Howard v. Harry

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 19, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-13269
StatusUnknown

This text of Howard v. Harry (Howard v. Harry) 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
Howard v. Harry, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

MELVIN HOWARD,

Petitioner, Case Number 17-13269 Honorable David M. Lawson v.

SHIRLEE HARRY,

Respondent. _____________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

After Michigan prisoner Melvin Howard’s first trial for criminal sexual conduct was terminated prematurely as a mistrial, a second jury found him guilty. He contended on direct appeal and now in a habeas corpus petition that his conviction violates the Double Jeopardy Clause. The state appellate court held that Howard impliedly consented to the mistrial and therefore denied relief on that and other claims that he raises here. Because the state courts did not contravene or unreasonably apply Supreme Court precedent, the petition for a writ of habeas corpus will be denied. I. Howard had sexual intercourse with a woman at her friend’s apartment in Ypsilanti, Michigan in July 2013. Howard said the sex was consensual, but the woman alleged that she was intoxicated by drugs and alcohol and sleeping at the time, and Howard’s actions violated her. Howard was charged with third-degree criminal sexual conduct, Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.520d, and proceeded to trial. In its opinion on direct review of the ensuing conviction, the Michigan Court of Appeals described what happened: A. THE FIRST TRIAL On March 24, 2014, defendant’s first trial began. After voir dire, the jury was sworn in and given preliminary instructions, and the parties gave opening statements. The jury then heard testimony from the victim and her friend who hosted the party. The victim's friend testified that she did not have a cell phone on the night of the incident and that someone other than herself or the victim purchased New Amsterdam vodka at Campus Corner. During her testimony, the victim’s friend was belligerent and argumentative with the attorneys. At one point, the judge excused the jury so he could have an off-the-record discussion with the attorneys in his chambers. When he came back on the record, the judge expressed his displeasure with the witness’s conduct and informed her that she would be held in contempt if she continued to argue with the attorneys and give evasive answers. After defense counsel cross-examined the witness, the judge questioned the witness about who purchased the alcohol and she repeatedly answered that she did not know. The judge then excused the jury and held a short off-the-record bench conference. Back on the record, the prosecutor stated the following concerning what the attorneys and judge had discussed in chambers and at the bench conference: A short while ago, we broke because the Court had some concerns about the answers [the witness] was giving. When we went back in chambers, we discussed that it was the Court’s opinion that [the witness] was giving some answers that were not truthful. I stated to the Court that they didn’t sound very good to me either. I was concerned about some of the answers that she was giving. However, what I could not say was that she was not testifying specifically on the stand in a manner that was different from what she had told me before. Therefore, I was not bringing it to the Court’s attention that I believed that she was committing perjury or misleading the Court in any way. Was I concerned, and did I, quite frankly, have problems with the veracity of some of the answers that she was giving, yes, and I made that clear to the Court. However, I didn’t feel, at that point, that I had specific information that she was committing perjury. And so we asked if we could reconvene. We spoke with her. We said knock it off, answer the questions, just be truthful. . . . And I think when she came back out here her demeanor was much more appropriate. There were some questions that were asked, both by [defense counsel] as well as the Court, and there were a couple of answers that were given with the last few minutes which concerned me. One of them was that [the witness] testified that somebody bought the alcohol at Campus Corner. . . . I am aware, through Officer Compton, who has been [a Ypsilanti] cop for over nine years, and . . . knows that city like the back of his hand, Campus Corner doesn’t sell liquor. They sell beer. They don’t [sell] liquor. Now, it’s one thing if that isn’t just an honest mistake, but I think, and I don’t [want to] speak for the Court, but it did appear as if she was definitively answering that there was liquor that was bought at that store because she talked about they were drinking New Amsterdam . . . so that was one issue that I wanted to bring to the Court’s attention as an officer of the court. The other thing that I wanted to bring to the Court’s attention, as an officer of the court, is [the witness] testified that she didn’t have a phone. In fact, she went over that on multiple occasions. She also testified that she didn’t have a cell phone, she didn’t have a house phone, and that she communicated through the [internet] or something like that. We are, and this is the other thing that I needed to bring to the attention of the Court, we are in possession of — well, for one thing, in the informational section of the police report under [the witness’s name], there is a phone number. Another bit of information that ties in with that, though, is we are in possession of some phone records which we use to look at a different aspect of this case which I raised with the Court before the trial even started, and there are some notations on there which were, quite frankly, written on there by [the victim] where she wrote down that that was [the witness’s] number, and she wrote that down [on] a few occasions. We didn’t track the whole week or two weeks or whatever it was, but we tracked [the] day or the hours surrounding this event. Now, the number that’s on there, quite frankly, is one digit off, but it's a digit in the middle of the number, and it certainly makes me comfortable to say that we're talking about the same numbers. I want to bring that to the Court’s attention because I think the Court needs to know that. Now, I will say this: Whatever the Court does, whatever action the Court takes, obviously, we will respect, and I understand that the Court has concerns as do I. I guess my only question is whether or not this impacts on the complaining witness’s testimony. That would be the only thing that I would ask the Court to consider before you make the ruling. Now, I understand that the jury has been given information, but the only thing that I would ask the Court to consider is . . . whether this problematic testimony necessarily impacts the testimony from [the victim]. After the prosecutor’s statement, the trial court declared a mistrial, stating the following: My concern, frankly, is having this issue, which is an important issue, go to the jury with the status of this testimony . . . and this witness. Frankly, I — let me back up. I thank you, [prosecutor] for bringing it to the Court’s attention. You are an ethical attorney, and you always have been in this court, and I respect that. Nothing that happened here is — not only is not the fault of the Prosecutor or the police, but — they have both been forthcoming with the Court. My concern is that the status of this testimony taints this jury to the degree that I don’t think it’s fair either to [defendant] or, frankly, to [the victim’s] complaint to allow this matter to go to the jury on this basis. I'm going to declare a mistrial in this matter. B. THE SECOND TRIAL Defendant was retried on June 30 and July 1, 2014. The problematic witness did not testify at the second trial. The victim testified that defendant engaged in sexual intercourse with her without her consent while she was heavily intoxicated.

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Bluebook (online)
Howard v. Harry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-harry-mied-2020.