Waldo Wiggins v. Tony Parker

423 F. App'x 534
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 2011
Docket09-6406
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 423 F. App'x 534 (Waldo Wiggins v. Tony Parker) 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
Waldo Wiggins v. Tony Parker, 423 F. App'x 534 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

*535 SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

A Tennessee jury found Waldo Wiggins guilty of murdering his pregnant girlfriend. The state courts rejected his direct appeal and his request for post-conviction relief. Wiggins filed a federal habeas petition, and the district court granted it based on a lack of sufficient evidence and ineffective assistance of counsel. We reverse.

I.

On April 13, 1999, 17-year-old Tatrina Terry arrived home from work around 10 p.m. She was 20-weeks pregnant at the time. Terry told her mother she planned to go out again, and told her friend Rodriquez Dean (by phone) that she intended to see “her baby’s father.” R.10-2 at 41. Terry abruptly ended the call with Dean, saying she had to go, “as if somebody had paged her or called her.” Id. At some point between 11:15 and 11:30 p.m., a neighbor heard Terry’s car leave her house.

Waldo Wiggins, also 17 years old at the time, lived in a trailer with his parents, about a 15-20 minute drive from Terry’s house. Wiggins and Terry had a romantic relationship, and he believed he was the father of Terry’s baby. The two had previously discussed the possibility of an abortion, though they decided against it. On the night of April 13, Wiggins told his mother that Terry was coming to their house.

According to Terry’s phone records, she called Wiggins several times from her cell phone between 11:38 and 11:56 p.m. The first five calls went unanswered. Wiggins answered the sixth call, at 12:02 a.m., and spoke to Terry for one to two minutes. Wiggins’ phone log suggests that he subsequently spoke with another girlfriend, Jennifer Bonaparte, at 12:46 a.m. for two minutes, and then again with Bonaparte for a much longer period of time, apparently from 1:05 a.m. to 4:46 a.m.

Between 5:00 and 6:00 a.m. on April 14, Terry’s mom realized her daughter was missing. By using the *69 feature on her home phone, she learned that the last phone call to their house had come from the Wiggins’ house.

Around 6:30 a.m. that morning, John Martin and his uncle, while driving to work, noticed a car off the side of the road in a field, with a white object beside it. Thinking someone was “stripping” the back seat of the car, they did not stop. R.10-2 at 53. On their way home from work at 11:30 a.m., they saw the same car again and pulled over. When they realized the white object was a dead body, they called the police.

Terry had died from three gunshot wounds to the head. The presence of soot inside the skin suggested contact wounds, namely that the killer had fired the gun with the muzzle against her head. The investigator at the scene, Ronnie Coleman, saw no signs of scrapes or bruises that would suggest a struggle. The keys remained in the ignition, and the police found Terry’s cell phone and portable CD player in the car. The police did not find tire tracks from any other car at the scene.

According to the autopsy, Terry showed signs of smothering, as though someone had forcefully covered her mouth and nostrils with his hand. The examiner also found vaginal abrasions, suggesting either “nonconsensual sex” or “sex that wasn’t lubricated” at some point before her death. R.10-4 at 21. Investigators later determined that Wiggins was not the father of the baby Terry had been carrying, and the would-be father to this day remains unknown.

When the police learned that Terry planned to go to Wiggins’ house on the *536 night of her death, they suspected Wiggins was involved, as the murder scene was a half mile away “as a crow flies” from his house. R.10-4 at 44. That night (April 14), the police interviewed Wiggins and his parents, who all claimed he was at home with his parents the night before and that Terry never showed up. Both parents acknowledged that they could not have known if Wiggins had slipped out quietly during the night because they were asleep and because Wiggins’ room was on the opposite end of the trailer.

During the interview, Wiggins maintained he had spoken with Terry just once on the phone the night before. The officers found Wiggins “deceptive,” R.10-5 at 117, and when they showed him telephone records suggesting six phone calls between him and Terry, Wiggins recanted and admitted to multiple conversations. At that point, he stopped cooperating and turned evasive, “couldn’t hardly answer a question” and acted “down and out.” R.10-4 at 55. It turned out that the telephone records demonstrated there were five attempted calls and only one connected call, as the phone records showed Terry had completed only one call to Wiggins.

When Investigator Jerry Dyson asked Wiggins’ father whether they kept any guns in the house, the father denied that the family had any. But he later changed his answer and acknowledged that they kept guns in the house and consented to a search of their home. On April 15, the mother led police to a purse in her bedroom closet that contained four handguns. Investigator John Fletcher said that one of the guns, a .22 caliber revolver, smelled like gunpowder, suggesting it had recently been fired. He also noticed that “oil had been put on” the barrels of all four guns, as if someone had tried to clean them. R.10-5 at 74. Wiggins knew the guns were hidden in the bedroom closet, was “familiar with” the .22 caliber pistol, and had “fired it on occasion.” R.10-2 at 86. None of the visitors who frequented the Wiggins’ home knew where the guns were hidden.

The police sent the .22 caliber revolver and other evidence to a state crime lab. A few months later, the crime lab concluded that the bullet fragments from Terry’s skull came from the .22 caliber pistol, and that traces of blood on the gun matched Terry’s DNA.

On October 25, after receiving the crime lab report, the police interviewed Wiggins again. When they showed Wiggins the .22 caliber gun, he “kind of stood up in his seat and backed up approximately two feet from the table, as if he was in shock.” R.10-5 at 38. Wiggins denied that it could have been the murder weapon, stating that only he, his uncle and his father had ever fired the gun before.

In March 2000, a Tennessee grand jury indicted Wiggins for first-degree murder. A jury convicted Wiggins, and the court sentenced him to life in prison. After losing his appeals in state court, Wiggins filed a federal habeas petition. The district court granted the petition on two grounds: (1) the State introduced insufficient evidence to convict Wiggins, in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and (2) defense counsel failed to object to a jury instruction regarding evidence of an admission against interest, in violation of the right to effective assistance of counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments.

II.

The Fourteenth Amendment requires the State to prove every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 315-316, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979). The constitutional inquiry, once a jury has convicted a defendant, is whether “any ration *537

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Bluebook (online)
423 F. App'x 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldo-wiggins-v-tony-parker-ca6-2011.