Porfirio Gutierrez v. Keith Anglin

706 F.3d 867, 2013 WL 466074, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 2679
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 2013
Docket11-2308
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 706 F.3d 867 (Porfirio Gutierrez v. Keith Anglin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porfirio Gutierrez v. Keith Anglin, 706 F.3d 867, 2013 WL 466074, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 2679 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

*869 ROVNER, Circuit Judge.

Porfirio Gutierrez was convicted of first degree murder in the death of Joyce Raymond. After pursuing his Illinois state court avenues for relief from that conviction, Gutierrez brought an action for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, alleging that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial in violation of the Sixth Amendment. The district court denied his habeas petition, and he has appealed to this court.

Gutierrez received two criminal trials in state court, the first a jury trial and the second a bench trial, and was convicted each time. At the time of his first trial, he was taking psychotropic medications to treat his diagnosed psychiatric disorder. The Illinois appellate court reversed that conviction and remanded the case for a new trial because the court had failed to conduct a fitness hearing to ensure that the medication did not adversely affect Gutierrez’ fitness to stand trial.

Gutierrez was again convicted of first degree murder, this time after a bench trial, and was sentenced to 50 years’ imprisonment. Gutierrez testified at that trial as to the events of the night of Raymond’s death. He testified that around 2 a.m., Raymond knocked on Gutierrez’ apartment door along with two young men. The knocking and kicking on the door awakened him, and he asked what they wanted. They responded that they wanted to talk with him, and he told them he was busy and they should leave. When they continued knocking on the door, he became frightened and retrieved a knife from the kitchen. He then opened the door slightly to ask them what they wanted, and one of the young men began pushing on the door and hit him. He stabbed that man in the arm and told the man that he did not want to kill the man but wanted the man to leave the apartment. That young man left, and Raymond then pushed her way into the apartment and tried to hit him. He backed away from her, and she continued forward. She did not stop and, while she was swinging at him, he stabbed her with the knife. He then rushed downstairs and told the clerk to call the police because people had forced their way into his apartment. He grabbed a fork that he found in the hallway to use for protection, and hid in the stairwell while awaiting the arrival of the police. In the hallway, he encountered Fernando Corona, and told Corona to call the police and that a woman had tried to break into his apartment and rob him. He further testified' that he thought the intruders had a gun.

That testimony was contradicted by both the testimony of witnesses and by the physical evidence at trial. The government witnesses testified that the victim, Raymond, visited Gutierrez’ apartment late in the evening of October 24, 1990, with her 14-year-old son Louis Raymond (“Louis”), where Gutierrez discussed the prospect of Louis selling drugs for him on the street. Raymond and Louis eventually left his apartment, and Louis -then related the conversation to his 13-year-old friend Antonio Alexander (“Antonio”). A few hours later, shortly before 2:30 a.m., Raymond, Louis and Antonio returned to Gutierrez’ apartment. The evidence demonstrated that none of them possessed a weapon, but Raymond carried a can of Old English malt liquor in a paper bag. Later testing established that Raymond had a blood alcohol content of 292 milligrams per deciliter, which an average-sized person would reach only by drinking fourteen typical drinks in the hour before testing. Gutierrez opened the door at their knock, told them to come back later, and closed the door again. At their third round of knocking, Gutierrez opened the door, grabbed *870 Antonio by the arm pulling him into the apartment, and slammed and locked the door behind him. He stabbed Antonio in the arm inside the apartment, and Antonio fled to the bathroom saying “don’t kill me.” Antonio encountered another man in the apartment who helped him, and when Gutierrez opened the door again in response to Raymond’s continued knocking, Antonio ran from the apartment into the hallway. He and Louis retreated down the hallway, but despite their encouragement Raymond was too drunk to follow. Gutierrez emerged into the hallway, yanked Raymond to the floor, and began stabbing her in the hallway. Another resident of the building, Fernando Corona, encountered Raymond in the 6th-floor stairwell of the building crying for help, and saw Gutierrez climbing the stairs toward the 7th floor holding a bloody knife. Corona testified that Gutierrez told him to go ahead and call the police and that Raymond had tried to rob him and break into his apartment. Corona stated that Gutierrez then walked down the stairs, kicked Raymond in the stomach, and told Corona to let her bleed to death.

The physical evidence at trial was consistent with the testimony of the government witnesses. It demonstrated that there was blood in the stairwell, on the push plate of the stairwell door, next to the elevator buttons, and on the floor on the outside of Gutierrez’ door, but not inside the apartment doorway. The detectives also observed blood on the bathroom floor and around the bathroom door of Gutierrez’ apartment. There was no evidence of forced entry or damage to the door of his apartment. The autopsy demonstrated that Raymond was stabbed once each in her right abdomen, left abdomen and left groin, and was stabbed twice in her left arm and three times on her left hand, causing her death.

At that trial, Gutierrez asserted a claim of self defense as a mitigating factor that could render him guilty of second degree rather than first degree murder, claiming that Raymond was breaking into his apartment to rob and kill him when he stabbed her. Gutierrez’ attorney did not present any evidence of Gutierrez’ history of mental illness at the trial.

Gutierrez argued in a petition for post-conviction relief in the state court that the evidence of mental illness could have bolstered his claim of self defense by establishing that he acted under a belief, though unreasonable, that he needed to defend himself. He argued that the failure to present that evidence constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court summarily denied that petition, but the Illinois appellate court reversed, holding that the evidence of mental illness could have reduced his conviction from first degree to second degree murder, and the court remanded the ease in order for the trial court to conduct an evidentiary hearing as to the mental illness evidence that could have been presented.

At that evidentiary hearing, the court heard extensive testimony as to Gutierrez’ history of treatment for mental illness. Briefly, that evidence included multiple hospitalizations for mental illness between 1981 and 1990 when the crime occurred. Gutierrez was diagnosed with varied mental illnesses during those hospitalizations, including brief reactive psychosis, atypical psychosis, undifferentiated chronic schizophrenia with acute exacerbation and antisocial personality disorder, unspecified psychosis, bipolar affective disorder-manic severe with psychotic behavior, and other diagnoses of schizophrenia. The treatment notes from those hospitalizations included references to impaired judgment and auditory hallucinations.

*871

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Bluebook (online)
706 F.3d 867, 2013 WL 466074, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 2679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porfirio-gutierrez-v-keith-anglin-ca7-2013.