Quincy Allen v. Michael Stephan

42 F.4th 223
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 2022
Docket20-006
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 42 F.4th 223 (Quincy Allen v. Michael Stephan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quincy Allen v. Michael Stephan, 42 F.4th 223 (4th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

USCA4 Appeal: 20-6 Doc: 56 Filed: 07/26/2022 Pg: 1 of 76

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 20-6

QUINCY J. ALLEN,

Petitioner - Appellant,

v.

MICHAEL STEPHAN, Warden, Broad River Correctional Institution,

Respondent - Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at Rock Hill. Donald C. Coggins, Jr., District Judge. (0:18-cv-01544-DCC-PJG)

Argued: September 22, 2021 Decided: July 26, 2022

Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, HARRIS, and RUSHING, Circuit Judges.

Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Chief Judge Gregory wrote the opinion, in which Judge Harris joined. Judge Rushing wrote a dissent.

ARGUED: Aren Kevork Adjoian, FEDERAL COMMUNITY DEFENDER OFFICE, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellant. Melody Jane Brown, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Joshua Snow Kendrick, KENDRICK & LEONARD, P.C., Greenville, South Carolina; E. Charles Grose, Jr., GROSE LAW FIRM, Greenwood, South Carolina, for Appellant. Alan Wilson, Attorney General, Donald J. Zelenka, Deputy Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee. USCA4 Appeal: 20-6 Doc: 56 Filed: 07/26/2022 Pg: 2 of 76

GREGORY, Chief Judge:

Quincy Allen was convicted of two capital murders and sentenced to death in a

South Carolina state court. During the penalty phase, the government and defense experts

agreed that Allen suffered persistent childhood abuse; they also agreed that he had at least

one mental illness—rumination disorder—and disagreed as to another—schizophrenia.

Yet, the sentencing judge concluded that “Allen was [not] conclusively diagnosed as

mentally ill” and found no “conclusive proof of mitigating circumstances.” Allen

exhausted his state court direct appeal and post-conviction remedies in seeking to overturn

his death sentence. He then filed the instant federal petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254,

raising several claims. The district court dismissed his petition, and Allen appealed.

We granted a certificate of appealability on five issues, including whether the

sentencing judge committed constitutional error by “[(i)] fail[ing] to find that any

mitigating circumstance had been established and [(ii)] us[ing] an impermissibly high

standard for determining whether [] Allen suffered from mental illness.”

As explained below, we conclude that the state court’s conclusion that the

sentencing judge “considered Allen’s mitigation evidence as presented” was an

unreasonable determination of the facts and its conclusion that the sentencing judge gave

“proper” consideration was contrary to clearly established federal law. Because we have

grave doubt that the state court’s errors did not have a substantial and injurious effect, we

reverse and remand.

2 USCA4 Appeal: 20-6 Doc: 56 Filed: 07/26/2022 Pg: 3 of 76

I.

A.

Quincy Allen’s childhood was marked by severe abuse and neglect. He also has a

lengthy history of mental health issues, including major mental illness diagnoses and a

history of commitments. Because both forms of mitigating evidence are important to

resolution of his claims, we go into some detail about them here.

Allen is the product of a short-term relationship between a 19-year-old soon-to-be

deployed military man who “never really thought about [the] family thing” and a woman

who confesses “never bonded” with any of her five children. S.J.A. 1804, 1807, 1809,

1819. “[P]atterns of intergenerational abuse and neglect go back at least to [Allen’s]

maternal great-grandfather’s large and chaotic family and bear strong similarities to the

abuse and neglect” that branded Allen’s childhood. S.J.A. 1804. 1

Allen’s early hospital emergency room and pediatric notes show an ingestion of a

bottle of perfume (twelve months of age) and a burn on his foot that his mother said came

from a babysitter (fifteen months of age). S.J.A. 1807. At nineteen months, Allen was

hospitalized for a week after an untreated fever progressed to pneumonia. Noting signs of

medical neglect, emergency room personnel referred Allen’s case to Protective Services.

S.J.A. 1807–08.

1 The quoted testimony in this subsection is based on the report of social worker Deborah Grey and is undisputed unless otherwise noted. This report is part of the state court record and is located on the district court docket (18-cv-01544) under ECF No. 65-24. 3 USCA4 Appeal: 20-6 Doc: 56 Filed: 07/26/2022 Pg: 4 of 76

Allen witnessed and suffered physical abuse throughout his childhood as well. His

earliest memories are of when his mother was married to his stepfather. S.J.A. 1808. He

remembers his stepfather beating him and his mother. Id. On one occasion, Allen’s

stepfather entered his room, picked up a gun from the floor and returned to another room

where he pistol-whipped Allen’s mother. Id.; J.A. 1262. During another incident, while

in the backyard, Allen’s stepfather held Allen up, placed a gun to his face, aligned the gun

site with Allen’s eye, and pulled the trigger—his stepfather needed “target practice.” J.A.

294; S.J.A. 1808. When Allen was three, his stepfather hit him so hard that he fractured

Allen’s tibia. S.J.A. 1808. About one year later, his mother got a restraining order against

Allen’s stepfather; his stepfather found them, attacked his mother with a knife and hammer,

and repeatedly broke into their home and stole things. S.J.A. 1809. Allen hid under the

bed with a telephone so he could call 911 if his stepfather showed up. Id. By this point,

Allen’s mother had four children and all of them were “accidents,” according to Allen’s

stepfather. S.J.A. 1810. He said Allen’s mother would have sold Allen if she could have

made money off him. Id.

Allen’s grade school career would include fifteen school changes before it ended.

S.J.A. 1811. When Allen was elementary school-age and did something wrong, his mother

forced him into a dark closet. Id. She also punished him by pushing him down, then

kicking or stomping on him, or forcing him to sleep in the bathroom with no clothes, pillow,

or blanket. S.J.A. 1815–16. She also stripped him naked, used an extension cord to tie

him up to the end of the bunk beds “kind of like Jesus,” and beat him with a belt, switch,

or her hands. S.J.A. 1811, 1815. When she got tired, she walked off to rest awhile and

4 USCA4 Appeal: 20-6 Doc: 56 Filed: 07/26/2022 Pg: 5 of 76

eventually came back to beat him some more. S.J.A. 1811. Allen’s aunt said that he

“stayed . . . [getting] beat half to death,” sometimes for insignificant transgressions. S.J.A.

1816. On one occasion, she threw him into a large trashcan—“the kind with wheels and a

swing shut lid” that “trash men pick up with a machine and dump over,” Allen described.

S.J.A. 1811. She shut the lid on him. Id. At some point during his childhood, after seeing

a television show during which a guy survived being in ice cold water in Alaska by

convincing himself that the water was warm, Allen decided that pain is all in the mind.

S.J.A. 1811–12. As an adult, he told some friends this and they beat him with a wire

hanger: “[He] didn’t feel it.” S.J.A. 1812.

During this time, Allen’s mother began denying Allen and his siblings food. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
42 F.4th 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quincy-allen-v-michael-stephan-ca4-2022.