Patrick McLemore v. Thomas Bell

503 F. App'x 398
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 2012
Docket10-1539
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 503 F. App'x 398 (Patrick McLemore v. Thomas Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick McLemore v. Thomas Bell, 503 F. App'x 398 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Patrick McLemore, a Michigan state prisoner, appeals the district court’s judgment denying him habeas relief from the effective life sentence he is currently serving following his convictions for first-degree felony-murder and carjacking. Before this court, McLemore alleges: (1) that the Michigan state trial court committed constitutional error in instructing the jury on the concept of aiding and abetting felony-murder and on the need for unanimity in its verdict; (2) that the prosecutor’s misconduct deprived him of due process of law; (3) that the trial court denied him the opportunity to mount an effective defense by excluding witness testimony; (4) that his trial counsel provided constitutionally ineffective legal assistance; and (5) that his appellate counsel also failed to provide adequate representation. For the reasons set out below, we disagree and affirm the judgment of the district court.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Many of the facts underlying the petitioner’s prosecution are not in serious dispute. McLemore himself concedes that sometime during the late-night or early-morning hours of June 14-16, 1999, he, then 16 years old, and his 19-year-old friend, Nathan Reid, found a wrench in the yard behind Reid’s former residence. As the two continued walking through the neighborhood, they approached the residence of Oscar Manning and broke into the house through an unlocked garage door. McLemore was acquainted with Manning because he had mowed Manning’s lawn on a number of occasions.

The petitioner also admits that by the time he and Reid left Manning’s property, Manning had been bludgeoned to death in his bedroom while he and Reid took off with a video cassette recorder, a ring, and one of Manning’s cars. Exactly how the brutal murder occurred is subject to differing accounts. In his own trial testimony, McLemore claimed that Reid first entered Manning’s home alone, despite McLemore’s pleas that he not do so. According to McLemore, he decided to stay in the garage rather than risk being seen *401 by a man he knew, but he eventually entered the house, where he saw Manning lying motionless in his blood-splattered bedroom. He then claimed to have stood horrified in the room as Reid rifled through dresser drawers in search of valuables. Rather than continue to remain in the room, McLemore said, he ran out of the house and began fleeing the scene until Reid, driving an automobile stolen from Manning’s garage, caught up with him.

The petitioner offered additional testimony that in the hours and days following the murder, he, Reid, and various other friends stole cases of liquor, patronized a prostitute, and eventually hid the stolen vehicle in a wooded area near Reid’s residence. McLemore also spoke with some of his friends about the murder, but denied telling those friends that he had actually struck the victim. In fact, at trial, the petitioner went so far as to admit that he entered Manning’s home "with the intent to steal but insisted that he was not aware of, or involved in, plans to injure or murder anyone. The defense also emphasized the fact that, although one of McLemore’s shoes was stained with blood matching the victim’s, other physical evidence pointed to Reid as the mastermind of the criminal spree. Indeed, the stolen car was found only yards from Reid’s home, and Manning’s car keys, ring, and VCR were all found in Reid’s possession, in his home, or in a vehicle owned by his mother.

Neither the prosecution nor the defense called Reid as a witness to establish the petitioner’s complicity or lack of complicity in the slaying of Oscar Manning, despite the fact that Reid had already pleaded no-contest to second-degree murder, armed robbery, carjacking, and first-degree home invasion in connection with Manning’s death. Instead, to hold the petitioner accountable for the crimes, the prosecution introduced not only physical evidence, such as McLemore’s blood-splattered shoes, but also the testimony of the friends to whom he had spoken after the criminal escapade. For example, Phillip Donnelly testified that he spoke with McLemore shortly after Manning’s death, recalling that:

[McLemore] started crying a little bit and he — he said that he was — he was gonna go to hell for the rest of his life and that God will never forgive him for what he did. I asked him what he did, he said that the man, the old man in the yellow house, I murdered him.... He told me he — it’s like I didn’t — I—I didn’t know what I was doing.
He told me that he was just going over there to get something out of the house because he didn’t think that the old man was there, and the incident happened and — he told me that he hit the guy with a wrench and then dropped the TV on him.
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[H]e told me that he struck him repeatedly because he — he was still standing there and I — I guess he wasn’t — he just wouldn’t fall down, so he hit him more than once.
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[H]e said that Oscar, that he had grabbed him, that Oscar had grabbed him, and that he — that he was just trying to get away from him.
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He said that he had blood on his upper body and he tried — he tried to wash it off but it wouldn’t all come off.

Following trial, the jury acquitted McLemore of premeditated murder but found him guilty of felony-murder, armed robbery, carjacking, and first-degree home invasion. However, the state trial judge vacated the convictions for armed robbery *402 and home invasion on double jeopardy grounds and sentenced McLemore to concurrent sentences of life in prison for felony-murder and 225-600 months for carjacking.

After the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed his convictions and the Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal, the petitioner filed a motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Michigan Court Rule 6.502, raising issues not presented on direct appeal. The trial court denied that motion, and the state appellate courts again denied leave to appeal. Having unsuccessfully navigated his way through state-court review, McLemore then filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus in district court, alleging six violations of the federal constitution. The state responded by contending that three of those claims were procedurally defaulted and the remaining claims did not merit relief.

The matter was referred to a magistrate judge who recommended denial of the petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2) (“An application for a writ of habeas corpus may be denied on the merits, notwithstanding the failure of the applicant to exhaust the remedies available in the courts of the State.”), after determining that McLe-more’s claims lacked merit. The district judge adopted the report and recommendation and also concurred in the suggestion that a certificate of appealability issue on only three of the issues identified by McLemore. We later expanded that certificate to include two additional issues, and the petitioner now pursues all five of those claims on appeal.

DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
503 F. App'x 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-mclemore-v-thomas-bell-ca6-2012.