Rohlf v. Director, TDCJ-CID

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 2021
Docket4:20-cv-00200
StatusUnknown

This text of Rohlf v. Director, TDCJ-CID (Rohlf v. Director, TDCJ-CID) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rohlf v. Director, TDCJ-CID, (N.D. Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH DIVISION

ANTHONY ROHLF, § § Petitioner, § § v. § Civil Action No. 4:20-CV-200-O § BOBBY LUMPKIN, Director, § Texas Department of Criminal Justice, § Correctional Institutions Division, § § Respondent. §

OPINION AND ORDER

Before the Court is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 filed by Petitioner, Anthony Rohlf, a state prisoner confined in the Correctional Institutions Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, against Bobby Lumpkin, director of that division, Respondent. After considering the pleadings and relief sought by Petitioner, the Court has concluded that the petition should be denied. I. BACKGROUND Petitioner’s appellate counsel summarized the facts of the case as follows (all spelling, punctuation, and/or grammatical errors are in the original): On the evening of April 10, 2015, three friends, Jeff Henry, Pat Cleburn, and David Allen, who shared a house set out to drink beer and relax on a Friday evening. They went to Hoots Bar in Rendon, Texas. Hoots was a small local bar with pool tables, electronic games and a regular clientele, many of whom knew one another.

On the same evening, another trio, Ashley Donahue, Paul Thomas and . . . Anthony Rohlf, set out with much the same purpose for Hoots Bar. When they arrived at the bar they headed back to play pool. Jeff noticed Ashley while she was playing pool and was attracted to her. After Paul and Anthony had a disagreement over the rules of the game, Paul moved off to play an electronic game. Anthony decided he was not enjoying the bar and asked Ashley for the keys to her car. Ashley refused to give him the keys, but did give him the key fob remote so he could sit in the car.

Then Ashley and Paul sat down at a table behind Jeff, Pat and Dave to drink beer. The attraction that Jeff felt toward Ashley was mutual and she asked Paul to ask Jeff to join them at their table. Jeff did so. At closing time, Jeff invited Ashley to come home with him. She agreed. Ashley, Jeff and Paul headed out of the bar while Pat and Dave settled their tab.

In the parking lot, Ashley’s car was parked next to Dave’s truck. Ashley approached Anthony, introduced him to Jeff and then told him she was going home with Jeff and his friends. Anthony, who is her cousin, got angry at this and accused her of being a whore and planning to have sex with all of them.

Jeff turned to ask Dave if he had any problem with Ashley coming home with them and Dave said no. Suddenly, Anthony ran up and hit Jeff in the side. After a few moments, Jeff looked down at the area of his body where he received the blow and realized he had been stabbed in the side just under his arm pit. Anthony had retreated into the darkness.

When Pat realized that Jeff had been stabbed he got up into the front passenger side of the truck (the truck sat very high because it was jacked up with risers) and said he was going to call the police. Anthony then ran up to him an stabbed him in the right arm.

Dave, who owned the truck, had a handgun in the truck. He retrieved it. Anthony, jumped in Ashley’s car in and began to drive out of the parking lot. Paul was in the front passenger seat. Dave aimed the gun at the car, but because Anthony was no longer threatening him or his friends, he did not fire.

The three roommates, along with Ashley, returned to the bar and the Sheriff’s Department and an ambulance were called. Once inside the bar, Jeff began having trouble breathing, and laid down on the floor. Pat was given some cloths to staunch the bleeding of his arm. When the ambulance arrived, Jeff and Pat were taken to John Petersmith Hospital. Jeff had a punctured lung and wound up in the hospital for two weeks. Pat’s wound was cleaned and closed and he was then able to proceed to the Sheriff’s Office to give a statement.

Ashley told sheriff’s deputies at the bar that Anthony was most likely headed for her house in rural Johnson County. The Johnson County authorities were informed and Lieutenant Stubbs of the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office was in the area. He saw the car, got behind it and turned on his emergency lights. Anthony stopped the car and ran on foot. Lieutenant Stubbs was unable to catch him and make an arrest. On April 25, 2015, Ashley Donahue was pulled over by Cleburne Police for a traffic violation. In the car was a male passenger who identified himself as Robert Johnson. He denied having any identification with him. When Officer Alexander could not find a Robert Johnson who fit the man, he asked for more information and the man verbally gave him a social security number and told him he was from Louisiana. The first three numbers of the social security number did not correspond to Louisiana, but to Kansas.

Officer Alexander then had the man step from the car and saw that he had a wallet chained to his belt. When he checked the wallet he found a Texas driver’s license for Anthony Rohlf. Finding there was a felony warrant out for Anthony, he arrested him.

At trial, Anthony testified and gave a somewhat different account of the conflict. He said that Jeff pushed him and he hit Jeff with his fist. A brief exchange of blows occurred, then Pat and Dave begin [sic] to rush toward Anthony and Jeff. That is when Anthony pulled a knife and stabbed Jeff in fear that he was about to be overwhelmed. Anthony felt he was being “backed into a corner” by Jeff and Pat and he saw Dave coming around the truck. He believed Dave had a gun because he had seen an empty holster in the truck. He said he stabbed Pat in the arm as Pat approached Anthony at a brisk jog. He then fled in Ashley’s car.

Anthony was charged, in two cases, with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Both cases were tried together before a single jury. The court included a charge on self defense in each case in its jury instructions. The jury found Anthony not guilty in the assault on Jeff but convicted him in the assault on Pat. [Anthony] went to the court for punishment and was sentenced, after pleading true to the enhancement count, to 25 years in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

App. Br. 3-8, ECF No. 18-12 (record citations omitted).

Petitioner’s conviction was affirmed on appeal and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused his petition for discretionary review. Electronic R., ECF No. 18-19. Petitioner also filed a state habeas-corpus application challenging his conviction, which was denied by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals without written order. SHR113-44, ECF No. 18-32; Action Taken, ECF No.

1“SHR” refers to the record of Petitioner’s state habeas proceeding in WR-90,317-01. 18-27. This federal petition for habeas-corpus relief followed. II. ISSUES Petitioner raises six grounds for relief, which are generally construed to raise the following claims: (1) he was denied a sufficiency-of-the-evidence review on appeal;

(2) the trial court breached its official duty and was an interested party;

(3) there were defects in the state habeas proceeding as to his ineffective- assistance-of-trial-counsel claims;

(4) he was denied counsel at critical stages and not allowed to supplement the record in the state habeas proceedings;

(5) there were defects in the state habeas proceeding as to his ineffective-assistance- of-appellate-counsel claims; and

(6) the prison law library is inadequate.

Pet. 6-7a, ECF No. 1. Because the claims are multifarious and rambling, they are addressed in this opinion as thoroughly as practicable. III.

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