Steve was startled when he looked over and saw 9:37 on his bedside clock. He rarely set his alarm on the weekend and usually slept in until sometime between 8:00 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. He felt groggy; he brewed a cup of coffee and took it with him as he left for the gym.
A good workout always energized him on days when his mind and body had other ideas. When he returned home, Steve pulled out one of his premade lunches of grilled chicken and asparagus from the refrigerator, poured a glass of orange juice, and sat down at the kitchen table with the trial transcripts. The first line he read was from Battel: “Your Honor, I call Rogers County Sheriff’s Deputy Andrew Blackburn to the stand.”
Seeing the deputy’s name, Steve involuntarily looked up trying to figure out why that name sounded familiar. Then it hit him. Deputy Blackburn was the cop who had killed Dominick Harrison outside of Claremore two days ago.
The shooting caused a nationwide stir. Members of civil rights organizations, alongside their national and community leaders, were on their way to Oklahoma and encouraging others to protest. Some marches and protests had already begun, and press conferences were being held. The small Oklahoma town was heating up and becoming the center of a national debate. Steve turned back to the transcripts.
After Deputy Blackburn was sworn in, he gave his name and testified to his training and experience as a peace officer. Once again, Steve’s imagination took him back in time to the Rogers County courtroom.
***
July 27, 2009—Rogers County Courtroom
Battel stood near the far end of jury looking forward at Deputy Blackburn, again dressed in uniform, on the stand; thereby nonverbally focusing their attention towards the testimony. “Now, please tell us what happened the morning of August 9, 2008,” Battel prompted.
“A call came in from dispatch that there was a possible domestic abuse situation with the perpetrator still in the home,” Deputy Blackburn explained. “At the time, I was sitting in the parking lot of the Racino—the Cherokee Racetrack and Casino. I had just finished up a call where someone was causing a disturbance at the Racino about twenty minutes prior to this dispatch.”
“I was sitting in my car, filling out an incident report on my laptop while keeping an eye on the handful of Saturday morning gamblers strolling into the facility. After dispatch gave me the location of the crime, I turned on my lights and drove north as fast as I safely could towards the home.”
“A few minutes later, I arrived at 5260 E. 420 Road. The house itself is about a quarter mile up the driveway from the main road. As I drove up the driveway, I saw a one-story ranch-style home. There was a pink Volkswagen bug parked in the driveway and no other cars in sight. I stopped my vehicle and radioed dispatch to let them know I had arrived at the location.”
“After confirming that I was at the right address, I got out and approached the house. I could see through the storm door that the main front door was open. I knocked loudly on the screen door and yelled, ‘Sheriff’s department, anyone here?’ After a few seconds, I knocked and yelled again. When I heard no response, I cautiously entered the residence.”
“That was when I saw her. In the middle of the living room, I saw a woman, whom I knew to be Ashley Pinkerton, we had gone to high school at about the same time and we both lived in Claremore our whole lives. She was lying on the floor, covered in blood. I immediately radioed dispatch, told them what I saw, and asked for an ambulance and backup. Before I administered any first aid, I drew my gun and quickly searched the home to see if the perpetrator was still in the residence. Based on my training and experience, I knew that I needed to secure the location before I could help her.”
“The only other person in the house was a baby. He was in his crib, crying. I knew it was a boy from the way they had decorated his room. The baby appeared safe, so I went back to the woman on the living room floor. At this point, since I had cleared the house, I holstered my firearm and began performing first aid on the victim. She was bleeding profusely.”
“First, I found some towels in a kitchen drawer and tried to slow the bleeding as best I could. I was hoping to keep her loss of blood down as much as possible. It seemed as if she was bleeding from every part of her body. When I began CPR, each pump I made on her chest pushed blood out from the wounds all over her. I soon realized she was dead, likely gone before I even touched her.”
“I radioed dispatch to let the ambulance driver know she had passed and that the ambulance did not need to rush. I then went to the master bedroom and pulled the duvet cover off the bed and placed it over the victim. During the entire process, I tried to disturb as little of the house as possible because I knew this was now a murder scene. I didn’t want to ruin any evidence that could help later in my investigation.”
“Then why did you place a cover on the victim?” interrupted Battel. “Couldn’t that affect the scene?”
“Yes, it could,” Deputy Blackburn answered. “But the baby was in the house, crying. I had a sense he knew something bad had happened to his mother. Maybe he had heard the fight, the yelling and screaming—the tussle that led to his mom’s death. I don’t know, but whatever it was, my instincts told me that I needed to get that baby out of the house. I didn’t want him to see his mother dead on the floor, so I covered her before I went and got him.”
“I carried him out to the street and held him until child welfare workers from the Department of Human Services arrived. For some reason, holding that baby and keeping him calm made me feel like I was helping his dead mother, despite the fact I wasn’t able to save her life. It still bothers me to this day that I didn’t get there sooner or do something more to save her.”
“The only solace I have is that I brought comfort to that little boy for her.” The deputy began to tear up during this part of his testimony. He stopped talking, took several deep breaths and then continued.
“After several minutes, the ambulance, other officers, and, finally, the Child Protective Services worker arrived. During this time, officers had run the husband through our databases and determined what type of vehicle he drove through registration records. Every officer in the county was looking for his red pickup truck.”
“Shortly after I handed the baby over to the child welfare worker, I received a call that they believed Scottie was in a room at a hotel just east of Claremore. It was the closest hotel between the house and town. Scottie’s car had been spotted in the parking lot. A City of Claremore police officer, Officer Mathews, confirmed with the hotel management that Scottie had rented a room the day before.”
“The jury will hear from Officer Mathews a little bit later in the trial,” Battel said. “Please continue with what you did next.”
“I went back inside and began my investigation. I asked some officers to tape off the outside of the house while I began taking pictures inside.”
Battel held up a stack of photos and asked, “Your Honor, may
I approach the witness?”
“You may,” Judge McClintock responded.
Battel presented the photos to Deputy Blackburn. “Are these the photos you took that day?”
“Yes,” Deputy Blackburn answered.
“Are they true and correct representations of the house and the victim as they appeared that day?”
“Yes.”
Battel took the photos from Deputy Blackburn and handed them to the judge.
“Your Honor, I move to admit exhibits one through fifty-seven into evidence.”
“Does the defense have any objections?” Judge McClintock asked while looking through the photographs. “None, Your Honor,” Hixon replied.
“Very well. They will be admitted.”
Battel took the photographs back from Judge McClintock and approached the jury box. “Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, since these pictures are now a part of the evidence, you are allowed to see them. I must warn you that some of these images are very graphic in nature.”
He handed the stack of photographs to the juror sitting nearest the witness stand. She looked at the first picture and passed it on. Eventually, all of the photos worked their way around the jury box.
***
Steve imagined how normal citizens would react to the photos. He had enough trouble looking at them despite two years of death penalty work under his belt. Some jurors probably looked quickly and turned away, passing them on without hesitation. Others would take their time to digest the bloody scene.
After Deputy Blackburn’s direct testimony was Hixon’s cross-examination. As Steve read through the transcript—still following his client’s directive to believe he was not guilty—Steve’s serious expression deepened into a frown; Hixon’s questioning left a lot to be desired. Steve himself had several questions that were simply not asked, and thus, never answered.
Did Deputy Blackburn see anyone else near the home when he arrived?
Did Ashley say anything before she passed that could have pointed them to someone other than her husband as the killer?
Did she say anything at all?
Where did he find the knife?
Deputy Blackburn was the first officer on the scene; his testimony should have given clues as to who the real killer was if it wasn’t Scottie. Without answers to these questions and many others, that mystery still remained.
Instead of providing new information, Hixon’s questions simply allowed Deputy Blackburn to recite his story a second time for the jury. However, this time, Blackburn took the opportunity to mention the knife, saying that he had to move the knife in order to perform CPR on the victim. At least that question was answered— not in a particularly helpful way, but answered, nonetheless.
As Steve flipped through the next several pages of the cross-examination, he concluded that, although Hixon was not doing a great job, the attorney’s incompetency likely wouldn’t qualify as “ineffective assistance” in accordance with how the United States Supreme Court defined the term.
Steve shot a text to Ackerman: When you have a few minutes, could I run something by you?
Two minutes later, the phone rang.
“How may I be of assistance to you, counselor,” Ackerman said.
“I’m reading through the transcripts in this Scottie case, and Hixon didn’t even cross the detectives and officers except with open questions that just let them repeat their directs. God-awful representation, but I’m not sure it rises to the level of Strickland v. Washington.”
“Well, let’s talk through it,” Ackerman said. “Explain to me the holding in Strickland. In your own words,” he added.
Steve grinned despite the circumstances; he knew this was another quiz by the master. “Well, the Strickland court determined that, in order for representation to be deemed constitutionally ineffective and requiring a new trial, the person raising the issue on appeal must meet a two-pronged test. First, the appellant must show counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness. Second, he or she must also demonstrate that if counsel had performed adequately, the result would have been different. I think there is a solid argument for that first prong. Hixon’s representation was almost nonexistent.”
“I’m not surprised,” Ackerman replied. “And the second?”
“Well, as we discussed before, there is a mountain of evidence against him. I don’t know if any attorney in the state could have gotten him off.”
“No offense taken,” Ackerman said dryly.
Steve chuckled. “Present company excluded,” he acquiesced before continuing. “Anyway, I have a concern, a real strong concern about convincing the district or appellate judges that anyone, even you, could have kept Scottie from being convicted. Which means the appellate courts will have to deny a request for a new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel because the result would have likely been the same, even with solid representation.”
Steve sighed. The line was quiet for a few seconds while he sat for what seemed like hours and stared into nothingness.
Finally, Ackerman cleared his throat. “Don’t ever forget, if you don’t win this case, your client will be executed. At the end of the day, it might be that you cannot win this case; it certainly is a tough one. I have lost cases and watched clients be put to death. I assure you that it is a feeling to which you will never get accustomed and, despite handling cases with insurmountable odds, if your client dies, you will suffer guilt that will never leave you.” Steve nodded somberly to himself.
“To minimize the time spent lying awake and replaying your every move and decision, which will be inevitable if you continue to take on these cases, you must scrutinize every scrap of evidence, every word in the transcripts, every word not in the transcripts. Every corner of every photograph. If the second prong is out there, you have to find it.”
Steve looked over at the box of photographs. “Understood. I’m on it.”
During his two years working for judges, Steve dreaded this part the most—detailed photographs from all angles and ranges of the surroundings, the murder scenes, the victims.
The pictures of Ashley Pinkerton’s dead body covered in blood were as gruesome as Steve had imagined, and the blackish-red stains splattered throughout the living room made the room look like a bad Jackson Pollock forgery. Steve thought back to all of the pictures of dead bodies he had looked at over those two years—exactly twenty-four cases, with two of them including separate murder scenes, for a total of twenty-six murder scenes and thirty-two dead bodies. Scenes where it appeared that the perpetrators had rushed away quickly. Scenes where he could tell the murderer had lingered after their victim’s death. Some with lots of blood, some with none, but always with a body and a face contorted with death.
The images had looked eerily fake to him, almost like a Hollywood movie scene, as if the body and blood had been staged to lay in just the right manner, yet at the same time they were unmistakably real because the cold reality was that they weren’t fake. The pictures Steve had seen were of real people.
As much as a part of his mind wanted him to think the scenes were staged, the visceral truth of the pictures always surfaced. The reality often hit him in the middle of the night when, for one reason or another, Steve just couldn’t sleep. Now, he wondered if Ackerman would also lie awake at the same time, for the same reason, and if, despite their best efforts, the two of them were merely two legal ships struggling to stay afloat in unforgiving seas.
Despite his apprehension, Steve knew he had to look closely at every detail in every picture. He had to study each one to see if something stuck out to him which would even hint that his client was not the murderer. Any chance of winning this case depended upon it.
Steve had been trying to persuade himself to believe Scottie’s words, but the truth was, deep down, Steve was nearly convinced his client had killed his wife that summer day. The evidence was overwhelming. The 911 call proving there was an altercation minutes before the police arrived, the scratches on Scottie’s body, particles of his skin and blood found under Ashley’s fingernails, even the fact Scottie had showered before police arrived. Additionally, the pictures showed the bloody footprints on the floor matching the pair of bloody shoes that Scottie owned and that were found near the crime scene. It all added up to Scottie Pinkerton being the killer. There was nothing tangible to support his client’s claim of innocence, except his word.
Then, Steve saw it! He wondered how no one had noticed it before, but then he realized that he was probably the first person to truly look for something other than proof of Scottie’s guilt. He knew perspective often replaced reality in these investigations. He turned to his computer and excitedly pounded on the keys.
First, he prepared a motion asking the court to appoint him an investigator to assist him on the case. If Scottie had not committed the crime, then he needed to find out who did. Although Steve felt confident in his knowledge of death penalty law, he had no investigative training whatsoever. Moreover, as much as he preferred to work alone, in this instance he knew that he needed help.
Second, he typed a letter to the prison requesting a barrier-free and restraint-free visit with Scottie as soon as possible. Steve knew that, with this evidence, he could convince Scottie he believed in his innocence, and Scottie would tell him everything he knew about that day and the events leading up to it.