Tak Sun Tan v. Runnels

413 F.3d 1101, 2005 WL 1579655
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 6, 2005
Docket04-55775, 04-55792 and 04-55815
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 413 F.3d 1101 (Tak Sun Tan v. Runnels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tak Sun Tan v. Runnels, 413 F.3d 1101, 2005 WL 1579655 (9th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

TROTT, Circuit Judge:

Wardens Runnels and Pliler appeal the district court’s decision to grant Jason Feng Chan’s, Tak Sun Tan’s, and Indra Lim’s (“petitioners”) petitions for habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In ruling in favor of the petitioners, the district court — -purporting to apply the standard of review required by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) — found fault with the California Court of Appeal’s decision to affirm the petitioners’ convictions and conclusion that the prosecutor did not engage in prejudicial misconduct in the petitioners’ joint trial by (1) arguing facts not in evidence, (2) presenting as true a fact that was false, and (3) appealing inappropriately to the jurors’ passions and prejudices. Respectfully, we disagree with the district court because we conclude without reservation that the state court’s determination that there was no prosecutorial misconduct was not an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law, and was not based on an unreasonable determination of the facts, and we reverse the court’s grant of the habeas petitions.

I

BACKGROUND

A.

Dr. Haing Ngor — a man well-known for the tragic experiences he endured in Cambodia in the 1970s during the reign of the Khmer Rouge and for the Academy Award he received for portraying life under the Khmer Rouge in the movie The Killing Fields — -was robbed and murdered in late February of 1996 while in his ear in his Los Angeles carport. He was shot once in the chest and once in the thigh, and the killers stripped his body of his gold Rolex watch, and of the gold chain and locket he habitually wore around his neck and to which he was sentimentally attached. His car and its contents were untouched.

Chan, Tan, and Lim, all members of the Asian gang known as the Oriental Lazy Boyz (“O.L.B.”), were charged with the robbery and murder of Dr. Ngor. They were tried simultaneously to three separate juries, the juries being separated on *1104 occasion for the presentation of evidence relevant to only one of the petitioners. Because the petitioners allege that the prosecutor committed prejudicial misconduct by (1) arguing “false facts,” (2) arguing facts not in evidence, and (3) appealing to the jurors’ passions and prejudices in his opening statements and closing arguments, the prosecutor’s comments and the relevant evidence supporting them are recounted here in detail.

B.

Petitioners were charged with first-degree murder and robbery. At the trial’s commencement, the prosecutor separately delivered substantively identical opening statements to each of the three juries. In his opening statements, the prosecutor introduced Dr. Ngor as an acclaimed actor who won an Academy Award for his performance in The Killing Fields. The prosecutor described Dr. Ngor’s life in Cambodia in the 1970s, stating:

Dr. Ngor lived most of his life in Cambodia. He was a medical doctor, as the judge said, actually an obstetrician/gynecologist. He met a girl in Cambodia who he planned to start a family with. But things don’t always work out as we plan.
In the early 1970’s [sic] a civil war was raging in Cambodia, and in April of 1975 that country was taken over by a group called the Khmer Rouge. This began the true life killing fields in which over a million Cambodians died.
The Khmer Rouge ordered everyone into the countryside to work at manual labor. And they were especially harsh on intellectuals, including doctors. In fact, doctors were often killed simply for their profession.
Dr. Ngor and his wife, Houy, were forced to work in the fields planting rice. There was little food, and starvation was very common. Dr. Ngor was tortured on three separate occasions, one time having part of his finger cut off. It was a time of incredible hardship and brutality. But life moved on, and one day Dr. Ngor and his wife discovered they were going to have a baby. Life seemed better. Once again, things don’t always work out as we plan.
Complications developed with Houy’s pregnancy. She went into labor, but she couldn’t deliver their child. She needed a doctor, and Dr. Ngor was beside himself. He knew how to help his wife, but if he helped her the soldiers would know he was a doctor and they would kill him and his wife and their child. Dr. Ngor also lacked the instruments that were necessary to perform the surgery. So while his wife clung to life, Dr. Ngor rushed around trying to get help and instruments from the untrained doctors, but they were useless; and Dr. Ngor could do nothing to save his wife. While Dr. Ngor watched helplessly, his wife and their unborn child died.

Immediately after these comments, the prosecutor explained the relevance of Dr. Ngor’s life in Cambodia to his murder. The prosecutor continued:

Now, you may be saying to yourselves, that’s incredibly sad, that’s incredibly tragic, but what does that have to do with this murder case? I’ll tell you what it has to do with this murder case, ladies and gentlemen, because the tragedy didn’t end there.
After his wife died, Dr. Ngor managed to save the only picture he had of his wife, a photograph from her identification card, and he had that photograph made into a locket once he escaped from the killing fields of Cambodia. He attached that locket to a 24-carat gold chain which he wore around his neck, always wore around his neck. His wife’s photo was always with him. And ultimately, ladies and gentlemen, this pho *1105 tograph, this picture that meant more to Dr. Ngor than anything in life, is why he died, because Dr. Haing Ngor died, Dr. Haing Ngor was murdered, when he refused to surrender his wife’s picture to these three gangbangers.

(emphasis added). The prosecutor explained his theory of the struggle over the locket in detail to each jury:

What happens is: As Dr. Ngor returns from [his friend’s] house, he comes off Alpine and he turns north into the alley.... Dr. Ngor drives north, up the alley, almost to the top, where he turns right and parks his car in the carport of his apartment building. He shuts off his engine, opens his car door, ready to get out and walk to his apartment; but he never makes it, because what Dr. Ngor didn’t know is that as he drove up the alley towards his home he passed the three [petitioners]....
These three [petitioners] ... had just finished smoking the last of their cocaine in the alley. They want more, but they need money. And at that precise moment Dr. Ngor drives right past them.
The [petitioners] see Dr. Ngor pull into the carport and they follow him. And as Dr. Ngor turns off his engine, the three [petitioners] approach him. They are planning to rob him to get money for more cocaine. And [petitioner] Chan has a gun, a 9-millimeter semiautomatic handgun, and he is ready to use it.
The [petitioners] first demand Dr. Ngor’s watch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 F.3d 1101, 2005 WL 1579655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tak-sun-tan-v-runnels-ca9-2005.