Jamie Mills v. Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections

102 F.4th 1235
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 2024
Docket24-11661
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 F.4th 1235 (Jamie Mills v. Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamie Mills v. Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, 102 F.4th 1235 (11th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 24-11661 Document: 19-1 Date Filed: 05/28/2024 Page: 1 of 18

[PUBLISH]

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit

____________________

No. 24-11661 ____________________

JAMIE MILLS, Petitioner-Appellant, versus COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

Respondent-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama D.C. Docket No. 6:17-cv-00789-LSC ____________________ USCA11 Case: 24-11661 Document: 19-1 Date Filed: 05/28/2024 Page: 2 of 18

2 Order of the Court 24-11661

Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, and LUCK and ABUDU, Circuit Judges. WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge: Jamie Mills, an Alabama inmate scheduled to be executed on May 30, 2024, for committing two murders in 2004, seeks a certifi- cate of appealability for the denial of his motion for relief from the judgment denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus in 2020. See FED. R. CIV. P. 60. Because no reasonable jurist could conclude that the district court abused its discretion, we deny Mills’s applica- tion and deny as moot his motion to stay his execution. I. BACKGROUND In 2007, an Alabama jury convicted Jamie Mills of the capital murders of Floyd and Vera Hill. The trial court accepted the jury’s recommendation and sentenced him to death. See Mills v. State, 62 So. 3d 553, 556 (Ala. Crim. App. 2008). After Mills and his common- law wife, JoAnn, plotted to rob the Hills, Mills “brutally executed” the Hills “with a machete, tire tool[,] and ball-peen hammer.” Id. at 557 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). JoAnn testi- fied against her husband at his trial and later pleaded guilty to mur- der and was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. Mills moved for a new trial on the ground that JoAnn had per- jured herself by denying that she testified against him to procure leniency for herself. The trial court denied the motion. The Ala- bama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, see id. at 574, and the Supreme Court of Alabama denied Mills’s petition for a writ of USCA11 Case: 24-11661 Document: 19-1 Date Filed: 05/28/2024 Page: 3 of 18

24-11661 Order of the Court 3

certiorari on that issue. Mills also later unsuccessfully sought post- conviction relief under Alabama Rule of Criminal Procedure 32. Mills petitioned the district court for a writ of habeas corpus in 2017. The district court denied relief on November 30, 2020. We denied his motion for a certificate of appealability, and the Su- preme Court denied his petition for a writ of certiorari on April 18, 2022. On January 29, 2024, the State of Alabama moved to set an ex- ecution date. In March 2024, Mills filed a successive motion under Rule 32 in state court. With that motion, he offered, for the first time, an affidavit by JoAnn Mills’s attorney, Tony Glenn. Glenn al- leged that he had “had several discussions” in 2007 with the district attorney, Jack Bostick, “about a plea offer based on [JoAnn’s] tragic mitigation history and her potential testimony at Jamie Mills’[s] up- coming trial.” Glenn alleged that Bostick and the victims’ family “agreed” that JoAnn would receive a plea deal for “life with parole,” instead of capital murder, if she “testified truthfully” at Mills’s trial. Glenn alleged that these discussions involving Bostick and the vic- tims’ family were recorded on his fee declaration, which Mills at- tached. And Glenn alleged that the first time he spoke with “any attorneys from the Equal Justice Initiative”—which has repre- sented Mills since 2009—about the matter was February 23, 2024, nearly two years after the Supreme Court denied certiorari. On April 5, 2024—three-and-a-half years after the district court denied his habeas petition—Mills moved for relief under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60. He argued that “[n]ewly discovered USCA11 Case: 24-11661 Document: 19-1 Date Filed: 05/28/2024 Page: 4 of 18

4 Order of the Court 24-11661

evidence”—the Glenn affidavit and attached declaration—estab- lished that Bostick had “engaged in egregious misconduct” by “af- firmatively and falsely stat[ing]” to the trial court that “there was no deal” with JoAnn to testify against her husband. Mills sought relief under Rule 60(b)(2), Rule 60(b)(3) and (d), and Rule 60(b)(6). The district court denied relief on each ground. First, under Rule 60(b)(2), which allows relief for “newly discovered evidence” that “could not have been discovered” with “reasonable diligence” in time to move for a new trial, the district court denied the motion as untimely. It explained that the motion had to be filed “no more than a year after the entry of the judgment or order” from which the party seeks relief. See FED. R. CIV. P. 60(c)(1). It alternatively de- nied relief because Mills failed to exercise reasonable diligence. Mills had known since 2007 that Glenn represented JoAnn and had been arguing since then that she perjured herself. Yet Mills did not approach Glenn until 2024 to discuss whether JoAnn struck a secret plea deal. Mills “offer[ed] no reason why he could not have spoken with Glenn or obtained [his] . . . fee declaration” before then. Sec- ond, the district court denied relief under Rule 60(b)(3) and (d). It ruled that relief under Rule 60(b)(3)—for the opposing party’s “fraud,” “misrepresentation,” or “misconduct”—was untimely. See id. It also ruled that Mills failed to prove that the State obtained Mills’s sentence through fraud on the court. It identified “mis- state[ments]” in Glenn’s fee declaration, stated that Bostick had al- leged in his affidavit that the State did not offer JoAnn a plea deal before she testified, and explained that, if Glenn’s affidavit “[were] to be believed,” Glenn would have sat silently in court in 2007 as he USCA11 Case: 24-11661 Document: 19-1 Date Filed: 05/28/2024 Page: 5 of 18

24-11661 Order of the Court 5

knowingly watched both JoAnn and Bostick repeatedly perjure themselves. Third, the district court denied relief under Rule 60(b)(6), which allows relief for “any other reason that justi- fies relief.” It ruled that the motion was not “made within a reason- able time.” Id. R. 60(c)(1). And it denied Mills a certificate of ap- pealability and his motion for a stay of execution. II. STANDARD OF REVIEW A party who seeks to appeal the denial of a motion for relief from a judgment denying habeas relief must obtain a certificate of appealability. See Gonzalez v. Sec’y for Dep’t of Corr., 366 F.3d 1253, 1263 (11th Cir. 2004), aff ’d on other grounds sub nom. Gonzalez v. Crosby, 545 U.S. 524 (2005). We may issue a certificate “only if the applicant has made a substantial showing of the denial of a consti- tutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). The applicant must establish that jurists of reason could disagree with the resolution of his con- stitutional claims or that jurists could conclude that “the issues pre- sented are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed fur- ther.” Miller-El v. Cockrell, 537 U.S. 322, 327 (2003). Because Rule 60 “vests wide discretion in [district] courts,” we ask whether a reason- able jurist could conclude that the district court abused its discre- tion. See Buck v. Davis, 137 S. Ct. 759, 777 (2017).

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102 F.4th 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamie-mills-v-commissioner-alabama-department-of-corrections-ca11-2024.