Reginald Jerome Love v. Aaron Johnson, Secretary of Correction Lacy Thornburg, Attorney General

57 F.3d 1305, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 15495, 1995 WL 369609
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 1995
Docket92-7080
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 57 F.3d 1305 (Reginald Jerome Love v. Aaron Johnson, Secretary of Correction Lacy Thornburg, Attorney General) 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
Reginald Jerome Love v. Aaron Johnson, Secretary of Correction Lacy Thornburg, Attorney General, 57 F.3d 1305, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 15495, 1995 WL 369609 (4th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Senior Judge PHILLIPS wrote the opinion, in which Judge MURNAGHAN and Judge HAMILTON joined.

OPINION

PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge:

Reginald Jerome Love appeals the dismissal of a petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging his state conviction on charges of first degree rape, first degree sex offense, and taking indecent liberties with a minor. Love claims that he was denied access to *1307 evidence in violation of rights guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. Because Love made a plausible showing that sufficiently identified state agency records might contain evidence that was material and favorable to his defense, the state court’s refusal to inspect the identified records in camera and to seal any not disclosed for appellate review violated Love’s constitutional right to such a procedure. Accordingly, we vacate the United States District Court’s dismissal of Love’s petition and remand to that court for further proceedings.

I

In March 1989, the alleged victim, then a nine-year-old girl (“the minor”), wrote a note to her mother indicating in explicit detail that she had been sexually abused by the petitioner, Reginald Jerome Love who, at the time, was her mother’s live-in boyfriend. The couple, along with the minor, two other of the mother’s children, and the minor’s grandmother shared an apartment in Raleigh, North Carolina.

In the evening of the day her mother read her note, the minor, her mother, and Love discussed it. According to the minor, Love denied subjecting her to such abuse, but suggested that she be taken to see a doctor, and her mother, after first objecting, agreed. J.A. 239. Several days later, the minor was taken by her mother to Wake Medical Center where she was interviewed by Kimberly Crews, a counselor, and then examined by Dr. Denise Evérette. A contemporaneous report of the interview prepared by Ms. Crews indicated that the minor first denied that Love had abused her but then described in detail an episode of sexual abuse by Love on March 18,1989, that included sexual intercourse. Dr. Everette’s contemporaneous report of her examination indicated discovery of healed hymenal lacerations. It also contained a marginal notation of an earlier medical examination of the minor on October 24, 1988 related to a menstrual period lasting three days and a complaint of pain upon urination for a week. Following Dr. Everette’s examination, the minor repeated her accusation to a school counselor, to a Department of Social Services (DSS) staff member, and to a Raleigh police detective.

In May 1989, Love was indicted for one count of first degree rape, one count of first degree sexual offense and one count of taking indecent liberties with a minor. All of the offenses charged were alleged to have occurred on March 18, 1989, the date of the minor’s note to her mother.

As the trial approached, Love’s attorney focused his efforts on obtaining evidence to support the theory that Love was an innocent man falsely accused by a young girl who was emotionally disturbed for other reasons than his conduct. To that end, he “considered it of central importance to expose every weakness in [the minorj’s credibility, and to provide the jury with a convincing explanation for her false accusation.” J.A. 77.

In pre-trial discovery, the state district attorney’s office voluntarily produced the report of Dr. Everette’s physical examination, the report of counselor Crews’ interview, and the police report of the March 18th incident.

Believing that other possibly exculpatory material existed, Love’s counsel filed in Wake County Superior Court a “Motion for Discovery [Brady v. Maryland].” J.A. 27. Among other things, the motion requested that “the State provide the Defendant with ... the alleged victim’s entire medical record maintained at Wake Medical Center ... the alleged victim’s entire file maintained by the Wake County Mental Health Department ... [and] the alleged victim’s entire file maintained by the Wake County Department of Social Services.” J.A. 29. On the same day, Love’s counsel also filed a “Motion for Early Disclosure of Statements of the State’s Prosecuting Witnesses].” J.A. 31-33.

A week later, on May 17, 1989, Superior Court Judge Donald W. Stephens presided over a hearing on these motions. At the hearing, Love’s counsel, seeking to demonstrate Love’s entitlement to the requested records, made several representations to the court. First, he asserted that before the date of the alleged incident, the minor had been receiving psychiatric care and counseling at the Wake Mental Health Center, presumably because of several incidents of bi *1308 zarre behavior, including attempts to set fires in her residence. He also asserted that the minor was presently receiving counseling at the DSS, which had taken her from her mother’s custody because of the mother’s original refusal to believe the child’s assertions, and that the defense was entitled to all exculpatory statements made to DSS officials by the mother. J.A. 108-09. Although the state prosecutor’s response characterized defense counsel’s assertions as being only “allegations,” she did not dispute their factual accuracy and indeed volunteered that the minor was “on Ritalin” because of hyperactivity and had been the subject of a recent civil proceeding which had involved a' medical witness. J.A. 110-11. The prosecutor’s position was éssentially that her office, hence the state, had voluntarily provided defense counsel with all exculpatory statements in its possession; that her office had in its possession no reports respecting the minor’s psychiatric care; and that the state therefore had provided all that it was required by law to provide. J.A. 110-12. Defense counsel then reasserted his belief that some reports concerning the minor’s “treatment for mental health problems” necessarily existed and were “readily available to the state or the [DSS].” J.A. 112.

Judge Stephens then ruled from the bench on the defense motion for production of Brady materials. He first noted that “the [state] District Attorney has the obligation to provide what the District Attorney has, and if the District Attorney has no such reports then I can’t enter an order compelling disclosure which they do not have.” J.A. 112. The judge then suggested to Love’s counsel an alternative means of obtaining the information: “subpoena these people you think are involved to trial, along with a subpoena duces tecum to bring their records. If they object, I’ll have a hearing and see whether or not I will require them to disclose that to you.” J.A. 112.

He then expanded on this ruling:

If the State has not obtained or provided this information to you prior to trial, you subpoena these people, they bring in records. I will require that they at least disclose those to the Court. After examination, [if] I think you’re entitled to them, and I’ll provide them to you. If it appears then that you need additional time, I’ll allow your motion to continue the case. If it appears then that you need additional expert assistance, I’ll consider your motion for additional expert assistance.
I don’t do any thing until I see what we’re dealing with.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 F.3d 1305, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 15495, 1995 WL 369609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reginald-jerome-love-v-aaron-johnson-secretary-of-correction-lacy-ca4-1995.