RUSSELL v. JOHNSON

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 6, 2023
Docket3:20-cv-01312
StatusUnknown

This text of RUSSELL v. JOHNSON (RUSSELL v. JOHNSON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RUSSELL v. JOHNSON, (D.N.J. 2023).

Opinion

Not for Publication

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY ____________________________________ JAMES RUSSELL, : : Petitioner, : Civ. No. 20-1312 (PGS) : v. : : STEPHEN JOHNSON, et al. : OPINION : Respondents. : ____________________________________:

PETER G. SHERIDAN, U.S.D.J. I. INTRODUCTION Petitioner, James Russell (“Petitioner” or “Russell”), is a state prisoner proceeding pro se with an amended petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (ECF No. 8.) For the following reasons, the amended petition is denied and a certificate of appealability shall not issue. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The factual background giving rise to Petitioner’s judgement of conviction was stated by the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division during Petitioner’s direct appeal as follows:1

1 The Appellate Division consolidated Petitioner’s and his codefendants’, Jamell D. Scott, Lee C. Reeves, and Trishawn F. Cochran, direct appeals. All three individuals challenged “their convictions and sentences following a joint jury trial involving charges related to a plot to silence a witness to a prior murder.” (ECF Nos. 30-35 and 30- 36, State v. Scott, Reeves, Russell, and Cochran, Nos. A-2580-09T1, A-4100-09T1, A-4101-09T1, A-6279-09T3, A. The Olivares Murder Proceeding

The following facts are derived from the trial record. In February 2006, Christian Vivar Granados was an eyewitness to a violent incident that led to criminal charges against Scott, Russell, and Tyleek Baker relating to the murder of Jose Francisco Olivares in a Lakewood barbershop. During his 9-1-1 call, Granados identified one of the participants by nickname and first name. He also gave statements to the police and identified all three participants in photographs.

Granados’s name and address appeared in the police reports and other documents produced during discovery in the Olivares murder proceeding. At a plea cut-off hearing in August 2008, Scott and Russell acknowledged that they had reviewed the discovery materials with their attorneys. The court set the trial date for September 15, 2008.

Jury selection began on September 17, 2008. On October 7, 2008, the trial judge advised the defendants that opening statements and witness testimony would begin on October 14, 2008.

B. The Plan to Silence Granados

According to Joseph Powell, on September 13, 2008, he was instructed by Shawn Craighead, a fellow gang member then incarcerated in the Ocean County Jail, to contact gang leader Cochran. When Powell met Cochran a few days later, Cochran told Powell that he was about “to take care of some bitch,” which Powell understood to mean an unnamed witness. Cochran later confided that he had learned the witness’s address – “in the Congress” - and if Powell spoke with Scott or Russell (who were incarcerated in the Ocean County Jail awaiting trial for the

slip op., at 3 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. April 16, 2013). To avoid confusion, this Court will short cite to the New Jersey Appellate Divisions direct appeal Opinion as Russell, No. A-4101-09T1, slip op. Olivares murder), Powell should tell them Cochran was “still working on that problem.”

Soon enough, Powell spoke again with Cochran, telling him that Scott and Russell kept calling him. Cochran responded that “if [you] talk[] to [them], to let [them] know that the situation is taken [sic] care of. That [Reeves] was going to take care of it in the Congress. But if [you] talk[] to him [sic], don’t mention [Reeves] or the Congress.”

On Friday, October 10, 2008, Russell called Powell. The following verbatim exchange, captured on an audio recording, occurred:

[Russell]: Big bro bust at you and told you tell “Brave” [Cochran] that shit? [Powell]: About the pants, right? [Russell]: Yeah. [Powell]: Word. [Russell]: Yeah, I know that like, that’s like top priority, ya hear. [Powell]: Word, I told ‘em I’d let him have that by Sunday and shit. [Russell]: Yeah, na, but ah, motherfucker ah, tell “Brave” ta ah, tell “Brave” “Big Bro” said, tell, tell “Brave” “Big Bro” said, “Handle that CVS thing[,]” ya heard? [Powell]: CVS thing ya said? [Russell]: Yeah. [Powell]: A-ight[.] [Russell]: He be knowin’, he be knowin’ what it is en shit. [Powell]: Word. [Russell]: Ya tell ‘em niggers you know what I mean, throw, throw a barbeque and speak about that shit. [Powell]: No doubt. [Russell]: Yeah, Nig, niggers goin’ have ta fight this war on Tuesday, ya heard? [Powell]: Yeah, I’m gonna be up there Tuesday. [Russell]: Yeah, I know that. Yeah, we just, we just wavy right now man. I mean I got this thing in neutral patiently waitin’ (inaudible) know what I mean? [Powell]: Word.

In another tape-recorded conversation on the afternoon of Monday, October 13, 2008, Scott told Powell: “Bust that ‘Brave’ that nigger you know what I mean ta handle that shit you know what I mean, he knows what to do with that shit.” Powell replied: “He’s hittin’ me back,” and Scott answered: “A-ight, I’ll be at ya later on tonight and shit.” Powell testified that “Bust that ‘Brave” meant to call Cochran, and the reference to “handle that shit” referred to “[t]he situation with the witness.”

Approximately one hour later, Russell telephoned Powell. Russell asked if Powell knew whether Cochran had “handle[d] that shit.” Powell replied that he had talked to everyone but Cochran. Russell responded: “Motherfucka you know niggers tryin’, you know what I mean, take it, take it ta a different level, ya heard?” Powell explained that Russell was asking if he had taken care of the witness situation and telling him to “get the job done.”

After Tuesday, October 14, 2008, Powell stopped taking telephone calls from any street gang member in the Ocean County Jail. He testified that he was “afraid of getting caught up between the murder with the phone calls.”

C. The Vazquez Murder

On Tuesday, October 14, 2008, Granados was staying with his girlfriend, Alisa Morales, and her mother, Thelma Vazquez, at the Congress Apartments in Lakewood. Prior to that day, a defense investigator had visited a different address listed for Granados in the Olivares discovery materials and was directed by Granados’s mother to reach Granados at the Congress Apartments. Shortly before 6:00 a.m., Vazquez was sleeping on the sofa in the living room when the household’s dog began barking. Morales and Granados, who were in the bedroom, heard Vazquez call for the dog and ask, “Que lo que?” Then they heard gunshots. Upon entering the living room, they saw the front door open and Vazquez bleeding on the sofa. While Granados called 9-1-1, Morales ran outside in an effort to get a glimpse of the shooter, but she did not see anyone.

Within moments, Lakewood Police Officer Robert Anderson received a dispatch call to respond to a shooting at Vazquez’s apartment. Upon entering the unit, he observed Vazquez with multiple bullet wounds. The front door was “pushed in” and “busted off” the jam, and wood was missing under the striker plate. Vazquez was taken by ambulance to nearby Kimball Medical Center, where she died.

D. The Ocean County Jail Investigation

On the same day as Vazquez’s murder, Sergeant Joseph Valenti of the Ocean County Department of Corrections coincidentally learned of a security threat involving contraband razor blades in the East E section of the Ocean County Jail. While correction officers searched inmates and cells, Valenti accessed and listened to tape-recorded telephone calls made by inmates between October 8 and 14, 2008, “to see if [he] could see if somebody had something to do with the four razor blades that were going to be used to cut up possible officers.”

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