Fenney v. Beltz

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMarch 11, 2022
Docket0:21-cv-01679
StatusUnknown

This text of Fenney v. Beltz (Fenney v. Beltz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fenney v. Beltz, (mnd 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA JUSTIN MICHAEL FENNEY,

Civil No. 21-1679 (JRT/HB) Petitioner,

v. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

DISMISSING PETITION FOR WRIT OF TRACY BELTZ, HABEAS CORPUS

Respondent.

Zachary A. Longsdorf, LONGSDORF LAW FIRM, PLC, 5854 Blackshire Path, Suite 3, Inner Grove Heights, MN 55076, for petitioner.

Jeffrey Wald, RAMSEY COUNTY ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, 345 Wabasha St. N, Saint Paul, MN 55102; and Matthew Frank, MINNESOTA ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE, 445 Minnesota Street, Suite 1800, Saint Paul, MN 55101, for respondent.

Justin Michael Fenney filed a Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus (“Petition”), pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, alleging he is in custody in violation of the laws of the United States. (Pet. Writ Habeas Corpus (“Pet.”), July 21, 2021, Docket No. 1.) Specifically, Fenney alleges the Minnesota state courts made an unreasonable determination of fact when he was denied relief based upon allegedly newly discovered evidence Fenney claims demonstrates a prosecution witness in his trial provided false testimony. (Pet. at 5); see also 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). Respondent moved to dismiss Fenney’s Petition on three procedural grounds and on the merits. (Mot. Dismiss, Aug. 23, 2021, Docket No. 6; Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss, Aug. 23, 2021, Docket No. 7.) The Magistrate Judge issued a Report and Recommendation (“R&R”)1 recommending that, although Fenney’s petition was not an unauthorized “second or

successive” petition, it should be denied because it is untimely and because Fenney did not present a claim for relief arising under federal law to the state courts. (R&R at 8–20, Nov. 19, 2021, Docket No. 14.) Fenney timely objected to the R&R. (Obj. R&R, Dec. 3, 2021, Docket No. 15.)

Because Fenney had actual knowledge of the factual predicate for his claim by May 2018, his petition is untimely. Therefore, the Court will overrule the objection and adopt the recommendation of the R&R. The Court, however, will limit its holding just to this

finding. BACKGROUND Petitioner Justin Michael Fenney was convicted after a bench trial in Minnesota state court on one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. See State v. Fenney

(“Fenney I”), No. A13-0978, 2015 WL 1880185 (Minn. Ct. App. Apr. 27, 2015); Fenney v. State (“Fenney II”), No. A19-2053, 2020 WL 5361660 (Minn. Ct. App. Sept. 8, 2020). The Minnesota Court of Appeals partially summarized the trial court’s findings of fact: Fenney and L.H. had been in a tumultuous 11-year relationship and have one child in common. On October 25, 2012, L.H. drank alcohol throughout the day and into the

1 The R&R was issued by then-Magistrate Judge Katharine Menendez before her confirmation as a District Court Judge. After Judge Menendez’s confirmation, the case was assigned to Magistrate Judge Hildy Bowbeer, but Magistrate Judge Bowbeer was not involved in the R&R at issue here. evening and was engaged in a sexual act with another man on her living-room couch when Fenney walked into her apartment around 10:00 p.m. Fenney was furious. L.H. ran into her bedroom, where their nine-year-old daughter was sleeping, and closed the door. As Fenney kicked the bedroom door open, the other man ran from the apartment. Fenney proceeded to beat L.H., repeatedly hitting and kicking her. Although L.H.'s alcohol consumption limited her recall, she remembered the angry look on Fenney’s face as he choked her and her pleas to stop as she lay on the bathroom floor with her nose bleeding profusely into the toilet. She also remembered being on the floor between the bathroom and living room with her hands behind her back and feeling a pain in her “bottom.” She passed out, and when she woke up, her “bottom” hurt. She did not know whether or not Fenney had anally penetrated her with an object. When the police arrived, they found a toilet brush with a bloody handle in the bathroom. The blood covered five and one-half inches of the handle. Officers also discovered fecal matter on the bathroom floor just inside the threshold of the door. A paramedic observed that L.H.’s nose was deformed and that she had a swollen and bloodied face. She also had blood running down her leg. L.H. indicated to the paramedic that the back of her groin area hurt. The paramedic asked L.H. if Fenney had assaulted her with the toilet-brush handle, and L.H. indicated “yes” by nodding. Later, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) conducted DNA testing of the blood on the toilet-brush handle and concluded that DNA from the blood matched L.H.’s DNA. Fenney I, 2015 WL 1880185, at *1. After she was transported to the hospital, L.H. underwent surgery to repair lacerations and perforations to her rectal wall. Id. The doctor discovered a one-inch external injury, a four-inch internal tear, and a one-inch internal perforation breaching the rectal wall. Id. The doctor who performed surgery on L.H. opined that her injuries were consistent with penetration by a toilet-brush handle. Id. When the police asked L.H. if she believed she was sexually assaulted with the toilet brush, she stated “I know I

was.” Id. at *2. During trial, however, L.H. testified that she did not know whether Fenney anally penetrated her. Id. When police questioned Fenney, they informed him that L.H.’s “private areas” were injured without mentioning any anal injuries or otherwise referencing her buttocks

or anus, and asked Fenney how these injuries may have happened. Id. Fenney responded that he did not do anything to her “bottom.” Id. In addition to this evidence, D.W., the man who was with L.H. and fled after

Fenney’s arrival, also testified at the trial. Fenney II, 2020 WL 5361660, at *1. D.W. testified that when he left the apartment (1) L.H. was physically unhurt; (2) L.H. had not complained about any physical injury; (3) there was no blood on any floors or walls; (4) there was no fecal matter on the bathroom floor; and (5) there was no bloody toilet brush

handle on the bathroom floor. Id. After sentencing, L.H. provided a statement that differed somewhat from her trial testimony. Fenney I, 2015 WL 1880185, at *2. At trial, L.H. testified that the pain in her rectum occurred “simultaneously with a kick when she was ‘part way in the living room

[and] part way in the bathroom’ and her ‘hands were behind [her] back.’” Id. (alterations in original). After sentencing, L.H. stated that Fenney had “flung” her to the bathroom wall and that, when she hit the wall, she “felt something sho[o]t up [her] back.” Id. Fenney sought postconviction relief based on L.H.’s new testimony. The district court and court of appeals denied the motion concluding that physical and medical evidence and

Fenney’s statement that he did not do anything to L.H.’s “bottom” although he had not been told of any rectal injuries provided sufficient basis to establish Fenney’s guilt. Id. at *4–5. The district court asserted that it did not rely heavily on L.H.’s testimony, and the postconviction courts concluded that even if L.H. had not testified, it would have

“change[d] very little about the overall evidence.” Id. at *6–7. In May 2018, Fenney received a letter from D.W. (Pet. at 6.) According to Fenney, D.W. stated in the letter that he “felt his testimony did not fully explain everything that

had happened between he and LH. Specifically, [D.W.] stated that he and LH had engaged in consensual anal intercourse immediately prior to Mr. Fenney arriving.” (Id.) Fenney had an investigator meet with D.W. (Id.) The investigator obtained an affidavit dated March 25, 2019 from D.W. confirming the contents of the May 2018 letter. (Id.)

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