Claude Varney v. Raymond Booker

506 F. App'x 362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 2012
Docket11-1595
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 506 F. App'x 362 (Claude Varney v. Raymond Booker) 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
Claude Varney v. Raymond Booker, 506 F. App'x 362 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

Claude Varney was convicted in the circuit court for Wayne County, Michigan of second-degree murder and of possessing a firearm in the commission of a felony. He was sentenced to serve 20 to 30 years in prison on the former charge, consecutive to a 2-year prison term on the latter charge. Varney filed a motion for a new trial, arguing that he had received the ineffective assistance of counsel at his bench trial. The circuit court, with the same presiding judge, held an evidentiary hearing and granted Varney’s motion. But the State appealed, and the Michigan Court of Appeals peremptorily reversed the trial court’s order. Varney’s subsequent direct appeal and his petitions for post-conviction relief in the state courts were unsuccessful.

He then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. The district court denied his petition but granted a certificate of appealability with respect to Varney’s claim that his trial counsel was ineffective in not calling Var-ney to testify in support of his self-defense theory of the case. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

In September 1993, Varney shot and killed Tommy Maples in a bar in Detroit, Michigan. Varney was arrested and charged with second-degree murder, in violation of M.C.L. § 750.317, and with possessing a firearm in the commission of a felony, in violation of M.C.L. § 750.227b. Witnesses at Varney’s bench trial gave conflicting accounts of the events surrounding Maples’s death. The following paragraph summarizes the trial court’s findings of fact.

Varney entered the bar with a group of people, approached Maples, and began speaking to him. The two men sat down at a table together, continuing a conversation that nearby witnesses described as outwardly friendly. There was no evidence of an argument or confrontation. Then “[a]n unusual sound was heard, possibly the scraping of chairs at the table,” and the two men stood up, Maples with his hands raised and Varney “armed with a handgun.” Varney fired a bullet into Maples’s body “for no apparent reason.” Varney might have believed that Maples was reaching for a weapon, but Varney did not see a weapon and Maples had none. Whatever Varney’s belief, it did not warrant his shooting Maples “under the circumstances then obtaining.” The court concluded that the killing was in no way justified or excused, thus finding Varney guilty as charged.

Varney filed a motion for a new trial, alleging that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel. The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on Varney’s motion, referred to in Michigan as a Ginther hearing. See, e.g., People v. Dendel, 481 Mich. 114, 748 N.W.2d 859, 863 (2008) (citing People v. Ginther, 390 Mich. 436, 212 N.W.2d 922 (1973)) (referring to a “Gin-ther hearing to determine whether [trial counsel] had provided ineffective assistance”). Both Varney and his former trial counsel, Dominick Sorise, testified about the defense that Sorise provided and the reasons why Varney did not testify at the trial.

Sorise said that Varney initially wanted to take the witness stand, but that, after at least one argument between the two men, *364 Sorise convinced him that he should not testify. At no point did Sorise explicitly advise Varney of his constitutional right to testify in his own defense. Instead, Sorise “assumed [Varney] understood that he had a right or an opportunity to testify.” Sorise explained that he advised Varney not to testify because the prosecution had already entered into evidence a statement that Varney had made to Detective Patrick Henahan sufficiently explaining Varney’s self-defense story. That statement, as related by Det. Henahan at trial, was as follows:

I went in the bar. I saw Tommy [Maples] in there. He waved me to come over where he was. I walked over to him and he said, come on. I want to talk to you. We walked over to a table. We sat down — and we sat down. He said to me, you know I shot a couple of your members and I shot at you before. And now I’m going to kill you. Then he reached behind his back like he was going for a gun and I shot him.

Det. Henahan went on to testify that Var-ney “stated it looked like Mr. Maples was reaching for a gun,” but that he did not “hear [Varney] say anything about seeing a gun.”

Varney’s testimony at the Ginther hearing told a somewhat different story about the decision to not have him take the witness stand and about the statement that he made to Det. Henahan. Consistent with Sorise’s testimony, Varney said that the two men argued about whether Varney should testify at trial and that Sorise never advised him of his constitutional right to testify. But unlike Sorise’s account of his convincing Varney not to testify, Varney claimed that Sorise told him, without explanation, that he could not take the stand. Varney said that he told Sorise what he wanted to say on the stand and that he “felt it was important for the Court to know exactly what happened.” Sorise allegedly responded, “no, you are not taking the stand.”

Varney also testified that Det. Hena-haris testimony was mistaken because Varney had told the detective that Maples had in fact pulled a gun on him, not that Maples merely “reached as if to have a gun.” Although Varney did not specifically testify that he had informed Sorise of having seen Maples with a gun, he claimed to have told Sorise “everything” about the issues that he was now raising at the Gin-ther hearing. Sorise could neither dispute nor confirm that Varney had told him about seeing Maples with a gun at the time of the shooting. But Sorise was certain that Varney had “indicated that Mr. Maples reached behind him as if to draw a gun and began drawing out a gun.” Furthermore, a defense witness, Marcello Gu-glieletti, testified at the trial that Maples “pull[ed] a gun before [Varney] shot [Maples].”

The trial court considered the two “strongly held” positions presented at the Ginther hearing: (1) Sorise’s testimony that he merely advised Varney not to testify, and (2) Varney’s contrary claim that Sorise did not allow him to testify. Whether the decision was unilateral or joint, the court made clear that the decision was “critical” for two related reasons. First, Varney’s testimony would have supported his argument that his “unsigned, and therefore unadopted” statement to Det. Henahan was either “incomplete, ... altered, or not his at all.” The trier of fact would have heard that Varney saw Maples draw a weapon, rather than that Varney simply saw Maples make a motion as if to draw a weapon. Second, “short of some other person describing circumstances that would to an ordinary mind raise the question of whether the accused reasonably and honestly feared for his life or being *365 seriously injured,” Varney’s only method of establishing that he had such fear would be by his own testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
506 F. App'x 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claude-varney-v-raymond-booker-ca6-2012.