Poindexter v. Booker

301 F. App'x 522
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 2008
Docket07-1795
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 301 F. App'x 522 (Poindexter v. Booker) 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
Poindexter v. Booker, 301 F. App'x 522 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

The warden appeals the judgment of the district court conditionally granting a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 to petitioner-appellee Quinn Poindexter. The district court held that Poindexter received ineffective assistance of counsel and that the Michigan Court of Appeals’s finding to the contrary was an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent. For the following reasons, we agree and affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

This case arises from the shooting of Timothy Ruff late one night in Detroit. Ruff testified that he walked alone past Poindexter’s house on his way to meet friends at approximately two o’clock in the morning. As Ruff passed Poindexter’s home, according to Ruffs testimony, Poindexter ran out of the house without a shirt, pants, socks, or shoes. He had a long gun and, without warning, shot at Ruff multiple times. The third shot, fired from approximately ten to fifteen yards away, hit Ruff in the forehead, destroying one eye and displacing the other from his eye socket. Ruff testified that he did not name his assailant when asked by police officers at the scene, but informed the police that the shooter lived in the “third house” and pointed towards the home that Poindexter, Walter Petty, Jr., Sabrina Moore, and Dion Griffin shared. At the time Ruff pointed at the house, his eyes had already been destroyed. Ruff survived but is blind as a result.

The prosecution’s theory was that the shooter thus ran out of his house half-naked, unprovoked, and shot Ruff. The state presented two witnesses to the Michigan trial court who identified Poindexter as the shooter, Poindexter’s roommate Petty and Ruff. Petty did not name Poindexter as the shooter until approximately eighteen days after the shooting, when he himself was questioned by the police about his involvement in an unrelated altercation. Petty then informed the police that Poindexter had gone to Petty’s girlfriend’s house after the shooting to find Petty. In contrast to Ruffs testimony that Ruff was walking alone and was shot for no reason, Petty alleged that Poindexter confided in him that three men were trying to break into Poindexter’s car and shot at Poindexter when he came outside. According to Petty, Poindexter said that after the three men shot at him, he shot back and noticed that two men fled and one man was lying on the ground.

On approximately the same day that Petty implicated Poindexter in the shooting, Ruff identified the shooter as “Big 50,” Poindexter’s nickname. Ruff stated that he had not mentioned “Big 50” at the time of the shooting because he was afraid that the shooter was still there and would shoot him again.

Following a bench trial, the trial court acquitted Poindexter of the charged offense, assault with intent to murder, but found him guilty of the lesser included offense of assault with intent to commit great bodily harm less than murder and felony firearm. Poindexter was sentenced to thirteen and one half years to twenty years in prison for assault and two years *525 in prison for felony firearm. Poindexter timely appealed and filed a motion to remand for an evidentiary hearing pursuant to People v. Ginther, 390 Mich. 436, 212 N.W.2d 922 (1973) (“Ginther hearing”). People v. Poindexter, No. 233907 (Mich.Ct.App. Apr.25, 2002). The Michigan Court of Appeals granted the motion, and Poindexter presented three days of testimony alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. Poindexter argued that his counsel, Robert Slameka, failed to call alibi witnesses, failed to call a medical expert to testify to the victim’s medical records, and misadvised Poindexter not to testify.

Three alibi witnesses, Dion Griffin, Sabrina Moore, and Violet Hicks, all testified at the Ginther hearing that Poindexter was innocent and that they were with Poindexter in the home he shared with Griffin, Moore, and Petty at the time of the shooting. All three said that Poindexter did not leave the house until after he heard shots, and then he called the police. Notably, Griffin and Moore recounted that Petty was agitated, said someone owed him money, and left the same house angrily moments before they heard shots. Their testimony established that Petty had a motive to shoot someone that evening and that he exited shortly before the shooting from the same “third” house that Ruff indicated to the police. Their testimony thus not only supported Poindexter’s innocence but also implicated Petty.

Juawanda and Robert Robinson, neighbors of Poindexter and Petty, also testified at the Ginther hearing. Juawanda Robinson stated that she heard two people arguing immediately before the gun shots. She also heard Ruff identify “Red” 1 as the shooter to the police at the scene. The Robinsons stated that they had not received subpoenas to testify at trial, though Slameka testified that he had subpoenaed them. Nevertheless, they appeared at Poindexter’s trial after a neighbor told them to attend. They happened to arrive during closing arguments, and Slameka declined to request a continuance or to request that the proofs be reopened in order to call the Robinsons as -witnesses. Thus five witnesses were not called to testify at Poindexter’s trial, who together would have offered testimony that Ruffs initial identification of the “third house” and “Red” as the shooter applied equally to implicate Petty as to Poindexter, that Petty had a motive to shoot someone that evening, and that Poindexter was in his bedroom at the time of the shooting.

After three days of testimony, including an attempt by Poindexter to present evidence that he passed a lie detector test, the trial court held that Slameka’s failure to call witnesses and his advice to Poindexter not to testify were part of Ms trial strategy. The trial court concluded that counsel had not been ineffective.

Poindexter timely appealed, allegmg ineffective assistance of counsel on five grounds: “[Slameka] (1) failed to present a defense; (2) failed to call credible and available defense witnesses; (3) advised defendant not to testify; (4) failed to disclose his prior representation of a prosecution witness; and (5) failed to call an expert or physician to explain the contents of the victim’s medical records.” People v. Poindexter, No. 233907, 2003 WL 22399309, at *2, 2003 Mich.App. LEXIS 2638, at *6 (Mich.Ct.App. Oct. 21, 2003) (footnote omitted). The Michigan Court of Appeals found that Poindexter did not overcome the strong presumption that his counsel’s decisions were based on trial strategy and did not show that, but for counsel’s mistakes, the result of the trial would have been different.

*526 Poindexter then filed an application for leave to appeal in the Michigan Supreme Court, arguing actual innocence and failure by the Michigan Court of Appeals to consider his polygraph results, which verified his innocence, when affirming Poindexter’s conviction. Poindexter v. Booker, No. 05-CV-71607, slip op. at 7, 2007 WL 1556671 (E.D.Mich. May 30, 2007) (“Poindexter III”).

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301 F. App'x 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poindexter-v-booker-ca6-2008.