Thacker v. South Carolina

438 F. Supp. 447, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13917
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 20, 1977
DocketCiv. A. 77-1010
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 438 F. Supp. 447 (Thacker v. South Carolina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thacker v. South Carolina, 438 F. Supp. 447, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13917 (D.S.C. 1977).

Opinion

ORDER

BLATT, District Judge.

The petitioner is serving a sentence in North Carolina which commenced after he escaped from the South Carolina Department of Corrections in 1968. He was committed to the Department by the Court of General Sessions for Newberry County, the Honorable J. B. Ness, Presiding Judge, after he was found guilty of armed robbery on September 21, 1967. For an offense carrying a maximum sentence of twenty-five years, Judge Ness sentenced the petitioner to twenty-one years. No direct appeal was taken.

A prior petition for a writ of habeas corpus by the petitioner was dismissed by Order filed in Civil Action No. 76-1034 on Augu^ 27, 1976. At that time, the petitioner was awaiting the decision of the South Care na Supreme Court on his appeal of a denial of post-conviction relief by the Honorable Francis B. Nicholson, Resident Judge for the Eighth Judicial Circuit of South Carolina, making it clear that state remedies had not been effectively exhausted. The Supreme Court on May 2, 1977, affirmed Judge Nicholson’s decision in Memorandum Opinion No. 77-37, Thacker v. State. 1 Accordingly, as to all grounds raised in his state application, the petitioner has now exhausted his remedies in the courts of the state, as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254.

The petitioner has alleged four grounds for relief in his petition filed in this court on May 30, 1977. Before reviewing these grounds, it is appropriate to review the evidence of the crime for which petitioner was convicted, and the circumstances of his arrest, and the events that transpired shortly thereafter, including appointment of counsel.

Between 11:15 a. m. and noon on July 13, 1967, Mrs. Ida Mae Neel of Newberry left her job to drive home for lunch in her 1966 Plymouth automobile. She noticed nothing amiss upon arrival at the home she shared with her husband, who was at work at the time. She began preparing lunch, and while going to her bedroom a few minutes later, she caught a fleeting glimpse of a black male clad in a white shirt just before he struck her with a pistol. She recalls grasping for her assailant, but nothing else about the encounter. She could not identify her attacker, but she specifically recalled that she left her car keys in her pocketbook in the kitchen, and that she had $8.00 in the house, in denominations of one five dollar bill and three one dollar bills. Mr. Neel found his unconscious wife when he came home a short time later. She was transported to a hospital where it was determined that she had been struck on the head in two places, causing a skull fracture and a severe concussion. Mr. Neel testified that he had left home after his wife that morning, and that all doors were locked when he *450 left. After he returned home and discovered his injured wife, he determined that a rear screen door had been cut, and the door unlatched through the cut area. His wife’s yellow Plymouth was not at their home when he found her there unconscious, and two pistols he kept in their bedroom were missing.

Early police investigation uncovered the fact that several neighbors or near-neighbors of the Neel couple had seen a black male wearing a white shirt 2 in the vicinity of the Neel home before and after the time fixed by Mrs. Neel as the time she was assaulted. Three witnesses stated that they saw the male either driving Mrs. Neel’s Plymouth or parked by the side of the road leading from the Neel residence to U.S. Highway 76 near the Newberry Airport. 3 Two other witnesses stated that they had a close view of the defendant when he stopped at their home for a drink of water before leaving by foot walking toward the Neel residence. 4 Four of these five witnesses positively identified the petitioner, Johnny Thacker, as the person they saw in the vicinity of the Neel home, or in Mrs. Neel’s car, about the time of the incident in which Mrs. Neel was struck and robbed.

At approximately 1:00 p. m. on July 13, 1967, a man later positively identified as the petitioner wrecked Mrs. Neel’s Plymouth in the 1700 block of Gadsden Street in Columbia, near the Interstate 26 exit off the route to Columbia from Newberry. The occupant fled the scene after the officer saw him reach into the glove compartment of the Plymouth. A short time later, the petitioner was seen at the Federal Courthouse, where he was apprehended after being shot by a Columbia policeman on the edge of the court house parking lot. 5 A pistol identified by serial number as one of the two pistols taken from the Neel home was lying near the petitioner, and he had eight dollars in currency in his pocket, consisting of one five dollar bill and three one dollar bills.

On the afternoon of petitioner’s arrest, one of the Newberry witnesses who saw a black male driving Mrs. Neel’s Plymouth was brought to Columbia by Newberry officers to determine if he could identify Thacker. 6 He made the identification after viewing the left profile. 7

About two weeks later, the two Johnson women also made stationhouse identifications of Thacker in Newberry as the young man who stopped at their house for a brief chat and sought a glass of water on the day Mrs. Neel was robbed and hit on the head.

Although the petitioner’s attorneys fully cross-examined the State’s eyewitnesses, no motion to suppress identification evidence because of suggestive showups was made. 8 This omission is the core of the petitioner’s claims for relief here. He alleges that the showups without notice to his counsel vio *451 lated his rights under the Sixth Amendment, and that all identification testimony should have been suppressed because the one man showups were so impermissibly suggestive that they gave rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable mistaken identification, in violation of his right to due process. In addition, the petitioner claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel in several particulars. He lists the failure of his trial attorneys to seek the suppression of the allegedly tainted eyewitness testimony, the lengthy delay between the date of his attorneys’ appointments and their initial interviews with him, 9 the efforts of the attorneys to obtain releases from his case, 10 and what he contends to be an inhibited defense effort, lacking the degree of advocacy he would expect and prefer. 11

The petitioner’s grounds were fully discussed by Judge Nicholson in his Order denying post-conviction relief 12 entered after a hearing on the case (Tr. 221-229). 13

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Related

Green v. Loggins
461 F. Supp. 24 (N.D. California, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
438 F. Supp. 447, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thacker-v-south-carolina-scd-1977.