Tapia-Martinez v. Taylor

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedSeptember 9, 2020
Docket3:17-cv-01307
StatusUnknown

This text of Tapia-Martinez v. Taylor (Tapia-Martinez v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tapia-Martinez v. Taylor, (D. Or. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

JOAQUIN TAPIA-MARTINEZ, Case No. 3:17-cv-01307-HZ Petitioner, OPINION AND ORDER v.

JERI TAYLOR,

Respondent.

Brian Patrick Conry Brian Patrick Conry, P.C. 534 SW Third Ave., Suite 711 Portland, Oregon

Attorney for Petitioner

Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General James M. Aaron, Assistant Attorney General Department of Justice 1162 Court Street NE Salem, Oregon 97310

Attorneys for Respondent HERNANDEZ, District Judge. Petitioner brings this habeas corpus case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 challenging the legality of his state-court convictions for Sodomy. For the reasons that follow, the Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus (#32-1) is denied. BACKGROUND When CA was 12 years of age, she related to her grandmother that a man who had previously lived with the family had repeatedly sexually abused her when she was five years old. During the time of the abuse, CA and her family lived with several other families at the Wright Street home owned by Gabino Martinez and his wife, Adriana. CA’s mother, Jennifer Martinez, routinely asked Adriana to babysit CA after school. Petitioner was also living in the home and did not work, leaving him as the only male in the home until the others came home from work. Trial Transcript, pp. 292-93. According to Jennifer, her children interacted with Petitioner “a lot” and spoke with him in broken

English. Id at 299, 310. When CA disclosed the abuse, she was able to provide a physical description of her assailant that included his hair style as a “buzz cut” and that he had a dimple on his chin. Id at 228-29. CA informed her grandmother of the room her assailant occupied as well as its contents, which included a glass table and a “big stereo.” Id at 231-33, 281. She also claimed that Petitioner spoke to her in broken English that “wasn’t perfect” and “sounded funny.” Id at 347, 376-77. Jennifer found a picture associated with a drug arrest from the Wright Street home which represented an array of six or nine individuals. Id at 238. When CA saw the photographs, she “just gasped for air . . . and just started crying. And, ‘That’s him. That’s him.’” Id at 288. CA had identified Petitioner as her abuser and, according to Jennifer, “Nobody pointed at the picture. Nobody wanted it to be him. He was family.” Id. Based on CA’s allegations, the Washington County Grand Jury indicted Petitioner on four counts of Sodomy in the First Degree and four counts of Sexual Abuse in the First Degree, the latter of which the State dismissed prior to trial. Id at 16; Respondent’s Exhibit 110, p. 2.

At trial, the defense argued that CA’s mother and grandmother tainted her identification. It theorized that CA had mistakenly identified Petitioner as her abuser, and pointed out another resident of the Wright Street home, Ricardo Martinez (“Ricardo”), was the more likely perpetrator despite the fact that Ricardo had, according to Jennifer, only lived at the home for a period of one month. Trial Transcript, p. 305. Ricardo was accused of sexually abusing his own minor daughter, IM. According to IM, her father and another man abused her at Ricardo’s girlfriend’s house beginning when she was four or five years of age. Id at 199-204. The defense also pointed out that Gabino had been convicted of sexually molesting a teenage girl, and had been accused of molesting IM. Id at 633. The defense also offered the testimony of Petitioner’s cousin, Osvaldo Martinez (“Osvaldo”), to bolster its theory. Osvaldo testified that the bedroom CA identified as belonging to Petitioner at the Wright Street home was not, in fact, the bedroom Petitioner occupied.1 He also testified that Petitioner did not speak English. Id 510. With respect to Ricardo, Osvaldo testified that he spoke English and that he did not work. Id at 512. Petitioner took the stand at his trial and denied abusing CA. He claimed that he had never taken care of her, nor had he ever interacted with her. Id at 359. He asserted that he could not have interacted with her because he spoke only Spanish and

had only ever heard CA speak in English. Id at 559-60. A non-unanimous jury convicted Petitioner of three counts of Sodomy in the First Degree, and the jury acquitted him of the remaining Sodomy I charge where CA testified that she could only recall three discrete incidents of abuse. Id at 354-55, 667-669. As a result, the trial court sentenced him to consecutive sentences totaling 300 months in prison. Id at 698.

1 The defense also wished to call Gabino, believing that he would testify much as Osvaldo did. Trial Transcript, p. 547. However, because Gabino was a suspect in IM’s abuse, he expressed his intention to exercise his Fifth Amendment rights if called to testify. Id at 546. As a result, the defense never called him. Petitioner directly appealed but, aside from an attorney fee issue not relevant to this habeas case, the Oregon Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision without discussion. State v. Tapia-Martinez, 266 Or. App. 701, 338 P.3d 801 (2014). Petitioner sought review in the Oregon Supreme Court, which denied his Petition. 357 Or. 112, 346 P.3d 1213 (2015). Petitioner next filed for post-conviction relief (“PCR”) in Umatilla County. In his pro se PCR Petition, he alleged that his trial attorney performed ineffectively by not calling Adriana to testify because she would have established that Petitioner could not have molested CA. Respondent’s Exhibit 109. The PCR court appointed counsel to represent Petitioner, and counsel filed an Affidavit stating that she had: (1) employed an investigator to speak with Adriana; (2) spoken with Petitioner by phone several times; and (3) met with Petitioner in person. Counsel did not believe that she could state a valid PCR claim on Petitioner’s behalf so, consistent with the requirements of 138.590(5), she

filed an Affidavit to this effect with the PCR court. Respondent’s Exhibit 110. Counsel did, however, advise the PCR court that Petitioner had expressed a desire to file pro se claims by way of a Church motion.2 It does not appear that Petitioner ever filed such a motion.

2 In Church v. Gladden, 244 Or. 308, 311-21, 417 P.2d 993 (1966), the Oregon Supreme Court held that where a litigant wishes to pursue claims that his attorney refuses to pursue, he must inform the court of an attorney’s failure to follow a legitimate request, and he may ask to have counsel replaced or ask the court to require the attorney to comply with the litigant’s request. The PCR court held a hearing where Petitioner advised it that he had hired another attorney to assist him with his case, but he was unable to identify that person. Petitioner also claimed that he had witnesses who never appeared in court that could have been helpful to his case. PCR counsel stated at the hearing that she tasked her investigator with meeting with Petitioner’s family, and that she spoke with Petitioner’s trial attorney about the witnesses Petitioner believed could have been helpful to his defense. According to PCR counsel, trial counsel had interviewed those witnesses despite Petitioner’s assertion to the contrary, and PCR counsel, herself, did not believe the witnesses would have been helpful to the defense. Respondent’s Exhibit 113. The PCR court intended to dismiss the case, but deferred its dismissal for 30 days to allow Petitioner’s new attorney to file a notice of appearance. When that did not happen, the judge dismissed the case for failure to state a claim. Respondent’s Exhibit 112. No appeal is permitted from such a judgment of dismissal in Oregon. ORS 138.525(3).

Petitioner filed this 28 U.S.C.

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