Case Law Nguyen v. State

Nguyen v. State

Document Cited Authorities (4) Cited in Related

Rosemary Ellen Percival, Kansas City, MO for appellant.

Julia Elizabeth Rives, Jefferson City, MO for respondent.

Before Division Three: Janet Sutton, Presiding Judge, Cynthia L. Martin, Judge, and Edward R. Ardini Jr., Judge

Cynthia L. Martin, Judge

Thu Hong Nguyen ("Nguyen") appeals from a judgment denying her Rule 29.151 motion for post-conviction relief following an evidentiary hearing. Nguyen asserts the motion court clearly erred in denying her claim that she was prejudiced by her trial counsel's failure to present all available mitigation evidence at her sentencing proceeding. Finding no error, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

Nguyen immigrated to the United States from Vietnam in the early 1990s when she was a young adult. In 2015, she was running a nail salon ("LN Nails") which was located on the first floor of a three-story apartment building in Kansas City, Missouri. In the same building were sixteen apartments and other businesses. On October 12, 2015, Nguyen intentionally set fire to the nail salon. The placement of the fire in the storage closet which contained acetone and isopropyl alcohol, along with the amount of fuel and accelerant Nguyen used, contributed to the speed with which the fire spread throughout the building and concealed the main body of the fire from the outside of the building. When firefighters arrived, they began clearing the ground floors and apartments, searching for people left inside. While firefighters fought the flames, the western side of the building collapsed, burying firefighters working in the alley. Two firefighters were killed and two were severely injured.

During a police interview, Nguyen claimed that her boyfriend was the owner of LN Nails, that she had nothing to hide because the building was not hers, and that her boyfriend helped her close the salon the night of the fire. However, Nguyen's boyfriend was at a nearby casino when the fire was set. Further investigation revealed that Nguyen had a pattern of purchasing a nail salon in another person's name and thereafter making an insurance claim after the business suffered a catastrophic event, usually a fire. Nguyen received $267,000 in insurance proceeds for fourteen different claims over an eight-year period which enabled her to go long periods with no employment, living on the insurance proceeds alone. In 2013, Nguyen owned another nail salon in Lee's Summit, Missouri with her 21-year-old son. In July 2013, that salon suffered a fire and it was never reopened.

The State charged Nguyen with one count of causing catastrophe, one count of first-degree arson for deliberately causing the fire inside of LN Nails, two counts of felony murder, two counts of second-degree assault, and one count of first-degree arson for deliberately causing a fire inside of her Lee's Summit nail salon in 2013.

Nguyen's five-day-long bench trial began on July 16, 2018. She was represented by two attorneys. Nguyen's primary counsel "handled all of the courtroom work [including all presentation of evidence at trial and the sentencing hearing,] witness interviews and depositions," while secondary counsel "was primarily responsible for client communication and keeping the family abreast of what was going on in the case." Nguyen's secondary counsel spoke Vietnamese, and she was familiar with cultural nuances which affected Nguyen's upbringing, as she was born in and spent a portion of her childhood in Vietnam.2

The trial court found Nguyen not guilty of causing a catastrophe, but guilty on all other counts. A sentencing hearing was held on September 21, 2018. The State called several family members of the victims. Nguyen presented evidence of mitigation from one of her sons who testified about her history of hardships, both while growing up in Vietnam and after she moved to the United States, including that Nguyen never received an education but she nevertheless worked hard as a single mother to support her four sons without help from their father. Nguyen also presented a letter from Thich Hoa Dao ("Dao"), a Buddhist nun at Nguyen's temple. The letter outlined, inter alia , that Nguyen's father, an American soldier during the Vietnam War, abandoned her in Vietnam to face racial discrimination, that Nguyen was ostracized by her community because she was interracial, that she was never afforded proper education as a child and instead had to work long hours to support her stepfather and four half-brothers, and that Nguyen was physically and verbally abused by her husband.

The trial court sentenced Nguyen to thirty years for the LN Nails arson, thirty years for each count of felony murder, fifteen years for the Lee's Summit nail salon arson, and seven years for each count of second-degree assault. Nguyen's sentences for the felony murder and assault counts were ordered to run consecutively but concurrent to the arson sentences, for a total of seventy-four years in prison. (Tr. 1477). Nguyen's conviction was affirmed on direct appeal. State v. Nguyen , 598 S.W.3d 927 (Mo. App. W.D. 2020).

Nguyen filed a timely pro se motion for post-conviction relief pursuant to Rule 29.15. The motion court appointed counsel who filed a timely amended motion on November 23, 2020 ("Amended Motion") which asserted that Nguyen's representation at sentencing was ineffective because counsel failed to investigate Nguyen's "substantial social history" which "would have revealed mitigation evidence" that "would have been presented to the [trial court and there] is at least a reasonable probability that the [trial court] would have given [Nguyen] a lower sentence." At the evidentiary hearing, post-conviction counsel presented evidence from primary and secondary counsel, as well as Dr. Christopher Robertson ("Dr. Robertson"), a certified forensic examiner who was retained to conduct an evaluation of Nguyen.

Dr. Robertson testified that while interviewing Nguyen, he learned that she was raised in an impoverished environment in Vietnam where she did not attend school and was required to work from the age of ten to help support the rest of the family. Prior to working, Nguyen was forced to raise her half-siblings. Dr. Robertson testified that Nguyen relayed that she did not know her biological father (who was an American soldier), that her mother and stepfather were emotionally neglectful and favored her half-siblings, and that her stepfather was physically abusive. Nguyen described that as a child, she was taunted by her peers because she was interracial. Dr. Robertson explained that Nguyen married her husband when she was eighteen, and they moved to the United States where he controlled the finances and sent substantial portions of their income back to his family in Vietnam. Nguyen's husband eventually abandoned the family, taking their savings.

Primary counsel testified that she relied on secondary counsel to help her gather mitigation evidence for sentencing. Primary counsel testified about her understanding of Nguyen's difficult background--she knew that Nguyen was "ostracized as a child" and treated differently by her mother because her father was an American soldier, that Nguyen grew up in extreme poverty and had a very limited education; and, that she was treated poorly and abandoned by her husband. Primary counsel testified that she made a strategic decision to forgo further investigation into Nguyen's background because she believed they had sufficient evidence to introduce at sentencing. Secondary counsel testified that prior to sentencing, she spoke with Nguyen, Nguyen's children, and Dao seeking mitigation evidence. Secondary counsel testified that she had more information about Nguyen's social history than primary counsel, but she did not present the evidence or speak to primary counsel about the additional history because "this court found [Nguyen] guilty despite the evidence. I did not want to bring her unfortunate history to the Court as I did not think it would make a difference."3 Secondary counsel testified that she was aware that Nguyen was abused by her stepfather, that she experienced trauma as a result of extensive taunting by her peers as a child in Vietnam, that her mother neglected her due to her skin color, and that Nguyen's husband took advantage of Nguyen's ability to immigrate to the United States and then financially abused her and isolated her and their children.

The motion court entered a judgment ("Judgment"), which included findings of fact and conclusions of law, denying Nguyen's Amended Motion. In regards to the claim that trial counsel failed to adequately investigate Nguyen's social background, the motion court found that their investigation was adequate. The motion court referenced primary counsel's testimony about her understanding of Nguyen's social history, and found that secondary counsel "had a full understanding of [Nguyen's] social history from her investigation but chose not to present the full extent of that history at sentencing and not to share all the details of [Nguyen's] upbringing with [primary counsel]." But, the motion court did conclude that "the omission of evidence related to [Nguyen's] social background at the sentencing hearing based on trial counsel's personal belief that presentation of [Nguyen's] full social history ‘would not make a difference to this Court fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and was not...

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