Victor Taylor v. Thomas Simpson

972 F.3d 776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2020
Docket14-6508
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 972 F.3d 776 (Victor Taylor v. Thomas Simpson) 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
Victor Taylor v. Thomas Simpson, 972 F.3d 776 (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 20a0278p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

VICTOR DEWAYNE TAYLOR, ┐ Petitioner-Appellant, │ │ > No. 14-6508 v. │ │ │ THOMAS SIMPSON, Warden, │ Respondent-Appellee. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky at Lexington. No. 5:06-cv-00181—Danny C. Reeves, District Judge.

Argued: October 16, 2019

Decided and Filed: August 25, 2020

Before: BATCHELDER, COOK, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.

_________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Dennis J. Burke, DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC ADVOCACY, La Grange, Kentucky, for Appellant. Matthew R. Krygiel, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF KENTUCKY, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Dennis J. Burke, DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC ADVOCACY, La Grange, Kentucky, Thomas M. Ransdell, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellant. Matthew R. Krygiel, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF KENTUCKY, Frankfort, Kentucky, for Appellee.

BATCHELDER, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which COOK, J., joined, and GRIFFIN, J., joined Section II.C. GRIFFIN, J. (pp. 29–44), delivered a separate dissenting opinion. No. 14-6508 Taylor v. Simpson Page 2

OPINION _________________

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. A Kentucky prisoner, sentenced to death, appeals the denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We AFFIRM.

I.

On the evening of Saturday, September 29, 1984, Scott Nelson and Richard Stephenson, 17-year-old students at Trinity High School in Louisville, Kentucky, were driving to a school football game at duPont Manual High School across town. When they stopped at a restaurant to ask for directions, Victor Taylor and his cousin, George Wade, offered to help in exchange for a ride but the boys refused. So, Taylor and Wade forced their way into the car at gunpoint and directed them to a secluded area where Taylor and Wade took the boys out of the car, had them undress, and bound and gagged them. While Taylor was sodomizing one of the boys, Wade called Taylor by name, so Taylor murdered the boys to keep them from identifying him to the police. Taylor and Wade stole the boys’ belongings, including Trinity High School gym bags and school jackets, some cassette tapes and fireworks from the car, and the boys’ watches, shoes, and even their pants. Taylor and Wade are African-American, the two boys were both Caucasian.

The boys’ bodies were found the next morning, each with a gunshot wound to the head from point-blank range. Within days, the investigation led police to Taylor and Wade.

At about 3:45 p.m. on Wednesday, October 3, 1984, police brought Wade to the station, advised him of his Miranda rights, and told him he was a suspect in the murders. Wade denied any involvement, waived his rights, and spoke with detectives. At about 8:30 p.m., Wade agreed to a polygraph examination, which was completed by 11:30 p.m., and which Wade failed. When questioning resumed, Wade continued to deny any involvement in the murders.

The police arrested Wade for an unrelated burglary and, a short time later, Wade agreed to participate in a line-up. A witness who had seen the abduction at the restaurant picked Wade No. 14-6508 Taylor v. Simpson Page 3

from the line-up as one of the abductors. At that point, Wade changed his story. Wade tape recorded a new statement, in which he confessed to the abduction, murders, and robberies, but placed full blame on Taylor as the sole shooter. He did not mention any sodomy.

When the state prosecutor indicted Wade and Taylor on charges of murder, kidnapping, robbery, and sodomy, he tried the cases separately, first Wade and then Taylor. The jury acquitted Wade of sodomy but convicted him of murder, kidnapping, and robbery, and the court imposed a life sentence.1 Wade’s direct appeal was pending at the time of Taylor’s trial.

Because Taylor’s trial began in March 1986, a month before Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986), the controlling law about racial animus in peremptory challenges was Swain v. Alabama, 380 U.S. 202 (1965).2 In selecting Taylor’s jury, the prosecutor had nine peremptory challenges and he used eight of them, four to strike African-Americans, leaving only one African-American on the jury after Taylor’s counsel removed an African-American woman with one of his own peremptory challenges. The prosecutor had previously entered his “juror chart” into the record, in response to Taylor’s unrelated change-of-venue motion. On that chart, the prosecutor had recorded each juror’s race, age, education, employment, and opinions on capital punishment.3

A few days later, while protesting the empaneled jury based on a fair-cross-section- violation theory, Taylor’s counsel pointed to the prosecutor’s removal of four of the six African- Americans. As transcribed in the record, the prosecutor responded, almost incoherently: “In accordance with the case law, the Commonwealth has no other rational reason—if I strike all it then becomes objectionable under the cases from, as I understand it, coming from California.”

1At his trial, while represented by counsel, Wade testified under oath and subject to cross-examination about the same testimony that he made in his tape-recorded statement to the police that is at issue in this case. 2As will be discussed, Batson’s now-familiar three-step framework had yet to be conceived, so neither the prosecutor, defense counsel, nor the court engaged it during jury selection. But Batson is nonetheless the applicable law in this case because it is retroactive on direct appeal. Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314 (1987). 3As mentioned, the prosecutor used eight of his allotted nine peremptory challenges to strike potential jurors (four African-American and four Caucasian); of that eight, he struck five who had only a high-school education (two African-American and three Caucasian); three who were unemployed (two African-American and one Caucasian), three who worked blue-collar jobs (two African-American and one Caucasian), and five who had expressed reservations about capital punishment during the voir dire questioning (two African-American and three Caucasian). No. 14-6508 Taylor v. Simpson Page 4

Taylor characterizes this in his Batson claim, infra, as a voluntary admission by the prosecutor that he struck the jurors because they were African-American and that he had no other rational reason for striking them. But the State retorts that, given the context, the prosecutor was actually trying to inform the court of the developing law, in California cases, holding that when a defendant’s objection to a prosecutor’s peremptory strikes is based on numbers alone, it is colorable only when both of two conditions are met: (1) all of the African-American jurors were struck and (2) the prosecutor had no other rational reason for the strikes. In this light, this attempt by the prosecutor to describe the legal theory (pre-Batson) was not a reference to—and certainly not an admission of—his jury-selection decisions in Taylor’s case. Regardless, it would be improper for us to speculate either way.

The trial court rejected Taylor’s fair-cross-section argument and effectively upheld the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges. The court added: “I believe the issue being addressed at this time [to the Supreme Court in Batson] [is] as to whether it is permissible to exercise your peremptory strikes whichever way you wish to.

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Related

Victor Taylor v. Scott Jordan
10 F.4th 625 (Sixth Circuit, 2021)
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E.D. Michigan, 2020

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Bluebook (online)
972 F.3d 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-taylor-v-thomas-simpson-ca6-2020.