Trammell v. McKune

485 F.3d 546, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8394, 2007 WL 1087329
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 2007
Docket06-3316
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 485 F.3d 546 (Trammell v. McKune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trammell v. McKune, 485 F.3d 546, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8394, 2007 WL 1087329 (10th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.

David Trammell was accused of stealing a service station tow truck and using it to steal another vehicle. His defense was that another man — Scott Cross — committed the crime and framed him. The prosecution knew of Mr. Trammell’s defense, but failed to disclose physical evidence linking Mr. Cross to the tow truck theft. We hold that this failure constituted a violation of Mr. Trammell’s due process rights under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963), and therefore GRANT Mr. Trammell’s petition for habeas corpus relief.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE

A. A Robber Steals a Tow Truck and Uses It to Steal a Corvette

The criminal charges in this case stem from two related incidents. The first occurred in June 1999, when a tow truck was stolen from an Amoco service station in Overland Park, Kansas. John Loper, then an Amoco employee, saw someone drive the truck from the station and pursued it. When the thief noticed Loper, he attempted to back the tow truck into Loper’s car; Loper evaded that attempted strike, so the thief made a U-turn and rammed Loper’s car head-on before driving away on the passenger’s side of Loper’s car. Loper testified that he saw the thief s face twice: once for “maybe” fifteen seconds while the thief was attempting to back into Loper’s car, Trial Tr. vol. I, 57, and again for “approximately” twenty seconds while trying to avoid the head-on collision. Id. at 58-59.

The second incident occurred soon after the first. On July 5, 1999, the tow truck thief used his new acquisition to attempt to steal a 1986 Corvette from an apartment building in Merriam, Kansas. The Cor *548 vette’s owner, John Kase, heard chains rattling outside his window and saw the would-be thief hooking his ear to the tow truck. Kase confronted the robber, who claimed that he was repossessing the Corvette. When Kase protested and said the Corvette was paid for, the robber said, “Buddy, I’ve got a gun. Go back to your apartment.” Id. at 110. Kase refused to comply and inspected his car to see how securely it was attached to the truck— until, that is, the thief “grabbed a gun” from the front seat. Id. at 110-11. At that point, Kase “made a beeline back” to his apartment, id. at 111, and the robber drove off with the Corvette in tow.

By happenstance, Kase was not alone that day. His friend Scott Beckman was visiting from Minnesota. Mr. Beckman witnessed the confrontation but stayed close to Kase’s apartment and therefore did not get as near to the thief as Mr. Kase did. During the episode, which he estimated took “anywhere from five to eight minutes,” id. at 240, Mr. Beckman reentered Mr. Kase’s apartment to search for documents that proved Mr. Kase owned the Corvette free from any liens. Shortly after he reemerged, Mr. Beckman saw the robber point the gun at Mr. Kase and drive away.

Messrs. Kase and Beckman jumped into Beckman’s car and began following the tow truck. Just as they did, another of Mr. Kase’s friends, John Eglich, arrived at Kase’s apartment on a Kawasaki bullet bike. Mr. Eglich knew something was amiss because he saw the tow truck dragging the Corvette, its rear wheels “skidding” because it was still in park. Id. at 150-51. At Kase’s urging, Eglich stayed on his motorcycle and chased the truck. Id. at 151. He pursued it around the apartment complex for about a half a block until it stopped, whereupon Eglich pulled up next to the driver’s side window and, while still seated on his motorcycle, asked the driver what he was doing. The driver answered, “I’m repoing this vehicle.” Id. at 156. Eglich told the driver that the car was his friend’s, that it was paid for, and that he was “not repoing anything.” Id. The driver responded by pointing a gun at Mr. Eglich and saying, “Get away from the truck.” Id. Before Mr. Eglich could react, the robber drove away. Mr. Eglich testified that this conversation lasted thirty to forty-five seconds. Id. at 169.

Before the truck left Eglich’s view, the Corvette broke loose and was heavily damaged. Eglich renewed his pursuit, but the thief eluded him. Eglich returned to Mr. Kase’s apartment where, minutes later, the robber reappeared and drove the tow truck toward Eglich as if to run him over. Eglich jumped off his motorcycle just in time to avoid a collision, and the robber left for good.

B. In a Separate Investigation, Police Find the Tow Truck

On July 10, 1999 — five days after the attempted Corvette theft — police officers in an unrelated investigation arrested Scott Cross for narcotics activity, theft, forgery, and using computers to facilitate the presentment of fraudulent checks. Cross was arrested in an Overland Park, Kansas, Econo Lodge motel room where he had set up his check forging operation. Police also found the stolen Amoco tow truck in the Econo Lodge parking lot. And they found a cardboard box in Cross’s motel room containing paperwork belonging to the Amoco station where the tow truck was stolen. 1

*549 During the interrogation following his arrest, Cross accused David Trammell of stealing the tow truck. Armed with this accusation but no physical evidence linking Trammell to the crimes, police prepared two separate photo arrays — both of which included Trammell’s picture but not Cross’s, despite the men’s physical resemblance — and showed them to Loper, Ease, and Eglich. All three eyewitnesses identified Mr. Trammell as the tow truck driver.

C. The State Prosecutes Trammell for the Crimes

Those three eyewitness identifications led the state to charge Mr. Trammell with three counts of aggravated assault, one count of felony theft, and one count of aggravated robbery. At trial, the three eyewitnesses recounted their photo array identifications and identified Mr. Trammell as the perpetrator in the jury’s presence. 2

Mr. Trammell’s defense proceeded on two fronts. First, his attorney argued that Cross had framed Mr. Trammell for the robberies because he was jealous that Trammell had been dating his ex-girlfriend, Janelle. The two men knew each other through her; Janelle lived with Mr. Cross while she was seeing Mr. Trammell. Second, Mr. Trammell’s attorney argued that police officers were negligent in their investigation because — despite Cross’s presence at the Econo Lodge when the tow truck was found and the physical resemblance between Cross and Trammell— officers did not include a photo of Cross in the arrays they showed to Loper, Ease, and Eglich.

Both theories gained traction when Scott Beckman, Mr. Ease’s friend from Minnesota, testified at trial that police officers did not show him a photo array after the attempted Corvette robbery. Instead, the first array he saw was one that defense counsel prepared by substituting Cross’s picture for Trammell’s in one of the police-prepared arrays. Beckman picked Cross as the robber, testifying he was “70 percent” certain of his pick.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 F.3d 546, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8394, 2007 WL 1087329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trammell-v-mckune-ca10-2007.