SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 23–7809
_________________
RUBEN GUTIERREZ, PETITIONER
v. LUIS
SAENZ, et al.
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the fifth circuit
[June 26, 2025]
Justice Alito, with whom Justice Thomas and
Justice Gorsuch join, dissenting.
The Court and I agree on one thing: we should
decide this case based on the test adopted in
Reed v.
Goertz, 598 U.S. 230, 234 (2023). After that, however, the
majority veers sharply off course. First, it blatantly alters the
Reed test. See
ante, at 1–2, 8, 10. Second, it then
has the audacity to criticize the Fifth Circuit for applying the
real
Reed test. See
ante, at 9. Third, it ignores
critical differences between the situation in
Reed and the
situation here. See
ante, at 9–11. Fourth, it paints a
misleading picture of underlying facts and Gutierrez’s decades-long
litigation campaign. See
ante, at 2–6. Fifth, it fails to
recognize the limited scope of the declaratory judgment at issue.
See
ante, at 9. And sixth, it ignores lawful and binding
Texas law regarding the facts that may be considered when a
prisoner seeks DNA testing. See
ibid.
I
A
1
Because the majority paints a misleading
picture of the facts and prior proceedings in this case, I begin by
setting the record straight. In 1999, Gutierrez was convicted and
sentenced to death for the brutal murder of Escolastica Harrison,
an 85-year-old woman who lived in a mobile home park in
Brownsville, Texas, with her nephew Avel Cuellar. See
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d 883, 886 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2011). As a result of his friendship with Cuellar, Gutierrez
became acquainted with Harrison and occasionally ran errands for
her.
Ibid. Cuellar, Gutierrez, and other friends gathered to
drink behind Harrison’s home—and Cuellar, while inebriated,
revealed that Harrison kept her entire life savings (more than
$600,000) in her home because she distrusted banks. See
Gutierrez v.
Stephens, 2013 WL 12092544, *1 (SD Tex.,
Oct. 3, 2013);
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d,
at 886.
When Gutierrez heard this, he hatched a plan to
break into the mobile home and steal the money.
Id., at 886.
He recruited two accomplices—Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia—and on
September 5, 1998, the three men went to Harrison’s trailer home to
execute the plan.
Ibid. By the time they left the scene,
Harrison had been beaten and stabbed 13 times in her face and neck
with two different instruments. See
id., at 887, and
n. 2. When Cuellar came home that night, he reported
discovering his elderly aunt’s dead body face-down in a pool of
blood.
Id., at 886.
Several witnesses told detectives that they had
seen Gutierrez at the mobile home park on the day of the murder.
Ibid.; see
Gutierrez v.
Stephens, No.
1:09–cv–00022 (SD Tex., July 30, 2012), ECF Doc. 23–96,
pp. 22–23. Detectives visited Gutierrez’s home but were told
he was not there.
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W.
3d, at 886. The next day, Gutierrez voluntarily appeared at the
police station and made the first of three conflicting statements.
Ibid. He told detectives that on the day of the murder, he
was driving with a friend far away from the mobile home park.
Ibid.; see 93 F. 4th 267, 269 (CA5 2024). This alibi fell
through, however, when the friend told a conflicting story.
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at 886. In
addition, Garcia and Gracia confessed to involvement in the crime,
named Gutierrez as an accomplice, and said he was inside the mobile
home when Harrison was killed.[
1]
Id., at 891; ECF Doc. 2–2, at 2. Based on these
statements and other evidence, Gutierrez was arrested.
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at 887; ECF Doc.
2–2, at 2.
At the police station, Gutierrez agreed to give
a second statement.
Id., at 2. Abandoning his earlier story,
he admitted that he had planned to “ ‘rip off ’ ”
Harrison, but he claimed that he had not wanted to murder her.
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at 887. He told
the police he had been waiting at a park when Garcia and Gracia
carried out the scheme.
Ibid. When they later met, he
asserted, Garcia was holding a screwdriver covered in blood and
said he had killed Harrison.
Ibid.
The following day, Gutierrez gave his third
conflicting statement.
Ibid. In a signed confession, he said
that Garcia was supposed to lure Harrison out of her home so that
Gutierrez could enter through the back of the trailer and steal the
money, but when Harrison saw Gutierrez enter her home, Garcia
knocked her out and began to stab her with a screwdriver.
Ibid. Gutierrez admitted that both he and Garcia were armed
with screwdrivers during the robbery.
Gutierrez, 2013 WL
12092544, *2. Gutierrez said that he took the money while Garcia
was stabbing Harrison and that Gracia drove everyone away from the
scene.
Ibid. The State of Texas then charged Gutierrez with
capital murder committed in the course of a robbery.
Ibid.
2
Gutierrez moved to suppress his signed
confession, arguing that it was coerced and that the police
continued to question him after he had invoked his right to counsel
and his right to remain silent. See
id., at *20. After
conducting a hearing at which Gutierrez and two police officers
testified, the judge denied the motion and issued detailed findings
of fact.[
2]
Ibid.; see
also ECF Doc. 23–66, at 47–125.
Gutierrez appealed, but the TCCA affirmed. See
Gutierrez, 2013 WL 12092544, *21.
3
At trial, the State’s theory was that
Gutierrez was guilty of murder either as a principal or a party to
the crime. 337 S. W. 3d, at 888. The State relied on Texas’s
“law of parties,” under which “[a] person is criminally responsible
as a party to an offense if the offense is committed
. . . by the conduct of another for which he is
criminally responsible.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. §7.01(a) (West 2021).
Because Gutierrez had admitted to participating in the robbery, the
State argued that he could be found guilty of murder even if he was
not the one who delivered the fatal blows. See ECF Doc. 23–102, at
69–70.
Gutierrez’s defense offered a version of events
that differed from all three of Gutierrez’s prior stories. The new
account was that
Cuellar had fatally stabbed Harrison.
Gutierrez, 2013 WL 12092544, *3. The defense “intimated that
the police had manufactured Gutierrez’s statements” and criticized
the police for conducting a shoddy investigation.
Ibid. The
jury found Gutierrez guilty.
At the penalty phase of the trial, the State
presented evidence that Gutierrez had a long history of crime and
violence, including burglaries, assault on a police officer, and
threats to kill an assistant district attorney and a prison guard.
Ibid. The jury found (1) that Gutierrez posed a “continuing
threat to society,” (2) that he had “intended to kill the deceased
. . . or anticipated that a human life would be taken,”
and (3) that any mitigating circumstance were insufficient to
warrant a sentence of life imprisonment without parole. ECF Doc.
23–108, at 45–48; ECF Doc. 23–109, at 4–5; see Tex. Code Crim.
Proc. Ann., Art. 37.071, §§2(b), (e)(1) (Vernon 2006). Based on
these findings, the judge imposed a sentence of death.
Gutierrez appealed and argued, among many other
things, that his confession should have been suppressed, but the
TCCA affirmed his conviction and sentence. See
Ex parte
Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at 888; ECF Doc. 19, at
58–60.
B
The end of direct appellate review was just
the start of a new litigation saga spanning 23 years (and
counting). After the conclusion of direct appellate review in 2002,
Gutierrez filed multiple petitions for state and federal
post-conviction relief, none of which has been successful. See 93
F. 4th, at 269–270. And Gutierrez has told us that he intends to
file yet another petition for state post-conviction relief. See
Brief for Petitioner 40–41.
Among the many claims that Gutierrez has
advanced in post-trial litigation, the claim involved here—that he
is entitled to DNA testing of items found at the murder scene—has a
prominent place. At trial, however, his counsel declined to request
DNA testing.
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at
897. As recounted by the TCCA, “the record affirmatively shows that
DNA testing was available to appellant before trial,” but “defense
counsel apparently did not have testing performed on those same
items because of
sound trial strategy.”
Ibid.
(emphasis added). Instead of risking what testing might reveal,
counsel “used the fact that the Brownsville Police Department
failed to test the evidence containing biological DNA evidence to
argue the lack of investigation and the existence of reasonable
doubt during the trial.”
Id., at 896. The lack of testing
figured prominently in his cross-examination of prosecution
witnesses and was repeatedly raised during summation.
Id.,
at 896–897, and n. 45.
The decision to forgo DNA testing at trial did
not pay off, so after his conviction, Gutierrez changed course and
demanded testing in post-conviction proceedings. Chapter 64 of the
Texas Code of Criminal Procedure governs such requests, and
Gutierrez filed his first Chapter 64[
3] motion in 2010. See 93 F. 4th, at 269. He sought
testing of: (1) a blood sample taken from Harrison; (2) a
blood-stained shirt belonging to Cuellar; (3) nail scrapings from
Harrison; (4) blood samples collected from Cuellar’s bathroom, from
a raincoat located in or just outside Cuellar’s bedroom, and from
the sofa in the front room of the home; and (5) a loose hair
recovered from Harrison’s finger.
Ex parte Gutierrez,
337 S. W. 3d, at 888. According to Gutierrez, the testing
would show that he had not entered Harrison’s house and would
“support his position that he neither murdered Mrs. Harrison nor
anticipated her murder.”
Ibid.
The trial court denied this motion, and the TCCA
affirmed.
Id., at 888–889, 901–902. The TCCA explained that
Chapter 64 authorizes post-conviction DNA testing only when the
results would affect the applicant’s conviction, not his sentence.
Id., at 899–901. And in any event, it explained, favorable
DNA results would not undermine the jury’s guilty verdict because
they would not “make it less probable” that Gutierrez planned and
participated in the crime.
Id., at 901. Nor, it added, would
such results affect Gutierrez’s eligibility for the death penalty
because “the record facts satisfy the
Enmund/
Tison
culpability requirements that he played a major role in the
underlying robbery and that his acts showed a reckless indifference
to human life.”
Ibid.[
4]
Gutierrez filed additional Chapter 64 motions
for DNA testing in June 2019 and July 2021, but the trial court
denied those motions, and each time the TCCA affirmed on the same
grounds.
Gutierrez v.
Texas, 2020 WL 918669, *6–*9
(Feb. 26, 2020) (
per curiam); 2 App. 477a–479a.
C
This brings us to the latest
chapter—Gutierrez’s current suit. In September 2019, Gutierrez sued
Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz and other Texas
officials in federal court under Rev. Stat. §1979, 42
U. S. C. §1983. See Complaint in
Gutierrez v.
Saenz, No. 1:19–cv–00185 (SD Tex., Sept. 26, 2019), ECF Doc.
1. Gutierrez asserted several facial and as-applied constitutional
challenges to Chapter 64, including a Fourteenth Amendment due
process claim, a First Amendment access-to-courts claim, and an
Eighth Amendment cruel-and-unusual-punishment claim. See
ibid.
The District Court rejected almost all of
Gutierrez’s claims, but the court held that Chapter 64 is
unconstitutional insofar as it allows a defendant to seek
post-conviction DNA testing to challenge his
conviction but
not his
sentence. 565 F. Supp. 3d 892, 910–911 (SD Tex.
2021). The District Court entered a partial declaratory judgment
for Gutierrez on that ground but did not issue the injunction
Gutierrez had sought.
Ibid.; see 2020 WL 12771965, *6 (SD
Tex., June 2, 2020) (denying Gutierrez’s request for a “preliminary
and permanent injunction” requiring Saenz to turn over the
requested evidence (internal quotation marks omitted)). The State
appealed, but Gutierrez did not cross-appeal, so the only issue
before the Fifth Circuit was whether Gutierrez was entitled to a
declaratory judgment on the one constitutional claim accepted by
the District Court.
The Fifth Circuit did not reach the merits of
that claim because it held that Gutierrez lacked standing. Our test
for Article III standing, set out in
Lujan v.
Defenders
of Wildlife,
504 U.S.
555, 560 (1992), has three prongs, and the Fifth Circuit found
that Gutierrez failed the third prong—that is, the court found that
Gutierrez could not show that his claimed injury (lack of DNA
testing) was “ ‘likely’ ” to be redressed by the relief
that could at that point be awarded. See 93 F. 4th, at 275;
Lujan, 504 U. S., at 561 (“[I]t must be likely, as
opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by
a favorable decision” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
In
Reed v.
Goertz, this Court
recently applied this test under related circumstances. As I will
explain, there are critical differences between that case and the
case at hand, but there are similarities that seem to have led the
majority astray. In
Reed, a prisoner sentenced to death
(Rodney Reed) brought a §1983 action against a district attorney
and sought a declaratory judgment that
a particular
provision of Chapter 64 (its chain-of-custody provision, Tex.
Code Crim. Proc. Ann., Art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(ii) (Vernon 2018))
violates the Constitution. This Court held that
this declaratory
judgment would redress the prisoner’s deprivation of DNA
testing because it would “ ‘substantially’ ” alter the
likelihood of the district attorney’s ordering DNA testing.
Reed, 598 U. S., at 234.
There were multiple issues in
Reed, and
the Court’s discussion of redressability was terse. In its
entirety, it was as follows:
“[I]f a federal court concludes that
Texas’s post- conviction DNA testing procedures violate due
process, that court order would eliminate the state prosecutor’s
justification for denying DNA testing. It is ‘
substantially
likely’ that the state prosecutor would abide by such a court
order. In other words, in ‘terms of our “standing” precedent, the
courts would have ordered a change in a legal status,’ and ‘the
practical consequence of that change would amount to
a
significant increase in the likelihood’ that the state
prosecutor would grant access to the requested evidence and that
Reed therefore ‘would obtain relief that directly redresses the
injury suffered.’ ”
Ibid. (emphasis added; citation
omitted).[
5]
The Court held that the prisoner satisfied this
test. In other words, the Court was persuaded that if he got the
declaratory judgment he wanted, it was “substantially likely” that
the district attorney would order testing.
The Fifth Circuit faithfully applied this test
in its decision below, taking into account the particular facts of
Gutierrez’s case. It noted that the TCCA has repeatedly held that
Gutierrez would still be responsible for the murder under the law
of parties and would still be death- penalty eligible even if DNA
testing provided the results he wanted. 93 F. 4th, at 272–273,
275. And it thus held that a decision in Gutierrez’s favor on his
constitutional claim would
not make it substantially likely
that the district attorney would release the items for
testing.[
6]
Id., at
275.
Today’s decision, in contrast, flagrantly
distorts the standard that
Reed articulated. Indeed, the
majority edits
Reed’s critical language in a way that would
draw rebuke if done by an attorney in a brief filed in this Court.
Reed’s full discussion of redressability was quoted above.
It consists of three sentences. The majority’s analysis is based
entirely on the first sentence, which states: “ ‘[I]f a
federal court concludes that Texas’s post-conviction DNA testing
procedures violate due process,’ that court order would redress [a
prisoner’s] injury by ‘eliminat[ing]’ the state prosecutor’s
reliance on Article 64 as a reason for denying DNA testing.” See
ante, at 12 (quoting
Reed, 598 U. S., at 234).
The second and third sentences explain why the conclusion drawn in
the first sentence was true in Reed’s case: because the particular
declaratory judgment that Reed sought (striking down Chapter 64’s
chain-of-custody requirement) would “substantially” increase the
likelihood that the district attorney would turn over the requested
items for DNA testing.
Id., at 234. But the majority
pretends those sentences do not exist.
This distortion is bad enough, but to make
matters worse, the majority then criticizes the Fifth Circuit for
“transforming the redressability inquiry into a guess as to whether
a favorable court decision will in fact ultimately cause the
prosecutor to turn over the evidence.”
Ante, at 11 (citing
93 F. 4th, at 274). In the majority’s view, this Court
apparently should not consider whether the District Court’s
judgment is likely to result in Gutierrez obtaining relief, but
whether the District Court’s judgment removes just one of the
numerous “barrier[s] . . . between Gutierrez and the
requested testing.”
Ante, at 12. The majority’s new test
makes a hash of redressability. It appears that, under this new
test, the likelihood of redress is simply not relevant. That most
certainly is not what
Reed held.
Under the real
Reed test, a plaintiff
like Gutierrez must show that a favorable decision on his
constitutional claim is “ ‘substantially likely’ ” to
prompt the district attorney to allow DNA testing. 598 U. S.,
at 234. And in this case, unlike in
Reed, it is clear that
the only relief that Gutierrez is in a position to
seek—reinstatement of the District Court’s declaratory judgment—is
most unlikely to cause respondent Saenz to order DNA testing. That
is the conclusion that the Fifth Circuit reached after carefully
considering the relevant facts, and that court was right. The
following part of this opinion will explain why.[
7]
II
A
The Texas courts have provided three reasons
why Gutierrez is not entitled to the testing he seeks. Any one of
these, if sound, would justify the denial of testing.
First, both the trial court and the TCCA have
held that Gutierrez is not entitled to post-conviction DNA testing
because such testing is unavailable under Chapter 64 to show
ineligibility for the death penalty, and Gutierrez could not show
by a preponderance of the evidence that he would not have been
convicted if he obtained favorable DNA test results. See
Ex
parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at 899–901;
Gutierrez, 2020 WL 918669, *5–*8. Second, both the trial
court and the TCCA have concluded that even favorable DNA test
results would not help Gutierrez because he would still be
responsible for the murder and would still satisfy the
Enmund/Tison Eighth Amendment requirements. See
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S. W. 3d, at 901;
Gutierrez, 2020 WL 918669, *8. Third, the trial court found
that Gutierrez’s application for DNA testing was made for the
purpose of delay. See
id., at *5. This finding of fact was
not addressed by the TCCA. See
id., at *9.
Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, a
favorable declaratory judgment respecting the first of these
reasons (Chapter 64 does not allow post-conviction DNA testing to
prove ineligibility for the death penalty) would not remove
“
the . . . barrier Article 64 erected between
Gutierrez and the requested testing”; it would remove
a
barrier.
Ante, at 12 (emphasis added). The District Court’s
declaratory judgment regarding the constitutionality of Chapter
64’s limited grounds for post-conviction DNA testing, even if
upheld by the Fifth Circuit and this Court, would affect only that
reason and not the other two. And even if the TCCA did not accept
the trial court’s finding that Gutierrez filed his Chapter 64
motion for the purpose of delay, the TCCA would almost certainly
adhere to its prior decisions holding that favorable DNA results
would not show that Gutierrez was innocent of the crime or
ineligible for the death penalty. As a result, the only relief
Gutierrez can possibly get in this case would not result in
court-ordered testing unless the TCCA reverses course in an utterly
unforeseeable way.
Gutierrez argues, however, that even if the
declaratory judgment would not lead
the Texas courts to
grant DNA testing, respondent Saenz would still have discretion to
turn over the items and might do so. See Brief for Petitioner
37–38. But Gutierrez does not spell out
why Saenz might do
that. His argument is based on rank speculation, and that is not
enough to support redressability. See
Lujan, 504 U. S.,
at 561.
Furthermore, nothing in the record suggests that
there is
any likelihood that Saenz would do what Gutierrez
wants. The declaratory judgment would not require Saenz to order
testing. And he would know that the testing would be pointless
because even if the items were tested and revealed what Gutierrez
hopes for, the Texas courts would not disturb his conviction or
sentence.
Not only is there no reason to think that
Saenz—for some unknown reason—might nevertheless order DNA testing,
but his conduct to date strongly suggests the opposite. Even after
the District Court issued its declaratory judgment, he refused to
order testing. And Gutierrez cannot explain why Saenz has
steadfastly declined to allow testing ever since. If he had any
inclination to allow testing, he could have done that at any point
during this litigation—for example, when Gutierrez filed his
petition, when this Court granted review, at any point during the
briefing process, before or after argument, or yesterday. Not only
has he not done so, he has steadfastly maintained that he
will
not do so. His position is that this case should be
dismissed!
Unable to explain why affirmance of the District
Court’s declaratory judgment might change Saenz’s mind, the
majority contends that a favorable decision on
other
constitutional claims asserted in Gutierrez’s complaint might
do the trick. And it criticizes the Fifth Circuit for “bas[ing] its
assessment of redressability on the declaratory judgment the
District Court later issued, rather than Gutierrez’s complaint.”
Ante, at 10.
This reasoning is fundamentally wrong and, if
allowed to stand, will corrupt our Article III case law. Our
standing requirements “persist throughout all stages of
litigation.”
Hollingsworth v.
Perry,
570 U.S.
693, 705 (2013). “That means that standing ‘must be met by
persons seeking appellate review, just as it must be met by persons
appearing in courts of first instance.’ ”
Ibid.
(quoting
Arizonans for Official English v.
Arizona,
520 U.S.
43, 64 (1997)). The constitutional claims on which the majority
relies were rejected by the District Court, and Gutierrez did not
appeal that part of the judgment. As a result, the best relief that
Gutierrez could now obtain in this case is an affirmance of the
District Court’s declaratory judgment—and for the reasons already
discussed, that relief would not make DNA testing substantially
likely.
For all these the reasons, Gutierrez cannot
satisfy
Reed’s real test for redressability.
B
The majority treats this case as
indistinguishable from
Reed, but that is not correct. An
examination of the situation in that case provides a clear
explanation for the
Reed Court’s conclusion that its test
for redressability was met. And once that is understood, it is
clear that the present case is different.
1
Rodney Reed was convicted and sentenced to
death for the murder of Stacey Lee Stites, whose body was found
partially clothed and abandoned near a back country road.
Reed v.
State, 541 S.W.3d 759, 762 (Tex. Crim. App.
2017). Based on an examination of her body, the police concluded
that she had been sexually assaulted and strangled with a belt
found at the scene.
Ibid. DNA found on semen in Stites’s
body matched Reed’s genetic profile, and Reed was subsequently
arrested and charged with her murder. See
id., at 763. At
trial, Reed argued (among other things) that he and Stites were in
a romantic relationship, that they had engaged in consensual
intercourse, and that the real culprit was Stites’s fiancé, Jimmy
Fennell.
Ex parte Reed, 271 S.W.3d 698, 710 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2008). The jury was not persuaded, and Reed was convicted of
capital murder and sentenced to death.
Id., at 712.
Reed filed a Chapter 64 motion seeking DNA
testing of the belt and more than 35 other items that were found
either on Stites’s body, at the scene of the crime, or in or near
the truck she shared with Fennell.
Reed, 541 S. W. 3d,
at 764–765. Applying Chapter 64, the TCCA ruled out consideration
of evidence that fell into either of two categories. See
id., at 773. First, the TCCA refused to consider 21 items on
the ground that they did not satisfy Chapter 64’s chain-of-custody
requirement.[
8]
Id., at
769–770. Among these were the strap and buckle from the belt with
which Stites had apparently been strangled.
Id., at 769.
Second, the TCCA excluded other items on the ground that they were
not reasonably likely to contain biological material suitable for
testing.
Id., at 772. Eight items remained for the TCCA to
consider, and five of them were found in or near the truck, not at
the crime scene.
Id., at 774–775. The court then found that
favorable results with respect to these eight items would not have
shown by a preponderance of the evidence that Reed was not guilty.
Id., at 773–777.
2
Once the role that the chain-of-custody rule
played in the TCCA’s analysis is understood, the support for this
Court’s redressability finding in
Reed is easy to
understand. The declaratory judgment that Reed sought—striking down
the chain-of-custody rule—would have critically undermined the
TCCA’s holding with respect to the potential impact of DNA testing.
Twenty-one additional items, including the belt, could have been
considered. If Fennell’s DNA, but not Reed’s, had been detected on
the belt and perhaps other items found at the scene, that would
have provided significant support for Reed’s theory that Fennell
was the murderer. As a result, the declaratory judgment might well
have led to a state-court decision ordering DNA testing, and that
possibility would have given the district attorney a reason to turn
over the items even before such a state-court decision was handed
down. The result would have been “
a significant increase in the
likelihood that the state prosecutor would grant access to the
requested evidence.”
Reed, 598 U. S., at 234 (emphasis
added; internal quotation marks omitted).
In response, the majority argues that even if
the chain of custody rule was held to be unconstitutional, the
district attorney could have denied Reed’s request for another
reason.
Ante, at 11. That is true but beside the point.
Under this Court’s decision in
Reed, all that was required
to show redressability was “a significant increase in the
likelihood” that the district attorney would allow testing.
C
Gutierrez’s case presents a far different
situation. Here, the TCCA has held that, even if DNA testing failed
to detect Gutierrez’s DNA
and detected the presence of
Cuellar’s DNA, Gutierrez could not establish that he was not guilty
of murder or that he is ineligible for a death sentence. The TCCA
noted that, since Cuellar lived with Harrison in the same trailer
home and was the person who found her dead body, detecting his DNA
on many items in the house would not necessarily be incriminating.
See
Gutierrez, 2020 WL 918669, *7–*8. And more important,
even if Cuellar’s DNA was detected on the most important items,
such as the material found under Harrison’s fingernails, that would
be of little value to Gutierrez. It would suggest that Cuellar was
one of the individuals who stabbed Harrison—but that would not
affect Gutierrez’s culpability or his sentence. Whether the fatal
blows were administered by Garcia, Gracia, Cuellar, or some
combination of these men, Gutierrez would still be guilty of murder
under the law of parties because he participated in the scheme. See
Tex. Penal Code Ann. §7.01(a). And because he had reason to know
that the execution of his scheme could well result in the loss of
life, he would still be eligible for the death penalty. See
Enmund v.
Florida,
458 U.S.
782, 797 (1982);
Tison v.
Arizona,
481 U.S.
137, 157–158 (1987). Thus, a favorable decision on Gutierrez’s
constitutional argument would
not bolster his challenge to
his sentence.
Gutierrez responds that favorable DNA results
might change the TCCA’s thinking because that court’s holding on
the effect of DNA evidence did not take into account newly
discovered evidence that he wants to introduce. See Brief for
Petitioner 38–42. The majority suggests that, in assessing whether
Gutierrez’s injury of not receiving DNA testing is redressable, the
Fifth Circuit should have considered Gutierrez’s assertion in his
complaint that favorable DNA results
along with the new
evidence could render him ineligible for the death penalty. See
ante, at 9–10. But the TCCA has held that only evidence in
the trial record may be considered in determining whether
post-conviction DNA testing is allowed. See
Holberg v.
State, 425 S.W.3d 282, 285 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (“[T]his
Court will not consider post-trial evidence when deciding whether
or not the appellant has carried her burden to establish by a
preponderance of the evidence that she would not have been
convicted had exculpatory results been obtained through DNA
testing.”).[
9] We have no basis
for disregarding that limitation here. We are, of course, bound by
the TCCA’s interpretation of Texas law, and no question regarding
the constitutionality of this feature of Texas law is now before
us.[
10]
Not only does the majority’s redressability
analysis take into account evidence that this binding state-law
rule excludes, but the majority seems to think it is relevant that
“Gutierrez has long maintained that the police coerced him into
confessing that he was in Harrison’s home on the night of the
murder.”
Ante, at 3.
The majority does not see fit to mention that
the state courts have definitively rejected Gutierrez’s argument
that the confession was coerced, that Texas law would almost
certainly bar him from raising the same claim again in a
post-conviction proceeding,[
11] and that the federal habeas statute would likewise
bar consideration of the claim.[
12]
* * *
This decision’s only practical effect will be
to aid and abet Gutierrez’s efforts to run out the clock on the
execution of his sentence. And if the decision is taken seriously
as a precedent on Article III standing, it will do serious damage.
I therefore dissent.