Tassin v. Cain

517 F.3d 770, 2008 WL 384578
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 15, 2008
Docket07-70013
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 517 F.3d 770 (Tassin v. Cain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tassin v. Cain, 517 F.3d 770, 2008 WL 384578 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

A jury convicted Robert Tassin of capital murder in a Louisiana state court. His wife Georgina, believing that she might receive a ten-year sentence in exchange for her testimony, testified that Robert had planned to commit armed robbery. Robert denied that there was any plan. The State suppressed evidence of Georgina’s sentencing agreement, arguing in close that there was “no deal” and that Georgina had no reason to lie. Robert challenged his conviction on numerous grounds, including an argument that the State misled the jury in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The state court found that there had been no promise of a lenient sentence and no Fourteenth Amendment violation. Robert filed a ha-beas claim in federal district court; that court held that the state court’s decision was contrary to federal law and vacated his conviction, ordering that the writ issue unless Louisiana retried Tassin within 180 days. 1 Louisiana appeals.

I

Wayne Stagner and Eddie Martin worked on a Mississippi tugboat. When they completed a shift one night, they met a young woman named Shirley, Sheila, or Shelia Mills at the Shady Lady Lounge in Louisiana. Martin, Stagner, and Sheila had several rounds of drinks and then drove away from the bar in an attempt to find cocaine to buy. Martin drove, Stag-ner rode in the passenger’s seat, and Sheila sat between them. After stopping at another bar, where they found no cocaine, Mills suggested that they stop at the home of Georgina and Robert Tassin. The men agreed, and Sheila went inside. Georgina later testified that while Martin and Stag-ner were waiting in the car, the Tassins and Mills hatched a plan to rob Martin and Stagner. The Tassins also informed Sheila that they did not have cocaine but they had Dilaudid, and that they would provide Sheila with the drug if she could get enough money from Mills and Stagner to pay for Dilaudid for the group. Mills emerged to ask Martin for money in exchange for sex. She re-entered the Tas-sins’ home, where she paid the Tassins and they all injected Dilaudid. Mills reemerged from the home, this time with the Tassins.

The five individuals drove elsewhere, allegedly to look for more drugs. They *773 stopped at another home, where the State argued that the Tassins borrowed a gun and Robert said that he obtained needles. While driving back to the Tassins’ home, Sheila asked Martin to stop the car under a bridge because she was going to be sick. She exited the car. Robert claims that at this point, Stagner pointed a gun at him, demanded drugs and money, and wrestled with him. During the tussle, Robert got possession of Stagner’s gun and shot the gun in self defense, wounding Stagner and killing Martin. Stagner, on the other hand, claimed at trial that Robert shot from the back seat in a surprise attack on Stagner and Martin.

The state court severed Georgina’s, Robert’s, and Mills’s cases. Georgina was indicted for first degree murder but pled guilty to armed robbery and received a ten-year sentence. Stagner and Robert also testified at Robert’s trial, but Mills did not.

Before trial, Robert asked the State to disclose any information it had on potential deals for a lenient sentence in exchange for Georgina’s testimony against her husband. 2 The State responded that it had no information on any deal. Georgina testified that she faced the possibility of a five-to ninety-nine-year sentence for armed robbery. When asked before the jury if her testimony would affect her sentence, she responded that she did not know if it would, and that no promises relating to her testimony had been made. 3 The pros *774 ecution then suggested to the jury that Georgina had no reason to lie, since she faced up to a ninety-nine year sentence. 4 According to an affidavit of Georgina’s attorney, however, the judge presiding over her case had indicated that he would sentence her to twenty to thirty years, or as low as fifteen years, if she waived the marital privilege and possibly ten years if her testimony was consistent with her police statement. 5 Georgina also testified in post-conviction proceedings that when she had testified at trial, she believed that she would receive a ten-year sentence. 6 At trial, Robert and his attorney were unaware that Georgina had a favorable sentencing bargain, more favorable than a plea of armed robbery with the potential for ninety-nine years in prison. They learned of the deal only when an inmate forwarded Robert a letter following Robert’s conviction and sentencing. Georgina had been writing letters to a male “pen pal” inmate named C.J. Jenkins or “Shorty,” who sent Robert one of Georgina’s letters 7 to reassure him that Georgina’s letters to Jenkins were friendly and not amorous. The letter referenced the possi *775 bility of a sentencing deal. 8

A jury found Robert guilty of first degree murder in May 1987, and the court sentenced him to death. The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed Robert’s conviction on direct appeal 9 and rejected Robert’s later application for a re-hearing. Robert filed his first application for post conviction relief in August 1990. The state court rejected that petition in August 1994, rejecting Tassin’s claim that the State’s suppression of the agreement between Georgina and the trial court violated the Fourteenth Amendment, as well as his other claims.

Following rejection of his application for writ of certiorari and review to the Louisiana Supreme Court, 10 Robert brought his first federal habeas petition arguing, inter alia, that the lower court’s determination that no covered-up deal existed was an unreasonable application of federal law. While these claims were pending, Robert discovered new evidence, 11 and the State permitted Robert to bring a second State Application for Post Conviction Relief (the “successor petition”) based on this evidence, which he filed in January 1997. The federal court dismissed his habeas claim without prejudice, and the state court considered the successor petition. The state court rejected the second petition for relief in November 1997. In January 2001, the state court rejected Robert’s motion to reconsider its denial of the successor petition. That court did, however, permit additional scientific testing to determine whether Stagner initiated the violence on the night of the murder. In December 2008, the state court considered the results of the scientific testing and denied Robert’s claims in his amended successor petition. Then the federal district court again addressed Robert’s habeas claims.

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Bluebook (online)
517 F.3d 770, 2008 WL 384578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tassin-v-cain-ca5-2008.