DeChirico v. Walker

558 F. Supp. 2d 355, 2008 WL 924937
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 31, 2008
Docket97 CV 1456
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 558 F. Supp. 2d 355 (DeChirico v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeChirico v. Walker, 558 F. Supp. 2d 355, 2008 WL 924937 (E.D.N.Y. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

DEARIE, Chief Judge.

Petitioner seeks a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. For the reasons set forth below, the application is denied, and the petition is dismissed.

Background

Around 1:00 a.m. on September 14, 1988, Judith Anne Wrappe, a young Pratt Institute art student who had just arrived in New York City, was senselessly murdered near campus on Hall Street in Brooklyn. The case attracted significant media attention, and within days, petitioner was arrested. The evidence at trial established that petitioner struggled with Wrappe over her purse, shot her at close range and ran toward his home a couple of blocks away.

Several area residents gave fairly consistent descriptions of the man they saw attack Wrappe and flee the scene, but none was able to see petitioner’s face. Felipe Morales, a homeless crack addict who had been introduced to petitioner by a friend a week or two before the murder, linked petitioner to the crime. Although Morales did not witness the shooting, he saw petitioner running near Hall Street, down Willoughby Avenue toward Washington Avenue, with a purse under his arm. Morales’s description of petitioner’s clothing was consistent with the description given by those who saw the attack. His positive identification of petitioner in a line-up led to petitioner’s arrest. Wrappe’s black leather purse, various personal effects and her dormitory key were *358 recovered in the front yard of 216 Washington Avenue. Petitioner resided at 100 Washington Avenue.

Petitioner was held at Rikers Island pending trial. A few days before opening statements in petitioner’s trial, Charles Brown, a Rikers Island inmate, contacted the trial prosecutor. Approximately one week later, Brown testified that petitioner made certain admissions to him at Rikers indicating that he murdered Wrappe.

Petitioner was convicted by a jury of two counts of second-degree murder (intentional and felony), first-degree robbery, and related weapons possession offenses. He was sentenced as a second felony offender 1 to concurrent prison terms of twenty-five years to life on each of the murder counts. At sentencing, the trial judge noted that the case was “probably one of the strongest circumstantial evidence cases [he had] ever witnessed in a courtroom.” (Sentence Tr. 24.)

Six months after petitioner’s trial, Charles Brown testified in People v. Joseph Fama, the high-profile Bensonhurst murder trial, to jailhouse admissions made by Fama. During the course of that trial, details of Brown’s questionable history as a cooperator surfaced that were not brought out at petitioner’s earlier trial.

Petitioner’s attack on his conviction is based upon the prosecution’s failure to disclose those details about Brown and a related claim that Brown’s testimony was perjured. In addition, petitioner challenges the reliability of Morales’s identification and the closure of the courtroom during the testimony of an undercover police officer.

I. Trial Testimony

Lauree Johnson, Alan Sigman, Robert Williams, and Leslie Collins each witnessed portions of the crime from their respective apartments. From their different vantage points, they were able to observe certain physical characteristics of petitioner and his clothing. Johnson saw petitioner and his victim struggle from her second-story window above Hall Street. She described petitioner as either light Hispanic or white (Tr. 368), tall and thin, approximately five feet ten inches and one hundred and forty pounds, with wavy hair to the start of his neck, wearing a dark blue baseball cap, a dark blue zip-up hooded sweat jacket, dark jeans and light-colored sneakers (Tr. 374-75). Sigman, who also saw the struggle from his second-story window above Hall Street, described petitioner as having a slim build and wearing a cap with a brim in the front. (Tr. 313.) He was unable to otherwise describe petitioner’s clothing or determine his race. When Williams stepped toward his sixth-floor window over Hall Street, after hearing screaming and a gunshot, he saw Wrappe hit the ground and saw petitioner running away. (Tr. 269.) He was able to see petitioner continue running down Wil-loughby Avenue (Tr. 272.). Williams described him as “of average height and weight” (Tr. 275), approximately five feet ten inches tall (Tr. 277), wearing a long-sleeved top and pants, both battleship grey or bluish-grey (Tr. 274). He was unable to determine petitioner’s race, but told police officers that petitioner did not appear to be white because he was not able to see white arms, white skin or light hair. (Tr. 278, 281.) After Collins heard screaming and a shot (Tr. 342), he looked out his second-floor window over Willoughby Avenue and saw petitioner running down the middle of the street towards Washington Avenue. (Tr. 344.) He described petition *359 er as white or Hispanic and wearing a windbreaker or sweatshirt with a hood. (Tr. 347.) Although Collins was not certain whether petitioner had the hood up, he said that petitioner’s head.may have been covered and that he thought petitioner was wearing a cap. (Tr. 347-48.)

Felipe Morales was walking on Wil-loughby Avenue at the time, looking inside cars for a radio to steal. (Tr. 75.) He saw petitioner running on Willoughby from Hall Street toward Washington Avenue (Tr. 78, 80), wearing a blue Mets baseball cap and a dark blue zip-up hooded sweat jacket. (Tr. 79-80, 95.) Morales was able to see him from about a foot away, and called out “What up, Frank?” when he recognized him. (Tr. 81-82.) Petitioner did not respond, but he dropped the dark-colored purse that he was carrying under his arm. (Tr. 83-84.) He ran back for the purse (Tr. 86), turned around his baseball cap in such a way that Morales saw his bald spot, and continued running towards Washington Avenue. (Tr. 87.) Morales then walked to Hall Street and approached Wrappe who was lying face-down in the street. (Tr. 89, 90.)

Johnson, Sigman and Collins each testified that they saw an Hispanic man on Hall Street just after petitioner fled. Johnson described him as “a young short Spanish guy” walking up Hall from the corner of Willoughby and Hall. (Tr. 376-77.) He was dressed in jeans and a jacket but did not look like petitioner because he was short and stocky. (Tr. 377-78.) Johnson positively identified Morales from photographs. (Tr. 377.) Other than noting that the Hispanic man he saw had a medium build, Sigman was unable to describe his appearance. (Tr. 311.) Collins was able to identify Morales from photographs as possibly being the Hispanic man he saw. (Tr. 349-50.)

All three also saw Morales approach or speak to the police when they arrived— Johnson from her window, and Sigman and Collins from the street. 2 (Tr. 311, 350, 379.) According to Johnson, Morales appeared to be agitated and upset.. (Tr. 379.) He was trying to give them information (Tr. 379-80), but they were “paying no attention to him.” (Tr. 380.) Collins testified that he did not appear to be “irrational.” (Tr. 351.)

Officer Angelo Martinez was one of the police officers who responded to the scene. (Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
558 F. Supp. 2d 355, 2008 WL 924937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dechirico-v-walker-nyed-2008.