Jermaine Edward Harris v. State of Minnesota

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 3, 2024
Docketa231219
StatusPublished

This text of Jermaine Edward Harris v. State of Minnesota (Jermaine Edward Harris v. State of Minnesota) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jermaine Edward Harris v. State of Minnesota, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A23-1219

Jermaine Edward Harris, petitioner, Appellant,

vs.

State of Minnesota, Respondent.

Filed June 3, 2024 Affirmed Larson, Judge

Hennepin County District Court File No. 27-CR-13-33511

Tyler Bliss, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for appellant)

Keith Ellison, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

Mary F. Moriarty, Hennepin County Attorney, Adam E. Petras, Assistant County Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Ede, Presiding Judge; Reyes, Judge; and Larson, Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

LARSON, Judge

In this appeal from an order denying his petition for postconviction relief, appellant

Jermaine Edward Harris argues the district court abused its discretion when it denied his

petition without an evidentiary hearing and determined that his claims did not satisfy any exception to the two-year statutory time bar under Minn. Stat. § 590.01, subd. 4 (2022).

We affirm.

FACTS

This appeal stems from Harris’s petition for postconviction relief, which largely

relied on an affidavit from J.H. (affiant) recanting the testimony he gave at Harris’s third

trial for the murder of R.J. (victim). The following facts are derived from the evidence

presented at Harris’s third trial and Harris’s submissions with his petition for

postconviction relief.

The Underlying Killing

On November 21, 2012, victim was shot and killed. The underlying trials involved

four people relevant to this appeal: (1) Harris; (2) affiant, who was a close friend to Harris;

(3) victim; and (4) D.D. (witness), who was a close friend to victim.

Prior to the killing, Harris became upset with victim because victim had sex with

the mother of Harris’s child. In July 2012, Harris and victim engaged in a physical

altercation, which affiant and affiant’s brother broke up. A second altercation soon

followed between Harris, victim, and others, during which Harris was shot in the leg.

Harris and victim supposedly settled their dispute in September 2012.

On the night of November 21, 2012, Harris, affiant, victim, and witness went

together to get “wet sticks”—cigarettes laced with PCP. Victim and witness rode in a

Chevrolet Impala; Harris and affiant rode in a Ford Explorer. After the men obtained the

wet sticks, they eventually parked to smoke the wet sticks in an area Harris selected.

2 Victim and witness moved into the Explorer and sat in the back seat. Harris sat in the

driver’s seat, and affiant sat in the front passenger’s seat.

After they smoked the wet sticks, witness and victim exited the Explorer and walked

toward the Impala. Both men stopped to urinate. As witness walked back to the Impala

from a nearby tree, witness saw Harris exit the Explorer with a gun in his hand and fire at

least three shots. Witness took cover behind the Impala and heard victim cry out as he was

shot. Witness then saw Harris get back into the Explorer and heard the Explorer drive

away. As the Explorer left, witness found victim unconscious where he collapsed behind

the Impala. Witness spoke to police on November 24, 2012, and identified Harris and

affiant as being involved in the shooting. Witness testified at trial consistent with the facts

given above.

Procedural History

Respondent State of Minnesota indicted Harris and tried him twice on charges of

first- and second-degree intentional murder pursuant to Minn. Stat. §§ 609.185, 609.19.

Harris’s first two trials ended in hung juries, and the district court declared a mistrial in

both instances. After the second trial, the district court dismissed the indictment but

allowed the state to refile a criminal complaint to prosecute the case a third time. The state

immediately filed a new complaint charging Harris with second-degree intentional

murder. 1 At the third trial, the jury found Harris guilty of second-degree murder. The

district court entered judgment of conviction and sentenced Harris to an executed 450-

1 The state also charged Harris with prohibited person in possession of a firearm pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 624.713, subds. 1(2), 2(b) (2012), but later dismissed the charge.

3 month prison term. Harris appealed his conviction, and we affirmed the conviction in a

nonprecedential opinion. See State v. Harris, No. A14-1039, 2015 WL 4714657, at *1, *7

(Minn. App. Aug. 10, 2015), rev. denied (Minn. Oct. 28, 2015). The Minnesota Supreme

Court denied Harris’s petition for discretionary review, Harris did not file a petition for

certiorari with the United States Supreme Court, and the judgment became final on

November 23, 2015.

Affiant’s Previous Statements

When law enforcement first interviewed affiant in November 2012, he was reluctant

to speak and denied being present when victim was killed. Eventually, affiant was

subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury. Affiant testified that, after the four men smoked

the wet sticks, affiant heard gunshots, and, when Harris got back into the Explorer, Harris

said, “He shot me, I shot him.” Affiant gave a similar account to law enforcement in a

recorded statement after his grand-jury testimony. There, affiant said: Harris exited the

Explorer and walked toward the Impala; affiant then heard several gunshots; and, when

Harris returned to the Explorer, Harris said something like “I shot him because he shot

me.”

At Harris’s first trial, inconsistent with his grand-jury testimony and recorded

statement, affiant testified that he did not remember much, he did not hear any gunshots,

and Harris never said, “He shot me, I shot him.” Affiant claimed he fabricated the earlier

statements. Affiant also testified that he lied to the grand jury because the prosecutors

pressured him and threatened to arrest him if he did not agree with their version of events.

4 Between Harris’s first two trials, the state charged affiant with aiding an offender

under Minn. Stat. § 609.495, subd. 3 (2012), on the theory that affiant lied to the jury in

the first trial. Despite being subpoenaed to testify at Harris’s second trial, affiant refused

to do so. Affiant was held in contempt of court and sentenced to 90 days in jail. Before

the third trial, affiant entered a guilty plea to the aiding-an-offender charge, admitting that

he lied to the police and under oath at the first trial. Affiant had not yet been sentenced at

the time of Harris’s third trial.

At Harris’s third trial, affiant testified that he lied during Harris’s first trial when he

testified that Harris did not say, “He shot me, I shot him.” Affiant also offered an account

of the killing that was consistent with his grand-jury testimony and recorded statement.

Affiant testified that he smoked PCP with Harris “numerous times,” and that Harris acted

“[k]ind of aggressive” under the influence of PCP. Affiant further testified that the state

did not offer him a plea deal for his aiding-an-offender charge; instead, he pleaded guilty

because he decided to tell the truth. Affiant expressed his understanding that he had no

plea deal with the state and that the judge in his case would determine his sentence. He

also acknowledged his understanding that the state would advise the judge regarding the

state’s view of an appropriate sentence based on affiant’s conduct at Harris’s third trial.

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Related

State v. Knaffla
243 N.W.2d 737 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1976)
Darryl Colbert v. State of Minnesota
870 N.W.2d 616 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2015)
Brian Keith Hooper v. State of Minnesota
888 N.W.2d 138 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2016)
Miles v. State
800 N.W.2d 778 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2011)
Riley v. State
819 N.W.2d 162 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2012)
Pearson v. State
891 N.W.2d 590 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2017)
Crow v. State
923 N.W.2d 2 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2019)

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Jermaine Edward Harris v. State of Minnesota, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jermaine-edward-harris-v-state-of-minnesota-minnctapp-2024.