Terrence Echols v. Michele Ricci

492 F. App'x 301
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2012
Docket11-3541
StatusUnpublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 492 F. App'x 301 (Terrence Echols v. Michele Ricci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terrence Echols v. Michele Ricci, 492 F. App'x 301 (3d Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Terrence Echols appeals the judgment of the United States District Court of the District of New Jersey denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Echols argues that his petition should have been granted due to ineffective assistance of counsel. For the following reasons, we will affirm.

I. Background

A. Facts

Franklin Powell was a drug dealer in New Jersey and sold cocaine for prices that undercut the business of a rival drug gang known as the “Hit Squad.” The Hit Squad responded by targeting Powell and, on the night of September 3, 1994, two assailants shot and killed him in his Newark residence. On the night of the shooting, the two men approached Powell’s apartment with their faces covered. One of the assailants entered through the back door with a gun while the other came through the front of the building carrying an automatic weapon. The two chased Powell upstairs and shot him as he attempted to protect his sister, Lisa Lucas.

In the subsequent police investigation, a witness named Darrell Jones identified Joseph Brown and Echols as Powell’s killers. Jones, who was at the scene, told police that he saw Brown kick down Powell’s front door. 1 Jones then heard shots and saw two men, Brown and Echols, flee from the apartment. Based on Jones’s statement, police apprehended Brown and Echols.

Upon his arrest, Echols gave a statement to the police indicating that he was with a number of people in a parking lot located within view of the back door of Powell’s residence, and that he ran with others when he heard the shots. Echols stated that he did not shoot anyone and that a man named Keith Eutsey had killed Powell. Echols passed a polygraph test administered by police. Based on Echols’s statement and the polygraph results, he was released and the police arrested Eut-sey and charged him with Powell’s murder. Later, however, Echols admitted to Eut-sey’s private detective that he had falsely accused Eutsey, and, as a result, the state dropped the charges. against Eutsey and renewed their investigative efforts. That investigation ultimately produced three additional witnesses who implicated Echols as one of Powell’s assailants.

*303 The first of those witnesses, Shalika Thomason, Echols’s former girlfriend, came forward after Echols accosted her with a knife on November 10, 1994 and tried to force her to leave her apartment with him, complaining that he would serve 25 years in prison because of her. 2 Tho-mason told police officers that she saw Echols enter Powell’s home on the night of the murder and that she saw him come out of the home right after the shooting. 3 The second witness, Tracey Irvin, the mother of Powell’s son, came forward on May 20, 1995 after Echols told her to stop talking about the murder or else he would kill her. 4 She told police that she saw Echols running from the back of Powell’s house holding his side on the night of the murder. The third witness, Ada Dansby, is another former girlfriend of Echols who has a son with him. She told police that, on June 5, 1995, Echols robbed her and threatened to kill their son because his name, Shaquill, was similar to Powell’s nickname, Quill. 5 According to Dansby’s statement, Echols “admitted to killing [Powell] ... when he said to me that he was going to do to my [s]on like he did to Quill.” (App. at 436a.)

B. Trial

A grand jury indicted Echols in connection with the killing of Powell, charging him with, among other things, felony murder, aggravated manslaughter, third degree burglary, and weapons offenses. In June 1996, Brown and Echols were tried jointly for Powell’s murder in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division. By that time, each of the four witnesses against Echols had recanted their statements to police except for Irvin. During his opening statement, the prosecutor sought to explain the recanted statements that would come up during the course of the 18-day trial. He said:

[Y]ou are going to have people [recant their prior statements].... Listen to everything with an open mind. These are not people like you[, who] are able to sit in a fairly nice courtroom in Essex County. [Court] officers are here, so that you can feel safe and comfortable. You know that nothing is going to happen to you. You are just hearing evidence. Think about the people who are living in the community and why they might say, [w]ell, my son is more important. My life is more important. I never saw nothing. I don’t want to be involved anymore. Get me out of this.

(App. at 270a.)

The prosecution called Jones, Thomason, Dansby, and Irvin, among other witnesses, to testify. Jones testified that he had lied when he told the police that he saw Brown and Echols at the scene of the murder. In *304 explaining his prior statements, Jones said that he owed Brown money and implicated him in order to escape repayment of the debt. Jones further claimed that he was scared of what the detectives would have done with him had he not implicated Brown and Echols.

In her testimony, Dansby insisted that she could not recall any of her prior statements to police implicating Echols in the crime. Dansby testified that she could not recall telling police that Echols admitted to her that he had killed Powell and that he was bragging about the murder. She further testified that she could not recall telling police that Echols threatened to kill her son Shaquill like he had killed Powell. Perhaps explaining her memory lapse, Dansby said that, on the morning of her testimony, someone “put a gun in [her] face” and told her to “shut up.” (App. at 288a.)

Thomason testified that she could not recall making statements to police after the murder, and that she never told police that Echols had kidnapped her at knife-point. She testified that she had lied to police when she told them that she saw Brown and Echols put on masks, enter Powell’s residence, and then exit the building shortly after she heard gunshots. She said that she lied to police because Echols had cheated on her and had a baby with Dansby while she and Echols were still together.

Irvin was the only witness of the four who did not recant her statement to police. She testified that, after Powell was shot, she saw Echols running from the home and apparently holding something. She further testified that Echols threatened to kill her if she kept talking about the Powell murder.

In investigating possible defenses, Echols’s trial counsel noted that Echols told police that he was in the parking lot near Powell’s residence at the time of the murder and that “Rasheed” or “Rashine” saw him in the parking lot as shots were fired. Echols’s counsel presumed that Echols was referring to Rashine Donaldson, but he discovered that Donaldson’s statements to police would likely not allow for an alibi defense. 6

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492 F. App'x 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrence-echols-v-michele-ricci-ca3-2012.