According to a report prepared by a private investigator in 1995 in connection with Hood's appeals, Haynes may have had other reasons for failing to pursue "those rumors." The report quotes a paralegal who worked for Haynes, Janet Heitmiller, claiming that her boss "feared raising the relationship as an issue in Dean's [Charles Dean Hood's] case would cost them points with the judge concerning other cases" he might argue before her. According to the investigator's report, Heitmiller learned of the alleged relationship while working for Haynes and believed that Judge Holland and O'Connell "were still dating up to a year after the case was resolved."

The report, written by Tena S. Francis, also quotes a local attorney, Ray Wheless, as saying that "the judge and DA tried to keep their relationship as private as possible. People in the legal community knew about it, though, and the two could often be seen going to lunch together from the courthouse."

The investigator concluded that "the relationship with O'Connell is what cost [Judge] Holland her marriage." The report added that Wheless "does not know why or how or when O'Connell's relationship with Holland ended." Now a Collin County judge, Wheless did not return phone calls to his home and office. Although Hood's appellate lawyers discussed the alleged affair over the years, the issue was never formally raised on any court proceeding.

Today, Hood's trial attorney, David Haynes, says that evidence of the alleged affair "certainly would have made a difference in the way the defense was approached. It would have cast some doubt about the fairness of the tribunal." But he says there is no way to know for sure if rulings Judge Holland made against his client were prejudiced due to the alleged relationship with the district attorney.

Richard Ellis, a San Francisco attorney now representing Hood, agrees that there is no way to connect Holland's rulings to allegations about her personal life, but he considers at least one of her decisions, refusing a defense request for a psychological evaluation, "totally out of the mainstream of judicial authority," given a Supreme Court ruling on the issue. Although Hood is not mentally retarded, a scientific presentation by a defense psychiatrist might have convinced the jury to forgo the death sentence. As a child, Hood suffered a traumatic head injury, and there was evidence that he was regularly whipped by his father.

David R. Dow, a University of Houston law professor who is also working on the Hood matter, insists, "It is a red herring to look for particular things that are challengeable, because what you have in a case like this is a complete and fundamental breakdown of all the premises of the adversary system." Based on the relationship of the judge and the prosecutor, Dow says there is no question that Hood should be granted a new trial. "Any criminal defendant who stands to be sentenced to death is entitled to a proceeding that is not only fair, but has the appearance of fairness. At a minimum, there is no appearance of fairness in this case, and we have good reason to believe the judge made decisions that resulted in concrete harm. Did she make those decisions because she was sleeping with the prosecutor? Who knows. But we shouldn't have to engage in that kind of idle speculation." Dow says the judge should have recused herself from the case.

Stephen Gillers, a professor of law at New York University Law School, agrees. One of the country's leading authorities on legal ethics, Gillers said, "There's no question -- it's incontrovertible -- this justice should not have sat in this case, at least not without informed consent on the record from the defense ... The public has a right to complete confidence in the court's disinterestedness, in the court's objectivity. It's simply not possible to know how the case might have gone differently or how the rulings might have been altered absent this relationship."

Gillers cited the widely used ABA Code of Judicial Conduct, which provides that "A judge shall disqualify himself or herself in a proceeding in which the judge's impartiality might reasonably be questioned." Where there is doubt, a judge is obliged to disclose information that lawyers might consider relevant to the question of disqualification.

Citing the same provision, Hofstra law professor Monroe Freedman, author of "Understanding Lawyers' Ethics," said, "Beyond any doubt, a judge's romantic involvement with a lawyer appearing before him 'might' cause a reasonable person to 'question' his impartiality. I am confident that no one who works in the field of judges' ethics would take a different view from mine in this case."

Hood, 36, may have some of the country's top legal ethicists on his side, but getting the courts to grant him a new trial is another matter. If Judge Holland's behavior in the case is challenged, the state will almost certainly argue that the defense still cannot prove that her rulings were prejudiced or that they would have changed the outcome of the jury's deliberations.

With his execution date imminent, Hood's lawyers have raised several other legal issues. On Thursday, the Supreme Court was scheduled to hear Hood's appeal for a new DNA test, with a decision expected on Monday. Hood's lawyers are also contesting the constitutionality of the Texas jury instructions given at his trial, which used the same language as instructions since deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.

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