Junior Blackston v. Lloyd Rapelje

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 2015
Docket12-2668
StatusUnknown

This text of Junior Blackston v. Lloyd Rapelje (Junior Blackston v. Lloyd Rapelje) 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
Junior Blackston v. Lloyd Rapelje, (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 15a0025a.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

JUNIOR BLACKSTON, ┐ Petitioner-Appellee, │ │ │ No. 12-2668 v. │ > │ LLOYD RAPELJE, │ Respondent-Appellant. │ ┘ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit No. 2:09-cv-14766—Arthur J. Tarnow, District Judge. Argued: November 20, 2013 Decided and Filed: February 17, 2015

Before: DAUGHTREY, KETHLEDGE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

_________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: B. Eric Restuccia, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellant. Kimberly A. Jolson, JONES DAY, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: B. Eric Restuccia, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellant. Kimberly A. Jolson, JONES DAY, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee.

DAUGHTREY, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which DONALD, J., joined. KETHLEDGE, J. (pp. 28–30), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

1 No. 12-2668 Blackston v. Rapelje Page 2

______________________

AMENDED OPINION ______________________

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. Petitioner Junior Fred Blackston is a Michigan state prisoner serving a life sentence for murder following his retrial and conviction in state court. Before the second trial was held, two of the state’s key witnesses recanted their testimony. Because those witnesses were later determined to be unavailable at the new trial, the court ordered their earlier testimony read to the jury, while at the same time denying Blackston the right to impeach their testimony with evidence of their subsequent recantations. After exhausting his state remedies unsuccessfully, Blackston sought federal habeas relief, contending that the state unreasonably abridged his clearly established federal constitutional right to confrontation. The district court granted a conditional writ. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case arises from the murder of Charles Miller, a 22-year-old Michigan resident who disappeared late in the night of September 12, 1988. His fate remained a mystery until 1999, when a cold-case investigation team began re-interviewing Miller’s former friends and associates. One of these associates, Charles Dean Lamp, admitted involvement in the disappearance and eventually led police to the location of Miller’s skeletal remains, buried in the woods near Lamp’s property. Lamp explained that he and the petitioner in this case, Junior Fred Blackston, had decided to kill Miller together and carried out the killing with the assistance of a third man, Guy Carl Simpson.

The state charged Blackston with first-degree murder. In exchange for his testimony, the state granted Simpson immunity from prosecution and permitted Lamp to plead guilty to a lesser-included charge of manslaughter. No physical evidence connected Blackston to Miller’s death, so the state’s case depended entirely on the testimonial evidence of five witnesses: the accomplices Lamp and Simpson; Darlene Rhodes Zantello (Blackston’s ex-girlfriend); Rebecca Krause Mock (the victim’s girlfriend); and Roxann Krause Barr (Mock’s sister). No. 12-2668 Blackston v. Rapelje Page 3

The details of the killing itself come almost entirely from the testimony of Lamp and Simpson at Blackston’s initial trial. According to them, Blackston was angry at Miller because he believed Miller was planning to rob Blackston’s cocaine wholesaler, a man named Bennie Williams. Lamp suggested that they kill Miller, using one of Lamp’s rifles, and bury him near Lamp’s property. Blackston agreed. To lure Miller to the ambush site, Blackston invited Miller to join them for a night-time raid on a clandestine marijuana field known to be in the area. Simpson arrived unexpectedly at Blackston’s house that evening, and ended up joining the proposed raid.

Lamp and Simpson further testified that Lamp drove all four men (plus Blackston’s one- year-old daughter) to a wooded area near Lamp’s property. Once there, Lamp handed Blackston a hunting rifle and walked ahead to find the pre-dug hole in which they planned to bury Miller after killing him. Simpson hung back with Miller and Blackston. Once Lamp reached the hole, he yelled, “I found it.” Simpson then saw Blackston raise the rifle and shoot Miller in the back of the head or neck. After the shooting, Simpson and Blackston dragged Miller’s body to the hole and threw it in; Blackston then climbed into the hole and cut off Miller’s ear. Lamp filled in the hole with dirt and concealed it with underbrush. The three men drove back to Blackston’s house at about 12:30 a.m. on September 13.

The defense impeached Simpson and Lamp’s credibility on several grounds, including charges that they had fabricated their testimony in exchange for favorable deals with the government. The defense also identified inconsistencies among Simpson’s earlier stories relating to Miller’s disappearance—Simpson had, at various times, identified other individuals as the killer (including Lamp), and had also claimed that Miller was still alive. The state attempted to rehabilitate Simpson’s credibility with evidence of prior statements consistent with his trial testimony, including written statements to his brother and to Zantello.

Darlene Rhodes Zantello, Blackston’s long-time girlfriend, also testified against Blackston at his first trial. At the time of Miller’s disappearance in 1988, Blackston and Zantello lived together. They had one child and Zantello was pregnant with a second. Zantello testified that on the night of Miller’s disappearance, she experienced abdominal pains and made an emergency trip to the hospital with Blackston’s sister Sheila. When she left her home for the No. 12-2668 Blackston v. Rapelje Page 4

hospital, Blackston, Miller, and Simpson were together at the house. When she returned from the hospital around midnight, she said, no one was home.

Zantello testified that after Blackston and Simpson returned to the house later that night, she overheard them discussing gory aspects of a killing of some kind. The discussion (which Zantello remembered only vaguely) included references to a severed ear, vast amounts of blood, and Blackston “almost bl[owing] [somebody’s] whole head off.” The defense impeached Zantello with her admittedly bad memory, bad hearing, and history of alcoholism and drug use. She was also questioned about prior inconsistent statements she had made, some of which exculpated Blackston.

Rebecca Mock and Roxann Barr were members of the same social circle as both Blackston and Miller. They testified that Blackston made certain incriminating statements to them in the weeks following Miller’s disappearance. According to Mock, who was Miller’s former girlfriend, Blackston twice admitted involvement in Miller’s death. First, at a party in a public park, Blackston admitted to shooting Miller and cutting off his ear. Later, at a second party at Zantello’s house, Blackston again hinted at his involvement but offered no details.

Barr, who is Mock’s younger sister, testified that she was present at each of the two parties at which Mock supposedly heard Blackston confess to the murder. Barr testified, however, that Blackston “never said that he shot [Miller] himself.” Instead, she recalled that Blackston identified Lamp as the shooter at the first party and made no incriminating statements at the second party. The defense impeached both sisters with evidence of their intoxication at the time of the purported admissions, as well as with their admitted history of alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, and crack use. Barr conceded that she had used drugs the night before testifying at trial.

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Junior Blackston v. Lloyd Rapelje, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/junior-blackston-v-lloyd-rapelje-ca6-2015.