Samuel Dantzler v. Randee Rewerts

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2021
Docket20-1059
StatusUnpublished

This text of Samuel Dantzler v. Randee Rewerts (Samuel Dantzler v. Randee Rewerts) 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
Samuel Dantzler v. Randee Rewerts, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0399n.06

No. 20-1059

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED SAMUEL LEE DANTZLER, ) Aug 25, 2021 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN RANDEE REWERTS, Warden, ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Respondent-Appellee. )

BEFORE: MOORE, ROGERS, and READLER, Circuit Judges.

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

In January 2006, Bernard Hill was murdered in his girlfriend’s apartment when a group of

men broke into the apartment and attacked him. Left behind in the apartment was a black knit cap

worn by one of the perpetrators. The case went cold until the Detroit Police Department obtained

a grant allowing them to test DNA in the cap more than three years later. That DNA evidence led

officers to Samuel Dantzler, whom they arrested in connection with the murder. Dantzler’s trial

counsel understood that the DNA evidence would be crucial and sought to retain an independent

DNA expert. The trial court appointed an expert but later decided her fee schedule was exorbitant

and did not approve her compensation. When Dantzler’s case eventually went to trial, Dantzler’s

defense counsel had not found another expert to advise on proper cross-examination of the

prosecution’s DNA experts or to rebut their testimony. Dantzler was ultimately convicted of first-

degree felony murder. He appealed his conviction and later sought postconviction relief in the No. 20-1059, Dantzler v. Rewerts

Michigan courts, to no avail. Dantzler petitioned for habeas relief in federal court, which the

district court denied. There are three issues on this appeal: (1) whether the Michigan trial court

violated Dantzler’s due process rights when it denied funding for a DNA expert; (2) whether

Dantzler’s trial counsel was ineffective for not securing a DNA expert to assist with Dantzler’s

defense; and (3) whether appellate counsel was ineffective for not raising a claim that trial counsel

was ineffective. Because the Michigan Court of Appeals’ conclusion that the trial court did not

deny Dantzler funding for an expert witness is not an unreasonable application of clearly

established law or an unreasonable determination of the facts, the district court properly dismissed

the due process claim. Dantzler’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims also fail because

Dantzler does not articulate how the lack of an independent DNA expert prejudiced him, and he is

therefore not entitled to habeas relief.

I. The Murder and Investigation

In the early hours of January 16, 2006, Bernard Hill was shot and killed in his apartment.

Just a few hours earlier, Hill had assaulted Quiana Turner, his ex-girlfriend and the mother of his

daughter. News of the assault spread to Turner’s family members, including Samuel Dantzler,

who is Turner’s uncle. After Hill attacked Turner, he went to the apartment of his girlfriend at the

time, Nikitta McKenzie. At around 12:45 AM, a group of about six men dressed in all black broke

down the door of McKenzie’s apartment. One of the men held a gun to McKenzie’s face,

demanding to know whether Hill was in the apartment. Hill entered the room, and as the men

began to fight, McKenzie ran into the bathroom with her cell phone and stood quietly. While she

was in the bathroom, one of the attackers shot Hill in the head, killing him. Left behind at the

scene of the murder was a black skull cap worn by one of the perpetrators. The police were unable

to identify the assailants, however, and the case went cold.

-2- No. 20-1059, Dantzler v. Rewerts

Years later, in September 2009, the Detroit Police Department received a grant that allowed

the Department to test the cap for residual DNA. The test results matched Dantzler’s DNA profile,

and he and his son were tried on the theory that they were part of a “posse” that attacked Hill in

retaliation for assaulting Turner. Dantzler’s son, Samuel Lamare Dantzler (who eventually

pleaded guilty), admitted that he had pointed the attackers to Hill’s location, knowing that they

had golf clubs and were planning to beat Hill up, although he did not testify at his father’s trial.

II. Pre-Trial Proceedings and the Murder Trial

In the months before the trial, Dantzler’s counsel, Robert Kinney, sought approval for an

independent DNA expert. In July 2010, the trial court approved the request and ordered that the

expert make the results available at least ten days before trial, which was scheduled for that

October. As the trial date neared, the prosecution still had not turned over the DNA evidence,

complicating Kinney’s efforts to secure an independent expert. The trial court judge indicated that

if the government did not turn over its report to the defense by August 20, he would consider

suppressing that evidence. At a pretrial hearing on September 9—approximately one month before

the scheduled trial date—Dantzler’s counsel still had not received the government’s DNA report,

likely due to an “overwhelming” backlog. Kinney had contacted the Specklin lab to obtain an

expert, but the lab wanted to review the prosecutor’s report before committing to assisting

Dantzler. Based on discussions of the lab’s timeline, it became clear that it was unlikely that the

government’s report would be completed early enough to give the defense’s DNA expert enough

time to review it. Although the trial court expressed its reluctance to postpone trial, the court

ultimately agreed to move trial to December once Dantzler’s counsel made clear that “[w]e need

our expert” and Dantzler had waived any speedy trial claims.

-3- No. 20-1059, Dantzler v. Rewerts

On November 24, the trial court entered another order, this time specifically naming Ann

Chamberlain as Dantzler’s independent DNA expert. The order specified that Chamberlain would

be compensated according to her fee schedule. But shortly before trial, an issue arose with

Chamberlain’s requested fees. Chamberlain demanded a $1,500 retainer fee, a $250 hourly rate,

and $2,500 for each day of depositions or court testimony. The judge found the retainer to be

excessive and denied funding for it.

Before the trial began in December, Kinney recounted his attempts to secure an

independent DNA expert. Making no mention of the Specklin lab he had previously contacted,

Kinney informed the court that he had attempted to secure Cathy Carr as an expert but that she had

a conflict because she had worked with the prosecution on Dantzler’s case. On Carr’s

recommendation, Kinney then reached out to Chamberlain, the expert who was appointed by the

trial court just the month before. In a discussion about Chamberlain’s rates, the court noted that it

had been willing to approve the hourly rate but found her $2,500 daily fee for depositions or

testimony to be “extraordinary” and the retainer to be “exorbitant.” The judge explained that he

had also consulted with the court’s chief judge, who agreed that the requested fees were

extraordinarily high. Defense counsel said he “wanted to put that on the [r]ecord because Ms.

Chamberlain—well, she wants the retainer or she won’t be here.” Kinney asserted at one point

that his client “is just making sure that Ms. Chamberlain was ready to do her own test, to determine

whether his DNA was on the cap.” The judge said he did not “preclude” Chamberlain as a witness,

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