Scrimo v. Lee

935 F.3d 103
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2019
Docket17-3434; August Term 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 935 F.3d 103 (Scrimo v. Lee) 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
Scrimo v. Lee, 935 F.3d 103 (2d Cir. 2019).

Opinions

Judge Newman concurs in a separate opinion.

Dennis Jacobs, Circuit Judge:

The petitioner, Paul Scrimo, was convicted by a jury of murdering Ruth Williams, chiefly on the testimony of the only person who was in the room with them when she was killed: John Kane. Scrimo petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus challenging his state court conviction for murder on the ground that he was deprived of the constitutional right to a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense when the trial court excluded, as collateral, evidence relevant to establishing *106that the State's main witness was the murderer. Scrimo also argues that he received ineffective assistance from his trial counsel. He appeals now the denial of the writ by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Donnelly, J. ).

We conclude that the State trial court's exclusion of evidence violated Scrimo's constitutional right to present a complete defense. Accordingly, we reverse without reaching Scrimo's ineffective assistance of counsel claim.

BACKGROUND

Ruth Williams was strangled to death in her Farmingdale apartment in the early morning of April 12, 2000. Two people were with her: Scrimo and Kane. Kane testified it was Scrimo who killed her. Scrimo's defense, as laid out for the jury by counsel, was that Kane was the killer rather than Scrimo, that Kane sold drugs, that Williams was a customer, and that Kane choked her because of a dispute about a drug transaction. The DNA under the victim's fingernails pointed toward Kane. Kane testified that she gripped his flesh while she gave him oral (unconsummated) sex. The prosecution surmised that Scrimo had a motive to kill her because the deceased rejected his advances and said that his wife was fat and ugly.

I.

At trial, the State elicited the following testimony from Kane. On Tuesday nights, Scrimo and Kane played darts at a bar in Farmingdale called Falcon's Nest. On Tuesday, April 11, 2000, they and others played darts and drank at Falcon's Nest until midnight, then walked to another bar, Granny O'Shea's, where they saw Ruth Williams and drank some more before they all went to yet another bar called Y.L. Childs. Kane had a prior sexual relationship with Williams, who flirted with Kane and kissed him at the bars they visited that night. Kane and Scrimo left Y.L. Childs at around 4:00 a.m.; Williams had left some time before. Kane proposed that he and Scrimo go to Williams's apartment for a drink, but when they arrived, they discovered that Williams was out of beer, so Scrimo left the apartment and went to a 7-Eleven for beer and cigarettes.1 While Scrimo was out, Williams performed oral sex on Kane, but not to completion. He "asked her to stop because [Kane] knew Scrimo would be coming back soon." Trial Tr. 1432. Williams ran her fingers through his hair and across his buttocks. (The grope reported by Kane conveniently accounted for DNA beneath Williams's fingernail, while the interruption implicitly explained why none of Kane's DNA was elsewhere.)

After the oral sex ended and Scrimo came back, the three of them sat in the kitchen drinking beer until at some point Scrimo stood up "and said that, you know, I'm not going to take this. I'm out of here," and started to walk away. Id. at 1435. Kane stood up to persuade Scrimo to stay, but Williams said, "[f]uck him. Let him go home to his fat ugly wife." Id. Scrimo then knocked Williams to the floor, strangled her, wrapped a wire around her neck, and pulled up on it. Kane interceded by grabbing Scrimo by the shoulders, but "[h]e was like a rock." Id. at 1436. After Williams was dead, Scrimo wiped down the chairs and table with a napkin, instructed Kane to turn off the music and grab the *107beer, and left with Kane. The night of the murder, and when they met to play darts the next week, Scrimo told him to keep his mouth shut.

Other witnesses offered little corroboration of the foregoing account of Kane:

• Francine Quinn identified Kane and Scrimo at Y.L. Childs and testified that, as she was walking home from the bar, she heard and saw Williams arguing loudly outside her home with a man fitting Scrimo's description. However, Quinn was unable to pick Scrimo out of a lineup. When she testified at trial and before the grand jury, Quinn was unable to recollect whether she left Y.L. Childs before or after Scrimo and Kane.
• Police officers testified that both Scrimo and Kane provided false stories in the course of the investigation: Scrimo admitted that he knew Williams and saw her on the night of the murder, but denied going to Williams's home with her, while Kane said that he knew nothing about the crime before telling the police the story he gave at trial.
• Police Officer Stark testified that she responded to a disturbance at Scrimo's home on October 18, 2000, months after Scrimo's release on bond. Stark testified that when she arrived, Scrimo came out, put his hands in the air, and said, "Paul Scrimo. I didn't do it. John Kane did. I was never in that apartment." Id. at 1407. Scrimo also told Stark that: while all three of them were at Y.L. Childs, Williams whispered in Scrimo's ear that "she wanted drugs from Kane," "Kane is a drug dealer," and "[h]e doesn't give away drugs for free," id. at 1408; on the night of the murder, the three walked towards Williams's apartment when the bar closed, but Scrimo never went inside; he went instead to the 7-Eleven to buy beer and cigarettes for Kane and Williams; he gave Kane the beer and cigarettes in an alleyway, and went home; and the reason Scrimo did not mention Kane to the police earlier was "because of the drugs," id. at 1409.
• A Nassau County detective testified that Kane's fingerprints were found on a compact disc in the victim's apartment, and Scrimo's fingerprints were not found on any materials.
• A forensic pathologist testified that Williams's cause of death was strangulation and that her blood alcohol content was 0.26 percent at time of death--extremely high. Williams had no toxological indication of drug abuse and had not used cocaine in the 48 hours before death.
• Another Nassau County detective testified that he examined the black plastic cord that was wrapped around Williams's neck, as well as a Leatherman cutting tool that was in Scrimo's possession when he was arrested. The detective concluded that a black plastic fragment on the interior handle of the Leatherman did not originate from the cord tied around Williams's neck. He believed the cord was cut with a one-directional shearing instrument, that the Leatherman was a shearing instrument of such a kind, but that he could not say that the cord was actually cut with the Leatherman. A firearm and tool-marks examiner testified that the Leatherman could have made the cut, but that he could not "say definitively" that it did. Id. at 935.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Calderon-Perez
234 Conn. App. 228 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2025)
Hernandez v. McIntosh
Second Circuit, 2025
United States v. Wilson
Second Circuit, 2025
Lloyd v. Morton
Second Circuit, 2024
Ervine v. Smith
Second Circuit, 2024
Marquez v. Barrone
Second Circuit, 2024
Richardson v. Capra
Second Circuit, 2024
Walker v. Royce
E.D. New York, 2024
Bernazard v. Miller
E.D. New York, 2024
Jimenez v. Stanford
96 F.4th 164 (Second Circuit, 2024)
Fay v. Annucci
S.D. New York, 2024
Gibson v. Bell
Second Circuit, 2023
Wilson v. Superintendent Capra
Second Circuit, 2023
Harrell v. Miller
Second Circuit, 2023
Jones v. Bell
Second Circuit, 2023
Reynolds v. McAllister (TVV)
M.D. Tennessee, 2022

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
935 F.3d 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scrimo-v-lee-ca2-2019.