Evans v. Mitchell

344 F. App'x 234
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2009
Docket02-4339
StatusUnpublished

This text of 344 F. App'x 234 (Evans v. Mitchell) 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
Evans v. Mitchell, 344 F. App'x 234 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Derrick Evans seeks review of the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Evans was convicted in Ohio state court for aggravated robbery and murder. The district court denied the habeas petition on all grounds, but granted a certifícate of ap-pealability on five grounds: (1) Whether Evans’s Sixth Amendment right was violated because the district court allowed a seven-year-old witness to testify; (2) Whether Evans was denied due process because the prosecution withheld a police report and did not inform Evans that a witness was testifying pursuant to a plea agreement; (3) Whether Evans was denied due process because the jury was given outdated instructions regarding accomplice testimony; (4) Whether the prosecutor violated Evans’s due process rights by referring to the victim and asking for justice during closing arguments; and (5) Whether the accumulation of the trial errors denied Evans of a fair trial.

None of these claims provides grounds for habeas corpus relief.

I.

On the evening of March 25,1987, Joann Richards and Marcellus Williams were stabbed and killed in their apartment in Cleveland, Ohio. Williams’s nineteen-year-old son, Derek Speights, was also stabbed but survived the attack. Richards’s sons, a seven-year-old named Albert and an infant, were also at the apartment that evening. The apartment was robbed during the course of the attack.

The Ohio Supreme Court summarized the case’s history as follows:

*236 On April 6, 1987, a Cuyahoga County Grand Jury issued a six-count indictment naming [Evans], Wayne Frazier and Michael Frazier as the perpetrators of the stabbings. The first two counts in the indictment charged [Evans] and the Fraziers with the aggravated murders of Joann Richards and Marcellus Williams, respectively, each in violation of Ohio R.C. 2903.01. With respect to [Evans], the counts each carried three death-penalty specifications.... Also with respect to [Evans], each aggravated murder count contained an aggravated-felony specification and a gun specification.
Count three of the indictment charged [Evans] and the Fraziers with aggravated burglary of the Richards residence in violation of Ohio R.C. 2911.11, and count four charged [Evans] and the Fraziers with the attempted murder of Derek Speights in violation of Ohio R.C. 2903.02 and 2923.02. Both counts three and four contained the same aggravated felony and gun specifications as in counts one and two.
Count five of the indictment charged [Evans] and the Fraziers with aggravated robbery of Marcellus Williams, and count six charged [Evans] and the Frazi-ers with aggravated robbery of Joann Richards, both in violation of Ohio R.C. 2911.01. Each count also contained the same aggravated felony and gun specifications as in counts one, two, three and four.
[Evans] entered a plea of not guilty to each of the counts in the indictment. He proceeded to trial on all the charges....
The prosecution’s chief witness, Derek M. Speights, testified that on March 25, 1987 at about 10:00 p.m., [Evans] and the Fraziers pulled up in an orange Che-vette shortly after Speights left a store across the street from his father’s home where he had gone to purchase a beer. He identified Wayne Frazier as the driver of the car, Michael Frazier as a passenger in the back seat and [Evans] as the front seat passenger. Speights stated that they asked him if his father was home, to which he responded affirmatively. Speights then was told to tell his father they would be back to see him. Speights related that approximately one-half hour after his encounter with [Evans] and the Fraziers, the three came to the apartment and knocked on the door. Speights let them into the apartment and they all sat down, with Wayne Frazier sitting on the couch next to Joann Richards and Michael Frazier and [Evans] sitting together on a love seat.
According to the testimony, after about five minutes of general conversation, [Evans] suddenly jumped up with a gun, ran over to Williams and put the gun to Williams’s head. [Evans] asked for some money and told “nobody to move.” Speights stated that at that same moment, Wayne Frazier ran over to Joann Richards with a knife, and Michael Frazier knocked him (Derek) to the floor. While Speights was down, he could see what appeared to him to be Wayne Frazier stabbing Richards. Speights also observed [Evans] knock Williams down, tie him up with a telephone cord, and stab him on both sides.
At some point during the incident, Michael Frazier tied Speights’s hands behind his back with a towel. Michael Frazier then stabbed Speights twenty-one times before he, Speights, was hit in the head with a gun. After Speights was stabbed, he saw Wayne Frazier run into one of the bedrooms and grab a television set. Speights also observed [Evans] take money from Williams’s pockets.
*237 Speights further testified as to various orders [Evans] gave to Wayne and Michael Frazier during the entire incident, including an order to kill Speights if he moved, and an order to Wayne Frazier to grab Richards. In his opinion, it was “[l]ike they planned it because the way it happened, as soon as he [Evans] moved, they [the Fraziers] all moved after him.” After the trio left the apartment, Speights tried to get up, but could not walk. He testified that he then crawled over to his father and kicked him to see if he was alive, but his father did not respond. Speights then crawled to the stairway and rolled down the steps, where a tenant who lived downstairs found him. An ambulance was summoned, and after two days of hospitalization for his injuries, Speights gave police the names of the perpetrators. After the court held a hearing to determine whether seven-year-old Albert Richards was competent to testify, the court found him qualified, and permitted the jury to hear his testimony. Albert testified that, after being put to bed at about 9:00 p.m., he was awakened by banging noises. He got out of bed and saw Wayne Frazier, whom he referred to as “Twin,” stabbing his mother on the couch. He also testified that he saw [Evans], known to him as “Da Da,” run out of the apartment with a television. Albert further testified that he observed Wayne Frazier kick his father, Williams, in the eye, and that he did not look for Speights because he (Albert) hid under the bed until the police came. After telling the police officers who arrived on the scene not to shoot him, that “he was a kid,” he came out from under the bed and was picked up by one of the officers, and was taken downstairs. Subsequently, Albert gave the police a statement describing the incident that evening.
On March 26, 1987, after speaking with Albert, the police apprehended Wayne Frazier at about 4:00 a.m. After interviewing Wayne, the police learned of two locations where various items relating to the crime were located. At one location, the police found items belonging to the victims including personal papers and Williams’s prescription bottle, a buck knife ..., and a television. At a second location, the police found pieces of burnt clothing and a bottle of cologne that had been used to ignite the clothing.

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Bluebook (online)
344 F. App'x 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-mitchell-ca6-2009.