Wilson v. Boyd

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJuly 29, 2022
Docket3:19-cv-00299
StatusUnknown

This text of Wilson v. Boyd (Wilson v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Boyd, (E.D. Tenn. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE

BILL SHANNON WILSON, ) ) Case No. 3:19-cv-299 Petitioner, ) ) Judge Travis R. McDonough v. ) ) Magistrate Judge Debra C. Poplin BERT BOYD, ) ) Respondent. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After Petitioner’s great niece accused him of raping her on two occasions when she was eleven years old, a Campbell County jury convicted Petitioner of two counts of rape of a child. State v. Wilson, No. E2013-02551-CCA-R3-CD, 2014 ZWL4639504, at *1–2 (Tenn. Crim. App. Sept. 18, 2014), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Sept. 18, 2014) (“Wilson I”). Petitioner, a state prisoner, has filed a pro se petition for habeas corpus relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 challenging these convictions by asserting that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance [Doc. 1]. Respondent filed a response in opposition to the petition [Doc. 12] and the state-court record [Doc. 11], and Petitioner filed a reply [Doc. 13]. After Respondent construed Petitioner’s reply to assert new claims, Respondent filed a motion to file a sur-reply [Doc. 15], which the Court granted [Doc. 20]. Respondent then filed his sur-reply [Doc. 21], and Petitioner filed a sur-sur-reply in which he asserts for the first time a claim for actual innocence [Doc. 22]. Petitioner then filed two affidavits to support his actual-innocence claim [Doc. 25, at 3; Doc. 27, at 4]. After reviewing the parties’ filings and the state-court record, the Court finds that Petitioner is not entitled to relief under § 2254 and no evidentiary hearing is warranted. See Rules Governing § 2254 Cases, Rule 8(a); Schriro v. Landrigan, 550 U.S. 465, 474 (2007). Accordingly, the habeas corpus petition will be DENIED, and this action will be DISMISSED. I. BACKGROUND

After the jury convicted Petitioner of two counts of rape of a child, he filed a direct appeal asserting that his trial court erred in: (1) denying his motion for judgment of acquittal; (2) denying his motion for a new trial due to newly discovered evidence and the insufficiency of the indictment; and (3) admitting certain testimony from a rebuttal witness [Doc. 11-8]. The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals (“TCCA”) described the evidence from Petitioner’s trial as follows: The victim testified that she was sixteen years old at the time of trial and in her junior year of high school. The victim stated that [Petitioner], whom she had known her whole life, was married to her great aunt. She related that she spent time with [Petitioner] during holiday celebrations, and that she and her older sister, P.S., would “stay the night” at his home.

The victim testified that her birthday is at the end of June. After school had finished in mid-May, but before her twelfth birthday in June of 200[6],1 she spent the day at [Petitioner]’s and her great aunt’s house. That night, she, P.S., and [Petitioner] “went to go ride the four-wheelers around the block.” She explained that [Petitioner] had two four-wheelers, a green one and a blue one. The blue four-wheeler was larger than the green, so she rode on the blue four-wheeler seated behind [Petitioner] while P.S. drove the green four-wheeler. At some point, [Petitioner] and the victim became separated from P.S. She described the area saying, “there was a road that went—you could go straight or you could follow the road and you can turn the curve.” This gravel road, “like a little driveway,” led down to an area where there was a “big thing of concrete.” She identified photographs of the area. One of the pictures depicted a dirt path that the victim said was “basically a four-wheeler trail going down to it, basically a faster way to get down there.”

1 While the TCCA twice stated in its opinion that this event occurred in 2007, Wilson I, at *1–2, the record as a whole establishes that it occurred in 2006 [Doc. 11-2, at 46–48, 129–30], so the Court has corrected the relevant date references in the TCCA’s opinion. The victim testified that [Petitioner] drove down the side road that led into a wooded area where “the house used to be” and parked the four-wheeler, “facing back towards the roadway.” The victim said that she was familiar with the area because she and her sister had driven the four-wheelers down to this area before. She said that this concrete slab was close to [Petitioner]’s house. The victim said that P.S. had continued on the main road explaining that [Petitioner] “sped up” leaving P.S. “quite a ways” behind them.

The victim testified that, after [Petitioner] parked the four-wheeler, he told her that they were “gonna sit down here and talk for a minute.” She said that she was seated “sideways” on the four-wheeler while [Petitioner] was standing. [Petitioner] touched her knees but “it didn’t really bother [her].” She said they talked for a few minutes and then, “[Petitioner] got mad, I guess, and then he just kind of slammed me down on it.” [Petitioner] retrieved two bungee cords from the rear of the four-wheeler and tied the victim’s wrists to the handlebars of the four-wheeler. The victim described in detail the bungee cords for the jury. He then pulled the victim’s jeans and underwear off and positioned himself over the victim and penetrated the victim’s vagina and “started moving.” She described his penetration as painful. When he finished, [Petitioner] told the victim that if she said “anything,” he knew where she lived. She said that she initially thought this was a threat but as she thought about it she “wasn’t sure how exactly to take that.”

The victim testified that [Petitioner] untied her, threw her clothes at her, and told her to get dressed. The victim said that she didn’t say anything to [Petitioner], “the first time.” She explained that, a few weeks later, but still before her twelfth birthday in June 200[6], her mother needed to “take [her] papaw to Murfreesboro,” so her mother asked [Petitioner] if the victim could stay with him while she was away. The victim said that she had not had any contact with [Petitioner] since the earlier incident. When she learned he was coming to get her, she said she did not “freak out or anything” because she believed it would not happen again. She stated that, at this time, she had not told anyone about the incident because she “felt dirty” and “shameful” like “it was [her] fault.”

The victim testified that [Petitioner] picked up the victim at her home in a “little black Chevrolet truck.” On the way to [Petitioner]’s house, he pulled into the same area where the “house had been.” She said that the two sat in the truck talking. When they stopped talking, [Petitioner] leaned over her with one arm on the console and his other arm on the passenger side armrest with his face directly in front of hers and then leaned back over into his seat. She said that [Petitioner] sat in his seat with his arm still on the console “for a minute or so” and then reached over, unbuttoned her pants, and put his hand down her pants and placed one of his fingers inside of her vagina. The prosecutor asked the victim how she felt when [Petitioner] did this and the victim replied, “I just felt like—you know, I thought what—what honestly am I doing so wrong.” She said [Petitioner] moved his finger “in and out” of her vagina and that it hurt “[a] little.” When [Petitioner] stopped, the victim looked at him and asked “why are you doing this to me[?]” She said that [Petitioner] just looked at her and then drove to the house.

The victim testified that she spent that night at her great aunt’s and [Petitioner]’s house as her mother had planned and that nothing else occurred during her stay. She stated that there had been no sexual contact between her and [Petitioner] since the incident in the pickup truck.

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Wilson v. Boyd, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-boyd-tned-2022.