Darryl Gumm v. Betty Mitchell

775 F.3d 345, 2014 FED App. 0301P, 2014 WL 7247393, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 24245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 2014
Docket11-3363
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 775 F.3d 345 (Darryl Gumm v. Betty Mitchell) 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
Darryl Gumm v. Betty Mitchell, 775 F.3d 345, 2014 FED App. 0301P, 2014 WL 7247393, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 24245 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinions

CLAY, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which DAUGHTREY, J. joined, and MOORE, J. joined in all but Part II.B.4.C. of the majority’s opinion and in the judgment. MOORE, J. (pp. 385-86), delivered a separate concurring opinion.

OPINION

CLAY, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Darryl Gumm is mentally retarded and has an IQ of approximately 70. He was convicted by an Ohio jury for the kidnapping, attempted rape, and murder of ten-year-old Aaron Raines. For these crimes, Petitioner was sentenced to death. His convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal, and his state post-conviction petition was found to lack merit by the Ohio state courts. After he filed a petition for federal habeas corpus, the United States Supreme Court decided in Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 122 S.Ct. 2242, 153 L.Ed.2d 335 (2002) that persons who are mentally retarded cannot be executed. In Petitioner’s post-Atkins petition for state post-conviction review, the Ohio courts adjudicated Petitioner mentally retarded and reduced his sentence to thirty years to life in prison. In that second petition, the Ohio courts rejected Petitioner’s non -Atkins claims.

On federal habeas review, the district court granted Petitioner a conditional writ of habeas corpus on the four claims we have before us on appeal. These claims include (1) that the government failed to disclose exculpatory evidence as required by Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963); (2) that Petitioner received an unfair trial due to the improper admission of incendiary prior bad acts evidence; (3) that admission of a psychiatric report violated the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause; and (4) that the prosecutor’s elicitation of inflammatory testimony and admission of psychiatric reports constituted prosecuto-rial misconduct, causing a denial of due process. Respondent Warden has appealed. For the following reasons, this Court AFFIRMS the district court’s grant of the conditional writ of habeas corpus based on Petitioner’s Brady and prosecutorial misconduct claims.1

I.

BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

The facts of the crimes in this case are not disputed and have been summarized by the Ohio Supreme Court during its review of his convictions and sentences on direct appeal as follows:

Early on the morning of May 12, 1992, the bludgeoned body of ten-year-old Aaron Raines was found by police in the basement of an abandoned building in the lower Price Hill section of Cincinnati....
At 11:00 p.m. on May 11, 1992, Aaron Raines’s family reported Aaron as missing to Cincinnati police. An extensive neighborhood search took place, culminating in the discovery of Aaron’s body in the basement of an abandoned building adjacent to a neighborhood park where Aaron had previously been playing.
Several weeks later Betty Gumm, a friend of the Raines family and defen[353]*353dant’s sister through adoption, learned that her brother Darryl had been in the neighborhood on the day of Aaron’s murder. Betty knew that her brother was acquainted with Aaron, and was familiar with the abandoned buildings where Aaron’s body was found, having stripped copper out of them many times at night. Betty called the local “crime Stoppers” number to report her information.
On July 24, 1992, Cincinnati police interviewed appellant at his job site, a tobacco farm in Brooksville, Kentucky. At that time, Gumm told police he hadn’t been in Cincinnati since March 1992, and indicated his desire to cooperate with police. On July 27, Cincinnati police returned to Brooksville to talk to Gumm again, and Gumm accompanied them back to Cincinnati, ostensibly to clear himself of any wrongdoing. After extensive questioning in which he changed his statement several times, Gumm eventually confessed involvement in the murder of Aaron Raines.
Gumm’s statement disclosed that he and one Michael Bies, a Kentucky acquaintance, were driven to Cincinnati on May 11 by acquaintances and dropped off around noon. Gumm told police that he and Bies went to a bar to drink beer, and later went to the Price Hill park adjacent to two abandoned buildings, where they encountered Aaron. Gumm and Bies were observed at approximately 7:00 p.m. sitting on a bench in the park in which Aaron last played. Gumm admitted that he lured Aaron into the abandoned building for sexual purposes by telling him he would be paid $10 to help strip copper from the buildings. According to Gumm, after the three entered the first building and crossed over a walkway into the second building, Bies asked Aaron to perform oral sex for money. When Aaron refused, Gumm claimed that Bies punched Aaron-several times, picked him up and carried him downstairs to the basement. According to Gumm, Bies there hit Aaron several additional times, once on the head with a “two by four.” After that, Gumm stated that he and Bies fled the scene. Gumm claims that he himself did not hit Aaron at all, but conceded that he might have stepped on his body as he was attempting to flee from the basement.
When police found Aaron’s body at the crime scene, they noticed several objects around the body that contained blood and hairs consistent with the victim’s. These objects included a chunk of concrete, a pipe, pieces of wood, and twine found wrapped around Aaron’s neck.
Amy Martin, M.D., a former deputy coroner of Hamilton County, examined Aaron’s body at the crime scene and conducted the post-mortem exam at the coroner’s office. Dr. Martin testified that Aaron sustained twenty-one lacerations to the back of his head, representing twenty-one separate blows from an object, and that some of these wounds manifested lines that matched the threading on the pipe found next to the body. Five of Aaron’s ribs were broken, which Dr. Martin found unusual for a boy of his age, since such bones are usually flexible. Dr. Martin opined that “something like a kicking or stomping” would be the type of force necessary to break a young boy’s ribs. Dr. Martin further testified that the left side of Aaron’s face was completely crushed in a manner consistent with a blow from the chunk of concrete found lying next to the body. Several “chevron pattern” bruises consistent with the tread of a Nike gym shoe were found on several areas of Aaron’s body. Gumm had told police that he thought Bies had been wearing L.A. Gear gym shoes, and ac[354]*354knowledged that he had thrown his own shoes away.
Dr. Martin testified that Aaron also sustained a broken jaw, chipped teeth and cut lips, a deep laceration and bone chip on the underside of his jaw, compression wounds and hemorrhages in the eyes probably caused by compression of twine wrapped around his neck, and pattern bruises typical of injuries caused by being struck with a stick or rod.
Dr. Martin found no evidence of any defensive wounds on Aaron’s body, and opined that the absence of defensive wounds was consistent with Aaron having been held or restrained while his injuries were being inflicted. Dr. Martin determined that the cause of death was a combination of blunt impacts to the head, chest and abdomen, as well as blunt injury to the neck.

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Bluebook (online)
775 F.3d 345, 2014 FED App. 0301P, 2014 WL 7247393, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 24245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darryl-gumm-v-betty-mitchell-ca6-2014.