Polen IV v. Artis

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMarch 14, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-10889
StatusUnknown

This text of Polen IV v. Artis (Polen IV v. Artis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polen IV v. Artis, (E.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION SAMUEL POLEN IV,

Petitioner, Case No. 23-10889 Honorable Laurie J. Michelson v. Magistrate Judge Patricia T. Morris

FREDEANE ARTIS1,

Respondent.

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS [1] AND DENYING MOTION FOR EQUITABLE TOLLING [3] Samuel Polen IV filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his state-court conviction for possessing and using methamphetamine and operating or maintaining a methamphetamine laboratory. Polen was sentenced to 10–40 years for the operating or maintaining a laboratory offense and lesser concurrent terms for his other offenses. Polen claims that insufficient evidence was presented at trial to sustain his convictions. The warden responds that the petition was untimely filed and that the state court reasonably adjudicated his claim. Polen agrees that his petition was filed after the statute of limitations had expired, but argues that he should be entitled to equitable tolling.

1 The Court substitutes Fredeane Artis for Jeff Tanner, since the proper respondent for a habeas petition filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 is the state officer having custody of the petitioner and Artis is the current warden of the facility where Polen is incarcerated. (See ECF No. 11, PageID.49); see also Rule 2(a), 28 U.S.C. § 2254. After careful review, the Court will deny Polen’s petition and his motion for equitable tolling. I.

Polen and his co-defendant, Mark Caplan, were charged with multiple methamphetamine offenses after they were found unconscious in a vehicle that contained the components and ingredients for producing methamphetamine, a jar of partially crystalized methamphetamine oil, and a lockbox containing white powder that tested positive for methamphetamine. At the joint jury trial, Clare County Deputy Joshua Loudenslager testified that on January 6, 2018, at 3:20 a.m., he was dispatched to investigate a car idling in the

middle of the intersection of two rural highways. (ECF No. 12-8, PageID.326–327.) He drove to the location and spotted a black Mercury Cougar in the roadway. (Id. at PageID.327.) He walked up to the vehicle and saw two men slumped over in the front seats. (Id. at PageID.327–328.) The car was in first gear, but the driver had his foot on the clutch. (Id. at PageID.328.) The deputy was unable to rouse the occupants by knocking on the window. (Id. at PageID.329.) So he opened the driver’s door, cut the

ignition, and yelled at the driver, who he identified as Caplan, to wake up. (Id. at PageID.329–330.) The man seated in the front passenger seat was later identified as Polen. (Id. at PageID.330–331.) While the deputy struggled to get Caplan out of the car, Polen woke up and stepped out of the car. (Id. at PageID.332–334.) The deputy placed Caplan under arrest and then turned to Polen. (Id. at PageID.335–337, 343.) He told Polen to empty his pockets, and Polen removed a white pill and plastic tubing. (Id. at PageID.343–347.) Another deputy arrived and found a black duffle bag on the floor behind the front seat. (Id. at PageID.350.) The bag contained Coleman fuel, empty bottles, rubber tubing, and ice packs. (Id. at

PageID.350–354.) The vehicle smelled of chemicals. (Id. at PageID.357.) After the car was impounded, a small lockbox was found behind the front passenger seat. (Id. at PageID.357; ECF No. 12-9, PageID.525, 533–534.) The lockbox contained a small scale, a white powdery substance that tested positive for methamphetamine, needles, and shoestring. (ECF No. 12-9, PageID.526–536, 546–547.) Officers later determined that the car was registered to someone named Tracy McClellan. (ECF No. 12-8, PageID.361.)

Clare County Deputy Aaron Miller testified that he was dispatched to the scene to assist Loudenslager. (ECF No. 12-9, PageID.402.) He put Polen in the back seat of his patrol car. (Id. at PageID.403.) Polen was very lethargic, his eyes were bloodshot, his speech was slurred, and he “kept nodding off.” (Id. at PageID.403–406.) Polen told Miller that a blood test would show that he had methamphetamine, marijuana, and morphine in his system. (Id. at PageID.408.) The parties stipulated

at trial that Polen tested positive for alcohol, methadone, tramadol, and methamphetamine after he was taken into custody. (Id. at PageID.546–547.) Clare County Deputy Thomas Brown testified that he also responded to the scene. (Id. at PageID.418–419.) His job was to assess whether there was a “one-pot” methamphetamine lab in the car that might present a hazard. (Id. at PageID.419.) Brown explained in detail the method and ingredients needed to manufacture methamphetamine. (Id. at PageID.420–426.) All the supplies and ingredients needed were present in the car and duffle bag: plastic bottles, Sudafed tablets, cold packs used for their ammonium nitrate, Coleman fuel used as a solvent, lye, a pill grinder,

sulfuric acid, pipe cutters, plastic tubing, funnels, coffee filters, and salt. (Id.) Deputy Brown also found a mason jar filled with what he believed was methamphetamine oil that had some crystals starting to form. (Id.) Detective Thomas Szidik of the Isabella Sheriff Office, a certified methamphetamine lab responder, was also called to the scene. (Id. at PageID.438, 442–443.) He likewise testified about the methamphetamine manufacturing process and corroborated the testimony of Deputy Brown as to the items recovered from the

vehicle. (Id. at PageID.440–446.) A field test of the liquid found in the mason jar tested positive for methamphetamine. (Id. at PageID.447–448.) Tracy McClellan testified that the Mercury Cougar belonged to her. (Id. at PageID.492.) She said that when she woke up on January 6, 2018, she found that her car was missing. (Id. at PageID.494.) She had not given anyone permission to use it, though she had previously allowed Caplan to borrow it. (Id. at PageID.495.) She

called the Sheriff’s Department, and they told her that her car was found and had been impounded. (Id. at PageID.496.) She denied that anything found in the car belonged to her other than some loose change. (Id. at PageID.496–497.) Caplan testified in his own defense. He said that he and Polen borrowed McClellan’s car so they could go to the bar. (ECF No. 12-10, PageID.560–561.) Caplan saw the black duffle bag in the backseat when they got into the car. (Id. at PageID.566–567.) Caplan explained that he fell asleep while driving back from the bar. (Id. at PageID.568–569.) Polen also testified in his own defense, repeating the story of borrowing

McClellan’s car and falling asleep after leaving the bar. (Id. at PageID.601–603.) Polen said he never saw the black duffle bag. (Id. at PageID.606.) Nor did Polen know how methamphetamine got in his system. (Id. at PageID.618.) The jury found both men guilty of the charged offenses. Following sentencing, Polen filed a direct appeal that raised three claims: I. The prosecution did not present sufficient evidence to sustain defendant’s convictions. II. The sentence imposed on defendant was unreasonable, disproportionate, and an abuse of discretion and violated People v. Lockridge, 448 Mich. 358 (2015), thereby requiring a remand to the trial court for resentencing. III. The trial court erred in requiring defendant to pay attorney fees without first assessing his ability to pay. The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed Polen’s conviction in an unpublished opinion. People v. Polen, No. 348324, 2020 WL 1963988 (Mich. Ct. App. Apr. 23, 2020).

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