Gamba M. Rastafari, A/K/A Gregory Rouster v. Rondle Anderson

278 F.3d 673, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 846, 2002 WL 75858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 22, 2002
Docket00-4063
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 278 F.3d 673 (Gamba M. Rastafari, A/K/A Gregory Rouster v. Rondle Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gamba M. Rastafari, A/K/A Gregory Rouster v. Rondle Anderson, 278 F.3d 673, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 846, 2002 WL 75858 (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner, Gamba Rastafari, a/k/a Gregory Rouster (“Rouster”), was convicted of two counts of felony murder in Indiana state court after a joint jury trial with two co-defendants. At the jury’s recommendation, the trial judge sentenced Rouster to death. After exhausting his state remedies, Rouster filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Northern District of Indiana. Rouster now appeals the denial of his habeas petition, alleging the following: 1) that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for severance prior to trial; 2) that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for severance prior to the penalty phase; and 3) that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present expert testimony on self-defense. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I. Facts

A Background

John and Henrietta Rease, an elderly couple who lived in Gary, Indiana, cared *676 for, fed, and housed foster children at their home at 2430 Jennings Street in exchange for $160 per month per child. One such foster child was Rouster, who lived with the Reases from November 1985 until his eighteenth birthday on February 7, 1986. On August 12, 1986, the Reases were robbed and shot to death in their home. Police arrested Rouster, Darnell Williams, Theresa Newsome, and Edwin Taylor and charged them each by information with two counts of felony murder. Ind.Code § 35-42-l-l(2). 1 Further, the State sought the death penalty against Rouster and Williams pursuant to Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9, Indiana’s death penalty statute.

At the Initial Hearing, public defender Robert Lewis was appointed to represent Rouster, and Rouster entered a plea of not guilty on both counts. On January 7, 1987, Noah Holcomb was appointed as additional counsel to aid Lewis in representing Rouster. On February 3, 1987, Williams filed a motion for severance, asking the court to “sever him from the trial of the remainder of the defendants herein ... [because] his interests, rights and his defenses hereto will be prejudiced if he is tried with the remainder of the defendants herein.” Williams’ motion to sever was denied, and Rouster never filed a motion to sever.

B. The Crimes

Rouster’s joint trial with Williams and Newsome 2 began on February 10, 1987, at which time Rouster’s counsel waived opening statement. Neither Rouster nor Williams testified, but the following evidence was adduced at trial through direct and cross-examination of the State’s witnesses and through the admission of 70 trial exhibits consisting of physical evidence and of photographs.

Jack Baumer, the child welfare caseworker who placed Rouster with the Reas-es, testified that he saw Rouster at a drug store in Gary, Indiana on August 12, 1986. Rouster asked Baumer if the Reases received a clothing allowance on his behalf during the time Rouster lived with them. Baumer responded that the Reases received a clothing allowance of about five to six dollars per month, and Rouster told him that he had never received any clothing from the Reases. According to Bau-mer, Rouster ended the conversation by saying that he was going to get his money from the Reases.

Derrick Bryant, a seventeen-year-old foster child who lived with the Reases, testified that on August 12, 1986, he was in the living room of the Rease house. Through a window in the living room, Bryant saw Rouster, Williams, Newsome, and Kim Toney (“Four”) 3 walking towards the Rease house at around 9:00 p.m. Bryant testified that while walking toward the Rease house, Rouster was drinking from a 40-ounce bottle of Private Label malt liquor. The Four entered the Rease house and sat down in the living room, and Rouster and Henrietta Rease went into Rouster’s former bedroom to talk. 4 Bryant testified that while he was in the living room, he heard Rouster state that Baumer had told him that he was supposed to get some money from the Reases. *677 Bryant also testified that Henrietta Rease responded that she did not know anything about that money. Bryant stated that Rouster and Henrietta Rease returned to the living room, at which time Bryant then left the living room and went to a room at the back of the house.

From the back room, Bryant heard Henrietta Rease ask the Four to leave the house. Bryant testified that he then heard Williams say, “I won’t let her, she’s doing nothing but gypping you out of the money.” Bryant then heard a gunshot and someone running through the backyard. He testified that the gunshot sounded like it was fired outside of the Rease house. Bryant then went upstairs to hide in the attic. While in the attic, he heard a conversation take place outside between Williams, Rouster, and Edwin Taylor, another foster child living with the Reases. According to Bryant, Taylor said, “you all have guns, you all go take the money.” Bryant stated that Rouster asked Taylor where the Reases kept their money, to which Taylor responded, “it’s on the dresser.” Bryant then testified that he heard Rouster say, “let’s go roh them.”

Bryant ran downstairs to warn the Reases, but when he saw Rouster coming into the Rease house through the front door, he hid behind a stairway. He then heard Rouster tell Henrietta Rease, “I know how to act now and I don’t need us to go through this because I got a gun and you got a gun.” Bryant heard Williams tell Henrietta Rease to get down on the floor and heard Rouster demand to be told where the money was. Next, Bryant heard Rouster say, “bring both of them back here,” and Bryant heard a noise that sounded like someone falling into a wall. Because he was hiding behind the stairs, Bryant could not determine where in the house this activity took place. Bryant testified that Williams then said, “it’s your time.” Bryant then heard Rouster say, “waste them.” Bryant stated that Henrietta Rease asked Rouster, “Greg, why are you doing this?” to which Rouster responded, “my name ain’t Greg.” Bryant then heard a gunshot, followed by someone entering the Rease house through a side-door in the kitchen. The next noise that Bryant heard sounded like money falling on the kitchen floor. Bryant heard more gunshots coming from inside of the house, at which time he ran out of the back door of the house. Bryant testified that he then flagged down a police car and told the police to come to the Rease house. Finally, Bryant testified that he knew that the Reases kept at least one pellet gun in the house, and that Taylor told him that Henrietta Rease kept a gun by her bed.

Fourteen-year-old Eugene Powell testified that,at around, 8:30 or 9:00 p.m. on August 12, 1986, he was standing outside of his house at 2423 Jennings Street (across the street and one house over from the Rease House) with friends Jamal Pope, Demond Ligón, Jimmy Gray, and others (“Group”). Powell saw Rouster, New-some, a young man, and a young woman walking towards the Rease House.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 F.3d 673, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 846, 2002 WL 75858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamba-m-rastafari-aka-gregory-rouster-v-rondle-anderson-ca7-2002.