McGhee v. Annucci

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 3, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-05801
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
McGhee v. Annucci, (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ee ee ee ee ee ee x DARRIN MCGHEE, : Petitioner, : ORDER AND OPINION : DENYING § 2254 PETITION -against- : 22 Civ. 5801 (AKH) ANTHONY J. ANNUCCT et al., : Defendants. : ee ee ee ee ee ee eee x ALVIN K, HELLERSTEIN, U.S.D.J.:

On the afternoon of November 14, 2011, Archie Phillips was shot and killed in the parking garage of the housing complex that once was the Polo Grounds, the home of the baseball and football Giants. Petitioner Darrin McGhee was found guilty of the murder, and was sentenced to 25 years to life imprisonment. After exhausting state remedies, McGhee timely filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in this court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C, § 2254, He raises two principal grounds of constitutional violation: a Brady violation by the prosecutor, and a corrupted identification by the main witness. Both lack merit; the petition is denied. THE TRIAL EVIDENCE At trial, the government sought to prove that McGhee was hired by two local narcotics dealers, John Reynolds and his boss, Mike Lilly, to kill Archie Phillips. Reynolds testified, under a cooperation agreement, that Lilly wanted Phillips killed as revenge for having robbed Reynolds of his watch, money, and iPod. A. 1628.’ Lilly considered McGhee to be a

The Court cites to the record as provided at the bottom of each page of petitioner’s exhibits.

“secret weapon,” whom he did not want anyone “to get familiar with . . . just in case [they] had to use him.” A, 1696-97. Reynolds testified that, in the week leading up to the shooting, McGhee came to his apartment to “stake-out” and identify Phillips. Reynolds instructed his wife to allow Lilly into their apartment to give a gun to McGhee, A. 1675. Reynolds testified that he also gave McGhee a cell phone to coordinate identifications of Phillips’s movements. On the afternoon of the shooting, Reynolds testified, he watched McGhee walking down the Polo Grounds stairs and through the parking lot, and heard gun shots but lost sight of McGhee. In support of this assertion, the government presented cell phone data to show that the phone number of the phone Reynolds had given McGhee showed a call received by Lilly just before Phillips was shot. Connie Truitt, Reynolds’s wife, corroborated his account. Reynolds testified that he and McGhee met in Lilly’s apartment later that afternoon, He heard McGhee boast, “You should have seen how I put five in this n|***]a,” and they smoked and celebrated. A. 1649. McGhee suggested they “get a coat hanger and scrape the barrel to get off the ballistics.” A. 1650. Reynolds testified that he had been in custody for his role in Phillips’ murder, and hoped that his agreement to testify would result in a reduction of his sentence. Nicole Davis, who had lived in the Polo Grounds for over a decade and was president of her building’s tenants association, was a key eyewitness. She testified that she had been standing with three friends near the parking lot next to a staircase (commonly known as the “110 stairs”) when she saw the shooting, just after 3:30 p.m. on November 14, 2011. A. 1030. She testified that she saw Archie Phillips leaning against a gate, hugging a woman whom she knew, forty to fifty feet away. A. 971-73, 987, 1030. One minute later, she saw McGhee shoot

Phillips “right in the back four times” and then “walk out in a slow pace . . . out of the parking lot going out the stairs.” A. 973-75. She testified that the shooter was wearing “all beige” clothing, a jacket, and a “flat cap” with a “snap in the front.” A. 973-75, Answering the question if she saw a gun, she first stated she was not close enough to see the gun, then that she did see the gun, and then that she “saw” the gun’s “sound effects.” A. 1042, 1048, 1053-54. Davis testified that she did not discuss the shooting with any of her three friends and did not share their names with law enforcement because she was nervous for herself, though she eventually informed the police that she was with three other people. A. 1020-21. She told the police about what she saw because “I knew I had to do something right, and I wanted somebody to do it for my own children . . . { had a feeling (sic) he could have did it to someone else if I didn’t say anything.” A. 992, Davis testified that after McGhee shot Archie Phillips “he looked at me,” and they made eye contact. A. 974-75. She testified that she recognized McGhee from two prior encounters: four months earlier as a “new face” in the Polo Grounds complex, A. 976-77, and the week before the shooting when they exchanged hellos while McGhee held the door for her as she exited the building, A. 977, 1016. The first time she saw him, she noticed he was “well □

built,” and she and her friend talked about him. A. 976. □ Davis testified that detectives came to her home later in the afternoon the day of the shooting, and she told them that the shooter “had all beige on.” A. 1035. She testified that she was contacted that evening to come to the precinct, where she watched surveillance footage and identified the shooter from the footage. This was the first time she told law enforcement that she recognized the shooter. A. 1037-38. Davis identified McGhee again at the lineup in December 2011 and at trial. A. 1044

Officer Jorge Morban corroborated Davis’s video identification, He testified that he was in the adjacent room when Davis was viewing the video and heard her exclaim, ““That’s him. That’s him. He is the one that shot the boy.” A. 1116.2 Another officer was in the room with Davis but did not testify. McGhee elected to testify. He testified that he was at the Polo Grounds to “mef[e|t a young lady” who lived there, A. 1731-32. He confirmed that he was wearing beige clothing, and that it was he who was shown on the building’s video surveillance. A. 1742-43. He testified that at the time of the shooting, “I got out of the cab and walked towards the curb. heard bang, bang, bang, bang. I hid in between two cars because I don’t want to get hit by stray bullets. So when the ,. . bullets stopped firing, I see people running past me.” A. 1742, He then ran up the stairs and away from the scene because “I’m [on] parole and I know that the police are going to be canvassing the area.” A. 1743. He conceded that he possessed Reynold’s phone, that he spoke to Lilly on that phone at a time that immediately preceded the shooting, that he met with Lilly at the top of the stairs immediately after the shooting, and that he visited Lilly later that night. A. 1743, 1766, 1783. He denied that he was in the parking garage when Davis claimed to have locked eyes with him, Despite all of these concessions, McGhee insisted that he did not have a relationship with Reynolds and that he did not shoot Archie Phillips. The defense called two additional witnesses, Germania Rodriguez testified that she saw a man she believed to be the shooter in an elevator at the Polo Grounds, several months after McGhee had been taken into custody. A, 1854-59. However, she conceded that she did not see the actual shooting and could not get a good look at the face of the man she thought to be the shooter. A. 1860-67. Jessica Santiago, also a Polo Grounds resident, testified that she heard

2 Defense counsel objected to the admission of Davis’s statement as hearsay. The trial judge, after hearing Officer Morban’s testimony outside the jury’s presence, admitted Davis’s exclamation as an excited utterance.

gunshots, saw one man drop to the floor, and saw another man “wearing all dark colored clothes

... Leap[] over two sets of fences.” A. 1907. However, she had memory issues due to a seizure condition and her recollection was not “completely clear.” A.

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