Gibbs v. Campbell

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 1, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-13273
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Gibbs v. Campbell, (E.D. Mich. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

ALVIN JUNIOR GIBBS,

Petitioner, Case No. 2:18-cv-13273 v. Paul D. Borman SHERMAN CAMPBELL, United States District Judge

Respondent. ___________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING THE HABEAS CORPUS PETITION, DECLINING TO ISSUE A CERTIFICATE OF APPEALABILITY, AND GRANTING PERMISSION TO APPEAL IN FORMA PAUPERIS

Petitioner Alvin Junior Gibbs, a state prisoner in the custody of the Michigan Department of Corrections, seeks a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (ECF No. 1.) Petitioner alleges in his habeas petition that his state sentencing guidelines were miscalculated. (Id. at PgID 5.)1 He also seems to be arguing, as he did in state court, that he was denied effective assistance of trial and appellate counsel because his trial attorney miscalculated the sentencing guidelines during plea negotiations and his appellate attorney did not argue that issue on appeal. (Id. at PgID 17.)

1 At the time, Michigan’s sentencing guidelines created a range within which the trial court had to set the minimum sentence. See People v. Drohan, 475 Mich. 140, 161 (2006), abrogated in part on other grounds by People v. Lockridge, 498 Mich. 358 (2015). The maximum sentence is set by law. Id. Respondent Sherman Campbell argues in an answer to the habeas petition that Petitioner’s challenge to the calculation of the sentencing guidelines is not

cognizable on habeas review and that all of Petitioner’s claims are procedurally defaulted and meritless. (ECF No. 7, PgID 67-68.) The Court agrees that Petitioner’s claims do not warrant relief. Accordingly, the habeas petition will be

denied. The Court also is denying a certificate of appealability, and granting leave to appeal in forma pauperis. I. Background A. The Charge, Rejection of a Plea Offer, and Jury Trial

Petitioner was charged with unarmed robbery, see Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.530, as a fourth habitual offender, see Mich. Comp. Laws § 769.12. The charge arose from a purse-snatching incident in Wyoming, Michigan on June 7,

2012. Before trial, the prosecutor offered to dismiss the habitual-offender enhancement if Petitioner pleaded guilty, as charged, to unarmed robbery. The elimination of the habitual-offender enhancement meant that the maximum penalty

of life imprisonment for a fourth, felony offender was reduced to 15 years. The prosecutor and defense counsel also projected that the sentencing guidelines would be 43 to 86 months, instead of 43 to 172 months. See Defendant’s

Acknowledgement and Rejection of Prosecutor’s Offer of a Plea Agreement and Notice of Intent to Proceed to Trial Without Further Plea Bargaining (ECF No. 1, PgID 30). On August 28, 2012, Petitioner rejected the prosecutor’s offer. See id.

In 2013, the trial date was postponed two times for further plea negotiations. See Kent County Circuit Court Register of Actions, docket entries 34 and 36 (ECF 8-1, PgID 125). Although the parties apparently reached a tentative agreement, a

plea hearing scheduled for July 16, 2013, was cancelled when Petitioner declined to plead guilty. See id., docket entries 37-38. Petitioner’s jury trial began on August 26, 2013. See 8/26/13 Trial Tr. (ECF No. 8-2). The victim, Lisa Ann Rizvi, testified that, on June 7, 2012, she stopped

at a gas station on the corner of 36th Street and Clyde Park Avenue in the city of Wyoming, Michigan. After filling her gas tank, she got back in her car, but before she could close the car door, a man reached over her, grabbed her purse, and left.

She called 911, and a police officer arrived shortly afterward. She provided a description of the robber, and the officer subsequently took her to a location where she identified Petitioner as the robber. The police also found her purse, and she was able to identify some things, such as hand lotion, gum, and lip gloss, which

had been in her purse. The police also recovered some cash that was folded like the cash which was in her purse before the incident. See 8/27/13 Trial Tr. at pp. 23-36 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 163-66). Michael Young was present at the gas station during the robbery. He heard the victim scream and saw someone wrestling or tussling inside the victim’s car. He

did not get a close enough look at the person to be able to identify him, but he saw the man leave with a purse, and he informed the police that the man ran down 36th Street. See id. at pp. 47-54 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 169-70).

Erich Staman was the first police officer to respond to the crime scene. He took the victim to the Foxcroft Apartments where some other officers thought they had captured the suspect. After the victim identified the detained man and some personal items that had been in her purse, Staman canvassed the area and located

the victim’s purse. See id. at pp. 54-62 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 170-72). Police Officer Blair Shellenbarger responded to the Foxcroft Apartments after receiving information that the suspect was there. A resident informed

Shellenbarger that someone had tried to enter the resident’s apartment and was hiding behind a hallway door on the second floor of the building. Shellenbarger found the suspect and took him into custody without incident. He searched the man and found some personal items, including $24.00 in neatly folded bills, a tube

of hand lotion, a package of gum, and two tubes of lip gloss. At trial, Shellenbarger identified Petitioner as the man he arrested and searched. See id. at pp. 69-74 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 174-75). Police Officer Kelli Duimstra also went to the Foxcroft Apartments to look for the suspect. Some other officers took Petitioner into custody, but she

transported Petitioner to the county jail and interviewed him. Petitioner told her that he had been looking for his friend “Q” who had dropped him off near the Foxcroft Apartments and told him to wait there while “Q” tried to find some

“smokes.” When Duimstra asked Petitioner why he had women’s cosmetics in his pocket, he told her that the items belonged to his girlfriend who had left the cosmetics in Q’s car. Petitioner also denied being at any gas stations that day, and even though he provided two addresses as his current address, Duimstra

determined that neither address was valid. See id. at pp. 80-86 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 177-78). On recross-examination, Duimstra admitted that Petitioner was not wearing

a dark blue shirt or white hat, as described by witnesses to the incident. However, he did match the description of the suspect as being short and having a thin build. Id. at p. 93 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 180). The trial court allowed the prosecutor to present evidence that in 2005,

Petitioner pleaded guilty to a charge of unarmed robbery. The crime in that case also involved snatching a purse from a female victim and running away. See id. at pp. 99-103 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 182-83). Petitioner did not testify or present any witnesses. See id. at p. 103 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 183). His defense was that the victim had misidentified him as the

robber. See id. at pp. 20-22 (ECF No. 8-3, PgID 162); 8/28/13 Trial Tr. at pp. 17- 25 (ECF No. 8-4, PgID 189-191). On August 28, 2013, the jury found Petitioner guilty as charged. See 8/28/13 Trial Tr. at p. 51 (ECF No. 8-4, PgID 198).

B. The Sentence

Two days before his sentencing, Petitioner wrote to the trial judge and stated that he had talked to defense counsel on July 14 and July 15 and that defense counsel had said the sentencing guidelines were 36 to 142 months.

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