Alton Higgins v. Paul Renico

470 F.3d 624, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 28667, 2006 WL 3345289
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 2006
Docket05-1564
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 470 F.3d 624 (Alton Higgins v. Paul Renico) 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
Alton Higgins v. Paul Renico, 470 F.3d 624, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 28667, 2006 WL 3345289 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

STAFFORD, District Judge.

Respondent, Paul Renico (“Renico”), appeals a conditional grant of habeas corpus relief to Petitioner, Alton Higgins (“Higgins”), under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

On April 3, 1995, Alvin Ramsey (“Ramsey”) was shot to death as he sat in the driver’s seat of a car parked in a Detroit neighborhood. Alton Higgins (“Higgins”) was one of three people sitting with Ramsey in that automobile at or near the time Ramsey was shot. Another of those three people, Michael Adams (“Adams”), exited the vehicle and fled on foot before shots were fired, leaving Higgins, Ramsey and Wayne Young (“Young”) in the car.

Not long after the shooting, 16-year-old Young, wearing a green jacket, surrendered to the police while the police were canvassing the neighborhood. The police were looking for Young because “word on the street” was that Young was the shooter and because a witness had reported that a black male wearing a green jacket was seen running from the car after two shots were fired. Although he denied shooting Ramsey, Young admitted that he had been in the car with Ramsey, sitting next to him in the front passenger seat, when a guy sitting in the rear seat behind Ramsey put a gun to Ramsey’s neck. Identifying the man in the rear seat only as “211,” Young explained that he did not know the man’s real name. In his own words, Young continued: “I got out and started running. I heard one shot as I turned the corner I heard a second shot.” J.A. Supp. at 2. 1 When asked specifically where he was when he heard the shots, Young said: “First time I had just got out the car. The second shot when I was on the side of the house.” Id. at 3. When asked if he saw the shooting, Young replied: “I only heard the shots.” Id. The police took forensic samples from Young’s hands and thereaf *627 ter released him from custody. Those forensic samples, the results of which were not known until after Higgins was charged with murder, showed that Young had gunpowder residue on both hands.

The next day, April 4, 1995, Higgins was questioned about the shooting. In a nutshell, Higgins denied shooting Ramsey. According to Sergeant Ralph Openshaw (who related Higgins’s statement at trial), Higgins said that he, Young, Adams, and some other friends were sitting on a front porch discussing who might have some guns for sale when Young suggested that Ramsey (then sitting in a car on the street in front of them) possibly had guns for sale. Higgins said that, when he and Young approached Ramsey, Ramsey indeed stated that he would sell a .25 caliber gun that he had at his house. According to Higgins, Young returned to the porch and told his friends that he was going to purchase the gun for money and possibly some fake cocaine. Higgins told Open-shaw that Young, having seen that Ramsey was armed, armed himself with a .45 caliber or. 9 mm handgun. Higgins admitted that he and Young walked down the street to Ramsey’s house, where Ramsey retrieved a .25 caliber gun, then fired a shot into the air to show Young and Higgins that the gun was, in fact, operable and in good condition. Higgins said that the men then got into Ramsey’s car to negotiate the price of the gun. According to Higgins, Young was sitting in the rear seat behind Ramsey; Higgins was sitting in the right front passenger seat next to Ramsey. Higgins said that, after they completed their negotiations, Young asked Ramsey to drive back down the street. As Ramsey started to drive, Young pulled a gun from his coat and said: “We want everything you got.” Higgins told Sergeant Open-shaw that he (Higgins) jumped out of the car before he heard two shots and before he saw Ramsey’s car hit a van parked on the side of the street.

Later that same day, April 4, 1995, Young was shown Sergeant Openshaw’s report of Higgins’s statement. After seeing that report, and after hearing that he would get life in jail if he refused to say who shot Ramsey, Young admitted that he knew the name of the man who shot Ramsey. That man, according to Young, was Alton Higgins. Young went on to explain:

When I saw Alton pull a gun out of his coat and put it to Mr. Ramsey’s neck, Mike [Adams] jumped out of the car. Alton said: “Give me the .32.” Mr. Ramsey opened his door and put the car in drive, and Alton hit him on the back of his head with the gun. I jumped out of the car and heard a gunshot coming from within the car. I started running to the vacant house on Coplin ... with Mike. As I started to run I heard a second shot coming from out of the car.

J.A. Supp. at 6.

Two weeks later, on April 17, 1995, Young testified at a preliminary hearing on the murder and robbery charges then lodged against Higgins. Higgins’s counsel, Walter Pookrum (“Pookrum”), was present at the preliminary hearing and questioned Young. Young again said that he was not in the vehicle at the time of the shooting, that only Higgins and Ramsey were in the car when he (Young) heard two shots fired. When asked where he was when he heard the shots, Young replied: “My sister’s driveway.” J.A. at 200. At the time of the preliminary hearing, Pookrum did not have copies of Young’s prior statements, and the result of the forensics test of samples taken from Young’s hands was still not known. Indeed, the result of the forensics test was not known until August of 1995.

Higgins was charged with felony murder/larceny, armed robbery, and posses *628 sion of a firearm during the commission of a felony. At trial, the medical examiner testified that Ramsey died almost immediately as a result of a single gunshot through the back of his neck that exited just below the collarbone in the area of his right shoulder. When asked whether he could determine if the firing was close-range, the medical examiner replied: “There was no evidence of any close range on the skin.” J.A. at 131. A police officer later testified that gun residue was found on the hands of both Ramsey and Young.

Over Pookrum’s objection, Young’s preliminary hearing testimony was read into the record at trial after Young failed to appear on the day he was subpoenaed to testify. The trial court found that Young was “deliberately evading” and was, therefore, unavailable.

On the fourth day of trial, Young was located. He testified on direct that he had been threatened by telephone and in writing not to testify in the case. He did not say who had threatened him. He also testified that, while Higgins was sitting in the rear of the automobile behind Ramsey, Ramsey handed Higgins the .25 caliber handgun, without a clip. When the prosecutor asked him what happened after Higgins was given the .25 caliber gun, Young responded: “So after [Higgins] got the .25 in his hand, I pulled — he pulled out the .45, saying give it up.” J.A. at 165. According to Young, Ramsey tried to get out of the car, but Higgins shot him before he could escape. Young denied that he had fired any of the guns that day.

Pookrum did not anticipate Young’s appearance on the last day of trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
470 F.3d 624, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 28667, 2006 WL 3345289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alton-higgins-v-paul-renico-ca6-2006.