GREEN v. KAUFFMAN

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 26, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-02919
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
GREEN v. KAUFFMAN, (E.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

AMAR GREEN : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 19-2919 : KEVIN KAUFFMAN, et al. : :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. August 26, 2020 The incarcerated Amar Green petitions for habeas relief for the seventh time arguing he is entitled release or a new trial because the verdict lacked sufficient evidence, his trial counsel ineffectively assisted in his defense, and the ineffective assistance of post-conviction counsel should excuse his procedurally defaulted claims. After reviewing the record and Mr. Green’s Objections, we overrule Mr. Green’s Objections and adopt Judge Rice’s comprehensive Report and Recommendation. We decline to issue a certificate of appealability as reasonable jurists could not dispute our findings. I. Facts adduced from the public record. A Philadelphia police officer heard seven gunshots on July 23, 1999 while on patrol near the 2100 block of Dickinson Street in Philadelphia.1 The officer found Luther Johnson bleeding, unresponsive, and without a pulse.2 The responding emergency medical team declared Mr. Johnson dead,3 and an autopsy showed Mr. Johnson had suffered six gunshot wounds, including one to his head.4 The reporting officer later testified he heard seven gunshots: two in quick succession, followed by a pause and then the remaining five.5 Four years later, Marcus Franklin reported the shooting to the police and the Commonwealth arrested and charged Mr. Green and a co-defendant with the first-degree murder of Mr. Johnson.6 Mr. Franklin testified he knew both the decedent and Mr. Green.7 Mr. Franklin stated he saw Mr. Johnson leave a store on Dickinson Street and a car often in Mr. Green’s or the co-defendant’s possession turn down the same street.8 Mr. Franklin saw Mr. Green in the passenger seat of the car and Mr. Green’s co-defendant in the seat behind him.9 The car turned

left onto Dickinson Street, and the passengers on the right passenger-seat side of the car shot Mr. Johnson as he rode his bicycle: Mr. Green shot first, knocking the decedent off of his bicycle and Mr. Green’s co-defendant fired the remaining shots.10 Mr. Franklin left Pennsylvania in 2004 because “someone tried to kill him,” postponing the trial.11 The prosecution located Mr. Franklin and put him in the witness protection program in November 2010.12 The Commonwealth reinstated the charges against Mr. Green and set trial for August 2012.13 Police held Mr. Green, his co-defendant, and Mr. Franklin in the same facility overnight during the trial.14 Mr. Franklin testified both Mr. Green and his co-defendant “threatened” him to try to prevent his testimony.15 During Mr. Green’s imprisonment, he confided to Marc Moore about the murder.16 Mr. Green told Mr. Moore he killed a man on his bicycle17 and “kept firing

until [he] fell off the bike.”18 Mr. Moore relayed this information to a detective before trial.19 Mr. Green’s trial counsel attempted to undermine Mr. Franklin’s credibility by highlighting the three-year delay between his witnessing the shooting and reporting it to the police during her opening statement.20 Mr. Green’s trial counsel referred to potential evidence which would show Mr. Franklin’s testimony to be baseless and derived from “gossip and innuendo.”21 Philadelphia’s Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Sam Gulino testified at trial as to his independent observations confirmed in Mr. Johnson’s autopsy report.22 The original preparer of the autopsy determined the gunshot wounds caused the decedent’s death, but she did not testify at trial as she no longer worked in Philadelphia.23 Dr. Gulino concluded homicide caused Mr. Johnson’s death with “a reasonable degree of medical certainty.”24 Dr. Gulino’s testimony swore the bullet wound to the left side of Mr. Johnson’s head “would have been [] fatal[,]” and an additional bullet severed Mr. Johnson’s spine and could have separately caused death.25

Two police officers testified at trial about their response to other shootings in March and August 1999.26 The ballistics evidence of the bullet casings recovered from those shootings matched a gun used in the killing of Mr. Johnson.27 After the shooting in August 1999, Officer Kerry Pleasant swore he saw Mr. Green leave the apartment building from which Officer Pleasant recovered the same gun.28 This testimony conflicted with Officer Pleasant’s statements to homicide detectives, but he corrected it by stating he included his account of Mr. Green leaving the apartment in his on-scene incident report.29 Both Mr. Franklin and Mr. Moore testified at trial.30 Mr. Green’s trial counsel cross- examined the detective who took Mr. Moore’s testimony.31 Detective Dougherty posited Mr. Moore’s testimony came from Mr. Green because of the “precise” nature of Mr. Moore’s testimony.32 Mr. Green’s trial counsel highlighted the inconsistencies between Mr. Franklin and

Mr. Moore’s testimony.33 Neither defendant testified.34 At the close of trial, counsel for Mr. Green’s co-defendant attempted to argue a jury could consider his client’s not-guilty plea as evidence tending to prove his innocence.35 The prosecutor refuted this by explaining a plea is not exculpatory evidence because it cannot be cross-examined, to which Mr. Green’s counsel twice objected.36 The trial judge instructed the jury to not consider attorney arguments as evidence.37 The trial judge also instructed the jury it “may consider” Mr. Green and his co-defendant’s threats to Mr. Franklin on the eve of trial “as tending to prove [their] consciousness of guilt,” but were “not required to do so.”38 The trial judge instructed the jury it should evaluate inconsistencies in statements Mr. Franklin and Mr. Moore gave before the trial and their testimony at trial.39 The jury convicted Mr. Green of, among other things, first-degree murder,40 but the jury acquitted Mr. Green’s co-defendant.41 Mr. Green appealed his conviction to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.42 Mr. Green argued

the judgment against him should be vacated for insufficient evidence to prove he had the requisite specific intent for first-degree murder and because of the impropriety of the trial judge’s consciousness of guilt instruction.43 The Superior Court rejected both claims.44 The Pennsylvania Supreme Court did not grant review.45 Mr. Green then petitioned for post-conviction relief to overturn his conviction and the trial court dismissed his petition.46 Mr. Green appealed arguing the post-conviction court erred by dismissing his claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for not presenting character witnesses to testify as to Mr. Green’s “non-violent” nature and ineffective assistance of trial counsel for not requesting a mistrial after the prosecutor stated a not-guilty plea could not be considered exculpatory evidence.47 The Superior Court rejected both claims on the merits.48

II. Analysis Mr. Green timely petitioned for habeas relief.49 Mr. Green raises three claims denied by the state courts: (1) the Commonwealth did not present sufficient evidence to support his first degree murder conviction; (2) trial counsel was ineffective for failing to call character witnesses to testify about his reputation for peacefulness; and, (3) trial counsel was ineffective for not seeking a mistrial after the prosecutor improperly discussed his right to remain silent.50 Mr. Green adds five claims in his petition he did not present for the state court’s review: (1) ineffective assistance of trial counsel for not requesting a mistrial after the trial court admitted both the decedent’s autopsy into evidence and testimony from another medical examiner; (2) ineffective assistance of trial counsel for failing to object to Officer Pleasant’s “perjured” testimony; (3) ineffective assistance of trial counsel for positing there were “rumors” Mr. Green committed the murder and these rumors could be used as evidence against him; (4) ineffective

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GREEN v. KAUFFMAN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-kauffman-paed-2020.