Randy Dillon v. Warden, Ross Correctional Inst.

541 F. App'x 599
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 2013
Docket19-5655
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 541 F. App'x 599 (Randy Dillon v. Warden, Ross Correctional Inst.) 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
Randy Dillon v. Warden, Ross Correctional Inst., 541 F. App'x 599 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BERNICE B. DONALD, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner-Appellant Randy L. Dillon, an Ohio prisoner, appeals an order of the district court dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Dillon’s petition raised four grounds for relief: (1) he was denied due process because he was denied his constitutional right to present a defense; (2) he was denied effective assistance of counsel on appeal; (3) he was denied due process because his conviction rests on insufficient evidence; and (4) he was denied due process because the trial court failed to instruct the jury on lesser-included offenses. The district court dismissed grounds two and four as procedurally defaulted and dismissed grounds one and three on their merits. Dillon appeals on grounds one and three. Because there were no due process violations at trial, we AFFIRM the district court’s order dismissing his petition.

I.

Sometime after 11:00 p.m. on March 12, 2007, Tonya Alexander put her fourteen-month-old daughter, M.B., to bed. Around 4:00 a.m. on March 13, 2007, Alexander awoke, went to check on M.B., found her missing, and immediately began looking for her. Unable to find M.B., Alexander had a neighbor call 911. Police soon responded and began searching. Once the *601 police determined that M.B. was not in the house, they secured the scene to collect evidence. This investigation yielded a number of items, including various fingerprints, M.B.’s bedding, M.B.’s bottle, and castings of tire impressions from the back yard.

Around the time Alexander was putting M.B. to bed, Appellant Randy Dillon was drinking with his friend Mike Norris, his girlfriend Stella Lantz, and his mother Mary Bittner. When Norris ran out of cigarettes, Dillon offered to run out to Norris’s van to get more, so Norris gave Dillon the keys to his van. Dillon left and did not return. Sometime after 5:00 a.m. on March 13, 2007, Dillon called Bittner to say that he was at a gas station and needed a ride.

Soon after Dillon made that call, a clerk from the gas station called the police because Dillon was bothering customers. When Sheriffs deputies arrived, they discovered that Dillon had an outstanding warrant, took him into custody on that warrant, and transported him to jail. As a part of the booking procedure, Dillon’s clothes and personal effects were placed in storage. At that time, M.B. was still missing, and Dillon had not been connected to her disappearance.

Shortly before noon on March 13, 2007, Jeff Yingling found M.B. wrapped in a comforter next to Ohio State Route 146 in the Dillon Wildlife Area. M.B. was transported to a local hospital and ultimately to Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Law enforcement secured the area where M.B. had been found, took pictures, and collected evidence.

Several days later, police learned of an abandoned van in a cornfield near where Yingling found M.B. This abandoned van turned out to be Norris’s van that Dillon borrowed in the wee hours of the morning on March 13; Dillon then emerged as a suspect. A search of the van revealed a bed sheet with both the same brand and pattern as the sheet on which M.B. had been sleeping when she was kidnapped. Further investigation revealed that the comforter that was wrapped around M.B. when Yingling found her belonged to the Norris family and that Norris’s wife had placed it in the van days before M.B.’s kidnapping.

The investigation ultimately established the following additional facts: Dillon had rented a garage from Alexander, M.B.’s mother, had been inside her house on several occasions, and knew M.B.; Dillon had been driving the van that was found approximately 500 feet from where M.B. was found; at around 4:00 a.m. on March 13, an eyewitness spotted someone with characteristics similar to Dillon’s walking alongside the road leaving the area where M.B. was later found; and surveillance videos from two gas stations placed Dillon in the same area moving away from where M.B. was found and toward Zanesville, Ohio. The tire castings recovered from the backyard of M.B.’s house were consistent with the tires on Norris’s van, and analysis of the clothes Dillon was wearing when he was arrested on the unrelated warrant revealed mud consistent with mud samples taken from where the van was recovered.

DNA analysis revealed Dillon’s DNA on the clothing that M.B. was wearing when she was found and M.B.’s DNA on the hip area of Dillon’s shirt. Medical evidence established that M.B. suffered an injury inside her labia majora consistent with sexual assault. Tests revealed amylase, a digestive enzyme heavily present in saliva, on M.B.’s diaper, but no semen was found on any of the items submitted for forensic analysis.

II.

In April 2007, a Muskingum County, Ohio grand jury indicted Dillon on charges *602 of burglary, kidnapping, and attempted murder, as well as unlawful sexual conduct (rape) and unlawful sexual contact (gross sexual imposition) with a minor. Dillon’s first trial began on January 10, 2008 but ended in a mistrial. On February 8, 2008, Dillon filed a notice of alibi in the Muskingum County Clerk’s Office claiming that two unknown assailants had abducted, beaten, and robbed him on the night of M.B.’s disappearance.

Over Dillon’s Double Jeopardy objections, his second trial commenced on April 7, 2008. See U.S. Const, amend. V. Dillon did not testify. Nonetheless, as a part of his alibi defense, Dillon tried to introduce statements indicating that he had been the victim of a kidnapping and robbery at the time of M.B.’s kidnapping through the testimony of his mother, Mary Bittner, and a Zanesville police officer, Terry Sheets. The trial court excluded this testimony as hearsay. Because this exclusion serves as the basis for one of Dillon’s claims on appeal, it merits further exposition.

During Bittner’s direct examination, Dillon’s attorney asked “as a result of that phone conversation [the call that Dillon placed from the gas station in the early morning hours on March 13, 2007], what did you do next?” The prosecution objected, and when the court sustained this objection, Dillon’s attorney clarified that he was not asking Bittner what Dillon had said. Bittner then described her actions after the call, but, in so doing, she explained that she had asked her brother to take her to the gas station “because Randy [Dillon] had been robbed.” The prosecutor made another objection, which the trial court again sustained. The trial transcript reflects that shortly thereafter there was a long discussion about Officer Sheets’s testimony in which Dillon’s attorney made an offer of proof that Officer Sheets would testify that he investigated Dillon’s claim about being kidnapped and robbed. The prosecution objected on grounds that all of the witness’s knowledge came from Dillon’s statements, so his answers would be inadmissible hearsay. The trial judge agreed but did permit questions to Sheets about Dillon’s physical appearance and whether he received any medical treatment.

At the conclusion of the second trial, the jury found Dillon guilty of all charges except gross sexual imposition.

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Bluebook (online)
541 F. App'x 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randy-dillon-v-warden-ross-correctional-inst-ca6-2013.