William F. McCartney, III v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections

662 F. App'x 664
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 2016
Docket15-13796
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 662 F. App'x 664 (William F. McCartney, III v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William F. McCartney, III v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections, 662 F. App'x 664 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

William McCartney, a Florida state prisoner serving a 30 year term of imprisonment, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court issued a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on two related issues: whether McCartney was denied effective assistance of counsel due to counsel’s failure to (1) retain and use the services of a forensic pathologist and (2) cross examine effectively State forensics expert Dr. Charles Diggs. Because we conclude that counsel’s performance was not constitutionally deficient, we affirm the denial of relief.

I. Background

A. Trial and Direct Appeal

McCartney was charged by superseding indictment with third degree murder (and, in the alternative, manslaughter), sale of methadone, and sale of alprazolam (commonly known as Xanax). He pled not guilty and proceeded to a jury trial.

At trial, the government introduced evidence that McCartney sold Xanax and two wafers of methadone to an acquaintance, Nolan Adams. Adams took the methadone wafers and, according to his housemate Tabitha Briggs, drank one or two rum and coke drinks. Adams watched a movie with his housemates and went to bed. He was dead by morning.

. At trial, McCartney’s counsel conceded guilt on the drug sale charges. Defense counsel’s primary theory was that McCartney was not guilty of third degree murder or manslaughter because Adams’s consumption of alcohol: was an intervening cause of his death.

Dr. Charles Diggs, a medical examiner who performed Adams’s autopsy, testified that Adams died from pulmonary edema (fluid in the lungs) due to acute methadone toxicity. The toxicology report indicated that Adams had .382 milligrams of methadone per liter of blood, an amount consistent with his having taken two wafers of methadone the night before his death. Diggs characterized this level as toxic and lethal for individuals unaccustomed to using opiates or narcotics. He testified that methadone toxicity was the sole cause of death.

The prosecutor asked Diggs on direct examination, “if I were to tell you ... that Nolan Adams had alcohol with the methadone on the night before, which [was] approximately around 12:30.... One drink ... how would that affect, would that change your opinion concerning the cause of death?” Doc. 13-3 at 178-79. 1 Diggs responded:

No. Because ... when this blood was analyzed, obviously they picked up methadone and no alcohol whatsoever. So a medical examiner has to go with the ... chemicals that’s found in the blood. Now, obviously the methadone was the only thing except for a little marijuana here, but the methadone was the only thing. If this person had taken alcohol, let’s say at a ... period of time before ... he died, it certainly was metabolized long before this person died because by the time that we ... did the ... case, obviously the ... methadone itself cer *666 tainly it, it stays there. Of course now, any drug in your body, whether you’re talking about methadone or alcohol, is going to remain the same level it was when the person dies. But now if the person is still living over a period of time, they are going to metabolize that amount of, of drugs. As a matter of fact, even the methadone might have been even a little higher, but still at the same time, there was not enough alcohol to have, to have any kind of effect on the methadone whatsoever. Now, if you had a lot of alcohol, in other words, if the ... laboratory had picked up alcohol and methadone, ... then you would have had what we call a potentiation effect, you see, of both drugs. But ... there was no alcohol present here, which obviously meant that if this person took it, and I don’t have any evidence to say that that person took it by ... the laboratory, but if that person took it, it didn’t have any effect on ... the methadone that was in his blood.

Id. at 179. The prosecutor followed up: “For the cause of death.” Id. Diggs said: “The cause of death, no. The methadone is still the, the cause of death.” Id.

Defense counsel told the jury during closing argument:

Let’s look at the medical examination. Dr. Diggs rendered his opinion. He also said that there is an effect from alcohol, but he said there’s no alcohol shows up on the tox screen. Well, we know for a fact, we don’t have to have an expert opinion or a tox screen, we know a fact from all the testimony that he had alcohol. We know that for a fact from the drug party that was happening back at the house once they got their, their methadone and their Xanax. Does that call into question the tox screen?

Doc. 13-4 at 79. In total, defense counsel told the jury three times during closing argument that Adams and his housemates were consuming alcohol the evening before Adams’s death.

The trial court instructed the jury that McCartney was charged with third degree felony murder and manslaughter, alongside the drug sale charges. As relevant here, the court instructed that, to establish felony murder under Florida law, the State must prove a causal connection between the felony and the homicide and that McCartney should be held responsible for Adams’s death in the absence of a definitive break in the chain of circumstances beginning with the felony and ending with Adams’s death.

The jury found McCartney guilty of the drug sales and third degree felony murder. The trial court sentenced McCartney to 30 years of imprisonment for felony murder, 30 years for the sale of methadone, and 10 years for the sale of Xanax, all to run concurrently. McCartney’s convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal.

B. Postconviction Proceedings

McCartney sought postconviction relief under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. As relevant here, he asserted that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to retain the services of a forensic pathologist and to cross-examine Diggs effectively.

During state postconviction proceedings, McCartney retained a forensic pathologist, Dr. Ronald Wright, to review the autopsy results, including the toxicology report. Based on what he saw, Wright opined that the level of methadone in Adams’s system was insufficient, by itself, to cause death. Wright also opined that Adams could have consumed a sufficient amount of alcohol to interact with the methadone to cause death and that the alcohol could have been metabolized fully (and therefore rendered undetectable) by the time he died. According *667 to Wright, had Adams not consumed alcohol along with the methadone, he would not have died. McCartney argued that trial counsel’s failure to secure Wright’s testimony constituted deficient performance, and that there was a reasonable probability that the jury would have returned an acquittal on the homicide charges had it heard this expert testimony.

McCartney also argued that trial counsel’s cross-examination of Diggs was deficient.

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Bluebook (online)
662 F. App'x 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-f-mccartney-iii-v-secretary-florida-department-of-corrections-ca11-2016.