Jesse Peoples v. Blaine Lafler

734 F.3d 503, 2013 WL 5811601, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 22061
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 30, 2013
Docket11-2161
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 734 F.3d 503 (Jesse Peoples v. Blaine Lafler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jesse Peoples v. Blaine Lafler, 734 F.3d 503, 2013 WL 5811601, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 22061 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BERNICE B. DONALD, Circuit Judge.

The only evidence connecting Jesse Peoples to the murder he now serves a life sentence for committing was the testimony of two men who, along with Peoples, occupied a stolen Jaguar where the murder weapon was found. During trial, the prosecutor elicited from these two witnesses known false testimony. Although the entire defense theory was that the two witnesses conspired to point the finger at Peoples, trial counsel did not use the only hard evidence at his disposal to prove that the two witnesses not only lied, but told the same lie. And he failed to do so despite the fact that Peoples himself found the evidence and told him how to use it.

We conclude that trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to impeach the credibility of these two witnesses based on known false testimony, and that the state court’s determination to the contrary was an objectively unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court precedent. Accordingly, we PARTIALLY REVERSE the decision below as to the ineffective assistance claim and REMAND the case to the district court with instructions to conditionally GRANT a writ of habeas corpus, giving the State of Michigan ninety days to retry Peoples or release him from custody.

I. BACKGROUND

Shannon Clark, a drug dealer, was shot and killed outside of his Detroit home. According to Clark’s girlfriend, the two had returned home at 11:00 p.m., and Clark immediately went out again, leaving her in the home filled with marijuana and *507 cash. A couple of hours later, a neighbor went outside after hearing three or four gunshots and found Clark’s body lying on Clark’s neighbor’s front lawn. Clark had been shot once in the chest and twice in the back of the head. Police found two nine millimeter shells near the body.

Three months later, police arrested three men — Jesse Peoples, Demetrious Powell, and Cornelious Harris — after the men led the police on a chase in a stolen Jaguar that ultimately ended in a car crash. According to a police report written by an officer who witnessed the crash, the driver of the Jaguar was Cornelious Harris. Harris, in fact, was the only one of the three who was indicted for and served time for the crimes of fleeing in the third degree, which requires “being the driver,” and unlawfully driving away in a motor vehicle. After the crash, police found a nine millimeter Sig Sauer pistol— the same gun used to kill Shannon Clark— on the driver’s side floorboard of the Jaguar.

A. Trial: Testimony Implicating Jesse Peoples and Jury Deliberations

Jesse Peoples alone was tried for Shannon Clark’s murder. The only evidence connecting him to the crime was the murder weapon found in the stolen Jaguar and the testimony of the other two men who occupied the same car, Demetrious Powell and Cornelious Harris. Powell and Harris both testified to two key facts: 1) that Peoples was the driver of the stolen Jaguar and had thus been sitting closest to the murder weapon, which Peoples owned; and 2) that Peoples told them about how he killed Clark.

Both Powell and Harris testified in detail about the stolen Jaguar incident, revealing that the car was stolen, that Powell, Harris, and Peoples led the police on a chase, and that all three were arrested. In response to careful questioning by the prosecutor, both witnesses testified that Peoples was the driver of the Jaguar during the chase and that Harris sat in the back seat. Powell went on to say that Peoples told him not to admit to owning any guns in the car (there were two others) because Peoples had used one of them to kill Clark. Testimony regarding the seating positions of the Jaguar occupants was important for two reasons. First, the prosecutor relied on it in her theory that Peoples, as the driver of the Jaguar, sat closest to the gun found on the driver’s side floorboard. During closing arguments, for example, she said, “[W]e have both witnesses indicating Mr. Peoples is driving a [J]ag.... Where is the murder weapon found ... It’s found on the driver’s side floorboard.... right beneath where Mr. Peoples’s would have been in the Jag. The car crashes, he dumps the gun, and he’s out.” Second, it was known false testimony from the only witnesses implicating Peoples.

Before trial, Peoples mailed defense counsel a copy of the police report, indictment, and criminal docket sheet showing that Harris was the driver of the Jaguar. And yet defense counsel made no attempt to impeach Powell or Harris as to this fact. On cross-examination, defense counsel questioned both witnesses about the stolen car incident, asking questions about charges for assault, home invasion, and gun counts. But he did not take the extra step of asking about Harris’s charges as the driver of the Jaguar. Nor did he call to the stand the officer who wrote the police report naming Harris as the driver of the Jaguar or question Officer Lazar, a witness for the government who also observed the car crash scene, as to whether Harris was in fact the driver of the Jaguar.

The rest of the relevant testimony from Powell and Harris, in sum, is that Peoples *508 told them how he had killed Clark. Both recounted similar stories. Powell testified that he and Peoples had planned to rob Clark but had never gone through with it. On the night Clark was shot, Peoples allegedly called Powell and said that he and a man called “0” “blew it” and had to “do the guy.” In subsequent phone calls, Peoples allegedly told Powell that he and 0 had watched Clark leave his girlfriend at the house, and then the two had lain in wait for Clark to return. When he did, the two attacked Clark to rob him, but Clark ran and threw his keys. 0 caught Clark in the neighbor’s back yard, Clark tried to punch O, and 0 shot Clark in the chest. Clark ran to the front yard and collapsed; Peoples followed and shot him twice in the head.

Harris’s version differs only in minor details. According to him, around the time of the stolen Jaguar incident, Peoples told Harris how he and 0 had waited for Clark to return home on the night of the shooting. When he did, the two would-be robbers rushed at him, but Clark ran away. Peoples and 0 caught Clark, Clark tried to attack 0, and Peoples “ran up and [shot] him.” Then Clark ran, but Peoples “caught him again, and said he shot him.” Peoples allegedly returned to the scene the next day to look for the keys Clark had thrown, but the house was full of family, and Peoples figured anything worth stealing had been removed.

Both witnesses testified that they admitted to their knowledge of the Clark murder because they did not want to be implicated themselves. They also testified that they received no benefit for their testimony other than civil immunity for the Clark murder, but this may not have been entirely true because at their own sentencing hearings for charges arising out of the stolen Jaguar incident, the courts expressly gave lower sentences in light of cooperation with the government. During closing arguments, the prosecutor said that Powell and Harris had received nothing in exchange for their testimony, but the judge issued a jury instruction reminding the jury that the two men had received civil immunity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
734 F.3d 503, 2013 WL 5811601, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 22061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jesse-peoples-v-blaine-lafler-ca6-2013.