Patsy Kelly Jarrett v. Frank R. Headley, Superintendent of Bedford Hills Correctional Facility

802 F.2d 34, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 31440
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1986
Docket1380, Docket 86-2121
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 802 F.2d 34 (Patsy Kelly Jarrett v. Frank R. Headley, Superintendent of Bedford Hills Correctional Facility) 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
Patsy Kelly Jarrett v. Frank R. Headley, Superintendent of Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, 802 F.2d 34, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 31440 (2d Cir. 1986).

Opinion

KEARSE, Circuit Judge:

Respondent Frank R. Headley (hereinafter “the State”), Superintendent of the New York State correctional facility at which petitioner Patsy Kelly Jarrett is imprisoned, appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, David N. Edelstein, Judge, conditionally granting Jarrett’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the identification of Jarrett at her state trial was unreliable and resulted from impermissibly suggestive police and prosecutorial procedures, in violation of her right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. See 633 F.Supp. 1403 (1986). The State contends principally that the police and prosecutorial procedures were not impermissibly suggestive and that, in any event, the identification of Jarrett was independently reliable. We conclude that the district court erred in finding that the in-court identification of Jarrett at trial was the result of impermissibly suggestive law enforcement procedures, and we therefore reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

In the summer of 1973, Jarrett and her paramour Billy Kelly drove Jarrett’s blue Oldsmobile from their hometown in North Carolina to Utica, New York, where the two lived together. They remained in Utica until about the middle of August, when they returned together to North Carolina. In 1977, in connection with events that had occurred in Utica in 1973 about two days before their departure, Jarrett, along with Kelly, was found guilty on two counts of murder, in violation of N.Y.Penal Law §§ 125.25(1) and (3) (McKinney 1975), and two counts of robbery, in violation of N.Y. Penal Law §§ 160.15(1) and (3) (McKinney 1975). Jarrett was sentenced to a prison term of 25 years to life.

A. The Events and Robert Hyland’s Initial Statement

In the early afternoon of August 11, 1973, a Seaway gas station near Utica was robbed and its attendant bound and slain. On August 13, 1973, Robert Hyland went to State Police Headquarters in Oneida, New York, and made a sworn statement to Investigator Ronald Hojnacki. As transcribed by Hojnacki and signed by Hyland, the statement described Hyland’s observation of the events of August 11 as follows.

At approximately 12:50 p.m. on August 11, Hyland drove into the Seaway station and pulled up to the pumps. Shortly after he got out of his car to look for the attendant, a blue/green car backed around from the side of the station and parked opposite him near the pumps. Hyland described the car’s driver as follows:

I am not sure, but I believe the operator was a white female. She had long black shoulder length hair and was wearing dark clothing____ Upon moving closer to the gas pumps I observed this female going through items in a brown hexagon type pattern pocketbook____ The type of hairstyle that this person had did not allow me to see her face. The girl did have a tan.

*37 A few seconds after the other car had parked, a white male, whom Hyland described in detail, approached Hyland’s car, and sold him $5 worth of gas. Hyland paid for his gas, received change, and left the station. The man who sold Hyland gas was not the station’s attendant.

B. Hyland’s Pretrial Identifications of Jarrett

More than two years later, police matched a latent fingerprint, lifted from the tape that had been used to bind the slain attendant, with that of Billy Kelly. In December 1975, New York State Police Investigator John Ingraham went to Hyland’s home and showed him two groups of photographs. From the first array, of males, Hyland selected two pictures, both of Billy Kelly, as the man who sold him gas at the Seaway station on August 11, 1973.

Ingraham then gave Hyland a dozen photographs of females. Three bore the notation “New York State Police,” one the notation “NY STA,” and the one of Jarrett, “Sheriff’s Department.” The other seven bore no markings. Hyland initially selected two photographs, the one of Jarrett and one of the three photographs bearing a “New York State Police” legend, and eventually settled on the photograph of Jarrett as the driver of the other car at the Seaway station on August 11, 1973.

In March 1976, Hyland testified before the grand jury. He stated that the driver of the other car at the gas station “was combing her hair in the car” and “looked like a female.” Shown the picture of Jarrett, Hyland testified:

A. Well, I can’t say positive about this, about the way — it was the same style, long hair.
Q. Is it safe to say then that the best you can say is that it could be the girl but you can’t say for sure?
A. Yes.

Following the grand jury’s indictment, Jarrett moved to preclude the State from offering an in-court identification of her by Hyland at trial, on the ground that the identification procedures used by the police had been unduly suggestive. In February 1977, a Wade hearing, see United States v. Wade, 388 U.S. 218, 87 S.Ct. 1926, 18 L.Ed.2d 1149 (1967), was held in State Supreme Court, at which Jarrett was present at the counsel table. Hyland testified that the other car at the gas station had been driven by a woman. He described the process of his selection of Jarrett’s picture from among those shown him by Ingraham in December 1975, stating that he had initially selected two photos and then narrowed his choice to one. He testified that he had selected the one photo as “possibly being the female that was in the car at the gas station,” but that he still thought that both of the photos he had initially selected looked like the driver.

He testified that Ingraham had given him the photographs in a pile and had not suggested which he should select or otherwise engaged him in conversation about the photos, even after he had made his selection. He said that he “may have” observed the “New York State Police” and “Sheriffs Department” markings on four photographs and that “I figured it was police pictures,” but did not have the markings “in mind, at all____ I was more concerned with the picture.”

On cross-examination, in response to Jarrett’s counsel’s inquiry as to whether he could describe the woman in the car, Hyland stated:

A. Yes. It was a question whether I was going to be served first with the gasoline or the girl. And this girl had long, darker hair, it seemed, than the one that’s right there, now.
Q. Darker than the one right there, right now, you’re referring to who?
A. That girl, right, there.
Q. At the Defense table?
A. Yes.

Following the Wade hearing, the state court denied Jarrett’s motion to preclude Hyland’s identification testimony, holding that the photographic identification procedures had not “create[d] a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification”:

*38 [Hyland] observed ...

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Bluebook (online)
802 F.2d 34, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 31440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patsy-kelly-jarrett-v-frank-r-headley-superintendent-of-bedford-hills-ca2-1986.