Linwood E. Briley v. Gary L. Bass, Warden

742 F.2d 155, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19244, 16 Fed. R. Serv. 1021
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 1984
Docket84-6243
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 742 F.2d 155 (Linwood E. Briley v. Gary L. Bass, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linwood E. Briley v. Gary L. Bass, Warden, 742 F.2d 155, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19244, 16 Fed. R. Serv. 1021 (4th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

The petitioner in this habeas proceeding was convicted in a two-stage trial of capital murder and sentenced to death by a judge and jury in the Circuit Court for the City of Richmond, Virginia. He appealed the conviction and sentence to the Virginia Supreme Court, which affirmed the conviction and sentence. 1 Application for certiorari was denied by the United States Supreme *157 Court. 2 The petitioner sought post-conviction relief in the State trial court. That petition was denied by the State Circuit Court and, on appeal, the denial was affirmed by the Virginia Supreme Court in an unpublished opinion. On application for certiorari that application was denied. 3 At this point the petitioner filed a habeas petition in the United States district court. After a full hearing, including testimony submitted by the parties, the district court denied the petition in an extended opinion. 584 F.Supp. 807. The petitioner has now appealed such denial. We affirm.

I.

The conviction in this case arose out of the murder of John Harvey Gallaher in Richmond, Virginia, on the evening of September 14, 1979. It is unnecessary to recount in detail the circumstances of the murder or trial other than those connected with a part of the examination of the witness Duncan Eric Meekins, since the facts generally are adequately set forth in the opinion of the Virginia Supreme Court. 4

Duncan Meekins, whose testimony is the primary issue on this appeal, had participated in the robbery which led to Gallaher’s murder and was present at the murder. He testified as a witness for the prosecution in this case under a plea bargain agreement with the Commonwealth. A juvenile sixteen years of age at the time of the murder and trial, Meekins, according to his testimony at trial, lived a few doors from the residence of the petitioner’s family in Richmond. Though considerably younger than the Briley brothers, 5 he often visited with the brothers and participated with them in their activities. In connection with the investigation of a murder in which the Brileys and Meekins were suspected (the Wilkerson murder), Meekins and the petitioner were arrested by the Richmond authorities and taken to the police headquarters. Because Meekins was a minor, the police officers did not interrogate him until his mother and father had arrived at the police station and were present for consultation with their son. 6 At the urging of his parents, Meekins gave the police authorities full information about the crimes in which he had participated with the group. In his testimony in this case concerning the Gallaher murder in which he and the brothers had been involved, Meekins testified to the circumstances of the robbery and the brutal shooting of Gallaher in the back as he was being pushed helplessly about by the group. More importantly, he provided in his testimony the evidence which identified the petitioner as the murderer of Gallaher.

Since Meekins was the only witness to provide evidence in the trial that the petitioner was the “triggerman” in the murder which was the subject of the prosecution, the petitioner naturally sought to put in issue at trial Meekins’ credibility by attempting to develop through cross-examination that his testimony was tainted by his plea bargain, particularly by the promise of immunity from the death penalty in the Wilkerson case. To this end, his counsel began with an inquiry into the existence of a plea bargain. The existence of a plea bargain and its details had been made known both to the trial court and the petitioner’s counsel before Meekins testified. The terms of such plea bargain were that the Commonwealth would (1) in one of the Barton Avenue murders, in which the group was involved and in which Meekins had been the “triggerman” not ask for the *158 death penalty against Meekins, 7 and (2) in all the others in which Meekins had participated with the Briley brothers, including the one under review here, Meekins was not to receive more than any other defendants received and (3) finally, Meekins was to testify “truthfully” in all the cases in which the group had been involved. When asked about the plea bargain in this case, Meekins responded that “for this case” the agreement provided that he was to receive no more time on conviction than any other defendant involved in the prosecution.

When the witness testified what his plea bargain was “for this case,” a bench conference was promptly requested by the Commonwealth’s attorney. In this bench conference, the Commonwealth’s attorney explained the reason the witness restricted his explanation of the plea bargain to the prosecution before the court. He said that in order “not to bring anything in this case which would indicate or cause an error to the defendant,” he had “cautioned” Meekins about submitting “any testimony concerning the triple homicide on Barton Avenue or the double homicide on Fifth Avenue,” these being other murders in which it was alleged the witness and the petitioner had been involved. But the Commonwealth’s attorney positively indicated no intention of seeking to limit in any way inquiries into all or any part of the plea bargain. In fact he suggested that petitioner’s counsel ask the witness specifically about the application of the plea bargain to “any case that [the witness] might be involved in.” This suggestion, had it been accepted by petitioner’s counsel, could have elicited the terms of the plea bargain as it related to the Wilkerson murder in which the witness had been given immunity from the death penalty. To the invitation of the prosecution that the petitioner’s counsel should ask the witness what the plea bargain was in any of the cases in which he was involved, the petitioner’s counsel immediately responded: “I think we are entitled to know what the plea agreement [was] without opening up all that,” indicating clearly the intention of petitioner’s counsel to limit any inquiry to the bare fact that Meekins had been promised immunity from a death sentence for his testimony and of strictly omitting any reference to the circumstances of the case in which the immunity was granted.

The Commonwealth’s attorney’s response to this contention that the petitioner was entitled to limit the inquiry about the plea bargain only

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Bluebook (online)
742 F.2d 155, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19244, 16 Fed. R. Serv. 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linwood-e-briley-v-gary-l-bass-warden-ca4-1984.