Engberg v. State of Wyoming

265 F.3d 1109, 2001 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4630, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 20362, 2001 WL 1044870
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 2001
Docket99-8092
StatusPublished
Cited by131 cases

This text of 265 F.3d 1109 (Engberg v. State of Wyoming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engberg v. State of Wyoming, 265 F.3d 1109, 2001 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4630, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 20362, 2001 WL 1044870 (10th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

SEYMOUR, Circuit Judgq.

Roy Lee Engberg seeks leave to appeal the denial of his federal motion for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We grant his request for a certificate of appealability 1 and affirm the judgment of the district court.

*1112 I

The resolution of Mr. Engberg’s claims depends in part on whether a piece of evidence excluded from trial was sufficient to cast doubt upon the verdict. His claims also raise detailed procedural concerns. Accordingly, we set out the trial evidence and procedural background of this case at some length.

Mr. Engberg escaped from a Missouri penitentiary in 1978 and began living under an assumed name with his wife and children in Casper, Wyoming. In late 1981 he was beset by financial difficulties: he had not drawn a paycheck in several weeks, he owed a previous employer for a salary advance, the rent on the family’s trailer was overdue, and the family was regularly pawning household goods to meet immediate needs. On December 22, Mr. Engberg and his family suddenly paid the rent on their trailer, filled their car with possessions, and left Casper.

Earlier on December 22, a Wells Fargo armored car was robbed as guards picked up approximately $4,200 in cash and $9,200 in other deposits from the Buttrey Food Store in Casper. The two Wells Fargo guards, Vernon Rogers and Kay Otto, were exiting the store when a man near the door said, “Hey!” As they turned to look at him, he pulled a gun and shot Mr. Rogers in the chest. Ms. Otto turned to run into the store, but as she entered the front doors she slipped and fell. The gunman approached her and repeatedly demanded that she surrender the bag of money. He took it from her and fled on foot through the store parking lot. He fired one shot in the direction of Robert Latham, a grocery checker who was leaving for the day. Ms. Otto told store personnel to summon the police and ran after the gunman. Warning a woman with a small child not to exit her car, Ms. Otto fired her own gun at the robber but she missed and he got away. Mr. Rogers, who was Ms. Otto’s brother, died at the scene.

Ms. Otto was taken to the police station, where police attempted to hypnotize her in order to enhance her recollection of the shooting. The hypnosis was reportedly unsuccessful, apparently because Ms. Otto was too upset to continue. She did, however, give some description of the gunman, stating that he was tall (around 5'10"), slender (155 to 160 pounds), forty to forty-five years old, and wearing a brown leather jacket and an orange ski cap. She assisted in the preparation of a composite drawing on December 23, and she returned to the police station on December 24 to make some alterations to the drawing. .

Other bystanders also gave descriptions of the armed robber. All described him as tall.(around six feet in height), slim (with estimates ranging from 160 to 200 pounds), in his late twenties or early thirties, and wearing a brown or tan coat. Descriptions of his hair and other clothing varied slightly. One customer remembered the gunman as having light or blond hair and possibly a moustache. Two customers described him as wearing a dark stocking cap, but another customer did not remember a hat. Robert Latham, who had been shot at after making eye contact with the gunman in the parking lot, remembered the man as having reddish blond hair and a beard and wearing an old army coat and gold-rimmed glasses. After reading newspaper accounts of the shooting, however, Mr. Latham decided this description was mistaken and in fact matched another man in the crowd rather than the gunman. His later descriptions of the gunman matched that given by the other witnesses. A composite sketch of the gunman described by Ms. Otto and the other eyewitnesses was published in the local newspapers.

*1113 Investigating officers recovered several spent bullets from the crime scene and from Vernon Rogers’ body. The bullets were a relatively unusual type of .38 caliber known as “S & W.” Forensic testing indicated the bullets had been fired from a revolver made by one of two companies, Armenius or FIE.

There was a break in the case on New Year’s Day. Mr. Engberg’s wife, Donna, contacted the police in Las Vegas, Nevada, and explained that her husband was holding her and her two small children as virtual hostages and that she feared for her life. She told police her husband had come home on December 22 with a large sum of cash and informed her the family would be leaving Casper immediately. Traveling under assumed names, they made their way to Las Vegas. When their 1970 Plymouth broke down in Rawlins, Wyoming, they had it towed to a garage. They purchased a 1975 Plymouth sedan for $1,550 in cash and continued on then-way. Once they reached Las Vegas, Mrs. Engberg explained her husband had obtained a copy of a Wyoming newspaper carrying a story of the robbery and the sketch of the gunman. She stated that upon seeing the story, she realized the gunman was her husband. Mrs. Engberg later reportedly recanted these statements, telling a friend she did not believe in her husband’s guilt and had made her statements to Las Vegas police as retaliation for spousal abuse.

Las Vegas police contacted the Casper police department to verify information on the December 22 robbery and murder and to notify the Casper authorities of the information provided by Mrs. Engberg. After obtaining Mrs. Engberg’s permission, Las Vegas officers searched the Eng-bergs’ car. They also attempted to enter the family’s hotel room, but Mr. Engberg attacked the officers and attempted to escape. He was injured in the ensuing struggle, arrested, and taken to the hospital for surgery.

The case against Mr. Engberg developed rapidly at that point. A brown jacket and dark orange stocking cap were found in his car in Las Vegas. S & W .38 caliber rounds were found in his hotel room in Las Vegas, his abandoned car in Rawlins, and his trailer in Casper. Pawn shop records in Casper showed he had pawned and redeemed a .38 caliber Armenius revolver a few weeks before the robbery. Vacationers then discovered the abandoned Wells Fargo bag containing the route clipboard and Buttrey deposit bag in a gravel pile outside Rawlins. Police photographed Mr. Engberg at the hospital, although he refused to be photographed wearing the stocking cap found in his car. When a photo lineup was presented to Kay Otto and Robert Latham, both identified Mr. Engberg as the gunman.

Mr. Engberg was tried in Wyoming state court in 1982 for aggravated robbery and first-degree felony murder. The case against him included descriptions of the scene by Kay Otto and other eyewitnesses, and testimony linking the relatively rare .38 caliber S & W cartridges found at the crime scene with Mr. Engberg’s Armenius revolver and .38 S & W cartridges. Testimony also established the Engbergs’ dire financial situation, sudden flight from Cas-per on the day of the robbery, use of assumed names, and cash outlay for a car in Rawlins, as well as the discovery of the brown jacket and stocking cap in the Eng-bergs’ car. Mrs. Engberg invoked her spousal privilege and did not testify; her earlier statements both for and against her husband’s guilt were excluded as hearsay. Mr.

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265 F.3d 1109, 2001 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4630, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 20362, 2001 WL 1044870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engberg-v-state-of-wyoming-ca10-2001.