Lorenzo Matthews v. Joseph Abramajtys, Warden

319 F.3d 780, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 2187, 2003 WL 261192
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 10, 2003
Docket00-1447
StatusPublished
Cited by215 cases

This text of 319 F.3d 780 (Lorenzo Matthews v. Joseph Abramajtys, Warden) 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
Lorenzo Matthews v. Joseph Abramajtys, Warden, 319 F.3d 780, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 2187, 2003 WL 261192 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Matthews was convicted by bench trial in 1986 of three counts of first-degree murder and one felony firearm count. Having unsuccessfully pursued his appeals through the Michigan state courts, Matthews filed a series of post-conviction motions with the state courts beginning in 1995. His last such motion was denied by the Michigan Supreme Court on December 30, 1997. In July 1998, Matthews sought a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254; his petition is thus governed by AEDPA. The district court granted the writ on several grounds, including insufficiency of evidence and ineffectiveness of counsel in violation of the Fourteenth and Sixth Amendments. The court ordered Matthews’s release, pending only the resolution of this appeal brought by the respondent, Warden Abramajitys. The respondent argues, inter alia, that the district court erred in its substantive analysis and that Matthews’s petition is untimely under AEDPA’s one-year time limit because the “gaps” between Matthews’s various filings with the Michigan courts do not toll the running of the statute under § 2254(d)(2). We reverse in part and affirm in part, and we affirm the grant of the writ on the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel.

I

In the summer of 1984, Bruce Baxter brought 27 diamonds to the Kayanan Jewelry Co. in Oak Park, Michigan and commissioned the design and manufacture of a gold ring in which to set the jewels. When the ring was completed, the diamonds were arranged in the shape of a trisected circle, recognizable as the logo of the Mercedes-Benz automobile company. Krikor Oknayan, one of the ring’s makers, testified in 1986 that although the jewelers had retained the mold, no other rings like Baxter’s had been made.

*783 Petitioner was convicted by the State of Michigan of participating in the triple homicide of Baxter, his wife Marilyn, and their friend and neighbor Robert Williams. On the morning of December 12, 1985, the three were shot to death, apparently by multiple assailants, at Baxter’s residence on Westwood Street in Detroit. There were no witnesses to the killings of the Baxters in their basement; the only person left alive in the Baxters’ house was their orphaned daughter Twyla, a 14-month-old infant found, by police, uninjured in her upstairs nursery. Police found Bruce Baxter with his hands bound behind his back, shot four times with three different weapons. Marilyn Baxter was found nearby, still in her nightclothes, also dead of four gunshots. Although there was no evidence of forced entry, the house had been looted, including the secret drawer beneath the carpet where Bruce hid his money. The ring, and other various other valuables, were missing from the house.

Robert Williams had apparently encountered the assailants when he arrived at the Baxter household at approximately 8:25 A.M., had been shot and had fled through his own yard into the yard of the Rev. James Ellison, where he was shot again and collapsed. Ellison witnessed the final moments of Williams’s life. After Ellison heard the shots, he saw a figure bending over Williams, lifting Williams’s body as if to “check him out.” When Ellison confronted this individual and asked what was going on, the figure stared at Ellison for a moment, concealed a dark object that had been in his hand, and ran away. Ellison indicated that this man was wearing a light blue “puffy jacket” and was 5'6" in height. Ellison testified the man was not petitioner Matthews. Ellison spoke briefly to Williams before he lost consciousness and died, attempting to comfort him, but all Ellison could comprehend of Williams’s responses was “two [garble] guys.”

Moments thereafter, three men ran from Westwood Street turning onto Oran-gelawn Street, and turning again to run down Minock Street, parallel to Westwood. Several boys between the ages of 8 and 12, on their way to school at the time, were able to describe these men as armed with handguns. The boys’ descriptions were hampered by the fact that, familiar with, and alerted to, the sound of gunshots, they all wisely took cover by throwing themselves on the ground or ducking behind trees and bushes.

The evidence about the incident that six of the boys gave at petitioner’s trial has been extensively detañed by the district court in its published opinion, Matthews v. Abramajtys, 92 F.Supp.2d 615, 621-22 (E.D.Mich.2000), and need only be summarized here. While the boys’ testimony on the route and number of the men was consistent, their descriptions varied to some extent. Generally, however, the boys remembered one as wearing a gray and blue “Georgetown” jacket and another as wearing a red “Sixers” jacket; the descriptions of the third figure were more vague, although some boys remembered him as hooded. All of the boys who testified claimed to have been unable to see the faces of the three men. Over the objection of the defendant, the prosecution introduced into evidence a mug shot of Matthews taken 11 months earlier, which shows him wearing a dark blue “Georgetown” jacket. 1

Matthews was a resident of this neighborhood of Detroit, and was acquainted with Mr. Baxter. Testimony established *784 that he had met with Baxter for an hour in the basement of Baxter’s home two days before the murders. Like Bruce Baxter, but at an apparently lower volume, Matthews was involved in the buying and selling of jewelry. On the morning of December 12, Matthews had been seen on Orangelawn, walking in the direction of the Baxter residence, wearing blue jeans and a “dark jacket.” Off-duty police officer Gilbert McReynolds testified that this occurred around 8:00 A.M. Ms. Marilyn Prior also saw the three assailants run by her home near the intersection of Minock and Orangelawn at 8:25 A.M. She only glanced at the men, and could not be positive, but testified that she thought one of them might be Matthews, whom she claimed to be familiar with from the neighborhood and because he went to Cody High School with her nieces. 2

By December 14, two days later, petitioner was in Illinois, where he called his girlfriend Rose Marie Marks. Marks testified that when Matthews returned to Detroit sometime between December 16 and December 18, he showed her Baxter’s ring. Matthews apparently told Marks that he wanted to purchase this ring, and attempted (unsuccessfully) to convince her to give him seven hundred dollars for this purpose. Other testimony established that petitioner behaved in a fashion inconsistent with this status as prospective purchaser. In the days following his display of the ring to Marks, Matthews took the ring to jeweler Brian Berry, to whom he sold it for $750 and a gold rope necklace, a “week before Christmas.” Berry, as well as others, averred that at this time the ring was far more valuable, worth $12,000 to $15,000. 3

Seven days earlier, on the evening of December 11, the ring had still been in Baxter’s house. The Baxters employed their nephew, Jonathon Hudson, as babysitter and housekeeper.

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Bluebook (online)
319 F.3d 780, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 2187, 2003 WL 261192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorenzo-matthews-v-joseph-abramajtys-warden-ca6-2003.