Oladipupo v. Warden

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 18, 2022
Docket8:18-cv-01016
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Oladipupo v. Warden, (D. Md. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

LARRY A. OLADIPUPO *

Petitioner *

v * Civil Action No. PWG-18-1016

WARDEN and * THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF MARYLAND *

Respondents * *** MEMORANDUM OPINION Petitioner Larry A. Oladipupo filed the above-captioned Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus on April 6, 2018. ECF No. 1 (“Petition”). I have reviewed the parties’ filings and the records they have submitted and determined that no hearing is necessary to resolve Mr. Oladipupo’s Petition. See Rule 8(a), Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts and Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2021); see also Fisher v. Lee, 215 F.3d 438, 455 (4th Cir. 2000) (petitioner not entitled to a hearing under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2)). For the reasons set forth below, the Petition shall be denied and a certificate of appealability shall not issue. BACKGROUND The events leading up to Petitioner’s conviction began on February 5, 2015, when Thalia Alexis, who was Petitioner’s girlfriend for approximately six-years prior to that date, called 911 on a cellphone she borrowed from a stranger at a shopping center on Quince Orchard Boulevard in Montgomery County, Maryland. See ECF No. 18-1 at 177-97 (Direct testimony Cpl.. Jessica Duke); 203-17 (Direct testimony Det. Everett Cammack), see also ECF No. 3-4 at 6 (Ct. of Spec. App. Op.). When Ms. Alexis called 911, she stated that her boyfriend tried to kill her and threatened to kill her family. ECF No. 3-4 at 6. The Maryland Court of Special Appeals further summarized the evidence as follows: Crying and out of breath, she explained to the operator that the boyfriend had told her he needed to speak with her in his car; when she entered the car, he punched, slapped, backhanded, and choked her to get her “to start telling the truth,” although she did not know what he thought she had done. She refused to give the 911 operator the boyfriend's name for fear he would retaliate against her and her family.

Gaithersburg City Police Corporal Jessica Duke and Officer Jonathan Bennett responded to Alexis's 911 call. When they arrived at the shopping center, Alexis was sitting on a curb, crying and visibly shaking—“utterly hysterical”—and repeating only that her boyfriend had beaten her up and she thought he was going to kill her. Although the officers did not initially see any injuries, Alexis said she had been choked and that her face hurt. Duke later saw “a little bit of swelling on the side of her face.” In addition, the officers observed that Alexis's shirt was inside out.

After much prodding from Duke, Alexis identified her boyfriend as Larry Oladipupo and relayed the details of the attack. She told Duke that on February 3, 2015, she had been at appellant's house. Suspicious of something he thought she had done, he pointed a silver handgun at her head and told her he was going to kill her.

The next day, appellant texted Alexis numerous times to try to get her to meet and talk with him. When he knocked on her window late that night, she went outside, and he asked her to enter his vehicle. She refused, but he pushed her to the ground and dragged her to the vehicle.

Appellant drove around for quite some time, “visibly upset” with Alexis. The pair argued, and appellant punched Alexis in the face, choked her, and banged her head against the car window.

At one point, appellant pulled into a gas station and instructed Alexis to disrobe, telling her she was going to walk home naked. She stepped out of the car and took her clothes off, and he revved the engine. Fearing that he would run her over, she grabbed her clothes and ran to the Quince Orchard Plaza shopping center, where she made contact with a man and used his cell phone to call 911. Later that night, Alexis completed a “Domestic Violence Supplemental,” a document that is required when there is an allegation of assault by a person with whom the victim is in an intimate relationship. The supplemental detailed, on a diagram, where Alexis's injuries were, her demeanor as observed by the police officer filling out the form, and her comments and description of the abuse. On February 6, 2015, Alexis was interviewed by Detective Corporal Everett Cammack at the Gaithersburg Police Department. During the interview, Alexis was calm and cooperative as she added details to the narrative that she had given to Duke.

Alexis told Cammack that on February 2, 2015, she had spent the night at appellant's parents' house, where he lived. When appellant did not receive an adequate explanation about an alleged incident, he got angry with her.

Early in the morning of February 3, 2015, Alexis was asleep on the couch in the basement where appellant slept; when she awoke, appellant was staring at her in the dark. He reached under a cushion on the couch and pulled out a silver gun that may have had a black grip, placed it against her forehead, and questioned her about a neighbor he had seen in his yard. He only stopped questioning her approximately 35 minutes later, when he heard his parents moving upstairs. Alexis was then able to leave the house.

Alexis did not respond to appellant's numerous calls or texts the next day. At approximately 1:00 a.m. on February 5, 2015, appellant appeared at Alexis's apartment and knocked on her ground floor window. She told her mother she was going outside to speak with him.

Although she was reluctant, appellant convinced her to get into his car. As soon as she entered the car, his wheedling demeanor changed to anger, and he told her she was going to die. Alexis tried to get out of the car, but appellant grabbed her by her jacket, choking her, and drove away. As he pulled away from her apartment, he hit her and threatened her and her family. He continued to drive and hit her and bang her head against the window.

When they arrived in Rockville, appellant ordered her to undress completely, after which he rolled down all the car windows, telling her she would freeze. He eventually pulled into a gas station in Gaithersburg and told her to get dressed. She did so hurriedly, putting her shirt on inside out, but she was unable to find her underwear or glasses. She jumped out of the car and ran to the nearby shopping center, where she encountered Smith, the stranger who let her use his cell phone to call the police. Alexis identified appellant as her assailant from a “target sheet” the police had made when they were looking for appellant on outstanding warrants.

ECF No. 3-4 at 3-10 (footnotes omitted). On February 6, 2015, a search warrant was executed at Petitioner’s parents’ house, where he was living at the time. During the search, police recovered a “loaded, black 9 millimeter handgun under a couch cushion in the basement,” an iPhone, and a pair of tan pants with Petitioner’s identification in the pocket. ECF No. 3-4 at 10. Petitioner was charged with two counts of first-degree assault, use of a firearm in commission of a crime of violence, kidnaping, illegal possession of a regulated firearm, and illegal possession of ammunition. ECF No. 18-1 at 112-13. Prior to trial, Ms. Alexis began sending emails to the lead detective, Everett Cammack,

indicating that she was afraid to testify against Petitioner and on the day trial was set to begin, informed the State’s Attorney that she was refusing to testify. The State’s motion to compel Ms. Alexis’s testimony was granted by the trial court after assurances were made that anything she testified to could not be used against her.1 ECF No. 18-1 at 108-9. After Ms. Alexis took the stand, she claimed she could not recall why she had called the police on February 5, 2015 and denied that Petitioner had assaulted her. Id.

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Oladipupo v. Warden, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oladipupo-v-warden-mdd-2022.