

that Tercero shot and misfired once at Berger before the shot that killed him, the

defense pointed to Tercero’s testimony that he moved the slide back and forth on

                                        40
the gun when he went to the front of the cleaners and, consistent with Baldwin’s

testimony, one or both of the recovered live rounds could have been expelled then.

20 SF 28. Secondly, if the gun had jammed, Tercero would have needed two hands

to run the slide to eject the bad round and, significantly, there was no evidence of

that. 20 SF 28.

      The State countered with a mantra, “[G]uns don’t accidentally go off during

a robbery. Guns are used to eliminate witnesses during a robbery.” 20 SF 52, 53,

55, 59, 60, 66, and 67. The State asserted that intent could be created in a split

second. Id. All that was needed to show that Tercero intended to shoot Berger and

intended to kill him in that act. Id. “A gun is used during a robbery to eliminate

witnesses, especially when you’re as calculated as Bernardo Tercero.” Id. at 53.

      The State’s principal argument for intent was: “If [Tercero] didn’t have the

specific intent to do something to Robert Berger why did he round the counter and

approach him?” 20 SF 55. The State argued only three adults saw everything that

happened: the deceased, the defendant, and Ms. Johnson, stressing the importance

of Ms. Johnson’s eyewitness testimony. The State argued that Johnson, like

Alberty, said Tercero went straight to Mr. Berger. Johnson said Berger was

“defensive.” 20 SF 58. Thus, the State argued that, although it is impossible to

know what Mr. Berger was thinking, he was not being heroic in the face of a gun

                                         41
with his three year old next to him. Id. The State argued that, as soon as Johnson

saw the gun,5 there was no struggle over the gun: just a gunshot. 20 SF 58. The

State argued that the horizontal path of the bullet, rather than some crazy angle,

showed intent. 6 20 SF 59-60. The shot in the “back of the neck” was consistent

with Johnson’s testimony that Berger was trying to get away from Tercero. 20 SF

60. The State found intent to eliminate a witness in Tercero’s statement that Berger

looked him in the eyes. 20 SF 63. The State argued that the indented live round on

the floor indicated that Tercero tried to eliminate the other witnesses, in particular

Michelle Johnson, but the gun jammed, he ejected the cartridge and went to the

back of the store. 7 20 SF 64. Finally, the State argued that intent was shown by

what Tercero said to Sylvia Cotera: that he shot Mr. Berger because the child had

seen his face. 20 SF 66. 8

           The jury asked to see Michelle Johnson’s entire testimony. 20 SF 70. When

asked to be specific, jurors wanted to hear cross-examination of Ms. Johnson about

Mr. Tercero’s initial approach to Mr. Berger. 20 SF 74. As Assistant DA Hawkins

5
    Ms. Johnson testified that the struggle between Tercero and Berger lasted about a minute. 16 SF 247.
6
 The pathologist also testified that the shot could have occurred with the shooter reaching around Mr. Berger. 18 SF
104.
7
 This argument is purely speculative. Ms. Johnson, with her eyes on Tercero as he shot Mr. Berger, would have
been perfectly capable of testifying that Mr. Tercero also pointed the gun at her if that were true.
8
 The state argued, “The defendant could not touch Sylvia Cotera. There is not one shred of evidence to indicate why
she would make this up. None. That’s what he said right after the crime.” 20 SF 66.

                                                           42
put it, “The question says, the question that Bernardo Tercero rounded counter

number two, initiating contact with Mr. Berger, grabbing Mr. Berger’s right arm.

And when we went through the direct with Mr. Denninger [defense counsel] we

looked at the language where he was grabbing the arm other than the path

situation.” 20 SF 74. It appears from the record that the jury was read snippets of

Ms. Johnson’s testimony on direct and cross: 16 SF 242 (lines 13-17); 243 (lines

12-15); 245 (lines 2-10); 17 SF 41 (lines 18-23); 43 (lines 12-20); 45 (lines 19-22).

20 SF 75-76. All pertain to Mr. Tercero coming in to her left and grabbing Mr.

Berger by the right arm. Subsequently, the jury found Mr. Tercero guilty of capital

murder after deliberating for a long time. 24 SF 100 (Prosecutor: “[I]t took you

guys a long time to come to a verdict.”). The docket sheet for October 16, 2000,

reflects that the jury began deliberations at 12:10 PM and ended at 9:47 PM,

including some breaks, returning with a guilty finding. SHR 000200.

      On December 18, 2000, an evidentiary hearing was held on Mr. Tercero’s

motion for new trial based on alleged misconduct with two witnesses, Idalia Lima

and Maria Lucinda Alvarado. Idalia testified that she had met with Assistant DA

Sally Ring prior to trial with DA investigator Gaston Rangel translating. MNT at 8.

Idalia stated that, during that meeting, Ms. Ring instructed her on how she was to

testify. MNT at 9. Although she had specifically told Ms. Ring that she saw

                                         43
Tercero and Mr. Berger struggle over the pistol, Ms. Ring told her to say that she

“did not see anything and that he threatened me.” MNT at 8-9; 11. Ms. Ring told

her not to say anything in favor of Mr. Tercero, or she would go to jail. Id. If she

cooperated, Ring said she would give Idalia a letter so she “would not go to jail.”

MNT at 10. Idalia also testified that she informed the prosecutor she had heard Ms.

Johnson say “help me” during the struggle between Tercero and Berger, and was

told she “did not have to say that in front of the jury.” MNT at 11. On cross-

examination with Ms. Ring, Idalia stated she believed the sentence was

inappropriate, because “[w]e know very well that there was a struggle and that man

died, fought to take the pistol away and . . . it fire by itself.” MNT at 17. She was

impeached with the fact that she had lied in her first two statements to the police

about not knowing who robbed the cleaners. MNT at 17-18. It was pointed out

that, in all three police statements, she did not say she could see the scuffle, and

Idalia said the police, too, threatened her. Id. Idalia told Ring that she had also told

her not to divulge that the police had threatened her. MNT at 19-20. Idalia

conceded they had had a discussion about whether exonerating things Mr. Tercero

had told her would be allowed in under the evidentiary rules. MNT at 22-23.

      Maria Lucinda Alvarado, Idalia’s mother, testified in corroboration of

Idalia’s claims. MNT 25, 27, 28. On cross, Alvarado agreed she had received a

                                           44
work permit due to her cooperation with the FBI getting Mr. Tercero to the United

States. MNT at 37. She objected to Mr. Tercero’s sentence being based on an

“exaggeration.” Id.

      Gaston Rangel testified at the hearing that, when he and Ms. Ring met with

Idalia, she did not tell them she had seen the struggle over the gun, nor did Ms.

Ring ever tell Idalia to change her testimony or not mention certain things. MNT at

43.   Ms. Ring’s co-counsel, Bill Hawkins, also testified denying Idalia’s

accusations. MNT 54ff. He testified that, in the meeting he attended with Idalia,

“[S]he was adamant that she had not seen the struggle.” MNT at 59. Hawkins also

described how FBI agent Rick Ganway had worked with Idalia Lima, Marisol

Lima, and Maria Alvarado to get Mr. Tercero back to the United States. MNT at

63. Marisol Lima also was given a work permit and five to seven thousand dollars

for her assistance in apprehension of Mr. Tercero. Id. Following brief arguments,

the trial court denied the motion. MNT at 71.

Punishment Phase

1. State Witnesses

      The State’s punishment phase presentation consisted of four offenses, two

misdemeanor theft convictions of Mr. Tercero under an alias, Carlos Arturo

Gonzales, in Houston, Texas, in 1994 and 1995 (22 SF 5), prior to the capital

                                        45
murder, and two unadjudicated felony offenses in Nicaragua that occurred after the

capital murder and before Mr. Tercero’s return to the United States and arrest.

      The first of the Nicaragua unadjudicated offenses was armed robbery of then

seventeen year old Jose Gonzales Gomez of money he had received for selling

watermelons in August 1998 in Chichigalpa, Nicaragua. 22 SF 5,8-9. The man

pulled a gun from under a newspaper and threatened to kill Gomez if he did not

give over his watermelon money. 22 SF 16-18. He gave the man $300.00 US and

the man ran and hopped on a bus. 22 SF 19. Gomez subsequently made a police

report. Just before trial, Assistant DA Hawkins and Gaston Rangel showed Mr.

Gomez a photo lineup in Nicaragua, in which he identified Mr. Tercero, 22 SF 23.

      The second Nicaragua unadjudicated offense was a complicated scenario in

which three men and one woman kidnapped a taxi driver (putting him in the trunk)

in order to use his car for a kidnapping of a child (by the wrenching of the child

away from his father in his own car). The somewhat unclear testimony showed

that, in the process of the chaotic child kidnapping, Mr. Tercero shot the father in

the leg.

      Juan Antonio Lezema Arauz, taxi driver, testified that a group of three men

and one woman hijacked his taxi in September 1998. A man sitting on the front

passenger side, later identified by Mr. Arauz as Mr. Tercero, pulled a gun on him,

                                         46
as did a man in the backseat, who also hit Mr. Arauz on the side of his head. 22 SF

55. Id. The man from the front seat told the others to tie up Mr. Arauz and take his

things and, after they took his glasses and money, they put Mr. Arauz in the trunk.

22 SF 57-58. Sometime later, when they stopped and the trunk was opened, Mr.

Arauz complained about binds on his hands. His hands were unbound and he was

given some refreshment through a straw. The front seat passenger told him they

would let him go, but that he must not make movements, or “that’s as far as [he

would] go.” 22 SF 58-60. The trunk was closed. Then, after more driving, when

the trunk was opened again, the front seat passenger said that they were going to

finish him off, but they shut the trunk again and went on. 22 SF 60. After about

four hours in the trunk, Mr. Arauz felt the car zig zagging, passing and falling

behind another car. As the car stopped, he heard the woman say, “Look, look he

don’t want to give it.” 22 SF 61, 63. A man’s voice that he did not recognize said,

“Just give him a few shots.” 22 SF 63. He heard two shots, heard a child

desperately crying as it was put in the taxi, and felt the taxi speed off. 22 SF 63-64.

For about forty minutes the taxi sped with Mr. Arauz in great distress in the trunk.

Then it stopped and someone said “the police, the police.” 22 SF 65. Arauz heard

five to seven shots, the child crying, and someone say, “Get the boy.” 22 SF 67.

He then said, “Don’t fire, I am here,” and police officers opened the trunk and let

                                          47
him out. 22 SF. 68. He saw that the police had captured the woman and one of the

men (not the man from the front seat). Id. In September, Mr. Hawkins and Mr.

Rangel showed Arauz a photo lineup, in which he identified Mr. Tercero, and he

made a courtroom identification of him as the man in the taxi front seat. 22 SF 72-

73. On cross, it was revealed that the person who gave Mr. Arauz a refreshment

through a straw was the man from the front seat. He also provided Mr. Arauz with

some pillows. 22 SF 77. Mr. Arauz admitted that is was unclear to him whether,

when the front seat man said something about “finishing” it was about finishing

“off” him or finishing what they were doing. 22 SF 78-79. Mr. Arauz had been

given the same photo of Mr. Tercero in Hawkins’ lineup by a Nicaraguan police

commissioner before he was shown the lineup by Hawkins and Rangel. 22 SF 83.

Arauz conceded that his captors had guns yet no one hurt him. 22 SF 89.

      Daniel Julio Chabarria, the father of the kidnapped four year old, owned a

food and a clothing store. On the first of September 1998, Chabarria was driving

his 1984 station wagon with his son Daniel about two blocks from his father’s

house, when he was intercepted by a white car (Mr. Arauz’s taxi) that he thought

was police. 22 SF 95-96, 99. Two men from the car immediately pulled guns on

Mr. Chabarria, one standing to his left at the driver’s side window, the other

entering the front seat from the right. The man at driver’s side told Mr. Chabarria

                                        48
not to move, it was a kidnapping. 22 SF 102. Then, as a woman on the street tried

to intervene, the man took the boy from Chabarria’s right arm while

simultaneously shooting him in the lower left leg below the knee. 22 S.F. 123. The

man took the boy to the white car and gave him to the woman in the car. 22 SF.

104. Chabarria simultaneously grabbed for the gun of the other kidnapper in his car

who shot him in his hand. Another (or the same) man outside the car fired on him

shooting him in the upper leg. He ultimately landed on the ground. 22 SF 105-10.

He was taken to the hospital where he gave a written police statement. Chabarria

realized that he knew the man (or one of the men) who shot him in the leg, because

he had been in his store and he had visited him once in his house. 22 SF 111. One

of the man’s aunts was an employee of his. Id. Thus, he told the police his name,

Bernardo Tercero. 22 SF 112. Chabarria agreed that, as Tercero was an arm’s

length away when he shot him, he could have killed him if he wished, but stated

“he did not want to kill me.” 22 SF 134.

      The State also put on a lieutenant from the Nicaraguan National Police, Luis

Gonzales, who testified about his participation in the police response to the

Chabarria kidnapping. 22 SF 143. When witnesses reported that three of the

assailants had left in a car with the boy and one had run away on foot, police

pursued all. They were able to capture the one on foot and borrow citizen cars to

                                           49
chase after the taxi. 22 SF 145. About an hour and ten minutes into the chase, they

found the taxi on a dirt road. 22 SF 150. Two men got out of the taxi in a hurry,

fled, and then from a distance fired upon Gonzales. 23 SF 5. There was chase, then

gunfire again. 23 SF 6-7. Gonzales fired back until his gun jammed. 23 SF 7. He

cleared his weapon, fired again, and it jammed again, so he gave up pursuit and the

men escaped. 23 SF 7-8. The boy and taxista were rescued. 23 SF 8-9. Gonzales

had recognized one of the men who had fired on him from the streets before, where

he had observed him wearing jewelry, which was unusual. This was Mr. Tercero.

23 SF 15. Gonzales made subsequent attempts to arrest Mr. Tercero, obtaining

photos of him from his family in the process. 23 SF 19.

      Gaston Rangel, DA investigator, testified about his trip to Nicaragua with

Asst. DA Hawkins to show photo arrays to prospective witnesses who came to

testify for the State. 23 SF 68ff. FBI agent Richard Ganway testified about how

Mr. Tercero was lured back to the United States through Marisol Lima, who was

paid $5,000.00 for her help. 23 SF 100. According to Rangel, Idalia Lima was not

so remunerated. Id.

2. Defense Witnesses

      The defense put on eight family and acquaintance witnesses that trial

counsel, Mr. Villarreal, personally obtained from Nicaragua right before trial. He

                                        50
introduced them and summed up the defense case by stating he had

“[a]pproximately eight witnesses that should be fairly short.” 23 SF 103. The brief

testimony of all eight was almost identical: Mr. Tercero was a good teenager, had

no bad habits, was a good student, helped his grandfather, and could be

rehabilitated. Testimony also was presented about how Mr. Tercero helped to

rescue victims of Hurricane Mitch, which hit Nicaragua in the last days of October

1998. Some pled for Tercero’s life, stating that Mitch had already killed a lot of his

family.

      Carlos Ruiz Molina, uncle, described Tercero as an excellent teen, having no

bad habits, and helping his grandfather Don Francisco clean and plant corn. 23 SF

107. He was raised by his grandparents and never did anything wrong. 23 SF 110.

Tercero could be rehabilitated. 23 SF 107. Molina told the jury that the family had

already lost sixty members to Mitch and asked for forgiveness on the part of the

family. 23 SF 108-110. On cross, Molina was asked if he had been aware of the

capital murder, thefts in Houston, and the offenses in Nicaragua. Only the capital

murder he had been made aware of “a little bit ago when we were notified.” 23 SF

111. He opined that, in light of the crimes, Tercero could be rehabilitated but

admitted he had had little contact with him since he was age 19. 23 SF 112.

                                          51
      Gregorio Berrios Alvarez, a fellow industrial machinery repair school

student, testified that for four or five years starting at about age 13, he saw Tercero

helping his grandfather with the beans and corn on weekends. 23 SF 116. Tercero’s

family was very poor. Id. He was not disrespectful and did not use alcohol or

tobacco or swear. 23 SF 117. Tercero was a good student, he studied hard. 23 SF

119. When defense counsel asked if he was aware that Tercero had been convicted

of capital murder, Alvarez responded, no, that he was not aware of what Tercero

had been accused of. 23 SF 118. On cross, Alvarez denied Tercero was “good” at

“repair[ing] industrial machinery.” When asked to clarify what he meant by “good

student,” Alvarez replied, “because I would see him study hard.” 23 SF 120. He

did not know Tercero’s grades, but said he made it to his third year. Id. The

prosecution grilled Alvarez on his lack of knowledge of Mr. Tercero’s capital

murder offense and the offenses in Nicaragua, questioning how he could believe in

Tercero’s potential rehabilitation with that record. 23 SF 123-128. On redirect,

Alvarez stated he believed in Tercero’s rehabilitation because the family was poor

but honest and Tercero was a “good boy.” 23 SF 128.

      Michael Alberto Mondragon, 21 years old, gave brief testimony that he was

three and Tercero five when they met and they also went to INO Tech school

together. 23 SF 129-30. He saw Tercero often until Tercero was 18. For two years

                                          52
Tercero lived at Mondragon’s house during the work week while attending the the

industrial school. On direct, Mondragon said Tercero was a “very good” student.

23 SF 130. “He tried to help [other students] that did not understand the classes.”

Id. Tercero was “smart.” When Mondragon was asked if Tercero helped him, he

answered, “Yes, and also a lot of the fellow students.” 23 SF 131.

         Gilma Berrios Alvarez testified that she was around Mr. Tercero almost

every weekend from when he was two years old until eleven at the house of one of

his uncles. 23 SF 166. He lived at her house from age 11 to 18 because he did not

have a way to commute home from INO Tech school. 23 SF 168-69. He was good

child. 23 SF 167. He helped his family. 23 SF 168. As a teenager, he was “well

mannered” with Alvarez. 23 SF 169. He was a “good student” meaning that “he

carried good grades.” 23 SF 169. He left for the United States at age 18 as a “very

simple man . . . due to the poor state in which he lived.” 23 SF 171. Defense

counsel 9 tells Alvarez that Tercero has been convicted of “capital murder” and she

says “I cannot believe it.” Id. Defense counsel asks if she is aware that Tercero

was involved in an armed robbery and a kidnapping in 1998, and she responds that

she was unaware. Id. When counsel asks if Tercero can be rehabilitated, she

responds, “Yes. Because for God there’s nothing impossible.” Counsel asks if she
9
  This is the first witness that defense counsel has informed on the stand about Tercero’s present conviction and
criminal history. The prosecutor previously had the distinction of asking first, and getting replies from the witnesses
that they were ignorant of the offenses.

                                                          53
believes in Tercero, and she replies, “From the deepest part of my heart.” 23 SF

172. On cross, the witness admits that she was aware Tercero was a suspect in the

kidnapping case from the news and that she did not tell police where he was

(adding that she did not know). 23 SF 175. She admitted she would do anything to

help him. Id.

      Maria Auxiliadora Herrera Montalvan, a friend of Tercero’s mother, testified

that his mother’s parents raised him. 23 SF 177. He was a “good working boy”

helping his very poor grandparents in the field, picking corn, planting beans,

carrying water, and grinding corn. 23 SF 178. In October 1998, Hurricane Mitch

caused a mudslide. Montalvan worked with the Nicaraguan Red Cross which was

involved in removing bodies and saving live people from the mud. 23 SF 178-179.

She saw Mr. Tercero seven times working to help with the mud slide during the

fifteen days of the rescue. 23 SF 180. On cross, Montalvan expressed amazement

and disbelief at what she has been told about Tercero’s offenses, yet said they did

not change her view of him being a good person. 23 SF 184-85.

      Luis Antonio Maldonado, a 52 year old man who lived with Mr. Tercero’s

grandparents and had known him since he was a small child, testified about

Hurricane Mitch. 23 SF 186. Mitch took away five communities, killing 2,753

people. Involved in the rescue effort, Maldonado directly saw Tercero over three

                                        54
days taking children and elderly people out of the mud, and transporting them to

rescue helicopters. 23 SF 187-88. Tercero lost 60 family members in Mitch. Id.

When he lived with Tercero as a child, he found him well mannered, “very

cordial.” 23 SF 188.

      Lydia Tercero Hueto, Mr. Tercero’s mother, testified that Bernardo is the

oldest of six sons and that she and he lived together. 23 SF 191. She never married

Jesus Tercero, his father, who in turn never supported Bernardo. 23 SF 191-93.

As a boy, Bernardo tried unsuccessfully to have a relationship with his father, who

was married to another woman. Id. Bernardo was raised by his grandparents, her

father Francisco Tercero and mother Amanda Hueto. Id.       Bernardo was a “very

good student.” 23 SF 193. Bernardo himself carried her in his arms fifty meters

out of the mud of Hurricane Mitch, and she watched him take other people out. 23

SF 194. Ms. Tercero pleaded for mercy from the jury because Bernard was “the

oldest son and he is the one that would help me because I am very poor.” 23 SF

195. Then she expressed “very much” love for him. 23 SF 196.

      Carlos Alonzo Tercero Huerto, Mr. Tercero’s uncle, testified that his and

Lydia’s parents, who raised Mr. Tercero, were very poor with fourteen children

whom Bernardo joined in their household. 23 SF 198. The family rented acres to

plant and Tercero’s grandparents and their older kids worked the acres farming. 23

                                        55
SF 199. Tercero’s father Jesus was a produce grower. 23 SF 197. Heurto and his

siblings would tell Mr. Tercero that his father had money, but when he looked for

his father his father was offended by Bernardo’s poverty. 23 SF 199. One of his

step-brothers (with his father’s wife) also prevented Bernardo from approaching

his father. 23 SF 202. Bernardo wore to school the clothes of his uncle Javier, who

was his same age, and sometimes went without shoes. 23 SF 200. Mr. Tercero was

a “[g]ood [elementary] student . . . [e]ven though he had to borrow some books

from friends.” 23 SF 200. Huerto testified that “with difficulty [Mr. Tercero]

studied elementary [and] he could not finish junior high. He had to go to a school,

medium technical school, also with difficulty because there was no money.” 23 SF

200. Trial counsel asked, “What difficulties?” and Huerto replied, “Economic.” 23

SF 201. He explained that Tercero would have to ask for rides to school and get up

very early. Id. He was well mannered, helped his grandparents in the field on

weekends, did not use vulgar language or alcohol, and had only one ambition: to

“study.” 23 SF 203. When he was 18, Mr. Tercero left Nicaragua for the United

States, in order to help his grandparents. 23 SF 203. Mr. Huerto testified that Mr.

Tercero studied about 2 years in technical school, but “twelve” years overall,

including “elementary.” 24 SF 4. He went to the “elementary institute” and then

the “medium technical school.” 24 SF 5. Mr. Tercero stopped going to school to

                                        56
help his grandfather for about three months before leaving for the United States. 24

SF 6. After a year and a half in the United States, Mr. Tercero returned to

Nicaragua, where he continued to help his grandparents and an uncle who died in

Mitch. 24 SF 7. Sixty family were lost in Mitch. 24 SF 10. Huerto pleaded with the

jury for a punishment less than death. 24 SF 16.

      Donald Davis, Sergeant in the Harris County Jail, testified that Tercero’s

only “offense” during pretrial detention was a writeup for “tampering.” 23 SF 136.

He was found covering the window of his cell with a newspaper, for which he pled

guilty and was given three days without privileges. 23 SF 141-42.

      Juan Cortez, a Catholic chaplain in the Harris County Jail, appeared at trial

and asked the defense attorneys if he could testify on Tercero’s behalf. 23 SF 164.

He had been in contact with Tercero since his time of arrival in the jail. He had

never seen any indication of trouble in Tercero’s interactions with other inmates.

23 SF 149. He was observing change for the good in Tercero and sincere spiritual

development. 23 SF 150-52. He saw no indication in Tercero that he would be

violent again. 23 SF 152. On cross, the chaplain stubbornly refused to state that he

could be wrong about Tercero’s sincerity and rehabilitation potential. 23 SF 159,

160. The prosecutor asked, “Do you think it’s possible that a person that plans

crimes . . . might be more difficult to rehabilitate than someone that doesn’t plan a

                                         57
crime?” and agrees that someone who manipulates might find rehabilitation harder.

23 SF 162.

3. State Rebuttal Witness

      Melinda Winn Berger, the wife of the victim, gave victim impact testimony.

24 SF 27ff. In addition to sharing the history of her relationship with her husband

and her experience of his death in the hospital, she painfully described how Jordan,

their daughter, was still crying herself to sleep at night and seeing a therapist to

deal with flashbacks of the crime. 24 SF 58-59. The hardest thing for her, she said,

was raising Jordan without Mr. Berger. 24 SF 62.

Arguments

      Defense counsel argued that the defendant shrouding his cell with a piece of

paper over its window was a non-violent incident and that he had no other

incidents of any kind, including aggression or violence, while awaiting trial in the

Harris County jail. 24 SF 72. The chaplain vouched Mr. Tercero was peaceable

and a sincere believer. 24 SF 73, 75. Mr. Tercero would peaceably serve a life

sentence. 24 SF 78. Counsel criticized the quality of evidence supporting the

unadjudicated Nicaraguan offenses. 24 SF 83, 86. Counsel appealed to residual

doubt: “If there is a possibility that this would not have been a capital murder case

but for the fact that there was a struggle or possibly a fight for the weapon, then do

                                          58
not, do not impose the death penalty in this case.” 24 SF 90. In addition to raising

residual doubt and an argument that “it’s never okay to take the life of another

human being, counsel’s mitigation argument was confined to:

            You talked about . . . mitigating circumstances. I brought you a poor
      family. I know some of you got bored when you heard some of that, but I
      thought it was important for you to know this young man here basically
      came from extreme abject poverty. Not using it as an excuse, but it’s
      important for you to know that it’s not like he starts off the way all of us
      have had our lives. I know, it’s – it starts off that way, comes from a good,
      hard-working humble family. No doubt about it. All those people are good
      people.

             Talked about how poor he was, how tough his schooling was. You
      heard that. And I bring you that not for you to consider that as a
      circumstance, but for you to get just an idea of the picture. We talked about
      maybe someone doing some deed that could be mitigating. . . He was out
      there helping [in the aftermath of the mudslide].

24 SF 93-94.

      The State initially dismissed Mr. Tercero’s family and friend good character

evidence in one short paragraph;

      You heard from his family, they said he was a good man, he was a good
      child. Well he likes his family. They’ve been nice to him. Well of course he
      gets along with them. But God forbid . . . you’re a target to him. You’re
      somebody he sets his sight on and then he becomes a threat.

24 SF 103. The State returned to argue that Tercero was lucky to have been raised

by loving grandparents. “No matter what you do, they’re still going to love you.”

24 SF 113. “Remember, he was doing okay. He was respectful with his parents no,

                                         59
bad habits [sic], things of that nature. So he wasn’t, he wasn’t harmed by being

raised by his grandparents. No mitigation there.” 24 SF 113.

      The State undercut poverty as mitigation by simply comparing him to the

watermelon salesman, State’s witness Jose Gonzales, who said he was “trying to

scratch out a living as a fisherman and farmer instead of committing God-awful

crimes.” 24 SF 114.

      The State noted that Mr. Tercero had “ a lot more education than” some of

the other Nicaragua witnesses, yet he was the one “out there committing cap

crimes.” 24 SF 114.

      The State argued the only mitigation that had been presented was the “mud

slide rescue,” which did not stack up against Tercero’s alleged “willingness to

commit violent crimes again and again and again.” 24 SF 118-19.

      The State projected its view of Tercero was that he was a “walking, talking

continuing threat. . . . We know that Bernardo Tercero is a master manipulator. He

manipulated Idalia and Marisol, he manipulated his victims over in Nicaragua. Not

you, not you. He’s not going to manipulate you.” 24 SF 102. “Folks, you all were

judges of that defendant’s character when he testified. And you saw and heard the

lies that he told you. You know that he can manipulate or tries to manipulate.” 24

SF 104. “[T]hink about his role in this deal at Park Avenue Cleaners. Who was the

                                        60
ring leader? That man. Who had the inside, Marisol and Idalia Lima? That man.

Who got Chilango or the co-defendant to come along? That man. Who went up to

the front and held up everyone at gunpoint? That man. It was very planned out.

That’s a man who is a threat. All the information he got, all the steps that he took

to make sure he was successful.” 24 SF 105-106. The State argued that Tercero

could have gone back to Nicaragua and sold watermelons. “Instead he chose to be

the demon that he is.” 24 SF 108. The State argued that Tercero “planned out” the

simple watermelon salesman robbery by himself. “He waited until no one else was

there. He waited until the bus was ready.” 24 SF 109. In reference to the

kidnapping, the State argued, “Look at his role. . . . So whose idea do you think

this was [to kidnap the businessman’s child]? This defendant develops the plan,

goes to [the taxi driver and asks him to pick up the group]. . . . Gets his cohorts

with him, pretend they’re going for a cab ride. Jump Mr. Ledezma, tie him up, put

him in the trunk at gunpoint. And who’s giving the orders? You heard Mr.

Ledezma; it was Bernardo Tercero, tie him up, don’t move, don’t look at me, I’m

going to untie your hands.” 24 SF 110. “What kind of beast makes a child the

focus of the crime. They were taking that kid for money. The defendant knew that

and the defendant planned that.” 24 SF 110-111.

                                         61
      As with guilt/innocence, the jury deliberated long and hard on Mr. Tercero’s

punishment. The docket sheets reflect that the jury began deliberating at 3:15 PM

on October 19, 2000, deliberated with two short breaks until 9:30 PM, and

recessed until the next day. SHR 000205. The jury resumed deliberating at 9:55

AM on October 20, 2000, took an hour and fifteen minute break for lunch, and

returned with its punishment verdict at 2:30 PM.

Trial Counsels’ Performance Was Deficient

             Under Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), counsel

performs deficiently by engaging in conduct that falls below an objective standard

of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms. Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S.
510, 521 (2003). Formal standards of professional practice can be “important

guides” in determining whether counsel performed deficiently. Missouri v. Frye,

132 S. Ct. 1399, 1408 (2012) (referring to ABA standards). In evaluating a claim

that counsel failed to adequately investigate, Strickland holds that “counsel has a

duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that

makes particular investigations unnecessary.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691.

      Prejudice is shown when, “but for counsel’s unprofessional errors,” there is

a “reasonable probability that . . . the result of the proceeding would have been

different.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. The reasonable probability standard

                                        62
requires only “a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”

Id. It does not require a showing that counsel’s deficient conduct “more likely

than not” altered the verdict. Id. This is because “[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. at 694 (emphasis supplied). For example, the standard can be

satisfied if, had counsel performed effectively, it is reasonably probable that a

single juror might have “struck a different balance” as to the weight of the

evidence. Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 537; Loyd v. Smith, 899 F.2d 1416, 1426 (5th Cir.

l990) (before concluding “no prejudice” under Strickland, reviewing court “must

be confident that at least one juror’s verdict would not have been different had the

new evidence been presented”) (emphasis added).

      A reviewing court must also consider the harm that can result at both phases

of trial from a deficient pretrial investigation. Errors made in the guilt phase

(including those that have their genesis in an inadequate pretrial investigation)

must be evaluated for both their effect on the jury’s decision to convict and any

potential impact on the sentencing phase that followed. See Moore v. Johnson, 194
F.3d 586, 619 (5th Cir. 1999) (“reject[ing the] notion” that guilt-phase

                                         63
ineffectiveness “may not be deemed to prejudice a capital defendant during the

punishment phase”).

      When evaluating the prejudicial effect of numerous errors made throughout

counsel’s representation, a reviewing court should not treat each error in isolation.

Instead, the question is whether the cumulative effect of all of counsel’s errors,

omissions and oversights undermines confidence in the result. Williams, 529 U.S.

at 397–98 (a reviewing court applying Strickland must assess “prejudice” by

considering mitigating evidence cumulatively, rather than piece-by-piece); see

also Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 534 (“In assessing prejudice, we reweigh the evidence in

aggravation against the totality of the available mitigating evidence”).

      1. The prevailing professional norms at the time of Mr. Tercero’s 2000
      trial required that counsel conduct a thorough investigation into
      potential mitigating evidence.

      The Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments require that sentencing procedures

“focus the jury’s attention on the particularized nature of the crime,” Gregg v.

Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 206 (1976) (plurality opinion), while also allowing “the

particularized consideration of relevant aspects of the character and record” of the

individual defendant, Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. 280, 303 (1976).

Because “an individualized decision is essential,” Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586,

605 (1978), the Eighth Amendment mandates that the sentencer “not be precluded

                                          64
from considering as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or

record and any circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis

for a sentence less than death,” id. at 604. Likewise, the sentencer may not “refuse

to consider, as a matter of law, any relevant mitigating evidence,” Eddings v.

Oklahoma, 455 U.S. 104, 114 (1982), such as a “troubled youth,” id. at 107.

        Relevant mitigating evidence is not limited only to evidence that would

“relate specifically to petitioner’s culpability for the crime he committed.” Skipper

v. South Carolina, 476 U.S. 1, 4 (1986). Likewise, there is no requirement that

mitigating evidence even have a “nexus” to the offenses or that the defendant make

any showing that “the criminal act was attributable” in any way to the mitigating

factors. Tennard, 542 U.S. at 286. Relevant mitigating evidence includes any

evidence that would be “mitigating” in the sense that it “might serve ‘as a basis for

a sentence less than death.’” Skipper, 476 U.S. at 5 (quoting Lockett, 438 U.S. at

604).

        In essence, the fundamental Eighth Amendment premise is that if the

sentencer fails to consider “those compassionate or mitigating factors stemming

from the diverse frailties of humankind,” an unacceptable risk exists that the death

penalty will be imposed in spite of factors that warrant a less severe penalty.

Woodson, 428 U.S. at 304. A jury can consider evidence in mitigation, however,

                                         65
only if trial defense counsel vigorously investigates and presents the available

evidence.

      “Because the scope of mitigation evidence which may be considered by the

jury in sentencing is much broader than the range of relevant information which

may be considered in determining guilt or innocence, counsel is under a greater

obligation to discover and evaluate potential evidence of mitigation.”        United

States ex rel. Emerson v. Gramley, 883 F. Supp. 225, 243 (N.D. Ill. 1995), aff’d, 91
F.3d 898 (7th Cir. 1996). See also Frierson v. Woodford, 463 F.3d 982, 989 (9th

Cir. 2006) (“[t]he imperative to cast a wide net for all relevant mitigating evidence

is heightened at a capital sentencing hearing”).

      The responsibility of the lawyer is to walk a mile in the shoes of the client,

to see who he is, to get to know his family and the people who care about him, and

then to present that information to the jury in a way that can be taken into account

in deciding whether the client is so beyond redemption that he should be

eliminated from the human community. Battenfield v. Gibson, 236 F.3d 1215,

1229 (10th Cir. 2001) (quoting Stephen B. Bright, Advocate in Residence: The

Death Penalty As the Answer to Crime: Costly, Counterproductive and

Corrupting, 36 SANTA CLARA L. REV. 1069, 1085-86 (1996)).

                                         66
      In Bobby v. Van Hook, 130 S. Ct. 13 (2009) (per curiam), the Supreme

Court stated that “[r]estatements of professional standards, we have recognized,

can be useful as ‘guides’ to what reasonableness entails, but only to the extent they

describe the professional norms prevailing when the representation took place.”

Van Hook, 130 S. Ct. at 17 (emphasis added). Subsequently, the Supreme Court

illustrated the sources from which courts can ascertain professional norms of

criminal defense practice. In Padilla v. Kentucky, 130 S. Ct. 1473, 1482–83 (2010),

in which the Court deemed deficient counsel’s failure to advise a non-citizen

defendant about the immigration consequences of a guilty plea, the Supreme Court

relied on the ABA guidelines, as well as numerous other sources, to determine the

prevailing standard of care. “Authorities of every stripe,” as well as reported

decisions describing Texas capital trials, confirm that the mid-1990's standard of

care, like the 2003 ABA Guidelines, required a thorough social history when

preparing to defend a capital case. As in the current ABA Guidelines, “the duty to

investigate mitigating evidence” was prescribed “in exhaustive detail, specifying

what attorneys should look for, where to look, and when to begin.” Van Hook, 130
S. Ct. at 17. Well-defined national capital defense norms in place since the mid-

1980’s required counsel to seek out a wide range of mitigating evidence. See, e.g.,

David C. Stebbins & Scott P. Kenney, Zen and the Art of Mitigation Presentation,

                                         67
or, The Use of Psycho-Social Experts in the Penalty Phase of a Capital Trial, THE

CHAMPION, Aug. 1986, at pp. 16–17) (“Upon appointment to a capital case, two

concurrent investigations should be begun by separate and distinct investigatory

personnel . . . . A social history is a complete chronicle of every event of any

significance in the life of the client from birth, or even before, to the present . . . .

Without a complete social history, any psychological examination is incomplete

and the resulting opinions, conclusions, or diagnoses are subject to severe

scrutiny.”); see also id. at 16 (“[A]ttorneys are not trained in . . . dealing with the

psycho-social problems of their clients and explaining these to the jury. Because

of this, it is necessary for attorneys in capital cases to recognize at the beginning

that they do not have the skills to accomplish the goals of mitigation and to go and

seek the assistance of psycho-social professionals who are skilled in these fields.

For all practical purposes, the effective use of social workers, psychologists, and

psychiatrists is necessary for the effective representation of a capitally-charged

defendant.”); Jeff Blum, Investigation in a Capital Case: Telling the Client’s Story,

THE CHAMPION, Aug. 1985, at pp. 27–31 (instructing capital defense counsel to

thoroughly investigate the client’s background by collecting documentary evidence

and interviewing witnesses related to family background, medical history, school

performance, military experience, work history, psychological profile, criminal

                                           68
record, institutional record, significant others, religious background, drug/alcohol

history, geography, skills and talents).

      Decisions from this Court applying Strickland to cases tried prior to Mr.

Tercero’s in 2000 confirm that this was the prevailing standard of care in Texas.

For example, Ex parte Gonzales, 204 S.W.3d 391, 393–96 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006),

held that trial counsel were deficient for not investigating whether the client had a

history of child abuse even though counsel “never even dreamed” it was an issue

relevant to his client’s case. On July 20, 1994, Gabriel Gonzales, along with four

other members of the Crips gang, robbed a pawn shop to get guns and money. Id.

at 393. “While his accomplices were smashing display cases and stealing guns,

[Gonzales] chased one of the proprietors of the shop into the back of the store and

shot her. Then he returned to the cash register and forced an employee to open it.”

Id. Gonzales was sentenced to death.

      Gonzales’ trial counsel interviewed Gonzales about his life from birth up to

the trial. Id. at 394. Counsel also talked to the client’s mother once before trial, and

to the client’s sister during trial. None of them revealed that Gonzales was

frequently sexually and physically abused when he was small child. Unbeknownst

to trial counsel, the mother believed that the father was sexually abnormal and used

excessive force on the children and, when she learned that her husband was
                                           69
sexually abusing their daughter, she notified the police and obtained a divorce. Id.

Trial counsel stated that he

      did not ask [the family members] or the applicant about any specific
      topics such as abuse in the applicant’s past. His interviews with the
      mother and sister started “globally in nature,” but he “never even
      dreamed” of the issue of abuse, and he “certainly didn’t really inquire
      about it.” He did ask the applicant about how he grew up. “I just start
      from the beginning, you know, tell me all about you. Where were you
      born and so forth, leading them up to—to this time.” The applicant did
      not volunteer any information about abuse. The sister testified at the
      habeas hearing that she did not volunteer information about the abuse
      because she is ashamed of having been abused and it is not very easy
      to talk about.

Id. at 394–95 (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).

      Although Gonzales’s trial counsel had interviewed both Gonzales’s mother

and sister about Gonzales’s background—the sister even testified at punishment to

Gonzales’s difficult childhood and his borderline mental retardation—Gonzales’s

counsel never specifically asked these potential witnesses whether Gonzales had

been abused, and thus did not present evidence of abuse at sentencing. Id. at 394–

95.

      Gonzales’ post-conviction counsel hired a psychiatrist who, after

interviewing Gonzales and reviewing some of his records, diagnosed him with

“chronic   post-traumatic      stress   disorder,   attention-deficit   disorder   with

hyperactivity, mixed personality disorder with explosive and antisocial traits,
                                           70
hereditary epilepsy, dyslexia and other learning disorders.” Id. at 395.       Quite

parallel to neuropsychological findings very recently made by an examination of

Mr. Tercero, Mr. Gonzales’ psychiatrist concluded that Gonzales was “an

individual who at an early age had [neurological and learning disorders]. He also

had stigmata of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. . . and a Borderline Normal

Intelligence Quotient which would lead to poor processing of information and

probably lower level of control of behaviors.” Id. at 395–96.

       Because counsel was not aware of this information, the issue before this

Court was whether counsel failed to conduct a reasonable investigation to uncover

mitigating evidence. The trial court found that trial counsel were not deficient

because the abuse information was known to Gonzales and he did not mention it to

trial counsel. Id. at 396.

       This Court disagreed, holding that the failure to investigate and inquire into

the subject of abuse when interviewing the client and relevant witnesses fell below

an objective standard of reasonableness for Texas capital trial counsel and rendered

trial counsel’s mitigation investigation unreasonable. Id. at 397. This Court noted

that the Supreme Court had made clear in Penry v. Lynaugh, 492 U.S. 302 (1989),

that the pre-1991 Texas sentencing statute violated the Eighth Amendment when it

precluded consideration of mitigating evidence beyond the scope of the special

                                         71
issues. In a footnote, this Court catalogued numerous cases tried under the former

statute in which counsel had investigated and presented mitigating evidence.

Gonzales, 204 S.W.3d at 396 n.32.

      In 1991, the Texas capital sentencing “statute was amended to comprise a

much broader range of mitigating evidence, namely, ‘all of the evidence, including

the circumstances of the offense, the defendant’s character and background, and

the personal moral culpability of the defendant.’” Id. at 397 (footnote omitted).

According to Gonzales, courts must assess counsel’s preparation for the

punishment phase in light of this development. Relevant mitigating evidence

clearly included “the defendant’s childhood and his physical and mental health.”

Id. Thus, “at the time of [Gonzales’ trial six years before Tercero’s] an objective

standard of reasonable performance for defense counsel in a capital case would

have required counsel to inquire whether the defendant had been abused as a

child.” Id. at 397.

      In granting relief to Gonzales, this Court announced that, in a post-1991

trial, capital defense counsel were required to investigate the client’s childhood

and mental health—even in a case in which (1) counsel, before investigating,

“never even dreamed” what the investigation would turn up; and, (2) counsel

interviewed family members who did not spontaneously volunteer information. Put

                                        72
differently, at the time of Mr. Tercero’s trial, Texas capital defense counsel had a

duty to independently investigate mitigating circumstances related to mental and

physical health, and the client’s childhood, regardless of whether the information

was volunteered by the client and his family. See Moore v. Johnson, 194 F.3d 586,

617 (5th Cir. 1999) (holding, when overturning a 1980 Houston death sentence,

“that [because] counsel’s conduct in failing to develop or present mitigating

evidence was not informed by any investigation and not supported by reasonably

professional limits upon investigation, we find that there is no decision entitled to a

presumption of reasonableness under Strickland”).

      Judge Cochran’s concurring opinion in Gonzales further clarifies the

applicable professional norms. “[D]efense counsel must fully investigate any and

all potential mitigating circumstances in his client’s background which might

conceivably persuade a jury not to impose the death penalty.           The failure to

investigate will not be excused simply because the defendant failed to mention such

evidence himself.”     Ex parte Gonzales, 204 S.W.3d at 400 (Cochran, J.,

concurring) (emphasis added). The Supreme Court has made it clear that “defense

counsel may be required to investigate potential mitigating facts even when the

defendant is ‘uninterested in helping’ or is ‘even actively obstructive’ in

                                          73
developing a mitigation defense.” Id. (quoting Rompilla v. Beard, 545 U.S. 374

(2005)).

       At the time of Mr. Tercero’s trial, the prevailing professional norms required

counsel to conduct a thorough mitigation investigation. See Porter v. McCollum,

558 U.S. 30, 39 (2009) (“It is unquestioned that under the prevailing professional

norms at the time of Porter’s [1988] trial, counsel had an ‘obligation to conduct a

thorough investigation of the defendant’s background.’”) (quoting Williams v.

Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 396 (2000)). See also ABA Guidelines for the Appointment

and Performance of Counsel in Death Penalty Cases 11.4.1(C), 93 (1989)

(investigations into mitigating evidence “should comprise efforts to discover all

reasonably available mitigating evidence and evidence to rebut any aggravating

evidence that may be introduced by the prosecutor”); Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S.
510, 524 (2003) (citing to 1989 ABA Guidelines to establish prevailing

professional norms in 1989 capital trial). The Texas and national practices reflect

“well-defined norms” for mitigation investigation, and thus the floor below which

counsel may not descend. Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 524–25; Rompilla, 545 U.S. at

380.

       The Texas standard of care is reflected in the ABA Guidelines specifying

that counsel should investigate the defendant’s full history, including “medical

                                         74
history, (mental and physical illness or injury, alcohol and drug use, birth trauma

and developmental delays); . . . family and social history (including physical,

sexual or emotional abuse).” 1989 Guideline 11.4.1.D.2. Counsel must also

interview “witnesses familiar with aspects of the client’s history that might affect

the . . . possible mitigating reasons for the offense(s), and/or other mitigating

evidence to show why the client should not be sentenced to death.”            1989

Guideline 11.4.1.D.3. Counsel’s duty “is not discharged merely by conducting a

limited investigation.” Lambright v. Schriro, 490 F.3d 1103, 1120 (9th Cir. 2007).

Counsel must “seek records, interview family members and friends, and obtain

appropriate mental evaluations well in advance of trial.” Poindexter v. Mitchell,

454 F.3d 564, 579 (6th Cir. 2006).

      Terminating the mitigation investigation is only appropriate in the context of

an informed decision, after a thorough investigation. Rompilla, 545 U.S. at 395;

Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 527–28. Even if counsel performed some investigation, that

does not preclude a finding of deficient performance with respect to further

investigation they reasonably should have done under the circumstances.

Rompilla, 545 U.S. at 388–89; Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 527, 534.

      Under the circumstances of Mr. Tercero’s case, counsel had an obligation to

secure the assistance of experts in a capital trial. 1989 ABA Guideline 11.4.1

                                         75
(“Counsel should secure the assistance of experts where it is necessary or

appropriate for . . . presentation of mitigation”); see also David C. Stebbins &

Scott P. Kenney, Zen and the Art of Mitigation Presentation, or, The Use of

Psycho-Social Experts in the Penalty Phase of a Capital Trial, THE CHAMPION,

Aug. 1986, at 18 (“The use of social workers and psychologists as part of the

defense team is a necessity—not a luxury.”); Sears v. Upton, 130 S. Ct. 3259, 3264

(2010) (holding trial counsel ineffective, in part, for failing to present expert

testimony that could have helped jury better understand defendant in a 1993 capital

trial because “[c]ompetent counsel should have been able to turn some of the

adverse evidence into a positive”).      Here, that duty was heightened because

counsel represented to the trial court that expert assistance was necessary to

effectively prepare for the punishment phase, and the trial court agreed and

authorized funding for an expert.

      2. Trial counsel’s performance fell way below prevailing norms.

      In the first place, trial counsel did not move for funds nor obtain a mitigation

specialist/investigator. On reading through trial counsel’s files, the undersigned has

seen no social history and no evidence that a now missing social history might

have been worked up as a basis for further mitigation investigation. The files

contain none of the usually collected documentary evidence related to such things

                                          76
as family background, medical or psychological history, school performance, work

history, institutional records, religious background, drug/alcohol history,

geography (anything pertaining to Nicaragua, the revolution occurring when Mr.

Tercero was born, the “Contra war,” the culture, farming hardships [e.g., droughts,

floods, pesticides], politics, gender roles), or particular skills or talents of Mr.

Tercero.       There is virtually nothing in the file designed to individualize Mr.

Tercero and evoke the jury’s sympathy, except for a list of family and friends that

Mr. Villarreal obtained from Mr. Tercero, which led to the trial testimony (see

infra).

          Trial counsel moved for funds for one expert, a forensic psychologist, but

only had the appointed psychologist, Dr. Jesse Reed III, see Mr. Tercero at a very

late date in the trial process, within a couple of weeks of trial, and only asked Dr.

Reed to evaluate Mr. Tercero to answer the State’s anticipated evidence of future

dangerousness, the capital murder and the unadjudicated Nicaragua offenses,

which were detailed in a letter for Dr. Reed. 15 Dr. Reed made no report observed

15
   On September 25, 2000, Mr. Villarreal asked the Harris County jail to give Dr. Reed access to the client. Exhibit
6. On September 29, 2000, Mr. Villarreal sent a letter to Dr. Reed (and his partner Dr. Ramon Laval) requesting
specifically that Dr. Reed assess and evaluate Mr. Tercero in relation to the prosecution’s upcoming attempt to prove
Mr. Tercero a “future danger.” Exhibit 7 (Letter from Gilbert Villarreal to Dr. Jesse Reed III and Dr. Ramon Laval,
Sept. 29, 2000). The three page letter describes the principal offense and the unadjudicated Nicaraguan offenses in
detail and closes stating, “The prosecutors . . . [are making] an effort to persuade a Jury to give the Death Penalty to
the Defendant, Bernardo Tercero, to prove that he is a ‘future danger.’ Please advise us as to what assistance you can
provide in the punishment portion of the trial. We would request that before you render a written opinion that you
meet with attorney John Deninger and/or myself at your convenience, to explain any questions or concerns.” Id. at 3.

                                                          77
by the undersigned as memorialized in any way, and did not appear at trial. It is

clear, however, that trial counsel did not instruct Dr. Reed to consider how to

develop a mitigation case for Mr. Tercero; he did not ask Dr. Reed to do a full

forensic examination of Mr. Tercero, which would have had the potential to find

many kinds of strong mitigating circumstances having nothing to do with future

dangerousness, such as the childhood sexual abuse found in Gonzales, supra, or

any organic brain injury or serious mental disorders. Trial counsel’s dilatory use of

a forensic expert like Dr. Reed, and the instructions he gave him, shows that

counsel was not working with a comprehension of Texas death penalty law.

Counsel showed no comprehension of the purpose of the mitigation special issue --

- to prevent a death-qualified jury from being locked into what Mr. Villarreal

locked his expert into: consideration only of the small subset of mitigating

evidence that is relevant to future dangerousness. This lack of comprehension is

borne out in the kind of evidence that Mr. Villarreal ultimately did put on (see

infra).

          The lack of a social history, the lack of pursuit of any relevant documentary

evidence, and the cabined instructions to a late-appointed expert is a particularly

poor performance for counsel in a trial involving an international defendant. The

standards for adequate mitigation function in international cases should be raised,

                                            78
as trial counsel should be on notice through the situation that mitigation planning

has to be done early to overcome inevitable obstacles that will arise in the securing

of documents from places that may be culturally strange to counsel and the

investigation and securing of witnesses under similarly unusual circumstances,

overshadowed by United States visa requirements and potential snafus. Indeed, Mr.

Villarreal ran into such snafus with the United States Embassy as he tried to

cultivate and bring family and friend witnesses at the last minute. He got in an

argument with Assistant DA Hawkins on the record, on October 11, 2000, the

second day of trial on the merits, when he began to complain about how easily the

prosecution’s witnesses were being processed for their visas in comparison to his.

Hawkins, in turn, called Mr. Villarreal’s preparation of his witnesses dilatory and,

realizing what he had done, then announced that, however, he was not calling Mr.

Villarreal ineffective:

        MR. VILLARREAL: Judge, I received word last night and I’ve been trying
to get some breaks to go ahead and get through to the U. S. Embassy in Nicaragua
regarding the witnesses that we have, our punishment witnesses. . . . The reason
that it’s important is because I made a trip to Nicaragua, because I had informed
the Court there were mitigation witnesses that the people were trying to bring in
were people living in certain remote areas within Nicaragua. I was able to locate
the different witnesses, and this           witness list are witnesses that we went ahead
and complied [sic] with the . . . request that was given of us. . . . [T]hese nine
witnesses were denied their          visas to travel to the United States of America and
to testify in the trial. . . . Our concern is that this Defendant will not get a fair trial
. . . because of mitigation witnesses [that will not be available] by this coming
Monday. . . .
                                            79
        MR. HAWKINS: I walked in a little late in the conversation but it’s my
understanding his complaint is that the U.S. Embassy or someone has denied visas
to individuals . . . . I think Mr. Villarreal was handicapped but the    Defendant
didn’t give him those names early enough in the process. And I went down [to
secure State punishment witnesses] before jury selection started. Mr. Villarreal
went down last week just before we started testimony.        So I started the process
as far as getting four or five witnesses in from       Nicaragua much earlier than he
did. . . . No law enforcement not employed by the State [e.g. Embassy personnel]
has made any effort to hinder Mr. Villarreal. . . . I know we started shortly after we
began jury selection . . . How long it normally takes for the visa process, I don’t
have any idea.

      MR. VILLARREAL: Can I be heard on that point?

      MR. HAWKINS: I’m not quite through. And Mr. Villarreal has been
working on this for approximately --- less than six days. I think he returned on
Wednesday or Thursday is when he returned back from Nicaragua, so he hasn’t
had nearly the time to work on it that we did. . . .

      THE COURT: So you’re asking for me to do something?

      MR. VILLARREAL: We’ll, you know, eventually be asking the Court for a
continuance to allow us at least, assuming that this man gets convicted of
something, for a continuance in the punishment phase . . . .

       MR. DENNINGER (trial counsel): Judge, if I may just interject. I don’t
think there’s any reason to believe that the reason that these visas were denied has
anything to do with the timing and that the implication that it’s somehow [] Mr.
Villarreal’s fault, is a mischaracterization of the problem we have here. The
problem we have is visas were denied. . . .

      MR. HAWKINS: I never --- someone’s misunderstanding me if they’re
suggesting that I think Mr. Villarreal hasn’t been diligent.

17 SF 213-226.

                                          80
      In the end, the only mitigation work apparently done in the case was trial

counsel’s arrangement at the last moment to personally go to Nicaragua and

arrange there to bring a few family and friend witnesses to testify only about things

Mr. Tercero had suggested to counsel. The trial file contains a handwritten list of

witnesses to which Mr. Villarreal referred, and notes on each, with the heading:

“Witnesses: (+what will say of [Defendant] according to [Defendant].” Exhibit 8.

The witnesses on the list do not fully correspond to those who came and testified,

but the themes are all the same: poverty, good character, worked hard on the farm,

rejected by his father, and helped people during Hurricane Mitch.

      In a hint of relevant mitigation, Mr. Tercero apparently suggested that

witness Gilma Berrios would testify he “had problems with school.” Exhibit 8.

Her testimony at trial, however, was that Tercero was a “good student” in that he

carried “good grades.” 23 SF 169. It fit right in with all the other Nicaragua

witnesses who (probably for the most part naively) falsely testified that Tercero

was a good student: Gregorio Berrios Alvarez, 23 SF 119, Michael Alberto

Mondragon, 23 SF 130, Lydia Tercero Hueto, 23 SF 193, and Carlos Alonzo

Tercero Huerto. 23 SF 200. This illustrates the extent to which counsel failed to

conduct anything like an appropriate mitigation investigation. Tercero’s grade

sheets, obtained recently from Nicaragua by an investigator for the undersigned,

                                         81
show that he was a very poor student, his report cards reflecting, year after year,

barely passing grades before he was sent the technical school route. Exhibit 9-H

(certified grades); Exhibit 9-G (original grade log in which teachers record

grades); Exhibit 9-B (Affidavit of Antonia Alvarado Puerto on her custody of the

grade book as director of the Ricardo Morales Aviles grade school; Affidavit of

Ann Nisenson, Exhibit 9 (describing how grade log and certified grades were

obtained by her in Nicaragua). Even though his client had suggested to him that he

had problems with school, Mr. Villarreal did not undertake one of the most basic

of mitigation duties: to investigate and obtain relevant documents regarding

education.

      The testimony of the witnesses Mr. Villarreal retrieved from Nicaragua

illustrates that, not only were they put on the stand to say merely what the client

had suggested they would say, with little evidence of any additional interviewing

or questioning (any curiosity about undisclosed mitigating subjects whatsoever);

they were put on the stand with little to no preparation by trial counsel regarding

their specific testimony and even knowledge of the capital murder offense for

which Mr. Tercero had been convicted or the crimes attributed to him in

Nicaragua. As a consequence, as illustrated in the summaries of their testimonies

above, their credibility was clobbered by the State on cross-examination. Their

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testimony was confined to good character and performance subjects (good to

grandparents, good at school, good at saving people from mudslides). Except for

themes of poverty and parental abandonment, they said nothing that could help the

jury understand the peculiar characteristics of Mr. Tercero that may have led him

to behave in a less than normally regulated way. So, they got clobbered. If they

thought Mr. Tercero was “good,” why did he kill Mr. Berger, kidnap a child while

shooting the father, rob a watermelon salesman at gunpoint? If being “good” were

his only defense, what would keep the jury from finding against him on the basis

of his contrary behavior?

        The jury was left with no explanation of the peculiar vulnerabilities of the

defendant and was given all the more reason to believe --- on the basis of the false

testimony about his school experience --- that he was a very capable individual,

adept at planning complicated heists and pulling together teams to carry them off

successfully. The jury was left without explanation simply because trial counsel

abandoned their very simple duty to look for it.

        Additionally, merely bringing in, at the last moment, some unprepared

witnesses suggested by the defendant and calling that “mitigation” falls way below

constitutionally adequate performance according to all standards that existed in

2000.

                                         83
      3. Trial counsel’s deficient performance caused dramatic prejudice to
      Mr. Tercero’s case.

      Had counsel performed competently, they would have been able to flip the

Gestalt of the trial. All of the State’s evidence pointing to Mr. Tercero as a leader,

plotter, manipulator, instigator, premeditator, schemer, calculator, etc., could have

been called into question by the evidence that could have been secured about

Tercero’s school records, pesticide exposure, and history of family mental illness,

including his father. Coupled with the findings of a forensic neuropsychologist that

Mr. Tercero suffered, as a result of his genetic inheritance and life experiences,

from post-traumatic stress, high anxiety, depression, and evidence of psychosis,

and fell within the 1st percentile of executive brain function, the jury would have

had a vastly different way of perceiving the crimes he had committed as much

more impulsive and less calculated, and, as a consequence should have assigned

him less culpability (due to things in his life history and in himself beyond his

responsible control).

      Recent affidavits by witnesses in Nicaragua contribute to an understanding

of what timely, professionally adequate mitigation investigation of Mr. Tercero’s

background would have looked like. It would have presented, inter alia, the

following issues not brought up in Mr. Tercero’s trial:

             a. Prolonged exposure to pesticides as a child.
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      The recent declarations re-frame Tercero’s work for his grandparents and

others in the fields as child labor. They highlight that, when Mr. Tercero was

working in the fields he was exposed to aerial spraying of pesticides, that caused

him to be sick with headaches “three or four days a week.” Declaration of Pedro

Pablo Canales, Exhibit 10-C. The water in Mr. Tercero’s town, Posoltega, was

contaminated by the pesticide use. Id. The pesticide Lorsban could be smelled in

the air. Id. DDT, Gramoxone and Nemagon were used near Tercero’s house.

Declaration of Jose Tercero Huete, Exhibit 10-B. As one declarant, Tercero’s

uncle, states:

      The whole world knew they were dangerous and caused health
      problems. Babies were born with physical deformities. Now the
      government prohibits children from working in the fields and having
      contact with these dangerous chemical substances.

Declaration of Jose Tercero Huete, Exhibit 10-B. Mr. Tercero’s grandmother who

raised him states:

      By the time Bernardo was 10 years old, he was working in the field
      with me, cutting coffee, sugar cane and cotton. Every two to three
      days, planes would fumigate the fields while we were working. We
      did not have gloves or masks and the chemicals would get on our skin.
      Often, we became sick and vomited afterwards. Then we had to rest
      for 30 minutes to an hour before going to work.

Declaration of Luisa Amanda Heute, Exhibit 10-A.             Tercero’s childhood

headaches led his grandmother (caregiver) to have him seen by a psychologist:

                                        85
      Bernardo had bad headaches, three or four times a week, beginning
      when he was around 12 or 13 years old. When he had a headache,
      Bernardo did not feel like working or going to school. The headaches
      were so strong that he usually cried and was depressed because he was
      unable to function. We sent him to Chinandega for a psychological
      evaluation on the recommendation of the doctor at the local clinic in
      Posoltega. We did not have sufficient health centers nearby for thse
      mental health needs.

Declaration of Luisa Amanda Huete, Exhibit 10-A.

            b. Deep family mental health history.

      The persons that have been deposed in Nicaragua generally do not show a

sophisticated understanding of mental health issues, but identified members of Mr.

Tercero’s family that had relevant mental health problems and described to some

extent what they were. These identifications and descriptions form a basis for

further investigation of documentary support for diagnoses and treatment in

Nicaraguan mental health facilities, and certainly would have been very important

information (diagnoses or not) for Mr. Tercero’s jury to consider. They would

have been something a competent mental health professional could have relied

upon in an examination of Mr. Tercero for mitigation purposes.

      Mr. Tercero’s grandmother stated that one of her own fourteen children had

“many mental health problems.” Affidavit of Luisa Amanda Huetes Torrez,

Exhibit 9-A. She noted that Carlos Huete, that son, had died recently. “In the

news it appears as if it were a car accident but I do not know what happened. He
                                        86
was always sick in the mind.” Id.       Pedro Pablo Canales Quezada described

Bernardo’s uncles problems in a some detail:

      His uncle Carlos was a maternal uncle who always had mental
      problems. In middle school, he used to come to the school as if he
      were an administrator or principle [sic] but he was not nor did he even
      work at the school. He would arrive and say things that made no
      sense. His family used to come and get him and take him home. In
      1997, I remember Carlos Alfonso was very sick. I remember he was
      still sick when I left Posoltega for a few years. Afterwards, my family
      told me he had improved with some medication and that he had
      become involved with the Sandinistas and won the election to be
      mayor.

Affidavit of Pedro Pablo Canales Quezada, Exhibit 9-C at 3. Mr. Tercero’s

paternal uncle, Rodolfo Agustin Membreno Centeno, stated:

      We have a family with a long history of mental health problems. My
      father and my mother [Mr. Tercero’s paternal grandfather and
      grandmother] were institutionalized there at Kilometro 5, in the
      National Psychiatric Hospital in Managua. My mother died without
      ever recovering her mental [] health.

      My father managed 2 large farms. The stress made him crazy.
      Sometimes the stress gave him cholera and made him hyperactive. He
      became angry with people very easily. We had to look after him
      frequently because he would speak without making sense and act
      childlike.

      Before he was admitted to Kilometro 5, one day he left the house at
      four in the morning and went to another farm to grab a horse. He was
      lost on the hill for 15 days. We did not know anything of him. They
      had to go and get him from the hill. They brought him back by force.
      After they took him to Kilometro 5.

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      This was not the only time that my father behaved insane. Also
      another time a bank matter became complicated with one of my
      brothers. My father came and behaved insane. He acted like a child,
      like a young child’s mind. He said incoherent things.

      Our mother also was admitted to Kilometro 5. The two were admitted
      before Mitch. We inherited from them our psychiatric problems. For
      example, I have suffered many mental health problems. It started
      when I was around 25 years old. I heard voices and saw
      hallucinations. Once, entering the house, I felt pressure and heard a
      voice saying to return to the mountain. I left the house like my father
      and spent days walking in the mountain without eating. I drank very
      little water and heard voices telling me to continue walking.

      Things happened to me that have made me feel the pain of suffering. I
      went three times to Kilometro 5. I do not remember when I went each
      time. I received electric shock three times.

      One time Desiderio and I were walking in the highway and I heard
      Maria, Jesus Christ’s mother, speaking to me. I saw her in the sky and
      told Desiderio but I saw things that were not there. Desiderio wanted
      to take me to the psychiatrist but I would not let him. I felt bad but I
      was afraid of hospitals. In the end, Desiderio drove me to Kilometro 5
      in Managua. They gave me pills. I also received electric shock to cure
      the brain . . . . I continue to take pills for my mental health. I take
      Deazepan, Cerebrofos, and Lozartan. I do not have money to go and
      see a doctor. I only go to the pharmacy and ask for the medication I
      need.

Affidavit of Rodolfo Agustin Membreno Centeno, Exhibit 9-F. Mr. Centeno add

about Mr. Tercero’s father, his brother, that he “died in 2011. He shut himself in

with a candle and burned himself. They found him burned all over his body. His

wife was not there. She lost everything in the fire.” Id.

             c. Very poor academic performance.
                                          88
      The consensus from Mr. Tercero’s obviously unprepared witnesses at trial

was that he was a “good student,” and several explained their affirmations of his

academic prowess by saying he made good grades or helped other students who,

unlike him, were struggling. This was (essentially unintentional) false testimony,

within the meaning of Ex parte Chavez, 371 S.W.3d 200, 207-08 (Tex. Crim. App.

2012), elicited from counsel because counsel had not bothered to do any

documentary investigation in Nicaragua. Grades, if there are such, for the technical

school to which Mr. Tercero was directed after eighth grade have not been secured,

but Mr. Tercero’s elementary and middle school grades are remarkably poor,

almost solid “60"s even in “Conduct” in elementary school. Declaration of Ann

Nisenson, Exhibit 9 (Graph of Grades); Exhibit 9-G (photos of grade log books);

Exhibit 9-H (Certified Grades). The Director of the elementary school, Escuela

Ricardo Morales Aviles, has provided an affidavit verifying that the grade reports

observed and photographed in their original log books (Exhibit 9-G) by Ms.

Nisenson, mitigation specialist for the undersigned, have been kept under secure

conditions. Affidavit of Antonia Alvarado Puerto, Exhibit 9-B. Mr. Tercero’s third

grade teacher confirmed that Mr. Tercero was not a good student. He was in her

first class as a teacher, 28 years ago. Modesta Haydee Zamora Mendoza attested

that Bernardo was between 8 and 10 years old when he was in 3rd grade. Having

                                         89
older students enrolled was not unusual for the time, but Bernardo stood out as not

being as quick to learn material as the other older students. Mr. Tercero’s low

early childhood exposure to pesticides, his family mental health history, and

particularly his scholastic marks coupled with his impending execution date led the

undersigned to have him evaluated by a forensic neuropsychologist to look for

intellectual disability, out of concern that he might be ineligible for the death

penalty (and no counsel from pre-trial until the present had looked into that

question). The results of the testing on August 3rd and 4th by Dr. Antolin Llorente, a

Cuban-born neuropsychologist who used culturally appropriate testing with Mr.

Tercero indeed revealed that he has a full-scale IQ in the 81 to 82 range, barely

outside the range that would, coupled with adaptive deficits, automatically protect

him from execution.

             4. Neuropsychological testing has uncovered
             severe deficiencies directly relevant to mental
             status during the offense.

      The undersigned was brought into this case about a month ago as a

consultant. Having been apprised of the findings made by the investigator in

Nicaragua in May 2015 of family mental illness, pesticide exposure (although not

recorded in affidavits at that time), and poor academic performance, the

                                          90
undersigned agreed with others that neuropsychological testing should be done to

rule out Intellectual Disability (I.D.) in Mr. Tercero.

      Finding a neuropsychologist both professionally qualified and Spanish

speaking, in order to appropriately culturally test Mr. Tercero, was somewhat

difficult. Dr. Antolin Llorente was located and the first available date for him to

see Mr. Tercero was August 3rd and 4th, 2015, on which he indeed met with Mr.

Tercero and conducted a battery of tests. He has just now finished his report,

attached as Exhibit 11 (with CV).

      Dr. Llorente has found Mr. Tercero to have a general I.Q. of around 83, just

outside of range for a possible diagnosis of Intellectual Disability. Exhibit 11 at

13. That fact alone makes it reasonably probable that one juror might have “struck

a different balance” as to the weight of the evidence regarding Mr. Tercero’s intent

in the crime or level of culpability for intent. Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 537. However,

Dr. Llorente also found: (1) Mr. Tercero’s reading comprehension is between the

2nd and 3rd grade levels (id. at 12): (2) his visual attention, concentration, and

working memory are impaired (in the less than one percent range) (id. at 14);

psychomotor speed and executive skills in impaired (< 1 percent) range (id.); fine

motor coordination and dexterity in impaired (< 1 percent) range (id. at 15); among

                                           91
other impairments. He “exhibited severe planning and organizational difficulties.”

Id. at 14.

       These dramatic results show, essentially, that Mr. Tercero has almost no

ability to “put on the brakes.” This Court should note the varying perspectives of

the eye witnesses to the Berger shooting; how they all testify to some conflict

between Mr. Tercero and Mr. Berger, however long or brief. If indeed Mr. Tercero

aggressed against Mr. Berger in the way the State has insisted, the findings of Mr.

Llorente certainly make him less culpable for the offense, and that lesser degree of

culpability should have been considered by the jurors once they already had found

future dangerousness and at least one of them should have been persuaded to

remove the death penalty as a sentencing option.

       Mr. Tercero may have been a “mover and shaker,” but he is not the

calculating planner the State made him out to be. He is nowhere close to having the

capacity to be an effective leader and, very likely, was a follower in the scenarios

about which the jury had to make findings (guilt/innocence and punishment facts).

His own trial testimony about collaborating, rather than leading others, into the

offense is more credible in light of the forensic testing. This raises a question that

was virtually ignored during the trial: What role did the silent co-defendant Jorge

Gonzales have?      Gonzales entered the store first. Could Tercero have been

                                          92
Gonzales’ patsy, moving to the front of the store, rendering himself vulnerable (to

what happened or to something else untoward that could have happened) in the

company of a more savvy co-conspirator?

      Dr. Llorente also found that Mr. Tercero is presently not competent to be

executed. A motion under 46.05 is being filed in the trial court more or less

simultaneously with the instant suggestion for reconsideration, while it is

understood that there can be no appeal to this Court on that matter. It must be

noted, for the purposes of the IAC claim here, that the kind of mental illness that

Dr. Llorente has found in Mr. Tercero is profound, and also may have been present

and had some effect in the tragic and regrettable shooting of Mr. Berger.

      Given the products of recent investigation, which h all were available at the

time of trial, at least one juror likely would have been convinced to return a verdict

less than death. Trial counsel’s deficient performance has prejudiced Mr. Tercero

and the performances of subsequent counsel have prevented him from rectifying

the situation.

                                          93
                         CONCLUSION AND PRAYER

      Mr. Tercero’s case is hauntingly reminiscent of a very old case decided by

this Court. Mr. Tercero would hope for a better result in his case. In Ex parte Leon

Martinez, Jr., this Court examined a remarkable trial in Pecos County, in which a

young man who was a citizen of Mexico was charged with killing a white woman

in a remote spot. A controversy over the defendant’s age --- was he sixteen and

ineligible for the death penalty? --- was not resolved, despite desperate efforts by

his relatives, before he was tried and sentenced to die. There were considerable

irregularities in the trial that affected Martinez’ right to counsel. None the least,

counsel were thwarted by a group of respectable citizens who threatened them if

they were to turn in a notice of appeal. They did not. And so, this Court struggled

to find jurisdiction. The Presiding Judge of this Court issued a long dissent when

the case was dismissed, essentially asserting that where there was a miscarriage of

justice, there should be no alternative but to find jurisdiction. Ex parte Leon

Martinez, Jr., 145 S.W. 959 (Tex. Crim. App. 1912).

      There is no question, of course, that Mr. Tercero killed Mr. Berger. The

critical query is, What was Mr. Tercero’s mental status (as it impacted culpability

and/or mitigation)? The real mitigation investigation that has been done in short

                                         94
order has made that a very serious question that should be grounds for this Court to

find jurisdiction.

      WHEREUPON, PREMISES CONSIDERED, Mr. Tercero prays that this

Court might grant his suggestion for reconsideration of his second state habeas

application, upon finding his first inadequate, not constituting a proper application

at least insofar as state habeas counsel ignored his duty to expeditiously investigate

facts outside the record that might form the basis for a court to find ineffective

assistance of trial counsel.    Mr. Tercero also prays that this Court stay his

execution.

                                               Respectfully submitted,

                                               /s/ Walter C. Long__________
                                               WALTER C. LONG

                                               Walter C. Long
                                               Texas Bar No. 24002491
                                               P.O. Box 41557
                                               Austin, Texas 78704
                                               512-912-0722 (office)
                                               512-554-2269 (cell)
                                               waltlong@aol.com

                                          95
                        CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

      I, Walter C. Long, do hereby certify that at true and correct copy of the

foregoing document has been served by me on this the 18th day of August, 2015,

by e-mail delivery on Assistant District Attorney Josh Reiss, Harris County

District Attorney’s Office, 1201 Franklin Street #600, Houston, Texas 77002, at

reiss_josh@dao.hctx.net .

                                             /s/ Walter C. Long__________
                                             Walter C. Long

                                        96