Milton Tony Greene v. I.C. Haunani Henry, Warden

302 F.3d 1067, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 10492, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9353, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 18645, 2002 WL 31017668
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 11, 2002
Docket01-15938
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 302 F.3d 1067 (Milton Tony Greene v. I.C. Haunani Henry, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milton Tony Greene v. I.C. Haunani Henry, Warden, 302 F.3d 1067, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 10492, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9353, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 18645, 2002 WL 31017668 (9th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a petition for a writ of habeas corpus based on ineffective assistance of counsel.

I. Facts

The facts in this case are extremely difficult to ascertain. Milton “Tony” Greene was convicted of two counts of forcible oral copulation, foreign object rape, and rape. 1 But Sherry Esposto, the purported victim, testified that he did not rape her, that he was her fiancé and lived with her, and that their sexual activities on the occasion at issue were entirely consensual. The evidence of the rape consisted of her prior account, to the police and a nurse practitioner, alleging that he and his companions forced various sexual activities on her against her will. She testified in Greene’s trial that she had developed a sexual relationship with another man and that she was jealous of her fiancé because she suspected him of sexual relationships with other women, so she had wanted to harm him by lying about him to the police. The case turned on whether her original story or her recantation at trial was a lie, or both were lies, or the truth was unas-certainable so that the jury ought to have had a reasonable doubt.

Here is the evidence that Greene did in fact rape Esposto. A man named Devin “Chris” Brown 2 had recently moved in with a friend downstairs from Esposto. She testified that she had developed a sexual relationship with him. (He was impeached by evidence that he was on probation for selling crack). He testified that while he was in Esposto’s apartment, Greene and two other men, Angelo Bird and William “Junior” Collins, came in and began forcing her to perform sexual acts. Esposto mimed making a telephone call and silently mouthed at “Chris” that he should call the police. Bird brandished a knife, and Esposto was forced to announce that she was a “ho for Tony.” “Chris” testified that at one point Esposto said, “I *1069 don’t want to do this.” He left and called 911. The police came and observed that Esposto was wearing only a tank top undershirt, was crying hysterically, was breathing hard and fast, vomited, had a red mark on her cheek as though she had been hit, and gave them an account of rape and other sex crimes. She told them that Greene and Bird (who brandished a knife) had forced her to perform fellatio on Bird and Collins while Greene fingered her vagina and made her submit to vaginal intercourse. The police brought her to a hospital where a nurse practitioner examined her for evidence of rape, and noted tenderness around her face and lower abdomen. The motive for Greene’s rape, as the police understood it from Esposto’s account, grew out of a robbery. When she got home that day, her apartment had been burglarized. A stereo, a lot of CDs, a leather jacket, and other property, largely Greene’s, were taken. As she originally told the story to the police, Greene accused her of complicity in the burglary, told her she would have to “ho” for him, and made her perform the various sexual acts as revenge for her causing his property to be taken.

And here is a summary of Esposto’s testimony at trial, which made out the ease that Greene committed no crime. The reason she had been out when the apartment was burglarized was that she had been arrested for drunk driving the night before. When she discovered the burglarized apartment, she went downstairs to seek solace from her new friend, “Chris,” about the burglary. He accompanied her back upstairs and stayed while she called the police and spoke to the responding officers. After “Chris” left, Greene came home, with his friends Bird and Collins. “Chris” wasn’t there while Greene was there, and she didn’t mime and mouth that he should call the police. Earlier that day, she had told him that he should call the police if it sounded as though they were violent, because they not infrequently were: she testified that she had had Greene arrested for domestic violence, she said she had previously hit him in the head with a hot Corning Ware pan (and then lied to the police and said Greene had hit her with it), and she had previously tried to shoot him.

She took Greene into the bedroom to discuss the burglary, and she harangued him about bringing Bird into their house, screaming loud enough so that “Chris” would hear. She strongly disliked Bird, because she believed he was “coming between [her] relationship with Milton Greene.” Then, she testified, she and Greene resolved their argument by having consensual sexual intercourse in the bedroom. After they finished having sex, she testified that Collins came into the bedroom and told them that Bird had left. She then testified that the three of them “discussed having ... sexual intercourse together.” When asked what happened next, she testified, “We consented.” At some point (for “no reason”), they moved to the front room, and she performed fellatio on Collins while Greene penetrated her digitally. Nobody made her — she volunteered. Her testimony made it clear that she regularly had sexual relations with a number of men. For example, asked who the father of her child was, she testified, ‘We actually don’t know, but Patrick Mac-Kenzie claims her.” Her testimony that she had previously had sex with one man while another watched made her story of consensual group sex more believable.

At trial, Esposto said that the reason she cried hysterically when the police came is that they forced her fiancé Greene to the floor and held a gun to his head. She was breathing hard and fast because of her anxiety that they might shoot Greene, which brought on an asthma attack. And the reason she vomited was all the alcohol *1070 she had consumed. When asked why, if she was so concerned about Greene, she would then accuse Mm of rape, she at one point stated that she was intoxicated, and at another that she was “in a tie between leaving Milton for Chris [Devin Brown],” and that she thought “that this was a chance to just let go of everything between me and Milton,” However, when asked why she would want to get Bird in trouble, she related that she did not like him. When asked if she was concerned about protecting her relationship with Milton Greene, she confusingly responded, “Yeah.” As to Collins, she testified that she had nothing against' him. When asked why she would want to put him in jail, she stated, “I didn’t know what I wanted.” Despite this highly equivocal evidence that Greene had committed the crimes, the jury convicted.

II. Post-trial Proceedings

Greene unsuccessfully moved for a new trial on the ground that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and then appealed his conviction to the California Court of Appeal. After losing there, he petitioned for review by the California Supreme Court, but that petition was denied. Next, he filed a writ of habeas corpus in federal court. The magistrate judge recommended denial. The district judge remanded for an evidentiary hearing. The magistrate judge heard the evidence of ineffective assistance, made findings of fact, and again recommended denial. The district judge rejected the recommendation and granted the writ. The respondent appeals.

In his petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court (prepared by counsel, not pro se), Greene makes the following claims, 3

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302 F.3d 1067, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 10492, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9353, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 18645, 2002 WL 31017668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milton-tony-greene-v-ic-haunani-henry-warden-ca9-2002.