Adams v. Eppinger

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 13, 2023
Docket4:21-cv-00158
StatusUnknown

This text of Adams v. Eppinger (Adams v. Eppinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Eppinger, (N.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO

: BENNIE ADAMS, : CASE NO. 4:21-cv-00158 : Petitioner, : OPINION & ORDER : [Resolving Docs. 21, 22 & 26] v. : : LASHANN EPPINGER, : : Respondent. : :

JAMES S. GWIN, UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT JUDGE:

An Ohio jury convicted Petitioner Bennie Adams of murdering Gina Tenney and recommended the death penalty. Adams successfully appealed his death sentence and now serves 20-years-to-life in prison. But because Adams believes Ohio court proceedings violated his federal rights, Adams now asks this Court for habeas corpus relief. This Court first examines whether Adams’s petition is time barred under AEDPA’s one-year statute of limitations. Although Adams failed to file this habeas petition within the one-year limit, this Court finds that Ohio waived an available statute-of-limitations defense. Turning to the merits of Adams’s habeas petition, unless excused, procedural default stops consideration of two of Adams’s claims. Adams responds that procedural default should not stop consideration of his defaulted claims because sufficient evidence suggests he is actually innocent. Unfortunately for Adams, any fair consideration of the evidence instead supports finding that Adams murdered Gina Tenney. Among the limited number of not-procedurally-defaulted claims, Adams makes one good claim. He offers sworn affidavit evidence that deliberating jurors somehow knew about the Court finds that Adams had the right to have this issue examined. For the following reasons, the Court conditionally GRANTS Adams’s petition in part. Unless Ohio holds a hearing on Adams’s juror-bias claim within 150 days of this order,

Adams may apply for release from custody. The Court DISMISSES in part and DENIES in part the rest of Adams’ claims. Finally, the Court AFFIRMS the magistrate judge’s decision to deny Adams’s discovery request. I. Background In 2008, an Ohio jury convicted Adams of the 1985 murder of Gina Tenney. Tenney lived above Adams in a Youngstown area duplex. On December 29, 1985, Adams murdered Tenney before casting her body in the Mahoning River.

Despite substantial evidence of Adams’s involvement, police did not initially charge Adams with Tenney’s murder. But in 1986, Ohio convicted Adams of an unrelated rape, kidnapping and robbery. Adams served nearly 18 years in prison on this separate rape, kidnapping and robbery. Shortly after Adams was released from the rape, kidnapping and robbery conviction, an Ohio program made DNA testing resources available to help police with unsolved crimes.

At the time of the original Gina Tenney murder investigation, this DNA testing had not been available. In 2007, police submitted the Tenney case’s evidence to state investigators for this new DNA testing. After using the now-available DNA testing, the testing matched Adams’s DNA to semen found with Tenney. So, in October 2007, a Grand Jury indicted Adams for Tenney’s murder. In October 2008, a jury found Adams guilty of aggravated murder and recommended a death sentence. The trial court adopted the jury’s recommendation. II. Discussion A. Timeliness Adams filed his federal habeas petition late. But although federal law limits the time

to file a habeas petition, the State appears to have waived this statute-of-limitations defense. So, the Court does not dismiss Adams’s petition solely because it arrived late. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) requires a state prisoner to file any federal habeas corpus petition within one year after the trial court’s judgment becomes final.1 But federal courts discount from AEDPA’s one-year limit any time that passes while a petitioner’s properly filed state postconviction petition remains pending.2

AEDPA’s time limit does not completely bar habeas courts from considering late petitions. Instead, the AEDPA limit gives state respondents an affirmative defense.3 But if a respondent fails to raise its statute-of-limitations defense, the habeas court may choose to dismiss a late petition sua sponte.4 This case’s procedural history reveals that Petitioner Adams failed to file this AEDPA petition before AEDPA’s one-year window closed:  On June 11, 2012, while his Ohio direct appeal remained pending, Adams filed a state postconviction petition.5 On April 23, 2014, the state trial court stayed this

1 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A). 2 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2). 3 Day v. McDonough, 547 U.S. 198, 209 (2006). 4 at 210. Before deciding to dismiss a late petition, courts allow the parties to present their positions. Courts also consider whether the petitioner would suffer significant prejudice if the Court itself raises the timeliness sua sponte. Finally, courts decide whether reaching the petition’s merits or dismissing the untimely petition would best serve the interests of justice. postconviction proceedings during Adams’s direct appeal.6  On October 1, 2015, on direct appeal, the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed Adams’s conviction but vacated his death sentence.7  On June 6, 2016, the trial court resentenced Adams to 20-years-to-life incarceration. Adams did not appeal his June 6, 2016, resentencing. So, on July 6, 2016, when Adams’s time to appeal his new sentence expired, Adams’s new judgment became final.8  The Ohio trial court never issued any opinion or judgment on Adams’s 2012 state post-conviction petition either before or after Adams’s resentencing. Petitioner’s counsel says that in an off-the-record meeting shortly before or after resentencing, the trial court suggested that Adams’s counsel should refile any petition for state postconviction relief after the resentencing.9  On June 5, 2017, Adams filed a second state postconviction petition attacking his new resentencing judgment.10  On January 21, 2020, Adams’s state postconviction bid on the new judgment ended unsuccessfully when the Ohio Supreme Court declined jurisdiction. Adams filed this petition on January 20, 2021.11 Relative to the one-year AEDPA statute of limitations, Adams had allowed 334 days to pass after resentencing before filing the 2017 state postconviction petition and had allowed an additional 365 days to pass after the state postconviction denial on the resentencing became final. Whether Adams filed his AEDPA habeas petition within the one-year statute of limitations turns on whether Adams’s 2012 postconviction petition from his original conviction continues to toll the federal habeas statute of limitations even though the Ohio Supreme Court vacated the first sentence and a new sentencing judgment replaced it.

6 Doc. 10-3 at 154 (PageID 3448). 7 State v. Adams, 45 N.E.3d 127 (Ohio 2015). 8 OHIO R. APP. P. 4 (allowing 30 days to appeal a final judgment); 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A). 9 Doc. 30 at 1–2 (PageID 6241–42). 10 Doc. 10-3 at 155 (PageID 3449). Only if the postconviction petition from the first judgment continued to toll the AEDPA statute of limitations after the successful appeal and resentencing judgment would Adams’s petition be AEDPA timely. If Adams’s first state postconviction petition continued

to toll the AEDPA one-year limit, Adams filed his federal habeas petition with a day to spare. But if AEDPA’s clock ran from when the second sentence judgment became final, Adams filed this petition nearly a year late. Neither party addressed timeliness. So, the Court ordered additional briefing on whether it should dismiss Adams’s petition sua sponte.12 In response, both parties said that Adams had filed his AEDPA petition on time.13

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