Terry Brown v. Superintendent Greene SCI

834 F.3d 506, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 15336, 2016 WL 4434398
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2016
Docket14-2655
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 834 F.3d 506 (Terry Brown v. Superintendent Greene SCI) 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
Terry Brown v. Superintendent Greene SCI, 834 F.3d 506, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 15336, 2016 WL 4434398 (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION THE COURT

AMBRO, Circuit Judge

This case has a familiar cast of characters: two co-defendants, a confession, and a jury. And, for the most part, it follows a conventional storyline. In the opening chapter, one of the defendants '(Miguel Garcia) in a murder case gives a confession to the .police that, in addition to being self-incriminating, says that the other defendant (Antonio Lambert 1 ) pulled the trigger. When Lambert and Garcia are jointly tried in Pennsylvania state court, the latter declines to testify, thereby depriving the former of the ability to cross-examine him about the confession. The judge therefore redacts the confession in an effort to comply with Bruton v. United States, 391 U.S. 123, 88 S.Ct. 1620, 20 L.Ed.2d 476 (1968). As a result, when the jury hears Garcia’s confession, Lambert’s name is replaced with terms like “the other guy.” The idea is that the inability to cross-examine Garcia is harmless if the jury has no reason to think that the confession implicates Lambert.

During closing arguments, however, there is a twist when the prosecutor unmasks Lambert and reveals to the jurors that he has been, all along, “the' other guy.” Now, instead of a conclusion, we have a sequel. Based on a Sixth Amendment violation caused by the closing arguments, we conclude that Lambert is entitled to relief. We therefore remand so that the District Court can give Pennsylvania (the “Commonwealth”) the option either to retry or release him.

I. Background

A. The crime

Mary Edmond 2 was shot near a gas station in North Philadelphia on February 23, 2001, and she died later that day from, her injuries. The police believed that Lambert pulled the trigger as part of a robbery gone wrong. Earlier in the day, Garcia and his friend Anthony Cheatham had been driving around Philadelphia and smoking marijuana in Garcia’s Monte Carlo. With Garcia at the wheel, the pair picked up Lambert, and together the three of them drove to North Philadelphia to buy Xanax pills. Afterward, they drove past the gas station, and Lambert told Garcia to pull over. From that point onward, two competing narratives emerge. One comes from a statement that Cheatham gave the police after the shooting coupled with his testimony at trial. The second is from Garcia’s statement to the police, which is at the *509 core of this appeal. We examine each of the narratives in turn.

Cheatham’s version is that he fell asleep in the car after taking a Xanax pill. When the trio reached the gas station, he was “[l]aid back, stretched out” in the back seat. Lambert and Garcia got out of the car, and although Cheatham could not see them, he heard a gunshot. When Lambert and Garcia returned to the car, the latter asked, ‘What the fuck did you just do?” Lambert then pointed a gun at Garcia and 'ordered him to drive away. Afterward, Lambert and Garcia dropped Cheatham off at a friend’s house. Detectives found Cheatham the next morning at his grandmother’s house, and he went with them to police headquarters, where he was threatened with charges if he did not cooperate. He gave a statement at that time and later testified at the joint trial of Lambert and Garcia. He was not charged ip connection with Edmond’s death.

Garcia, meanwhile, had a different story, which he outlined in a confession 3 to the police. In his version, he stayed in the car while Lambert and Cheatham got out and approached the victim. Garcia saw a “tussle” and witnessed the “lady ... backing up holding her purse.” He continued, “She yanked back, she resisted and I heard a gunshot.” When the two companions got back in the car, Lambert said that he had “banged the bitch” because she “wouldn’t give up her pocketbook.” This was a preview of Garcia’s defense at trial, which was that he was merely a bystander to the crime.

Whereas Cheatham’s account cut off shortly after the shooting, when he got to his friend’s house, Garcia’s version described additional events. After dropping off Cheatham, Lambert went with Garcia to the latter’s house. Lambert pulled out the gun and told Garcia that “you better not ever cross me or snitch on me because you know what the deal is.” Garcia understood this to mean that Lambert would kill him.

After seeing the gun, Garcia’s mother asked them to leave. They drove away, and in the early hours of February 24 the two of them, along with another passenger (not Cheatham), were pulled over. Garcia was driving and attempted to flee, but the car crashed. According to Garcia, Lambert threw him the gun and tried to escape on foot. Garcia, now holding the weapon, attempted to do the same. Shortly afterward, officers apprehended both of them.

B. The trial

The Commonwealth charged Lambert and Garcia with murder (first degree for the former and second degree for the latter), conspiracy, robbery, and possession of an instrument of crime. It sought a joint trial in state court for the two defendants, and Lambert responded with a motion to sever (i.e., to have a separate trial for each defendant). At the time, it was clear that the Commonwealth intended to use Garcia’s confession and that the latter was planning to invoke his Fifth Amendment rights by not testifying at trial. Lambert’s counsel argued that the combined effect— the introduction of the confession without any ability to cross-examine Garcia — violated the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause.

The trial judge agreed that the Commonwealth could not, under those circumstances, introduce a full version of Garcia’s confession without violating the Confrontation Clause. As discussed in *510 Part III below, that would have been a classic violation of the Supreme Court’s Bruton decision. However, relying on other Supreme Court decisions interpreting Bruton, the judge determined that the confession could be redacted in a way that satisfied the Sixth Amendment, thereby negating the need for separate trials. Under Bruton, it is proper for the jury to consider the confession against Garcia; it only becomes problematic to use it against Lambert. If the confession were redacted so that the jury did not know it implicated Lambert, the judge reasoned, the risk of improper use could be contained. On that basis, the judge denied the motion to sever.

With severance off the table, the parties discussed how to implement the redac-tions. They ultimately settled on using terms such as “the other guy,” “one of the guys,” or “the guy with the gun” to replace Lambert’s name in the confession. 4 At trial, a detective read to the jury the redacted confession, which took the form of questions posed to Garcia and his answers. Before the reading, the judge instructed the jurors that the confession “may be considered as evidence only against [Garcia]” and that they “must not consider the statement as evidence against defendant Antonio Lambert.” The following is, for our purposes, the key portion of what the jury heard.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
834 F.3d 506, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 15336, 2016 WL 4434398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-brown-v-superintendent-greene-sci-ca3-2016.