Ralph Cottenham v. Noah Nagy

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 2023
Docket21-1711
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ralph Cottenham v. Noah Nagy (Ralph Cottenham v. Noah Nagy) 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
Ralph Cottenham v. Noah Nagy, (6th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 23a0382n.06

No. 21-1711

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Aug 16, 2023 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk RALPH COTTENHAM, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED Petitioner - Appellant, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR v. ) ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NOAH NAGY, Warden, ) MICHIGAN ) Respondent - Appellee. ) OPINION

Before: BOGGS, WHITE, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Petitioner-Appellant Ralph Cottenham, a

Michigan prisoner convicted of the second-degree murder of his step-daughter, Amber Morris,

appeals the denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus, arguing that the state trial court violated

his Sixth Amendment rights under the United States Constitution when it barred certain testimony

at trial. We AFFIRM.

I.

A.

When Cottenham’s wife, Charlene Morris, died in 2014, he remained close with her

daughters, Amber and Holly Morris. In January 2016, Cottenham’s estranged 23-year-old son,

Cody Sweet, moved into Cottenham’s home. Sometime in the evening of April 28, 2016, Amber

Morris was killed by a combination of drug intoxication and asphyxia. Sweet testified at

Cottenham’s trial that Cottenham had murdered Morris and that he had directed Sweet to assist No. 21-1711, Cottenham v. Nagy

him in disposing of her body. Cottenham was convicted and appealed to the Michigan Court of

Appeals.

The Michigan Court of Appeals set forth the following facts, which the parties agree are

“presumed correct pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).” Appellant Br. at 3.

[Cottenham’s] conviction arose from the April 28, 2016 killing of his stepdaughter, Amber Morris. Amber’s sister, Holly Morris, testified that she and Amber remained friends with [Cottenham] after their mother died in October 2014. Holly testified that Amber and [Cottenham] worked together and that [Cottenham] would give Amber prescription drugs. Brandon Thomas, Amber’s fiancé, agreed that Amber used prescription drugs such as tramadol, that she was addicted to prescription drugs, and that [Cottenham] would give her money and prescription drugs. Thomas stated that [Cottenham] wanted Amber “to come around all the time” and would “bribe” her with money to spend time with him. The prosecution’s primary witness was Cody Sweet, [Cottenham’s] son. Sweet had been estranged from [Cottenham] for most of his life, but began living with [Cottenham] in January 2016, having met him only once before. Sweet testified that [Cottenham] wanted a “sexual relationship” with Amber. Similarly, Holly described an incident, “about 45 days before [her] sister died,” in which [Cottenham] “was texting [Amber], asking me, is this enough money to ask her for oral sex?” Holly testified that she once took [Cottenham’s] phone away from him because he was excessively texting Amber. Holly also recalled a time when [Cottenham] was upset with Amber and said, “I’ll kill that b***h.” Holly said that [Cottenham] apologized the next day and blamed the statement on being drunk. At trial, Sergeant Matthew Gerow of the Saginaw Police Department recited a series of text messages between [Cottenham] and Amber that began on March 29, 2016. In those messages, [Cottenham] offered Amber money in exchange for sexual favors and told her that their relationship would end if she declined. In her responses, Amber adamantly and repeatedly declined the offers. On the afternoon of April 28, 2016, Sweet returned home from work and found Amber and [Cottenham] drinking alcohol in the living room. Sweet took a nap until the evening; when he awoke, Sweet observed that Amber and [Cottenham] were arguing, which he testified was not unusual. Sweet said that after Amber left

2 No. 21-1711, Cottenham v. Nagy

the home, [Cottenham] called 9-1-1 in an attempt “to get her arrested for a DUI.” According to Sweet, [Cottenham] said he was “tired” of “the way she was treating him.” Later that evening, [Cottenham] told Sweet that Amber would be returning to the house that night. Sweet testified that [Cottenham] said he was “going to kill her,” but Sweet assumed that he was joking. When Amber returned, she and [Cottenham] conversed in the living room while Sweet was in his bedroom. Sweet heard [Cottenham] tell Amber that “he had to show her something in the basement.” Sweet said that after [Cottenham] and Amber went to the basement, he heard “a little bit of argument, commotion.” Specifically, Sweet thought that Amber might have said “help,” but he stated that he “didn't want to get involved.” The noise ceased, and about 10 minutes later [Cottenham] entered Sweet’s bedroom and told him that he had killed Amber. Sweet rushed downstairs and observed Amber lying face-down on the floor. Sweet said that [Cottenham] proceeded to “kick” and “stomp” on Amber to prove that she was deceased. [Cottenham] then pulled Amber's pants and underwear down and digitally penetrated her. Sweet asked [Cottenham] to stop; he did so after “30 seconds to a minute.” Sweet also testified that he observed a “ratchet strap” wrapped around Amber’s neck; he stated that [Cottenham] told him that he had “tried knocking her out” but then used the strap to “choke her.” Sweet then helped [Cottenham] move Amber’s body to the trunk of her vehicle. Sweet said that he helped [Cottenham] out of fear for his life. [Cottenham] then proceeded to clean up the basement with towels and bleach. [Cottenham] instructed Sweet to meet him at a bar and then left in Amber’s vehicle. Sweet picked [Cottenham] up from that location, leaving Amber’s vehicle there. The police found Amber’s body in the trunk of the vehicle the next day. Within a couple of days, [Cottenham] invited Holly to his house. Holly thought it was unusual that they were “chilling” outside on the patio because they usually “hang out in the house.” When Holly later entered [Cottenham’s] bathroom, she observed a strong odor of bleach. She also noticed that the basement windows were open, which also was unusual. She testified that at one point [Cottenham] asked her, “[Y]ou don’t think I did anything to your sister, do you?” Dr. Kanu Virani performed Amber’s autopsy. He testified that toxicology testing revealed that alcohol and tramadol were in

3 No. 21-1711, Cottenham v. Nagy

her system when she died, and opined that the cause of death was “a combination of drug intoxication and asphyxia.” Dr. Virani could not say whether asphyxiation or drug intoxication was the sole cause of death. Dr. Virani said that the level of tramadol in Amber's system was “in a toxic range,” but explained that there is not a “defined overdose” for the drug because a person can develop a tolerance to it. Dr. Virani said that there was “faint bruising” on Amber's face and both sides of her neck. He opined that the markings on Amber’s neck were inconsistent “with any string or belt” and indicated that they were consistent with a human hand. Dr. Virani concluded that the manner of Amber’s death was a homicide because of “asphyxia and the bruising on the face and the neck.” Sweet testified that he stopped residing at defendant’s home within a few days after [Cottenham] killed Amber. Through his attorney, Sweet contacted Sergeant Gerow and disclosed [Cottenham’s] crime. Sweet was granted immunity from prosecution, and [Cottenham] was charged with open murder. The prosecution’s theory was that [Cottenham] had strangled Amber with his hands and then used the ratchet strap “just to make sure he finished the job . . . .” [Cottenham’s] theory of the case was that Sweet had killed Amber out of jealousy for [Cottenham’s] attention.

R.9-11, PID 457-59.

Several additional facts are pertinent to our resolution of Cottenham’s appeal.

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