Searcy, Derrick v. Jaimet, Danny D.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 2003
Docket02-4010
StatusPublished

This text of Searcy, Derrick v. Jaimet, Danny D. (Searcy, Derrick v. Jaimet, Danny D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Searcy, Derrick v. Jaimet, Danny D., (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 02-4010 DERRICK SEARCY, Petitioner-Appellee, v.

DANNY D. JAIMET, Warden, Hill Correctional Center, Respondent-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 02 C 2164—Robert W. Gettleman, Judge. ____________ ARGUED APRIL 3, 2003—DECIDED JUNE 23, 2003 ____________

Before CUDAHY, MANION, and KANNE, Circuit Judges. KANNE, Circuit Judge. Derrick Searcy filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He claimed that his conviction for first-degree murder was tainted by the violation of his Sixth Amendment right to a broad opportunity to cross-examine witnesses regarding their motivation to testify against him. The district court agreed that the Illinois state court had indeed violated Searcy’s Confrontation Clause rights and granted his petition. Because we do not believe that the Illinois state court’s decision regarding the scope of Searcy’s cross-examina- 2 No. 02-4010

tion rights was either contrary to or an unreasonable ap- plication of clearly established federal law, we reverse.

HISTORY Petitioner Searcy was tried and convicted by a jury in Cook County Circuit Court on the charge of first-degree murder in the death of Edward Bowman. The State’s case against Searcy rested heavily on the testimony of two “occurrence” witnesses who were present during the events leading up to the murder of Bowman. The first witness, Clarence Johnson, testified that on June 6, 1994, he saw Searcy and Bowman arguing, that Searcy hit Bowman during their argument, and that Searcy repeatedly told Bowman that he was going to kill him. Johnson went on to testify that he witnessed a second altercation between Searcy and Bowman later that same day, this time on the front porch of Searcy’s home. During this second argument, Searcy pulled a gun from his shoe and chased Bowman around the side of Searcy’s house into the alley. Johnson said he saw Searcy fire two shots at Bowman as he chased him, neither of which hit Bow- man. Once Bowman and Searcy reached the alley, Johnson could no longer see them, but he said he heard five more shots a few seconds later. After hearing the shots, Johnson went to the alley where he found Bowman lying on the ground. The State’s second primary witness was Michael Brooks, who was with Johnson during the events of June 6th. Brooks also testified to seeing Searcy and Bowman argu- ing early in the day and to witnessing the second argu- ment at Searcy’s home. Like Johnson, Brooks said he saw Searcy chase Bowman to an alley adjoining Searcy’s home and saw Searcy fire two shots at Bowman (he was unaware if those shots actually hit Bowman). Brooks testified that some five to ten seconds later he heard five No. 02-4010 3

more shots, all coming at the same time. He testified to being the first person to arrive at the scene of the shooting, where he found Bowman lying in the alley. Brooks said that Bowman spoke to him at that time, telling him, “Uhh, I’m not going to make it.” The police arrived to find Bowman dead at the scene. At the time, neither Johnson nor Brooks told the police that they believed that Searcy had shot Bowman. Brooks did tell a detective about the earlier confrontation between Searcy and Bowman, but not that he saw Searcy shoot- ing at Bowman in the later incident. Johnson testi- fied that he then drove home and called Bowman’s son, Marlonn Boyd, to tell him about the murder of his father. They later returned to the scene, where Brooks said he and Johnson told Marlonn that Searcy had killed his father. On May 1, 1995, almost one year after Bowman’s death, the police arrested Searcy on an unrelated matter. Based on the police interviews of Johnson and Brooks on the day of Bowman’s death, Searcy was ultimately charged with Bowman’s murder. The State’s case against Searcy rested primarily on the testimony of Johnson and Brooks, who testified at trial as to what they allegedly witnessed on the day Bowman was killed. Given the centrality of the testimony of Johnson and Brooks to the State’s case, a key part of Searcy’s defense was to call into question their credibility by highlight- ing discrepancies in their accounts. For example, Searcy pointed out that the medical examiner testified that Bow- man had been shot six times in the face. According to both the medical examiner and the defense’s expert neurolo- gist, the fourth shot to Bowman’s head likely caused im- mediate death, conflicting with Brooks’s account of Bow- man talking to him after he had been shot. The defense also offered the testimony of Tonita Mills, who said that on the day Bowman was killed, she saw Brooks arguing 4 No. 02-4010

with a man in the alley behind Searcy’s house. After she turned away from the argument, she heard several gun- shots. As she ran away from the scene, she saw Johnson driving up. She testified that she did not see Searcy at any point that afternoon. In addition to noting inconsistencies in Johnson’s and Brooks’s accounts, Searcy also wanted to inquire into their possible biases and motivations in testifying. The defense’s theory was that Brooks was the actual shooter of Bowman, with Johnson as his accomplice, because Brooks had learned that Bowman was acting as a police informant, providing information about Brooks’s drug- dealing activities. Searcy sought to question them about the fact that after Bowman had been arrested for posses- sion of drugs, he began negotiations with the police to become an informant. He also wanted to cross-examine both Brooks and Johnson about their alleged membership in a gang that sold drugs in competition with Bowman. Searcy argued that his evidence would show that when Bowman was arrested for drug dealing in 1994, in the presence of someone named Clinton Boyd (who was a neighbor of Johnson), he told police that Michael Brooks was a drug dealer and the one for whom the police were looking. Searcy was prepared to call as a witness Chicago Police Officer Donald Washington, who would testify to the events surrounding Bowman’s arrest, as well as his subsequent negotiations with Bowman over the terms of a deal to act as a police informant. He also offered the testimony of Tonita Mills, who the defense said would testify to buying drugs from Brooks and John- son on numerous occasions. Ultimately, the defense sought to argue that Brooks became aware of Bow- man’s informant activities (through Clinton Boyd talk- ing with his neighbor Johnson, who would then talk to Brooks), providing a motivation for him to murder Bowman. No. 02-4010 5

Before the opening statements in Searcy’s trial, the State moved in limine to prevent the defense from offering any evidence about the issue of Bowman working as a po- lice informant. The State was apparently concerned that the defense’s theory was to create reasonable doubt as to Searcy’s guilt by giving the jury another potential vil- lain, regardless of any evidence backing up accusations against Brooks. The trial court eventually ruled that Searcy could not cross-examine Johnson or Brooks regarding the informant issue unless he could provide a foundation for that line of questioning—by, for example, showing that they knew that Bowman was informing on them.1

1 The relevant portion of the sidebar discussion in which the court made its ruling on the State’s in limine motion proceeded as follows: COURT: Could you prove, by competent evidence at trial, that Clinton told [Brooks] that Bowman threw his name in as the owner, possessor, or a drug dealer? DEFENSE: I don’t think I can make that proof at this point, your Honor, but I do not think that your Honor can hold that against us. It goes to the weight of the statement, not its admissibility. . . .

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