Jimmy Fletcher Meders v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic Prison

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2018
Docket15-14734
StatusPublished

This text of Jimmy Fletcher Meders v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic Prison (Jimmy Fletcher Meders v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic Prison) 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
Jimmy Fletcher Meders v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic Prison, (11th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Case: 14-14178 Date Filed: 08/22/2018 Page: 1 of 40

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT ________________________

Nos. 14-14178; 15-14734 ________________________

D.C. Docket Nos. 2:07-cv-00090-LGW-JEG 2:07-cv-00090-LGW

JIMMY FLETCHER MEDERS,

Petitioner-Appellant,

versus

WARDEN, GEORGIA DIAGNOSTIC PRISON,

Respondent-Appellee.

________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia ________________________

(August 22, 2018)

Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, MARCUS, and NEWSOM, Circuit Judges.

ED CARNES, Chief Judge:

Jimmy Fletcher Meders, a Georgia prisoner, filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254

petition in the Southern District of Georgia raising 18 claims. After the district Case: 14-14178 Date Filed: 08/22/2018 Page: 2 of 40

court denied his petition, Meders moved for a certificate of appealability on several

of his claims. The district court granted that motion only as to his claim alleging

that trial counsel was ineffective at the guilt phase of his trial. This is his appeal.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

The facts that follow in these two paragraphs are not disputed. On October

13, 1987, Meders went to help his boss, Randy Harris, fix a car at Harris’ house.

Bill Arnold and Greg Creel later arrived at the house. Arnold is Harris’ cousin,

and Creel is Arnold’s friend. Meders, Harris, Arnold, and Creel spent the

afternoon drinking beer and liquor. The four of them went to a Best Western motel

later that evening, where Harris had rented a room for a young woman with whom

he was having an extramarital affair. Meders, Arnold, and Creel left the motel

later that night.

Around 2:35 the next morning (October 14), the three men stopped by a

Jiffy Store. Don Anderson, the store clerk, was shot twice — once in the chest,

once in the head — and he died. The weapon used in the shooting was a Dan

Wesson .357 Magnum revolver. Meders took between $31 and $38 from the cash

register. Included in the cash taken were two $1 bills and a $5 bill that the store

manager had planted as bait money — she had written down the three bills’ serial

numbers and kept them in the store’s records so that the money could be identified

2 Case: 14-14178 Date Filed: 08/22/2018 Page: 3 of 40

if the store was robbed and the money was recovered. That bait money and some

food stamps were found in Meders’ wallet and in his house after he was arrested

later that same day. The murder weapon was found under his bed two days later.

B. The Trial

Meders was indicted in Georgia state court in December 1987 for the murder

and armed robbery of Anderson, the store clerk. The case proceeded to a jury trial.

1. The State’s Witnesses

Because the claim Meders presses in this Court involves the trial testimony

of several of the State’s witnesses, we recount their testimony in some detail.

The State first called Harris to the stand. He testified that he spent the

afternoon of October 13 drinking with Meders, Arnold, and Creel. He paid Meders

about $200 for his work on a car, and while they were sitting around drinking and

talking, Meders kept mentioning that he owed some people in Florida $2,000 for

some drugs, and that they were “going to come down here and kill him if he didn’t

pay them.”

Harris testified that later that evening all four men went to a Best Western

motel. They continued to drink, “smoked a joint or two,” and sat around talking in

the motel room. Meders, Arnold, and Creel left the motel around 8:30 p.m. but

Meders returned to it around 3:15 a.m. After he did so, according to Harris,

Meders pulled out a revolver and told him: “I just blowed a man’s head off over

3 Case: 14-14178 Date Filed: 08/22/2018 Page: 4 of 40

$38.00.” Harris thought he was joking, so Meders threw some cash and some

“little white pieces of paper” about “the same size [as] a dollar bill” on the bed.

Meders also opened the revolver’s chambers and dumped the bullets on the bed.

Harris said that two of the bullets had been “freshly fired.” He testified that

Meders picked up the cash and the pieces of paper, put them back in his pocket,

and left the motel.

Harris testified that around that same time, Arnold called his motel room and

asked Harris to pick up Creel and him from a trailer park. Harris drove Creel’s

truck to the trailer park, picked up both of them, and took them to Harris’ house.

After arriving at his house around 4:00 or 5:00 a.m., Harris urged the two of them

to go to the police and report what had happened. He testified that the three of

them talked for about an hour and then all three went to sleep at his house. Around

9:00 a.m., Harris woke up and went to his shop; the police questioned him there

and then took him to the police station for more questioning.

Creel testified next for the State. He stated that he, Harris, Arnold, and

Meders had spent the afternoon of October 13 drinking before going to the Best

Western later that evening. After spending a few hours in the motel room, he,

Arnold, and Meders left and went riding around, stopping at a couple of bars.

Arnold was driving, Meders was in the passenger seat, and Creel was in the back

seat. They later stopped at a Jiffy Store because Creel was hungry. He testified

4 Case: 14-14178 Date Filed: 08/22/2018 Page: 5 of 40

that both he and Meders got out of the car and went into the store. Once inside,

Creel grabbed a Yoo-hoo and a package of sausage and biscuits. While he was

heating up his sausage and biscuits in a microwave in the back of the store, he

heard a gunshot. He turned around and saw the store clerk falling against the wall

and Meders facing the wounded clerk.

Creel testified that he “tore out” of the store, and as he was running out, he

heard a second gunshot. He exited the store, jumped in the back seat of the car,

and told Arnold to “go” because Meders had “just shot a man.” He recounted how

Meders had run out of the store, jumped in the front passenger seat of the car, and

pointed his gun at Arnold and Creel. Arnold drove to Shady Acres, a trailer park,

where he and Creel got out. Meders got in the driver’s seat, and Arnold told

Meders “to never come around him again.” Meders asked Arnold and Creel if they

wanted any of the money or food stamps he had taken from the store. They both

said no, that they didn’t want any part of it. Creel and Arnold then walked to one

of the trailers where they called Harris to pick them up. Creel testified that he

didn’t know Meders until the day before the shooting, that he didn’t know that

Meders had a gun until the shooting, and that he had no idea that Meders was

going to rob the store or shoot the clerk. He also stated that he had given the police

two statements about the incident: one on October 15, and one a few weeks later.

5 Case: 14-14178 Date Filed: 08/22/2018 Page: 6 of 40

On cross-examination Creel confirmed that, after they all were finished

drinking at Harris’ house, they did not take Meders back to his house but instead

went to the Best Western. For that reason, Creel thought Meders “must have” had

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