John Pecoraro v. Jonathan R. Walls, Warden

286 F.3d 439, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 5618, 2002 WL 481237
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2002
Docket01-2282
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 286 F.3d 439 (John Pecoraro v. Jonathan R. Walls, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Pecoraro v. Jonathan R. Walls, Warden, 286 F.3d 439, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 5618, 2002 WL 481237 (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

John Pecoraro was convicted by a jury in an Illinois state court in 1987 of murder and sentenced to death. After exhausting his state remedies, see People v. Pecoraro, 144 Ill.2d 1, 161 Ill.Dec. 296, 578 N.E.2d 942 (Ill.1991), 175 Ill.2d 294, 222 Ill.Dec. 341, 677 N.E.2d 875 (Ill.1997), he sought relief from the judgment through federal habeas corpus, which the district court de *442 nied after an evidentiary hearing, precipitating this appeal. Pecoraro challenges the constitutionality of his conviction but does not claim that if he was properly convicted the sentence of death imposed on him violated any of his federal constitutional rights. He had a previous conviction for a murder in which he and some friends, after abducting and shooting their victim, doused the body with gasoline, lit it, and watched it burn for some time, and under Illinois’s death-penalty law — the constitutionality of which is not questioned in this appeal — that prior conviction was an aggravating factor that warranted the sentence. 720 ILCS 5/9—1(b)(3); see Coleman v. Ryan, 196 F.3d 793, 796-97 (7th Cir.1999); People v. Coleman, 168 Ill.2d 509, 214 Ill.Dec. 212, 660 N.E.2d 919, 939-40 (Ill.1995). The sentencing judge thought that Pecoraro’s current crime involved another aggravating factor as well: “the murder was committed in a cold, calculated and premeditated manner pursuant to a preconceived plan, scheme or design to take a human life by unlawful means.” 720 ILCS 5/9-1(b)(11).

These are the circumstances of that crime. In December of 1982, Jimmy Christian was found shot dead in his car; the fatal bullet was a .357 magnum. Martha Jackson, who worked with Christian’s wife Nadine in a jewelry business, had seen Pecoraro “kissing on” Nadine and had heard him say, upon seeing Jimmy Christian, who also worked for the jewelry company: “She’s mine; if I can’t have her, nobody will.”

Pecoraro was suspected from the first of the murder, but was not charged. However, more than three and a half years later, in August of 1986, he flagged down a police officer and told him that he wanted to turn himself in for a murder. He described the murder briefly to the officer, who had no previous knowledge of it. The officer then arrested him. At the police station, after being given the Miranda warnings, Pecor-aro narrated the Christian murder in detail. He explained that he and Nadine had become lovers and that Nadine had complained to him about Christian’s beating her and her son and that he had told her he’d kill Christian if she wanted him to. He said that he had used a .45 caliber pistol to murder Christian, not a .357 magnum, and there were a few other, but very minor, discrepancies as well — understandably, in light of the years that had elapsed since the murder. Even the mistake about the caliber of the gun might well have been a memory lapse, especially if Pecora-ro owned more than one gun, as most gun owners do, James B. Jacobs & Kimberly A. Potter, “Keeping Guns Out of the ‘Wrong’ Hands: The Brady Law and the Limits of Regulation,” 86 J.Crim. L. & Criminology 93, 103 n. 65 (1995), although there is no evidence one way or another on whether Pecoraro did.

A prosecutor reduced Pecoraro’s statement to writing, but Pecoraro refused to sign it, saying, “I don’t want to go to jail over this. I just want to get it off my chest.” Before trial he tried to get the statement suppressed on the ground that he had been so far under the influence of cocaine and beer that he could not make a voluntary statement. After hearing witnesses for both sides (including Pecoraro), the judge denied the motion. The principal evidence for the prosecution at trial was Pecoraro’s confession, corroborated by the circumstances in which Christian had been killed, which Pecoraro would have been unlikely to know had he not been the murderer, and by Martha Jackson’s testimony, which supplied the motive for the killing. Doubtless fearing impeachment by his prior murder conviction (as well as by another conviction, for shooting a teenage girl), Pecoraro did not take the stand.

*443 The principal argument pressed on this appeal is that the prosecution failed to turn over possibly exculpatory evidence to the defense, in violation of the rule of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 86, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963). In evaluating this and Pecoraro’s other arguments, we are confined to the standard that Congress adopted in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act to govern federal courts’ review, in habeas corpus proceedings, of adjudications by state courts of the merits of challenges to state convictions. The Act authorizes us to upset such a conviction only if the state courts’ adjudication “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). As held in Valdez v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 941, 946-47, 951-52 (5th Cir.2001), and assumed in other cases, United States v. Pierson, 267 F.3d 544, 550, 556 (7th Cir.2001); Williams v. Coyle, 260 F.3d 684, 697-98 (6th Cir.2001), this standard is applicable even though the district judge held an evidentiary hearing. The evidence obtained in such a hearing is quite likely to bear on the reasonableness of the state courts’ adjudication; that is true; but we do not see why it should alter the standard of federal review.

The Brady doctrine is of course clearly established law determined by the Supreme Court; the only question concerning the doctrine in this case is whether it was unreasonably applied. In February of 1983, three months after the murder, Martha Jackson signed an affidavit stating that she had solicited Pecoraro to kill her husband for $4,000; she had already admitted this to the police, as recorded in several police reports. She was arrested, and agreed at the request of the police to meet with Pecoraro and secretly record their conversation; the police hoped he would admit to her that he was the murderer of Jimmy Christian. The effort to incriminate Pecoraro failed. Jackson was released from custody and never charged with her crime. The details of her agreement with Pecoraro, as she described them to the police, were odd: Pecoraro insisted that they put the deal in writing and that the $4,000 be paid in weekly installments of $20-30. The writing was not produced. Nor was the agreement carried out, or Jackson’s husband harmed.

The prosecution turned the police reports of Jackson’s statements over to the defense, but not her affidavit. Pecoraro argues that it could have been used to undermine her credibility as a witness by establishing that she had a motive to play ball with the pohce by testifying against him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 F.3d 439, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 5618, 2002 WL 481237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-pecoraro-v-jonathan-r-walls-warden-ca7-2002.