Sharpe v. Bell

593 F.3d 372, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 2021, 2010 WL 339044
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 2010
Docket09-6206
StatusPublished
Cited by221 cases

This text of 593 F.3d 372 (Sharpe v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharpe v. Bell, 593 F.3d 372, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 2021, 2010 WL 339044 (4th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:

Montoyae Dontae Sharpe was convicted of first degree murder in North Carolina Superior Court and sentenced to life in prison. After exhausting state post-conviction remedies, Sharpe petitioned for habeas corpus in federal court, claiming that his conviction was unconstitutional because it resulted from ineffective assistance of counsel. Although he had procedurally defaulted on this claim, the district court held that Sharpe had come forward with new evidence of “actual innocence” suffi *375 cient to excuse his default. The district court then ruled in Sharpe’s favor on the merits of his constitutional claim. Yet in reaching its conclusions, the district court ignored the several state post-conviction proceedings which had determined that the evidence Sharpe presented was not credible and that his constitutional claim was without merit.

Such a de novo do-over was impermissible under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”). Sharpe would have us substitute our own judgment for the state court’s credibility determinations, disregard the fact that the state courts soundly assessed each of his contentions, and unfairly hindsight the performance of his own trial counsel. Such an approach undermines the principles of comity and federalism that the Supreme Court and Congress have set forth in the context of federal habeas review. We therefore reverse and remand with directions to dismiss the petition.

I.

Dontae Sharpe was charged with killing a man named George Radcliffe, who was shot to death on the night of February 11, 1994, in downtown Greenville, North Carolina. Radcliffe’s body was found inside his pickup truck on a grassy lot, just off a downtown street. Inside the truck, police officers found Radcliffe’s wallet, which contained fifty-three dollars, and a coat later identified as belonging to one Wilbur Mercer.

At trial, the state offered the testimony of two purported eyewitnesses to the killing. Beatrice Stokes, twenty-seven years old, and Charlene Johnson, fifteen years old, both testified that Sharpe sold drugs with a man named Mark Joyner and was a leading drug dealer in the neighborhood where Radeliffe’s body was found. Both testified that on the night of the murder, they saw Sharpe, Joyner, and Radcliffe standing in the street next to Radcliffe’s pickup truck, that an argument broke out, and that Sharpe shot Radcliffe. Both stated that Wilbur Mercer was also at the scene, and Stokes noted the presence of several others.

Stokes testified that she immediately fled and called the police when the shot went off. Johnson testified that she watched Sharpe and Joyner load Radcliffe’s body into the truck and drive it into the lot where it was found. Johnson admitted that she had received a reward for coming forward. Stokes testified that she had not received a reward but admitted that she was probably using drugs at the time.

A third eyewitness, Alonzo Vines, lived in a house adjacent to the lot where Radcliffe’s truck was found. He testified that he was in his house on the night of the murder when he heard a loud noise, looked out his window, and saw that a pickup truck had been driven into the lot. He stated that he saw the truck’s door was open and that two or three people were standing next to it. He could not identify them, however, because his view was blocked by dust on his windows. Seven other witnesses testified for the state. The state’s medical examiner testified as to the trajectory of the bullet and opined that Radcliffe could have remained conscious after the shooting for no more than 10 seconds. Police officers investigating the murder testified that local residents appeared to be afraid to get involved.

In his defense, Sharpe offered the testimony of his aunt and her neighbor, who offered partial alibis, and of two witnesses who testified that Stokes was untrustworthy. Sharpe also attempted to introduce further testimony from one of these witnesses, a woman named Tracy Highsmith. *376 On voir dire, Highsmith stated that her boyfriend, Damien Smith, had come home on the night of the murder and confessed to shooting a man, presumed to be Radcliffe, whom he had attempted to rob. According to Highsmith, Smith repeated comments to this effect several times over the next three weeks. Smith committed suicide twenty-seven days after the murder, and while Highsmith asserted that he had become increasingly agitated after Radcliffe was killed, she also admitted that he had repeatedly threatened suicide before Radcliffe’s death. Although Sharpe’s attorney argued that Highsmith’s testimony should be admitted under the dying declaration and state of mind exceptions to the bar on hearsay evidence, the court held that the testimony was inadmissible. A jury found Sharpe guilty on July 24, 1995, and the North Carolina Supreme Court sustained his conviction on appeal. State v. Sharpe, 344 N.C. 190, 473 S.E.2d 3 (1996).

On the day Sharpe was first arrested for the murder, Charlene Johnson had been beaten and stabbed by a group of women for being a “snitch.” Sharpe’s mother and aunt had followed behind the women as they set out for Johnson’s home and rescued Johnson from the attack. In the course of taking her to the emergency room, they told her, in Johnson’s words, that the “word on the street” was that Johnson was “the one that said something about Dontae murdering Mr. Radcliffe.” For safety reasons, Johnson went to live outside of Greenville, but her mother could not come with her, and she returned after a few weeks. Johnson came to form a relationship with Sharpe’s family, and eventually with Sharpe himself, visiting him in prison at least twice. Not long after his conviction, Johnson recanted her testimony.

In February 1997, Sharpe filed a motion for appropriate relief (“MAR”) in North Carolina Superior Court, alleging that the recantation entitled him to a new trial and raising, for the first time, a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. The MAR court held an evidentiary hearing and determined that Johnson’s recantation was not credible. It also held that the ineffective assistance of counsel claim had been defaulted.

Sharpe then filed for habeas corpus in federal court, and the district court scheduled an evidentiary hearing on his claims. Just prior to the hearing, a man named Dearl Powell came forward, claiming to have witnessed the shooting and identifying Smith as Radcliffe’s killer. In Powell’s account, Radcliffe was in the driver seat of the truck and Wilbur Mercer was in the passenger seat when Smith shot Radcliffe through the driver side window. According to Powell, after being shot, Radcliffe drove the truck off. Powell began to testify at the habeas hearing, but the district court cut him off before he could be cross-examined and ordered that his evidence be presented first in North Carolina court.

Sharpe filed another MAR in November 2001, seeking a new trial under North Carolina law on the basis of newly discovered evidence of actual innocence and renewing his ineffective assistance of counsel claim. A second evidentiary hearing was held before the same judge who had considered Sharpe’s earlier MAR. After listening to Powell and considering the entire evidentiary record, the court concluded that his testimony was not credible and denied Sharpe’s actual innocence claim.

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Bluebook (online)
593 F.3d 372, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 2021, 2010 WL 339044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharpe-v-bell-ca4-2010.