Stadler v. Curtin

682 F. Supp. 2d 807, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4950, 2010 WL 331716
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 22, 2010
DocketCase No. 06-14286
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 682 F. Supp. 2d 807 (Stadler v. Curtin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stadler v. Curtin, 682 F. Supp. 2d 807, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4950, 2010 WL 331716 (E.D. Mich. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

DAVID M. LAWSON, District Judge.

Michigan prisoner David Stadler has filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 challenging his conviction for first-degree criminal sexual conduct and his prison sentence of twenty-five to forty years. The petition, filed by counsel, states ten claims. Stadler says he was deprived of due process of law as a result of the delay in bringing the charge, the denial of certain pretrial discovery motions, the destruction of exculpatory evidence, an improper pretrial photographic show-up, an improper jury instruction, the prosecutor’s failure to produce witnesses, and the prosecutor’s misconduct; he was denied effective assistance of competent counsel because his trial lawyer did not pursue an alibi defense and did not let him testify, and the trial court did not allow the petitioner to discharge the lawyer immediately before trial; and his sentence is improper because it is excessive under the Eighth Amendment and based on judge-found facts that were not determined by a jury in violation of the Sixth Amendment. The respondent filed an answer to the petition asserting that an adequate and independent state procedural ruling bars review of some of the claims by this Court, and the state courts’ disposition of the rest of them did not result in an objectively unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court law. The Court finds that three of the petitioner’s claims are barred by the doctrine of procedural default, and the balance do not warrant habeas relief on the merits. Therefore, the Court will deny the petition.

I.

The victim of the sexual assault, identified here as N.C., says that the petitioner raped her at her home on June 14, 1997. N.C. reported the incident to police the next day, but then she refused to cooperate in the prosecution until she was contacted three years later by a detective who was reviewing old open files. She appar[812]*812ently agreed to testify, and a charge was filed against the petitioner in the spring of 2001. The petitioner was brought to trial eventually on November 8, 2002 after several pretrial motions were litigated.

N.C. testified at a preliminary examination and at trial that she first came into contact with the petitioner when he called her home, allegedly dialing a wrong number. N.C. nonetheless continued the conversation, and they talked on the phone six to eight times again. N.C. met the petitioner in person thereafter and saw him twice prior to the incident. They first met at a bar, where the N.C. had gone with friends and clients (N.C. said she was a nail technician) named Tracy and Kelly and Brian Bankey. The meeting was not pre-arranged; instead, N.C. said that the petitioner just showed up at the bar that night and approached her, even though she had not told him what she looked like. According to N.C., the petitioner walked over to her and asked her “if I was “N[ ] and I said yeah. And he said I’m Dave.” Trial Tr. vol. Ill at 56. She said they talked for about ten minutes. She did not introduce the petitioner to her friends. N.C. said she did not go out with these friends on a regular basis and could not remember their full names.

N.C. testified that the next time she saw the petitioner was when she was outside her home playing with her four-year-old son. She said that the petitioner walked up to her and told her he was visiting a friend, who lived across the street. N.C. said she then told her son to go inside, and she and the petitioner talked for about ten to twenty minutes. N.C. testified that she had not told the petitioner where she lived.

The rape occurred two to three weeks after the initial phone call. Although N.C. described some of the details of the interaction leading up to the assault inconsistently at the preliminary examination and at trial, she said that on June 14, 1997, the petitioner came to N.C.’s house near 10:00 p.m.; they planned to go out that evening. The two were on the couch either before or after N.C. was getting ready in the bathroom. At some point, the petitioner tried to kiss N.C., and she told him no. Then the petitioner made his advance, either as they were sitting on the couch or as he was standing in the door of the bathroom while N.C. was in the midst of getting ready for the evening. N.C.’s two versions of the events converged when she described the rape itself. She testified that the petitioner pushed her onto the couch and, in a struggle that ensued, ripped her sweatshirt. N.C. claims that the defendant proceeded to take her pants and underwear off, ignoring her pleas to stop. In the process, she ended up with a black eye and a bite mark on her right breast. She said that the petitioner then forced his penis into her vagina. N.C. testified that once the petitioner ejaculated, she immediately ran into the bathroom and cleaned herself. She said that when she came out of the bathroom, the petitioner was still sitting on her couch and, when asked to leave, inquired whether they were still going to a movie. She said no, and the petitioner left. As the petitioner was leaving, he said, “[Gjood luck with Matt.” Trial Tr. vol. Ill at 90. N.C. testified that she told the petitioner that she had just split up with her son’s father, but she did not recall ever mentioning that his name was Matt.

After the petitioner left, N.C. said that she took a shower and douched three or four times, cleaned off the couch with Lysol, locked all the doors, and, after taking three sleeping pills, went to sleep. She said that she did not call the police or her neighbors because she was embarrassed over what had happened, and that she let the petitioner into her house.

[813]*813The next evening, N.C. saw her Mend Jean and told her what had happened. At Jean’s urging, the two went to the Sterling Heights, Michigan police station together that night. N.C. talked to two or three police officers and filled out a statement, but did not tell the police everything because she did not want to pursue prosecution. The police investigator took photographs of her black eye and the bite mark on her breast. She explained that she did not lie to the police, but she did not tell them all of the details of the assault. She claims that she told the police the first and last name of her assailant, a point that was hotly contested at trial and contradicted by testimony from police witnesses, who said N.C. only revealed a first name.

According to N.C., a police officer contacted her shortly afterward, and she told him that she had been raped. She acknowledged that she made several appointments to view a photo lineup but never kept those appointments. She said she just wanted to forget the incident and move on with her life. She said that she also wrote a letter to Matt (the father of her son) telling him what had happened but never told anyone else other than Matt and Jean.

According to testimony from a pretrial hearing challenging the photographic show-up, this case came to the attention of Sterling Heights police detective Thomas McMullen, who was investigating other cases involving the petitioner and reports of stalking and random phone calls to women. McMullen said he called N.C. and asked her if she would now be interested in going forward with a prosecution. She agreed. On March 9, 2001, McMullen went to N.C.’s apartment along with a female detective and showed N.C. a prearranged photo array. He said that N.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
682 F. Supp. 2d 807, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4950, 2010 WL 331716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stadler-v-curtin-mied-2010.