Alvarez, Daniel v. Boyd, William E.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 2000
Docket99-3175
StatusPublished

This text of Alvarez, Daniel v. Boyd, William E. (Alvarez, Daniel v. Boyd, William E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alvarez, Daniel v. Boyd, William E., (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-3175

Daniel Alvarez, Sr.,

Petitioner-Appellant,

v.

William E. Boyd,

Respondent-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 98 C 8338--Ruben Castillo, Judge.

Argued March 28, 2000--Decided August 29, 2000

Before Easterbrook, Manion, and Evans, Circuit Judges.

Manion, Circuit Judge. At 7:00 a.m. on December 14, 1993 Alicia Godina, while walking to a commuter train, was attacked and severely stabbed. She identified Daniel Alvarez, a former boyfriend, as the attacker. However, Alvarez not only denied it and presented a plausible alibi, but also the only eyewitness to the attack said Alvarez was not the perpetrator. Nevertheless, an Illinois jury convicted him of attempted first- degree murder. He was sentenced to forty years in prison. Alvarez brought this sec. 2254 motion, arguing that the cumulative effect of two evidentiary rulings denied him a fair trial. The district court denied relief but granted a certificate of appealability. This was a close case with each side presenting very conflicting evidence. Nevertheless, a jury resolved the difficult questions and found him guilty. We conclude he received a fair trial, and so we affirm.

I.

On the morning of December 14, 1993, Alicia Godina was on her way to work following the usual route from her house to the train station in her Chicago neighborhood along East 93rd Street. She testified that shortly after she left her house at 6:55 a.m., she heard someone behind her. When she turned around she saw her ex-boyfriend-- Daniel Alvarez. He was holding a knife, which he then used to stab her. Godina testified that Alvarez temporarily halted the attack when a man yelled at him to stop. According to her, Alvarez ran after the man, but soon returned, got on top of Godina and began to cut her throat. She said that she closed her eyes and feigned death, at which time Alvarez ran away.

A nurse from the emergency room testified that Godina suffered multiple stab wounds to her neck, chest, abdomen, and wrists. When she arrived at the hospital she was close to death: because the knife had penetrated her heart, she had only a faint heartbeat and only minimal blood pressure. Yet apparently she was conscious at some point because she informed a nurse (without mentioning any names) that her "ex-boyfriend" had attacked her. Godina underwent emergency surgery, without anesthesia because of her faint heartbeat, and eventually recovered from the attack.

Because of Godina’s accusation, the police went looking for Alvarez. About 2:00 p.m. on the day of the attack, a small band of officers went to his parents’ house where he lived. Alvarez was there and he identified himself, invited the officers into the house, and consented to a search of the house and his van. The police did not find any physical evidence linking Alvarez to the crime. Nevertheless, based on Godina’s accusation, they took Alvarez down to the police station for questioning. A grand jury eventually indicted Alvarez on one count of attempted first- degree murder, three counts of armed violence, and four counts of aggravated battery. Most of the charges were eventually dismissed, but Alvarez was tried by a jury for attempted first- degree murder.

At trial, the jury heard Godina’s version of the attack and also learned about her prior relationship with Alvarez. Godina testified that she started dating Alvarez when she was fourteen years old, and they dated for about three and one-half years. Godina characterized Alvarez as jealous and possessive, particularly after she broke off the relationship in June 1993. She described Alvarez as unhappy with the breakup, although they both moved on and occasionally met for lunch. Godina regularly took a Metra train to downtown Chicago, and she told the jury that on four occasions Alvarez followed her onto the train, although she admitted that this might have been a coincidence, as Alvarez also took the same train to and from his job in downtown Chicago. She testified that after August 25, 1993, she did not again see Alvarez until the attack on December 13. The prosecution’s case was necessarily brief, as it centered on Godina’s testimony. The defense’s star witness was Peter Thompson, who was the only person to see the stabbing other than the victim and the attacker. Thompson testified that he was leaving his house on his way to work when he saw the assailant first follow and then attack Godina. Thompson was only about three or four feet from them during part of the attack. When the attacker saw Thompson, they faced each other and briefly made eye contact before Thompson went to his car to obtain a bat, whereupon the attacker ran away. Thompson testified that he looked closely at the assailant, that he remembered his facial features, hair color, mustache, build, and height. Although at some point he was not certain he could identify the attacker, he was positive that Alvarez was not the man who stabbed Godina. Thompson also related that, although the police interviewed him, they never showed him photographs of Alvarez or any other suspects, and never got around to having him view a lineup of suspects. Thompson claimed he knew neither Godina nor Alvarez, and thus apparently had no motive to lie. He also lent some support to the defense’s theory that Godina’s memory of the attack may have been faulty, as he testified that he never yelled at the attacker to stop, as Godina’s testimony indicated.

Other testimony also gave reason to believe that Alvarez may not have been the attacker. Alvarez testified that on the morning of the assault he was at Peggy’s Restaurant, a small diner near the Royal Crown Cola plant where he had a job interview. While no witness fully corroborated Alvarez’s testimony about being at the restaurant during the attack, several Royal Crown employees testified that Alvarez showed up for an interview at their plant at 47th Street and California Street between 6:15 and 6:30 a.m. Because the trucks needed to be dispatched, he was told to return around 7:30 a.m. According to Alvarez, he went to the restaurant to have something to eat, and returned to the Royal Crown plant around 7:40. Royal Crown employees confirmed that Alvarez returned to the plant between 7:30 and 8:00 a.m. This narrow space of time raises some troubling questions. It gave Alvarez, at most, one hour and forty-five minutes to drive from the Royal Crown plant to the scene of the attack. The timing had to be precise. He had to drive from Royal Crown to the crime scene, park his van, stalk and stab Godina, flee to his van, ditch the knife, perhaps clean up any blood and ensure that he did not leave any traces in the van, and drive back to the plant and look presentable at the interview. And all this during peak driving times. A private investigator testified that, based on two experiments driving the route, to travel the approximate fifteen miles between the Royal Crown plant and the site of the attack at East 93rd Street would have taken forty-three minutes, assuming the driver traveled the speed limit and used the Dan Ryan Expressway during non-peak driving times. A state investigator testified that he made the drive from the plant to the attack site in as little as twenty-eight minutes during non-peak times, and thirty-seven minutes during rush hour. Because the attack occurred around 7:00, and the undisputed testimony was that Alvarez was at the plant no earlier than 6:15, it would have been difficult for him to have committed the crime. True, the attack might have occurred as late as 7:10 or possibly even 7:15, but if that’s the case, it would have been extremely difficult for Alvarez to make it back to the Royal Crown plant by 7:40.

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