Sellers v. United States

574 F. Supp. 767, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13446
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 26, 1983
DocketNo. SH-C-80-109-M
StatusPublished

This text of 574 F. Supp. 767 (Sellers v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sellers v. United States, 574 F. Supp. 767, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13446 (W.D.N.C. 1983).

Opinion

ORDER

McMILLAN, District Judge.

These proceedings started as a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 by Willie Foster Sellers to vacate a sentence because of alleged constitutional errors in his trial and conviction in April, 1974, for the burglary of a bank at Fallston, North Carolina.

Sellers is not an amateur; he is serving sentences totaling at least sixty-five years on various previous convictions. Detainers have been filed against him from Alabama, where he has a seven-year sentence to serve, and from Texas, where he has a ninety-nine-year sentence to serve. The outcome of this petition may well have no bearing on when he becomes eligible for parole or whether he ever gets out of prison again. Nevertheless, the issue must be approached as though human freedom is presently involved; the inquiry is whether or not in the course of his conviction on these particular charges he was or was not accorded a fair trial as required by the Constitution and laws of the United States.

An evidentiary hearing was conducted on March 3-4, 1983, by United States Magistrate Barbara H. DeLaney. She has filed a comprehensive memorandum making proposed findings of fact; she recommends that the motion to vacate the sentence be allowed.

The United States has filed objections to the Magistrate’s proposed findings and recommendations.

Under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(C), the District Court is required to make a de novo determination of those Magistrate’s findings to which the defendant has filed objections. Under the circumstances of this case, such de novo determination does not appear to require the court to have a de novo hearing. Rather, the court, as I understand the law, is expected to give to the Magistrate’s proposed findings and recommendations such weight as is indicated by the evidence, by the entire record, by their content, and by sound discretion. United States v. Raddatz, 447 U.S. 667, 100 S.Ct. [768]*7682406, 65 L.Ed.2d 424 (1980). I have carefully reviewed the transcripts of the evidentiary hearing and the pleadings and exhibits, and the findings and recommendations of the Magistrate. I have concluded that the Magistrate’s proposed findings and recommendations are carefully considered and consistent with the evidence and each other and with common sense. The objections of the United States to the proposed findings and conclusions of the Magistrate, and to her recommendations, are overruled, and the court adopts the Magistrate’s findings and conclusions.

The court, in addition, specifically finds as follows:

1. Some time between early afternoon of Wednesday, October 13, 1971, and 6:00 on the morning of October 14, 1971, the Fallston, North Carolina branch of the Union Trust Company of Shelby was burglarized. A large quantity of money was removed from the vault by burning a hole in the top of the vault, letting water in the vault so that the money would float up to the top, and removing the money from the vault.

2. From the time of the burglary until June of 1972, Sellers had not been charged with the crime nor connected by evidence with the crime.

3. In June of 1972, a woman named Carolyn Sue Alexander was serving a sentence at a state jail in Ohio. Ms. Alexander had been living with Wayne Ruff, a co-defendant of petitioner. At the trial she testified that she had had a baby on September 24, 1971; that six days later she went home; that on or about October 1, 1971; she met Ruff at Greenville at a motel and then came to Charlotte that night; that a day or so later, in Ruff’s apartment, she heard petitioner and Ruff and others talking about burglarizing banks; that petitioner took a leading part in the conversation; that a day or so later she heard a news broadcast about the robbery of a bank and that the following day, petitioner and Ruff and their accomplices came home carrying money bags with the name “Fallston” on them. The bags had wet money, some of it with burn spots on it. She testified to incriminating remarks by petitioner.

On cross-examination Carolyn Alexander admitted that she had been convicted of larceny, of burglary, of possession of burglary tools, of grand larceny, and of shop lifting.

Her testimony was the only testimony tending to link petitioner with the bank burglary.

4. Ms. Alexander told her jailer that she wanted to see agents of the F.B.I. Those agents visited her in the jail in Ohio, and got the information above described.

5. Before Carolyn Sue Alexander surfaced, there had been no evidentiary basis to prosecute or convict Willie Foster Sellers for the burglary of the Fallston bank. She was the only witness who identified him or implicated him in the crime. Her testimony was the key testimony against petitioner and without it, the prosecution could not have been brought and would not have succeeded.

6. In the course of the preparation and' the trial of the case, the following events occurred:

(a) Petitioner’s trial counsel received from the United States Attorney under the Jencks Act an oral description of the testimony that the government expected to be given by their key witness. Though she was not identified by name, this information included facts from which her identity might have been surmised by one familiar with the crime or acquainted with the witness. Counsel made a “gentleman’s agreement” with the district attorney not to reveal to petitioner the identity of this witness or the full nature of her involvement in the crime.
(b) Trial counsel did not make any independent investigation of the substance of the witness’ testimony or her motives, whatever they were, for testifying.
(c) Counsel made no effort to talk with the witness.
[769]*769(d) Counsel relied on the defendant who was then and there in prison to do his own investigation.
(e) Petitioner’s alibi was that he was in Baxley, Georgia, more than 300 miles away, at the time of the burglary. His wife-to-become, Barbara Thomas, testified that on the day of the crime she and Sellers drove to Baxley, Georgia, and that she left Sellers there while she drove 100 miles back to Savannah where she obtained a divorce decree from her then husband, H.A. Kilpatrick. She said that after obtaining the divorce, she returned to Baxley on October 14, 1971, and that she and Sellers then left Baxley about 5:00 in the afternoon and drove the 300 or so miles to Charlotte, arriving in the early morning hours of October 15th. She displayed a certified copy of her divorce decree dated October 14, 1971. She was vigorously attacked on cross-examination with the prosecutor contending that her presence in Savannah was not necessary on the day the decree was entered. Defense counsel did not offer any evidence as to whether Georgia law required her presence on the day of the decree, and did not make any effort to investigate in Savannah nor to bring known and available witnesses from Savannah, to corroborate this alibi.

7. Defense counsel did not take advantage of significant opportunities to impeach the prosecution’s key witness.

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574 F. Supp. 767, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellers-v-united-states-ncwd-1983.