Terrence Williams v. Raymond Booker

454 F. App'x 475
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 5, 2012
Docket10-1785
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 454 F. App'x 475 (Terrence Williams v. Raymond Booker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terrence Williams v. Raymond Booker, 454 F. App'x 475 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellee Terrence Williams, a Michigan state prisoner, successfully petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Williams’s petition alleged ineffective assistance of trial counsel based on his attorney’s failure to communicate a favorable plea agreement to him. Because this claim was procedurally defaulted and because Williams cannot establish cause to surmount this procedural roadblock, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of the writ.

I. BACKGROUND

In October 2002, a Saginaw County jury convicted Williams of conspiring to commit first-degree murder, being a felon in possession of a fireax-m, and two counts of possessing a firearm during the commission of a felony. These convictions arose from the shooting of Frederic Stewart, who was shot four times while sitting in a parked vehicle in his driveway and sustained multiple injuries. People v. Williams, 2004 WL 1459559, at *1-2 (Mich.App. June 29, 2004). Williams was tried with three co-defendants, and was sentenced to concurrent terms of two years in prison for each felony firearm conviction, followed by life imprisonment for the conspiracy conviction, and a concurrent term of forty-two to ninety-two months for the felon in possession conviction.

Following these convictions, Williams appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals, raising six claims, including challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, the denial of a directed verdict, the jury instructions, the validity of the verdict, and the denial of a mistrial. Id. at 1-6. The appellate court affirmed the convictions and sentences, id. at 6, and the Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal. People v. Williams, 471 Mich. 954, 690 N.W.2d 118 (Mich.2004).

Some five years after his trial in state court, Williams filed a post-conviction petition raising an ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on his claim that his trial attorney unilaterally rejected a favorable plea agreement offer and failed to promptly inform him of the proposed agreement. Because Michigan law required this claim to be first raised on direct appeal and Williams failed to do so, the court on collateral review deemed it procedurally defaulted. That court also found Williams unable to demonstrate good cause to overcome this procedural default and denied his motion for relief from judgment. The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed this decision and the Michigan Supreme Court denied *477 Williams’s leave to appeal, both courts finding Williams unable to meet his burden of establishing good cause to forgive the procedural default. See People v. Williams, 477 Mich. 997, 725 N.W.2d 670 (2007).

After exhausting all direct and collateral appeals, Williams filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Eastern District of Michigan under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. As one basis for relief, Williams advanced his ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim. This claim presupposed the existence of a plea agreement offer, a fact the Warden heavily contested. Because the issue was in great dispute, the district court held three evidentiary hearings and heard testimony from Williams, the trial attorney, the prosecutor, the appellate counsel, and Williams’s stepfather. The district court sought to establish whether a plea agreement offer was ever extended and, if so, whether Williams’s trial counsel unilaterally rejected it.

Williams’s trial lawyer, James Gust, testified that on the first day of trial, just before voir dire, “all the defendants and the defense attorneys were in a jury room” together to discuss the plea offer. Gust’s memory was admittedly hazy, but he testified that, under the terms of the proposed agreement, Williams would have received roughly five years’ imprisonment, though all of the codefendants would have had to accept the plea offer. Gust remembered discussing the offer with Williams and his stepfather, Reginald Smith, and testified that Williams was opposed to accepting the agreement. Smith later testified that he never discussed a plea agreement with Gust.

The prosecutor, Steven Fenner, testified that he was unaware of any proposed plea agreement. Fenner had no recollection of extending an offer, could not find any mention of an offer in the ease file, and found it inconceivable that he would have offered such a favorable plea agreement in a conspiracy to commit first-degree murder case. He also testified that he had no knowledge of a pre-voir dire meeting in the jury room, but he found it “very unusual” that the court would permit defendants to meet there due to security concerns. As the trial attorney, Fenner did not handle the preliminary stages of the case, but he testified that he had no knowledge of a predecessor offering a plea agreement.

Williams denied the existence of a prevoir dire meeting with all the defendants and their counsel and testified, rather, that his attorney first apprised him of the plea offer immediately following the victim’s testimony. According to Williams, Gust informed him that the prosecution extended an offer to plead guilty to both the possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony and the felon in possession charges, but that Gust had already rejected the offer.

Vincent Green, Williams’s appellate counsel during the direct appeal to the Michigan Court of Appeals, testified that he filed an appellate brief, raising six trial court errors. Although Green’s memory was hazy, he recalled visiting Williams twice as well as talking to him on the phone, and testified that Williams never informed him of the plea agreement Gust rejected. He further testified that, at the time of Williams’s appeal, he had handled only a small number of criminal appeals and likely had his law clerk draft the brief.

Relying essentially on only the testimony of Williams, most of it self-serving, the district court determined that a plea offer was extended, that Williams’s trial counsel failed to inform him of it, and that counsel unilaterally rejected the offer. In its May 28, 2010 opinion and order, the district court found that the trial counsel’s actions amounted to ineffective assistance of coun *478 sel and conditionally granted the writ of habeas corpus. Williams v. Booker, 715 F.Supp.2d 756 (E.D.Mich.2010). The district court found that even though the claim was procedurally defaulted due to Williams’s failure to raise it on direct appeal, Williams was able to satisfy the cause and prejudice standard to overcome the default because he received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel in not timely raising the issue. Id. at 762-65. The state filed an appeal, and the district court released Williams on bond pending appeal.

II. ANALYSIS

This Court reviews a district court’s legal conclusions, including its ultimate decision to grant or deny the writ, de novo. Satterlee v. Wolfenbarger,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 F. App'x 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrence-williams-v-raymond-booker-ca6-2012.