Dennis v. Wetzel

966 F. Supp. 2d 489, 2013 WL 4457047, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118481
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 21, 2013
DocketCivil Action No. 11-1660
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 966 F. Supp. 2d 489 (Dennis v. Wetzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis v. Wetzel, 966 F. Supp. 2d 489, 2013 WL 4457047, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118481 (E.D. Pa. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ANITA B. BRODY, District Judge.

James Dennis, the petitioner, was wrongly convicted of murder and sentenced to die for a crime in all probability he did not commit. I will grant Dennis’ [491]*491habeas petition, vacate his conviction and death sentence, and require the Commonwealth to retry Dennis within 180 days or let him free.

In this habeas petition brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Petitioner James Dennis (“Dennis”) brings an assortment of claims challenging the legality of his conviction and death sentence he received for killing Chedell Williams in 1991. I will grant Dennis’ petition on the basis of exculpatory and impeachment evidence that the Commonwealth improperly withheld from the defense at the time of trial, in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963) and its progeny. While each piece of withheld evidence is, on its own, sufficiently prejudicial to entitle Dennis to a new trial, there can be no question that the cumulative effect of the Commonwealth’s Brady violations abridged Dennis’ constitutional right to due process of law. In the interest of avoiding unnecessary rulings on constitutional questions, I reserve decision on Dennis’ remaining claims. See Jamison v. Collins, 291 F.3d 380, 392 (6th Cir.2002).

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On October 22, 1991, two high school students, Chedell Williams and Zahra Howard, were walking up the steps of the Philadelphia Fern Rock SEPTA station when two men approached them yelling, “Give me your fucking earrings!” The girls fled down the steps; Howard hid behind a nearby fruit stand, while Williams ran into the street. The two men pursued Williams. One of them held a gun to her neck and shot her. The men then fled up the street, where they jumped into a car and sped away. Witnesses said there must have been a third participant who drove the vehicle, given how fast the perpetrators left the scene. Emergency services arrived within minutes, but Williams was pronounced dead at the hospital shortly after the shooting. Her earrings were missing, but her necklace and ring were untouched.

Dennis’ conviction was based solely on shaky eyewitness identifications from three witnesses, the testimony of another man who said he saw Dennis with a gun the night of the murder, and a description of clothing seized from the house of Dennis’ father that the police subsequently lost before police photographed or catalogued it. In short, Dennis’ prosecution was based on scant evidence at best. In the process, the Commonwealth covered up evidence that pointed away from Dennis. It ignored Dennis’ own explanation for where he was at the time of the murder: taking a bus from his father’s home to the Abbots-ford Homes project. It allowed a witness who saw Dennis on that bus to give incorrect testimony about what time that interaction occurred. Police never recovered a weapon, never found the car that witnesses described, and never found the two accomplices. Despite Dennis’ lack of significant criminal history,1 the Commonwealth charged him with a capital crime. There was virtually no physical evidence presented at trial; Dennis was convicted almost entirely through eyewitness identification.2 [492]*492Although the crime was committed by at least two people, Dennis was the only person ever arrested or convicted for the crime.

There were numerous flaws with the investigation and prosecution of this crime, flaws that significantly diminish confidence in the outcome. The police focus on Dennis stemmed from neighborhood rumors that he had been involved. This focus appears to have led police to overlook disparities between the eyewitness descriptions of the shooter and Dennis, most importantly their descriptions of the shooter’s size. All five of the nine eyewitnesses who provided an estimate of the shooter’s height in their statements to the police described the shooter as between 5'7" and 5'10", "with four describing him as 5'9" or 5' 10". Not a single eyewitness described the shooter as small, short, or petite. However, Dennis is only 5'5" and 125-132 pounds, significantly smaller than the descriptions of the shooter. NT 10/14/92 at 74-75. Moreover, the victim, Williams, was 5'10", Postmortem Report, Pet’r’s Br. Ex. 87, and yet none of the witnesses remarked that the shooter was much shorter than Williams, even though the shooter and Williams were standing close to each other when the shooting occurred.3

Police showed most of the eyewitnesses photo arrays with Dennis’ photo. Not one confidently selected Dennis right away. . One "witness, Thomas Bertha, hesitated at first but then positively picked Dennis’ photo. 10/25/91 Bertha Stmt., Pet’r’s Br. Ex. 29. Howard, who was with Williams at the time of the murder, was less certain, and said that Dennis’ photo “looks like the guy but I can’t be sure.... He looks a little like the guy who shot Chedell.” 10/25/91 Howard Stmt., Pet’r’s Br. Ex. 45. James Cameron, a SEPTA worker who saw both the struggle and the shooting, viewed a photo array and said that Dennis’ picture “looks familiar but I can’t be sure.” 10/25/91 Bertha Stmt., Pet’r’s Br. Ex. 28. Notwithstanding their relatively uncertain identifications of Dennis in the days immediately following the shooting, these three individuals would ultimately become the Commonwealth’s "only testifying eyewitnesses. At trial, after each had seen Dennis’ photo and his face in person during a line-up,4 each of these witnesses identified [493]*493him as the shooter without hesitation.5 Meanwhile, four other eyewitnesses did not pick Dennis as the shooter: Three did not pick his photo from the photo array, and a fourth, who tentatively identified Dennis’ picture, later chose another suspect from a line-up.6 Detectives never reported showing the ninth eyewitness, George Ritchie, a photo array, but years after the trial, Ritchie testified that he had in fact been presented with a photo array, and that the police had grown agitated when he could not pick out a suspect. PCRA Evid. Hrg. NT 5/6/05 at 35-39.

Further, the police arguably conducted misleading line-ups and identifications. After his arrest, Dennis volunteered to participate in a line-up. Although the defense requested that all eyewitnesses be present, the Commonwealth provided only four of the nine who gave statements immediately after the murder. Incidentally, the four were the only witnesses who had already initially identified Dennis from a photo array. Because discovery had not yet been exchanged, Dennis’ lawyer did not know about the other five eyewitnesses, or that three of them had failed to pick Dennis’ photo from the array. He therefore could not have challenged the line-up. The Commonwealth had still not completed discovery by the time of Dennis’ preliminary hearing, held on December 23, 1991. So when the Commonwealth presented only the three eyewitnesses who had identified Dennis at the line-up — Howard, Bertha, and Cameron — defense counsel still did not know about the other witnesses who had not identified Dennis as the shooter.7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
966 F. Supp. 2d 489, 2013 WL 4457047, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-v-wetzel-paed-2013.