Leonel Torres Herrera v. James A. Collins, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division (506 U.S. 390)

U.S. Supreme Court · decided January 25, 1993 · Supreme Court Database (Spaeth)

Citation
506 U.S. 390 · 113 S. Ct. 853
Decided
January 25, 1993
Term
October Term 1992
Vote
6–3
Majority author
Justice Rehnquist
Issue area
Criminal Procedure
Disposition
Affirmed
Outcome
Petitioning party lost
Ideological direction
Conservative

Opinion excerpt

Chief Justice Rehnquist delivered the opinion of the Court. Petitioner Leonel Torres Herrera was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in January 1982. He unsuccessfully challenged the conviction on direct appeal and state collateral proceedings in the Texas state courts, and in a federal habeas petition. In February 1992 — 10 years after his conviction — he urged in a second federal habeas petition that he was “actually innocent” of the murder for which he was sentenced to death, and that the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment and the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of due process of law therefore forbid his execution. He supported this claim with affidavits tending to show that his now-dead brother, rather than he, had been the perpetrator of the crime. Petitioner urges us to hold that this showing of innocence entitles him to relief in this federal habeas proceeding. We hold that it does not. Shortly before 11 p.m. on an evening in late September 1981, the body of Texas Department of Public Safety Officer David Rucker was found by a passer-by on a stretch of highway about six miles east of Los Fresnos, Texas, a few miles north of Brownsville in the Rio Grande Valley. Rucker’s body was lying beside his patrol car. He had been shot in the head. At about the same time, Los Fresnos Police Officer Enrique Carrisalez observed a…

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