Matias Morin v. Rick Thaler, Director

374 F. App'x 545
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 2010
Docket06-41590
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 374 F. App'x 545 (Matias Morin v. Rick Thaler, Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matias Morin v. Rick Thaler, Director, 374 F. App'x 545 (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Petitioner-Appellant Mafias Morin, III (“Morin”) appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his second conviction by a jury for the 1993 murder of Javier Cantu. He contends that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because (1) his attorney labored under an actual conflict of interest during the representation; and (2) his attorney failed to object to (and in one instance caused the introduction of) evidence that was inadmissible or prejudicial, or both. Concluding that the errors alleged to have been committed by the state court do not rise to the demanding standard required by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AED-PA”), we affirm.

I. FACTS & BACKGROUND

A. Facts

In August 1993, Javier Cantu was murdered in the proximity of an irrigation canal near Edinburg, Texas. He suffered several gunshot wounds to his head and his chest. Petitioner-Appellant Morin, his younger brother Marc Morin (“Marc”), and another young man, Javier “Andy” Cespedes, were the only ones present when the shooting occurred. Prior to the homicide, the four young men had been involved in the sale and distribution of various narcotics, with Cantu acting as the supplier for the other three. For the sake of efficiency, we adopt the district court’s summary of the evidence presented at the trial, which in turn relied on the summary of the evidence generated by Texas’s Thirteenth Court of Appeals:

The State’s chief witness, Javier Andres “Andy” Cespedes, was an accomplice in the crime. He testified that in August, 1993, he was with appellant, Marc Morin, and Javier Cantu. Marc gave some cocaine to Cantu and asked him to sell it. Cantu left with the cocaine but later returned it because he could not sell it. Appellant, [sic] then took the cocaine to Houston and tried to sell it there. However the buyers threatened to kill him when they discovered that the cocaine was “cut up,” meaning that it was not strong enough. Afterwards appellant blamed Cantu for nearly getting him killed and said that Cantu “had to go down.”
On August 26, 1993, appellant and Andy went to a store where appellant bought a box of shotgun shells. After buying the shells they drove to Andy’s house and loaded two shotguns and a 9 millim *547 eter gun. Andy kept the guns in his bedroom. They wrapped towels around the guns and put the guns in the back of the van which appellant was driving. After picking up Marc the trio decided that appellant would call Cantu over the telephone and ask him to go to a location near a canal in the Edinburg, Texas, area. Appellant would take him to the canal where Marc and Andy would be waiting in the van. They decided that each person would shoot Cantu one time at the canal. After agreeing on the plan they returned to appellant’s house. Appellant called Cantu and then told Marc and Andy that Cantu was “on his way” and “to take off to the canal” and wait there. When appellant and Cantu arrived at the canal Andy aimed a shotgun at Cantu’s head. Andy testified that “Mat [appellant] is looking at me, so he takes two steps back and then he looks back at me and nods his head. That’s when I pulled the trigger and he [Cantu] falls down.” Andy shot Cantu three more times with the shotgun and six times with the 9 millimeter. Afterwards appellant, Marc, and Andy drove to the home of Isaac Fuentes. Appellant and Isaac took the two guns used in the murder out of the van and then washed the van.
Eulogia Cantu testified that on August 26, 1993, she and her son, Javier Cantu, were at home. She saw him using the telephone. After hanging up he told her that he was going to meet appellant. He left the house about 7:20 p.m.
Jose Cespedes, Andy’s brother, testified that a couple of days before the murder he saw what looked like a machine gun underneath the bed in the bedroom where he and Andy slept. Around noon on the day of the murder Jose was home when Andy and appellant came to the house and went into the bedroom where the machine gun was located. They stayed in the bedroom for twenty minutes. When they came out Andy was carrying the machine gun which was wrapped in a towel. Jose saw them get into a van and leave.
Appellant testified that he had gone to Houston prior to Cantu’s murder, but he denied that he had tried to sell any cocaine there. He testified that on the day of the murder he and Cantu went to the canal because Cantu wanted to talk to Marc. 1 Appellant and Cantu arrived at the canal about 7:30 p.m. They got out of Cantu’s car and walked to the van. While appellant stood near the van he heard an “explosion.” He panicked and got into the van. He heard some more explosions or shots and then Andy threw a shotgun inside the van. He then saw Andy take a machine gun out of the van. He tried to take the gun away from Andy but Andy cocked it in his face. Appellant got into the van and closed the door. He heard another shot and then Andy got into the van. After the shooting Marc and Andy dropped off appellant at Isaac Fuentes’ house. Appellant’s testimony was that he did not nod his at Andy before Andy had shot Cantu. He denied saying that Cantu had to go down, and he denied having anything to do with the murder.
Isaac Fuentes testified that he went with appellant to Houston. He stated that he was with appellant during the entire trip and that appellant did not try to sell any cocaine there. *548 Eli Armenta, Andy’s neighbor, testified that on the day of the murder no one was at Andy’s home until Andy’s mother arrived about 5:00 p.m. He never saw the Morin family van at Andy’s home that day.
Dr. Santos, [the medical examiner], testified on direct examination that Cantu was shot ten times. He had six distant-type gunshot wounds to the right side of the face. He received one shotgun wound to the front of the right ear. Dr. Santos said that although he was not a ballistics expert this wound was made from a range of between three to five feet. Cantu had three other shotgun wounds. He said that these wounds “were of a close range type” because he found wads in each of the perforations. He did not know the order in which the shots were fired, nor which were fired first.
On cross examination counsel questioned him about the shotgun wound to Cantu’s head. His testimony was that generally speaking this wound was inflicted at a distance of three to five feet. Counsel also questioned him about the trajectory of the gunshot wounds to Cantu’s face. Dr. Santos said that they were fired from Cantu’s right side. 2

B. Facts and Proceedings

Morin, Marc, and Cespedes were charged with Cantu’s murder. Morin was indicted in September 1993, at which time Morin’s father hired attorney Abel Tosca-no, Jr. to represent his son. A month later, Marc (who was sixteen at the time) was charged with the murder. In April 1994, Marc was certified for prosecution as an adult, and Toscano was retained to represent both Morin

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