Mark McQueen v. O'Bell Winn

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 2021
Docket19-2212
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mark McQueen v. O'Bell Winn (Mark McQueen v. O'Bell Winn) 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
Mark McQueen v. O'Bell Winn, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0360n.06

Case No. 19-2212

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jul 21, 2021 MARK MCQUEEN, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT v. ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN O’BELL T. WINN, Warden, ) Respondent-Appellee. ) OPINION )

BEFORE: COLE, BUSH, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. In 2011, a Michigan jury convicted Mark McQueen of

first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving his eleven-year-old daughter. The trial court

sentenced him to 25 to 40 years’ imprisonment. After a failed direct appeal to the Michigan Court

of Appeals and the Michigan Supreme Court, and multiple unsuccessful post-conviction

motions, McQueen filed a writ of habeas corpus in federal court. The district court denied his

petition. We affirm.

I.

A. FACTUAL HISTORY

The charge against McQueen followed from the accusation that he sexually assaulted his

eleven-year-old daughter, A.M., in late 2009. Five months after the alleged assault, in April 2010,

A.M. testified at a probable cause hearing. She told the court that on the Wednesday before Case No. 19-2212, McQueen v. Winn

Thanksgiving 2009, McQueen picked up her and her brother, D.M., from their grandmother’s

house, and that she and D.M. stayed at McQueen’s house for the reminder of Thanksgiving break.

A.M. said that on Sunday night, while she was asleep in the living room, McQueen called out to

her, told her that he was lonely, and asked that she come into his room. She testified that she went

into the room, laid on the bed, and that McQueen told her that he was going to “touch” her. A.M.

allegedly responded by telling her dad “No.” But according to A.M., McQueen told his daughter

that if she didn’t cooperate, he would “beat” her. A.M. also testified that McQueen touched her

inside her “private spot” with his hand. She said nothing to her mother at first. But after about

three weeks A.M. told her mother what McQueen had done to her. Based on that account the court

bound the case over for trial, which took place the following year.

At trial, A.M.’s testimony featured some minor gaps and inconsistencies with her

statements during the probable cause hearing. For example, she could not recall what day the

alleged assault took place until counsel reminded her of her testimony at the probable cause

hearing. She also said that McQueen had told her he would “kill” her if she didn’t let him have

his way, not that he would “beat” her as she previously testified. She also contradicted her prior

testimony by saying at trial that she had seen McQueen after the assault (previously she said she

had not), and by saying that McQueen had assaulted her more than once (previously she had only

reported the one assault). Generally, though, she told the same story at trial that she did at the

probable cause hearing. She further noted at trial that her mom—whose later testimony reinforced

A.M.’s account—took her to the hospital for an examination, to the police station to file a report,

and then to a place called Care House for a special interview.

At the hospital, a pediatric nurse examined A.M. and recorded A.M.’s account of what

happened. The nurse then testified at trial about what A.M. told her—essentially, that A.M.’s

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father had touched her genital area with his finger one night when she was visiting him over the

Thanksgiving holiday period. The nurse also reported that A.M. did in fact show signs of vaginal

trauma, though the nurse could not specify exactly what caused the trauma or when it occured.

At the police station A.M.’s mother filed a report, and a detective was assigned to the case.

The detective testified at trial that he spoke with A.M. and her mother. The detective did not,

however, formally interview A.M. because protocol dictated that children be interviewed at Care

House.

At Care House, a forensic interviewer1 named Margo Moltmaker interviewed A.M. The

prosecution called Moltmaker as an expert witness during the trial to buttress A.M.’s testimony.

Moltmaker told the jury that during the forensic interview, A.M. seemed to be telling the truth.

Prior to trial, McQueen’s attorney had moved for funds to hire an expert to rebut

Moltmaker’s testimony at trial. At the hearing on the motion, trial counsel said that he might be

considered ineffective if he failed to hire an opposing expert—he also noted that he had left a

phone message with an expert, Dr. Katherine Okla, who left a return message, but that the two had

not formally discussed any plans. The court granted the motion, providing counsel with $1,500.00

to hire Dr. Okla as an expert. But at trial, counsel did not call Dr. Okla to testify, and it does not

appear that he consulted with her beyond leaving the initial message.

Counsel did, however, cross-examine Moltmaker. He questioned Moltmaker about her

procedure, and why she failed to follow standard protocol which dictated that child interviews be

videotaped so that experts can adequately review the film. He also inquired about some of the

inconsistencies between A.M.’s account in the forensic interview (which had been transcribed),

and A.M.’s testimony at the probable cause hearing and at trial.

1 Forensic interviewers are trained to gather information about incidents of alleged child abuse in a manner that is supposed to yield accurate information from the child.

-3- Case No. 19-2212, McQueen v. Winn

In addition, counsel called Tawanna Patterson, McQueen’s girlfriend, as an alibi witness.

Patterson told the jury that she and McQueen took A.M. and D.M. to their grandmother’s house

Sunday evening—when A.M. alleged that the two were at McQueen’s house. She also said that

after dropping A.M. off, she and McQueen went home and spent the rest of the night together,

alone.

McQueen had also wanted his counsel to call his cousin, Archie McQueen, as an alibi

witness. McQueen says that he told his trial counsel that Archie could have told the jury that the

two were at a rap party until two or three in the morning on the night in question, so McQueen

could not have been at the house with A.M. as alleged. Trial counsel did not call Archie to testify.

The jury credited A.M.’s account of the facts, convicting McQueen of criminal sexual

conduct in the first degree. And because this was McQueen’s fourth felony offense, the court

sentenced him to a mandatory 25 to 40 years’ imprisonment.

B. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On direct appeal to the Michigan Court of Appeals, McQueen’s appellate counsel argued

that his trial counsel had been constitutionally ineffective for failing to object to certain hearsay

statements that Moltmaker made. In accord with a special Michigan state court rule, McQueen

also filed two supplemental pro se briefs alleging several other trial counsel deficiencies. Neither

McQueen nor his appellate counsel raised the claims relevant to McQueen’s habeas petition now

before us.

The Michigan Court of Appeals considered the briefing before it and affirmed McQueen’s

conviction. People v. McQueen, No. 306317, 2013 WL 3814349 (Mich. Ct. App. July 23, 2013)

(per curiam). The Michigan Supreme Court denied McQueen’s application for leave to appeal.

People v. McQueen, 840 N.W.2d 350 (Mich. 2013) (mem.).

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