Green-Anderson v. Florida Attorney General

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 21, 2020
Docket9:19-cv-80421
StatusUnknown

This text of Green-Anderson v. Florida Attorney General (Green-Anderson v. Florida Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green-Anderson v. Florida Attorney General, (S.D. Fla. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

Case No. 19-cv-80421-BLOOM/Reid

CYNTHIA GREEN-ANDERSON,

Petitioner,

v.

MARK S. INCH,

Respondent. /

ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS THIS CAUSE is before the Court upon pro se Petitioner Cynthia Green-Anderson’s (“Petitioner”) Amended Petition Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 for Writ of Habeas Corpus, attacking her conviction for conspiracy to commit first degree murder in case number 2008-CF-011256-AMB from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit in Palm Beach County, Florida. ECF No. [7] (“Petition”). The Court issued an Order to Show Cause requiring that Respondent Mark S. Inch (“Respondent”) file a response to the Petition, ECF No. [8], which Respondent timely filed, ECF No. [10] (“Response”). Petitioner further filed a reply, ECF No. [15] (“Reply”). The Court has carefully reviewed the Petition, all opposing and supporting submissions, the record in this case, the applicable law, and is otherwise fully advised. For the reasons discussed below, the Petition is denied. I. BACKGROUND A. Procedural History Petitioner was charged with attempted first-degree murder with a firearm (Count I), conspiracy to commit first degree murder with a firearm (Count II), and being a felon in possession of a firearm (Count III). ECF No. [11-1] at 2-4. A jury found her guilty of Count II. Id. at 6-8. Petitioner later entered a plea of guilty to Count III. Id. at 11. After the court adjudicated her guilty, it imposed a sentence twenty years for Count II and a concurrent five years sentence for Count III. Id. at 13-17. Petitioner appealed. Id. at 19-20. The state appellate court affirmed the Petitioner’s conviction and sentence in a per curiam opinion. Id. at 133. The court denied Petitioner’s motion

for rehearing. Id. at 135-47. Petitioner then sought post-conviction relief in the state trial court pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850.1 Id. at 159-265. She raised twenty-two claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. Id. Of relevance to the instant proceeding, Petitioner argued that counsel was ineffective for (1) misadvising Petitioner not to testify in her own defense; (2) agreeing to play only redacted versions of phone conversations between Petitioner and her husband; and (3) failing to present evidence of the victim’s prior violent history and domestic violence injunctions. Id. The State filed a response to the motions. Id. at 267-300; ECF No. [11-2] at 1-4. The state trial court adopted the reasoning of the State’s response and denied the relief without an evidentiary hearing.

ECF No. [11-5] at 216-17. The appellate court affirmed the denial. ECF No. [11-6] at 58. The Mandate issued on May 11, 2018. Id. at 60.2 Petitioner filed this § 2254 petition on October 27, 2017. ECF No. [1]. She raises seven claims of ineffective assistance of counsel.

1 Petitioner filed multiple motions and amendments; those pleadings presented twenty-two claims for relief. Petitioner also a moved for mitigation of her sentence. ECF No. [11-1] at 149-155. The trial court denied the motion. Id. at 157.

2 During the pendency of the motion to vacate, Petitioner filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the state appellate court raising three claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. [Id. at 62-71]. The petition was denied. ECF No. [11-7] at 3. During the pendency of the motion to vacate, Petitioner filed a motion to correct an illegal sentence. Id. at 5-8. The motion was denied. Id. at 10-11. The denial was affirmed on appeal. Id. at 26. Neither of these proceedings is relevant to the instant habeas petition. B. Underlying Facts The victim, Jerry Logan, testified that he met Petitioner and her husband in 2005. ECF No. [12-3] at 89. He and Petitioner eventually developed an intimate relationship and began living together. Id. at 91. According to the victim, the relationship had its ups and downs. Id. at 92. She sometimes called the police on him and he was arrested. Id. At some point, she obtained a

restraining order against the victim. Id. at 94. The relationship lasted for three years and ended when the victim went to jail in 2007. Id. at 93. The victim relocated to Port Charlotte, Florida, but returned eight months later. Id. at 95. Despite the restraining order, Petitioner asked the victim to come to her house to pick up some mail. Id. at 97. The two renewed their intimate relationship. Id. at 98. About a week later, the victim learned that Petitioner was married when she showed him a DVD of her wedding. Id. They continued the relationship in spite of her being married. Id. at 99. The victim spent many nights at Petitioner’s home. Id. He would eat there and kept his clothes at her house. Id. at 100. Petitioner told the victim that her husband was working in Georgia. Id. When her husbanded called,

she would tell the victim to be quiet. Id. The victim believed that Petitioner intended to leave her husband. Id. at 102. On one occasion when the husband called, the victim answered the phone and told the husband that he was the reason his wife would not come visit. Id. at 106. Petitioner became upset, so the victim left. Id. at 107. Petitioner called the police who arrested the victim for violating the restraining order. Id. at 108. At some point later, Petitioner came to pick up the victim. Id. at 109. She said she called the police because the victim had answered the phone. Id. The victim and Petitioner continued seeing each other. Id. at 110. Petitioner would sometimes pick up the victim and other times she would invite him over. Id. at 111-12. On the Wednesday before the shooting, Petitioner picked up the victim. Id. at 115. He stayed the night and she drove him back home the next morning. Id. at 116. Petitioner did not mention that her husband was getting out of jail. Id. at 117. She asked the victim to call her later

that evening. Id. at 118. When he called later that day, Petitioner did not answer. Id. When he finally contacted her Friday night, she sounded hysterical on the phone. Id. at 124. Petitioner told the victim that her husband was out of jail on a furlough. Id. at 125. Later that night, the husband called Petitioner’s house while she was on the phone with the victim. Id. at 126. It was clear from what the husband was saying that he knew that Petitioner and the victim had been together. Id. at 127. The victim advised Petitioner to call the police. Id. at 128. She said that she would call him back after she called the police. Id. He waited for her call, but eventually he called her back. Id. at 129. He tried many times to reach her, but she did not answer. Id. He finally contacted her, at which time she asked him to come by her house the next day to

watch her dogs because she had to go to Miami, Florida. Id. at 132. She told the victim she would leave a key on the back porch and $20.00 so he could get cigarettes and beer until she got back. Id. at 133. The victim went to the house twice the next day. Id. at 136. The first time he had to leave because the gate was locked, and he could not reach Petitioner to have someone open the gate for him. Id. at 136-37. After speaking to Petitioner, he returned with three others. Id. at 138. Upon arriving, he jumped over the locked gate and passed through a second gate. Id. at 139. He went to the back of the house but did not find the key or money. Id. at 140. As he came from the back of the house, the victim encountered Petitioner’s husband who was wearing latex gloves and holding a handgun. Id. at 142, 147. As the victim turned to run, the husband shot him in the leg. Id. at 147. Petitioner then approached the victim and the husband gave the gun to Petitioner and told her to finish killing him. Id. at 148-49.

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Green-Anderson v. Florida Attorney General, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-anderson-v-florida-attorney-general-flsd-2020.