PASHA v. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 7, 2022
Docket3:19-cv-03701
StatusUnknown

This text of PASHA v. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY (PASHA v. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PASHA v. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, (D.N.J. 2022).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY ____________________________________ IBN EL AMIN PASHA, : : Petitioner, : Civ. No. 19-3701 (GC) : v. : : ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE : OPINION OF NEW JERSEY, et al., : : Respondents. : ____________________________________:

CASTNER, District Judge I. INTRODUCTION Petitioner, Ibn El Amin Pasha, a/k/a James Coleman (hereinafter “Petitioner” or “Pasha), is a state prisoner proceeding pro se with a petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Petitioner raises several ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel claims in this habeas petition. For the following reasons, the habeas petition is denied and a certificate of appealability shall not issue. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Petitioner had two separate trials after the New Jersey Superior Court, Law Division severed several counts of Petitioner’s indictment. In the first trial, a jury found Petitioner guilty of stalking, making terroristic threats, and two lesser included false imprisonment counts. The jury found Petitioner not guilty on three kidnapping counts as well as one lesser included count of false imprisonment. Petitioner was also found not guilty on one count of aggravated assault and one count of sexual assault at his first trial. The jury hung on three counts of criminal mischief, one count of possession of a firearm for an unlawful purpose, one count of threatening to kill and one count of aggravated assault. At the second trial, a jury found Petitioner guilty on three counts of criminal mischief, one count of terroristic threats, one count of possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, one count of burglary, one count of theft and two counts of murder. See State v. Pasha, No. 04-03-0255, 2008 WL 2917172, at *1 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. July 31, 2008). Petitioner received a sentence of 168 years imprisonment. See id.

Most of the facts giving rise to Petitioner’s convictions were adequately set forth by the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division on Petitioner’s direct appeal as follows: The murder victims were Shani Jones Baraka, sister of defendant's estranged wife, Wanda Wilson, and Rayshon Holmes, a friend of Baraka’s. Wilson was the victim of the great bulk of the remaining counts. . . .

Wilson met defendant through mutual friends. At the time, she held a position as an executive administrator at a bank in New York City. She earned a comfortable salary and owned a home in Piscataway that she shared with her half-sister, Shani Jones Baraka. Defendant was unemployed and without a permanent residence. Wilson was nonetheless attracted to him. The two began to date, and she lent him funds to start a business. He moved into her home, and they were married in February 2000.

Trouble developed in the marriage, however, due to defendant's habit of pursuing other women. By February 2003, the two were separated. Wilson, however, continued to provide money to defendant even in the face of several incidents in which defendant showed up at Wilson's home and attacked and threatened her. We do not consider it necessary to set forth all the incidents to which Wilson testified, nor the particular details. A summary will suffice for purposes of this opinion.

On April 27, 2003, defendant came to Wilson's home, demanding to be admitted. She would not let him in and eventually summoned the police. Defendant was no longer there by the time the police arrived. One of the officers who responded advised Wilson that she should obtain a restraining order against defendant. Although Wilson did obtain such an order, it was never served upon him.

In June 2003 Wilson met James Hill, Jr., and formed a relationship with him. Defendant came to the house and threatened Wilson, holding a gun to her head. The following day, Wilson left her house and went to stay with Hill. She returned to the house on June 17, 2003, with a cousin and a friend and instructed the friend how to care for the pool that was on the property. She gave him keys to her car so that he could use it to get back and forth from his apartment in Newark to the home in Piscataway. She then returned to Hill's home.

The following day, Wilson's friend called her to tell her that Wilson's car had been set afire. In addition, the car's windows had been broken and its tires slashed. Defendant called Wilson the day after, asking if she was upset about her car. He said he had destroyed the car because he had overheard her giving her friend instructions on caring for the pool and wanted to deprive him of a way of getting back and forth.

Later in the month, she returned to the house and found that someone had entered, triggering the security alarm. Pictures of Wilson and Hill were missing. In early July, her pool was vandalized on several occasions and the water contaminated with motor oil.

In addition, defendant continued to contact Wilson on her cell phone and at work, at times calling up to twenty times a day. She arranged to have a security escort at work, while entering and leaving the building.

On August 8, 2003, Wilson and Hill went to Las Vegas. The night before their departure, Wilson gave Hill's seventeen-year-old son a key to the house and asked him to watch over the dog while they were gone. [FN 1] While Wilson was showing the house to the boy, he saw two leather motorcycle jackets in a closet. Wilson did not like her jacket and the boy asked if he could have it; she said he could wear it when the cold weather came.

[FN 1] There was testimony that the dog, a pit bull, had belonged to Hill’s son and that Hill had asked his son to lend it to Wilson as protection.

Hill's son came to the house on August 12, together with his girlfriend and nine-year-old cousin. All of the lights on the second floor of the house were on. The older boy and his girlfriend went to check upstairs, and the young cousin went to check on the dog in the basement. He came upstairs screaming that were [sic] bodies down there. His older cousin called his father in Las Vegas, and Wilson called the police. They responded to the house and found the bodies of Baraka and Holmes, both of whom had been shot to death. The police sought to question defendant but were unable to locate him at first. Defendant was staying with a friend in North Carolina. On learning that the police were looking for him, he asked his friend to drive him to New Jersey so that he could turn himself in. His friend told police that defendant had been with him the entire weekend of the murders. Subsequent investigation, however, produced several witnesses who could place defendant in the area at the time of the murders.

Holmes had owned a Toyota Land Cruiser, but the vehicle was missing at her death. The vehicle was equipped with an EZ-Pass transponder which tracked the vehicle through New Jersey down to the Fort McHenry Tunnel in Maryland. It was eventually discovered about four months later in Virginia, at a spot very close to a Greyhound Bus Terminal. The bus company records showed that a one-way ticket to Winston-Salem had been purchased by “Rob Carpenter” on August 12, 2003. The friend with whom defendant had been staying in North Carolina and who drove him back to New Jersey was Robert Carpenter.

Based upon that information, the police interviewed Carpenter again, and he eventually admitted that he had spent that weekend with his girlfriend and not defendant. The police asked if defendant had left anything behind in Carpenter's home. Carpenter showed them two motorcycle jackets. Wilson identified them as the jackets which had been in her closet which Hill's son had asked about.

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PASHA v. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pasha-v-the-attorney-general-of-the-state-of-new-jersey-njd-2022.