Lanier McPherson v. Jeffrey Woods

506 F. App'x 379
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 2012
Docket11-2010, 11-2048
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 506 F. App'x 379 (Lanier McPherson v. Jeffrey Woods) 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
Lanier McPherson v. Jeffrey Woods, 506 F. App'x 379 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal arises out of the district court’s grant of habeas corpus to a Michigan prisoner. The petitioner-appellee and cross-appellant, Lanier McPherson (“McPherson”), was convicted by a jury in Wayne County Circuit Court of flrst-de- *381 gree murder, felon in possession of a firearm, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The district court granted his habeas corpus petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on his Fifth Amendment claim but denied his petition on all other grounds. The Warden, Jeffrey Woods, appeals the grant of habeas corpus, and McPherson cross-appeals the denial of his petition on the remaining grounds. Based on the reasons that follow, we reverse the district court’s grant of habeas corpus on McPherson’s Fifth Amendment claim and affirm the district court’s denial of habeas corpus on all other grounds.

I.

On August 19, 2000, four men went to a funeral home in Detroit to attend a funeral: Lanier McPherson, Cherell King 1 , Delano Gaffney, and Marcell Dorsey. McPherson traveled to the funeral with his girlfriend, Lucretia Thompson, his uncle, and Cherell King. When McPherson arrived, he had a gun with him. He told Thompson the gun was not his and asked her to take the gun home with her.

At some point during the day, Gaffney’s car was stolen from the funeral home parking lot. King told officers that when Gaffney realized this, he remembered seeing two men walking on West Grand Boulevard whom he suspected of stealing his car. Gaffney asked McPherson to have Thompson bring Gaffney’s gun back to him, which McPherson did. At that time, Dorsey, Cherell King, Gaffney, and McPherson all got into Dorsey’s Jeep and drove down West Grand Boulevard. Dorsey’s Jeep approached the two men, Abdul Scott and Max King, at the corner of West Grand Boulevard and Linwood Avenue. Two of the passengers in Dorsey’s Jeep jumped out of the vehicle. Scott and King were shot — Scott five times and King twice. King survived the shooting. Scott did not.

A.

Cherell King and McPherson were arrested for an unrelated crime approximately three months after the shooting, on November 22, 2000. The next day, Investigator Barbara Simon arrived at 1300 Beaubien, where McPherson was being held, to interview him about the shooting of Scott and King. McPherson initialed a document informing him of his right to have an attorney present. Later, at a state court Walker 2 hearing, Simon testified that McPherson “said he didn’t know anything about it and he didn’t want to talk. And after a while, I believe I took him back up on the ninth floor.” Simon testified that McPherson had said “fuck this, fuck you, I don’t want to talk.” At that same hearing, McPherson testified that Simon “kept asking me questions and I said I don’t want to talk, I want a lawyer. She told me the big, bad, lawyer talk doesn’t scare her, I don’t run anything in Squad 7.” Simon did not attempt to speak with McPherson again.

The next day, Cherell King was interviewed and gave a statement implicating McPherson. After learning of this statement, on November 24, Investigator James Fisher testified at trial that he went to interview McPherson. McPherson testified at the Walker hearing that he initially told Fisher that he wanted a lawyer and *382 that he did not want to talk to Fisher. Both men acknowledge that Fisher then gave McPherson a Constitutional Rights Certificate of Notification before beginning to take a formal statement, which McPherson read aloud and initialed. Fisher took contemporaneous notes, which McPherson also reviewed and initialed at the conclusion of the interview. In his statement, McPherson asserted that he gave the gun Thompson brought back to the funeral home to Gaffney. Gaffney then put the gun in Cherell King’s hand and said, “smoke both of them.” Disbelieving McPherson’s statement, Fisher set up an appointment for McPherson to take a polygraph examination with Investigator Andrew Sims, a polygraph examiner with the Detroit Police Department.

McPherson testified at the Walker hearing that the next day, November 25, an unnamed investigator entered his holding area. McPherson testified that he asked, “what happened to the lawyer I asked for and I thought I was getting off.” McPherson recalled the investigator saying “yeah, yeah” and walking off.

On November 26, Sims gave McPherson a polygraph examination. Before beginning the examination, McPherson signed a waiver of his Miranda rights. Sims initially disbelieved McPherson’s account of the events during the polygraph examination and told him so. At that point, McPherson told Sims that he would tell the truth. Sims testified at trial that during that statement, McPherson said that he “fired a couple of shots, because they were reaching as though they were armed. And [McPherson] shot him and left the scene.” McPherson gave the following statement to Sims:

I, Lanier McPherson, was only going, trying to ask the two guys had they seen a Chevy that had been stolen from a funeral home? And while doing so, the guys became hostile, and began to reach like they had weapons. So, I fired the gun at them, only to scare them away, because I didn’t want to be hurt by them or any weapons they were trying to pull out.

After completing his interview with Sims, McPherson was transported by Investigator Dwight Pearson back to 1300 Beaubien, where he was being held. McPherson made the following statement to Investigator Pearson (read at trial from Investigator Pearson’s notes memorializing the statement):

Q [by Investigator Pearson]: Tell me what happened over at Linwood and West Grand Blvd.
A [by McPherson]: “(Hondo), 3 ... Delano Gaffney, while over at Cole’s Funeral Home, stated that there was two guys walking down West Grand Blvd. that knew something about this car he had that was stolen. He asked us, did anyone have a heater [gun] on them. That’s when I called my girlfriend and told her to bring my nine millimeter up to the funeral home. It took her five to ten minutes to get up to the funeral home. After the gun was brought up to the funeral home, Tick, which is [Che-rell] King, Hondo, and myself got into Dune’s, which is Marcel Dorsey, Jeep Grand Cherokee and went riding around looking for both Hondo’s car and two guys that were walking down West Grand Blvd. While riding, we saw the two guys walking on West Grand Blvd. So, Dune stopped the Jeep at the corner of Linwood and West Grand Blvd. I got out to ask the two guys about Hondo’s car, because Hondo was upset. When I walked over to the two guys, I asked them have they seen a gold Chevy with *383 twenties? They said, no, dog, we haven’t seen one, and that they didn’t know what I was talking about. I asked them where they were walking.”

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506 F. App'x 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanier-mcpherson-v-jeffrey-woods-ca6-2012.