Brown v. Booker

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 31, 2021
Docket7:16-cv-00576
StatusUnknown

This text of Brown v. Booker (Brown v. Booker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Booker, (W.D. Va. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA ROANOKE DIVISION

SHERMAN BROWN, ) Petitioner, ) ) Civil Action No. 7:16-cv-00576 v. ) ) By: Elizabeth K. Dillon BERNARD W. BOOKER, Warden, ) United States District Judge Respondent. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION Petitioner Sherman Brown, a Virginia inmate proceeding by counsel, filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his Albemarle County Circuit Court conviction for first-degree murder on May 25, 1970, when he was 23 years old. (See Amended Petition (Am. Pet.), Dkt. No. 19.) Initially sentenced to death, the death penalty was vacated by the United States Supreme Court on June 29, 1972, but the conviction was upheld. Brown v. Virginia, 408 U.S. 940 (1972). On remand, Brown was sentenced to life in prison. (Trial Tr. (Tr. #2) 508 (Nov. 7, 1973), Ex. F to Pet., Dkt. No. 1-9.)1 The Respondent has filed a motion to dismiss the petition, and Brown has filed a response, making this matter ripe for disposition. Brown’s petition raises two claims: (1) new evidence establishes his actual innocence, and (2) introduction of invalid scientific testimony violated his right to due process and undermined the fundamental fairness of his trial. (Am. Pet., Dkt. No. 19.) Upon consideration of the record and arguments of counsel, the court finds that Brown has failed to establish his

1 Both parties have attached many state court pleadings and other documents as exhibits to their briefs. (See Dkt. Nos. 1, 19, 38, & 49.) For convenience the court cites to the briefs’ exhibits, where possible, using the ECF-generated page numbers when a page cite is appropriate. “Va. Sup. Ct. R.” will refer to citations to the combined Virginia Supreme Court record of Brown’s state habeas case (Record No. 161422) and his state petition alleging actual innocence (Record No. 161421) using the page numbers in the lower left corner, “page __ of 803.” freestanding claim of actual innocence. With respect to the second claim, the court also finds that Brown has not satisfied the standard for using his actual innocence claim as a gateway to reach otherwise procedurally defaulted constitutional claims. See Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298 (1995). Accordingly, for the reasons stated below, the court will grant respondent’s motion to dismiss, deny the petition, and decline to issue a certificate of appealability.

I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background 1. The crime and the crime scene On October 1, 1969, at 4:55 p.m., Mrs. B.’s sister-in-law2 walked next door to Mrs. B.’s home to see if the phone was off the hook. She walked in to find Mrs. B. lying in a pool of blood in the living room floor, near the kitchen door. The phone was hanging from the wall, with the wires ripped from the wall and the receiver broken into two pieces. Mrs. B. was weak and could not talk very loudly, but she seemed coherent and spoke briefly to her sister-in-law. After getting Mrs. B. a rag, the sister-in-law left to call her husband and the rescue squad from a

neighbor’s phone. (Trial Tr. (Tr. #1) 95–100, Ex. B to Pet., Dkt. No 1-5.) She returned to Mrs. B.’s home to await the rescue squad, and while waiting, asked where the children were. She removed Mrs. B’s unharmed 2-year-old son from his crib in the front bedroom and took him outside to be with her own children. She then walked to the back bedroom and saw her 4-year-old nephew lying face down in the bed. She could tell that he was seriously hurt but did not know if he was dead. She did not move the child or disturb the scene

2 The names of Mrs. B., her husband, her father, her brother-in-law (husband’s brother), and sister-in-law were all redacted in the trial transcripts. Her son’s name was replaced with the initials “W.B.” Presumably, her husband and in-laws had the same last initial, and her father’s last initial cannot be determined from the record. For this reason, each of these witnesses will be identified based on their relationship to Mrs. B. and returned to the living room. Her husband and Mrs. B.’s husband then arrived, followed immediately by the rescue squad. (Id. at 100–03, 112.) Maynard Strickler and James Bingler, volunteers with the rescue squad, were dispatched to the B. home at 5:05 p.m., and they arrived on scene between 5:15 and 5:20 p.m. While Bingler started assisting Mrs. B., Strickler went to the back bedroom to check on the child, where

he determined that the boy had no signs of life. (Id. at 124–25.) Bingler saw no blood on Mrs. B’s back, but there was a lot of blood coming from somewhere. Needing help to turn her over, he called for Strickler. As they turned Mrs. B. over, a knife flipped up into Bingler’s face, the blade still stuck in Mrs. B’s side. Because they are trained not to remove foreign objects, if possible, they unsuccessfully tried to stop the bleeding and bandage the wound without removing the knife, which had no handle. They determined that they had to move the knife in order to put enough pressure on the wound to stop the bleeding. Mrs. B. was weak, mumbling, and possibly bleeding out. She was dressed in a nightgown and robe, with no underwear on. Bingler cut a square out of her nightgown, with the blade through it, and Strickler removed the patch and

blade. (Id. at 142–46.) Strickler went to get the stretcher from the ambulance; while outside, he called the Sheriff’s office and then notified the hospital that an emergent patient was on the way. In order to make room to place Mrs. B. on the stretcher, he had to move the coffee table and rug; he used his foot to move a pair of panties from under the coffee table, pushing them to the edge of the couch. (Id. at 128.) After placing Mrs. B. on the stretcher and into the ambulance, the rescue squad workers dropped her off at University of Virginia Hospital before responding to another call. (Id. at 146.) Dr. Alrich, the surgeon on call when Mrs. B. arrived at University Hospital, examined her and operated on her. He testified that she had stab wounds on her lower back, her chest, and the right side of her upper abdomen. Although her chest and pleural cavity showed no internal wounds, her abdominal cavity was full of blood. She appeared to be bleeding out through a vein from her liver, and he had to stop the bleeding. Once he stopped the bleeding and removed the

blood from her abdomen, he determined that a stab wound had sliced all the way across the right lobe of her liver. She was also bleeding from the pedicle of her spleen, where the artery and vein enter, and he removed the spleen. He closed her surgical incisions and stitched up the wound in her back. He noticed two major lacerations on the top of her head, down to her skull, which he also cleaned and closed. These were consistent with a blow to her head. Finally, he called the gynecology department to perform an exam. (Id. at 115–21.) Dr. Wiecking, the medical examiner, testified about his autopsy of W.B., Mrs. B.’s 4- year-old son, who had been declared dead by Dr. Ooghe at 5:30 p.m. on October 1, 1969. Wiecking examined the body in the home at 6:00 p.m. and later at the University Hospital

Morgue, where he also performed the autopsy. W.B. had suffered two stab wounds in his chest, just to the left and right of midline, both of which pierced the heart; either wound alone would have been fatal within one to five minutes. W.B. had a stab wound through his left armpit into his left chest and lung and a stab wound through his right wrist. He had blood inside his lung and chest cavity. He also had two lacerations on the back of his head, down to the bone, another laceration above his left ear, and a fourth laceration on his scalp. Finally, W.B.

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