Simpson v. Warden, Warren Correctional Institution

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 12, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-00777
StatusUnknown

This text of Simpson v. Warden, Warren Correctional Institution (Simpson v. Warden, Warren Correctional Institution) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson v. Warden, Warren Correctional Institution, (S.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION AT CINCINNATI

ROGER SIMPSON,

Petitioner, : Case No. 1:21-cv-777

- vs - District Judge Timothy S. Black Magistrate Judge Michael R. Merz TIM SHOOP, WARDEN, Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Respondent. :

SUBSTITUTED REPORT AND RCOMMENDATIONS

This habeas corpus case, brought by Petitioner Roger Simpson with the assistance of counsel, is before the Court on Petitioner’s Objections (ECF No. 27) to the undersigned’s Report and Recommendations (ECF No. 20). District Judge Black has recommitted the case for reconsideration in light of the Objections (ECF No. 28). The time within which the Attorney General could have responded to the Objections has expired and no response has been filed. Initial review of the Objections persuades the undersigned that a substantially different analysis of the issues in the case is required. Accordingly, the prior Report (ECF No. 20) is WITHDRAWN and this Report substituted for it. On June 14, 2017, a Butler County grand jury indicted Simpson on twenty-three counts of sexual misconduct: ten counts of rape, five counts of sexual battery, two counts of kidnapping, four counts of complicity to rape, and two counts of complicity to sexual battery. (ECF No. 4, Exhibit 1; PageID 11-26). Simpson’s charges arose from his participation, along with two codefendants, in a rape of a single victim, B.H., on February 11-12, 2017, at Miami University. A jury convicted Simpson on all counts. After some mergers of allied offenses, he was sentenced to a total of fifty-one years imprisonment on five counts of rape, one count of kidnapping, and two counts of complicity to rape. Simpson appealed to the Twelfth District Court of Appeals, raising two assignments of

error. That court affirmed the convictions. State v. Simpson, 2019-Ohio-1493 (Ohio App. 12th Dist. Apr. 22, 2019). Simpson did not seek review in the Supreme Court of Ohio. The two assignments of error raised on direct appeal are no longer at issue in the case. On July 22, 2019, Simpson, represented by the same counsel who represents him here, filed an Application to Reopen his direct appeal under Ohio R. App. P. 26(B). He claimed counsel on direct appeal was ineffective for omitting the following assignments of error: 1. The trial court erred by admitting codefendant Gibson’s out-of- court hearsay statements that inculpated Simpson over Simpson’s objections.

2. The trial court erred by sentencing Simpson to an aggregate 51- year prison term after a jury trial, where codefendant Mincy received an 8-year term upon a plea and codefendant Gibson received a 5-year term upon a plea.

3. The trial court erred by failing to record the rape-shield hearing, failing to journalize its rape-shield holding, and failing to preserve and file the proffered exhibit containing the rape-shield evidence.

(26(B) Application, State Court Record, ECF No. 4, Exhibit 9, PageID 96).

The Twelfth District denied the Application and Simpson appealed to the Supreme Court of Ohio, raising the following two propositions of law: 1. Appellate ineffectiveness is measured in the application and reopening by comparing the presented arguments on direct appeal with omitted ones, by applying the Sixth Circuit’s Mapes factors to weigh the strengths, weaknesses, and viability of those omitted arguments, and by evaluating postconviction facts about appellate counsel’s preparedness and tactics.

2. Rule 26(B) reopening is a postconviction procedure and omitted arguments from direct appeal are defaulted until a merits determination of appellate ineffectiveness is made, which triggers the remedy of eliminating default and allowing review of the omitted arguments on their merit.

(Memorandum in Support of Jurisdiction, State Court Record, ECF No. 4, Exhibit 13, PageID 125).

The Ohio Supreme Court accepted jurisdiction only over the first proposition and ultimately rejected it. State v. Simpson, 164 Ohio St. 3d 102 (2020). On December 15, 2021, Simpson filed the instant habeas corpus petition, pleading one ground for relief: Ground One: Simpson was denied the effective assistance of appellate counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. On direct appeal, appellate counsel presented weak issues, omitted stronger and obvious issues, and failed to meet with trial counsel, obtain the file, or review the file to research issues for appeal. The most important defaulted issue was that Simpson received a 51-year term and his codefendants, with roughly equal culpability, received 8- and 5-year terms, respectively. Only Simpson went to jury trial; the codefendants accepted plea deals.

(Petition, ECF No. 1, PageID 2). Although the Petition speaks generally about “omitted issues,” Petitioner limited himself in his Reply to one such omitted issue: “Simpson contends that his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise an Ohio disproportionate-sentencing claim on direct appeal. His habeas claim is confined to this point.” (Reply, ECF No. 17, PageID 403). As will be seen below, Petitioner labels his claim as “disproportionate sentencing” when his real claim is that the sentencing judge imposed a “trial tax”: extra punishment for not accepting a plea agreement. PROCEDURAL DEFAULT

In the original Report, the undersigned concluded that, as argued by Respondent, Simpson had procedurally defaulted his Ohio disproportionate sentencing ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim by failing to fairly present it to the Supreme Court of Ohio (Report, ECF No. 20, PageID 431). Reaching that conclusion required parsing the fractured decision of the Ohio Supreme Court. Id. at PageID 427-31. Simpson objects that the fair presentment requirement in habeas turns on whether the petitioner

“actually afforded the state courts the opportunity to rule on the claim and not on whether the state courts actually availed themselves of that opportunity.” (Objections, ECF No. 27, PageID 441, quoting Randy Hertz & James S. Liebman, Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure (7th Ed.) § 23.3(a)(emphasis added by Petitioner)). He claims that he presented his ineffective assistance of appellate counsel disproportionate sentence and trial-tax claim to the court of appeals and then again to the Supreme Court of Ohio (Objections, ECF No. 27, PageID 443, quoting Memorandum in Support of Jurisdiction, State Court Record, ECF No. 4, PageID 137-38). In seeking Supreme Court acceptance of the case, Simpson posited two Propositions of Law: PROPOSITION OF LAW I: Appellate ineffectiveness is measured in the application and reopening by comparing the presented arguments on direct appeal with omitted ones, by applying the Sixth Circuit’s Mapes factors to weigh the strengths, weaknesses, and viability of those omitted arguments, and by evaluating postconviction facts about appellate counsel’s preparedness and tactics.

PROPOSITION OF LAW II Rule 26(B) reopening is a postconviction procedure and omitted arguments from direct appeal are defaulted until a merits determination of appellate ineffectiveness is made, which triggers the remedy of eliminating default and allowing review of the omitted arguments on their merit.

(Memo. in Support of Jurisdiction, State Court Record, ECF No. 4, PageID 126). As can readily be seen, neither Proposition of Law asserts squarely that the court of appeals erred in not finding ineffective assistance of appellate counsel for omission of the discrepancy and trial tax assignment of error. Instead, they speak in the abstract about how Ohio R. App. P. 26(B) works or should work. Nevertheless, Simpson says his Memo in Support of Jurisdiction was enough to fairly present the merits of his claim (Objections, ECF No. 27, PageID 443). That presentation seems opaque to the undersigned.

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Simpson v. Warden, Warren Correctional Institution, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-warden-warren-correctional-institution-ohsd-2023.