Landrum v. Mitchell

625 F.3d 905, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 23035, 2010 WL 4352213
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 2010
Docket06-4194, 06-4251
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 625 F.3d 905 (Landrum v. Mitchell) 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
Landrum v. Mitchell, 625 F.3d 905, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 23035, 2010 WL 4352213 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Warden Betty Mitchell appeals the district court’s order granting Lawrence Landrum’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus on the basis of guilt-phase ineffective assistance of counsel. Landrum cross-appeals the district court’s denial of his other claims. Because we find that Landrum has procedurally defaulted his claim of guilt-phase ineffective assistance of counsel, we reverse the district court’s grant of habeas on that ground and affirm the district court’s decision in all other respects.

I.

The Ohio Supreme Court summarized the facts of this case as follows:

On September 19, 1985, Harold White, Sr., the eighty-four-year-old victim, left his second floor apartment where he lived alone to dine at Sir Richard’s, a restaurant just north of Chillicothe. After dinner, he went home around 9:15 or 9:30 p.m. When he arrived home, White found burglars in his apartment. Appellant-defendant, Lawrence (“Larry”) Landrum, was searching drawers in the kitchen. White, shining a flashlight on him, asked Landrum: “What the hell are you doing in my apartment?” Land-rum replied: “I’m going to get all the money and stuff I can.” Then White told Landrum to leave immediately: “If you don’t get out, I will call the police.”
While White and Landrum were talking, Grant Swackhammer, Landrum’s fourteen-year-old accomplice, came up behind White and struck White on the head five or six times with a large railroad bolt. He struck some blows after White had fallen. Grant then said: “I killed him.” Landrum, joining in, sat astride White and wrestled with him. In the struggle, White tore Landrum’s surgical gloves. Landrum then told Grant that White was still alive and to go get the biggest knife that he could from the kitchen. Grant responded and handed Landrum a large kitchen knife.
Landrum has given different versions of exactly what he did next. At trial, Landrum testified that he did not kill White. He denied asking Grant for the knife but admitted Grant handed it to him. Landrum testified that he only threatened White with the knife: “Told him not to move, to stay still and he wouldn’t get hurt.” Landrum then went through White’s pockets, taking his keys and wallet. Landrum further testified that he told Grant to watch White, then laid the knife down and went to another room to search for valuables. Later, Landrum heard hollering and screaming and shouted to Grant to keep White down. Only when Landrum came back did he notice that White’s throat was slit. However, Landrum told several witnesses that night that he, and not Grant, had cut White’s throat.
Landrum took about $80 and over two hundred nerve pills (Placidyls and Librium) from White’s apartment. Landrum *910 kept all the money and pills. When Landrum and Grant left the apartment, they went to Grant’s house, separated, and Landrum then went to the house of his friend, Rick Perry.
At Perry’s house, then at a railroad yard, and later at a first floor apartment below White’s, Landrum told several juveniles that night the details of the burglary and murder. Landrum told Michael Drew, a seventeen-year-old runaway, that he had just done a job and then described the burglary and murder. He told Drew that he had nodded his head, telling Grant to hit White with the railroad bolt. Landrum showed Drew a bunch of money and also told him that “he slit his [White’s] throat from ear to ear.” Landrum also warned Drew and the others: “If you guys go to the law, I’ll cut your throat just like I did Mr. White’s.” Drew also described Landrum changing clothes that evening.
Rick Perry, age nineteen, a good friend of Landrum’s, testified that he saw Landrum around 11:30 p.m. on September 19 at Perry’s house. Landrum told him: “I’ve got money.” “I did a job.” “I killed some old man.” “I cut his throat.” Landrum told Larry Perry, Rick’s brother, that: “he had to get out of town because he had just gutted [someone].” He also showed Larry around one hundred thirty Placidyl pills and about the same quantity of Libriums. Landrum counted the pills at the house.
Cary Leasure, age sixteen, was also at the Perry house and later at the railroad yard. Cary testified that Landrum said he encountered White, “and then gave the signal, waved his hand and told his buddy to hit him [White] in the head.” When White fell down, Landrum got on top of him and then “told his buddy to go get a knife out of the kitchen drawer.” After his buddy gave him the knife, Landrum said, he then “cut the guy’s throat.”
Karen Hughes Brown, age sixteen, also was at the Perry house and at the railroad yard. Karen said that Landrum told them he and his buddy, Grant, had “broke into Mr. White’s house and Grant was supposed to have hit [him] over the head and Larry sliced his throat.” Landrum said they had been planning the burglary for a couple of days. Karen went that evening with Larry back to an apartment on the first floor of the same building. Landrum had to get a sweater and pair of pants that he had left. There, Landrum told Karen, “Oh, by the way, there’s a dead body above you.” Karen testified that Landrum “asked me what I would do if blood started dripping on me from the ceiling and after he did that he asked if I wanted to go upstairs and see the body.” That evening, Landrum threatened all the juveniles, “if we told anybody, that he’d slice our throat. He said he sliced one person’s throat, so he’d slice another.”
On September 20, an anonymous caller phoned the police, and that afternoon, the police forcibly entered Mr. White’s second floor apartment. Inside they found White, his throat slit, lying in a pool of blood. Closet doors were ajar or open, drawers were pulled open with some contents dumped on the floor, and a wooden locked cabinet had been pried open. Police also found two pieces of material later determined to be pieces of gloves.
On September 21, police arrested Land-rum for White’s murder. On his person, police found a one-way bus ticket to Michigan purchased on September 20. When Landrum was arrested, the tennis shoes he was wearing bore traces of *911 human blood. On September 23, after a grid search, police found a large kitchen knife in a wooded area. Police also found that day in the woods a paper sack containing a bloody towel and washcloth, surgical gloves, a pair of other rubber gloves, and the victim’s wallet. At trial, Landrum admitted throwing away the towel and gloves. The knife, towel and washcloth, and one glove, contained human blood, type 0, the same blood type as White’s. Two fragments of gloves found in the apartment matched torn rubber gloves from the sack in the woods.
A pathologist testified that White suffered multiple lacerations to his head caused by a relatively blunt instrument, possibly the railroad bolt. He found six distinct wounds on White’s right forehead, right side of the scalp and back left side. One blow caused a depressed skull fracture which might have proved fatal. White died of massive bleeding from a gaping neck wound. The neck wound, five inches in length, extended to the spine itself; the right carotid artery, windpipe, neck muscles and veins were all severed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Doss v. Foley
N.D. Ohio, 2025
Ford v. Rewerts
E.D. Michigan, 2025
Hare v. Wilkins
E.D. Michigan, 2025
Searles v. Baldauf
N.D. Ohio, 2025
Williams v. Black
N.D. Ohio, 2024
French v. Johnson
M.D. Tennessee, 2024
West v. Bracy
S.D. Ohio, 2024
Walker v. Chapman
E.D. Michigan, 2024
Morris v. Erdos
N.D. Ohio, 2023
Benjamin Young v. State of Alabama
Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2023
Filipunas v. Campbell
E.D. Michigan, 2023
Parks 749266 v. Burgess
W.D. Michigan, 2022

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
625 F.3d 905, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 23035, 2010 WL 4352213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landrum-v-mitchell-ca6-2010.