McKinney v. Bolling

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 6, 2020
Docket1:17-cv-00713
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
McKinney v. Bolling, (N.D. Ala. 2020).

Opinion

FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA EASTERN DIVISION

DESTRY CORD McKINNEY, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) Case No.: 1:17-cv-0713-RDP-GMB ) WARDEN LEON BOLLING, et al., ) ) Respondents. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Destry Cord McKinney (“Petitioner” or “McKinney”), a person in custody under a judgment of a court of Alabama, filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (Doc. 1). Petitioner challenges his 2004 conviction for capital murder in the Circuit Court of Talladega County, Alabama. (Id. at 1). In response to the Magistrate Judge’s order to show cause, Respondents filed an answer, and Petitioner thereafter filed a reply. (Docs. 4, 10, 14). Accordingly, this matter is ripe for adjudication. For the reasons that follow, Petitioner’s claims are due to be denied. I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY A. Trial and Direct Appeal On February 6, 2000, McKinney shot and killed Stevelynn Seals after an altercation outside McKinney’s home. McKinney was arrested that day for hindering prosecution. (See Doc. 10-22 at 17). On March 8, 2000, an arrest warrant was issued for McKinney charging him with murder in violation of Alabama Code § 13A-6-2.1 (See Doc. 10-22 at 18; Doc. 10-24 at 92). On November 1, 2001, a grand jury in Talladega County, Alabama, returned an indictment charging McKinney with the capital offense of murder of a person in a vehicle from outside the vehicle. (See Doc. 10-

1 The warrant was not for the capital murder offense for which McKinney was indicted and convicted. The following is a summary2 of the evidence presented at trial: The State presented evidence that, on February 6, 2000, the victim, Stevelyn[n] Seals, went to Chris Gaddis’ uncle’s house to borrow Gaddis’ uncle’s truck and to get Gaddis to pick up a bed for her at Garrett Road. Gaddis testified that he went to the appellant’s place on Garrett Road; that, when he arrived, the victim’s teal green Honda Civic was in the driveway; that he and the victim went up the driveway toward the house on top of the hill, and he put the headboard and footboard of the bed in the truck; that the appellant subsequently drove an older model cream colored vehicle around his vehicle and to the foot of the hill, got out of the vehicle, and walked back up the hill; that the victim was standing in the door of her vehicle; that the appellant and the victim started arguing and cussing each other; that, at some point, the appellant reached behind his back, pulled out a gun, and pointed it at the victim; that the victim got back into her vehicle and rolled up the window; that the appellant looked back at him and told him to “get [his] punk ass out of there”; that, as he began to back up, he saw the appellant go to the side of the victim’s vehicle and grab her window; that, when the appellant grabbed the window, it broke; that the appellant then reached into the victim’s vehicle, grabbed her purse, and threw it over the victim’s vehicle; that the appellant then gave the purse back to the victim; and that he subsequently stopped at the foot of the hill, put a bed rail in the truck, and left pretty quickly. (R. 1032.) He also testified that he did not notice that the hood of the victim’s vehicle was scratched and that he did not remember any sort of discoloration or disfigurement on the hood of the victim’s vehicle.

The State also presented evidence that, on the afternoon of February 6, 2000, Linda Blanchard Shierling and Jody Corbitt saw an older model pale yellow or cream-colored vehicle headed toward Sylacauga; that a man was driving the vehicle, and a woman appeared to be in the front passenger’s seat of the vehicle; that the man was driving erratically; that the man and woman were struggling; and that it appeared that the man was either beating the woman or trying to hold her down in the passenger’s seat.

Laura Dix testified that she was a registration clerk at Coosa Valley Medical Center on February 6, 2000; that, at some point, she saw the appellant pushing a wheelchair toward the emergency room; that the victim was in the wheelchair and was limp and slumped over; that the appellant told one of the nurses that the victim had been shot; that she asked the appellant if he knew the victim’s name, and he said that he did not; that she asked the appellant if he knew the victim’s birthday or anything, and he said that the victim’s information was in her purse, which was in the vehicle; that the appellant left to move his vehicle and to get the victim’s purse, but he never returned; and that the appellant did not tell her his name or give her any identification for himself or the victim.

2 This summary is taken directly from the Court of Criminal Appeals memorandum opinion on direct appeal. (Doc. 10-22). The summary is quoted throughout McKinney’s Rule 32 proceedings and has not been challenged by any of the parties as factually incorrect, misleading, or the like. Police Department stopped the appellant’s vehicle a short distance from the hospital; that the appellant had blood on him; that law enforcement officers found a bullet that appeared to have tissue, blood, and hair on it in the appellant’s pants pocket; and that there was blood inside and outside of the appellant’s vehicle.

The State further presented evidence that law enforcement officers went to 539 Garrett Road, where they found the victim’s vehicle; that the driver’s side window of the vehicle was broken, and there was a bullet hole in the front windshield of the vehicle; that there was blood inside and outside of the vehicle; that there was a blood smear beside the front tag area; that there were fine scratches on the hood; that there was a spent projectile in the backseat behind the driver’s seat and a piece of metal that appeared to be a bullet fragment in the front passenger’s seat; that there was a spent shell casing about five feet from the vehicle’s front bumper; that there was blood and glass in the appellant’s driveway; and that there was a dented white bed rail across the street from the appellant’s driveway on the shoulder of Garrett Road.

Larry Huys, a DNA analyst with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences (“the ADFS”), testified that he found blood stains that were consistent with the victim’s genetic pattern on the appellant’s shirt and pants, on a section of the appellant’s passenger’s side seat belt, on a soil sample that had been taken from the appellant’s driveway, and on a swabbing that had been taken from the bullet that was found in the appellant’s pocket; that the appellant was excluded as the source of the blood on those items; and that the source of the blood on those items was a female.

During a search at the house at 539 Garrett Road, law enforcement officers found an empty box for a Glock handgun on the front porch; another empty box for a Glock handgun in a cabinet inside of the residence; four nine-millimeter magazines—two of which were Glock magazines; a box of nine-millimeter ammunition and an empty nine-millimeter ammunition box; and a loaded Glock handgun under a pillow on the bed in the first bedroom.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
McKinney v. Bolling, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-bolling-alnd-2020.