Arif Majid v. Jeff Noble

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 2018
Docket16-3872
StatusUnpublished

This text of Arif Majid v. Jeff Noble (Arif Majid v. Jeff Noble) 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
Arif Majid v. Jeff Noble, (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0515n.06

No. 16-3872

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Oct 16, 2018 ARIF MAJID, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE JEFF NOBLE, Warden, ) NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ) OHIO Respondent-Appellee. ) )

BEFORE: SUHRHEINRICH, CLAY, and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Arif Majid appeals the district court’s denial

of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Majid was convicted in Ohio state

court of murder and attempted murder. Majid’s conviction depended largely on eyewitness

testimony, and his distinctive religious tattoos, including the word “Jihad” stretched across his

shoulder blades, played a significant role in said eyewitness identification. Majid argues that over

the course of his trial, the prosecutor engaged in several instances of misconduct by improperly

directing the jury to Majid’s Islamic faith. He also argues that the trial court improperly admitted

irrelevant and prejudicial evidence of the meaning of certain Islamic terms. The Ohio Court of

Appeals rejected these arguments, and the district court concluded that the state court decision was

entitled to AEDPA deference. We affirm the judgment of the district court. No. 16-3872, Majid v. Noble

I.

A.

The events in question took place at a Euclid, Ohio bar called Milton’s Lounge on the

evening of Saturday, September 3, 2005, and the early morning hours of Sunday, September 4,

2005. Witnesses at trial generally agreed that there was a crowd of between 40 to 60 people at the

bar. Amid this crowd was a group of three to four men who were on the dance floor, taking off

their shirts, and behaving in a rowdy manner. One of the men, described by witnesses as a light

skinned African-American with a muscular build, had several noticeable tattoos. The tattoos

included an AK-47 or assault rifle tattooed on the man’s torso, the word “Jihad” tattooed across

his upper back with crossed swords beneath, and additional tattoos on his arms. The shirtless man

with tattoos was identified in court as Arif Majid.

Christopher Core, an acquaintance of Majid, testified that he was at Milton’s Lounge with

Majid1 and LeCarlton Parker, Majid’s brother, on the night in question. He confirmed that Majid

was dancing with his shirt off and stated that Majid and his brother are easily distinguishable.

While Majid has tattoos, light brown skin, and a muscular build, Parker is shorter with darker skin

and a less muscular frame. Core also testified that of the men in the group, Core was the only one

who wore his hair in braids.

The group soon attracted the attention of the bar’s management, including Milton P.

Franklin Jr., the owner of Milton’s Lounge, who went to speak to the DJ about enforcing the bar’s

shirts-on policy. The group put their shirts back on, but the man with the distinctive tattoos soon

took his off again. After one of the men dropped a drink, Franklin Jr. spoke with bar employees

about getting the group to leave Milton’s Lounge. One of the employees was his son, Milton P.

1 Core knew Majid by his given name, Cedric Parker, and thus referred to Majid during his testimony as “Cedric.”

-2- No. 16-3872, Majid v. Noble

Franklin III, who was working at Milton’s Lounge as a bartender. Franklin III asked the group to

leave, and they were escorted out of the bar.

Instead of leaving the premises, though, the group continued to loiter in front of the bar.

The man with tattoos was still with the group and had his shirt off again. Franklin Jr. told the men

that loitering was not permitted, but they ignored him. Then, one of the bar’s other employees

came outside and reiterated that the men needed to leave; they ignored him as well. At that point,

Franklin III noticed the situation and joined the group outside. He also asked the group to move

along and testified that one of the members “got in [his] face” and said “threatening” things. DE

8-9, Trial Tr. Vol. 7, Page ID 2479. Franklin Jr. saw that the situation was deteriorating and told

his son to go back inside the bar.

Franklin Jr., Franklin III, and the other bar employees went inside the bar, and Franklin Jr.

closed the front door and searched through his key chain for the key to lock the door. As his father

searched for the key, Franklin III retrieved his gun from the back of the bar. At that moment,

someone punched the window in the front door and cracked it.2 Although Franklin Jr. tried to hold

his son back, Franklin III opened the front door, where he saw Majid and another man, and fired

two shots. Franklin III was then pulled back inside the bar, and Franklin Jr. quickly locked the

door. At that point, the front door window broke completely, and the glass fell onto the floor.

Core, who was in the parking lot with Parker and Majid, heard Majid say, “Somebody tried to

shoot my brother.” DE 8-8, Trial Tr. Vol. 6, Page ID 2287–88.

An arm holding a gun then came through the front-door window to the inside of the bar;

witnesses testified that the arm was tattooed and appeared to be that of a light-skinned African-

2 Blood was later found on the window, with DNA belonging to LeCarlton Parker. A witness testified that the man who punched the front door was a “dark-skinned gentleman,” not the lighter-skinned man with tattoos. DE 8-10, Trial Tr. Vol. 8, Page ID 2620.

-3- No. 16-3872, Majid v. Noble

American man. The gun was fired through the window into the bar. One of the bouncers attempted

to grab the arm, but the shooter was able to twist free. The shooter then withdrew his arm from

the front-door window.

A few seconds later, more gunshots were fired through the larger, main window of the bar

(the “picture window”). Rayshawn Whitsett, one of the victims injured by the shooting, testified

that he was standing up to leave the bar after the first set of gunshots and could see clearly out of

the picture window. He stated that he saw “[a] light-skinned cocky fellow” of indeterminate height

wearing a “wife beater” with tattoos on his arm. DE 8-6, Trial Tr. Vol. 4, Page ID 1647. Whitsett

recognized the shooter as “[t]he guy with the Jihad on his back,” and identified Majid in court as

the shooter. Id. at 1647, 1676–77. Another witness, Michelle Johnson, had been a customer at the

bar when the incident occurred. She looked out the picture window and “clearly” recognized the

man who had been dancing shirtless earlier in the night. DE 8-8, Trial Tr. Vol. 6, Page ID 2152.

She too saw his face and identified Majid in court as the shooter. Johnson’s friend, Nickeesha

Robinson, also saw the shooter through the picture window and identified him in court as Majid.

She recognized him from the dance floor. Finally, Franklin III testified that he saw the shooter

come to the picture window, duck behind the brick wall next to the window, and shoot through the

window six times. Franklin stated that he clearly saw the shooter’s face and identified him in court

as Majid.

Three bar patrons were struck by bullets during the shooting, and one victim, Jerome

Thomas, died as a result of his wounds. See State v. Majid, No. 96855, 2012 WL 986127, at *3

(Ohio Ct. App. Mar. 22, 2012). One of the initial officers on the scene was able to obtain a “very

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