Terrance Mack v. Howard A. Peters, Iii, Director, Department of Corrections, State of Illinois

80 F.3d 230, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 6266, 1996 WL 149393
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1996
Docket94-3849
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 80 F.3d 230 (Terrance Mack v. Howard A. Peters, Iii, Director, Department of Corrections, State of Illinois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terrance Mack v. Howard A. Peters, Iii, Director, Department of Corrections, State of Illinois, 80 F.3d 230, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 6266, 1996 WL 149393 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

MANION, Circuit Judge.

Convicted murderer Terrance Mack seeks a writ of habeas corpus which the district court denied. While a member of the Black Gangster Disciples gang, Mack attempted to murder an adversary who had “disrespected” a fellow gang member. Mack shot the youth from a moving car. While wounding the youth, Mack also shot and killed an eleven-year-old boy standing nearby. Mack, along with the driver of the car, Adrian Hennon, and another passenger were arrested soon after. Mack and Hennon’s cases were severed and they were tried simultaneously before separate juries, with Hennon’s defense case following Mack’s. Both juries convicted. After exhausting his direct appeals, Mack filed the habeas petition now before us. Mack claims he was denied his constitutional right to a fair trial by the state trial court’s refusal to completely sever his case from Hennon’s and its failure to reorder the trial so that Hennon’s defense case would precede *232 Mack’s, permitting Hennon to testify on Mack’s behalf. Because we find no constitutional error with Mack’s trial, we affirm the district court’s denial of the writ.

I.

A The Shooting

At Mack’s trial, the State of Illinois introduced through eyewitness testimony evidence of the following chain of events: 1 On Friday, September 9, 1988, Darren Harris, Devon Miller, Jason Murray, Elwood Ver-rett, Esau Asad, and Esau Asad’s eleven-year-old brother Abdulah Asad were standing together in a public park across from the Chicago Vocational High School. Several other young men in a Suzuki Samurai drove up and began yelling at Jason Murray after Murray crossed the street to get ice cream. The Suzuki left but retened shortly accompanied by a grey Chevrolet Nova containing Terrance Mack, Adrian Hennon, and Richard Terrell. The men in both ears, including Mack, were members of the Black Gangster Disciples gang.

Several of those in the cars began yelling and “throwing gang signs” at the young men in the park. The young men in the park testified that they yelled back at the others to leave them alone, that they were not members of any gang. Mack disputed this point at trial. He accused the other young men of being members of the Vice Lords, although he also testified he had never seen them before. Other than Mack’s accusation from the stand neither the State nor Mack’s attorney elicited any testimony or introduced any evidence that the young men in the park belonged to any gang. During the confrontation at the park, Mack pointed people out and shouted, depending upon whose testimony we believe, “shoot him,” “pop him,” 2 or “pop that shorty.”

The Black Gangster Disciples then reentered the Suzuki and Nova and drove down the street. Verrett testified that he saw Mack and Hennon get into the Nova. The Suzuki drove off but the Nova turned around and passed in front of the young men in the park. According to Verrett, as the Nova drove by Terrance Mack stuck his arm out the window and fired a number of shots in the direction of the young men in the park. All of the others who were shot at testified at trial that they clearly saw Mack shooting from the front passenger’s window while Hennon was driving the car.

The apparent target of the shooting, Jason Murray, was shot in the arm. Eleven-year-old Abdulah Asad was shot in the back. His brother Esau Asad carried Abdulah to a police car that arrived at the far end of the park, and cared for him as the car raced the Asad brothers and Jason Murray to the hospital. Abdulah Asad was dead on arrival from a bullet having passed through his heart.

B. The Arrest

Within minutes of the shooting, and while en route to the hospital, police officer Earl Parks radioed an alert with a description of the grey Nova, which witnesses had described to Parks as the injured young men were loaded into the police car. Cruising several blocks away, Officer Ronald Forgue heard the call and five or six minutes later observed a car matching the description pass him going the other direction. Officer For-gue pursued the Nova, which attempted to escape at high speed. Several minutes later, the car stopped for a moment under a viaduct and Mack and Terrell unsuccessfully attempted to flee on foot. The police apprehended them and took them to the police station. Hennon, who fled in the car while the police pursued Mack and Terrell, was arrested soon after.

Later that evening, Mack and Hennon were presented in a police lineup to three of the' eyewitnesses, Esau Asad, Harris, and Miller. Each identified Mack as the shooter and Hennon as the driver of the Nova. Asad, *233 Hands, and Miller, along with eyewitnesses Venett and Munay also identified Mack and Hennon at trial as the shooter and driver respectively. They also testified that they had never seen Mack prior to the confrontation preceding the shooting. Mack, Hennon, and Terrell were subsequently indicted and charged with first-degree murder and armed violence for the shooting of Abdulah Asad, and attempted first-degree murder, aggravated battery, and armed violence for the shooting of Jason Murray.

C. The Trial

All three defendants were tried in front of the same judge. As a preliminary matter, the judge severed the trials of all three defendants, but ordered that Mack and Hennon be tried simultaneously before separate juries; Terrell’s ease was set for a later date because it was not in a posture to go to trial.

The judge ordered that at Mack and Hen-non’s trials, the government would present its case in front of both juries, but the individual juries would hear only the cross-examination conducted by the defendant’s attorney whose case that jury was deciding. In other words, when Mack’s attorney cross-examined the government’s witnesses, Hen-non’s jury would be excused, and vice versa. Mack’s defense case would then proceed, as his name was first on the indictment. At the conclusion of Mack’s defense the case would be sent to the jury hearing his case and Hennon would proceed with his defense. 3 Both Mack’s and Hennon’s attorneys timely objected to this approach, preserving the issue for appeal.

D. Mack’s Defense

At trial, Mack’s sole theory of defense was misidentification — that he was not the gunman. Mack testified that although he had been in the Nova when it arrived at the park, and although he had been in the Nova shortly after the shooting when it was fleeing from the police, he had not been in the Nova during the time period in between, when somebody else riding in the Nova had shot at the boy and the witnesses from the front passenger’s window. Mack testified that following the initial confrontation by the park, he had entered the Suzuki and another member of the gang, Terrance Hill, had entered the Nova in his place. Mack also testified that upon leaving the park, he rode in the Suzuki to his grandmother’s house where he also lived. He remained there for fifteen minutes with his aunt, his uncle, one of his uncle’s friends, and his grandmother.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F.3d 230, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 6266, 1996 WL 149393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrance-mack-v-howard-a-peters-iii-director-department-of-ca7-1996.