Pritchett v. Gentry

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedMarch 9, 2023
Docket2:17-cv-01694
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Pritchett v. Gentry, (D. Nev. 2023).

Opinion

1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 Shawn Pritchett, Case No. 2:17-cv-01694-JAD-DJA

4 Petitioner Order Granting in Part v. Respondents’ Motion to Dismiss and 5 Directing Petitioner to Advise How He Jo Gentry, et. al., Wishes to Proceed with this Mixed Petition 6 Respondents [ECF No. 76] 7

8 Counseled Nevada inmate Shawn Pritchett petitions for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 9 U.S.C. § 2254, arguing that his trial counsel was ineffective; the trial court erred by allowing a 10 detective to testify as an expert in cellular-site data and admitting prior-bad-act evidence, failing 11 to dismiss the tainted jury pool, denying his Batson challenge, and violating his Sixth 12 Amendment rights to confrontation and autonomy; and there were cumulative errors.1 13 Respondents move to dismiss Pritchett’s claims as untimely, unexhausted, procedurally 14 defaulted, and non-cognizable.2 I find that Pritchett’s right-to-autonomy claim in ground 8 is 15 time barred, so I dismiss it. I also find that his ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claims in 16 grounds 1(a) through 1(e) are technically exhausted and procedurally defaulted, but I defer 17 consideration of whether Pritchett can demonstrate cause and prejudice to overcome that 18 procedural default until the merits phase. Lastly, I find that Pritchett’s claims of trial-court error 19 in grounds 2, 4, and 6, and part of ground 7 are unexhausted, and he must advise the court by 20 April 10, 2023, how he wishes to proceed with this mixed petition. 21 22

23 1 ECF No. 42. 2 ECF No. 76. 1 Background 2 Pritchett was convicted in 2010 in a Nevada state court of conspiracy to commit murder, 3 first-degree murder with the use of a deadly weapon, and robbery with the use of a deadly 4 weapon, following a jury trial.3 His sentence includes two consecutive life terms without the

5 possibility of parole.4 Pritchett appealed, and the Nevada Supreme Court affirmed.5 He then 6 filed a state petition for post-conviction relief,6 which was denied by the trial court.7 The 7 Nevada Supreme Court affirmed.8 8 Pritchett dispatched his federal habeas corpus petition on or about June 16, 2017.9 I 9 appointed counsel,10 and Pritchett filed counseled first-, second-, and third-amended petitions.11 10 After Pritchett’s third-amended petition added a new claim—ground 8—that his trial counsel 11 violated his Sixth Amendment rights by conceding his guilt, I sua sponte entered a Rhines stay to 12 allow him to return to state court.12 That stay was in place from June 17, 2019, until May 21, 13 2021.13 During that time, Pritchett’s second state habeas petition was denied and the Nevada 14 Supreme Court affirmed that denial on appeal.14 After I reopened this case, respondents moved

16 3 ECF No. 22-8. 4 Id. 17 5 ECF No. 22-15. 18 6 ECF Nos. 23, 23-2. 7 ECF No. 23-8. 19 8 ECF No. 23-12. 20 9 ECF No. 7. 21 10 ECF No. 6. 11 ECF Nos. 12, 32, 42. 22 12 ECF No. 41. 23 13 ECF Nos. 41, 46. 14 ECF Nos. 63-9, 44-1. 1 to dismiss Pritchett’s third-amended petition, but I granted Pritchett’s motion to strike that 2 motion because the respondents’ vague and generalized assertion of untimeliness failed to give 3 him fair notice of that argument’s contours to allow a proper response.15 Respondents now 4 renew their dismissal request with greater detail.16 Pritchett opposes it.17

5 Discussion 6 I. Timeliness 7 Respondents argue that Pritchett’s third-amended petition was filed after his limitations 8 period expired, and because grounds 1(d), 1(e), 2, and 8 do not relate back to his timely filed pro 9 se petition or first-amended petition, these claims must be dismissed as untimely.18 A new claim 10 in an amended petition that is filed after the expiration of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death 11 Penalty Act (“AEDPA”) one-year limitation period will be timely only if the new claim relates 12 back to a claim in a timely filed pleading because it arises out of “the same conduct, transaction 13 or occurrence” as a claim in the timely pleading.19 Habeas claims in an amended petition do not 14 arise out of “the same conduct, transaction or occurrence” as claims in the original petition

15 merely because the claims all challenge the same trial, conviction, or sentence.20 Rather, new 16 claims relate back only if they “arise from the same core facts as the timely filed claims, and not 17 when the new claims depend upon events separate in ‘both time and type’ from the originally 18 19

20 15 ECF Nos. 66, 75. 21 16 ECF No. 76. 17 ECF No. 87. Respondents have replied. ECF No. 92. 22 18 ECF No. 76 at 9. 23 19 Mayle v. Felix, 545 U.S. 644 (2005). 20 Id. at 655–64. 1 raised episodes.”21 In this regard, the reviewing court looks to “the existence of a common ‘core 2 of operative facts’ uniting the original and newly asserted claims.”22 Typically, a claim that 3 merely adds “a new legal theory tied to the same operative facts as those initially alleged” will 4 relate back and be timely.23

5 A. Grounds 1(d), 1(e), and 2 are timely because they relate back to the first- 6 amended petition.

7 In ground 1(d), Pritchett alleges that his trial counsel failed to hire an expert in digital 8 forensics that could have refuted the state’s evidence.24 In ground 1(e), he contends that his trial 9 counsel failed to challenge the admissibility of Detective Condratovich’s testimony concerning 10 cell-tower-location data.25 And in ground 2, Pritchett alleges that he was denied his right to a 11 fair trial when the trial court allowed that detective to testify as an expert in cellular-site-location 12 data.26 Respondents contend that, although Pritchett presented similar claims in his first- 13 amended petition, these grounds do not rely on the same common core of operative facts as any 14 of his original claims because Pritchett now relies on new evidence: a report from Spencer 15 McInvaille, an expert retained by the Federal Public Defender’s office.27 16 When the third-amended petition is compared to the first-amended petition,28 it is clear 17 that the new facts in these grounds, which are derived from the expert report, merely expand or 18

21 Id. at 657. 19 22 Id. at 659. 20 23 Id. at 659 n.5; see also Ha Van Nguyen v. Curry, 736 F.3d 1287, 1297 (9th Cir. 2013). 21 24 ECF No. 42 at 19. 25 Id. at 22. 22 26 Id. at 40. 23 27 ECF No. 76 at 10. 28 Compare ECF No. 42 at 19–25, 40–43 with ECF No. 12 at 16–19, 33–36. 1 amplify those alleged in the first-amended petition.29 While the addition of facts from 2 McInvaille’s report30 may strengthen Pritchett’s arguments in these grounds, they do not alter its 3 “common core of operative facts.”31 For ground 1(d) of both the first-amended and third- 4 amended petitions, that common core is that the state relied heavily on cell-site data to convict

5 Pritchett, defense counsel had no training in reading cell-tower data, defense counsel failed to 6 hire an expert who could have challenged the state’s cell-phone-data evidence, and the state’s 7 evidence was faulty.32 The common core of operative facts for ground 1(e) of both versions of 8 the petition is that Detective Condratovich testified that he could determine Pritchett’s location 9 based on cell-tower data, his testimony placed Pritchett in suspect locations, the state did not 10 notice Detective Condratovich as an expert and he did not have specialized training in historical 11 cellular-site data that would make him an expert, and Pritchett’s counsel did not object to the 12 detective’s testimony in a timely manner.33 For ground 2, the common core of operative facts in 13 both the first- and third-amended petitions is that Detective Condratovich testified that he could 14 determine Pritchett’s location on various dates based on cell-tower-location data, Condratovich

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Pritchett v. Gentry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-gentry-nvd-2023.