Robie J. Drake v. L.A. Portuondo, Superintendent, Shawangunk Correctional Facility

321 F.3d 338, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 1693, 2003 WL 209460
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 31, 2003
DocketDocket 01-2217
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 321 F.3d 338 (Robie J. Drake v. L.A. Portuondo, Superintendent, Shawangunk Correctional Facility) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robie J. Drake v. L.A. Portuondo, Superintendent, Shawangunk Correctional Facility, 321 F.3d 338, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 1693, 2003 WL 209460 (2d Cir. 2003).

Opinion

JACOBS, Circuit Judge.

Robie J. Drake appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Elfvin, J.) denying a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In 1982, Drake was convicted by a jury in New York State Supreme Court, Niagara County, on two counts of second degree murder for the shooting of a young couple in a parked car in an isolated area near a junkyard. The defense theory was that Drake often used abandoned cars for target practice, that he shot up the victims’ car without realizing it was occupied, and afterward in panic stabbed the young man (who was dying), and drove the car to a nearby dump. To aid the prosecution of a crime that was seemingly without motive, the prosecutor at the last minute called to the witness stand a putative expert who testified about a syndrome of sexual dysfunction that appeared to account for the particular, gruesome circumstances of the crime. Farfetched as the defense theory was, the prosecution concedes that the expert was recruited late in the trial to plug a perceived hole in its case concerning intent. It is now clear that the expert’s qualifications were largely perjured, and that the syndrome, dubbed “picquerism,” is referenced nowhere but in a true-crime paperback. The prosecution successfully opposed a continuance sought by Drake’s counsel, who protested that he had been unable to find a psychologist who had even heard of “picquerism.”

Drake claims on habeas that (i) his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment and his Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process were violated because the surprise testimony, coupled with the denial of a continuance, deprived him of the opportunity to present a meaningful defense; and (ii) his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated because the prosecution knew or should have known of the perjury.

*341 BACKGROUND

On the night of December 5-6, 1981, teenagers Amy Smith and Stephen Rosen-thal were in Rosenthal’s rusty 1969 Chevy Nova in the parking lot of a factory in the Town of North Townawanda, New York. The factory parking lot was adjacent to a junkyard with abandoned vehicles. The teenagers were using the spot as a lovers’ lane. It is undisputed that Drake shot them to death shortly after midnight.

In a confession, Drake said that he left home at approximately 11:30 p.m., dressed in military fatigues and armed with a loaded Marlin .22 caliber semi-automatic rifle, a loaded Winchester .22 caliber high powered rifle, extra ammunition and two hunting knives, and that he went to the junkyard looking for abandoned vehicles to use in target practice. He said that the first vehicle he came across was the parked Nova, that he believed the car to be abandoned because the engine was off and no noise came from within, and that he opened fire on the passenger side window of the car with his semi-automatic rifle.

Drake claimed that he did not intend to kill Smith and Rosenthal, and insisted that he learned of their deaths only when he inspected the car, heard Rosenthal groaning, and opened the door to find the two bodies. According to Drake, he stabbed Rosenthal twice, in a fit of panic, to stop him from groaning, but that he “didn’t mean to kill him or anything.” Trial Transcript at 267. According to Drake, Rosen-thal was fully clothed, Smith not. Unsure of what to do, he drove the Nova car to a secluded spot down the road from the parking lot, and put Rosenthal’s body in the trunk. Surprised by a passing car, Drake got back in the car and drove to the Niagara County dump in the neighboring town of Wheatfield, where he was putting Smith’s body into the trunk when he was spotted by two police officers on routine patrol.

The only issue at trial was whether Drake had the intent requisite for second degree murder. The prosecution’s case was supported by a good deal of circumstantial evidence. Drake stated in his confession that he could not see into the car because the windows were fogged up, an indication that the car may have been occupied. Drake’s semi-automatic rifle could fire nineteen rounds of ammunition in a single clip, and Drake fired them all. The autopsies showed that Smith died from two gunshot wounds to the head, and that Ro-senthal died from fourteen gunshot wounds to his face, neck and chest. (The stab wounds were not the cause of Rosen-thal’s death.) A student at the high school attended by Drake and the victims testified that, a few weeks prior to the shooting, Drake and Rosenthal argued while passing each other in the hallway.

Physical evidence supported the prosecution’s theory that this was a sex-crime. The emergency room physician who pronounced the victims dead testified concerning sexual trauma to Smith, including a bruised rectum, and mud near her private parts. The medical examiner who performed the autopsies noted a bite-mark on Smith’s left breast, with hemorrhaging so minor as to indicate that the bite had been inflicted post-mortem. The prosecution’s medical forensic witness found no evidence of semen anywhere except on Drake’s underwear. Forensic experts who performed a second autopsy following the exhumation of Smith’s body a month after her death, confirmed that the bite on Smith’s right breast was inflicted postmortem, and also found a post-mortem bite mark on the other breast. Dr. Lowell Levine, a dentist and forensic odontologist with experience in bite marks, confirmed the presence of the two post-mortem *342 marks on each breast. Over a defense objection, Dr. Levine opined that bite marks are often present in “sexually [sic] or demented type[s] of crimes.” Trial Transcript at 671.

Justice Aldo L. DiFlorio had advised the parties pretrial that because of an out-of-town judicial commitment, the trial would have to conclude no later than Tuesday of the week following its commencement. The prosecution informed defense counsel on the Thursday evening that it intended to call a psychologist named Richard D. Walter to testify about psychological profiling. On the Friday, the prosecution successfully moved to add Walter as a witness, and Walter mounted the stand. Under the announced schedule, defense counsel would have no more than a weekend to get a competing expert, if needed, or for that matter to prepare his cross-examination.

The prosecution concedes that Walter’s testimony was intended to reinforce what it perceived as weaknesses in the evidence supporting its theory of intent. The prosecution also concedes that Walter was referred to them by Dr. Levine, the forensic dentist, and that the prosecution did not independently investigate Walter’s qualifications.

Walter conceded at the outset that he had not examined Drake or reviewed his medical records, and would rely on his review of grand jury testimony, medical evidence and the police record. Walter opined on that basis that Smith and Ro-senthal had been the victims of a specific type of “lust-murder” called “picquerism” (a derivative misspelling of the French verb “piquer,” which means, among other things, to stick or poke). See Trial Transcript at 794. According to Walter, pic-querists achieve sexual gratification by biting, shooting, stabbing, and sodomizing their victims (though not all picquerists do all these things).

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Bluebook (online)
321 F.3d 338, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 1693, 2003 WL 209460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robie-j-drake-v-la-portuondo-superintendent-shawangunk-correctional-ca2-2003.