David M. Murrell v. Matthew J. Frank, Secretary

332 F.3d 1102, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 12630, 2003 WL 21436452
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 2003
Docket02-1895
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 332 F.3d 1102 (David M. Murrell v. Matthew J. Frank, Secretary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David M. Murrell v. Matthew J. Frank, Secretary, 332 F.3d 1102, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 12630, 2003 WL 21436452 (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinions

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

David Murrell was charged and convicted of committing five counts of reckless injury in connection with a shooting that took place on October 25, 1993, in a nightclub known as the Roxbury Club, located in the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. After a five-day trial, the jury found Murrell guilty on all counts. Murrell filed a post-conviction motion for a new trial, arguing that his attorney failed to provide him with effective assistance at trial. After conducting multiple hearings in the matter, the state trial judge denied Murrell’s motion for a new trial based on his claim of ineffective assistance. The trial court’s decision was affirmed by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. The Wisconsin Supreme Court declined to accept the matter for review. Thereafter, Murrell launched a collateral attack on his conviction and the federal district court denied Murrell’s request for habeas relief, finding that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ decision could not be classified an unreasonable application of Strickland. We affirm.

I. Factual Background

Around 1:00 a.m. on October 25, 1993, a shooting took place at the Roxbury Club (the “Club”), in which some five gun shots were fired, resulting in bodily injury (multiple gunshot wounds) to four of the Club’s patrons: Orlando Williams, Mario Bur-rage, Randolph Harvey, and Shawn Buf-ford, as well as one of the Club’s security guards, Eddie Murphy. A number of the victims were in serious condition when received at the hospital; all of them have since been discharged.

After an investigation, the State charged David Murrell and Carl Owens with five counts of reckless injury. Judge Diane Sykes, the trial judge1, upon motion of defense counsel at the close of the prosecutors’ case, dismissed the charge against Carl Owens based upon insufficient evidence. The case against Murrell continued and after completion of the five-day trial, the jury convicted Murrell on all counts.

A. Trial Testimony

At trial, prosecutors presented a plethora of testimony and other evidence pinpointing Murrell as the perpetrator of the shootings resulting in the reckless injury crimes charged. Jermaine Burrage, whose brother was injured in the shooting, was an eyewitness to the event, and, consistent with a statement he gave police on the morning of the shooting, testified at trial that he saw Murrell commit the crimes (reckless injury). Specifically, Burrage recounted that, shortly before the shooting, he entered the men’s bathroom and saw Murrell, who greeted him, stating, “What’s up?”2. Soon thereafter, Owens [1104]*1104entered the bathroom and told Murrell to “give him the strap because it’s drama.” (Day 3 Tr. at 117) (explaining that the word “strap” was slang for “gun” and the phrase “it’s drama” meant that “something [was] going on like a fight or something.”) Burrage testified that Murrell pulled an automatic pistol out from under his sweater, moved the slide in preparation for firing, and exited the bathroom with Owens, with the weapon in his (Murrell’s) possession. Burrage followed Murrell and Owens out the bathroom door and, as Burrage was standing “behind [Murrell],” Burrage “saw [Murrell] fir[e] the gun ... five or six [times].” (Id. at 120-22.)

After the shooting, Burrage waited with his brother until the “Flight For Life” helicopter ambulance arrived, and thereafter he proceeded on his own to the hospital where his brother was transported for emergency care. Police officers meanwhile began an investigation at the nightclub, and although Burrage was unable to give local authorities a detailed interview at the crime scene (because of his travel to the hospital to see his brother)3, about seven hours later he contacted the Milwaukee police and informed them that it was Murrell who fired the weapon.

During trial, Christopher Davis, a security guard at the Roxbury, also provided testimony that proved damning to Murrell. Davis testified that, immediately prior to the shooting, he was standing inside near the entrance to the Club when an altercation broke out on the dance floor. He stated that, “approximately three seconds” after he had broken up the fight, he heard gunshots ring out behind him. Davis immediately exited the Club, positioned himself just outside the Club’s front entrance and, while watching the entrance of the Club, observed Murrell walk out of the Club very casually, clutching on his right side what Davis “believed to be a weapon.” (Id. at 271.) Davis remarked at trial that Murrell looked suspicious because as he exited the Club, he was walking in a manner that was far “too calm” for one who had just been in very close proximity to the scene of the shooting. (Id. at 226-27.)

Davis testified that, upon observing Murrell, he asked him to “stop,” and Mur-rell “started running ... [and] I chased behind him.” (Id.) Davis’s trial testimony as to what transpired during the footchase was as follows:

“[Murrell] ran towards the [Club’s] parking area, and he was running towards the parked cars. I asked him to stop again, and then at that point I saw him bring something out, and he shot it on the ground which was a gun, and he tried to toss it up under one of the cars there, but at that point I looked back to see if anyone else was around, and I saw Danny DeNeal — I believe that’s his last name — and I screamed to him, ‘hey, watch the gun,’ and I continued to chase.” (Id.)

Davis further remarked that he identified the object tossed, as a gun “when [it] hit the ground [and in that instant was able to see that it] was a black nine-millimeter ... a Gloek.” (Id. at 228.) In fact, Davis stated that, while in pursuit of [1105]*1105Murrell, he “actually ran over the gun,” and at this time recognized the make of the gun because he (Davis) “carries] a Glock [him]self” in connection with his duties as a security guard. (Id.) Davis went on to explain that, in an attempt to catch up with the suspect, he continued to chase Murrell through the Club’s parking lot, across the street, and into a nearby parking lot (Northridge shopping center parking lot) “where he (Murrell) was then apprehended by [the] Milwaukee Police Department.” (Id. at 229.) Thereafter, Davis returned with a police officer to the location where he “had previously seen [the gun] dropped” (id. at 23), and, within a minute or two, with Davis’s assistance, the officer retrieved the Glock nine-millimeter that was later determined to have been used in the shooting. See infra at 1106.

A number of police officers (Henson, Arndt, and Shaw) provided testimony consistent with Davis’s account of his pursuit of the suspect. Officer Gregory Henson, a sergeant with the police department, testified that he was seated inside his squad car in the Northridge parking lot about 50 to 60 yards west of the Club’s entrance, and while talking to an officer in another squad car (David Arndt), he heard the sound of four to five shots come from inside the Club. Sergeant Henson estimated that “[approximately three to four seconds later [he] observed a uniformed security person chasing another male westbound from the entrance of the club into the parking lot ...”. (Day 4 Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
332 F.3d 1102, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 12630, 2003 WL 21436452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-m-murrell-v-matthew-j-frank-secretary-ca7-2003.