Johnson v. Zmuda

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedApril 6, 2022
Docket5:18-cv-03260
StatusUnknown

This text of Johnson v. Zmuda (Johnson v. Zmuda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Zmuda, (D. Kan. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

REGINALD MARCEL JOHNSON,

Petitioner,

v. CASE NO. 18-3260-SAC

JEFF ZMUDA,

Respondent.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter is a petition for habeas corpus filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Petitioner challenges his 2008 conviction in the District Court of Sedgwick County, Kansas, for first-degree murder, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel and cumulative error. Procedural History On February 29, 2008, petitioner was convicted by a jury of first-degree murder. On April 4, 2008, he was sentenced to a term of life without the possibility of parole for 25 years. Petitioner filed a direct appeal, alleging an error in failing to instruct the jury on ‘sudden quarrel’ voluntary manslaughter. The Kansas Supreme Court (KSC) affirmed the conviction and sentence. State v. Johnson, 236 P.3d 517 (Kan. 2010). On December 15, 2010, petitioner filed a motion for post-conviction relief under K.S.A. 60-1507 alleging various trial errors, including ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court dismissed the motion without prejudice on April 8, 2011. On August 24, 2011, petitioner placed a new petition in the prison mailing system the district court held a hearing and orally denied relief. Petitioner appealed, and the Kansas Court of Appeals (KCOA) remanded the matter for an evidentiary hearing. The district court conducted the hearing on May 22, 2014, and June 10, 2015, and denied relief in an order entered on October 20, 2015. Petitioner again appealed, and the KCOA affirmed the denial on September 1, 2017. The KSC denied review on April 25, 2018. Johnson v. State, 401 P.3d 184 (Table), 2017 WL 3836912 (Sep. 1, 2017), rev. denied, Apr. 25, 2018. On June 18, 2018, petitioner filed a second motion under K.S.A. 60-1507 based on newly discovered evidence. The district court summarily denied relief on July 17, 2018, and the KCOA affirmed the denial on May 15, 2020. The KSC denied review on March 12, 2021. Factual Background The KSC summarized the facts underlying petitioner’s conviction as follows:

Johnson was at work on August 20, 2007, when his colleague, Eddie Porter, approached him during their lunch break and told him that Johnson needed to talk to Amy Whiteman, Johnson’s common-law wife. Johnson, suspicious that Whiteman might be cheating on him, asked Porter if Whiteman was “stepping out” on him. Porter confirmed Johnson’s suspicions, told him he needed to speak with her, and provided Johnson with a name: Anthony.

Johnson received permission from his boss to leave work for the rest of the day, called Whiteman, and asked that she meet with him in a nearby parking lot. Johnson confronted Whiteman, and she told him that Anthony was “just a friend.” Johnson, however, did not believe Whiteman and demanded that she give him back his truck and move out of their house. Whiteman suggested they go home and talk, but instead they went to see her (and also formerly his) therapist.

They arrived at the therapist’s office only to discover she was unavailable, and again began discussing their situation in the office parking lot. Johnson again asked Whiteman anything more than a friend. Johnson told her to give him her car keys and cell phone because both belonged to him. He then told her that he would have her belongings waiting for her in the front yard, “so there [was] no reason for [her] to come in the house.” Johnson then locked the vehicle he had been driving and left in the truck Whiteman had been driving. Johnson, who suffered from depression and had previously attempted suicide, called his therapist and made an appointment to see him that evening. He then drove home. Whiteman called her friend Lisa Sandoval to pick her up and take her home to get her clothes.

Johnson arrived home and started moving Whiteman’s clothes into the front yard. As he was doing so, he noticed a rose and a card he had given to Whiteman the day before. “At that point,” Johnson testified, he “didn’t want to live anymore.” He then retrieved his gun, planning on committing suicide. Noticing Sandoval’s car arriving in front of the house, however, he instead put the gun in the closet by the front door and went out to the front yard. Johnson there again confronted Whiteman about her infidelity and their relationship, while Sandoval waited in her car.

Sandoval reminded Whiteman and Johnson twice that their son, Josiah, would be home from school soon and suggested they remove Whiteman’s belongings from the yard. Johnson and Whiteman finally started carrying them back into the house. Sandoval checked with Whiteman to make sure she was okay before Sandoval left, and Whiteman indicated she was fine. Johnson thanked Sandoval for bringing Whiteman home, said everything was going to be all right, and told her that he was not the “monster” Whiteman had portrayed him to be. Sandoval asked Whiteman to call her later and left.

Whiteman and Johnson continued moving Whiteman’s belongings back inside. They also agreed that Whiteman would accompany Johnson to meet with his therapist that evening to discuss their situation and possible separation. They moved to the backyard and continued to talk about their problems. While there, Josiah arrived home from school. Johnson told Whiteman she needed to tell Josiah why they were separating. He told Josiah that his mother was sleeping with another man. Josiah indicated he did not want to move away and left to ride his bike around the neighborhood.

After Josiah left, the couple when back inside and continued talking. Eventually Johnson told Whiteman to pack up her things. Whiteman, however, saying she needed “closure” so her he did not want to hear about it, but she continued, telling him she had slept with the man four times. Johnson told her he did not want to know any more and said, “could you just get your things now and leave?” Whiteman refused to leave and instead continued to provide details on the affair. Then, according to Johnson, his “heart started beating really fast, just pounding,” his head started to hurt, and then everything went black. He did not remember getting the gun from the closet, did not remember hearing the shotgun “being discharged,” never intended to hurt Whiteman, but simply wanted her to “get her things and leave.” At some point, a noise at the door roused him, and he opened his eyes. Whiteman was lying on the floor. Fearing the noise at the door was Josiah coming home, he pulled Whiteman’s body into the bedroom because he “didn’t want [Josiah] to see his mom like that.”

The State described those same events this way: Johnson silenced Whiteman “when he retrieved his Mossberg pump-action shotgun from the living room closet, pointed it at her, and shot her four times.”

Johnson then went to a Wichita police station and informed officers there that he had hurt his wife. The police went to Johnson’s house, found three shotgun shells and the shotgun on the floor of the living room, a trail of blood leading to a bedroom, and Whiteman’s bloody body on the bedroom floor. The body was transported to the hospital, where Whiteman was pronounced dead from shotgun wounds to the chest and thigh.

State v. Johnson, 236 P.3d at 518-19. Additional facts are incorporated into the discussion. Standard of review This matter is governed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA).

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Johnson v. Zmuda, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-zmuda-ksd-2022.