Strickland v. Marshall

632 F. Supp. 590, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26891
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 11, 1986
DocketC-1-83-321
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 632 F. Supp. 590 (Strickland v. Marshall) 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
Strickland v. Marshall, 632 F. Supp. 590, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26891 (S.D. Ohio 1986).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER DISMISSING PETITION

TIMOTHY S. HOGAN, Senior District Judge:

This matter is before the Court on Earl L. Strickland’s petition for writ of habeas corpus and memorandum in support (docs. 2 and 5), respondent’s return of the writ (doc. 6), and Mr. Strickland’s traverse to the return (doc. 8). The transcript of Mr. Strickland’s state court trial is also a part of the record and file in this case (doc. 7).

Petitioner claims the writ should issue for the following reasons, and we quote him:

1. The guilty verdict is not supported by legally sufficient evidence and the prosecution did not prove the elements of murder beyond a reasonable doubt. The prosecution did not prove the element of purpose/intent as defined in the offense of murder; the prosecution did not attempt to rebut, in any manner, defense evidence in which demonstrated petitioner was too intoxicated and drugged to have formed the element of intent.
2. Petitioner was denied the effective assistance of counsel as required by the Sixth Amendment under the facts of this particular case. Defense counsel failed to motion the trial court, pretrial, to suppress statements by petitioner that was incompatible with the defense advanced at trial, and where the statements were inadmissible under constitutional law. Defense counsel failed to point out to the trial judge that the state had failed to rebut the affirmative expert evidence introduced by the defense, so the elements of murder could not be found as presented by the evidence in this case. And these two failures denied petitioner of a defense that was factually substantial in nature. Then, defense counsel failed to point out to the trial court that since he was a taker of the same drug — prescribed, as petitioner was taking, that the trial judge should disqualify himself on any finding of same relative to alcohol and the facts of this case.

*593 Respondent counters that Mr. Strickland is not entitled to the relief requested, as both claims are without merit.

No evidentiary hearing is required in this case because petitioner has not alleged any facts outside the record which, if proved true, would entitle him tó the relief sought. Townsend v. Sain, 372 U.S. 293, 83 S.Ct. 745, 9 L.Ed.2d 770 (1963). The arguments made by petitioner are legal ones, and the facts necessary to resolve these issues appear in the files and records already before the Court. Further, as petitioner has elucidated his legal arguments quite clearly, the interests of justice do not require the Court to exercise its discretion to appoint counsel to assist petitioner. See, 18 U.S.C. § 3006A(g); Rule 8(c), 28 U.S.C. fol. § 2254, advisory committee note.

Summary of Facts and Proceedings

Earl Strickland was indicted by the September 1978 term of the Montgomery County, Ohio grand jury on one count of murder following the stabbing death of Flora Jean Swindle, Mr. Strickland’s former common-law wife, on August 25, 1978. Mr. Strickland pled not guilty to the charge and waived his right to a jury trial. Trial to the Court was held on January 22 and 23, 1979, and the trial court pronounced its guilty verdict on January 24. Following is a summary of the evidence on which the verdict was based.

Rosa McLemore, in whose home the victim was killed, testified that she had been with Ms. Swindle all day on August 25. Around 9:00 in the evening, Ms. McLemore went upstairs to bathe and dress, leaving Ms. Swindle sitting in the livingroom of the McLemore house. Ms. McLemore’s son, Jessie, came into the house and upstairs to tell his mother that Ms. Swindle was still downstairs. Later, the son called up to his mother from outside the house to tell her that Earl Strickland was entering the house carrying a gun. Ms. McLemore called the operator to connect her with the police and informed the police that a man was killing a lady at her address. She heard no gunshots, however. Ms. Swindle called upstairs for Ms. McLemore to bring $200.00 downstairs, and Ms. McLemore replied that she had no money. She then heard the victim cry out the name “Earl, Earl.” She also heard Earl’s voice asking about his “damn money.” Her son came upstairs again to tell her that “Earl done killed Jean.” When Ms. McLemore came downstairs, she found the victim lying dead on her floor and her furniture spattered with blood. Later that evening, at the police station, Ms. McLemore heard Earl Strickland’s voice in the room next to her: “He said that he killed the bitch and he would intend to kill her. If he hadn’t, somebody else would.” Ms. McLemore also testified that, a few weeks before the killing, Earl Strickland had come to her house and created such a disturbance that Flora Jean Swindle called the police, who came and took Mr. Strickland away. On cross examination, Ms. McLemore testified that Mr. Strickland had threatened to kill Ms. Swindle during the August 3d incident and that she smelled alcohol on him that day.

Jessie McLemore testified that when he left his mother’s house after telling her that Ms. Swindle was sleeping downstairs, he went across the street to Bea’s house and was standing on the sidewalk talking to Bea when he saw Earl Strickland going into his mother’s house. Jessie went back across the street and looked in the window; he saw Mr. Strickland go to the chair in which the victim was sitting and hold a knife toward her head. Jessie heard Mr. Strickland say “I’ll kill her, I’ll kill you.” He then went next door to tell the neighbor to call the police. He went back to the house, stood on the porch, and saw Mr. Strickland kneeling on the floor straddling the prone Ms. Swindle, stabbing her with a knife approximately eight inches long. Jessie ran next door again to tell the neighbor to call the police again, and as he was coming out of the neighbor’s house, he saw Mr. Strickland pass by, going down the street with the knife in his hand. Mr. Strickland was walking straight, leaning a little. Jessie went back in the house and saw the victim lying dead on the floor with *594 blood all around. He, too, was taken to the police station later that evening, where he overheard Mr. Strickland say he meant to kill the victim. • On cross examination, Jessie indicated that he thought the lean to Mr. Strickland’s walk indicated that the latter had had something to drink but that “[h]e wasn’t that ... He ain’t had that many drinks.” Jessie also testified that there were perhaps a dozen people in front of his house that evening when Earl Strickland arrived, because the ice cream truck was on the street.

A neighbor named Kim Caldwell testified that when she heard that something was going on inside Rosa McLemore’s house the evening of August 25th, she stood on the front porch and looked in the front door to see Earl Strickland stabbing Flora Jean Swindle. She ran after seeing him stab the victim once and saw Mr. Strickland leave the house carrying a knife: “He was just walking normal, you know. The knife was down by his side. He was just walking.” Later that evening, at the police station, she heard Mr. Strickland say that if he didn’t get her, somebody else would.

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Bluebook (online)
632 F. Supp. 590, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-marshall-ohsd-1986.