Mitchell v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Hillsborough County)

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMay 23, 2023
Docket8:20-cv-01214
StatusUnknown

This text of Mitchell v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Hillsborough County) (Mitchell v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Hillsborough County)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Hillsborough County), (M.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

JAMES MITCHELL,

Petitioner,

v. Case No. 8:20-cv-1214-CEH-MRM

SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

Respondent. /

ORDER

James Mitchell, a Florida prisoner, timely filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (Doc. 1.) Respondent filed a response opposing the petition. (Doc. 7.) Mitchell filed a reply. (Doc. 10.) Upon consideration, the petition will be DENIED. I. Procedural History A state-court jury convicted Mitchell of robbery with a weapon and battery on a victim over sixty-five. (Doc. 7-2, Ex. 4.) After finding that he qualified as a habitual felony offender and a prison releasee reoffender, the state trial court sentenced Mitchell to concurrent terms of life imprisonment on the robbery count and five years’ imprisonment on the battery count. (Id., Ex. 5.) The state appellate court per curiam affirmed the convictions and sentences. (Id., Ex. 7.) Mitchell then sought postconviction relief under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. (Id., Exs. 9, 10.) The state trial court denied Mitchell’s claims, and the state appellate court per curiam affirmed the denial of relief. (Id., Exs. 11, 13.) This federal habeas petition followed. (Doc. 1.)

II. Facts; Trial Testimony1 On March 15, 2016, Charles Bean was working as a security guard at the Tampa Wholesale Produce Market. Bean was seventy years old at the time, and he worked out of a “guard shack” in the market. (Doc. 7-3, Ex. 15, pp. 173-74.) For several years,

Bean had sporadically bought items from Mitchell, who would visit Bean while he was working at the market. Bean also occasionally gave Mitchell gas money when he was “in a bind.” (Id., p. 177.) Bean testified that, on the morning of March 15, Mitchell visited him in the guard shack and asked if he was “interested in” buying an air compressor. (Id., p. 178.)

Bean said he was, and Mitchell left to retrieve the item. Approximately forty-five minutes later, Mitchell returned to the guard shack with the compressor. Bean told Mitchell to put the item in the back of his truck; Mitchell complied. Bean then removed a “white envelope” from an inside pocket of his jacket, which was hanging on a nail by the doorway. (Id., pp. 179, 181.) Bean took $30 from the envelope and gave it to

Mitchell. Bean testified that he also asked whether Mitchell could find a “sander,” but the two did not agree on a price at the time. (Id., pp. 179-80.) Mitchell left, and Bean did not expect him to return that day.

1 This summary is based on the trial transcript. Later that morning, Bean saw Mitchell walk toward the guard shack, then turn around and leave. Bean testified that, shortly thereafter, Mitchell entered the guard shack and immediately began hitting him over the head with a “piece of wood.” (Id.,

pp. 181-82.) The stick was approximately one to two feet long and “four to five inches across.” (Id., p. 184.) Bean was sitting down during the attack, and he did not see Mitchell “prior to him coming through the doorway.” (Id., p. 181.) Once the attack ended and Bean was able to get up, he ran to a gas station for

help. Mitchell left the shack carrying Bean’s jacket, which contained an envelope with $240 in cash. Bean was ultimately taken to a hospital where he received fourteen “staples in three different places.” (Id., p. 198.) The top of Bean’s head was “permanently scarr[ed],” and his arm was “swollen three times what it normally [was].” (Id.)

Robert Boehm, a customer at the market, witnessed the attack. At the time, he was parked in his truck approximately fifteen feet from the guard shack. Boehm testified that he looked through the shack’s glass door and saw Mitchell “hitting [Bean] in the head” with a “big stick.” (Id., pp. 263-65.) After the attack, Boehm observed Mitchell “going through some pockets” of a “dark colored sweater,” which Boehm

subsequently identified as Bean’s jacket. (Id., pp. 266-67.) Boehm followed Mitchell in his truck as the latter fled on foot. He saw Mitchell throw the jacket on the ground and jump a fence. At this point, law enforcement apprehended Mitchell, recovering $240 in cash from his “front left pocket.” (Id., p. 254.) Mitchell testified at trial and offered a different account of the incident. He claimed that, on the morning of March 15, he sold Bean an air compressor for $20. According to Mitchell, Bean paid him by removing the cash from his pants pocket. As

Mitchell was getting ready to leave, Bean asked whether Mitchell could “get [him] a four[-]inch belt sander.” (Id., p. 292.) Mitchell said he would need “another $30” to obtain the item. (Id.) Bean agreed and gave Mitchell the cash from his pants pocket. Mitchell then left the shack. Mitchell testified that, later that morning, he returned to the market to tell Bean

that he “was not able to keep [his] end of the bargain.” (Id., p. 295.) According to Mitchell, he had taken Bean’s money and “got[ten] high with it.” (Id., p. 296.) As Mitchell approached the guard shack, he noticed that “another guy” was there with Bean. (Id., p. 297.) Mitchell turned around, walked back down the street, and waited

for the person to leave. When Mitchell returned approximately five minutes later, Bean was alone in the shack. Mitchell testified that he entered the shack and set his bag down. Bean picked the bag up and said, “[T]his feels a little light to have a sander in there.” (Id., p. 298.) Mitchell testified that, when he told Bean he had used the money to get high,

Bean got “really upset” and began attacking him “out of nowhere.” (Id., p. 299.) According to Mitchell, Bean jumped up and tried to wrap his arms around Mitchell’s neck. Mitchell claimed he “look[ed] around,” saw “an old stick on the ground,” and picked it up. (Id., p. 300.) Mitchell then hit Bean on the head with the stick to “protect [himself].” (Id.) When Bean left the shack “hollering [for] help,” Mitchell took the jacket to “cover [his] appearance to look different.” (Id., p. 304.) As he was walking through the parking lot, Mitchell claimed he “felt something in the [jacket] pockets.” (Id., p. 305.) He pulled out an envelope containing $240 in cash, took the money, and

decided he could not “keep [the] jacket anymore.” (Id.) Mitchell therefore “threw the jacket on the ground” and “jumped across the fence to try to get away.” (Id.) On cross examination, Mitchell admitted that he did not receive any injuries “from being inside of the guard shack with” Bean. (Id., p. 315.) Asked why he ran from

the scene if he was “defending [himself],” Mitchell claimed that he “panicked.” (Id., p. 313.) Mitchell also acknowledged that he had been convicted of “[e]leven felonies and seven crimes of dishonesty.” (Id., p. 309.) III. Standards of Review A. AEDPA

The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”) governs this proceeding. Carroll v. Sec’y, DOC, 574 F.3d 1354, 1364 (11th Cir. 2009). Habeas relief can be granted only if a petitioner is in custody “in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a). Section 2254(d) provides that federal habeas relief cannot be granted on a claim adjudicated on the merits in

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Mitchell v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Hillsborough County), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-secretary-department-of-corrections-hillsborough-county-flmd-2023.