Musaid v. Kirkpatrick

114 F.4th 90
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
Docket23-264
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 F.4th 90 (Musaid v. Kirkpatrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musaid v. Kirkpatrick, 114 F.4th 90 (2d Cir. 2024).

Opinion

23-264 Musaid v. Kirkpatrick

1 United States Court of Appeals 2 for the Second Circuit 3 _________________ 4 5 August Term, 2023 6 7 Argued: February 26, 2024 8 Decided: September 4, 2024 9 10 No. 23-264 11 _________________ 12 13 MOHAMED MUSAID, 14 15 Petitioner-Appellant, 16 17 v. 18 19 MICHAEL KIRKPATRICK, Superintendent of Clinton Correctional Facility, 20 21 Respondent-Appellee, 22 23 STATE OF NEW YORK, 24 25 Respondent. 26 27 _________________ 28 29 On Appeal from the United States District Court 30 for the Southern District of New York 31 _________________ 32

33 Before: CALABRESI, CABRANES, and LOHIER, Circuit Judges. 34

1 23-264 Musaid v. Kirkpatrick 1 Petitioner-Appellant Mohamed Musaid seeks the writ of habeas corpus. 2 Musaid was convicted in New York state court of the 2007 murder of a relative. 3 Within days of the murder, Musaid was arrested and confessed to the crime. But 4 his case did not proceed to trial for more than eight years because Musaid was 5 repeatedly found incompetent to stand trial. Musaid had a long history of mental 6 illness, and medical professionals who examined him found him incompetent on 7 ten occasions while he awaited trial. 8 Musaid would oscillate between periodic competence when he took his 9 medication and sustained incompetence when he did not, though his periods of 10 competence were far fewer and shorter than his periods of incompetence. When 11 found competent, Musaid would be transferred from a psychiatric hospital to 12 Rikers Island. There, he would refuse his medication and swiftly return to 13 incompetence. 14 After a final finding of competency and transfer to Rikers, the state trial 15 court allowed Musaid’s criminal trial to proceed. The trial, however, did not start 16 until nearly ten months after this finding. Notably, Musaid had regressed to 17 incompetence in shorter periods after every previous finding of competence. 18 Musaid argues that it was objectively unreasonable for the trial court to 19 proceed to trial without making even a minimal inquiry into whether he remained 20 competent just before trial. Based on the exceptional record before us— 21 specifically, Musaid’s cyclical pattern of regressing from competence to 22 incompetence, his consistent history of such regression after relatively brief of 23 periods of medically-induced competence, his erratic behavior at and shortly 24 before trial, and the importance of his medication to every finding of 25 competence—we agree with Musaid. We further conclude that neither the trial 26 court nor the Appellate Division applied the proper legal standard governing 27 when further inquiry is required. 28 But we decline Musaid’s request that we issue the writ of habeas corpus 29 outright. Instead, we issue only a conditional writ. This allows the state courts to 30 develop the record further and reconsider, in the first instance, whether it is 31 possible, by holding a hearing or by other means, to decide for themselves 32 Musaid’s competency at the time of trial based on evidence proximate to the trial. 33 Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND 34 with instructions to enter a conditional writ. 35 Judge Cabranes dissents in a separate opinion. 36 _____________________________________

2 23-264 Musaid v. Kirkpatrick 1 2 RANDA D. MAHER, Maher & Pittell, LLP, Great Neck, 3 New York, for Petitioner 4 5 BRENT E. YARNELL (Steven C. Wu, Chief, Appeals 6 Division, on the brief), Assistant District Attorney, for 7 Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., District Attorney, New York County, 8 for Respondent 9 _____________________________________ 10 11 CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

12 Petitioner Mohamed Musaid seeks the writ of habeas corpus. In 2007,

13 Musaid was arrested for the killing of a relative. He immediately confessed to the

14 crime but was not tried and convicted until 2016. The delay is the result of

15 Musaid’s extensive history of mental illness. While in the custody of the State of

16 New York, he was diagnosed with Schizophrenia (Paranoid Type), found by

17 medical professionals to be incompetent to stand trial ten times, and repeatedly

18 committed to psychiatric hospitals. When hospitalized, he would receive

19 medication and would, with time, return to competence. After being found

20 competent, however, Musaid would be transferred to Rikers Island Jail (“Rikers”),

3 23-264 Musaid v. Kirkpatrick 1 where he would decline medication and quickly regress to incompetence once

2 again.

3 This cycle occurred in full three times. After the fourth time Musaid was

4 found competent, he was not again examined for competency. Instead, the state

5 trial court ordered the start of his trial. Musaid’s trial did not start, however, until

6 nearly ten months after he was last examined for competence. Nonetheless, the

7 trial began without so much as an inquiry into whether Musaid remained

8 compliant with his medication, let alone any meaningful inquiry into his

9 competence.

10 Musaid argues that this was unreasonable and a violation of the

11 Constitution’s prohibition against trying defendants when there is reasonable

12 cause to doubt their competence. On the exceptional record before us, we agree.

13 Musaid’s history provided ample reasons to doubt that he remained competent

14 after ten additional months at Rikers. That history, together with Musaid’s bizarre

15 conduct shortly before and during trial, should have prompted at least a minimal

4 23-264 Musaid v. Kirkpatrick 1 inquiry into his compliance with medication and his then-existing cognitive state.

2 The trial court’s failure to do so was objectively unreasonable.

3 We decline, however, Musaid’s request that we issue the writ of habeas

4 corpus outright. Instead, consistent with the principles of federalism, we issue a

5 conditional writ to allow the state courts to consider whether it is possible to

6 reconstruct Musaid’s competence at the time of trial based on evidence proximate

7 to the trial that is not currently in the record before us.

8 I. Factual and Procedural History

9 On November 24, 2007, Musaid was arrested for the murder of Rafik

10 Alsamet that occurred three days earlier. Alsamet was shot three times: twice in

11 the back and once in the back of the head. There were two witnesses to the

12 shooting, one of whom knew Musaid and recognized him. Police recovered a gun

13 a few blocks away from the shooting, which testing concluded had fired at least

14 one of the bullets that killed Alsamet. Further testing conducted before trial

15 revealed Musaid’s DNA on the gun.

16 After he was arrested, Musaid immediately confessed to shooting and

17 killing Alsamet. 1 In his confession, Musaid explained his motive for the crime and

1 In this conversation—and in many of Musaid’s competency examinations—an interpreter was present and assisted Musaid in communicating. 5 23-264 Musaid v. Kirkpatrick 1 provided several details relating to the commission of the crime itself. Many of

2 the details Musaid provided, such as the location of the gun, are those that

3 presumably only Alsamet’s killer would have known. At the end of the interview,

4 police reduced Musaid’s answers to a written confession that Musaid then signed.

5 In the confession, Musaid stated that he had known Alsamet for roughly

6 fifteen years. They were both immigrants to the United States from Amiq, Yemen,

7 where Musaid was born and met his wife. Musaid’s wife, who was a cousin of

8 Alsamet’s, remained in Yemen with their three sons. Musaid explained that he

9 killed Alsamet because he believed that Alsamet was sending money to Musaid’s

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114 F.4th 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musaid-v-kirkpatrick-ca2-2024.