TRAMBLE v. JACKSON

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMarch 15, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-11624
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
TRAMBLE v. JACKSON, (E.D. Mich. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION DAQUAVIUS DAVONTE TRAMBLE, Petitioner, Civil Action No. 20-CV-11624 vs. HON. BERNARD A. FRIEDMAN SHANE JACKSON, Respondent. _________________________________/ OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PETITIONER’S APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS Petitioner in this matter has filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Petitioner was convicted after a jury trial in Genesee Circuit Court of second-degree murder, MICH. COMP. LAWS § 750.317, assault with intent to commit murder, MICH. COMP. LAWS § 750.83, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. MICH. COMP. LAWS § 750.227b. He was sentenced to 375 months to 50 years for the murder and assault convictions and a consecutive two years for the firearm conviction. The petition raises two claims: (1) insufficient evidence was presented at trial to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioner possessed the mens rea for the offenses, and (2) the trial court erroneously admitted prior-acts evidence. For the reasons stated below, the Court shall deny the petition I. Background The Michigan Court of Appeals summarized the facts of the case as follows:

These cases arise out of a shooting on August 29, 2015 on Wisner Street in Flint that resulted in the death of Donnie Younger, Jr. and the injury of Deandrea Shields. The cases were tried jointly before two separate juries. A. WISNER STREET SHOOTING On August 29, 2015, Tramble borrowed Aniesa Alley's car, a black Malibu. Alley, Tramble's girlfriend, lived in Davison, Michigan. Tramble drove Alley's Malibu to a McDonald's restaurant on Clio Road in Flint; his passengers were Keel-Haywood and Keel-Haywood's girlfriend, Sharlyn Dendy. Several witnesses testified that they had attended a party on Pasadena Street in Flint, and that a group of party attendees left the party around midnight to go to the McDonald's on Clio Road. Tayonna Williams, a relative of both defendants, testified that she was at the party and rode with several other women, including Yamonie Williams (no relation to Tayonna, but a cousin of Younger), to the McDonald's in a truck driven by a woman whose name she did not know. At some point, Yamonie and the driver of the truck began to argue; Tayonna testified that someone called defendants to pick up Tayonna and her friends because the driver did not want them in her vehicle any longer. Tayonna testified that by the time defendants and Dendy arrived at the McDonald's, Yamonie and the driver of the truck had begun physically fighting. Tramble left the Malibu to attempt to break up the fight. While Tramble and others were attempting to do so, someone retrieved a firearm from the trunk of a black Impala and fired it several times into the air. Several witnesses testified that the gun was fired by a man named James Reed or “JR.” However, Reed testified that the shooter was an unknown man with whom he and two others had ridden to the McDonald's in the black Impala. After the gun was fired, everyone in the parking lot ran to various vehicles and left the scene. Tayonna testified that Younger, Shields, Reed, and another unknown individual left in a silver Hyundai driven by Younger. However, Reed testified that he left in the black Impala with several others, including the unknown man who had fired the gun in the parking lot. Yamonie, Tayonna, and Tracy Coleman got into the Malibu along with Dendy, Tramble, and Keel-Haywood and left the area with Keel-Haywood driving. As they drove away, Dendy testified that she heard Tramble say, “they was [sic] shootin' at us” and “we need protection.” Yamonie and Dendy both testified that Keel-Haywood drove the Malibu to Tramble's grandmother's house. Defendants exited the Malibu, went into the house briefly, returned to the Malibu and resumed driving. Dendy testified that they were looking for a friend of theirs so that they could return her phone to her. 2 As the Malibu driven by Keel-Haywood was traveling southbound on Wisner Street, Yamonie and Dendy testified that they saw Younger's silver Hyundai approaching them northbound on Wisner Street. Yamonie heard one of defendants say, “look, there they go.” Tayonna testified that Keel-Haywood parked the Malibu on the corner of Wisner Street and Dartmouth Street; after parking, defendants exited the Malibu and walked to the other side of the street into someone's yard. Tayonna testified that she knew defendants were carrying handguns because she had seen them while riding in the Malibu. Dendy took over driving the Malibu, leaving defendants behind. Yamonie testified that, as they drove off, she saw one of defendants with a gun; she believed it was Tramble. Yamonie testified that after that she “put [her] head down” because she “knew they was goin' shoot [sic] each other.” Yamonie heard gunshots as they drove away, but did not see the actual shooting. Dendy also heard gunshots. Tayonna heard a “crash” as they drove away. Shields testified that he was a passenger, along with two others, in the Hyundai driven by Younger. Shields testified that as they traveled north on Wisner Street, he heard several gunshots and heard bullets hitting the Hyundai. The window next to Shields broke and glass got into his eyes and cut his face; Shields initially believed that he had been shot. The Hyundai crashed into a light pole. Shields and the other occupants ran from the Hyundai, but Younger was unresponsive. Shields was later treated at a hospital for cuts and glass in his face and eyes. Flint Police and Michigan State Police officers who arrived at the scene found the crashed Hyundai under a still-live electrical wire; it was deactivated by a Consumer's Energy employee. Younger had been shot in the back of the head and killed. The vehicle had been hit by at least five bullets. Nine Winchester brand 9mm Luger caliber shell casings were found near the crash site on Wisner Street. A Michigan State Police firearms expert testified that all of the casings had been fired from the same weapon. A fired bullet found at the scene was of the caliber class that included 9mm Luger. A lead fragment of a bullet removed from Younger's brain could not be matched to a particular caliber. Shortly after Dendy drove off in the Malibu, she received a phone call from Tramble and drove back to the area to pick up defendants. Tramble drove the Malibu and its occupants back to Alley's house in Davison, where they all spent the night. Yamonie testified that while at Alley's house, she learned from Facebook that Younger had been 3 shot–although she did not learn whether he was alive or dead—and she began crying. She testified that Tramble took her aside and said, “I know that's your cousin” and “I'm sorry” or something like that. Yamonie went to the police a few days later. Lieutenant Jason Cate was the officer in charge of the homicide case. After Lieutenant Cate interviewed Yamonie and Tayonna, Flint Police arrested defendants and Dendy. Lieutenant Cate interviewed both defendants shortly after the incident. Tramble was re-interviewed by Special Agent David Dwyre of the Michigan Department of Attorney General in 2016. Tramble initially told Special Agent Dwyre that Keel-Haywood shot at the Hyundai before it crashed; however, he later stated that he believed the occupants of the Hyundai were shooting at him, so he shot at the Hyundai “once or twice” before the crash. Tramble also gave a video-recorded statement to Lieutenant Cate and Detective-Sergeant Jeffrey Hook of the Michigan State Police in 2016, portions of which were played only for Tramble's jury; a redacted transcript of that statement was also entered as an exhibit before Tramble's jury.

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Bluebook (online)
TRAMBLE v. JACKSON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tramble-v-jackson-mied-2021.