Brandon Hobbs v. Mark Hooks

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 2018
Docket17-4094
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brandon Hobbs v. Mark Hooks (Brandon Hobbs v. Mark Hooks) 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
Brandon Hobbs v. Mark Hooks, (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0349n.06

No. 17-4094

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jul 16, 2018 BRANDON L. HOBBS ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE MARK HOOKS, Warden ) SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ) OHIO Respondent-Appellee. ) ) )

BEFORE: KEITH, ROGERS, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.

ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Brandon Hobbs appeals the district court’s denial of his petition

for a writ of habeas corpus. In 2014, an Ohio jury convicted Hobbs of murder. Hobbs appealed

his conviction, alleging that his trial counsel had rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance

by failing to keep out certain prejudicial evidence about Hobbs’s history with drugs and guns. The

state appellate court affirmed Hobbs’s conviction, holding that his trial counsel had engaged in a

“legitimate trial strategy” to admit certain acts to lessen their significance to the jury and to bolster

Hobbs’s credibility by making him appear honest and transparent. On federal habeas, Hobbs again

asserts ineffective assistance. However, the district court properly denied Hobbs’s petition,

because the state appellate court’s conclusion that Hobbs’s trial counsel’s performance fell within

the wide range of reasonable professional assistance was neither contrary to clearly established

federal law nor based on an unreasonable determination of facts. No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks

In September 2012, Brandon Hobbs sold Jaron Kirkling a used Chevrolet Suburban.

Hobbs’s friend, Brandon Mackey, who was also Kirkling’s cousin, facilitated the sale. Initially,

Kirkling gave Hobbs a down payment and took possession of the vehicle, and Hobbs agreed to

transfer the title and registration once the vehicle was paid for in full. In October, the pair met at

a branch office of the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles to complete the transfer. Kirkling paid the

remaining balance, and Hobbs signed the required transfer forms. Hobbs believed that the vehicle

had been legally transferred to Kirkling, but he did not know that Kirkling did not have valid

driving privileges or that the Bureau accordingly had not accepted transfer of the registration

plates.

Soon after, Kirkling was caught on traffic cameras speeding through a school zone in the

Suburban. Because the vehicle’s plates were still registered to Hobbs, the City of Columbus sent

him a ticket in the mail for the speeding violation. Hobbs confronted Kirkling, and Kirkling

assured Hobbs that he would take care of the ticket and the plates. Kirkling reimbursed Hobbs for

the traffic ticket, but Kirkling never had the plates changed.

On November 11, 2012, Hobbs and his girlfriend, Shelby Abrams, went to Mackey’s home

to sell him and his girlfriend, Melody Gaston, drugs. Hobbs and Mackey were sitting in Hobbs’s

pick-up truck completing the drug transaction when Kirkling pulled into Mackey’s driveway.

Hobbs had not anticipated meeting up with Kirkling that day, but when Kirkling pulled into the

driveway Hobbs noticed that his plates were still on the Suburban, and he got out of his truck to

confront Kirkling. Hobbs asked Kirkling, “I thought you had took the tags off the truck, what’s

goin’ on?” Kirkling told Hobbs that he had not had a chance to change the plates yet. He failed

to tell Hobbs that the Bureau had refused to issue him new plates.

-2- No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks

Hobbs asked Mackey to keep Kirkling occupied while he and Abrams retrieved a

screwdriver from home to remove the plates from the Suburban. Mackey agreed, and Hobbs

returned shortly to remove the plates. Hobbs began removing the plates while Mackey and

Kirkling were smoking in the Suburban. Kirkling did not notice Hobbs remove the front license

plate, but when Hobbs began to remove the rear plate Kirkling realized what was happening, got

out of the Suburban, and the two men began to argue. Mackey called for Gaston to come out of

the house and deescalate the situation, and Gaston told Hobbs and Kirkling to “take it across the

street.” Meanwhile, Abrams went around to the rear of the Suburban and tried to remove one of

the screws from the license plate. What happened next is disputed.

According to Hobbs, Kirkling pushed Abrams to the ground when she tried to remove the

rear plate. Hobbs and Kirkling then began yelling at each other. Mackey tried to intervene, but

Hobbs and Kirkling continued to argue about the license plates. At some point Kirkling reached

into his waistband and pulled out a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun. Hobbs felt threatened

and pulled out his own .357 caliber Glock handgun in self-defense and fired several shots at

Kirkling, who fell to the ground. Hobbs grabbed both the Smith & Wesson and the Glock and left

with Abrams. Abrams’ version of events materially overlaps with Hobbs’s. Hobbs later arranged

for the guns to be turned over to authorities, and he surrendered himself to the sheriff’s office.

However, Mackey and Gaston told a very different story. According to Mackey, when

Kirkling noticed Abrams trying to remove the rear plate he moved her out of the way and told her,

“You not taking my tags today.” Immediately after that, Hobbs yelled, “Fuck this,” stepped back,

and shot Kirkling. Kirkling fell straight back, and Hobbs stepped forward, firing “three to four”

more rounds. Mackey then ran inside his house to grab his handgun, and he fired at Hobbs and

Abrams as they fled the scene. According to Mackey, Kirkling never drew a gun during the

-3- No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks

incident, and Mackey testified that he never saw anything that day indicating that Kirkling had a

weapon. Gaston’s version of events materially overlaps with Mackey’s.

Kirkling died from his injuries, and Hobbs was indicted for murder with a firearm

specification, possession of a weapon under disability, and carrying a concealed weapon. At trial,

Hobbs defended against the murder charge by claiming that he had acted in self-defense. Thus,

the trial largely boiled down to whether the jury found Hobbs and Abrams’, or Mackey and

Gaston’s, version of events more believable.

During the prosecution’s case, Hobbs’s trial counsel attempted to impeach Mackey with

conflicting statements he had made to investigators about the shooting. Counsel also introduced

evidence comparing DNA samples taken from the Smith & Wesson with samples from Hobbs and

Kirkling. The test determined that Kirkling could not be excluded as a major contributor to the

mixture of DNA found on the Smith & Wesson, but the prosecution countered with testimony

showing ways Kirkling’s DNA could have ended up on the handgun. For example, the prosecution

introduced evidence about indirect transfer of DNA from one person to another.

Gaston took the stand towards the end of the prosecution’s case, and the bulk of her

testimony focused on the events surrounding the shooting. However, prior to Gaston’s testimony,

counsel filed a motion in limine seeking to keep out testimony regarding Hobbs’s history of drug

dealing and firearms possession. The trial court concluded that it would allow witnesses to testify

about Hobbs possessing guns and selling drugs under limited circumstances. But the trial court

held that Gaston could not provide gratuitous testimony about Hobbs selling drugs or possessing

guns, because such testimony would be “irrelevant” and “prejudicial.”

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