Lotts v. Steele

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 2020
Docket4:16-cv-01796
StatusUnknown

This text of Lotts v. Steele (Lotts v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lotts v. Steele, (E.D. Mo. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

DAREL LOTTS, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) Case No. 4:16-cv-01796-AGF ) TROY STEELE, et al., ) ) Respondents. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on the pro se petition of Missouri state prisoner Darel Lotts for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. On July 15, 2010, Petitioner was convicted by a jury of first-degree murder, first-degree assault, and two counts of armed criminal action. Petitioner was sentenced to a term of life without parole for the murder, a concurrent term of 30 years’ imprisonment for the first-degree assault, and two concurrent terms of 20 years’ imprisonment for the armed criminal actions. In his federal habeas petition, Petitioner asserts several claims of trial court error and ineffective assistance of counsel. For the reasons set forth below, habeas relief will be denied. BACKGROUND This case arises out of a drug deal that resulted in the shooting of Kurt Williams and his brother, Jamar Starks. Petitioner was charged by the State of Missouri with first- degree murder; first-degree assault; first-degree robbery; first-degree attempted robbery; and four counts of armed criminal action. A jury trial took place from July 13–15, 2010, and the evidence at trial showed the following, as summarized by the Missouri Court of

Appeals in Petitioner’s direct appeal: [Petitioner] bought drugs from [Williams] on several occasions in the past. During the evening of July 22, 2008, [Petitioner] called Williams to buy crack cocaine from him again, but Williams was suspicious because the deal was not conducted as it had been in the past. [Petitioner] walked to the meeting spot, entered the car that Williams and his brother, [Starks], drove, and asked Williams for the drugs. When Williams handed [Petitioner] the drugs, [Petitioner] told Williams that his “brother” wanted to see the drugs on the scale. Williams agreed. [Petitioner] handed back the drugs and left the car to look for Alex Jordan (“Jordan”).

[Petitioner] returned to the car with Jordan, who carried a backpack. [Petitioner] and Jordan sat in the back seat, and [Petitioner] pulled out a revolver from Jordan’s backpack. Williams and Starks tried to flee from the car, but [Petitioner] shot them both. Williams saw [Petitioner] and Jordan running away, but then [Petitioner] returned and shot Starks three more times.

At the crime scene, the police found Starks’s body and a baseball hat. A DNA analysis of the hat determined that [Petitioner’s] DNA was present on it. Williams was hospitalized for a month, and when he was released from the hospital, he told the police that [Petitioner] shot him. Williams also identified [Petitioner] and Jordan from photographic line-ups and physical line-ups.

Resp. Ex. 5 at 6-7.

On the first day of trial, Petitioner’s counsel informed the trial court outside the presence of the jury that counsel had just learned that morning of an alleged feud between Petitioner’s family and Williams’s family stemming from a nearly 15-year-old homicide in which Williams’s uncle’s girlfriend’s son was convicted of killing Petitioner’s cousin and uncle. Resp. Ex. 1 at 211-12. Counsel indicated that he wished to cross-examine Williams about this feud to demonstrate bias and Williams’s motive to falsely identify Petitioner as the perpetrator. The trial court held that cross-examination on the issue would not be permitted because the allegation of bias was too attenuated. Id. at 212.

During the presentation of its case, the State called Williams to testify. Williams described the shooting, identified Petitioner in the courtroom, testified that Petitioner was the shooter, and testified that he had previously identified Petitioner as the shooter in a police photographic lineup more than a month after the shooting. Defense counsel cross- examined Williams but did not raise the issue of his family’s alleged feud with Petitioner’s family or other potential bias.

As part of the State’s case, a DNA analyst from the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department Crime Laboratory also testified that DNA recovered from a baseball hat found on the scene of the crime contained DNA from four different individuals, two of which were main contributors, and that one of the main contributors was Petitioner. Petitioner testified in his own defense at trial and presented the testimony of four

of his relatives who each testified that Petitioner was at his grandmother Brenda Blount’s apartment with other family members at or around the time of the shooting. Petitioner also testified that the baseball hat found at the crime scene did belong to him at one point, but that he shared the hat with multiple family members and that he had given the hat to Jordan several weeks before the shooting.

During cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited testimony from Petitioner that Petitioner owned and had worn the baseball hat found at the crime scene. The prosecutor then asked Petitioner whether he was the “main contributor” of the DNA found on the hat, and defense counsel objected that the question misstated the evidence. The trial court sustained the objection “as to the main contributor questions,” but the prosecutor went on to state: “You were the main contributor. You heard that evidence.” Resp. Ex. 1

at 511. Petitioner answered: “I mean that is my hat, of course. Since it’s mine, of course, I would be the main contributor. I mean I wore it the most.” Id. Defense counsel did not renew his objection, and the trial court did not ask the jury to disregard this testimony. The prosecutor further questioned Petitioner about being stopped by the police in connection with the shooting, as follows:

[Prosecutor]: I mean you actually told the police they stopped you -- they told you have the right to remain silent and all that kind of stuff, right?

[Petitioner]: Yes.

[Prosecutor]: And you said, “I understand my rights.”

[Petitioner]: Yes, I did.

[Prosecutor]: And you said, “I have an alibi for that night.”

[Petitioner]: And I said -- yes, sir.

[Prosecutor]: And then you said, “But I’m not going to tell you what it is.”

[Petitioner]: No, I didn’t say--

[Prosecutor]: And you refused to tell the police what your alibi was, didn’t you, Mr. Lotts?

Id. at 521-22. At this point, Petitioner’s trial counsel objected to the prosecutor’s line of questioning and argued that it constituted improper impeachment. Counsel then moved for a mistrial. The prosecutor responded that Petitioner waived his Fifth Amendment right when he told police he had an alibi because he made a statement, even if he refused to tell police the alibi. The trial court held: “Maybe half and one-half. I think once he refused to tell them, he might be invoking his right again, but I think you got that much

out.” Id. at 523. The trial court then denied the motion for a mistrial, and the prosecution moved on to a different line of questioning. Id. During its rebuttal, the State presented the testimony of Michael Jones, who testified that he had known Petitioner for nine years and had lived with Petitioner and Petitioner’s family for some time. Jones testified that, in December 2008, Petitioner confessed to Jones that Petitioner had shot two people who tried to rob him, and although

Petitioner did not name the two victims, Jones “just kn[ew]” it was Williams and Starks. Id. at 544. The prosecutor also showed Jones a copy of a photographic line-up and asked Jones to identify Petitioner from the photograph.

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Lotts v. Steele, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lotts-v-steele-moed-2020.