West v. Addison

127 F. App'x 419
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 2005
Docket04-6305
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 F. App'x 419 (West v. Addison) 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
West v. Addison, 127 F. App'x 419 (10th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING CERTIFICATE OF APPEALABILITY AND DISMISSING APPEAL

BRORBY, Circuit Judge.

Appellant Henry Glen West, an Oklahoma state inmate appearing pro se, ap *421 peals the district court’s decision denying him a certificate of appealability and dismissing his habeas corpus petition filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In his petition, Mr. West challenges his numerous convictions, but not his sentences. We deny Mr. West’s request for a certificate of appealability and dismiss his appeal.

The procedural history surrounding Mr. West’s state convictions, sentences, and direct appeal are more fully outlined in the federal magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation (Recommendation). 1 In short, the State of Oklahoma charged Mr. West with two counts of assault and battery with intent to kill; forcible oral sodomy; first degree rape; second degree burglary; robbery with firearms; attempting to kill another; assault with a dangerous weapon; and two counts of shooting with intent to kill. A jury convicted him on all counts.

Following the trial, Mr. West raised three issues to the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, namely: 1) The trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the defense of automatism denied Mr. West the benefit of this statutory defense supported by the evidence; 2) The trial court erroneously instructed the jury to consider Mr. West’s flight as substantive evidence of guilt; and 3) The State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the state-of-mind elements of the charged offenses. Unsuccessful on direct appeal in the state court, 2 Mr. West filed his federal habeas petition, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his convictions on the same three grounds.

The federal district court assigned the matter to a magistrate judge, who issued a thorough and comprehensive report recommending denial of Mr. West’s petition on all issues presented. While we decline to reiterate the magistrate judge’s analysis throughout her fifteen-page Recommendation, we note she carefully considered each of Mr. West’s arguments, the standard of review, and the state court’s resolution of those same arguments, as summarized hereinafter.

In addressing Mr. West’s arguments, the magistrate judge recounted Mr. West’s own summary of his “morning long crime spree,” and also considered some of Mr. West’s admissions with respect to his crime spree. It began with Mr. West launching an unprovoked attack on his brother while he slept, hitting him with a hammer and rendering him unconscious. He then pulled his brother’s girlfriend from the bed into their father’s bedroom where he sodomized, raped and choked her into unconsciousness. 3 Before leaving the apartment, Mr. West searched for a knife *422 because he thought his father had returned to the apartment and he might have to Mil him on the way out. He then left the apartment in a van, drove around, and pried open the door of a house, from which he took a .22 revolver, a .45 semiautomatic handgun, clips and ammunition.

After driving around again, Mr. West stopped at a convenience store where he used one of the guns to rob the clerk, attempted to fire the gun (which did not discharge) and, after leaving the store, attempted to back the van over the clerk, who followed him out to get his license number. The same clerk notified the police.

Meanwhile, after driving away and “because he believed he had failed God’s will in not killing the clerk,” Mr. West drove to another convenience store, went inside and asked for a drink. When the clerks told him he needed money for a beer, Mr. West went back to the van, retrieved a gun and returned to the store. ‘Without a word,” he shot the man once and the woman twice as they tried to retreat. Mr. West then drove away.

Based on a description of the van from the first convenience store clerk, a police officer pursued Mr. West, who drove the van into a ditch, after which he fled on foot and was arrested. At trial, Mr. West admitted he used methamphetamine daily and he used an illegal drug on the day he committed the crimes. 4 After his arrest, and again at trial, he admitted to committing all the crimes with which he was charged.

After recounting these facts, the magistrate judge rejected Mr. West’s claim the trial court improperly failed to instruct the jury on the defense of automatism. In exhaustive detail, the magistrate judge explained that under OMahoma law, the automatism instruction and defense are inappropriate and unavailable where, as here, the defendant voluntarily consumes a drug. 5 She further pointed out that the jury was properly instructed on the defendant’s voluntary use of drugs, as supported by the evidence and unchallenged by the defense, as well as the insanity instruction, as requested by the defense, and that the sua sponte omission of the automatism instruction, which the defense never requested at trial, did not render his trial fundamentally unfair. 6

The magistrate judge also addressed Mr. West’s claim the trial court erroneously instructed the jury to consider Mr. *423 West’s flight as substantive evidence of guilt. After reviewing the flight instruction given and the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision that the evidence at trial supported the instruction, the magistrate judge concluded the state court’s determination was reasonable and the instruction did not render Mr. West’s trial “fundamentally unfair.” Specifically, the magistrate judge noted Mr. West committed each crime at different locations, all of which he left, and that the jury could reasonably conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that his determination to leave the scene of each crime was based on his conscious guilt over the crimes he committed, including his admission at trial that he began to drive faster and to run on foot to “get away from the police.”

Finally, the magistrate judge rejected Mr. West’s claim the State faded to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the state-of-mind elements of the crimes charged. After considering the standard of review, 7 the magistrate judge pointed out Mr. West confessed and admitted to all the crimes he was charged with committing. While Mr. West relied on the insanity defense and offered evidence in support of that defense, contending a demon or God possessed him and spoke to him, the magistrate judge determined the evidence, reviewed as a whole, established a rational jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt he possessed the requisite intent to commit the crimes with which he was charged and to which he admitted.

After considering all three of the aforementioned claims, the magistrate judge determined Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
127 F. App'x 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-addison-ca10-2005.