Perry March v. Gerald McAllister

573 F. App'x 450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 2014
Docket13-5870
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 573 F. App'x 450 (Perry March v. Gerald McAllister) 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
Perry March v. Gerald McAllister, 573 F. App'x 450 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

DAMON J. KEITH, Circuit Judge.

On August 17, 2006, in the Criminal Court for Davidson County, Tennessee, Perry A. March was convicted of murdering his wife Janet nearly a decade prior. In this habeas appeal, Petitioner March, initially proceeding pro se, and later retaining counsel, makes three challenges to the admission of certain of his incriminating statements on grounds that they were obtained in violation of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. On two of his three claims, we assume without deciding the existence of constitutional error, only to conclude that in light of the significant evidence adduced against March, any errors would be harmless. As to March’s third challenge, although the facts present a close legal question, we are unable to conclude that the Tennessee appellate court unreasonably applied federal law, and accordingly we reject this claim as well. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of March’s writ of habeas corpus.

I.

March and his wife were married in 1987 and thereafter took up residence in Nashville. March enrolled at Vanderbilt Law School, with full financial support from the victim’s parents (the “Levines”), and was eventually employed as an attorney at a Nashville law firm. The couple undertook marriage counseling in 1991 or 1992, and the record reflects that the two were experiencing marital problems thereafter. March began to see a psychiatrist, whose sessions into which the victim joined in 1996. The victim’s mother, Ms. Levine, testified that at that point the situation had seriously deteriorated. March confided in her his fears that a divorce was imminent. Eventually, the situation was so bad in 1996 that the victim demanded that March find alternative housing. 1

Ms. Levine had planned on accompanying the victim to see a divorce lawyer on August 16, 1996. However, around midnight on August 15, 1996, March called the Levines to inform them that the victim had left the house after an argument. The victim was never seen again. The events that followed pertaining to the victim’s disappearance were described as highly uncharacteristic. A non-exhaustive list of unusual circumstances include: abnormalities as to the victim’s computer usage; handwriting; credit card usage; the lack of an itinerary and otherwise detailed instructions as to her absence; the victim’s repeated absence away from her children, for whom she had made birthday and school plans; and vehicular inconsistencies. In short, the trial testimony established that a permanent change of scenery was antithetical of the victim’s habits, customs, and ethos.

Memorial services were eventually held for the victim, which March did not attend. March initially moved the children to Chicago, and then in May 1999, moved the family to Mexico. With regards to evidence as it relates to March, much of the testimony established at trial detailed him as volatile and hostile, making sundry threats to the victim’s friends, family members, and confidants, as well as exhibiting similar behavior towards investigators, po *452 lice officers, and psychiatrists. March’s demeanor, especially when approached by authority figures, is detailed as having been frequently impatient, frustrated, and irritated. Certain anomalies and facts inconsistent with the victim’s purported voluntary disappearance include, but are not limited to: the house having been cleaned the morning after the incident but before the housekeeper arrived; March’s presence at 1:00 am the night of the incident walking a bicycle down a parking lot where the victim’s car was later discovered; ripping out his computer’s hard drive; turning white and shivering when the police arrived; commenting that “Fucking Janet ruined my life”; purchasing new tires and wiping disinfectant in his car; asking victim’s long-time friend Diane Saks if she could believe a scenario in which he would put the victim in the back of his vehicle, leave the children home alone while they were sleeping and then return and pretend “like nothing ever happened”; penning a manuscript portraying the murder of a young woman; telling Mexican businessmen that if he did not help him “he would do away with us the way he did with his wife”; and the victim’s discovery of evidence of a sexual harassment suit filed against March by a paralegal at his law firm, as well as evidence that March’s settlement of that suit had rendered March in arrears.

Arthur March, the Defendant’s father, played an instrumental role in both the victim’s disappearance and the subsequent plot to murder the Levines. He was deposed, and the corresponding videotape of the deposition was played before the jury. Arthur March arrived in Nashville three to four days after the victim’s disappearance. He testified that his son admitted to him that the victim had died in an “accident” after an argument. March asked his father to dispose of his computer’s hard drive, which he did. March also asked his father to dispose of the victim’s remains, which he also did: after following March’s instructions, his father bought a shovel and Clorox bleach and, after following directions provided to him, unearthed a large leaf bag containing the victim’s remains located in a wooded area. Arthur March stated that he saw certain bones in the bag and that the bag weighed approximately fifty or sixty pounds. March and his father drove northwards to Chicago, where Arthur March disposed of the victim’s body and clothes underneath brush.

March moved to Mexico, and, after nine years on the lam, was arrested there on August 3, 2005. March was transported to a jail in Los Angeles, California, where he waived extradition. Detectives Pat Posti-glione and Bill Pridemore of the Metro Nashville Police Department escorted March from Los Angeles to Nashville via plane on August 12, 2005. Detective Posti-glione, to whom March spoke to most frequently, informed March that he understood that Defendant was an attorney and that he had no intention of interrogating him. Although Postiglione conveyed that March was under no obligation to speak to him, Postiglione did not provide March a Miranda warning. He also said that he would “certainly listen” and relay whatever March had to say to the appropriate authorities. Postiglione testified that he was aware that March was represented by counsel.

Generally, March indicated a willingness to plead guilty to murder, but was persistently inquisitive with Postiglione. Posti-glione, although generally reserved in conversation, 2 held steadfast in reminding *453 March he did not have the authority to negotiate a plea deal, made the following statements during the flight to Nashville:

1) “[S]ometimes things happen that some people may perceive one way when, in fact, it is something totally different. I used as an example — a moment of anger instantly regretted. I gave the scenario of someone killing someone else by accident compared to walking up behind someone and shooting them in the back of the head — and said that there is a stark difference between the two”; and 2) in response to March’s statement that he intensely loved the victim, “sometimes people hurt people they love in a moment of anger.”

March was held at the Davidson County Criminal Justice Center, where he met Russell Nathaniel Farris, an inmate who was unable to make bail.

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573 F. App'x 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-march-v-gerald-mcallister-ca6-2014.