Darrell Ewing v. Connie Horton

914 F.3d 1027
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 2019
Docket17-2485
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 914 F.3d 1027 (Darrell Ewing v. Connie Horton) 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
Darrell Ewing v. Connie Horton, 914 F.3d 1027 (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Two months after Darrell Ewing was convicted of murder, a juror filed an affidavit accusing two fellow jurors of conducting after-hours internet research about the case and discussing their findings during deliberations. Without holding an evidentiary hearing to determine what, if any, prejudicial impact that extracurricular fact-finding had on the jury, the state trial and appellate courts considered the information duplicative of the evidence at trial and the incident harmless. That was constitutional error, as everyone now agrees. The question is how best to remedy that constitutional injury on habeas review. The district court conditionally granted Ewing's release from prison unless the State acts within ninety days to afford him a new trial. The appropriate remedy in such a case, however, is generally to order release unless the State provides-instead of a new trial-a hearing to consider whether a new trial is warranted. Such an order should have been entered by the district court in this case.

In October 2010, Ewing stood trial for first-degree murder and other charges arising from an apparently gang-related shooting at a Detroit intersection. J.B. Watson and three others were waiting at a red light at the intersection of Harper and Van Dyke when Derrico Searcy drove up a few car lengths behind them and pulled over to the curb. With the light still red, Ewing allegedly exited Searcy's car with his gun drawn, walked the rest of the way to the intersection, and fired several shots into the back of the van before retreating to his getaway car and speeding off in the other direction. One passenger was injured after taking a bullet to the hand, and Watson was killed. Watson and two other passengers were members of a gang known as the Knock Out Boys; Searcy and Ewing allegedly belonged to the rival Hustle Boys.

The prosecution framed the shooting as part of an ongoing feud between the Knock Out Boys and the Hustle Boys, and *1029 relied on witness testimony identifying Ewing as the shooter. Ewing's defense was that they had the wrong guy-that he was attending a funeral when the shooting happened and that the real shooter was another Hustle Boy, Tyree Washington. Ewing put on alibi witnesses and even a jailhouse informant who testified that Washington had confessed to the shooting-and had bragged about it to other inmates-while Washington and the informant were in jail on federal carjacking charges. On the second day of deliberations, the jury asked the court to declare that the jury was deadlocked, but the court refused and charged them to press on. On the fourth day of deliberations the jury returned a verdict against Ewing of guilty on all counts, including first-degree murder, which carried a mandatory life sentence.

About two months after the verdict, Kathleen Frances Byrnes (Juror #4) filed an affidavit stating that two fellow jurors had "brought up information that was not part of the evidence introduced into court." Byrnes swore the following:

5. [Juror #13] discussed Facebook look up information during deliberations. [Juror #13] brought up information regarding Mr. Ewing's and Mr. Searcy's past. [Juror #13] said she saw on Facebook a picture of Mr. Ewing and a girl with the caption "Mr. and Mrs. Nasty" and had brought to the juror's attention that she had read an [sic] eulogy online for J.B. Watson.
6. [Juror #5] bought up during juror deliberations that she had googled gang information and knew about gang codes and that gang activity involved killing people.
7. [Juror #5] also said during deliberations that gangs have a pecking order according to information she googled at home. She went on to say that Darrell Ewing was at the top of the pecking order. That would put Tyree Washington at the bottom and the gang decided to sacrifice Tyree Washington by setting him up as the fall guy for the murder. According to [Juror #5], the above information was based on what she had read on line [sic] regarding the history of gangs on the goggle web site [sic].

Based on the Byrnes affidavit, Ewing filed a motion for a new trial on the ground that the jury was tainted by the extraneous information. Although the motion was styled as one for a new trial, Ewing alternatively requested an evidentiary hearing to elicit testimony from Byrnes and further develop the facts surrounding the allegedly tainted jury deliberations. The State argued in response that, while the affidavit alone did not warrant a new trial, the State would have no objection if the court determined that an adequate showing was made to hold an evidentiary hearing. Despite the State's amenability, the court held that Ewing had not shown that the jury was exposed to extraneous information "that was not already presented to it as evidence in the trial," and denied the motion outright. In other words, the court found that the jury was not exposed to any extraneous influences because the internet information was duplicative of what the jury had learned from the evidence at trial.

The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed and held that the extraneous information was duplicative of evidence produced at trial and thus harmless. See People v. Searcy , 2013 WL 4609125 , at *9-10 (Mich. Ct. App. Aug. 29, 2013). According to the court, the Facebook picture of Ewing was innocuous and similar to many photos that were shown at trial; Watson's eulogy contained no new, relevant information and presumably was discussed only in passing; and the information about gang activity *1030 and hierarchy was either patently obvious or easily inferred from witness testimony. See id. at *9. The court therefore held that Ewing had not shown a real and substantial possibility that the information could have affected the verdict. See id. at *10. The Michigan Supreme Court denied Ewing's petition for leave to appeal. See People v. Ewing , 495 Mich. 935 , 843 N.W.2d 200 (2014).

Having exhausted his state remedies, Ewing filed a timely petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 . Ewing raised several claims, 1 including that he was denied his constitutional rights to a fair trial and an impartial jury because of the jury's consideration of extraneous facts, as recounted in the Byrnes affidavit. As for relief, Ewing argued that he was "entitled to a new trial or at least a proper hearing to determine the impact of the extraneous influences on the jurors." Over the State's opposition, the district court held that the state court's determination was contrary to clearly established law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
914 F.3d 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darrell-ewing-v-connie-horton-ca6-2019.