Cowherd v. Million

260 F. App'x 781
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 2008
Docket06-5610
StatusUnpublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 260 F. App'x 781 (Cowherd v. Million) 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
Cowherd v. Million, 260 F. App'x 781 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The petitioner, Johnny Cowherd, is an inmate in the Kentucky prison system, following his conviction in state court on two counts of rape, four counts of sodomy, and one count of second-degree burglary. Faced with a resulting sentence of 104 years, he filed this action in federal district court, seeking issuance a writ of habeas corpus. In his habeas petition, Cowherd contended that the lengthy sentence was unconstitutionally disproportionate to the crimes he committed, that he was improperly subjected to multiple convictions and multiple punishments for the same offense, and that his trial attorney provided him with ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court denied relief, and the petitioner now appeals that order. For the reasons set out below, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The appellate record filed in this case does not include a copy of the transcript from the petitioner’s trial in state court. According to the brief that Cowherd filed in his direct appeal to Kentucky’s highest state court, however, the following facts were established at trial:

[Cowherd] came to stay with [Edna Gal-breath and her boyfriend, Jeff,] six or seven times.... On April 6th[, 1993, while Jeff was in jail], after Galbreath had put her son[, DeAngelo,] in bed, [Cowherd] allegedly grabbed her from behind and put a box cutter to her throat. When she asked what he was doing, [Cowherd] allegedly replied, “Bitch, shut up.” When she asked again, he allegedly replied, “Bitch, I will kill you and DeAngelo.” He then threw her on the bed and tied her hands together with electrical cord he had cut off her curling iron. He next took off her pants and panties and cut off her shirt with the boxcutter. He tore off her brassiere. He then began to have sex with her. She tried to fight him off with her feet, but he cut the cord off a radio and tied her feet together. Then, according to Galbreath, the appellant rolled her over and put his penis in her rectum. He then put his penis in her mouth.
Leaving her tied up in the bed, [Cowherd] went into the kitchen and cooked a hamburger. He then got money out of her purse and left the apartment. Before she could get loose, he returned. By then she had gotten her hands loose. She put her hands behind her back, but he saw that her hands were loose. He retied them with cord he cut off the fan. She then saw that [Cowherd] had bought some cocaine with her money. He smoked the cocaine. He blew the smoke into her face and tried to get her to inhale it. He then left the room and ate some potted meat. When he returned, he “did it all over again.” He kept saying, “Bitch, you better make me feel good. You better make me come.” [Cowherd] also kept saying, “Jeff thinks he’s got this. Jeff thinks he’s got that.” According to Galbreath, [Cowherd] then *783 had vaginal and rectal intercourse with her. He then put his penis in her mouth. He told her to “lick his asshole and then his balls.” He then told her to suck his penis again. Galbreath felt something coming out of her and saw that it was blood. She thought she was having a miscarriage. [Cowherd] saw the blood, but it didn’t stop him. [Cowherd] told Galbreath to go to sleep. He put on Jeff’s sweatpants and began to walk around. He then got into bed beside her and went to sleep with the boxcutter in his hand.

Eventually, Galbreath escaped with DeAngelo from her own apartment and appeared, crying, at the door of a neighbor who contacted the police. At that time, the neighbor noticed that Galbreath’s wrists were swollen and that “her mouth was ‘swollen up real bad’ from being gagged.” When the police arrived at the neighbor’s apartment, they “found [the] victim crying on the sofa,” claiming to have been raped by Cowherd. The petitioner was subsequently apprehended by the police as he walked out of Galbreath’s apartment, and an examination of the alleged crime scene revealed “cut wires and chairs in front of [the] door” and a boxcutter “in the bed under a pillow.”

Additional trial testimony was offered by Dr. Anita Rogers, the emergency room physician who examined Galbreath based upon the victim’s report that she had been raped. In his brief filed in the state supreme court, Cowherd summarized her testimony as follows:

According to Rogers, Galbreath had no bruises on her face or abdomen. She did see remnants of tape on Galbreath’s left cheek. She saw no bruises on Gal-breath’s abdomen or back. She did observe abrasions and bruises on Gal-breath’s ankles and wrists. According to Rogers, Galbreath had moderate swelling of her external genitalia. Their [sic] was no swelling of Galbreath’s vagina. Sperm were present. There was a 1 centimeter laceration at the 6:00 o’clock area of Galbreath’s rectum.

Cowherd testified on his own behalf and admitted to engaging in anal, oral, and vaginal sex with Galbreath. The petitioner insisted, however, that all such acts were consensual and that Galbreath was tied with cords only because the two adults agreed “to have sex with bondage.”

The jury obviously credited the testimony of Galbreath and prosecution witnesses because it returned guilty verdicts on all counts. In accord with Kentucky practice, the jurors then offered their recommendation that the petitioner be sentenced to 16 years in prison on each of the two rapes (vaginal intercourse) and 18 years in prison on each of the four sodomy charges (anal and oral sex). They further recommended that all such sentences be served concurrently, yielding an effective prison sentence of 18 years. The trial judge disregarded that recommendation, however, and ordered the six sentences for sexual offenses to be served consecutively, resulting in a prison term of 104 years.

Cowherd’s attempts to overturn his convictions and sentence on both direct appeal and through state post-conviction proceedings were unsuccessful, leading him to file this habeas action in federal district court. Initially, the district court dismissed that petition as untimely. In so ruling, the court recognized that the federal filing occurred within one year of the dismissal of Cowherd’s second state post-conviction petition. However, the court held that because the state-court action had not included a federal constitutional claim, the statute-of-limitations period created by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996), was not tolled during the pendency of the *784 state post-conviction proceedings. A panel of this court affirmed that dismissal. See Cowherd v. Million, 80 Fed.Appx. 415 (6th Cir.2003). Subsequently, however, the Sixth Circuit, sitting en banc, vacated the panel decision, granted rehearing, unanimously overruled the prior circuit precedent upon which the original panel opinion had been based, and remanded the matter to the district court for whatever proceedings were necessary in order to render a decision on the merits of Cowherd’s habeas corpus petition. See Cowherd v. Million, 380 F.3d 909 (6th Cir. 2004).

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260 F. App'x 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowherd-v-million-ca6-2008.