Demetrius Edwards v. Sherry Burt

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 2020
Docket19-1302
StatusUnpublished

This text of Demetrius Edwards v. Sherry Burt (Demetrius Edwards v. Sherry Burt) 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
Demetrius Edwards v. Sherry Burt, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0464n.06

Case Nos. 19-1302/1304

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED Aug 05, 2020 19-1302 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) DEMETRIUS WILLIAM EDWARDS, ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR v. ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF ) MICHIGAN SHERRY BURT, Warden, ) Respondent-Appellee, ) ) 19-1304 ) ) BRYANT LAMONT ROYSTER, ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) KEVIN LINDSEY, Warden, ) Respondent-Appellee. ) ) ____________________________________/

Before: GUY, SUTTON, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.

RALPH B. GUY, JR., Circuit Judge. Following a joint bench trial in state court,

Demetrius Edwards and Bryant Royster were convicted of murder in the shooting death of Cedell

Leverett as he sat in his car outside a shopping mall in Michigan. After Edwards and Royster

exhausted their appeals in state court, they each filed a habeas petition in federal court. Denying Case Nos. 19-1302/1304, 2 Edwards v. Burt / Royster v. Lindsey

their claims in separate albeit overlapping orders, the district court granted certificates of

appealability on their common claim that the absence of defense counsel during the trial judge’s

solo visit to the crime scene was a per se violation of the Sixth Amendment. Concluding that the

state court’s rejection of this claim was neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of

Supreme Court precedent, we affirm.

I.

A.

The Michigan Court of Appeals, which issued the last reasoned state court decision on the

matter, explained that, on September 24, 2010,

Edwards was free on a GPS tether to “settle [his] affairs,” having been sentenced just the day before for a prior armed robbery conviction. Apparently, those affairs included a trip to the Eastland Mall with Royster and two acquaintances, Devante Smith and Jaisaun Holt.

Around 8:30 p.m., the decedent, Cedell Leverett, was sitting in the driver’s seat of his Mercedes parked in the valet area of Eastland Mall. Another car was parked nearby. Deborah Gaca observed Edwards get out of the other car, and run towards the valet area in a crouched position. Edwards was holding a gun. Royster, who was standing outside the driver’s side of the other car, yelled “Pop him, pop that mother f * * * * * good.” Edwards then fired four shots into the Mercedes at close range, killing Leverett. Edwards ran back to the other car, which was backing out, and fled the scene. Police . . . found over $3,000 in the decedent’s pocket. Corroborating Edwards’s and Royster’s presence at the Eastland Mall during this time were a surveillance video and Edwards’s tether records.

Holt confirmed in a police interview (which he later disavowed at trial) that Edwards intended “to get [the decedent’s] glasses and he hit him,” before Royster whisked them away in the car. Although Holt also elaborated that Edwards claimed to have shot the decedent after the decedent brandished a firearm, police found no weapons in or around the Mercedes or on the decedent's person during their investigation immediately after the shooting. Devante claimed the others left the Eastland Mall without him.

Deonte Smith, Devante’s brother, . . . stated [in a police interview] that he saw defendants, Holt, and his brother (Devante) at a high school football game sometime after the shooting. At the game, “they” told Deonte they had seen a man Case Nos. 19-1302/1304, 3 Edwards v. Burt / Royster v. Lindsey

walking around the Eastland Mall with a diamond watch and $12,000 to $15,000 cash in his pocket. Holt kept tabs on this man and reported to Edwards by phone. Edwards “bragged” to Deonte that he tracked the man outside and tried to rob the man of his watch, but because the man was reaching for something, Edwards shot him. Others at the football game told Edwards he was stupid for not getting anything.

[Edwards was arrested] a week after the shooting [when] a security officer at the Northland Mall in Southfield saw Edwards toss a gun under an SUV in the parking lot while fleeing a fight. Edwards was arrested at the scene. Royster was apparently arrested shortly thereafter. Subsequent tests of the gun revealed that this weapon had fired the shell casings and bullet fragments found in and around the Mercedes and inside [Leverett].

People v. Edwards, et al., Nos. 318000/318025, 2015 WL 1069275, at *1-2 (Mich. Ct. App. Mar.

10, 2015) (per curiam) (footnote omitted), lv. to appeal denied, 870 N.W.2d 67, 67 (Mich. Oct.

15, 2015) (mem.). Someone who had been with Leverett on the day of the shooting gave police a

diamond watch and sunglasses, which Leverett’s daughter said she had seen Leverett wearing

earlier on the day he was killed. Id. at *2.

Deborah Gaca, who worked at a store in the Eastland Mall, testified that she walked an

elderly customer out of the mall entrance where she witnessed the shooting. Shown photographs

of the area, Gaca was questioned about what she saw, where she was standing, and the lighting

conditions at the time of the shooting. On the next day of trial, the judge announced that “the

attorneys would accompany [him] to the crime scene” at lunch on the following day. Edwards,

2015 WL 1069275, at *7. When defendants’ attorneys “indicated their clients’ desire to [also]

attend this viewing, the [judge] canceled the visit unless defendants “change[d] their mind.”” Id.

(third alteration in original). That exchange occurred on the morning of July 30, 2013.

The defendants apparently relented, as two days later the judge described a trip to the crime

scene that took place without Edwards or Royster. Although the defendants were not there, their

attorneys were both present along with the judge, the prosecutor, the eyewitness, and others. Case Nos. 19-1302/1304, 4 Edwards v. Burt / Royster v. Lindsey

A record was made of that visit with the concurrence of defense counsel. In particular, Gaca

indicated where she had been standing when the shooting occurred and explained that she did not

move except to back up against the pole when she saw the gunman running back to the getaway

car. The judge would later find that Gaca stood 50 feet away from the shooting—not 20 feet as

she had testified. But that first crime scene visit was not the basis of the claim here.

Instead, after the record was made of the first visit, the trial judge disclosed in open court

that he had also made a separate nighttime visit to the crime scene by himself.

THE COURT: Anything else? And I will say that the night before I, myself, went out just to look at the lighting around the place. I went at approximately 10:00 P.M. to see what it looked like, [what] the lighting was like at the mall from the area where we were standing yesterday. Anything else to put on the record regarding that? [Prosecutor]: Not regarding that, Your Honor. THE COURT: Okay. [Counsel for Royster]: No, Your Honor. [Counsel for Edwards]: No.

(Tr. Trans. 8/1/13, pp. 37-38.) As this exchange reflects, defendants’ attorneys did not object to

the judge’s solo crime scene visit on any basis. Nor did defense counsel lodge any objection after

the judge rendered his oral decision, which briefly referenced both crime scene visits and his own

observation that the area “was very well lit.” (Tr. Trans. 8/5/13, p. 59.) Even when the judge

asked counsel if there was anything else to put on the record, both defense attorneys responded

that they had nothing to add. (Id. at 63.)1

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