Bolden v. Warden W TN High Sec

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 27, 1999
Docket98-30789
StatusPublished

This text of Bolden v. Warden W TN High Sec (Bolden v. Warden W TN High Sec) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolden v. Warden W TN High Sec, (5th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

No. 98-30789

IVRIN BOLDEN, JR., Petitioner-Appellant, versus WARDEN, WEST TENNESSEE HIGH SECURITY FACILITY, Respondent-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court For the Western District of Louisiana

October 27, 1999 Before POLITZ, JOLLY, and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges. POLITZ, Circuit Judge:

Ivrin Bolden, Jr., currently a prisoner at West Tennessee High Security

Facility, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition which

relates to a Louisiana state conviction. For the reasons assigned, we affirm. BACKGROUND

Bolden was tried in Louisiana state court in 1988 for the murder of Brenda

Spicer. He testified at trial and denied killing or having had physical contact with her. The jury acquitted. Bolden later confessed to killing Spicer and was charged with perjury for his testimony at the murder trial. Because a detailed factual background of this high-profile case is provided

in the opinions of the Louisiana Supreme Court1 and the Louisiana Third Circuit

Court of Appeals,2 we need only summarize the facts relevant to this appeal. On March 6, 1987 the body of Brenda Spicer, a former basketball player at Northeast

Louisiana University, was found in a trash dumpster on campus in Monroe,

Louisiana. The coroner stated that the victim had been killed by strangulation at

approximately 7:00 p.m. the previous evening. The coroner found sperm in the victim’s rectum and vagina, and saliva on the victim’s breasts. Bolden was tried for Spicer’s murder. The State sought to demonstrate that Bolden murdered Spicer because he was jealous of her close relationship with his

girlfriend, Joel Tillis. The State’s case was largely circumstantial; no eyewitnesses testified that Bolden had physical contact with or murdered Spicer. The State’s

theory of the case was that Bolden took Spicer to a storage locker unit on March 5, 1987, murdered her, and then went to a campus basketball game. At half-time Bolden allegedly went back to the storage locker and moved Spicer’s body to the

dumpster. To bolster this theory, the State presented evidence that Spicer met

Bolden at approximately 5:45 p.m., that Bolden attended the basketball game and was taking pictures on the floor to establish an alibi, and that Bolden was seen

running away from the basketball arena at half-time. Physical tests performed on

1 State v. Bolden, 639 So. 2d 721 (La. 1994). 2 State v. Bolden, 680 So. 2d 6 (La. App. 1996). 2 the seminal fluid and saliva indicated a type A secretor, a category in which Bolden and 80% of the population belong.

At trial, Bolden testified on his own behalf as follows:

Q. Did you meet Brenda Spicer at that storage locker on March 5th? A. No, I did not at any time that day. Q. The only time you saw Brenda Spicer is when she gave you that camera and the $5.00? A. I saw her earlier in the dorm and the last time I saw her was at the intersection when she had given me the camera. Q. Did you have any kind of physical struggle or contact with Brenda Spicer that day? A. No, I didn’t, didn’t have any contact with her at all physically. Q. Did you have any kind of sexual intercourse with Brenda Spicer? A. Never did. Q. You never have? A. No, I haven’t. Q. Did you kill Brenda Spicer on March 5th? A. No, I did not. The jury acquitted Bolden of Spicer’s murder.

Bolden and Tillis later moved to Tennessee. In 1989, Tillis disappeared and her body was found in Arkansas. Bolden, although a suspect in her murder, was never arrested and eventually moved to New Jersey and began to live with Jennifer

Spurlock. In 1991, Bolden filed a complaint against Spurlock with local police in

New Jersey. During the investigation of this complaint, Bolden admitted to killing Joel Tillis and Brenda Spicer.3 Bolden pled guilty in Tennessee to involuntary

3 On April 23, 1991, Bolden gave a statement to New Jersey police in part as follows: Q. What were the circumstances surrounding the death of Ms. Spicer? A. I went, um, I asked her come to like, we had a storage unit, and I asked her to come there with me and then I was trying to talk to her, you know, I had been asking her and asking her to, you know, try to give 3 manslaughter in the death of Tillis and received a ten-year sentence. Bolden was charged in Louisiana with perjury in connection with his

testimony in Spicer’s murder trial. Prior to the perjury trial, Bolden moved to

dismiss the charges as violating the collateral estoppel component of the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment, a motion which the state trial court denied.

The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s ruling and remanded the

case for further proceedings. The court found that the perjury prosecution was not

barred by the murder trial because the jury could have found that reasonable doubt was present in the first trial. Specifically, the court noted that this was not a situation in which the jury was presented with two conflicting versions of the facts and was forced to determine the veracity of one over the other, as would have been

the case if there had been eyewitness testimony contradicting defendant’s statements.4

Additionally, assuming arguendo that the jury necessarily determined Bolden’s credibility in the murder trial, the Louisiana Supreme Court enunciated a rule of law, relying primarily on the dicta of other courts, and held that when the

me some time with Joel and she just, you know, she just kept saying that she was going to be with Joel no matter what, and so I just, I got mad with her and I strangled her. Q. And where did this take place at, the storage area? A. Yeah. Q. And where was the storage area located? A. Not far from the college campus in Monroe, Louisiana. Q. And after you strangled her, what did you do? A. Took her body back to the campus and put it in the dumpster and went back to the game or I went back to the dorm or something. 4 Bolden, 639 So. 2d at 725 (citations omitted). 4 State produces new evidence that the defendant lied under oath at the first trial, collateral estoppel does not bar a subsequent perjury prosecution. The court found

that this rule would bolster the policy considerations behind collateral estoppel,

noting that [o]n the one hand, there is a concern that allowing an acquittal to insulate the defendant from perjury will give a defendant “an uncontrollable license to testify falsely,” with a resulting detriment to the reliability of evidence. On the other hand, there is an apprehension that allowing a prosecution for perjury will give the state a “second shot” at defendant for the same wrong, or allow an overzealous prosecutor to use the perjury trial to retry issues already determined in defendant’s favor. The concern that the state should not be given a second chance based on the same evidence was central to the Court’s holding in Ashe.5

At the perjury trial, the jury listened to a tape recording of Bolden’s confession, as well as to witnesses who testified about the confession, 6 and heard

from three additional witnesses: (1) Dr. George McCormick, the coroner who performed the autopsy on Spicer, testified that she died of manual strangulation; (2) Rudeen Crawford, the owner of a gas station across from the storage warehouse

where the murder was allegedly committed, testified that he saw a black man and

white woman talking outside of the storage unit shortly before 6:00 p.m.

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Related

Mata v. Johnson
105 F.3d 209 (Fifth Circuit, 1997)
Ashe v. Swenson
397 U.S. 436 (Supreme Court, 1970)
Nix v. Whiteside
475 U.S. 157 (Supreme Court, 1986)
Lindh v. Murphy
521 U.S. 320 (Supreme Court, 1997)
State v. Bolden
683 So. 2d 286 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1996)
State v. Bolden
680 So. 2d 6 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1996)
State v. Bolden
639 So. 2d 721 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1994)
Mata v. Johnson
99 F.3d 1261 (Fifth Circuit, 1996)

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