Carter v. Uhler

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 26, 2022
Docket1:16-cv-07589-VSB-SDA
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Carter v. Uhler, (S.D.N.Y. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ----------------------------------------------------------X : STEVEN CARTER, : : Petitioner, : : 16-CV-7589(VSB) (SDA) -against- : : OPINION & ORDER SUPERINTENDENT DONALD UHLER, : : Respondent. : : ----------------------------------------------------------X Appearances: Barbara Zolot Center for Appellate Litigation New York, NY Counsel for Petitioner Susan Holly Gliner New York County District Attorney’s Office New York, NY Counsel for Respondent VERNON S. BRODERICK, United States District Judge: Currently pending before me are the objections of Petitioner Steven Carter (“Carter”) to the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Stewart D. Aaron (Doc. 23 (“Report”)), recommending that I deny Carter’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus,(Doc. 6(“Petition”).)1 I have reviewed the Report and Petitioner’s objections. Because I find the Report to bethorough and accurate, I overrule Carter’s objections, ADOPT the Report and Recommendation, and DISMISS the Petition. 1After Carter filed his initial petition, he filed an amended petitionon September 30, 2016, which is the document I refer to as the “Petition.” BACKGROUNDAND PROCEDURAL HISTORY2 On November 10,1986, a young woman (“Victim”) was found dead in St. Nicholas Park. (Report 2.) An autopsy concluded that the Victim was killed by manual strangulation. (Id.) Medical examiners took fingernail clippings from the Victim’s fingersand swabbed areas of her body for physical evidence. (Id.) The Victim’s inner thigh and leggings were swabbed and

semen was collected; however, the technology available at the time did not allow anything more to be done with this evidence. (Id.) In April 2010 and February 2011, the evidence from the autopsy was tested for deoxyribonucleic acid (“DNA”), and it was found that DNA under the fingernails and in the semen taken from the Victim’s leggings matched a male DNAprofile. (Id.) This profile was run through a state DNA database, where it was found to match Carter’s DNA profile. (Id.6.) Detectives interviewed Carter onJune 15,2011, who at the time was already incarcerated on unrelated charges. (Id. 3.) Carter denied killing the Victim, but “he admitted that he had taken prostitutes into St. Nicholas Park in the past, and that some of his sexual activities would get ‘out

of hand.’” (Id.) Carter was subsequently indicted for causing the Victim’s death and charged with murder and felony murder. (Id.) OnFebruary 2,2012, Carter moved to dismiss the indictmentonvarious grounds including, relevantly, that prosecutors had violated his due process rights by(1) delaying for 25 years in seeking his indictment, and(2) by not producing potentiallyexculpatory materials pursuant to Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), until shortly before trial. The Brady material in question was a two-page handwritten statement from the Victim’s sister,dated May

2The facts in this section are taken from the Report, which contains a more complete factual account and procedural history. Carter does not object to the Report’s statement of factual background or procedural history. 13,2011(“Sister Statement”). In the Sister Statement, the Victim’s sistersuggested that the Victim’s boyfriend, Gary Mullings (“Mullings”), had argued with the Victim on the night of her death and had motive and opportunity to carry out the killing. The sister died in October 2011, which meant that Carter never had a chance to interview her. Carter’s motion to dismiss was denied. The trial court found that the delay was not

unreasonable given that Carter was not even a suspect until he was matched in the DNA database, and it reserveda remedy for the alleged Brady violation for a later hearing. By agreement of counsel, and with the trial court’s consent, it was agreedthat parts of the Sister Statement would be read into the record during trial. Carter also moved prior to trial for the admission of statements that Mullings had made to detectives who had interviewed him in May 2011(the “Mullings Statement”). As Mullings himself was unavailable to testify at trial,3 Carter arguedthat the Mullings Statementshould be admitted as an exception to the rules against hearsay evidence. In particular, Carter sought to use the portions of the Mullings Statement statingthat: (1) the Victim’s sister had returned to the

apartment the two women shared “with money andcrack which she made from prostitution”; (2) the Victim wanted her sister “to go back out and make more money for crack”; (3)and Mullings had attempted to persuade the Victim “not to go back out” because they “already had enough crack money for the night.” The trial court ruled these statements inadmissible under New York’s Rape Shield Law. (Report 8 n.12.) The jury convicted Carter on two counts of murder in the second degree, and Carter was sentenced to 25 years to life on each count, to run consecutively. Carter presented no evidence at trial, but a witness for the prosecution did read the agreed-upon portions of the Sister Statement

3Defense counsel informed the trial court that Mullings had moved and she could not locate him. (Report8 n.12.) to the jury. On appeal, Carter arguedthat (1) the exclusion of the Mullings Statement violated his right to mount a defense; (2) the delayed disclosure of the Sister Statement was a Brady violation requiring dismissal of the indictment; and (3) the 25-year delay between the Victim’s murder and Carter’s indictment similarly required dismissal of the indictment. The Appellate Division

rejected all of Carter’s arguments. People v. Carter, 128 A.D.3d 580 (1st Dep’t 2015). It found that the Mullings Statement was properly excluded as hearsay testimony from an unavailable witness and that Carter had not made an adequate showing of the Mullings Statement’s reliability under Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284 (1973). Id. at 581. It also held that, although the prosecutorsdelayedin providing the Sister Statement in response to Carter’s “Bradyrequest,” the “drastic sanction of dismissal” was not warranted, because “the court received the [Sister] [S]tatement in evidence,” and because there was “no reasonable possibility that earlier disclosure would have affected the outcome of the case, given the remedy fashioned by the court and the strength of the [prosecution]’s case.” Id. at 582.4 Carter sought leave to appeal to the New York

Court of Appeals, whichwas denied. In his Petition, Carter raises three challenges to his conviction. First, he says that he should have been permitted to introduce evidence that the Victim was a prostitute. Second, he says that the 25-year delay between the Victim’s killing and his indictment violated his due process rights. Third, he argues that the delay in producing Brady materials prejudiced his defense. All of these arguments were rejected in the Report. Carter timely filed objections. (Doc. 24 (“Objections”).)

4Carter also challenged the sufficiency of the evidence against him, which the Appellate Division both found “unpreserved” for appeal and, “[a]s an alternative holding,” unpersuasive “on the merits.” 128 A.D.3d at 581. LEGAL STANDARDS A. Review of Magistrate Judge’s Report In reviewing a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, a court “may accept, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the findings or recommendations made by the magistrate

judge.” 28U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(C). A court reviews de novo the portions of the Report to which timely and specific written objections are made. Id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(3). “The objection must be ‘specific and clearly aimed at particular findings’in the R[eport].” Bussey v. Rock, No.

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