Ege v. Yukins

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 2007
Docket05-2078
StatusPublished

This text of Ege v. Yukins (Ege v. Yukins) 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
Ege v. Yukins, (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 07a0145p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X Petitioner-Appellee, - CAROL EGE, - - - No. 05-2078 v. , > JOAN YUKINS, Warden, - Respondent-Appellant. - N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Bay City. No. 01-10294—David M. Lawson, District Judge. Argued: September 12, 2006 Decided and Filed: April 24, 2007 Before: BOGGS, Chief Judge; MARTIN, Circuit Judge; OLIVER, District Judge.* _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: John S. Pallas, OAKLAND COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE, Pontiac, Michigan, for Appellant. Carole M. Stanyar, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: William C. Campbell, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellant. Carole M. Stanyar, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. MARTIN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which OLIVER, D. J., joined. BOGGS, C. J. (pp. 14-16), delivered a separate dissenting opinion. _________________ OPINION _________________ BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge. On July 22, 2005, the district court granted Carol Ege’s petition for a conditional writ of habeas corpus on grounds that (1) admission of bite-mark evidence at Ege’s state trial violated her right under the Due Process Clause to a fair trial, and (2) the performance of Ege’s state trial counsel was unconstitutionally deficient and caused her actual prejudice. The State appeals the district court judgment on both grounds, and argues additionally that Ege’s habeas petition is time-barred under the one-year limitations period of 28 U.S.C.

* The Honorable Solomon Oliver, Jr., United States District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting by designation.

1 No. 05-2078 Ege v. Yukins Page 2

§ 2244(d)(1). For the following reasons, we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part the judgment of the district court. I This is a troubling case. The crime is horrific. The initial investigation was deficient. Defendant was not charged until nine years after the murder. There are others who are logical suspects. No one saw defendant at the scene the evening of the murder. No physical evidence links defendant to the crime except testimony that a mark on the victim’s cheek is a bite mark that is highly consistent with defendant’s dentition. People v. Ege, No. 173448, 1996 WL 33359075, at *1 n.1 (Mich. Ct. App. Sept., 17, 1996). Such was the description of Carol Ege’s case by the Michigan Court of Appeals, which heard her direct appeal following a jury trial and conviction for first-degree murder for the killing of Cindy Thompson. Ege and Thompson had both been romantically involved with Mark Davis, whose child Thompson allegedly was carrying. Davis testified that he found Thompson in her upstairs bedroom some time before 5:00 a.m. on February 22, 1984, bludgeoned and stabbed to death, her organs laying beside her. There was no sign of forced entry at Thompson’s home, and the back door was found unlocked. The phone cords had been cut. Thompson was last seen alive on the evening of February 21, sometime between 8:45 and 9:15 p.m. The initial police investigation, concluded in April 1984, yielded no definitive evidence. Eight years later, however, the investigation was reopened as a result of persons coming forward with evidence allegedly incriminating Ege. During the course of this reopened investigation, in 1992-1993, evidence that had been collected at the murder scene in February 1984 was submitted to the Michigan state crime lab for the first time. None of the evidence submitted to the crime lab connected Ege to the crime. The lab results yielded fingerprints of Davis and Thompson and hairs of Thompson and others, but no similar trace evidence connected to Ege. Thompson’s body was exhumed in 1993, apparently to investigate a mark on her left cheek visible in photographs taken at the murder scene. The initial autopsy report had concluded that the mark was livor mortis.1 Ege was tried for murder following the 1992-1993 investigation. At trial, the prosecution attempted to show that Ege was obsessed with Davis and was therefore furiously jealous of Thompson and the child Thompson was carrying. The prosecution presented witnesses who testified that Ege and Thompson had argued several years prior to Thompson’s death, when Ege entered Thompson’s house to destroy a watch case and T-shirts that Thompson had bought for Davis. Further evidence was presented that Ege and Thompson engaged in a physical struggle at Thompson’s sister’s house, when Thompson was five months pregnant. Witnesses also testified that Ege had attempted to hire two different men to kill Thompson, and that about one week before Thompson’s death, Ege had asked her roommate, Carol Parker, to provide her with an alibi in exchange for free rent. Finally, several witnesses testified that Ege had expressed to them a desire to see Thompson killed. One witness testified that after Thompson became pregnant, Ege said to her, “Cindy [Thompson] was not going to have the baby; that she didn’t know how or why, and she didn’t want to get me involved, but that she wasn’t going to have the baby.” Another witness testified that Ege told her “she could stomp the baby out of her, slit her throat, rip her up in little pieces and think nothing of it.” Yet another witness testified that Ege told him she wanted Thompson “really hurt bad, either beat her up bad or kill her.”

1 Livor mortis, also known as postmortem lividity, is a form of skin discoloration caused by the settling of blood, often marking the location where a body suffered some sort of blow or trauma. DORLAND’S ILLUSTRATED MEDICAL DICTIONARY 1060 (30th ed. 2003). No. 05-2078 Ege v. Yukins Page 3

Ege denied virtually all of the allegations made by prosecution witnesses, and much of their testimony was called into serious question on cross-examination, either through impeachment or showing of bias. The defense’s theory of the case was that Ege could not have been at the crime scene on the evening of the murder because she was at home all evening, and that although there was perhaps some evidence pointing to her, a more compelling circumstantial case could in fact be made against several of the prosecution’s witnesses, including Davis. Davis admitted that he had been drinking most of the day and night prior to Thompson’s murder, and that by the time he decided to go to Thompson’s house on the morning of February 22, he had consumed approximately five bottles of wine. Davis’s presence at Thompson’s house coincided approximately with the time she died. His alibi that he was drinking at a friend’s house up until the time that he found Thompson’s body was largely undermined by the friend’s subsequent testimony that he and Davis were not in fact together that night. Also on cross-examination, Davis testified that he never believed that Ege had killed Thompson, and affirmed that Ege had in fact been home all night. The prosecution’s expert witness, Dr. Alan Warnick, opined that the mark found on Thompson’s cheek, which the original autopsy report had concluded was liver mortis, was actually a bite mark. Dr. Warnick was unable to examine the actual injury, because Thompson’s body was too badly decomposed upon exhumation nine years after the murder. Thus, Dr. Warnick relied on photographs of the mark which had been taken at the time of the initial autopsy, in 1984. Dr. Warnick compared dentitions of several suspects raised by the defense and found that none of them could have made the bite mark. He also checked Ege’s dentition and concluded that it was highly consistent with the bite mark. Dr. Warnick was asked by the prosecution, “Let’s say you have the Detroit Metropolitan Area, three, three and a half million people.

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Ege v. Yukins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ege-v-yukins-ca6-2007.