Alisha Glisson v. Debra Johnson

705 F. App'x 361
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 2017
Docket16-5737
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 705 F. App'x 361 (Alisha Glisson v. Debra Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alisha Glisson v. Debra Johnson, 705 F. App'x 361 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge.

In 2006, a Tennessee jury convicted Alisha Glisson of felony murder and other crimes for her role in a robbery gone wrong. After the Tennessee courts affirmed her conviction and denied her motion for post-conviction relief, she filed a petition for habeas corpus in federal court. The district court denied her petition. We affirm.

I.

A.

Glisson was living in Nashville, Tennessee when she started dating David Sullivan, a private in the Army who was stationed about an hour away. Sullivan asked Glisson about any drug dealers that she knew, and she told him about a local marijuana dealer named Randy St. Laurent. After Glisson and Sullivan had dated for a couple of weeks, Sullivan and his friend from the Army, Andrew Warner, decided to come to Nashville to rob St. Laurent and beat him up. The two men drove into town and went to Glisson’s apartment, where they joined Glisson and a man named Michael Henry. Glisson told the men that she was planning to spend the evening out partying with St. Laurent. A rough plan soon formed: the men would try to steal money and drugs from St. Laurent’s home while he was out with Glisson. Glisson told the men where St. Laurent lived, and the men drove to a nearby motel to complete their plans.

The men drove from the motel to St. Laurent’s apartment building, where they entered the wrong apartment at first. They quickly realized their mistake—the apartment was home to a family with two kids, not a drug dealer—and left. Henry called Glisson to confirm St. Laurent’s address, and she gave him the correct apartment number. They then knocked on the door to the right place. As St. Laurent’s pregnant girlfriend opened the door, the men drew guns on her and barged in, searching the place for drugs and money. They stole about a pound of marijuana, some jewelry, and around $1,500 in cash— much less than they had hoped for. Then the men returned to the motel to plan their next steps and make a few phone calls. They decided to steal whatever St. Laurent had with him, and they drove to Glisson’s apartment to wait for him.

Meanwhile, Glisson left St. Laurent and drove around in a different car with anoth *363 er young woman, Meredith Runion. Glis-son drove Runion to a hotel parking lot and then back to Glisson’s apartment. St. Laurent soon came by to pick up Runion and go back out partying. He pulled up to Glisson’s building in his limousine and stepped out of the car. All of a sudden, Henry, Warner, and Sullivan rushed at him. Warner used a stun gun on St. Laurent, who fell back into the limo. As Warner and Henry tried to pull him out of the car, St. Laurent fought back. In the struggle, Henry hit St. Laurent with a gun. The gun accidentally discharged, shooting St. Laurent. The robbers fled, and St. Laurent later died from the gunshot wound.

Detective Danny Satterfield of the Nashville Police Department soon arrived at the scene, where he interviewed several witnesses, including Glisson, who had been in her apartment during the attempted robbery. Glisson told Satterfield that she had been out partying with St. Laurent that night, but she did not provide any other useful leads. A few months later, Satterfield spoke with Glisson again at the police station. In that videotaped interview, Glisson told her version of what had happened that night. She told the officers, for the first time, about Henry, Sullivan, and Warner. She explained that the men, while at her apartment, had formed a plan to steal drugs from St. Laurent’s home. She admitted that she knew about the plan. And she remembered trying to meet up with Henry at a motel at some point after the men had invaded St. Laurent’s apartment and walked away unsatisfied. She also claimed she did not know that Henry, Sullivan, and Warner had killed St. Laurent. Instead, she said, “I just know that they were going to rob him, and that, since they did not get all his weed at his house, that they thought that he had it on him or had money on him or whatever.”

During the interview, the police officers showed her some phone records, which seemingly proved that she had called the men that night and talked to them repeatedly before St. Laurent’s death. Faced with these records, she admitted to being in phone contact with the men throughout the night. But she could not remember what she had said on those phone calls, because she had been “really messed up”—presumably from the drugs and alcohol that she had consumed. The officers asked her if she had called the men to tell them where St. Laurent would be later that night. She said “I do not remember saying ‘hey Randy’s on his way, come and get him.’ I promise you that.” But she backtracked later in the interview, admitting that she “may have” talked to Henry about finding St. Laurent after the men “did the home invasion” of St. Laurent’s apartment, and that she “may have called” the men after she got home to let them know that she was there. Upon further questioning, she eventually said, “I don’t remember, but I know that I did ... call him [St. Laurent] and say, ‘hey are you coming’ and then call them [the men] and said ‘hey, he’s coming.’ ” She knew she had done so, she explained, because of the phone records that the police had shown her.

Based on these statements, the police investigated Sullivan, Warner, and Henry. Eventually, the three men and Glisson were all indicted for the murder of St. Laurent. Sullivan promptly pled guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment. During Sullivan’s plea hearing, the State read its version of the facts into the record, establishing that Sullivan, Warner, Henry, and Glisson had conspired together to rob St. Laurent’s apartment and, later, to ambush St. Laurent outside of Glisson’s apartment. Sullivan stated under oath that the State’s recitation of those facts was true.

*364 Although the State offered Glisson a plea deal for 15 years’ imprisonment, she refused and prepared to go to trial. Her counsel hired a private investigator to help prepare her case. The defense soon learned that the prosecution planned to call Warner and Henry to testify against Glisson, but not Sullivan. Glisson talked to her counsel about calling Sullivan to testify in her defense, but counsel ultimately decided that she would neither interview him nor call him as a witness. Glisson trusted her lawyer’s judgment.

B.

At trial, the prosecution started by calling Henry and Warner as witnesses. According to Henry, Glisson was involved in the plan to rob St. Laurent from the beginning; he testified that she had talked to him about the plan before the other men had arrived and that, after Sullivan and Warner had joined them, they all discussed the plan and decided to split any profits four ways. Henry said that Glisson was the one who had told them how to get to St. Laurent’s building.

Henry also testified about several phone calls that he had exchanged with Glisson. First, he called her to ask about which apartment was St. Laurent’s after the men had gone into the wrong one, and she told him the right apartment number. Second, he said that he called her from the motel after the failed home invasion, “[tjrying to find out if [St. Laurent] really had ...

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Bluebook (online)
705 F. App'x 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alisha-glisson-v-debra-johnson-ca6-2017.