Seifullah Abdul-Salaam v. Secretary Pennsylvania Departm

895 F.3d 254
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 2018
Docket14-9001
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 895 F.3d 254 (Seifullah Abdul-Salaam v. Secretary Pennsylvania Departm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seifullah Abdul-Salaam v. Secretary Pennsylvania Departm, 895 F.3d 254 (3d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

CHAGARES, Circuit Judge.

*257 A jury found petitioner Seifullah Abdul-Salaam, Jr. ("Abdul-Salaam") guilty of first-degree murder, robbery, and conspiracy after a six-day trial in March 1995 in the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. After a one-day penalty phase hearing in which Abdul-Salaam's counsel presented three mitigation witnesses, the jury sentenced Abdul-Salaam to death. Abdul-Salaam, after exhausting his state remedies, filed the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 , challenging his sentence based on trial counsel's provision of ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to investigate adequately and to present sufficient mitigation evidence at sentencing. The United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania denied the petition. As explained more fully below, because trial counsel could not have had a strategic reason not to investigate Abdul-Salaam's background school and juvenile records, to acquire a mental health evaluation, or to interview more family members about his childhood abuse and poverty, counsel's performance was deficient. Further, because there is a reasonable probability that the un-presented evidence would have caused at least one juror to vote for a sentence of life imprisonment instead of the death penalty, Abdul-Salaam has met the prejudice prong of the ineffective assistance of counsel inquiry. Accordingly, we will reverse in part the Order of the District Court and remand to grant a provisional writ of habeas corpus directed to the penalty phase.

I.

A.

At the guilt phase of Abdul-Salaam's trial, the Commonwealth presented evidence showing that on the morning of August 19, 1994, Abdul-Salaam, with Scott Anderson, attempted to rob a store in New Cumberland, Pennsylvania. Abdul-Salaam brandished a handgun during the robbery, then bound and assaulted the shop's owner. When Officer Willis Cole of the New Cumberland Police Department responded, Abdul-Salaam managed to escape but Anderson was caught. As Officer Cole prepared to handcuff Anderson, Abdul-Salaam reappeared with his gun drawn, sprinted toward Officer Cole, and fired at him. Officer Cole died of his gunshot wounds. The jury returned a guilty verdict on first-degree murder, robbery, and conspiracy charges.

The penalty phase of the trial lasted one day. The jury was instructed about four statutory aggravating factors that the Commonwealth had to prove beyond a reasonable *258 doubt. 1 The first two factors were established by virtue of the guilt-phase testimony, and the Commonwealth presented eight witnesses to establish the last two factors.

The defense presented three witnesses: Abdul-Salaam's mother and two of his sisters. Mahasin ("Dovetta") Abdul-Salaam, Abdul-Salaam's mother, testified that Abdul-Salaam's father, Seifullah Abdul-Salaam, Sr., was "very abusive" to him, but stated multiple times that "most of the abuse was mental," such as by "inhibit[ing the children's] worth and their consideration of themselves." Appendix ("App.") 276-77. Dovetta added that Abdul-Salaam, Sr. would also physically abuse the children and that to discipline Abdul-Salaam, the father-who abused drugs and was homeless at the time of trial-would punch him in the chest "pretty hard" "until he took the breath out of him." App. 283-84, 286. Dovetta added that as a child, Abdul-Salaam saw his father abuse her as well and often tried to protect her.

Dovetta described the trouble that Abdul-Salaam experienced in school. Because he could not pay attention as a result of his "deficit disorder," Abdul-Salaam was placed in a special school. App. 278. In addition, when he was sixteen or seventeen, as a result of a juvenile adjudication, he was placed in an Alternative Rehabilitation Communities ("ARC") program. Dovetta insisted that she and her daughters love Abdul-Salaam and visit him in prison "every chance [they] get." App. 284.

The next witness was Karima Abdul-Salaam, one of Abdul-Salaam's younger sisters. She "vaguely" remembered "spurts" of her father's drug addiction and abuse. App. 295-96. She said that their father verbally degraded all of the children and she recalled her father hitting Abdul-Salaam, including one instance when she saw her father take an aluminum baseball bat into Abdul-Salaam's room and then heard her father hitting him with it. She recalled times as children when they could find no food in their house except for a can of beans.

Safryah Abdul-Salaam, Abdul-Salaam's youngest sister, briefly testified that she loved her brother and wanted to visit him as often as she could. Although she was young at the time, Safryah remembered seeing her father throwing objects at their mother and hearing her father hitting Abdul-Salaam behind closed doors.

At the close of the penalty phase, the trial court instructed the jurors that it was their task to weigh the aggravating factors against the mitigators and that they must issue a sentence of death if they found that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors. However, each juror was instructed to give "whatever weight you deem reasonable to mitigating factors." App. 333. The court added that a death sentence must be unanimous. The jury found all four charged aggravating factors and one mitigating factor, namely that "[t]he background that includes both physical and mental abuse does have a negative impact on a person's development and therefore his future behavior." App. 342; see also 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 9711 (e)(8) (the "catchall" mitigating factor in Pennsylvania). The jury unanimously found that the aggravating *259 factors outweighed the mitigating factor and sentenced Abdul-Salaam to death.

B.

Abdul-Salaam filed a direct appeal to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court but did not raise an ineffectiveness claim. That court affirmed the conviction and sentence, Commonwealth v.Abdul-Salaam , 544 Pa. 514 , 678 A.2d 342 , 355 (1996), and the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari, Abdul-Salaam v.Pennsylvania , 520 U.S. 1157 , 117 S.Ct. 1337

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895 F.3d 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seifullah-abdul-salaam-v-secretary-pennsylvania-departm-ca3-2018.