THOMPSON v. MCGINLEY

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 27, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-01042
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
THOMPSON v. MCGINLEY, (W.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

WILLIAM G. THOMPSON, ) ) Petitioner, ) Civil Action No. 17-1042 ) Magistrate Judge Maureen P. Kelly v. ) ) THOMAS MCGINLEY, Superintendent of ) SCI Coal Township, the ATTORNEY ) GENERAL OF THE COMMONWEALTH ) OF PENNSYLVANIA, and the DISTRICT ) ATTORNEY OF ALLEGHENY COUNTY, ) ) Respondents. )

OPINION AND ORDER

William G. Thompson (“Petitioner”) is a state prisoner, proceeding pro se, who has filed an Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus by a Person in State Custody pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (the “Amended Petition”). ECF Nos. 15 and 17.1 By means of the Amended Petition, he seeks to challenge his three first degree murder convictions and the resulting three life sentences made to run consecutive. For the reasons that follow, the Amended Petition will be denied because it is time barred and none of the grounds for relief merits the grant of federal habeas relief. Furthermore, because jurists

1 By text Order entered December 5, 2017, this Court deemed that Petitioner’s filings at ECF Nos. 15 and 17 would together constitute the operative Amended Petition and ordered the Respondents to address both filings as the Amended Petition. ECF No. 18. 1 of reason would not find this disposition of the Amended Petition debatable, a certificate of appealability will also be denied. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The Pennsylvania Superior Court in a Memorandum, filed February 12, 2012, addressing Petitioner’s direct appeal of his convictions, ECF No. 23-2 at 120 — 124, adopted the trial court’s recitation of the factual history recounted in the Opinion of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County filed on January 15,2001. ECF No. 23-1 at 101 — 186. Specifically, the Superior Court noted that “[t]he trial court has set forth an exhaustive recitation of the relevant facts and procedural history underlying these appeals in its Opinion. See Trial Court Opinion, 1/15/10, at 2—4 (procedural history), 8 — 28 (factual history). In the interest of brevity, we adopt the trial court’s recitation herein by reference.” ECF No. 23-2 at 121. The trial court recounted the facts of this case as follows:

On January 25, 2002, Terri Coles met her two children, i age 8 and age 13, at Mr. Tommy's Restaurant, which was located in the Homewood Section of the City of Pittsburgh. She had gone there to meet her children’s father, Parrish Freeman, Sr., (hereinafter referred to as "Freeman"), so that they could have dinner and then go to a movie. They had decided that they would treat their children to dinner out and a movie to celebrate the fact that a had just received a straight A report card. They arrived at approximately 6:30 p.m. and after talking with Freeman, they ordered their meals. Freeman was at a table talking to Thomas Washington, Sr., (hereinafter referred to as "Washington"), the owner of Mr. Tommy's Restaurant. Also at the table were Brian Freeman, Brian Shealey, Catrell Boyd, (hereinafter referred to as "Boyd") and Thomas Mitchell, (hereinafter referred to as “Mitchell"). Mitchell was unemployed and living on social security disability benefits as a result of the fact that he was a paraplegic, having been shot in the back a number of years earlier. Mitchell was waiting in Mr. Tommy's Restaurant for his new Cadillac Escalade to be washed at the car wash which was part of Washington's businesses and separated from the restaurant by a parking lot which served both businesses. In addition, he was waiting

for Boyd to deliver keys to his Lincoln Continental which he had allowed Boyd to use earlier but now needed to give to his mother so that she might use that vehicle. Mitchell supplemented his social security disability income by monies he received from being a drug dealer in the Homewood area.

At approximately 6:45 p.m., Shealey arrived and went to the table where Freeman was sitting. His purpose in coming to the restaurant was two-fold: first he wanted to sell some pills to Freeman and, second, he wanted to discuss the upgrading of Mr. Tommy's menu with Washington since he was a part-time cook. In light of the fact that Freeman's family was with him and that Freeman had indicated that he did not want to discuss a drug transaction, Shealey confined his discussions to Washington's menu upgrade. Before walking into the restaurant, Shealey noticed several men lurking near the cut in the fence that abutted the parking lot. He noticed that one of these individuals was much taller than the others and that his eyes were unusually large. He also noted that all of these individuals were dressed in black.

In January of 1995, Boyd plead guilty to the charge of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance and was sentenced to six and one-half to thirteen years. He was paroled in June of 2001. As a part of his restrictions on parole, he was not permitted to be involved with drugs, to consume alcohol or to possess a cellular phone. Despite these restrictions, Boyd had a cellular phone and, in fact, received a phone call shortly before Shealey entered the restaurant. Boyd wanted to keep his phone conversation private and moved from the table to a booth that was adjacent to the outside door that led into the restaurant. At some time between 6:56 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.2, two individuals all dressed in black with masks came into the restaurant, armed with semi-automatics and fired sixteen shots, fifteen of which resulted in casings being left at the scene and one live round.

2 The Commonwealth was able to virtually pinpoint the time that the shooters entered the restaurant since Mr. Tommy's Restaurant had a Pennsylvania lottery machine. That lottery machine would freeze, thereby preventing the cashier from taking any more bets at 6:56 p.m. The woman who was operating the lottery machine was waiting for the lottery numbers to be drawn at 7:00 p.m. so she could write them down, and they had not been drawn when the two shooters entered the restaurant.

Although the people in the restaurant initially maintained that they did not see anything, ultimately a basic description of the two shooters evolved, that being two individuals all dressed in black, with masks, and one of the two was substantially taller than the other. Boyd indicated that the taller of the two was at least six foot three. From discussions with witnesses, it was clear that the intended victim of this 3 shooting was Mitchell. Mitchell was shot ten times, nine to his torso, which effectively knocked him out of his wheelchair and a tenth was placed in his head from point-blank range, when the shorter of the two shooters ran over to him and put the gun to his head and fired. However, during the course of this execution, a who was getting a straw for her drink was shot three times. Her Mother, Terri Coles, was shot once in the shoulder and her father, Freeman, was shot three times. Terri Coles rushed over, picked up her daughter and ran to the kitchen for protection, imploring people to help her save her child. The two shooters then ran out of the building and through the parking lot. The police were called as were the paramedics and the paramedics arrived on the scene first. The paramedics removed a lifeless body from her mother and it was only at that time that Terri Coles realized that she had been shot. a her mother and Freeman were all taken to Presbyterian- University Hospital and while it was clear that a had suffered catastrophic and fatal injuries, the surgeons at Presbyterian-University Hospital attempted to save her life but to no avail. While Terri Coles was receiving treatment for her shoulder wound, surgeons in an adjacent area of the emergency room, were working on Freeman in an attempt to save his life.

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Bluebook (online)
THOMPSON v. MCGINLEY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-mcginley-pawd-2020.