Mills v. Dunn

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMay 17, 2024
Docket6:17-cv-00789
StatusUnknown

This text of Mills v. Dunn (Mills v. Dunn) 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
Mills v. Dunn, (N.D. Ala. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA JASPER DIVISION

JAMIE MILLS, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) vs. ) 6:17-cv-00789-LSC ) ) JEFFERSON S. DUNN, ) Commissioner, Alabama ) Department of Corrections, ) ) Respondent. )

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND ORDER

I. Introduction On November 30, 2020, this Court dismissed this habeas petition filed by death row inmate Jamie Mills and closed this case. (Docs. 26 & 27.) Over three years later, on April 5, 2024, Mills filed a motion seeking relief from the judgment under Rules 60(b)(2), (b)(3), (b)(6), and (d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Doc. 42.) Mills raises a claim that he has raised unsuccessfully many times since his 2007 trial: that his common law wife, JoAnn Mills, who testified against him, and the District Attorney, Jack Bostick, hid the fact that JoAnn received a plea bargain for her testimony. However, Mills never offered any evidence in support of this claim. On January 29, 2024, following the exhaustion of all of Mills’ appeals, the State of Alabama moved the Alabama Supreme Court to authorize the Governor to set Mills’ execution date. Less than one month later, Mills’ longtime counsel, the Equal Justice

Initiative, procured an affidavit from JoAnn’s lawyer, dated February 26, 2024, in which he claims that JoAnn received a plea deal for her testimony prior to Mills’

trial. Based on this affidavit, Mills now asks this Court for relief in a Rule 60 motion. Mills has also recently sought similar relief in the Alabama state courts, but he has been denied. Mills’ execution is currently set for May 30, 2024. For the following

reasons, the motion for relief from judgment (doc. 42) is due to be denied. Additionally, this morning, Mills filed a Motion for Stay of Execution pending disposition of his Rule 60 motion. (Doc. 46.) Several hours later, Respondent filed a

response in opposition. (Doc. 47.) As the Rule 60 motion is due to be denied, so will be the motion for stay of execution. II. Background and Procedural History

This Court set out the facts of Mills’ crime in its November 2020 opinion, taking them from the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision on direct appeal. (See Doc. 26.) In brief, on the afternoon of June 24, 2004, Mills and JoAnn went to

the home of Floyd and Vera Hill in Guin, Alabama, intending to rob them. Floyd, 87, was Vera’s caretaker, as she was in poor health. When Floyd took Mills out to his backyard shed to show him some items for an upcoming yard sale, Mills beat Floyd to death. Vera and JoAnn came out to see about the commotion, and Mills hit Vera in the head with a ball-peen hammer. He also used a tire tool and a machete to beat

the Hills while JoAnn stood by. Mills and JoAnn then stole several items from the Hills’ home, including Vera’s purse, a phone, and a locked tackle box containing

Vera’s prescription medications. Mills called Benjie Howe, a local drug user, and invited him over to purchase some of Vera’s pain pills. Mills and JoAnn were apprehended the next day as they were pulling out of their driveway with the bloody

murder weapons, stolen property, and a cement block in the trunk of their car. While Floyd died at the scene, Vera lingered until September 12, 2004, when she died due to complications from blunt head trauma.

Mills and JoAnn were each indicted for capital murder. Mills went to trial in the Circuit Court of Marion County on August 20, 2007. JoAnn was the State’s final witness at Mills’ trial, testifying on August 22. Her attorney, J. Tony Glenn, sat in

the courtroom as she testified. At the beginning of her testimony, JoAnn stated that she had no agreement with the prosecution, as follows: Q. Do you have an attorney?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Is that attorney Tony Glenn?

A. Yes, sir. Q. Is he here in the courtroom with you today?

Q. Has he discussed with you the implications of you coming and testifying before the jury? Has he talked to you about coming and testifying before the jury?

A. Yes.
Q. And are you doing this of your own free will?
Q. Have there been any deals or offers or anything like that made to you?
A. No, sir.
Q. And this is after a discussion with your attorney you chose to testify?

(Doc. 37-8 at R. 685-86.) JoAnn went on to offer graphic testimony of what Mills did to the victims and what the two of them did thereafter to cover their tracks. Under cross-examination, JoAnn insisted there was no deal for her testimony: Q. And you’re telling us today that your lawyer and you—you’re a codefendant in this case, right?

Q. Your lawyer and you have decided that it’s a good idea for you to get up here and basically admit to capital murder where if you’re convicted, the only two sentences are life without parole or death by lethal injection, and that you haven’t made a deal with the DA? A. No, sir.

Q. You’re just up here admitting to capital murder without any hope of help from the district attorney’s office?

Q. You do expect help from the district attorney’s office?

Q. Has anybody told you that if you get up here and tell this story that the district attorney will have pity on you and let you plead to something besides murder?

Q. So you expect as a result of your testimony today to get either life without parole or death by lethal injection?

[…]

Q. But you hope by doing this today to get off of life without parole or death by lethal injection, don’t you, because you said a minute ago possibly. That’s what you expect, don’t you?

A. No.
Q. And your lawyer has suggested that you do this today, right?
A. He left it up to me.

Q. Okay. He let you decide whether or not to admit to being an accomplice to capital murder, where if convicted you only get life without parole or death by lethal injection? Your lawyer suggested that? A. Yes.

Q. And you say that you don’t expect some benefit from your testimony today?
A. Some forgiveness from God.

(Id. at R. 720-23.) At the conclusion of the day’s testimony, once the jury had been dismissed, the defense raised the issue of JoAnn’s testimony again: MR. WILEY: Oh, there is one thing that we need to get on the record. We want to ask you—or ask Judge to direct him to assure us, him being Jack [Bostick], that there is no inducement for JoAnn’s testimony.

MR. BOSTICK: There is not.

MR. WILEY: Not a promise, not a maybe, not a nudge, not a wink, because we think it stretches the bounds of credibility that her lawyer would let her testify as she did without such an inducement.

MR. BOSTICK: There is none.

MR. WILEY: None?

MR. BOSTICK: Have not made her any promises, nothing.

MR. WILEY: Have you suggested that a promise might be made after she testifies truthfully?

MR. BOSTICK: No.

MR. WILEY: No inducement whatsoever?

MR. WILEY: Thank you, Your Honor. (Id. at R. 829-30.) Glenn was present in court for JoAnn’s testimony, and he said

nothing to the trial court to indicate that she or the District Attorney had lied. Mills was convicted of three counts of capital murder on August 23, 2007. At

the conclusion of the penalty phase the following day, the jury recommended 11–1 that he receive a death sentence. The court then held a sentencing hearing on September 14 and sentenced Mills to death. On September 24, 2007—ten days after

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