Michel v. Kirkpatrick

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-02469
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Michel v. Kirkpatrick, (E.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------X DONALD MICHEL,

Petitioner, -against- MEMORANDUM & ORDER 18-CV-2469 (PKC) MICHAEL KIRKPATRICK,

Respondent. ---------------------------------------------------------X PAMELA K. CHEN, United States District Judge:

Petitioner Donald Michel, appearing pro se, petitions this Court for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his conviction for Murder in the Second Degree under N.Y. Penal Law § 125.25(3), and Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree under N.Y. Penal Law § 265.03(3), and his sentence entered on December 5, 2011 in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Kings County. Petitioner challenges his conviction on the following grounds: (1) the verdict sheet and the trial court’s supplemental instructions on the felony murder charge were erroneous; and (2) his defense counsel was ineffective in (a) failing to object to the erroneous instructions and verdict sheet, (b) failing to call his sister to testify at the pre-trial suppression hearing, and (c) failing to challenge the police’s allegedly illegal search and seizure with respect to his cell phone records. (See generally Dkt. 1.) For the reasons set forth below, the petition is denied in its entirety. BACKGROUND I. Underlying Facts1 On the afternoon of December 29, 2008, Sason Shokrany was working in his store in Brooklyn. (Tr.2 1, Dkt. 8-3, at ECF 682: 3–14.) At approximately 3:30 or 4:00 p.m., Petitioner entered the store and asked Shokrany about a charger for Petitioner’s cell phone. (Id. at ECF 682:

6–8; ECF 683:9–13.) After a brief conversation, Petitioner pulled out a gun and pointed it at Shokrany. (Id. at ECF 688:16–20.) At the same time, Widley Viau entered the store with a shopping bag, which he and Petitioner began filling with cell phones from the display case. (Id. at ECF 691:18–20.) Shortly thereafter, Shokrany looked toward the front door of the store, which was glass, and saw Zalmai Anwari, who worked as a driver for the cab company next door, outside the door. (Id. at ECF 696:1–4.) Shokrany watched as Viau ran out of the store, followed by Petitioner, leaving the blue shopping bag in the store in their haste. (See id. at ECF 696:6–24.) Shokrany saw two shots fired, hitting Anwari in the head. (Id. at ECF 699:6–11.) Anwari died the next day from the gunshot wound. (Tr. 2, Dkt. 8-4, at ECF 814:8–15.) Petitioner was arrested in his home in Queens and taken to the 61st Precinct on the same

day that Anwari died. (Id. at ECF 924–37.) Shokrany identified Petitioner in a lineup. (Tr. 1,

1 Because Petitioner has already “been found guilty of the crime[s] charged,” the Court construes the facts “in the light most favorable to the prosecution.” Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979).

2 “Tr.” generally refers to the transcript of what occurred before the trial court. The number immediately following “Tr.” refers to the relevant trial transcript section. More specifically, “Supp. Tr., Dkt. 8-2” refers to the transcript of Petitioner’s suppression hearing; “Tr. 1, Dkt. 8-3” refers to the first transcript of Petitioner’s trial; “Tr. 2, Dkt. 8-4” refers to the second transcript of Petitioner’s trial; and “Tr. 3, Dkt. 8-5” refers to the third and last transcript of Petitioner’s trial. The “ECF” page numbers following the transcript identifier refer to the “PageID” number in the upper right corner of the combined transcript generated by the Court’s CM/ECF docketing system and not the document’s internal pagination. The numbers following the colon correspond to the line numbering on the left side of each page of the transcript. Dkt. 8-3, at ECF 704–06.) While in custody, Petitioner also made statements to police admitting that he had participated in the attempted robbery of the store and that he had brandished a gun while Viau loaded merchandise into a bag. However, with respect to the killing of Anwari, Petitioner told the police that, as Petitioner and Viau fled from the store, Viau had shot a man. (Tr.

2, Dkt. 8-4, at ECF 1065:91–1066:9.) Petitioner was charged, by Kings County Indictment Number 25/2009, with Murder in the First Degree and Murder in the Second Degree, both with robbery as the underlying felony; Manslaughter in the First Degree; and Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree. (Dkt. 8-1, at ECF 78, 174.) II. Suppression Hearing The trial court held a suppression hearing on September 12 and 15, 2011, at which Petitioner raised a number of issues, including the manner in which he was arrested, and the subsequent lineup and content of his written statements. (Supp. Tr., Dkt. 8-2, at ECF 370:14–25; ECF 372:1–10.) Two New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) detectives, Detective Lou Yero and Detective James McCafferty, and Kings County Assistant District Attorney (“ADA”) John Gianotti testified at the hearing. (Id. at ECF 179:21–22; ECF 265:2–4; ECF 294:8–10.) The

Court found the detectives’ testimony credible and the arrest of Petitioner lawful. (Id. at ECF 371:11–12.) The trial court specifically held both that there was consent for the police to enter Petitioner’s home to arrest him and that, in any event, an outstanding warrant for his arrest, unrelated to the homicide charges, justified the officers’ entry. (Id. at ECF 371:13–20.) III. Trial Between September 28, 2011 and October 13, 2011, a jury trial was held before Justice Joel M. Goldberg in Kings County Supreme Court. (See generally Trs. 1–3, Dkts. 8-3, 8-4, 8-5.) In addition to Shokrany’s testimony about the attempted robbery by Petitioner and Viau, and Petitioner’s shooting of Anwari (Tr. 1, Dkt. 8-3, at ECF 683–700), a number of law enforcement and forensic expert witnesses testified. Detective Matthew Steiner of the NYPD’s Crime Scene Unit testified that the blue shopping bag, which was left at Shokrany’s store, and all of its contents were forwarded to the police lab for chemical development of latent fingerprints and DNA analysis. (Id. at ECF 579:15–22.) He also testified that he recovered thirty-four latent fingerprints

from the crime scene. (Id. at ECF 604:6–9.) Alynka Jean of the NYPD Latent Print Development Unit testified that she found four fingerprints on a roll of duct tape, thirteen prints on the cell phones and chargers, and twenty-five fingerprints from the shopping bag itself. (Id. at ECF 638:7– 20; ECF 651:21–24; ECF 657:3–23.) Detective Cynthia Ramirez, also of the Latent Print Unit, testified that she identified one of the fingerprints from the side of a case containing watches inside Shokrany’s store, and two fingerprints from a duct tape roll, as belonging to Petitioner. (Tr. 2, Dkt. 8-4, at ECF 856:2–9, 866:11–20.) Anthony Joseph Tosi, a criminalist with the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (the “ME’s Office”), stated that the DNA samples taken from the blue shopping bag likely belonged to Viau. (Id. at ECF 909:2–15.) Dr. Melissa Pasquale-Styles, also with the ME’s Office, testified that Anwari’s death was

caused by a gunshot wound to the head. (Tr. 2, Dkt. 8-4, at ECF 814:8–15.) Detective Wilfredo Torres of the NYPD’s Firearms Analysis Section testified that he could not determine whether the bullet that killed Anwari was fired from a revolver or a semi-automatic pistol. (Id.

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Michel v. Kirkpatrick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michel-v-kirkpatrick-nyed-2020.