Stallone v. Kopp

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 12, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-07865
StatusUnknown

This text of Stallone v. Kopp (Stallone v. Kopp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stallone v. Kopp, (E.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FILED CLERK EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

----------------------------------------------------------------X 12/12/2024 2:54 pm

JEROME STALLONE, U.S. DISTRICT COURT

EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK Petitioner, LONG ISLAND OFFICE

-against- MEMORANDUM AND ORDER 23-CV-7865 (GRB) MARILYN KOPP,

Respondent. ----------------------------------------------------------------X GARY R. BROWN, United States District Judge: Petitioner Jerome Stallone (“Petitioner”), proceeding pro se, petitions this Court for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging a conviction and sentence for robbery in the first degree and burglary in the second degree in the County Court, County of Suffolk (the “trial court”). On this petition, Petitioner raises several claims as follows: • Prosecutorial misconduct in the grand jury proceedings • Ineffective assistance of the subsequently disbarred defense counsel • Purported denial of the constitutional right to testify at trial • Alleged Batson violations and racial discrimination during jury selection Because each of these claims is procedurally barred and/or substantively without merit, and because none represent a procedure or decision that was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, the petition is denied. Background A review of the petition, filings by the Respondent, and the state court record1 reveals

1 The trial of People v. Jerome Stallone took place from May 21 through June 15, 2018. The jury selection took place on May 21-23, 2018, of which May 21 and May 22-23 are separately paginated transcripts of the jury selection minutes referenced herein together as “J. Tr.” (DE 9-12, ECF pp. 1-455.) The transcripts of the trial from May 31 through June 15, 2018, are paginated throughout and referenced herein as “Trial Tr.” (DE 9-12, ECF pp. 464-1230.) that Petitioner was convicted by a jury after trial, during which trial, the prosecution introduced evidence identifying Petitioner as a person who, on November 28, 2016, burglarized and robbed a jewelry store in Southampton, Suffolk County. The jury selection took place over the course of multiple days; neither party made any

Batson challenges nor was there any on-the-record mention of any of the prospective jurors’ race. (J. Tr.) At trial, while the prosecution was unable to present any conclusive forensic evidence linking Petitioner to the robbery/burglary of the jewelry store—a point extensively addressed by the defense counsel—multiple witnesses testified and identified Petitioner as the perpetrator. Notably, Petitioner’s former parole officer testified that she knew Petitioner from having regularly met him in the months before November 2016 and later identified him from the “wanted” flyers as the person sought in connection with the jewelry store robbery.2 (Trial Tr. 202-17.) The robbed store’s owner and her two employees, who all were in the store at the time of the robbery, identified Petitioner in court as the person who, on November 28, 2016, entered the store. (Trial Tr. 133-35, 189, 421.) The owner also described being threatened by Petitioner

who, while in close proximity to her, used a hammer to smash a display window and extract $23,000 worth of jewelry. (Trial Tr. 418-19, 420-21, 424.) She testified that she believed the Petitioner would hit her with the hammer, an experience she found frightening and traumatizing. (Trial Tr. 420-21, 424, 426, 450.) The defense counsel extensively cross-examined the store owner regarding the fact that, in her initial statements to law enforcement, she did not mention this threat. (Trial Tr. 426-45.) The People also presented testimony from a medical assistant familiar with the fact that Petitioner had a full hip replacement surgery on October 31, 2016.

2 The parole officer testified without identifying herself as such or indicating how exactly she knew Petitioner; instead, she described how often she met Petitioner, how well she knew him, and how she recognized him from the distributed “wanted” flyers. (Trial Tr. 3-7, 202-17.) (Trial Tr. 386-87.) She testified to witnessing Petitioner riding his bicycle to his post-surgery appointment on November 16, 2016. (Trial Tr. 386-87, 396.) As part of the defense case, Petitioner challenged the value of the in-court identification by presenting an expert witness who testified about the challenges associated with memory

reconstruction and various identification procedures. (Trial Tr. 479-559.) Though offered the opportunity, Petitioner decided not to testify: THE COURT: Mr. Stallone, you do not wish to testify in this case?

THE DEFENDANT: I don’t want to testify.

(Trial Tr. 541.) After defense rested, (Trial Tr. 560), the People presented their rebuttal witness—the investigating detective—who described the procedures by which the store owner and her two employees made their prior identifications of Petitioner from the photo spreads presented to them at the police station in the months after the robbery. (Trial Tr. 561-66.) After both sides rested, (Trial Tr. 589), Petitioner requested that the defense counsel read Petitioner’s statement in the record. (Trial Tr. 596.) In sum, Petitioner sought to argue to the jury that the prosecutor “suborned perjury” from the medical assistant regarding her having seen him riding a bicycle on November 16, 2016, two weeks after his hip replacement surgery. (Trial Tr. 597.) Petitioner insisted that his grand jury testimony, including the exhibits—his medical records, also admitted in evidence at trial, (Trial Tr. 559-60)—painted a different picture, and he could not have been riding the bicycle on the day in question. (Trial Tr. 597.) After the trial court, outside of the jury presence, heard from the defense counsel and Petitioner, (Trial Tr. 596-602), the defense counsel told the court that he was ready to give closing arguments, adding, “now my client is mentioning about testifying himself, but the case is over and now we’re into closing arguments.” (Trial Tr. 597-98.) Nevertheless, Petitioner continued reiterating his claim that the prosecutor had elicited perjury from the medical assistant: THE DEFENDANT: . . . I went to the facility by van. I was placed in a medical van by a wheelchair and brought to the facility by the people at the facility with one of their nurses as an escort. The woman who testified in this court said that she saw me riding a bicycle at that facility. And it’s a major issue because that’s the only thing that alleges that I rode a bicycle. If anything was to be taken from that time, it’s that I was not in a condition to ride a bicycle. That’s my biggest concern. I did not go there by bicycle. I was taken by van from a facility where I was recovering from hip replacements, taken by van by one of their escorts.

THE COURT: Okay. Sit down. You had an opportunity to testify if you wanted to. You told your lawyer you did not want to testify. I asked you in court and you said on the record you did not want to testify. That ship has sailed.

THE DEFENDANT: Sorry, your Honor.

THE COURT: Don’t say anything else.

(Trial Tr. 601-02.) The parties proceeded with their summations, and, at the conclusion of the trial, the jury convicted Petitioner on all three counts: Robbery in the First Degree, a class B violent felony, in violation of New York Penal Law (hereinafter, “Penal Law”) § 160.15(3), Burglary in the Second Degree, a class C violent felony, in violation of Penal Law § 140.25(1)(c), and Burglary in the Third Degree, a class D felony, in violation of Penal Law § 140.20. (Trial Tr. 763-64.) After the conviction, but prior to sentencing, Petitioner moved the trial court pursuant to C.P.L.

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Bluebook (online)
Stallone v. Kopp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallone-v-kopp-nyed-2024.