Brian Miller v. Blaine Lafler

505 F. App'x 452
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 2012
Docket11-2256
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 505 F. App'x 452 (Brian Miller v. Blaine Lafler) 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
Brian Miller v. Blaine Lafler, 505 F. App'x 452 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

In May 2008, a Michigan jury convicted Brian Miller of first-degree home invasion and second-degree criminal sexual conduct. The state trial judge held a sentencing hearing and imposed consecutive terms of 50 to 240 months and 24 to 180 months of imprisonment for the respective charges. Miller asserted his innocence throughout the hearing, but the judge urged Miller to admit responsibility for the sake of his family and that of the victim. The judge criticized Miller when he failed to do so. Miller moved for resentencing, arguing among other things that the trial court based its sentence in part on Miller’s assertion of innocence. The trial judge denied the motion, again commenting on Miller’s failure to accept responsibility.

Miller appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals, which concluded that the trial court did not base its sentencing decision on Miller’s refusal to admit guilt. The Michigan Supreme Court denied Miller’s application for review. After his direct appeals, Miller filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The district court granted Miller’s petition in part, finding that the trial court violated Miller’s Fifth Amendment rights by basing its decision to make Miller’s sentences consecutive on an adverse inference drawn from Miller’s repeated assertions of innocence.

The district court granted relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) and (d)(2), holding that the Michigan Court of Appeals unreasonably applied clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court and unreasonably determined the facts in light of the evidence. However, we find no law, clearly established or unreasonably applied, that would support Miller’s habeas claim. Nor do we find a factual issue that would warrant consideration under § 2254(d)(2). For the reasons that follow, *454 we reverse the district court and deny Miller’s petition for habeas corpus.

I

The facts of this case arise from an August 2007 event involving Miller and a female who was a neighbor to Miller and a friend of Miller’s sister. The victim awoke early in the morning to find Miller, donning a mask, in her bedroom doorway. Miller rushed the victim, tore off her shirt, fondled her, and attempted to rape her. He stopped after the victim identified Miller by his voice. The two talked for some time afterward. Miller admitted to breaking into the victim’s home through a laundry-room window and to being under the influence of alcohol and drugs. The victim ordered Miller to leave after he made another unwanted sexual advance. Before leaving, Miller threateningly ordered the victim not to report the incident. Notwithstanding the threat, the victim phoned the police, who immediately arrested Miller. He pled not guilty, but was convicted after a four-day trial.

At sentencing, the trial judge heard from both Miller and his attorney. Speaking first, Miller’s attorney portrayed him as a young man with a rough background who posed no threat to the community and who was prepared to accept the consequences of his actions. After taking statements from the victim and the prosecutor, the trial judge permitted Miller to allocute. It was at this point that Miller began to assert his innocence:

I’m — I’m not a ... whatever she is saying. This never happened.... And you know there’s just, I don’t know what’s going on. You know everybody’s blaming it on me. But you know, I’m the one with the job, I had a job. I got my diploma. I’m special ed. You know, ... I don’t know how to say it, you know, to you right — right now, because it’s just going through my head so fast. I don’t know what to tell you. And it’s just — just so hard on me.

Later, he appears to indicate that the victim picked on him as a child:

You, know [sic] I’ve been teased as a kid by — by—by the defendant, you know, a lot. You know when I was growing up, that’s — that’s hard, you know, going through school. Oh, you’re in special ed, ha — ha—ha, you know that, you know. You’re a retard, you know? How — how do you feel, you know, about all that.

Responding to Miller’s allocution, the trial court stated that, based upon what it had seen during the trial, it believed Miller was a danger to the community. After expressing its views on the weight of the evidence, the court noted its concern with the grief that Miller’s denial of responsibility caused Miller’s family:

Now your family, I don’t know what they think.... Ah, you know, obviously they don’t think you did it. They believe you. Ah, you know they believe this young lady is just making it up because she thinks, you know, she doesn’t like you because you’re special ed.... But quite frankly, I don’t know that they do you any favor by accepting that. I think they would probably be better off if they told you point blank they think you did this, and you shouldn’t be conducting yourself in this way, and they want to get you help. That’s what I think they should be saying to you based on what I saw here. ‘Cause I — I have no doubt in my mind you did it, ah, there’s no doubt about it, you did this.

The trial judge went on to admonish Miller personally, stating,

Your family is going to suffer the rest of their lives because they’re going to think that you went to prison when you *455 shouldn’t have. And they’re going to blame this young lady for the fact that you went to prison. Urn, and you’re never going to get any help. And you’re going to live to do it again. And then the next time you’ll go away for the rest of your life. That’s the bad part about it. And to be honest with you, if you wanted to do your family a favor, you would turn to them and you would admit [the crime] to them. You would say, look I absolutely did this. Because they need to know that you did it, so they can get you help.

The court doubted that Miller would actually admit his guilt:

But you’re not going to do that. You’re gonna to do [sic] like every other defendant I’ve sent to prison. You’re gonna deny it all the way to prison. And then they’re going to spend money on appellate lawyers, and all this kind of stuff for you, ‘cause they think you got railroaded.

After the trial judge criticized Miller’s failure to accept responsibility for a second time, Miller and the judge engaged in the following exchange:

THE COURT: Tell them what you did, so that they can go on with their lives and not think that you’ve been railroaded. But you’re not gonna do it. So everyone continues to suffer.
MR. MILLER: Because I didn’t do it.
THE COURT: I’m sorry?
MR. MILLER: Because I didn’t do it.
THE COURT: That’s what I expected you to say.
MR. MILLER: You — you got your own story, she’s got her own story, I got my own story.

The trial court proceeded to impose consecutive sentences at the high end of the state sentencing guidelines. In explaining its reasoning, the court stated,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
505 F. App'x 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-miller-v-blaine-lafler-ca6-2012.