Skinner V Switzer Complaint
Skinner V Switzer Complaint
Skinner V Switzer Complaint
AMARILLO DIVISION
)
Plaintiff, )
)
vs. ) Civil Action No. 2:09-CV
)
LYNN SWITZER, District Attorney )
of Texas, )
Defendant. )
COMPLAINT
on February 24,2010. The State intends to carry out this sentence in spite of the fact that there is
a substantial amount of DNA evidence that has never been tested and could prove Plaintiffs
innocence. This suit is brought to enjoin Defendant Lynn Switzer, the District Attorney for Gray
County, Texas, from violating Plaintiffs federal constitutional rights by denying him access to
Plaintiffs Fourteenth Amendment right to due process and his Eighth Amendment right to be
free from cruel and unusual punishment. Plaintiff requests of this Court an order declaring that
Defendant's continued withholding of the evidence violates Plaintiffs constitutional rights and
requiring that Defendant release the evidence to Plaintiff under a reasonable protocol regarding
chain of custody and preservation of the evidence, in order that Plaintiff can have the evidence
COMPLAINT
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I. JURISDICTION
3. This Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343, 1651, 2201, and 2202,
II. VENUE
4. Venue lies in this Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1391 because the Defendant resides in
III. PARTIES
Judicial District Court of Texas (the "31 st District Court"), at the Polunsky Unit ofthe Texas
6. Defendant Lynn Switzer is the District Attorney for the 31 st Judicial District of
Texas, and maintains an office in that district in the city of Pampa. She is being sued in her
official capacity. Defendant Switzer has custody and control of the DNA evidence that is the
District Court for the murders of his girlfriend Twila Busby and her sons Elwin Caler and Randy
Busby. The conviction and sentence were upheld by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
("CCA") on direct appeal. Skinner v. State, 956 S.W.2d 532 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997), cert.
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8. On March 26, 1998, Plaintiff initiated state court habeas corpus proceedings
pursuant to Art. 11.071 V.A.C.C.P. Plaintiff's efforts to obtain post-conviction relief from the
9. Plaintiff filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus with this Court on February 4,
1999. That petition was ultimately denied on February 22,2007. Skinner v. Quarterman, No.
2:99-CV-0045, 2007 WL 582808 (N.D. Tex. Feb. 22,2007) (not designated for publication). On
May 14, 2008, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit granted a certificate of
appealability on two issues relating to Plaintiff's claim that he was denied effective assistance of
counsel at the guilt phase of his trial. Skinner v. Quarterman, 528 F.3d 336 (5 th Cir. 2008).
However, after receiving additional briefing, the Fifth Circuit on July 14, 2009 affirmed this
Court's denial of the writ of habeas corpus. Skinner v. Quarterman, 576 F.3d 214 (5 th Cir.
2009). On November 25, 2009, Plaintiff filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with the Supreme
Court of the United States, seeking review of the Fifth Circuit's judgment. A ruling on that
petition is pending.
opportunity to be heard, the 31 51 District Court entered an order directing that Plaintiff be
executed by intravenous injection "at any time after the hour of 6:00 p.m. on the 24th day of
February, 2010."
11. The evidence presented at trial showed that Twila Busby was strangled by her
assailant and then beaten repeatedly with an ax handle found at the scene, that Elwin Caler
received multiple stab wounds to his chest, and that Randy Busby was stabbed repeatedly in the
back. The evidence also showed that at some point around the time of the murders, Plaintiff
sustained a cut to his hand. As a result of these mUltiple injuries, copious blood stains and other
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biological evidence were found by the police throughout the house in which the murders
occurred.
12. The State chose to conduct DNA testing prior to trial on only four items. At trial,
the State's DNA expert testified that swaths cut from Plaintiffs shirt contained both Twila
Busby's and Plaintiffs blood and swaths cut from the pants contained blood from Twila Busby,
Elwin Caler and Plaintiff. She also testified that the blood on the blanket was that of Randy
Busby, the hair on his body was also his, and the hair on the blanket belonged to Elwin Caler.
These results tend to show that Plaintiff came in contact with Twila Busby and Elwin Caler after
they were injured. They do not indicate how that contact occurred and do not show that Plaintiff
13. No evidence submitted at trial proved conclusively that Plaintiff committed the
murders. His conviction was based primarily on the circumstantial evidence that Plaintiff was
present in the house at the time the murders occurred, that he had the blood of two of the victims
on his clothes, and that he supposedly told a neighbor, Andrea Reed, shortly after the murders
that he might have "kicked" Twila Busby to death. There was no evidence, however, that Twila
Busby was in fact kicked. The defense presented expert testimony that Plaintiff was too
incapacitated from having consumed large quantities of alcohol and codeine, and had insufficient
use of his right hand due to a prior injury, to have committed the crimes. The defense also
asserted that the State, which had the burden of proof, had failed to test all of the evidence and
had failed to investigate an alternative suspect, Twila Busby's uncle Robert DonnelL The
evidence showed that Donnell had stalked Twila Busby at a New Year's Eve party shortly before
the murders, and his whereabouts at the time of the murders were never explained.
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14. In 2000, former District Attorney John Mann, responding to questions raised in
the media regarding Plaintiffs possible innocence, decided to have additional DNA material
testing process to insure its validity, Mann unilaterally arranged for GeneScreen, a private
laboratory in Dallas, Texas, to test certain additional items selected by Mann. Once again, the
items selected did not include all the available DNA evidence.
15. GeneScreen reported its results to the District Attorney in four separate reports.
Twila Busby is included as a contributor ofthe profile obtained from the blood on
the cover of the blue notebook, the hair from the back of Twila Busby, the hair
from the left hand of Twila Busby, and the hair from the ax handle. Henry
Watkins Skinner is included as a contributor to the profile from the cigarette butt.
Twila Busby and Henry Watkins Skinner are included as contributors to the
mixed profile from the hair from the right hand of Twila Busby. The profile from
the gauze with bloodstain is from an unknown male individuaL The profile of the
cassette tape with blood is a mixture of two unknown individuals. No conclusion
could be reached concerning the hair from the living room, the hair from the
abdomen of Twila Busby, the hair from the cassette tape, and the hair from the
back bedroom door.
16. The second GeneScreen report, dated September 20,2000, solely addressed
additional testing performed on blood flakes on the hair found in Twila Busby's right hand. It
concluded that Twila Busby herself was the contributor of that blood.
17. The third GeneScreen report, dated October 4,2000, was identical to the first
report except that it added an additional paragraph describing the likelihood that the mixed
profile of the DNA found on the hair from Twila Busby's right hand was from Twila and
Plaintiff, as opposed to the possibility that someone other than Plaintiff was the second
contributor.
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18. Because the GeneScreen testing performed up to this point had been incapable of
determining the source of the hair shafts themselves, John Mann asked GeneScreen to subject
those hairs to mitochondrial testing, a form of analysis that examines the mitochondria within the
cells of the hair shaft. The fourth and final GeneScreen report, dated February 6,2001 - after
Mann had left office - contradicted Mann's assertion that the hairs themselves came from
Plaintiff. Specifically, the final GeneScreen report reached the following conclusions:
Based on the results ofthis testing, the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence
obtained from the #1 hair from the victim's right hand, hair samples from T.
Busby, the #5 hair from the paper towel around the cassette tape, the #1 hair on
the tape found on back bedroom door and the #2 hair on the tape found on back
bedroom door are consistent with the profile from the known blood sample from
the victim Twila Busby. Neither Twila Busby nor a maternal relative of Twila
Busby can be excluded as the potential contributor of these hairs. This profile is
unique in the FBI database of 4052 individuals.
Robert Donnell, the brother of Twila Busby's mother, was a "maternal relative" of Twila Busby.
19. The GeneScreen testing raised more questions than it answered. For example,
while the August 24, 2000 and the October 4, 2000 reports conclude that Twila Busby and
Plaintiff were both contributors to a "mixed genetic profile" taken from a hair in Twila Busby's
right hand, they also indicate that the markers found in this material matching Twila's DNA
profile were strong but those matching Plaintiff s were "faint." In neither of these two reports
was the nature of the material found on the hair disclosed, but apparently it was not blood
because, in the September 20,2000, GeneScreen indicated that "blood flakes" taken from this
same hair came solely from Twila Busby and that the genetic markers in these blood flakes were
inconsistent with Plaintiffs DNA. And the February 6,2001, report concluded that one of the
hairs found in Twila's right hand was her own, and test results on a second hair found in her
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hand were inconclusive. The February 6 report is the first to indicate that more than one hair
was found in Twila's right hand, but is silent on whether either of the hairs tested
mitochondrially was the same as the hair from which DNA material had been obtained for the
20. GeneScreen did not test all the DNA material Mann sent to have tested. For
example, although GeneScreen was provided with the "Dalchem" rape kit specifically used to
collect DNA material from Twila Busby's vagina during her autopsy, no results from any DNA
testing of the vaginal swabs appears in GeneScreen's reports. Similarly, GeneScreen was
provided with Twila Busby's fingernail clippings, but no test results from this material appear in
the reports.
21. GeneScreen was not provided with several additional items that could yield
important results. For example, Mann sent to GeneScreen known DNA samples from only Twila
Busby and Plaintiff. No comparison was made to the known DNA of the other two victims,
Randy Busby and Elwin Caler, or to the DNA of other possible suspects. Nor was GeneScreen
provided the two knives found at the scene (one or both of which were almost surely used to stab
Elwin Caler and Randy Busby). Nor was GeneScreen provided a bloody dish towel and a man's
jacket containing hairs, blood and perspiration, both of which were found near Twila Busby's
body.
Plaintiff has attempted on numerous occasions to obtain testing of DNA material and in
each instance was refused relief. The first of those attempts was in 2000, when Plaintiff s
counsel asked District Attorney Mann for the opportunity to participate on a joint basis with the
testing that Mann unilaterally initiated with GeneScreen. In early 2001, Mann's successor,
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Richard Roach, met with Plaintiff's counsel to consider voluntary testing of the remaining DNA
22. In 2001, the Texas legislature amended Art. 64 ofthe Texas Code of Criminal
Procedure to provide a procedure for Texas inmates to obtain post-conviction DNA testing.
Shortly after that law took effect, on October 9, 2001, Plaintiff filed a motion (the "First
Motion") with the 31 st District Court asking for DNA testing of the following items:
6) the blood and hairs on the jacket found next to Ms. Busby's body.
23. The First Motion was ultimately denied by the 31 st District Court, and Plaintiff
appealed to the CCA. On September 10, 2003, the CCA issued a decision affinning the lower
court on the ground that Plaintiff had failed to satisfy the requirements of Art. 64.03(a)(2)(A),
which required that the convicted person establish by a preponderance of the evidence a
reasonable probability that he would not have been prosecuted or convicted if exculpatory results
had been obtained through DNA testing. The court concluded that the GeneScreen results were
so inculpatory that they could never be overcome by eXCUlpatory results on the items Plaintiff
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victim's and the appellant's DNA during the time when she was struggling/or her
life. Because the appellant's DNA was found mixed with Busby's DNA in her
hand during the autopsy, there is nothing about the other items found at the crime
scene that, if linked to a third person, would cast doubt on the appellant's
presence at the scene of Busby's death or the appellant's involvement in the
offense. Given this evidence, the presence of a third party's DNA at the crime
scene would not constitute affirmative evidence of innocence.
24. On September 25, 2003, Plaintiff moved for rehearing ofthis decision, on three
grounds: (1) the Court was wrong in concluding that the blood flakes on the hair in Twila
Busby's right hand were a mixed profile; (2) the Court was wrong in concluding that, ajor/tori,
the intermingling had occurred "during the time [Twila] was struggling for her life"; and (3) the
Court was wrong in relying on the GeneScreen reports at all, because they had never been
25. On December 10,2003, the CCA issued a new opinion that was identical to its
September 10, 2003, opinion except for the paragraph regarding the GeneScreen test results
quoted above. In the revised opinion, that paragraph was changed to read as follows:
The GeneScreen reports indicate that Twila and the appellant "are
included as contributors to the mixed profile from the hair from the right hand of
Twila Busby." This analysis demonstrates the intermingling of the victim's and
the appellant's DNA,probably during the time when she was struggling for her
life. Because the appellant's DNA was found mixed with Busby's DNA in her
right hand during the autopsy, there is nothing about the other items found at the
crime scene that, if linked to a third person, would cast doubt on the appellant's
presence at the scene of Busby's death or the appellant's involvement in the
offense. Given this evidence and the other evidence detailed above, the presence
of a third party's DNA at the crime scene would not constitute affirmative
evidence of innocence.
Skinner v. State, 122 S.W.3d 808, 811 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (emphasis added). The revised
opinion ignored Plaintiffs objection to reliance on the GeneScreen reports at all, given that they
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26. Plaintiffs next effort to obtain DNA testing was in this Court. in connection with
his federal habeas petition. Plaintiff filed a motion contending that DNA testing was necessary
in order for Plaintiffto prove that he had been prejudiced by his counsel's failure to ask for the
testing prior to trial. On May 18,2004, Magistrate Judge Averitte granted production of
GeneScreen documents relating to its 2000-0 I testing but, without explanation, denied the
request for further testing. On August 15,2005, after reviewing the GeneScreen documents and
consulting with his own DNA experts, Plaintiff renewed his motion for DNA testing. On
October 4, 2005, Magistrate Judge Averitte again denied the request but left open the possibility
that Plaintiff could "reurge" the motion if Plaintiff were able to demonstrate at the November
2005 evidentiary hearing that trial counsel had been deficient in failing to seek DNA testing prior
to trial.
27. At the November 2005 evidentiary hearing in the habeas case, Magistrate Judge
Averitte allowed the parties to submit evidence limited to GeneScreen's conclusion, in its
February 6,2001 report, that the results of the mitochondrial testing of the second of the hairs
clutched in Twila Busby's right hand were "inconclusive." Plaintiffs expert testified that the
results ofthe testing on the second hair, while inconclusive in the sense that they could not be
used to identify a particular person as the source of that hair, were nevertheless sufficient to
determine that Twila Busby could conclusively be excluded as the source of the second hair and
that Plaintiff more likely than not could be excluded. The State's witness, who had performed
the mitochondrial DNA testing on that hair while employed at GeneScreen in 2000-01, defended
his decision to report the results as inconclusive. This Court ultimately did not resolve the
dispute between the experts on this point, or rule on Plaintiff s motion for further DNA testing,
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because it concluded that trial counsel had not performed deficiently in failing to request DNA
testing.
28. On July 30, 2007, Plaintiff filed a second motion for DNA testing (the "Second
Motion") with the 31 st District Court, citing certain new developments since the CCA's decision
on the First Motion that warranted a different result. Shortly after the Second Motion was filed,
Plaintiffs counsel telephoned Defendant Switzer, who by then had succeeded Roach as District
Attorney, and requested that she voluntarily provide the requested DNA evidence for testing,
pursuant to a protocol for handling the evidence to which the parties would agree. Defendant
29. Art. 64.02(a)(2) requires that, when a motion for DNA testing is filed, the
attorney representing the State either (A) deliver the evidence sought to be tested to the court,
along with a description of the condition of the evidence, or (B) explain in writing why the State
cannot deliver the evidence. Defendant Switzer, who represented the State in connection with
the Second Motion, informed the court that, "[t]o the best of the State's information, knowledge
and belief, the items sought to be tested are still available for testing, the chain of custody is
intact, and the items are in a condition to be tested although the State has not sought expert
30. On December 7, 2007, the 31 st District Court denied the Second Motion On
appeal, the CCA affirmed, relying only on the ground that Plaintiff had failed to meet the "no
convicted person requesting testing that was available at the time of trial to show that the testing
was not previously performed "through no fault of the convicted person, for reasons that are of a
nature such that the interests ofjustice require DNA testing." The CCA interpreted this section
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as barring DNA testing altogether for any convicted person who had declined to seek DNA
31. As a result of the decisions of the CCA denying Plaintiff post-conviction DNA
testing under Art. 64, the Defendant has refused and continues to refuse to make available to
Plaintiff any DNA material for testing. Her most recent refusal was in a telephone conference
32. Plaintiff realleges and incorporates herein by reference the allegations contained
33. By refusing to release the biological evidence for testing, and thereby preventing
Plaintiff from gaining access to exculpatory evidence that could demonstrate he is not guilty of
capital murder, Defendant has deprived Plaintiff of his liberty interests in utilizing state
procedures to obtain reversal of his conviction andlor to obtain a pardon or reduction of his
sentence, all in violation of his right to Due Process of Law under the Fourteenth Amendment to
34. Plaintiff realleges and incorporates herein by reference the allegations contained
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35. By refusing to release the biological evidence for testing, and thereby preventing
Plaintiff from gaining access to exculpatory evidence that could demonstrate he is not guilty of
capital murder, Defendant has deprived Plaintiff of his liberty interests in utilizing state
procedures to obtain reversal of his conviction and/or to obtain a pardon or reduction of his
sentence, all in violation of his right to be free from Cruel and Unusual Punishment under the
a. vaginal swabs taken from Twila Busby at the time of her autopsy;
c. the knife found on the front porch of the house where the murders
occurred;
d. the knife found in a plastic bag in the living room of said house;
37. A preliminary and permanent injunction requiring Defendant to produce all the
38. Reasonable attorneys' fees, costs of suit and such other and further relief as this
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Respectfully submitted,
ROBERT C. OWEN*
DOUGLAS G. ROBINSONt
D.C. Bar No. 10850
Washington, DC 20005-2111
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