Michael Goza v. Robert Welch

579 F. App'x 367
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2014
Docket13-3114
StatusUnpublished

This text of 579 F. App'x 367 (Michael Goza v. Robert Welch) 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
Michael Goza v. Robert Welch, 579 F. App'x 367 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

After the district court denied Michael Goza’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, we granted a certificate of appealability (COA) for his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to present evidence that one of the victims initially identified another person as her attacker. Goza claims that the court erroneously decided that counsel’s deficient performance was not sufficiently prejudicial to justify issuance of a writ. We AFFIRM.

BACKGROUND 1

Early in the morning on March 26, 2006, nine-year-old C.A. awoke on her top bunk bed to find that her pants and underwear *368 had been removed. She saw a man in her bed with his hands on his zipper in preparation for removing his pants. C.A. resisted, telling him to leave and kicking him off her. Finally, he determined to leave, but warned, “If you tell anyone, I’ll hurt you.” He then climbed out of the bed and walked out the door. C-.A. checked on her three-year-old sister, K.J., lying on the bottom bunk, who remained asleep. Five to ten minutes later, C.A. climbed the stairs to her parents’ room to report the incident.

Robert Jarvis, father of K.J. and stepfather of C.A., called the police. While C.A. explained to her mother, Coral Jarvis, what happened, Robert checked the house. He found K.J. asleep in her first floor bedroom. Although she was not home that night, he then checked his 16-year-old stepdaughter T.A.’s room, located next to C.A. and KJ.’s room. T.A. had two windows in her room, one on the side of the house and one on the back of the house. Her bed was positioned underneath the back window, so that if someone climbed into her room through the back window, he or she would land on her bed. Robert noted that the side window screen was open about a quarter of the way, the back window screen was completely ajar, and both windows were unlocked.

Police arrived almost immediately after Robert’s call. C.A. described the attacker to the police: he wore a cap, a dark sweatshirt and jeans; she noted that he was white. Fairview Hospital is located directly across the street from the Jarvis home. Police called the hospital to see if anyone with characteristics similar to C.A.’s description had visited the hospital. Fair-view Hospital reported that Robert Givens had recently checked in and loosely matched the description. Police brought Givens to the Jarvis house, and C.A. identified him as the attacker, although she admitted that she did not observe the perpetrator’s face. However, police quickly learned that Givens had been at a CVS pharmacy around the time of the incident in question and eliminated him as a suspect.

When K. J. awoke, she said to her father, “Daddy, you hurt my vagina last night, don’t do that again.” Robert reported this accusation to the police and then took K.J. to the emergency room. She told the nurse at the hospital that her father hurt her vagina and put his fingers in her panties. The nurse released K.J. to her parents despite the child’s accusations against the father, because the interaction between Robert and K.J. gave no indication that her father committed the attack.

A social worker, Lawrence Petrus, interviewed the two victims. The story C.A. related to Petrus was consistent with what she told her parents and the nurse. Pe-trus testified that K.J. informed him that there had been “a bad man in her room” who “asked her to hold his penis,” and when she refused, “pressed his finger against her vagina.” Even though he was aware of KJ.’s allegation against her father, Petrus gathered no information from the interview substantiating the accusation.

Testimony from trial conflicts as to how Goza became a suspect, but at some point authorities became aware of the relationship between T.A. and Goza. They had socialized on two occasions. Goza lived just across the street and called T.A. occasionally.

T.A. was not at home on March 26, 2006, because she was being treated for drug abuse. When Detective James McPike interviewed T.A. at her drug treatment facility, T.A. informed him that she had experienced a similar nighttime attack weeks before. At trial, T.A. testified to the following: on March 11, 2006, she was sleeping at home when she awoke around 2:00 *369 a.m. to ñnd Goza on her bed. When she asked him how he got into her room, he explained he had entered through her window. He then began rubbing her stomach, legs, and chest. He told her he loved her, that she should be his girl, and that he had been coming to her window at night for the past couple of weeks to see if she would be there. She asked him to leave and led him out of her room and through the front door. When she returned to her room, she noted that the side window was open a few inches, while the back window over her bed remained closed. She testified that Goza must have entered through the side window, because if he had entered through the back window, she would have been awakened by his entry onto her bed.

During the investigation into the March 26 incident, police lifted five fingerprints from T.A.’s back window — the one positioned above her bed. 2 They compared Goza’s fingerprints to those lifted and found an exact match on one. The police did not identify the other four fingerprints. On April 11, Detective McPike brought a six-man photo array to the Jarvis house. Within seconds, C.A. identified Goza as her attacker, saying, “He looked just like him.”

Goza was charged with two counts of aggravated burglary, two counts of kidnapping, one count of rape, one count of attempted rape, and one count of gross sexual imposition arising from the March encounters. He was also charged with burglary from the March 11 incident. During trial, C.A. identified Goza as the man who attacked her. Goza’s fiancee, Sheari Conner, testified that Goza was at home, sleeping with her from 2:30 a.m. through the night in question. She would have known if he left the bed, because he would have had to crawl over her to do so. Her car blocked his, so he could not drive to the Jarvis home, and he had an unspecified disability that prevented him from walking to the Jarvis house. The jury found Goza guilty on all charges except rape, and the court sentenced him to 31 years’ imprisonment.

Goza appealed his conviction to the Ohio Court of Appeals, which affirmed the judgment entered against Goza. The Ohio Supreme Court denied leave to appeal and dismissed the appeal. Next, Goza petitioned the state trial court for post-conviction relief. The trial court dismissed the petition on res judicata grounds. Goza appealed that ruling to the state court of appeals, which determined that the trial court’s judgment on res judicata grounds was erroneous, but denied relief to Goza. The court of appeals neglected to discuss the ineffective assistance of counsel claim pertaining to counsel’s failure to investigate, develop, and present evidence of C.A.’s initial identification of Givens. Goza appealed the decision to the Ohio Supreme Court, which again declined review.

Having thus exhausted his state court remedies, Goza filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Northern District of Ohio. He presented numerous claims of error, including the present issue before us — ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court found no prejudice and denied the petition.

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