Terry Coley v. MJ King

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJuly 7, 2026
Docket6:24-cv-06003
StatusUnknown

This text of Terry Coley v. MJ King (Terry Coley v. MJ King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terry Coley v. MJ King, (W.D.N.Y. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

TERRY COLEY, DECISION AND ORDER

Petitioner, v. 6:24-CV-06003 EAW

MJ KING,

Respondent.

I. INTRODUCTION Pro se petitioner Terry Coley (“Petitioner”), a prisoner in the custody of the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision,1 seeks a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (Dkt. 1). Petitioner challenges the constitutionality of the judgment entered against him on October 16, 2017, in New York State Supreme Court, Monroe County (Moran, J.). (Id. at 1).2 Petitioner was convicted after a jury trial of five counts of second-degree robbery (New York Penal Law (“P.L.”) § 160.10(2)(b)). He is presently serving an aggregate sentence of 20 years in prison, to be followed by five years of post-release supervision. For the reasons below, the request for a writ of habeas corpus is denied, and the petition is dismissed.

1 See New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision Incarcerated Lookup, available at https://nysdoccslookup.doccs.ny.gov/ (search results for DIN 17B3185) (last accessed July 6, 2026).

2 Page citations to pleadings filed by Petitioner and Respondent are to the pagination automatically generated by the Court’s case management and electronic filing system (CM/ECF) and located in the header of each page. II. BACKGROUND A. Crime and Indictment The judgment of conviction at issue stems from a series of armed robberies in the

Town of Irondequoit during the months of May, June, August, and September 2016. The perpetrator—wearing the same all-black outfit and ski mask and wielding the same small black gun—robbed the Kwik Fill gas station on Hudson Avenue four times and the Irondequoit branch of the ESL Federal Credit Union (“ESL”) once. Each incident was captured on surveillance video.

Petitioner was apprehended shortly after the last Kwik Fill robbery on September 14, 2016. Police followed a GPS tracker that had been concealed in stolen money to a nearby apartment Petitioner shared with his aunt. Petitioner was found in his bedroom with the stolen money, the disassembled GPS tracker, items of black clothing and footwear, and two black ski masks.

On March 7, 2017, a Monroe County grand jury returned indictment number 2017- 0225 charging Petitioner with five counts of P.L. § 160.10(2)(b), an armed felony offense as defined in New York Criminal Procedure Law (“C.P.L.”) § 1.20(41). (SR: 85-90).3

3 Citations to “SR:” refer to the Bates-stamped page numbers of the state court records, filed at Docket 15-2. B. Trial 1. The Prosecution’s Case a. The May 20, 2016 Kwik Fill Robbery

At about 9:20 p.m. on May 20, 2016, a slender man dressed all in black, wearing a ski mask, and clutching “something shiny in his hands,” ran in front of Natasha Astacio’s car as she was driving down Hudson Avenue; the man was heading straight towards the Kwik Fill gas station. (T: 300-03).4 Ashley Robare (“Robare”), who was working as the Kwik Fill clerk, was getting

ready to close for the night. The man ran into the store, held a small black gun to her face, and told her to give him all the money from the register. (T: 563-64). Robare described the perpetrator as an African-American man, wearing a black ski mask, black sweatshirt, black pants, and black gloves. (T: 564-66). Robare, who was “very close” to the robber, described the mask as having no nose opening, just eye and mouth openings with extra

embroidery around them. (T: 564-65). Robare described the gloves the perpetrator wore as “all black,” with “a little part of red on it.” (T: 566). She identified the mask and gloves, People’s Exhibits 46 and 48, respectively, at trial. (T: 565-66). Robare identified People’s Exhibit 49 as the same gun the perpetrator used during the robbery, describing how he had pulled the slide back and pointed it at her face. (T: 566-68). Robare testified that the robber

left the store after pocketing approximately $260 from the cash register. (T: 268).

4 Citations to “T:” refer to the original pagination of the trial transcript, filed at pages 27 to 748 of Docket 15-3. Citations to “S:” refer to the original pagination of the sentencing transcript, filed at pages 749 to 759 of Docket 15-3. Dezmond Nauden was in his car across the street from the Kwik Fill when a figure wearing black pants, black shoes, and a black hoodie “darted past” him, heading away from the Kwik Fill and towards the Hill Court Circle apartments just down the road. (T: 398-

401, 568-70). b. The June 20, 2016 ESL Robbery When the ESL Irondequoit branch opened at 9:00 a.m. on June 20, 2016, a man dressed in a black ski mask, a black hoodie, black pants, black shoes, black gloves, and brandishing a small black gun pushed past the entering customers and demanded “all the

money in the branch.” (See, e.g., T: 378, 393, 408). The perpetrator went down the line of bank tellers and pointed the gun at each of them, telling them to put all their drawer money in a bag and threatening to shoot them if they did not comply, along with any bank customers who tried to leave. (See, e.g., T: 379, 380-81, T: 411-12). The perpetrator was described by the tellers and customers as a slender man in his twenties, around six feet tall,

and either Latino or a light-skinned African-American man, based on the skin exposed around the eye and mouth holes in the mask he was wearing. (See, e.g., T: 380, 384-85 (Michael Torres); T: 396-97 (Cheryl Mercendetti); T: 408-09, 423, 426 (Dianalis Bianchi); T: 429 (Amber Heintzelman); T: 436-38 (Stephanie Kooijmans); T: 442-44 (Felicia Bryant), T: 455-56 (Edilberto Rosa-Sosa); T: 461-62 (Alberto Jimenez Zilueta); T: 474

(Palmire Rolle); T: 482-83 (Cynthia Joseph)). The robber repeatedly pulled the slide back to cock the gun, though nothing ejected from the firearm. (See, e.g., T: 393, 412-13, 427- 28, 445, 475, 550-51). After holding each teller at gunpoint while they emptied their drawer, the perpetrator grabbed the bag filled with nearly $20,000 in cash and fled the bank. (T: 394, 411-18). Several of the tellers had placed dye packs in the bag, which exploded seconds after the

perpetrator stepped outside the bank. (T: 269, 394, 417-18). The robber abandoned the stained cash in the parking lot and headed eastbound into the nearby Hill Court Circle apartment complex. (T: 464-65, 495-98). Numerous witnesses identified People’s Exhibits 46, 47, and 48, respectively, as the ski mask, hooded sweatshirt, and gloves worn by the robber; and People’s Exhibit 49 as

the gun used during the robbery. (See, e.g., T: 381-82, 409-10, 416, 427, 443-45, 462-63, 47, 494, 500, 550-51). c. The August 3, 2016 Kwik Fill Robbery Around 9:30 p.m. on August 3, 2016, Kwik Fill employees LaJames Ivey (“Ivey”) and Keenan Graves (“Graves”) were preparing to close for the night when a man with a

gun came into the store. (T: 227, 522). Ivey was in the back office; Graves was at the cash register. (T: 227). The perpetrator had a slender build, appeared to be either Latino or a light-skinned black man, and wore a black hoodie, black jeans, black shoes, black gloves, and a black ski mask which he “kept pulling down . . . trying to hide something,” like “some type of tattoo.” (T: 228-29, 524-25). Each time the perpetrator pulled down on his

mask, he “reveal[ed] a big portion of his face.” (T: 247, 250-51). The perpetrator walked up to Graves, pointed the gun at him, cocked it, and demanded all the cash in the drawer. (T: 227, 525). He then appeared to notice Ivey sitting in the manager’s office, pointed the gun at him, and said to both employees: “Move, you’re dead.” (T: 228, 235). Graves handed over all the money from the register, and the man walked out of the

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