Martinez, et al v. Ryan, et al
Filing
147
ORDER denying the 142 Motion for Reconsideration. Signed by Senior Judge Roslyn O Silver on 5/13/2021. (See Order for details.) (LFIG)
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
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Ernesto Salgado Martinez,
Petitioner,
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v.
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No. CV-05-01561-PHX-ROS
DEATH PENALTY CASE
Charles L. Ryan, et al.,
ORDER
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Respondents.
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On March 23, 2021, the Court denied Martinez’s motion for relief from judgment
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pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6). (Docs. 136, 141 at 5.) Martinez has filed a motion for
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reconsideration. (Doc. 142.) The motion is fully briefed. (Docs. 145, 146.) The Court will
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deny the motion for reconsideration.
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I.
Discussion
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A motion for reconsideration will be denied absent a showing of manifest error or a
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showing of new facts or legal authority that could not have been brought to the Court’s
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attention earlier with reasonable diligence. LRCiv 7.2(g)(1); see United Nat’l Ins. Co. v.
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Spectrum Worldwide, Inc., 555 F.3d 772, 780 (9th Cir. 2009). The motion may not repeat
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previously made arguments. See id.; Motorola, Inc. v. J.B. Rodgers Mech. Contractors,
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215 F.R.D. 581, 582 (D. Ariz. 2003) (reconsideration cannot “be used to ask the Court to
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rethink what it has already thought” through).
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Martinez’s Rule 60(b) motion was premised on the grounds that the Ninth Circuit’s
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decision in Mitchell v. United States, 958 F.3d 775 (9th Cir. 2020), entitled him to discovery
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regarding a potential Napue1 claim. (Doc. 141.) Martinez now asserts that the Court
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“overlooked or misapprehended” several points in denying his request for discovery and a
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certificate of appealability. The Court disagrees.
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In denying Martinez’s Rule 60(b) motion, the Court found it had jurisdiction to
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resolve the motion because he sought only the opportunity to develop the potential Napue
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claim, and, unlike his previous attempts to reopen the judgment, did not separately assert
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the Napue claim itself. (See id. at 3.) For purposes of the analysis, the Court assumed
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without deciding that Mitchell was an “extraordinary change in the law.” (Doc. 141 at 4.)
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The Court then denied the requested discovery, finding there was no significant likelihood
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Martinez would be entitled to relief because, “given the constraints imposed by AEDPA,”
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it would be difficult to determine a vehicle for vindicating the right violated. (Id.)
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Assuming he could find a legitimate “vehicle” to present his claim using the new evidence,
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the Court found no meaningful likelihood his convictions or sentence would be upset. (Id.)
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The Court did not, as Martinez asserts, “graft[] onto Mitchell a requirement that
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Martinez identify the legal vehicle that would allow Martinez habeas relief if he obtained
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the Napue evidence he seeks.” (Doc. 142 at 2.) The Court’s suggestion that Martinez would
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have difficulty identifying the vehicle is not a “disapprobation of the rule announced in
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Mitchell,” (see id.), rather, it is merely the application of the law controlling discovery in
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§ 2254 habeas. Whether a petitioner has established “good cause” for discovery under Rule
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6(a) requires a habeas court to determine the essential elements of the underlying
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substantive claim and evaluate whether “specific allegations before the court show reason
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to believe that the petitioner may, if the facts are fully developed, be able to demonstrate
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that he is . . . entitled to relief.” Bracy v. Gramley, 520 U.S. 899, 908–09 (1997) (quoting
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Harris v. Nelson, 394 U.S. 286, 300 (1969)) (emphasis added).
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A habeas petitioner is not entitled to discovery “as a matter of ordinary course.”
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Bracy, 520 U.S. at 904. “[A] district court abuse[s] its discretion in not ordering Rule 6(a)
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discovery when discovery [i]s ‘essential’ for the habeas petitioner to ‘develop fully’ his
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Napue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264 (1959).
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underlying claim.” Pham v. Terhune, 400 F.3d 740, 743 (9th Cir. 2005) (quoting Jones v.
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Wood, 114 F.3d 1002, 1009 (9th Cir. 1997)). The Ninth Circuit has explained that in habeas
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proceedings “discovery is available only in the discretion of the court and for good cause
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shown,” Rich v. Calderon, 187 F.3d 1064, 1068 (9th Cir. 1999) (citing Rules Governing
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Section 2254 Cases, Rule 6(a) 28 U.S.C. foll. § 2254), and is not “meant to be a fishing
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expedition for habeas petitioners to ‘explore their case in search of its existence.’” Id. at
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1067 (quoting Calderon v U.S.D.C. (Nicolas), 98 F.3d 1102, 1106 (9th Cir. 1996)).
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Thus, in determining whether discovery should be permitted, the Court properly
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focused on whether specific allegations before the court demonstrated a significant
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likelihood of relief. (See Doc. 141 at 4.) The Court suggested Martinez’s ability to ever
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present a claim on which it would permit discovery would be a difficult task because of the
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procedural hurdles AEDPA imposes and because, even if Martinez could prove the
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allegations set forth in his Rule 60(b) motions, there was no significant likelihood he would
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obtain relief. (Doc. 141 at 4.)
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Assuming, as this Court did, that Mitchell was a change in the law, it is not one that
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permits the Court to ignore the constraints of AEDPA, which contains provisions such as
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28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A), that prohibits the filing of second or successive petitions absent
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authorization from the court of appeals, and §§ 2254(d)(1) and (e)(2) that “strongly
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discourage[s]” state prisoners from submitting new evidence. Cullen v. Pinholster, 563
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U.S. 170, 186 (2011). “Federal courts sitting in habeas are not an alternative forum for
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trying facts and issues which a prisoner made insufficient effort to pursue in state
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proceedings.” Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 420, 437 (2000).
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Put another way, the Court cannot find good cause to grant discovery where
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Martinez has no procedurally proper mechanism for demonstrating entitlement to relief.
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As Martinez notes, the Ninth Circuit in Mitchell “ruled that Peña-Rodriguez did not set
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aside the bar on juror interviews in the absence of good cause. Mitchell, 958 F.3d at 790-
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91.” (Doc. 146 at 2.) Similarly, Mitchell did not set aside the bar on discovery in state
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habeas cases in the absence of good cause. Good cause cannot be shown if Martinez, after
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fully developing the evidence, would still be unable to demonstrate that he is entitled to
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relief. See Bracy, 520 U.S. at 908–09. The Court suggested it would be difficult
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procedurally to do so, but moreover found that, assuming Martinez uncovered the evidence
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he hoped to uncover, there was no significant likelihood that such a claim would be
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successful.
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Martinez contends that in doing so, the Court misapprehended the materiality
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standard of Napue, and should reconsider its conclusion that “assuming Martinez found a
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legitimate ‘vehicle’ to present claims using the new evidence, there is no meaningful
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likelihood his convictions or sentences would be upset” and, in its discretion, denied
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discovery on these grounds. (Doc. 141 at 4)
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Assuming, arguendo, that Martinez uncovered evidence supporting his Napue
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claim, reversal would not be “virtually automatic,” as he claims. (Doc. 136 at 16) (citing
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Jackson v. Brown, 513 F.3d 1057, 1076 (9th Cir. 2008), and Hayes v. Brown, 399 F.3d
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972, 978 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc); see also (Doc. 142 at 3.). Though both Jackson and
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Hayes cited this language from the Second Circuit with approval, both cases clarified that
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Napue did not create a “per se rule of reversal.” Jackson, 513 F.3d at 1076; Hayes, 399
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F.3d at 984. If error is established, the proper test under Napue is materiality; the Court
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must determine whether there is any reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could
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have affected the judgment of the jury; if so, then the conviction must be set aside. Hayes,
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399 F.3d at 984 (quoting Belmontes v. Woodford, 350 F.3d 861, 881 (9th Cir. 2003)).
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Martinez has failed to demonstrate how the Napue violation, if true, could have
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affected the judgment of the jury. Martinez asserts Sheriff Detective Douglas Beatty
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testified at the guilt phase of trial that the ignition was missing from a 1975 Monte Carlo
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driven by Martinez at the time of his arrest, which led prosecutors to argue Martinez had
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stolen the car and, therefore, had motive to shoot the victim, a state police patrolman,
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during a traffic stop and premeditated the homicide. (Doc. 142 at 2.) But there was ample
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evidence, aside from Detective Beatty’s testimony about the missing ignition switch, that
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the Monte Carlo was stolen and that the murder was premeditated. The Court previously
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summarized the evidence offered during the guilt phase of Martinez’s trial relevant to the
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determination that the Monte Carlo was stolen and that Officer Martin’s murder was
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premeditated, and will not restate that testimony here. (Doc. 127 at 12–16.)
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Martinez argued in his Rule 60(b) motion that:
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Prosecutors argued repeatedly in closing that the evidence showed that
Martinez stole the vehicle and therefore had motive to shoot Arizona DPS
Officer Robert Martin at a traffic stop, which contributed significantly to the
element of premeditation necessary to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt
to convict of first degree murder. See ECF No. 115-5, Appx. 2 at 8-9, 12, 1920, 28-29.
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(Doc. 136 at 7) (emphasis added). He also asserted that the Respondents’ arguments
regarding premeditation are “disingenuous” and ignore “the critical significance
prosecutors placed on that testimony in closing argument to prove beyond a reasonable
doubt that Martinez acted with premeditation.” (Doc. 139 at 4.)
Martinez’s characterization of the significance placed on Det. Beatty’s testimony is
misleading. The Court has reviewed the closing arguments and the prosecutor did not assert
that Martinez stole the Monte Carlo, only that the Monte Carlo he was driving was stolen,
an uncontroverted fact whether the ignition switch was missing or not. The prosecution
highlighted this and additional facts not contested in these proceedings to establish motive:
“A stolen car, a handgun, a warrant for his arrest, on the run, and a prior felony conviction.”
(Doc. 115-5, Appx. 2 at 12; see also id. at 29 (“Motive. He’s got a warrant for his arrest.
He was on the run, a prior felony conviction, a stolen car. He was illegally in possession
of a handgun, and he stated, ‘If I am stopped by the police, I am not going back to jail.’.”)
Even if the fact that the car was stolen was removed from the equation, along with
Martinez’s statement that he intended not to go back to jail if stopped by police,2 the fact
remains that Martinez had a warrant for his arrest and was illegally in possession of a
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For purposes of the materiality analysis, the Court assumes Martinez could prove
that the ignition switch was intact at the time of his arrest, that Maricopa County
prosecutors were told by Detective Beatty or California criminalist Ricci Cooksey that the
ignition in the Monte Carlo driven by Martinez was intact when it was impounded after his
arrest, and that Fryer’s testimony regarding Martinez’s statements about what he would do
if stopped by police were successfully impeached.
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handgun. Moreover, Martinez admits the state’s theory of premeditation also relied on the
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testimony of Maricopa County Chief Medical Examiner, Phillip Keen, M.D., as to the
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sequence of shots allegedly fired by Martinez that struck Officer Martin. (See Doc. 115 at
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39). In addition, to prove premeditation the state also relied heavily in closing arguments
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on the amount of time it would have taken Officer Martin to walk the distance from his
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vehicle to the stolen Monte Carlo, where he was shot at the driver’s side door.
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From 45 feet away, Bob Martin got out of his car and started walking toward
the defendant’s car. His body was found 37 feet in front of -- the front of his
police car, and the location where he would have gotten out of that car is an
additional 8 feet. 45 feet. 45 feet. How many steps is that for the defendant
to keep thinking what is it? What is it that I am going to do when he gets to
my car? However long it takes for Bob Martin to walk up to that car, that’s
how long the defendant is reflecting on what he’s going to do when he gets
there.
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Four times he pulled this trigger, and four times he struck Bob Martin each
time in the location designed to murder this police officer. In the neck, in the
hand area, and then as the police officer spun, as he gets to the back of his
car and perhaps to safety he shot him in the back. And then when he was
down -- and we have scuff marks on both of Bob Martin’s knees -- when he
was down he pulled that trigger again. That’s four, four times he shot this
man. Premeditation each time he pulls that trigger he’s thinking what I am
doing to this man in the uniform? I am trying to kill him so I can get out of
here. Four times. And then after he was dead or shortly before he died, he
shot at him twice more and missed. Six times.
(Doc. 115-5, App. 2 at 17-19, see also id., App. 3 at 73-74).
Further, Martinez has repeatedly, explicitly and incorrectly stated throughout these
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proceedings that “it is clear from closing argument that the prosecution sought to prove
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‘premeditation’ through . . . the testimony of Det. Beatty concerning the condition of the
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ignition of the 1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo at the time of [Martinez’s] arrest.” (Doc. 115
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at 39) (citing Doc. 115-5, App. 2 at 8, 12, 19–20, 28–29) (emphasis added).3 In fact, the
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Additional misstatements attributed to the prosecutor’s closing arguments include:
“The prosecution argued in closing argument that the absence of an ignition meant
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missing ignition was not mentioned at all during closing argument. It was mentioned only
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briefly in rebuttal closing argument in the context of one of several reasons why an
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eyewitness in Payson was able to remember and identify Martinez from a brief encounter
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at a gas station:
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. . . [I]t is significant because of the vehicle that was being driven, she told
you that the person left the car running. And that is something because if you
are driving a stolen vehicle you don’t have any keys that work it, and you
have to possibly use a screwdriver. And when you go to the gas station and
somebody is looking right at you and, remember, she says there is an eye
contact here, you don’t want that person seeing you stick a screwdriver there
in the ignition switch, do you, because right away they are going to know
that something is up.
(Id., Appx. 3 at 66.)
Thus, even if Martinez establishes the alleged Napue violation, there is no
reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the judgment of the jury
because the evidence supporting premeditation was overwhelming and uncontroverted. See
Hayes, 399 F.3d at 984. Martinez has stated in these proceedings that the “Supreme Court
has indicated that closing argument is the barometer for the significance the prosecution
attaches to its evidence.” (Doc. 115 at 39) (citing Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 444
(1995) (for materiality purposes, “[t]he likely damage [to the prosecution’s case had it
complied with its duty under Brady] is best understood by taking the word of the
prosecutor” in closing argument). If this is true, the prosecution placed no significance on
that Petitioner knew the vehicle to be stolen and, therefore, that he had a motive to kill
Officer Martin, to wit, a desire not to be returned to prison for stealing the Monte Carlo.
R.T., September 25, 1997, at 8, 12, 16, 19-20.” (Doc. 95 at 6) (emphasis added).
“Prosecutors argued repeatedly in closing that the evidence showed that Martinez
stole the vehicle.” (Doc. 136 at 7) (emphasis added).
“Sheriff’s Detective Douglas Beatty testified at the guilt phase of trial that the
ignition was missing from a 1975 Monte Carlo driven by Martinez at the time of his arrest,
which led prosecutors to argue Martinez had stolen the car.” (Doc. 142 at 2) (emphasis
added).
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the testimony of Det. Beatty regarding the missing ignition switch.
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Finally, as the Court previously stated, whatever change in law Mitchell may have
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wrought does not support Martinez’s request in these circumstances to permit evidentiary
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development with respect to the Napue claim. (Doc. 141 at 4); see Phelps v. Alameida, 569
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F.3d 1120, 1133 (9th Cir. 2009) (“[T]he proper course when analyzing a Rule 60(b)(6)
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motion predicated on an intervening change in the law is to evaluate the circumstances
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surrounding the specific motion before the court.”).
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The court in Mitchell addressed a jurisdictional issue; it rejected the Government’s
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argument that the Fifth Circuit’s decision in In re Robinson, 917 F.3d 856, 861–66 (5th
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Cir. 2019), was controlling in the circumstances present in Mitchell, and reaffirmed that
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“[a]s explained in Gonzalez, an argument is a ‘claim’ if it ‘substantively addresses federal
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grounds’ for setting aside a prisoner’s conviction.” Mitchell, 958 F.3d at 784. Finding that
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the district court indeed had jurisdiction to decide the Rule 60(b) motion, the Ninth Circuit
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proceeded to analyze the motion under the strictures of Gonzalez.
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Similarly, Martinez argued, and this Court agreed, that under Gonzalez and the
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Ninth Circuit’s holding in Mitchell, the Court has jurisdiction over Martinez’s Rule 60(b)
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motion because it is not a disguised second or successive petition.
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After addressing the jurisdictional issue, the Court in Mitchell turned to Mitchell’s
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argument that a recently-decided Supreme Court case, Peña-Rodriguez v. Colorado, 137
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S. Ct. 855 (2017), was an extraordinary change in the law which would “give Mitchell
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relief from the prior order denying his request to interview jurors.” Mitchell, 958 F.3d at
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787.
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Like Mitchell, Martinez has failed to demonstrate how a change in case law would
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upset or overturn a settled legal principle relied on by this court in denying his previous
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requests for discovery. Previously, the Court analyzed Martinez’s renewed request for an
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“indication” whether it would consider a Rule 60(b) motion (Doc. 115) and found that he
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failed to demonstrate a defect in the integrity of the underlying habeas proceedings, but
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instead sought to raise new substantive claims under Brady and Napue. (Doc. 127 at 24–
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25.) In doing so, this Court applied the then-controlling law regarding Rule 60(b)(6)
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motions, Gonzalez v. Crosby, 545 U.S. 524, 528 (2005), and denied the motion, and
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consequently the related discovery request, as a disguised second or successive petition.
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The Ninth Circuit’s holding in Mitchell did not change that law.
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Martinez’s arguments are premised on flawed understandings of both the holding in
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Mitchell and the purpose of a Rule 60(b) motion. First, Martinez incorrectly states that the
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Court in Mitchell “explicitly understood the import of Gonzalez to be . . . [that] a petitioner
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may seek discovery via Rule 60(b) so long as he is not raising a merits-based substantive
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claim in his Rule 60(b) motion.” (Doc. 146 at 3.) Mitchell neither explicitly nor implicitly
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said this; a Rule 60(b) motion is not a discovery device, much less a post-judgment one.
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Martinez’s assertion also ignores the fact, as this Court pointed out, that the Court in
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Mitchell ultimately denied Mitchell’s request for discovery because Peña-Rodriguez did
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not unsettle that court’s previous order denying Mitchell’s request to interview jurors.
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Mitchell, 958 F.3d at 790 (“[T]his change in law left untouched the law governing
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investigating and interviewing jurors.”).
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Martinez fails to point to a controlling or well-settled principle of law, relied on by
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the Court in denying either habeas relief or relief on the motions for indication, that is now
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unsettled as a result of the holding in Mitchell. Martinez has consistently argued that he is
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entitled to relief on the grounds of the Beatty Brady and Napue violations and has sought
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to support his claims with newly discovered evidence, and the Court has denied those
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requests, and the attendant discovery requests, as disguised second or successive petitions.
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Beginning with his Motion to Remand before the Ninth Circuit, Martinez argued
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for a stay of his appeal and a remand “for consideration of newly-discovered evidence that
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supports claims that Maricopa County prosecutors violated . . . Napue . . . where they
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deliberately elicited critical testimony from Detective Beatty they knew or should have
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known was false.” Martinez v. Ryan, No. 08-99009, (Dkt. 67 at 1) Martinez asserted he
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was entitled to habeas relief under Brady, Kyles and Napue. (Id., Dkt. 67 at 12–16.) He
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requested a remand for evidentiary development and for preparation of findings of fact and
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conclusions of law with respect to both the Brady and Napue claims. (Id. at 20.) In his reply
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brief, Martinez clarified that his Quezada motion “alleges a violation of Napue, . . . which
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identifies a due process violation where the prosecution fails to correct trial testimony it
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knows or should know is false.” (Id., Dkt. 86 at 3.) Martinez asserted he had established
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colorable Brady and Napue claims that should be remanded for discovery and evidentiary
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hearings. (Id. at 5.) Subsequently, the discovery of the photograph showing the apparently
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intact ignition prompted Martinez to file a motion for leave to supplement the motion to
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stay and remand stating “[t]he presence of the photo in the Maricopa County Attorney’s
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file conclusively proves the Napue claim in the Quezada Motion because it is ‘material,’
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as defined by the Supreme Court and this Court, and it establishes that prosecutors knew
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or should have known Beatty’s testimony was false or misleading.” (Id., Dkt. 87 at 3.)
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After the court granted Martinez’s motion to remand for consideration of a possible
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Brady-Napue claim in light of the newly discovered evidence, Martinez asserted in the
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renewed request that “[t]he Napue violation would require that the writ issue.” (Doc. 115
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at 44.) He alleged that if in fact the ignition was intact, then he had stated a claim which,
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upon full factual development, might entitle him to habeas corpus relief. (Id. at 115 at 45.)
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Further, Martinez asserted that he was entitled to evidentiary development because he had
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“alleged claims which, if proven true, would establish the violation of the right to federal
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due process but, despite his diligence, he ha[d] not been able to assemble all of the evidence
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in support of the claims due to lack of cooperation of Arizona and California law
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enforcement in his investigation.” (Id. at 45–46) (emphasis added).
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Mitchell did not change the law governing the presentation of newly discovered
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evidence and new claims in Rule 60(b) motions and does not upset or overturn any legal
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principle relied on by the Court in previously denying Martinez’s Rule 60(b) motions to
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reopen the judgment as disguised second or successive petitions.
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Finally, as this Court previously ruled, in determining whether Martinez’s claims of
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evidence of an intact ignition or false assertions by Detective Beatty would entitle Martinez
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to relief:
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Even if Petitioner could demonstrate the assertions were false and part of
such a scheme, he cannot demonstrate a defect in the integrity of the
proceedings because the assertions had no effect on the outcome of the
proceedings. The Court found Claim 4 procedurally barred and denied
further evidentiary development of Petitioner’s theory that the ignition was
intact at the time the vehicle was impounded. The Court considered the
evidence proffered in support of Claims 9, 16, and 17, and assumed that
Petitioner’s new evidence would demonstrate that “the ignition was intact at
the time Petitioner was arrested,” but nonetheless concluded that Petitioner
failed to establish that no reasonable juror would have found him guilty of
premeditated first degree murder because “whether the ignition was intact at
the time Petitioner was arrested does not negate the fact that the owner had
reported it stolen.” (Doc. 88 at 26-27) (emphasis added).
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Thus, Martinez has failed to demonstrate that Mitchell is an intervening change in
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law that constitutes extraordinary circumstances sufficient to permit him to reopen the
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judgment in these circumstances. See Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1133.
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Accordingly,
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IT IS ORDERED Martinez’s motion for reconsideration (Doc. 142) is DENIED.
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Dated this 13th day of May, 2021.
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Honorable Roslyn O. Silver
Senior United States District Judge
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