United States v. Elisha Dickens

438 F. App'x 364
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2011
Docket09-4529
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 438 F. App'x 364 (United States v. Elisha Dickens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Elisha Dickens, 438 F. App'x 364 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

On June 7, 2008, Christopher Roush was killed during the course of a robbery gone awry. That evening, Michael Haynie entered Roush’s home pursuant to a plan concocted by Adam McClellan and Elisha Lacy Dickens to rob Roush of money and drugs. After Haynie entered Roush’s home, a struggle ensued in which Haynie struck Roush twice in the head with a gun. The gun discharged and hit Roush in the back of the head, killing him.

Dickens was convicted by a jury of interstate stalking, drug trafficking crimes, and firearms crimes and was sentenced to a total of 600 months’ imprisonment. He now appeals his conviction and sentence, arguing that reversal of the conviction is warranted based on prosecutorial misconduct and that his sentence is unreasonable. For the following reasons, we affirm Dickens’s conviction and sentence.

I.

Defendant-appellant Elisha Lacy Dickens lived in Meigs County, Ohio, across the *367 river from Mason, West Virginia. Dickens was previously convicted of attempted assault, drug possession, and drug trafficking. Dickens admitted to selling and using cocaine prior to this arrest.

While Dickens was in prison, Adam McClellan, a drug dealer and user, moved to Meigs County. McClellan sold drugs to and spent some time living with Frank Dickens, Dickens’s brother. 1 Frank purchased drugs from McClellan and another drug dealer and sold most of them to the victim, Christopher Roush. Eventually, Frank introduced McClellan to Dickens. When Frank and McClellan had a disagreement, McClellan went to stay with Dickens. While McClellan was living with Dickens (about a week before Roush was killed), Frank went to Dickens’s house to confront McClellan about a woman. During the fight, Frank hit McClellan in the face, giving him two black eyes, and McClellan cut Frank with a knife.

After the confrontation with Frank, McClellan and Dickens began to make progress on a plan to set up a “trap house” for the purpose of selling drugs. Neither McClellan nor Dickens wanted to stay in the house, so McClellan asked Michael Haynie, who was in need of work and a place to stay. On Friday, June 6, 2008, Haynie drove to Meigs County in a white 1992 Dodge Spirit and met McClellan at the last rest stop before West Virginia. The two left this rest stop in McClellan’s green pickup truck and eventually met with Dickens at his house. Haynie understood that they were going to “hit a lick,” meaning that they were going to do something illegal in order to get drugs or money for drugs. The three men left together in Dickens’s red truck to pick up Haynie’s car. McClellan filled Haynie’s white 1992 Dodge Spirit up with gas paid for by Dickens.

Haynie testified that the three men drove around in Haynie’s Dodge Spirit looking at various drug dealers’ homes and discussing possible robbery victims. Haynie testified that Dickens “settled on” Roush’s house in West Virginia because this would mean that he could take “his competitor’s drugs.” McClellan and Dickens explained to Haynie that Roush’s drug supply came from Dickens’s brother Frank, and Haynie testified that he thought Dickens was “more in it for the money” and McClellan was “out for revenge for the two black eyes.”

That night the three returned to Dickens’s house. Haynie testified that they formulated a plan in which McClellan would drive and Haynie would rob Roush. Then, according to Haynie, Dickens pulled out a .45 caliber handgun and gave it to Haynie. (Dickens maintains that the gun used to shoot Roush was stolen from his mother’s home, and McClellan later said that he stole the gun from Dickens and gave it to Haynie.) McClellan and Haynie drove to Roush’s house but left because no one was home. Later that evening, between 11:42 p.m. and 1:45 a.m., McClellan and Dickens called each other a number of times. Phone records also show that, in the early morning hours of June 7, Dickens called Roush’s house two times and called a friend of Roush’s, but Dickens denies making these calls. At some point Haynie and McClellan returned to Dickens’s house. Haynie returned the gun to Dickens. At about 3:00 a.m. Dickens reserved a room for McClellan and Haynie at the Mason Hotel in West Virginia. They checked in using a false name.

*368 In the morning, McClellan woke up sick and stayed in bed most of the day. At some point they went to get McClellan morphine. According to Haynie, McClellan and Dickens communicated by phone throughout the day and met at a gas station. Later in the evening of June 7, Haynie testified that he, McClellan, and Dickens were together in the Mason Hotel planning the robbery. McClellan had the .45 in his bag, and Dickens came to the hotel with bandanas. After 20 or 80 minutes of planning, Dickens returned to Ohio. When it got dark, McClellan and Haynie dressed in dark clothes, baseball caps, and bandanas. The two drove the Dodge Spirit to Roush’s house at approximately 10:00-10:30 p.m. Haynie went to the door of Roush’s house while McClellan waited in the car. Shane Leach answered the door, and Haynie instructed Leach to give him drugs and money. When Leach said there were none, Haynie racked the slide of the gun and struck Leach, causing Leach to run from the house. When Haynie was inside the house, he struck Roush with the gun and knocked him to the floor. This strike caused the gun to discharge into the ceiling. When Roush got up from the floor, Haynie struck him again with the gun, which discharged a bullet into Roush’s head. Haynie fled, and he and McClellan went back to Ohio. The men threw the gun and bandanas into a pond and drove to Athens, where McClellan planned to meet up with Dickens but never did.

Dickens participated in a series of interviews with law enforcement during the investigation. His story changed substantially from July 23 to September 9 to December 16, 2008. Regarding the gun used to kill Roush, Dickens first claimed that the two guns at his mother’s home were missing on the night of Roush’s death. He subsequently told police that McClellan had been at Dickens’s mother’s home and might have stolen the guns. Regarding his communications with McClellan on the day of Roush’s death, Dickens first stated that he received a call from McClellan on the night of Roush’s death in which McClellan said that “[Roush] would not be competition anymore.” In a later interview, he told agents that he never discussed the homicide with McClellan and that he could not recall why he and McClellan spoke so many times on the phone the night of the murder. During the interview on December 16, Dickens stated that he spoke to McClellan a few times on the day of the murder and that McClellan claimed to be in Columbus and failed to give Dickens a clear answer about Roush. At this time Dickens had no answers to questions about why his red truck was at the rest stop on the day before the murder and at the gas station later. Later on December 16, Dickens said that McClellan had introduced him to Haynie on the day of Roush’s death and the three men drove to West Virginia, specifically Roush’s house, in the white car and spoke of robbing people. Dickens admitted that he paid for a hotel room for McClellan and Haynie. Dickens also admitted that McClellan called Dickens to tell him that they had accidentally shot Roush and said that Dickens refused to answer future calls from McClellan. Regardless, Dickens claimed that he had no prior knowledge of the robbery.

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Bluebook (online)
438 F. App'x 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-elisha-dickens-ca6-2011.