Taylor v. Pfister

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedAugust 24, 2018
Docket1:17-cv-01552
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Taylor v. Pfister, (N.D. Ill. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

JOHN E. TAYLOR (R-66376) ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) No. 17 C 1552 ) WALTER NICHOLSON, Warden,1 ) Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer Stateville Correctional Center, ) ) Respondent. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Three weeks after marrying John E. Taylor, Nickole Kitchen died at his hands. Taylor left her body in a locked bedroom and fled to Virginia, but was apprehended there, and later convicted and sentenced to sixty years in prison. Taylor now seeks habeas corpus relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, asserting two claims: (1) that the trial court erred by refusing to issue a ruling on his motion in limine to bar admission of his prior convictions, should he choose to testify; and (2) that his Confrontation Clause rights were violated when a medical expert who did not prepare the autopsy report was permitted to testify about the conclusions in that report. For reasons explained below, the court concludes neither of his claims supports habeas relief. FACTS In an unpublished order affirming Taylor’s conviction, the Illinois Appellate Court summarized the trial testimony. Taylor does not challenge the state court’s findings, and this court presumes they are correct, absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1); Daniels v. Knight, 476 F.3d 426, 434 (7th Cir. 2007).

1 During the pendency of this case, Walter Nicholson replaced Randy Pfister as Petitioner’s custodian at the Stateville Correctional Center. Nicholson has been substituted as the proper Respondent. See FED. R. CIV. P. 25(d). The Prosecution’s Case Nickole Kitchen and John Taylor were married on September 27, 2003. (Unpublished Order, People v. Taylor, No. 03 CR 26182, 9/18/2010 [15-9] (hereinafter, “Unpublished Order”), at 3.) The couple traveled to Florida for their honeymoon, but Nickole returned to her mother’s home by herself after just four days—“hysterical,” her mother recalled. Id. On October 14, 2003, the night she died, Nickole was at her mother’s home. Her mother had gone to the store with another family member, but Nickole’s uncle, Little Kitchen, was there watching television with his own uncle when Taylor rang the doorbell. (Id. at 3-4.) Nickole met him at the door and the couple went into the bedroom. (Id. at 4.) At some point, Little Kitchen’s daughter Vicky Richard arrived with her own daughters. Vicky Richard was visiting with her grandmother, who was also at home, in the bedroom adjacent to Nickole’s. (Id.) Vicky Richard “heard something seem like it had fell on the floor and . . . a noise [sounded like] ‘huh’” from the next bedroom. Vicky did not hear any screaming, and believed Nickole and Taylor were engaged in sex. (Id. at 4, 5.) At some point thereafter, Taylor left the apartment by himself. (Id.) As he was leaving, Taylor spoke to Vicky Richard’s daughter, LaSharon Richard, briefly about LaSharon’s college applications. (Id.) LaSharon observed that Taylor’s shirt was open, his shirt tail was out, and his shoes were untied, but she did not observe any visible injuries, and he appeared to be calm. (Id.) Vicky Richard had seen Taylor leave Nickole’s bedroom, and Little Kitchen saw him leave the apartment, as well. (Id. at 4, 5.) Concerned about Nickole, Vicky knocked on the bedroom door and, when she got no response, picked the lock with a paper clip. (Id. at 4.) Inside, Little Kitchen and Vicky Richard found Nickole’s unresponsive body on the bed. (Id. at 5.) Vicky observed marks on Nickole’s lip and neck, and LaSharon observed that Nickole’s body appeared purple. (Id.) Attempts to revive Nickole were unsuccessful. (Id.) The medical examiner, Dr. Ponni Arunkumar, reviewed an autopsy report prepared by a forensic pathologist who moved to New York prior to trial. (Id. at 9.) Dr. Arunkumar described injuries, including abrasions and bruising on Nickole’s face, neck, arm, and thigh; hemorrhaging in her eyes, and internal injuries to her neck, scalp, and tongue. (Id. at 10.) Dr. Arunkumar concluded that strangulation was the cause of Nickole’s death; she noted that death from strangulation can occur in three-and-a-half to six minutes. (Id. at 9.) The jury heard testimony from other women with whom Taylor had relationships before his marriage to Nickole. Taylor had proposed to Tasha Jones, and she had a child by him. (Id. at 6.) Taylor called Jones on October 10, 2003, crying, and told Jones “he was getting a divorce and believed his wife was going to send him back to jail.” (Id.) Then, on October 14, Taylor returned to Jones’s home, told her his marriage was being annulled, that his wife Nickole “was violent,” and that he wanted to reconcile with Jones. (Id.) Before leaving Jones’s home, Taylor received a call from Nickole and “was in a happy mood” when he left. (Id. at 7.) Later that day, however, Taylor called Jones and stated, “‘It’s over, it’s over, Nickole’s gone. I’m sorry, I love you. Take care of my son.’” (Id. at 6.) When he spoke to her next, on October 16 or 17, Jones confirmed that Nickole had died (the record does not disclose how or when she learned this), and Taylor responded by saying that “there was nothing left for him to do but kill himself.” (Id. at 7.) On October 20, 2003, Taylor called Tracey Garfield, whom he had also dated prior to his marriage to Nickole. (Id. at 6.) Taylor left a voicemail message saying that his “marriage was a mistake and he should have married her [Garfield] instead of Nickole, and that he had killed her and was going to kill himself.” (Id.) Taylor did not carry out these suicide threats. Instead, he fled the jurisdiction. FBI Agent Matthew Alcoke testified that he tracked Taylor’s automobile to New York City. (Id. at 7.) From there, Alcoke learned, Taylor rented another car and drove to Virginia. (Id. at 8.) Two other FBI agents attempted to take Taylor into custody from the Virginia hotel room where he was staying, but their efforts were unsuccessful, and Taylor was seized by local SWAT team officers. (Id.) On his return from Virginia, Taylor told a law enforcement officer that he knew he had killed Nicole and that he “‘ha[d] to live with it.’” (Id. at 15.) Defense Case When the prosecution rested, Taylor called two character witnesses: a member of his church, and the church pastor, both of whom characterized him as a peaceful person. (Id. at 10.) Taylor also testified in his own defense. He acknowledged having committed robberies in the 1980’s as a result of drug addiction, and serving time in prison. (Id.) After his release, Taylor became a minister, and met Nickole while preaching at the Joshua Missionary Baptist Church. (Id. at 11.) After the wedding in September 2003, Taylor said, he and Nickole traveled to Florida for a honeymoon; he explained that Nickole left early and flew home to be with her ailing grandmother, while Taylor himself remained behind for a preaching assignment in Orlando. (Id.) On cross-examination, Taylor acknowledged he had been arrested for domestic battery while in Florida, but he denied that was the day that Nicole left for home. (Id. at 14.) He recalled that Nickole met him at the airport on his return, that they spent that night and the next night together, and that he saw her every day at her mother’s home. (Id. at 11.) Taylor confirmed that he was at the home of Tasha Jones on October 14, 2003, visiting his son. (Id.) He testified that Nickole called him, and he left Jones’s home, feeling happy about seeing his wife. (Id.) On his arrival at her mother’s home, Nickole let Taylor into the apartment and directed him to the bedroom, where he closed and locked the door. (Id.

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Taylor v. Pfister, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-pfister-ilnd-2018.