Francis Reed, Jr. v. Darrel Vannoy, Warden

703 F. App'x 264
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2017
Docket15-30237
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 703 F. App'x 264 (Francis Reed, Jr. v. Darrel Vannoy, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Francis Reed, Jr. v. Darrel Vannoy, Warden, 703 F. App'x 264 (5th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Petitioner-Appellant Francis Eugene Reed, Jr. filed this habeas petition seeking collateral review of his Louisiana aggravated rape conviction. The district court denied habeas relief but granted a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on one issue: whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach the victims’ testimony with prior inconsistent statements. For the reasons stated below, we AFFIRM,

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Trial

Reed was charged with and convicted of aggravated rape of his two minor step *266 daughters, KP-1 and KP-2. 1 According to the victims, their stepfather began abusing them in 2000. The victims both testified that Reed forced them to perform oral sex on him and engage in vaginal intercourse with him. Each of the victims testified that this abuse occurred about three times per week for four or five years.

According to KP-2’s friend Stephi King, one day in May 2005, she and KP-2 went to the victims’ house and found that the front door was locked. KP-1 came to the door in a long shirt. It was clear she had been crying. Stephi also saw Reed zipping up his fly and noticed a foul odor in the house. After KP-2 and Stephi stepped inside, KP-1 dropped something; when she picked it up, Stephi noticed that KP-1 was not wearing any underwear.

Based on this incident, Stephi suspected sexual abuse. On the advice of Stephi’s stepfather, Robert Jeanfreau, Stephi and her friend Stephanie Caballero wrote a letter to KP-2 asking her whether KP-1 was being abused. Stephanie testified that KP-2 initially denied the abuse, but shortly thereafter wrote the following letter:

Dear Steph, remember the question you asked me about [KP-1] and I, and I said no? No isn’t true. Yes. Yes would be the truthful answer, but [KP-1] likes it. She never cries about it. He does it to me, too. He makes us do other things, too. He makes us drink alcohol, too. I hate it. That’s not the reason she cries when he yelled at her. I don’t know that reason. Tell [another friend]. Just tell him what happens to me, and go home when my mom is not home. You can tell anyone who won’t tell anyone else.

Stephi gave this letter to Jeanfreau, who testified that he immediately notified the authorities. Luanne Mayfield from the Office of Community Services testified that she interviewed KP-2 at school shortly thereafter and that KP-2 confirmed the allegations of sexual abuse. That day, May-field also interviewed KP-1, who was home schooled. Although KP-1 was initially hesitant to talk, she eventually described the abuse in similar terms as KP-2.

Rachel Smith of the St. Tammany Parish Sheriffs Office testified that in May 2005, the victims recanted their story. Additionally, physical examinations did not reveal signs of abuse, although Dr. Adriana Jamis testified at trial that no physical signs were expected given the lapse of time between the abuse and the examinations. The authorities did find Reed’s semen on the carpet in KP-l’s and KP-2’s bedrooms. Later, in April 2006, the victims gave taped interviews at the Children’s Advocacy Center (“CAC”) during which they again confirmed the sexual abuse. The investigation culminated in Reed’s indictment on April 25, 2007. Reed pleaded not guilty, and the case went to trial.

Both KP-1 and KP-2 testified at trial. On cross-examination, Reed’s counsel did not impeach the victims based on inconsistent statements in the CAC tapes. But defense counsel did bring out the fact that both victims initially denied the abuse to several individuals. 2 At the conclusion of each victim’s testimony, defense counsel stipulated that the trial testimony was consistent with the taped CAC interview. The tapes were entered into evidence but not *267 played for the jury. Reed, testifying in his defense, denied his stepdaughters’ allegations of sexual abuse.

The jury convicted Reed of two counts of aggravated rape, for which he received two sentences of life imprisonment. The Louisiana appellate court affirmed the convictions and amended the sentences to life imprisonment at hard labor. State v. Reed, No. 2010-0571, 2010 WL 4272897 (La. Ct. App. Oct. 29, 2010). Reed did not seek review by the Louisiana Supreme Court.

B. Habeas Petitions

Reed filed his state application for post-conviction relief in November 2011. This application claimed ineffective assistance of counsel for, among other things, failing to impeach KP-1 and KP-2 with prior inconsistent statements made during the CAC interviews. The most significant of these inconsistencies concerns the day in May 2005 when Stephi first suspected sexual abuse. At trial, KP-1 testified:

I was being abused, and I heard a knock on the door, and it was [KP-2]. ... [Reed] said, don’t worry about it. I said, it’s [KP-2], let me go get the door. He said okay, and I opened the door, and it was [KP-2], and I know it was Stephi.

During the CAC interview, however, KP-1 stated that “nothing had happened” on that day. KP-1 explained that

whenever I told them about that day, I was veering around the truth because whenever [Stephi] came that day, nothing had happened to me. The reason why I was crying is because I got sent to my room. And I had a long shirt on and I had shorts underneath it. She just thought I had a shirt on. But nothing had happened.
But I just remember her coming to the door, and I was all hot-faced and red
[[Image here]]
INTERVIEWER: You said something about veering around the truth or something?
KP1: Uh-huh. What I mean was I knew what had happened, and, you know, I was just kind of, you know, saying, “This — no, this didn’t happen. This is what really happened.” You know, I was telling the truth, but on part of it, I wasn’t.
INTERVIEWER: What do you mean?
KP1: Like I was — whenever I was telling them that nothing happened that day that when [Stephi] came to the door, I was seriously just upset because I went to my room, you know. I was saying nothing happened.
INTERVIEWER: That day?
KP1: Nothing happened that day, you know. I was — I wasn’t actually saying nothing happened at all.

The Louisiana trial court dismissed Reed’s application in March 2012. In addressing counsel’s failure to impeach the victims’ testimony with statements made during their CAC interviews, the court noted that:

Trial counsel often choose not to have the victim’s interview shown to the jury, as more often than not any discrepancies between the child’s interview and the in court testimony are insignificant as weighed against the jury, having to hear the child discuss the events of offense that occurred years prior.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rodriguez v. Davis
W.D. Texas, 2020
Ramirez v. Davis
W.D. Texas, 2020

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
703 F. App'x 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-reed-jr-v-darrel-vannoy-warden-ca5-2017.