Ouber v. Guarino

158 F. Supp. 2d 135, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13484, 2001 WL 1012746
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 29, 2001
DocketCIV. A. 99-11021-RCL
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 F. Supp. 2d 135 (Ouber v. Guarino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ouber v. Guarino, 158 F. Supp. 2d 135, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13484, 2001 WL 1012746 (D. Mass. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

LINDSAY, District Judge.

I. Introduction and Procedural History

Before me is a petition of Barbara L. Ouber (the “petitioner”) for the issuance of *137 a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner was convicted of trafficking in cocaine in February, 1997, following a jury trial in the Barnstable (Massachusetts) Superior Court. After the conviction, the trial judge sentenced the petitioner to a term of five to seven years in a Massachusetts state prison. The trial, which resulted in the conviction, was the third in which the petitioner was charged with the same offense. The two previous trials, in each of which the petitioner testified, ended in mistrials. 1 That the petitioner did not testify in the third trial, as she had in the two previous trials, is one of the circumstances from which the present petition derives.

Following her conviction, the petitioner filed an appeal with the Massachusetts Appeals Court (the “Appeals Court”) and a motion for a new trial in the trial court. In each she claimed ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial judge denied the petitioner’s motion for a new trial. Thereafter, the Appeals Court affirmed both the conviction of the petitioner and the order of the trial judge denying the petitioner’s motion for a new trial. See Common-tvealth v. Ouber, 46 Mass.App.Ct. 1112, 707 N.E.2d 408, 1999 WL 130759 (1999). The petitioner sought unsuccessfully to have the matters reconsidered by the Appeals Court. The petition for reconsideration was denied on March 2, 1999. The petitioner then filed an application for leave to obtain further appellate review with the Supreme Judicial Court, the state court of last resort in Massachusetts. That application was denied on March 26,1999.

The petitioner then sought relief in this court by way of the present petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), She claims here that her petition for habeas corpus relief is necessitated by the failure of the Massachusetts courts “to overturn [her] conviction ... despite the fact that she was deprived of [cjonstitutionally effective assistance of counsel as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution.” Memorandum in Support of Petition for Habeas Corpus (“Petitioner’s Memorandum”) at 1. The specific constitutional claim before me — as it was before the Appeals Court — is that the performance of the petitioner’s attorney at trial (“Trial Counsel”) was prejudicially deficient, in that Trial Counsel made four promises to the jury that he would call the petitioner as a witness at trial, but failed to keep those promises. See id. at 8.

II. The Trial and Peri-Trial Events

The trial of the petitioner took place over two days. The events relevant to the present petition occurring at, and surrounding, the trial are summarized as follows.

A. Opening Statements

On the first day of the trial, an assistant district attorney for the Cape Cod and Islands District, representing the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (the “Prosecutor”), and Trial Counsel for the petitioner gave opening statements along the following lines.

The Prosecutor told the jury that the Commonwealth expected to prove through the testimony of its primary witness, an undercover police officer named Todd Shea (“Shea”), that the petitioner sold fifty-six grams of cocaine to Shea for $2,000 on March 8, 1992. See Trial Transcript (“Tr.”) at 44-46. The transaction in question, the Prosecutor said, took place inside *138 the petitioner’s automobile in a parking lot at a Hyannis, Massachusetts bar called Bud’s Country Lounge and came about as a result of a three-month undercover investigation into a Cape Cod cocaine ring. See id. The investigation had ultimately come to focus on one Nicholas Tsoleridis, brother of the petitioner, and on the petitioner herself, both of whom resided at 9 Beth Lane in Hyannis. 2 See id. at 47. The Prosecutor stated:

The ultimate issue for you to decide in this case will be on March the 8th, 1992, did this Defendant meet an undercover officer in a parking lot, knowingly gnd intentionally give him cocaine in this case... .What I expect the issue to be was did she knowingly and intentionally distribute that or give that to the officer. And that’s where its going to be very important in this case that you listen to the words of Todd Shea as he describes that transaction, and he describes Barbara Ouber’s words and actions in that car.

Id. at 48-49. The Prosecutor further said that Shea would testify that the petitioner handed him two partially-sealed envelopes of cocaine and that:

[Shea] opened those envelopes up, pulled the substance out ... [a]sks her, [i]s this of the same quality that I had boughten [sic] from Nick Tsoleridis in the past? She indicates, [y]es, it is. And the weight is all there. And those words are going to be very important when you determine her knowledge and intent in this case.

Id. at 49.

In his opening, Trial Counsel described the case as a credibility contest between the petitioner and Shea concerning what happened between the two on March 8, 1992. See id. at 60-61.

The cocaine at issue at the trial was contained in two envelopes. See id. at 58. The envelopes, Trial Counsel said, were sealed and were such that one could not see through them. See id. at 58-59. Trial Counsel told the jury that the petitioner had been directed by her domineering brother, Tsoleridis, to take the envelopes to Bud’s Country Lounge and deliver them to a man there (who turned out to be Shea) and to collect money the man owed Tsoleridis. See id. at 56, 58-59. Trial Counsel said that the jury would hear that Tsoleridis told the petitioner that the envelopes contained drill bits, and that the petitioner accepted that explanation without question and without herself inspecting the envelopes. See id. at 59. The petitioner’s defense, as explained by Trial Counsel, was the “mailman defense;” that is, the petitioner unknowingly delivered the cocaine to Shea in sealed envelopes in the way that a letter carrier delivers mail in sealed envelopes, without knowing the contents of the envelopes. See id. at 58.

Trial Counsel told the jury, on four separate occasions, that Ouber herself would testify about how she came to deliver the cocaine, about her lack of knowledge that the envelopes contained cocaine and about the absence of any intent on her part to traffic in cocaine, as charged in the indictments. On the first occasion, he said:

[Y]ou’ll hear from the evidence from her and from another witness— [that there] were two sealed white envelopes.

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Related

Ouber v. Guarino
293 F.3d 19 (First Circuit, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
158 F. Supp. 2d 135, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13484, 2001 WL 1012746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ouber-v-guarino-mad-2001.