(HC) Baxter v. Pfeiffer

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedAugust 22, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-01268
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
(HC) Baxter v. Pfeiffer, (E.D. Cal. 2023).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 ANTHONY HARRISON BAXTER, No. 2:21-cv-1268 DAD AC 12 Petitioner, 13 v. FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 14 CHRISTIAN PFEIFFER, Warden, 15 Respondent. 16 17 Petitioner is a California state prisoner proceeding pro se with an application for a writ of 18 habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The action proceeds on the original petition, ECF 19 No. 1, which challenges petitioner’s 2018 conviction for two counts of first degree murder. 20 Respondent has answered. ECF No. 26. Petitioner did not file a traverse. 21 BACKGROUND 22 I. Proceedings in the Trial Court 23 A. Preliminary Proceedings 24 Petitioner was charged in Shasta County with two murders and a related vehicle theft. A 25 special circumstance of double murder was alleged. Petitioner entered pleas of not guilty and not 26 guilty by reason of insanity, and two psychologists were court appointed to evaluated petitioner 27 under Cal. Penal Code § 1026. The case proceeded to trial. 28 //// 1 B. The Evidence Presented at Trial (Guilt Phase) 2 The jury heard evidence of the following facts.1 In January 2016, petitioner’s wife, M., 3 was living in a duplex in Anderson with her sister, daughter, nephew, and Helsby, who moved 4 into the unit prior to M.’s family. Helsby initially allowed M.’s sister and nephew to move into 5 one of the unit’s bedrooms. About a week before the murders, he also allowed M. and her six- 6 year-old daughter to move into a second bedroom. M. and her sister were friends with the tenant 7 of the duplex’s other unit, C., who introduced them to Helsby before he let them move in. 8 Helsby’s girlfriend, Engelhaupt, did not live there, but periodically came over and spent the night. 9 She did not like that Helsby allowed so many people to move in with him. 10 Petitioner came over to visit M. a few times during the time she lived with Helsby. 11 Petitioner’s relationship with M. was “rocky” and they “argu[ed] constantly.” One such argument 12 occurred on the night of the murders. When petitioner came over to visit M. that evening, Helsby 13 was cooking soup in the kitchen. C. and his girlfriend, N., were also at the residence. At some 14 point, Helsby pulled a pair of women’s underwear out of his pocket and smelled them in front of 15 petitioner. The underwear belonged to M., who had done her laundry that day. Helsby’s conduct 16 angered petitioner. As M. described in her testimony, petitioner’s face “went . . . bright red” and 17 he clenched both fists. The record does not reveal whether any words were exchanged between 18 petitioner and Helsby at that point, but N. testified she heard defendant and M. arguing loudly 19 outside and described petitioner’s part of the exchange: “He’s talking about he’s going to kill 20 everybody.” Petitioner denied making any threats, but acknowledged in his testimony that his 21 anger at Helsby’s conduct was intensified by the methamphetamine he had ingested a few hours 22 earlier. 23 After this incident, C. and N. gave M. and her daughter a ride to a friend’s house. 24 Petitioner joined them for a portion of the ride, but he got out at a convenience store after he and 25 M. continued to argue in the car. At some point during the next two or three hours, petitioner 26 //// 27 1 This summary is adapted from the opinion of the California Court of Appeal. Lodged Doc. 12 28 at 3-8 (ECF No. 27-12 at 4-9). The undersigned finds it to be accurate. 1 returned to the duplex and killed both Helsby and Engelhaupt, who apparently had come over in 2 the meantime. The bodies were discovered later that afternoon. 3 In a statement to interrogating officers after his arrest and in his trial testimony, petitioner 4 provided the following explanation(s) of what had happened. Petitioner told the police that he 5 “was fed up with [M.] bein’ disrespected,” so he returned to the duplex. When he walked inside 6 without knocking, he found Helsby and Engelhaupt asleep on opposite sides of the couch in the 7 living room. Petitioner reached over the back of the couch and grabbed Helsby by the throat, 8 initially “plannin’ on just chokin’ him out.” Helsby woke up, “but he couldn’t do nothing.” After 9 petitioner had been choking Helsby for a few minutes, Engelhaupt woke up and grabbed her cell 10 phone. Petitioner “couldn’t have her doin’ that,” so he let go of Helsby, came up behind 11 Engelhaupt, and used his arm to choke her “until her body went limp.” Helsby was lying on the 12 couch “gasp[ing] for air” while petitioner choked Engelhaupt, but eventually started to get up, so 13 petitioner grabbed a wine bottle that was nearby and “hit him over the head, um, twice.” The 14 second blow caused the wine bottle to shatter and sent Helsby’s blood onto petitioner’s shirt. 15 Petitioner then picked up a butter knife from the nearby kitchen counter and stabbed Helsby twice 16 in the chest before walking over to Engelhaupt and also stabbing her in the chest with the knife. 17 Petitioner claimed he “just snapped,” but also explained that when Engelhaupt “got up, 18 went to try to use her phone,” that was when he realized he “had to take them both out.” 19 Petitioner also told the officers he stabbed the victims because choking them was taking too long 20 and he “had to make sure” they were dead. When asked to be more specific about the disrespect 21 he felt the victims had shown M., petitioner responded that Engelhaupt “disrespected” M. by 22 telling Helsby to kick her and her daughter out of the duplex and “into the cold,” adding: “And 23 that - that’s bullshit. That’s a little girl.” With respect to Helsby, petitioner claimed “he has, uh, 24 broken into their bedrooms, uh, took all their stuff, throwed them, um, outside into the mud. Um, 25 he’s, uh, blocked them out of the apartment, you know? He - he’s basically, um - he’s tried to put 26 them out, you know?” 27 During petitioner’s testimony at trial, he repeated the claim that Helsby threw M.’s 28 family’s belongings “out in the rain” and that Engelhaupt told Helsby to do so. However, he also 1 described two additional incidents involving Helsby, neither of which he told the interrogating 2 officers. First, he claimed M. told him that Helsby had come into her room at night and M. 3 “woke up with him standing over the top of [her and her daughter] and watching them while they 4 were sleeping.” The second incident involved Helsby smelling M.’s underwear, described above. 5 Petitioner testified that he was named after Saint Anthony and “was raised to be a family 6 protector.” Although M.’s daughter, K., was not his biological daughter, she was three years old 7 when petitioner came into her life and he considered her to be his daughter, adding: “Before her 8 father passed away, I made a vow to him . . . that I would watch out after [K.] as my own 9 biological daughter.” Petitioner testified to various “learning disabilities” he had while he was in 10 school and continuing “all the way up until now.” He also testified to having suffered physical 11 and sexual abuse as a child and claimed Helsby’s conduct brought back memories of the latter 12 abuse. Petitioner claimed he ingested methamphetamine about four hours before killing Helsby 13 and Engelhaupt and stated he “was still under the influence” when he did so. After he saw 14 Helsby smell M.’s underwear that night, he was “very angered” and this anger was intensified by 15 the methamphetamine. 16 Turning to the murders, petitioner testified he went to the duplex that night not to kill 17 anyone, but only to “physically check [Helsby], slap him around a few times,” for disrespecting 18 M. and her daughter. When asked whether something happened to cause petitioner to “elevate 19 the attack,” petitioner answered: 20 Yes. As -- when I first got there, you know, I saw them asleep.

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(HC) Baxter v. Pfeiffer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hc-baxter-v-pfeiffer-caed-2023.