White v. Medina et al
Filing
22
OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PETITION. Mr. White's 7 Amended Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 is DENIED in its entirety on the merits. None of Mr. White's claims make a substantial showing of a denial of a constitutional right under the standard of Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473 (2000). The Court DENIES Mr. White a Certificate of Appealability, by Judge Marcia S. Krieger on 05/11/2011. (wjc, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Honorable Marcia S. Krieger
Civil Action No. 10-cv-00282-MSK-MEH
DEMARCO JAMAAL WHITE,
Petitioner,
v.
ANGEL MEDINA, Warden, L.C.F., and
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF COLORADO,
Respondents.
______________________________________________________________________________
OPINION AND ORDER DENYING PETITION
______________________________________________________________________________
THIS MATTER comes before the Court pursuant to Mr. White’s Amended Petition (#7)
for a writ of Habeas Corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, the Respondents’ Response (# 15),
and Mr. White’s reply (# 17).
FACTS
The Court will briefly summarize the background facts here, and elaborate where
necessary as part of its analysis. In March 2002, Mr. White and Bodashon Wilkins went to the
home of Donzell Jenkins and Samuel Knox for the purpose of selling some crack cocaine. While
at the home, Mr. White fatally shot Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Knox. Mr. White was charged with two
counts of first degree murder, C.R.S. § 18-3-102(1)(a), and one count of conspiracy to commit
murder, C.R.S. § 18-3-201. Mr. White was jointly tried with Mr. Wilkins in 2004. At the trial,
the Government contended that Mr. White acted without provocation, arguing that Mr. White
sought to retaliate against Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Knox for stealing drugs or money from him
1
earlier. Mr. White contended that Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Knox summoned him to the home with
the intent of robbing him and menaced him with weapons, forcing him to act in self-defense.
The jury convicted Mr. White of one count of first degree murder (involving Mr. Knox),
and the lesser offense of second degree murder (involving Mr. Jenkins), and acquitted him of the
conspiracy count. Mr. White was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole on the first
degree murder charge and a consecutive sentence of 48 years on the second degree murder
count.
In the instant Amended petition (# 7), Mr. White raises 11 claims: (i) denial of his 6th
Amendment right to assistance of counsel, in that his assigned counsel labored under a conflict
of interest and provided ineffective assistance by failing to investigate and present exculpatory
evidence; (ii) deprivation of Due Process, in that the trial court refused jury instructions tendered
by Mr. White or gave incomplete and abbreviated versions of those instructions, including an
instruction on necessity/self-defense; (iii) denial of his 6th Amendment right to trial by jury and
his right to Due Process, in that the trial court failed to adequately address a note from a
dissenting juror claiming to be “picked on” by other jurors; (iv) deprivation of Due Process, in
that the trial court erroneously admitted evidence of Mr. White’s prior felony conviction, which
Mr. White claims was obtained unconstitutionally; (v) deprivation of Due Process, in that Mr.
White was tried with his co-defendant, Mr. Wilkins, whose defense was antagonistic to that
presented by Mr. White; (vi) denial of his 6th Amendment right to trial by jury and his right to
Due Process, in that the trial court denied Mr. White’s challenges to four jurors for cause (thus
requiring Mr. White to use peremptory challenges to remove those jurors and preventing him
from removing other “biased jurors”); (vii) deprivation of Due Process by the trial court in
2
allowing the admission of “extremely prejudicial photographs” of the victims which, Mr. White
contends, did not accurately depict the victim’s locations and positions; (viii) deprivation of Due
Process, in that the trial court permitted the Government to make prejudicial remarks in its
closing argument; (ix) deprivation of Due Process, in that there was insufficient evidence in the
record to support the jury’s verdict; (x) that the cumulative effect of the errors discussed above
operated to deprive Mr. White of Due Process; and (xi) ineffective assistance of trial counsel in
violation of the 6th Amendment, in that trial counsel failed to present exculpatory evidence that a
victims’ girlfriend had altered or concealed evidence prior to the police’s arrival and failed to
properly challenge the introduction of his prior conviction.
The Respondent concedes that the Amended Petition is timely and properly-exhausted.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
A habeas petition under § 2254 examines whether the petitioner’s state court conviction
was obtained in violation of provisions of the United States Constitution. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d);
Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390, 400 (1993). Specifically, federal courts may not grant a writ
unless the state court decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of,
clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court,” or the state court's
decision “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented in the State court.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). This Court is generally not concerned with
questions of fact decided by the state court or jury, sufficiency of the evidence against the
petitioner, or questions of whether the state court properly applied state law, except to the extent
that such alleged errors implicates rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. Id. at 400-01. As
3
a result, the Court presumes factual findings by the state courts to be correct, and the petitioner is
required to come forward with clear and convincing evidence to overcome such presumption. 28
U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
In considering Mr. White’s filings, the Court is mindful of his pro se status, and
accordingly, reads his pleadings liberally. Haines v. Kerner, 404 U.S. 519, 520-21 (1972).
However, such liberal construction is intended merely to overlook technical formatting errors
and other defects in his use of legal terminology and proper English. Hall v. Bellmon, 935 F.2d
1106, 1110 (10th Cir. 1991). Pro se status does not relieve Mr. White of the duty to comply with
the various rules and procedures governing litigants and counsel or the requirements of the
substantive law, and in these regards, the Court treats Mr. White according to the same standard
as counsel licensed to practice law before the bar of this Court. See McNeil v. U.S., 508 U.S.
106, 113 (1993); Ogden v. San Juan County, 32 F.3d 452, 455 (10th Cir. 1994).
B. Claims
The Court addresses Mr. White’s claims seriatim. With regard to each claim, the Court
first notes the articulation of the claim as found in the Amended Petition, then examines the
relevant facts – typically, as recited by the Colorado Court of Appeals1 – and then considers Mr.
1
The record before this Court on this claim is entirely indirect, in the sense that neither
party has submitted copies of filings in the trial court nor transcripts of trial court proceedings.
Instead, this Court has been presented with only the parties’ briefing on Mr. White’s direct
appeal from his conviction, the August 16, 2007 decision of the Colorado Court of Appeals
denying that appeal, the parties’ briefing of an appeal from the trial court’s denial of Mr. White’s
post-conviction motion pursuant to C.R.C.P. 35 (although, notably, neither the motion itself nor
any record of proceedings before the trial court in this regard), and the September 10, 2009
decision of the Colorado Court of Appeals denying that appeal.
This Court is required to presume the accuracy of findings of fact made by the state
courts. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). When a habeas petition challenges the correctness of state court
factual findings, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(f) details the parties’ responsibilities to produce the
4
White’s particular arguments in support of the claim, as found in his reply brief.
supporting state court record. That statute provides that, in the first instance, “the applicant, if
able, shall produce that part of the record pertinent to a determination of the sufficiency of the
evidence.” Id. If a petitioner demonstrates, “because of indigency or other reason [that he is]
unable to produce such part of the record,” the respondent “shall produce such part of the
record” upon order of the Court. Id. If the respondent “cannot provide such pertinent part of the
record,” this Court “shall determine under the existing facts and circumstances what weight shall
be given to the State court’s factual determination.”
Here, Mr. White did not provide any particular portions of the state court record with his
Petition (# 2) or Amended Petition (# 7). Mr. White has neither sought nor obtained leave to
proceed in forma pauperis, nor has he made any particular showing under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(f)
that his indigency prevents him from supplying relevant portions of the trial court record. At the
same time, the Court notes that it specifically ordered (# 14) the Respondents to file “those
portions of the record of trial and/or post-conviction proceedings as are available and relevant,”
to “identify those portions of the record of trial and/or post-conviction proceedings that are
relevant but not presently available,” and to file copies of “all relevant appellate briefs submitted
by either party.” The Respondents fully complied with this final requirement, producing all
appellate briefing, but did not produce any transcriptions of any proceedings, pre- or postconviction, before the trial court, nor did the Respondents proffer any indication that such
materials were unavailable.
Given the absence of any record of proceedings before the trial court, this Court thus has
two options: it could delay the resolution of this matter by directing that the Petitioner and/or the
Respondents obtain and supply the relevant portions of the trial court record. Or it can assume
that both parties have tacitly discharged their obligations under § 2254(f) and presume that both
sides “cannot provide such pertinent part[s] of” the trial court record. In the event of the latter
alternative, this Court must then “determine under the existing facts and circumstances” what
weight to give the state court’s findings of fact, particularly those expressed in the opinions of
the Colorado Court of Appeals.
This Court’s decision to proceed in the absence of any trial record is informed by two
observations. First, the Court notes that Mr. White does not appear to specifically challenge any
state court factual findings. Indeed, Mr. White frequently concedes that the Colorado Court of
Appeals’ factual findings with regard to certain claims are accurate, and he notes only that he
disputes the correctness of the state court’s application of federal law to the undisputed factual
circumstances. Second, on the limited occasions in which Mr. White can be understood to
implicitly challenge a state court factual finding, the Court has the benefit of Mr. White’s
appellate briefs to the state courts, which recite his positions on the factual matters in more detail
than Mr. White does in his filings in the instant action. This Court ultimately concludes that Mr.
White does not meaningfully contest the sufficiency of any state court factual findings, and
accordingly, this Court gives dispositive weight to the particular factual findings of the Colorado
Court of Appeals with regard to each claim. Because those findings are sufficient to address
each claim, the Court elects not to require the parties to submit the record of proceedings before
the trial court.
5
1. Ineffective assistance of counsel
Mr. White contends that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance to him in two
respects. First, he contends that his counsel labored under a “conflict of interest” with him. Mr.
White’s Amended Petition does not elaborate on this allegation, but his reply brief explains that
“counsel was operating under conflict because she had failed to meet with him, investigate
possible defenses, and/or [present] exculpatory evidence which would support his claims of selfdefense [as well as] feigned ignorance of these issues when confronted with them by the Court.”
Second, Mr. White contends that his counsel “failed to investigate, prepare, communicate,
forensically test exculpatory evidence, etc.” It appears to the Court that these two allegations are
one and the same – that is, that his counsel failed to investigate and present (unspecified)
exculpatory evidence and otherwise failed to effectively communicate with Mr. White.
The Colorado Court of Appeals’ August 16, 2007 decision recited the following factual
findings with regard to the ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Between the appointment of
counsel in August 2002 and March 2004, Mr. White “filed three sets of motions” seeking
appointment of different trial counsel. During the same time period, his counsel filed two
motions seeking to withdraw from representation. Mr. White’s motions “alleged without
specificity” an inability to communicate with and a distrust of his counsel. His counsel’s
motions “alleged [that] an irreconcilable conflict of interest rendered [counsel] ineffective.” The
trial court conducted three separate hearings on these motions. In the first hearing, the court
rejected Mr. White’s first set of motions “because they were ‘boilerplate’ motions with
conclusory allegations of ineffective assistance.”
A second hearing considered Mr. White’s second motion, as well as the first motion filed
6
by his counsel. These motions “indicated that [Mr. White]’s ‘intense distrust’ effectively
hindered counsel’s ability to communicate with him,” and that Mr. White “asserted, but could
not specify, that ‘certain things weren’t getting done.’” At the request of the trial judge, a
different judge conducted an additional hearing into the matter. In that hearing, counsel
explained that, although they were asserting “a total breakdown of communication,” they were
nevertheless able “to the full extent of their ability, having been impeded essentially by a client,”
to effectively represent Mr. White. Thus, the trial court “concluded that counsel’s inability to
communicate with [Mr. White] principally stemmed from [Mr. White]’s noncooperation.” As a
result, the trial court denied both motions.
The matter of counsel’s effectiveness was taken up again in a third motion by Mr. White,
which largely repeated his earlier motion (with some additional elaboration concerning his
counsel’s failure to conduct ballistics testing). Such motion was “summarily denied.” His
counsel filed a second motion to withdraw, which occasioned yet another hearing by the trial
court. This time, “the court denied the motion because it was filed on the eve of trial.” After
reviewing this record, the Colorado Court of Appeals found “[no] abuse of discretion in the trial
court’s rulings” denying both Mr. White and counsel’s requests to withdraw. The Court of
Appeals explained that “the record supports the trial court’s conclusion that communication
difficulties were largely a result of [Mr. White]’s noncooperation.”
After his conviction was affirmed, Mr. White filed a Rule 35 motion in the trial court,
contending that his trial counsel had supplied ineffective assistance. Once again, the record
before this Court of the Rule 35 proceeding consists entirely of the parties’ briefs and the Court
of Appeals’ decision affirming the trial court’s denial of that motion. The Court of Appeals’
7
September 2009 decision explained that “the trial court denied the motion without a hearing on
the grounds that [Mr. White]’s arguments had been previously raised and rejected.” The Court
of Appeals found that although the trial court’s rationale was incorrect,2 the denial of the motion
was nevertheless appropriate. It characterized his motion as contending that “certain crucial
information was not adequately highlighted by his attorney,” who, Mr. White contends, “should
have ‘hammered home’ that the victim’s girlfriend moved and hid the victim’s gun, that
additional shell casings were found at the scene but were not tested by the firearms expert, and
that gunshot residue was found on the victims’ hands.” The Court of Appeals found that “all of
this evidence was presented to the jury,” if not by Mr. White’s counsel, then by counsel for his
co-defendant, Mr. Wilkins. Thus, the Court of Appeals determined, Mr. White “cannot show
how the outcome would have been different had the evidence been highlighted again.” As a
result, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of Mr. White’s Rule 35 motion,
albeit on different grounds.
Although the Colorado Court of Appeals perceived a difference between Mr. White’s
claims on direct appeal – i.e. challenges to the trial court’s denial of motions to appoint
substitute counsel – and the claims he raised in his Rule 35 motion – i.e. challenges that his
attorneys provided him ineffective assistance – this § 2254 action presents the simple question of
whether Mr. White’s counsel’s performance at trial was constitutionally-deficient. See Wheat v.
U.S., 486 U.S. 153, 159 (1988) (“in evaluating Sixth Amendment claims, the appropriate inquiry
2
The Court of Appeals observed that Mr. White “previously raised similar issues, [but]
he did not do so under the purview of ineffective assistance of counsel.” Mr. White’s pre-trial
complaints about his representation were couched in terms of “conflict of interest” or “inability
to communicate,” not ineffective assistance.
8
focuses on the adversarial process, not on the accused’s relationship with his lawyer as such”);
Carlson v. Jones, 526 F.3d 1018, 1025 (7th Cir. 2008) (“when a trial court refuses to appoint new
counsel, the defendant can only show a denial of a constitutional right if he can establish that his
counsel was ultimately ineffective”). In other words, any error by the trial court in failing to
grant Mr. White’s pre-trial requests for new counsel is germane only to the extent that the failure
to appoint new counsel resulted in Mr. White receiving ineffective assistance by his counsel in
presenting his case at trial.
The Supreme Court has established a two-prong test to review claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). Mr. White must
demonstrate both that his counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness and that his counsel’s deficient performance was prejudicial to him. Id. at 687.
Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance is “highly deferential,” and there is a strong
presumption that counsel’s performance falls within the range of “reasonable professional
assistance.” Id. In order to demonstrate prejudice, Mr. White must establish that counsel’s
performance rendered the proceedings “fundamentally unfair or unreliable.” Lockhart v.
Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364, 369 (1993). If Mr. White fails to satisfy either prong of the Strickland
test, the ineffective assistance claim fails. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697.
The Colorado Court of Appeals, applying the Strickland standard, concluded that Mr.
White could not show that his counsel’s performance (assuming it was objectively unreasonable)
was prejudicial to him. Mr. White’s reply brief identifies the “exculpatory evidence” that he
contends his counsel “failed to investigate, prepare, communicate, [and] forensically test” as
being “ballistic evidence which would have shown that the victim fired a weapon at him” and
9
other evidence that is unspecified. The Colorado Court of Appeals expressly considered whether
Mr. White had shown that his counsel’s alleged failure to investigate such evidence was
prejudicial. It concluded that there was no prejudice because “his co-defendant’s counsel was
able to thoroughly cross-examine the detective on the fact that gunshot residue was found on the
victims.” The Colorado Court of Appeals could not find that “the outcome would have been
different had [that same] evidence been highlighted again” by Mr. White’s counsel, and thus
found no prejudice to Mr. White from his counsel’s alleged failure to investigate this evidence.3
As noted above, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1) requires this Court to adopt factual findings
made by the state courts, unless Mr. White shows, “by clear and convincing evidence,” that such
a factual finding is incorrect. Mr. White has not disputed the Court of Appeals’ key factual
finding – that his co-defendant’s counsel fully explored each of the issues his own counsel
overlooked – and thus, this Court adopts that factual finding.
Mr. White does not address the effect of such a finding in his reply brief, and thus, has
not demonstrated that he experienced any prejudice as a result of his own counsel’s alleged
ineffectiveness. The record reflects that, regardless of which counsel presented it, the jury was
supplied with the relevant evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) authorizes the Court to grant habeas
relief only if Mr. White can show that the state court’s application of law “was contrary to or
involved an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law.” This Court finds that
3
Although neither the Amended Petition or reply brief specifically describe any other
items of evidence Mr. White contends his counsel allegedly failed to investigate and present, this
Court can assume, from the Colorado Court of Appeals’ decision on his Rule 35 motion, that Mr.
White might also be referring to claims that his counsel failed to present evidence of a victims’
girlfriend’s motive, her hiding the victims’ guns, and the fact that additional shell casings were
found at the scene. These contentions form the basis of his eleventh claim for relief, discussed
below.
10
the Colorado Court of Appeals’ conclusion that Mr. White suffered no prejudice from his
counsel’s allegedly ineffective performance was a proper application of Strickland to the facts
here. Accordingly, Mr. White is not entitled to relief on claim 1.
2. Inadequate jury instructions
Mr. White contends that he tendered three jury instructions at the charging conference,
“including an ‘apparent necessity’ instruction”4 that emphasized the jury’s duty to assess his
“awareness of the need to act [in his own self-defense] because he knew in advance that the
victims were armed and dangerous.” He complains that the trial court replaced his tendered
instruction with an abbreviated version that “limited the apparent necessity to use of non-deadly
force.” Mr. White states that, by doing so, the trial court “deprived [him] of a complete
defense.”
The Court of Appeals’ decision quotes the entirety of the 14-line, three-sentence
instruction tendered by Mr. White,5 as well as the significantly-abbreviated instruction ultimately
4
Self-defense is viable only where an imminent danger of harm to the defendant
warranted the conduct that now gives rise to the criminal charges. In some circumstances, a
defendant may misperceive the nature or existence of the threat against him, using force in
response to a threat that is not actually as severe as the defendant subjectively believed. In these
circumstances, courts sometimes give an “apparent necessity” instruction that advises the jury
that a defendant’s mistaken belief of imminent harm can nevertheless support a claim of selfdefense, so long as that mistaken belief was reasonable in light of the circumstances as they
appeared to the defendant at the time.
5
Mr. White’s tendered instruction read “When a person has [ ] reasonable grounds for
believing, and does in fact actually believe, that danger of his being killed or receiving great
bodily injury is imminent, he may act on such appearance and defend himself. A person may act
on such appearances even to the extent of taking a human life when necessary, although it may
turn out that the appearances were false or although he may have been mistaken as to the extent
of the actual danger. Apparent necessity, if well grounded, and of such a character as to appeal
to a reasonable person under similar conditions or circumstances, as being sufficient to require
action, justifies application of self-defense to the same extent as actual or real danger.”
11
given by the trial court: “A person may act in self-defense on the basis of apparent necessity, or a
reasonable but erroneous belief that the use of unlawful physical force is imminent.” The Court
of Appeals understood Mr. White’s contention on appeal to be that the instruction given by the
trial court “restricted the jury’s consideration of this doctrine to the use of nondeadly physical
force.”6
The Court of Appeals concluded that it was error for the trial court to give the “apparent
necessity” instruction, but found that the error was rendered harmless by the fact that the trial
court also gave instructions “on the use of deadly physical force in self-defense.” Colorado’s
statutory self-defense provision, C.R.S. § 18-1-704, includes a provision focusing on “what [the
defendant] reasonably believed” to be an imminent threat. The Court of Appeals explained that
“a separate instruction defining a defendant’s right to act upon ‘apparent necessity’ is not
required when the jury is instructed . . . that a defendant is entitled to act in self-defense upon the
defendant’s reasonable belief,” as “our supreme court abrogated the need for a separate [apparent
necessity] instruction” in such circumstances. Citing Beckett v. People, 800 P.2d 74 (Colo.
1990). The Court of Appeals found that “the self-defense instructions given here, framed in the
6
Mr. White’s appellate brief to the Colorado Court of Appeals framed this contention
with greater clarity. He argued that the trial court gave two separate self-defense instructions,
one explaining that a defendant can use non-deadly force in self-defense against impending
“unlawful physical force” from the victim, and one which explained that a defendant can use
deadly force in self-defense in response to an “imminent danger of being killed or of receiving
great bodily injury.” The “apparent necessity instruction” given by the trial court made mention
of a defendant’s belief that “unlawful physical force” was imminent. Mr. White contends that
the use of the phrase “unlawful physical force” linked the “apparent necessity” instruction to the
instruction concerning the use of non-deadly physical force in self-defense, which incorporates
the same phrase, but deprived him of the benefits of an “apparent necessity” instruction with
regard to his use of deadly self-defense, which uses a different phrase to describe the harm
sought to be avoided by the defendant.
12
statutory self-defense language, adequately apprised the jury to consider [Mr. White’s]
reasonable belief to act in self-defense.” Thus, the Court of Appeals “reject[ed Mr. White’s]
contention that the apparent necessity instruction restricted the doctrine to non-deadly selfdefense.”
Jury instructions describe principles of state law, and to the extent they do so incorrectly,
the error is one for the state courts to correct, if they see fit. See Parker v. Scott, 394 F.3d 1302,
1319 (10th Cir. 2005). On federal habeas review under § 2254, this Court’s role in evaluating a
claim premised upon erroneous jury instructions is limited to ascertaining whether the
instructional errors “had the effect of rendering the trial so fundamentally unfair as to cause a
denial of a fair trial in a constitutional sense.” Robinson v. Ward, 232 Fed.Appx. 785, 789 (10th
Cir. 2007) (unpublished), citing Shafer v. Stratton, 906 F.2d 506, 508 (10th Cir. 1990). The
question is not whether the challenged instructions were “undesirable, erroneous, or even
universally condemned, but whether the instruction so infected the trial that the resulting
conviction violates due process.” Id., citing Nguyen v. Reynolds, 131 F.3d 1340, 1357 (10th Cir.
1997).
The instructions described by the Colorado Court of Appeals do not rise to the exacting
level of “violat[ing] due process”; indeed, the Court has some doubt that they inhibited Mr.
White’s invocation of self-defense in these circumstances at all. Key to this conclusion is
Beckett’s holding that an “apparent necessity” instruction – the instruction Mr. White complains
was incomplete – is superfluous when the jury is properly instructed on the statutory self-defense
elements. As Beckett explains, the statutory definition of self-defense “reflects what has long
been the settled law of this jurisdiction, namely, [apparent necessity] rather than absolute
13
certainty is the touchstone of self-defense.” 800 P.2d at 78. The statutory language requires the
jury to consider whether the defendant “reasonably believe[d]” – rightly or wrongly – that
physical harm was imminent, thus wholly incorporating the “apparent necessity” doctrine.
C.R.S. § 18-1-704(1). By giving correct statutory self-defense instructions regarding both
deadly and non-deadly force, the trial court thus gave the jury instructions consistent with Mr.
White’s claim that he “reasonably believed of an apparent necessity to use deadly force under
the circumstances as he perceived them.” At best, Mr. White has shown only that the trial court
gave an duplicative standalone “apparent necessity” instruction that simply repeated one aspect
of the defense as it related to the use of non-deadly force in self-defense. But because the
deadly-force instruction was complete on its face, incorporating the “apparent necessity”
doctrine within it, the erroneous standalone instruction did not mislead the jury with regard to
the apparent necessity to Mr. White of the need to use deadly force in self-defense. Accordingly,
Mr. White’s second claim is without merit.
3. “Picked-on” juror
Mr. White’s Amended Petition alleges that, on the second day of deliberations, a juror
requested to speak to the judge, explaining that “the jurors were having a big problem, that he
was alone in his viewpoint on one issue and felt he was being picked on,” and sought
clarification from the court on an issue. According to Mr. White, the trial judge refused to
clarify anything and ordered the juror to resume deliberations. Later, the trial judge allegedly
stated, on the record, that the juror “was quite a guy” and “was now labeled a snitch because he
had spoken with the court.” Mr. White contends that the trial court’s actions violated his Sixth
Amendment right to a trial by jury.
14
This Court’s understanding of the issue is again derived from the Colorado Court of
Appeals’ decision. It explained that, after the juror submitted a request to speak with the judge,
“all counsel agreed to the judge’s ex parte communication with the juror on the record in
chambers.” A quoted excerpt of the trial record indicates the following colloquy:
JUROR: We’re having a big problem in there and I feel – I don’t
know if I can continue. It’s –
THE COURT: All right.
JUROR: Can I say what?
THE COURT: What’s going on?
JUROR: I’m alone in this one position and everybody is just
picking on me and it’s – I don’t know if I’m right or wrong. It’s
like – can you clarify something for me?
THE COURT: I really can’t without the other jurors. But what
you need to do is go back in there and continue to deliberate. If
there’s a problem or if the jury has a question again, communicate
that in writing.
After this colloquy, the court reconvened with the parties, at which time Mr. White’s counsel
requested that the court give the jury an Allen charge, a request the court denied. The jury
returned a verdict approximately two hours later, without further communication with the court.
(Unlike Mr. White’s Petition, the Court of Appeals’ recitation of the facts does not mention the
trial judge thereafter making disparaging remarks about the juror.7)
7
Mr. White’s appellate brief to the Court of Appeals states only that “The trial court
related the substance of the conversation to the attorneys and opined, ‘I got a feeling he has got a
[snitch] jacket in that room.’” This Court assumes that, consistent with typographical
convention, the use of brackets in that quote indicates that the term “snitch” is an editorial
addition by the brief’s author, Mr. White’s counsel, and does not purport to reflect words
actually spoken by the trial court. Nothing in the record offers any indication as to whether Mr.
White’s counsel’s accurately interpreted what the trial judge meant by the statement that the
15
The Court of appeals found that “the juror did not raise, nor did the ex parte
communication establish, that the juror had a fundamental misunderstanding of a point of law,”
that the trial judge did not “clarify anything substantive without the approval of counsel or
outside the presence of other jurors,” and thus, that “the court’s initial response requiring that the
juror communicate questions in writing could not have prejudiced [Mr. White]” and did not
constitute an abuse of discretion by the trial court. The Court of Appeals also found that “the
juror’s ex parte communication did not sufficiently demonstrate that the jury was deadlocked”
and that his “sentiment that he felt alone in his position is not analogous to a jury communication
that it is at an impasse on a particular offense.” Thus, the Court of Appeals found that the refusal
of the trial court to give an Allen instruction was not error.
In Mr. White’s reply brief, he makes clear that the basis for his Sixth Amendment
challenge with regard to this set of facts is that “this failure to instruct with a modified Allen
instruction . . . was an abuse of discretion.” He contends that, when confronted with a juror who
claimed to be “alone” on one issue, the trial court’s refusal to give an Allen instruction to the
entire jury was the equivalent of the court giving an (improper) Allen instruction to the single
juror. In other words, by failing to instruct all jurors to take into consideration the opposing
views of their fellow jurors, the trial court implicitly (and improperly) conveyed to the lone juror
that he should surrender his objections and join the majority.
Mr. White equates this situation to the one in U.S. v. Zabriske, 415 F.3d 1139, 1147-48
(10th Cir. 2005). In Zabriske, the 10th Circuit reversed a criminal conviction where the trial court
received numerous notes from the jury indicating that a lone holdout was refusing to deliberate,
juror “has got a jacket in that room.”
16
and the court resolved that issue by essentially giving a private Allen charge to only the holdout
juror, not the entire jury. The 10th Circuit held that an Allen charge, which inherently possesses
some risk of coercing dissenting jurors, becomes coercive as a matter of law when delivered only
to a holdout juror. Id. Mr. White argues that “basically, this is the situation we have in [this
case].” He contends that “by returning the juror to deliberations in which he already felt picked
upon, the court in essence coerced the juror into reaching a verdict [because] the court could not
clarify a question for him and/or failed to tell him that he needed to maintain his beliefs in the
evidence.”
Mr. White’s reliance on Zabriske is misplaced. The facts of the two cases are
fundamentally different. Unlike in Zabriske8, the trial court’s communication here contained
none of the coercive characteristics of an Allen charge. In this case, the only information
communicated by the trial judge to the holdout juror was that: (i) the judge could not “clarify”
anything for the juror outside the presence of the other jurors; and (ii) if there continued to be a
problem, the jury could communicate a question to the court in writing. Not only were these
instructions correct, both were highly prudent. See U.S. v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 438 U.S. 422, 461
(1978) (“any occasion which leads to communication with the whole jury panel through one
juror inevitably risks innocent misstatements of the law and misinterpretations despite the
undisputed good faith of the participants”) and U.S. v. Powell, 226 F.3d 1181, 1193 (10th Cir.
2000) (when faced with a vague or ambiguous request by a jury for clarification, trial judge may
8
See 415 F.3d at 1147 n. 11 (noting that the court’s communication with the holdout
juror included all “essential elements of a typical Allen charge: a juror is told . . . that absolute
certainty cannot be expected . . ., that they have a duty to reach a unanimous verdict if they can
conscientiously do so, and that dissenting jury members should accord some weight to the fact
that a majority of jurors hold an opposing viewpoint”).
17
properly advise the jury to review existing instructions and, if their confusion persists, to “pose
another, clearer question”).
Mr. White offers no particular argument as to how these instructions operated to “coerce”
the holdout juror into surrendering his beliefs. Mr. White appears to assume that the juror felt
coerced to agree with other jurors because the trial court refused to separately clarify instructions
or give additional instructions to the juror.
This Court finds no support for such assumption. First, one purpose of not separately
instructing a single juror is to avoid coercion of the juror. Separate instruction of individual
jurors not only defeats the equality implicit among jurors, it has the potential to be perceived as a
directive from the judge on the issue of disagreement among the jurors. By telling the juror that
if the jury still had a “problem” when it reconvened, they could collectively submit a written
communication seeking clarification, the trial court ensured that all jurors had the opportunity to
obtain clarification of the point in dispute. Second, to the extent that Mr. White contends that
juror felt coerced because the judge did not reaffirm his perspective, the record is devoid of any
such indication. The fact that the jury ultimately reached a unanimous verdict is not sufficient to
infer coercion of the “picked-upon” juror. It is equally possible that upon two additional hours
of reflection and consideration of the evidence, the members of the jury reached an informed and
voluntary consensus. For these reasons, as well as the reasons stated by the Colorado Court of
Appeals, which this Court finds the Court of Appeals’ descition to be a reasonable application of
federal law to the facts presented here, and the Court finds that this claim is without merit.
4. Admission of prior conviction
Mr. White contends that the trial court deprived him of due process by admitting into
18
evidence the fact that Mr. White had previously been convicted in 2000 of illegal discharge of a
firearm (“the 2000 conviction” or “the illegal discharge conviction”). Mr. White contends that
the 2000 conviction had been obtained unlawfully, in that his counsel in that case did not provide
effective assistance in various respects. Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel assert a
“unique constitutional defect” in prior proceedings that “rise[s] to the level of a jurisdictional
defect.” Daniels v. U.S., 532 U.S. 374, 378 (2001). As a result, where a defendant was
previously convicted of criminal conduct A, and that conviction is sought to be used against the
defendant in a later trial on criminal conduct B, the defendant may collaterally attack the prior
conviction on conduct A during case B if (and only if) the defendant contends that his counsel in
case A provided ineffective assistance in case A. Id. at 382; U.S. v. Cousins 455 F.3d 1116,
1125 (10th Cir. 2006).
The record on this claim, as derived from the Colorado Court of Appeals’ opinion,
indicates that, prior to trial in the instant case, Mr. White moved to exclude evidence of his 2000
conviction for illegal discharge of a firearm on the grounds that that conviction had been
obtained in violation of his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. According to
the Court of Appeals, Mr. White’s complaints about his representation in the 2000 illegal
discharge case fell into two categories: (i) failure of his counsel to adequately prepare for trial,
and (ii) failure of his counsel to investigate possible defenses, including self-defense and “an
alternative suspect defense.” The trial court held a hearing on the motion, at which Mr. White
submitted the transcripts of the 2000 trial on the illegal discharge case, but did not present any
testimony from Mr. White’s counsel in that case or present “any witness to testify as to what a
reasonably competent attorney ought to have done” in that case. The Court of Appeals found
19
that Mr. White’s evidence “failed to make the requisite prima facie showing of ineffective
assistance of counsel.” It found that the trial court properly analyzed the claim of ineffective
assistance under Strickland and that the trial court properly concluded that Mr. White had shown
neither that his prior counsel’s performance was outside the range of competent assistance or that
he was prejudiced as a result. “[Mr. White’s] minimal offer of proof,” the court explained,
supports the trial court’s conclusion that his [2000] prior felony conviction was not obtained in
violation of his right to counsel.”
Mr. White’s reply brief describes the events somewhat differently. He states that “the
trial court made [its] finding even though it did not conduct an evidentiary hearing in which the
[prior] conviction trial counsel testified. In other words, the trial court just presumed that trial
counsel in the [prior] case was effective.” Mr. White ambivalently explains that his dispute with
the Court of Appeals’ finding, stating that “the problem with [the Court of Appeals’] finding is
that [the trial court] either didn’t allow counsel to call the prior trial attorneys as witnesses . . . or
alternatively, this is further proof of Mr. White’s claims [in claim 1, supra] of denial of the
assistance of counsel altogether, as [Mr. White] told [his current counsel] to contact/call the prior
attorneys whom would have testified that he conducted no investigations and lacked sufficient
time to prepare for trial.”
This Court does not understand Mr. White to dispute that the trial court in the instant case
provided him with an opportunity to support his contention that his counsel in the 2000 illegal
discharge case was ineffective. Notwithstanding the first quoted passage in the paragraph above,
this Court understands Mr. White to contend not that no hearing was held on his motion to
exclude evidence to the 2000 conviction, but that his counsel from the 2000 case was not called
20
to testify at the hearing that was held. Mr. White does not appear to dispute that some kind of
hearing was held on his motion to exclude evidence of the 2000 conviction: his direct appeal to
the Colorado Court of Appeals notes that “a hearing [was held on the motion] on May 8, 2003,”
and that his current trial counsel “explained” the circumstances of the 2000 conviction to the trial
court in the instant case. It is undisputed that Mr. White’s current trial counsel did not call his
counsel from the 2000 case to testify at the hearing and that the only record made by Mr. White
at this hearing was through the submission of the trial transcript from the 2000 illegal discharge
case.
It is difficult to conceive of how the submission of a trial transcript alone would be
sufficient to carry Mr. White’s burden of proving that his representation in the 2000 case was
ineffective; short of an outright admission of unpreparedness by his counsel, made on the record
in the 2000 case, the trial transcript alone would not reveal the facts necessary to convince the
trial court in the instant case that counsel in the 2000 case was ineffective. Even if the transcript
from the 2000 trial demonstrated questionable decisions by Mr. White’s counsel in that case, the
trial transcript alone would be insufficient to establish the required Strickland factors, showing
what a reasonable attorney would have done in the same circumstances and how more effective
representation could have affected the outcome of the case.9
9
This Court notes that Mr. White’s brief to the Colorado Court of Appeals acknowledges
that, in the prior trial, Mr. White was charged with not only illegal discharge of a firearm, but
also attempted first degree murder, arising out of an event in which Mr. White allegedly fired
into an occupied car. He states that his trial counsel “completely rejected Mr. White’s
[suggestion] of self-defense [as a trial strategy] and adopted a different theory in which they
urged the jury to acquit on murder and convict on the firearm charge, which is exactly what the
jury did.” Thus, Mr. White’s own submissions appear to indicate that the decision of his trial
counsel not to pursue the defenses cited by Mr. White here was a strategic one, giving the jury a
way to convict Mr. White on a less-serious charge while sparing him on the more-serious charge.
21
Under these circumstances, this Court cannot say that Mr. White has shown that the
Court of Appeals’ findings – that Mr. White failed at trial in this case to demonstrate that his
2000 conviction was obtained as a result of his then-counsel’s ineffectiveness – are an incorrect
application of Strickland to the factual record here. Thus, Mr. White is not entitled to relief on
this claim..10
5. Severance
Mr. White’s fifth claim alleges that his 6th and 14th Amendment rights were violated when
the trial court refused to sever trial of his co-defendant, Mr. Wilkins, from Mr. White’s trial. Mr.
White contends that Mr. Wilkins presented an antagonistic defense to Mr. White, insofar as Mr.
White intended to argue that he acted in self-defense, but Mr. Wilkins “alleged that he had just
joined Mr. White and gone to the victim’s house to commit a drug deal,” and further, that Mr.
Wilkins had “stated he intended to testify against Mr. White and allowed certain evidence, such
as the gun [Mr. Wilkins] possessed to be allowed into evidence,” thus undercutting Mr. White’s
claim of self-defense.
The Colorado Court of Appeals addressed the two aspects of Mr. White’s claim
separately. Turning first to Mr. White’s claim that severance was required because Mr. Wilkins
Such strategic decisions, when made after through investigation of law and facts, are “virtually
unchallengeable.” Knowles v. Mirzayance, 129 S.Ct. 1411, 1420 (2009). Here, Mr. White
makes naked assertions that his prior counsel failed to investigate the facts underlying his selfdefense claim and other possible defenses, but, once again, the submission of only a trial
transcript is insufficient to support such assertions.
10
The natural extension of Mr. White’s argument on this claim is that his current trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance to him in the instant case by failing to adequately present
and support an argument for excluding evidence of the 2000 conviction. This contention is
asserted as Mr. White’s eleventh claim for relief, which is addressed infra.
22
intended to present a defense antagonistic to Mr. White’s, the Court of Appeals observed that
while Mr. White’s theory was simply one of self-defense, Mr. Wilkins presented a hybrid
defense, invoking self-defense in response to the charge of menacing, but invoking a mistake of
fact defense with regard to the murder charges. In short, Mr. Wilkins “asserted that he lacked
the knowledge that [Mr. White] intended to do anything other than a drug transaction.” The
Court of Appeals found that these defenses are “neither antagonistic nor mutually exclusive.”
Noting that the test for antagonistic defenses is whether “the jury, in order to believe the core of
one defense, must necessarily disbelieve the core of the other,” the Court of Appeals found that
“the jury plausibly could have both believed that [Mr. White] acted in self-defense when the
drug transaction went awry and at the same time believed that [Mr. Wilkins] had no knowledge
that [Mr. White] intended to commit murder.”
In elaborating on this claim in his reply brief, Mr. White’s argument is somewhat
difficult to follow. He first recounts some pretrial jockeying over a statement Mr. Wilkins had
given to police, exculpating himself and accusing Mr. White of being the shooter, but Mr. White
eventually acknowledges that the State agreed not to present that statement at trial, and there is
no indication that the jury ever heard it. Next, Mr. White points out that Mr. Wilkins “tendered
his theory of the case instruction” that asserted that Mr. Wilkins “lacked any intent to assist Mr.
White in murdering the victim, i.e. Mr. White acted alone and had killed the victim on his own.”
Mr. White contends that this is “tantamount to testifying against Mr. White via a jury
instruction,” although there is no indication in the record before this Court that the trial court
actually gave the instruction tendered by Mr. Wilkins.
Finally, Mr. White complains that Mr. Wilkins “introduced the weapon found in his
23
possession,” which “forced Mr. White to adopt a position that he was the shooter . . . because he
could not blame [Mr. Wilkins] for the shooting.” (The Court discusses Mr. Wilkins’
involvement with a particular weapon in more detail infra. To understand this portion of Mr.
White’s argument, it is sufficient to note simply that Mr. Wilkins eventually led police to the
location of an unfired weapon.) Mr. White explains that “the trial court allowed the unfired,
identical weapon to be inferred to have belonged to [Mr. Wilkins] even though there was no
proof that it did.” Mr. White contends that Mr. Wilkins’ defense “directly undermine[d] Mr.
White’s claims of self-defense, but [also] prevented him from pointing the finger elsewhere, thus
denying him a choice of defenses.”
Although questions of improper joinder are typically matters of state law and do not
implicate the U.S. Constitution, misjoinder can amount to a federal constitutional violation if “it
results in prejudice so great as to deny a defendant his Fifth Amendment right to a fair trial.”
U.S. v. Lane, 474 U.S. 438, 446 (1986); Lathrop v. Dinwiddie, 317 Fed.Appx. 842, 845 (10th Cir.
2009) (unpublished) (“whether the trial court erred in denying severance is generally a question
of state law that is not cognizable on federal habeas appeal,” but “a criminal defendant has no
constitutional right to severance unless there is a strong showing of prejudice caused by the joint
trial”). To obtain habeas relief for failure to sever in the face of antagonistic defenses, Mr.
White must show the defenses urged by the parties
were so antagonistic that they are mutually exclusive. Severance
is not warranted, however, merely because defense theories
conflict or because one defendant is attempting to cast blame on
the other. Mutually antagonistic defenses are not prejudicial per
se. The defenses truly must be mutually exclusive, such that the
jury could not believe the core of one defense without discounting
entirely the core of the other.
24
Campbell v. Ward, 315 Fed.Appx. 82, 85 (10th Cir. 2009) (unpublished). The Colorado Court of
Appeals correctly applied this law to Mr. White’s claim. In doing so, the Court of Appeals also
correctly concluded that Mr. Wilkins’ defense strategy (that he did not share any premeditated
intent that Mr. White may have had) is not mutually exclusive with Mr. White’s defense
strategy (that he harbored no premeditated intent and shot the victims only in self-defense). It is
entirely possible for the jury to believe both defenses at the same time; for example, the jury
could have accepted both men’s contention that they went to the house with no premeditated
intent towards the victims, and that Mr. White began shooting only in self-defense. Mr. White’s
remaining arguments on this point – e.g. that Mr. Wilkins’ joinder prevented Mr. White from
fingering Mr. Wilkins as the shooter – do not give rise to an entitlement to severance. Id.
(“severance is not warranted . . .because one defendant is attempting to cast blame on the
other”). Thus, the Court of Appeals correctly applied federal law to the facts of this case, and
Mr. White is not entitled to relief on the grounds of improper joinder due to antagonistic
defenses.
The second component of Mr. White’s claim for severance comes from the fact that Mr.
Wilkins “had led police to the weapon used.” As the Colorado Court of Appeals explains, the
State’s firearms expert testified that “all 13 shell casings [recovered from the scene of the crime]
had been fired from the same weapon, which was characteristic of a .40 caliber Glock firearm.”
At the same time, there was testimony that Mr. Wilkins had led police to an alley where a .40
caliber Beretta weapon was found, although the State’s firearms expert testified that the shell
casings found at the scene of the crime had not been fired by the Beretta produced by Mr.
Wilkins. Mr. White complained to the Court of Appeals that introduction of evidence relating to
25
the unfired Beretta “prejudiced him because (1) it impermissibly resulted in the implication that
this weapon belonged to [Mr. Wilkins]; and (2) it prevented [Mr. White] from implicating [Mr.
Wilkins] for firing any of the shots.” The Court of Appeals concluded that these arguments did
not warrant severance, in that “the record in no way supports the proposition that [Mr. Wilkins]
may have been responsible for some of the shots fired,” both as a result of the State’s firearm
expert’s testimony that all shots were fired from the same gun, and from “eyewitness testimony
[that] established that [Mr. Wilkins] never fired his weapon.” Analyzing this aspect of the
severance claim under the rule that “a defendant is entitled to severance as a matter of right
[under state law] if there is material evidence admissible against one, but not all, of the parties
and admission of the evidence is prejudicial to the party against whom the evidence is not
admissible,” the Court of Appeals concluded that Mr. White had not shown that the evidence of
the Beretta, even if improperly introduced as against him, resulted in any prejudice.
Mr. White’s reply brief contends that introduction of the Beretta was prejudicial to him
because the weapon was “identical to the weapon used to kill the victim” and that “[Mr. Wilkins]
could not prove that [the Beretta] was [Mr. Wilkins’] or that the weapon actually used to kill the
victim wasn’t his.” Mr. White believes that introduction of the Beretta “forced Mr. White to
adopt a position that he was the shooter” because allowing evidence that Mr. Wilkins led the
police to the (unfired) Beretta allowed the jury to “infer[ that it] belonged to [Mr. Wilkins] even
though there was no proof that it did.”
Once again, the Court assumes that “in egregious cases,” joinder of co-defendants that
allows certain evidence to be admitted as against one co-defendant, where such evidence would
be inadmissible in a separate trial against the other co-defendant, a deprivation of constitutional
26
due process can arise. Lopez v. DelPapa, 290 Fed.Appx. 41, 44 (9th Cir. 2008) (unpublished),
citing Lane, 474 U.S. at 461 n. 3 (Brennan, J. concurring in part). Here, the crux of Mr. White’s
complaint is that Mr. Wilkins’ cooperation with police effectively identified Mr. White as the
shooter.11 As the Court of Appeals’ found – in factual findings which are treated as
presumptively true and are unrebutted by Mr. White here – the record established that all 13
shots were fired from one weapon and that eyewitnesses indicated that Mr. Wilkins was not
firing his weapon. This testimony would have been equally admissible against Mr. White in a
separate trial, and would have established him as the shooter regardless of whether evidence of
Mr. Wilkins’ cooperation with the police was admitted. Because any admission regarding Mr.
Wilkins’ knowledge of the location of the unfired Beretta was merely cumulative of properlyadmitted evidence identifying Mr. White as the shooter, admission of Mr. Wilkins’ evidence did
not prejudice Mr. White’s defense. Lane, 474 U.S. at 446 (misjoinder does not constitute
constitutional error without a showing of actual prejudice). Thus, Mr. White is not entitled to
relief on this claim.
6. Juror challenges for cause
Mr. White contends that, during jury selection, “four separate jurors contended that drug
dealers . . . forfeit their right to act in self-defense if things go wrong during their transaction.”
Mr. White challenged these jurors for cause, but the trial court refused to excuse them on those
grounds. As a result, Mr. White was “forc[ed] . . . to use all his peremptory challenges and still
be stuck with biased jurors.”
11
Implicit in this argument is that Mr. White contends that, had the trials been severed, he
could have credibly alleged that Mr. Wilkins was the only shooter.
27
The Colorado Court of Appeals assessed the record regarding each of the four jurors
individually. This Court will not repeat that analysis, and instead will merely observe that each
juror made comments that indicated some resistance to the notion of self-defense being invoked
by those engaged in illegal activities. Nevertheless, upon further questioning, each juror also
indicated a willingness to follow the law as instructed. Observing that a defendant’s right to a
fair trial is violated where a juror is “unwilling or unable to accept the basic principles of
criminal law and to render a fair and impartial verdict based upon the evidence admitted at trial
and the court’s instructions,” the Court of Appeals ultimately concluded that “none of the four
challenged jurors’ responses indicated any bias, prejudice, or similar grounds for
disqualification,” and thus, “the trial court [did not] abuse[ ] its discretion in denying [Mr.
White’s] challenges for cause.”
In his reply brief, Mr. White does not dispute that the Court of Appeals correctly
summarized each prospective juror’s responses; indeed, Mr. White specifically points the Court
to the Court of Appeals’ decision “for a detailed explanation of what each juror stated.” Mr.
White also acknowledges that “the use of the peremptory challenges to remove these 4 jurors
does not violate Mr. White’s constitutional right to a fair trial.” Instead, he contends, “it did . . .
deny him his statutory right to remove each juror for cause,” citing C.R.S. § 16-10-103(1)(j). He
contends that this statutory violation “did in fact violate [his] right to a fair trial before an
impartial jury.”
To satisfy constitutional standards, the trial court must empanel jurors who are
“impartial”; to be “impartial,” a juror must be able to “lay aside his opinion and render a verdict
based on the evidence presented in court.” Patton v. Yount, 467 U.S. 1025, 1036 n. 12 (1984).
28
Whether a particular juror’s answers to voir dire questions indicate that the juror is excusable for
cause – i.e. because the juror cannot lay aside his own opinions – is a question of fact to be
resolved by the trial court, such resolution to be granted “special deference” by habeas courts.
Id. Thus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)’s presumption of correctness of state court factual findings
applies to state court findings regarding a juror’s impartiality. Id. at 1038. Here, the Court of
Appeals concluded that “none of the four challenged jurors’ responses indicated any bias,
prejudice, or similar grounds for disqualification,” and this Court is required to defer to those
findings unless Mr. White can show otherwise. Mr. White has not done so, and thus, the Court
concludes that the state court’s application of federal law to this claim was not unreasonable.
Even assuming that the trial court somehow erred in not excusing one or more of the
jurors for cause upon Mr. White’s request, Mr. White is nevertheless not entitled to habeas relief
because he was able to remove each of the jurors through the use of peremptory challenges. In
U.S. v. Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. 304, 315-16 (2000), the Supreme Court held that “if the
defendant elects to cure such an error [by the trial court in not excusing a biased juror for cause]
by exercising a peremptory challenge, and is subsequently convicted by a jury on which no
biased juror sat, he has not been deprived of any rule-based or constitutional right.”12 Although
Mr. White’s Amended Petition contains a bare assertion that he was forced to “use all his
peremptory challenges and still be stuck with biased jurors,” his reply brief, which sets forth his
contentions in far greater detail, indicates that he made “use of the peremptory challenges to
12
Ross v. Oklahoma, 487 U.S. 81 (1988), upon which Martinez-Salazar is based, aptly
disposes of the argument in Mr. White’s reply brief – that the erroneous refusal to dismiss the
challenged jurors for cause deprived him of a state-created right to a certain number of
peremptory challenges, thereby warranting relief. The Court in Ross addressed and rejected
precisely this argument.
29
remove these 4 jurors.” The reply brief makes no mention of “biased jurors” remaining on the
jury or otherwise makes any contention that the jury ultimately empaneled was somehow
improper. Under these circumstances, this Court cannot find that, even if the trial court erred in
not removing one or more of the challenged jurors for cause, that error was harmless and does
not give rise to habeas relief. Watley v. Williams, 218 F.3d 1156, 1160 (10th Cir. 2000).
7. Admission of photographs
Mr. White contends that the admission of “extremely prejudicial photographs” of the
victims amounted to a deprivation of his 6th and 14th Amendment rights. He contends that the
photos did not accurately represent the crime scene, as “the victim’s bodies were moved prior to
the police arriving on the scene.”
The Colorado Court of Appeals refused to reach the merits of this contention. It stated
that “[Mr. White] . . . asserts the photographs were irrelevant because the bodies had been moved
prior to being photographed and thus did not accurately portray the crime scene.” It then found
that Mr. White “did not raise [this] argument during trial; therefore we will not consider it for the
first time on appeal.”
Mr. White acknowledges that this objection to the photographs’ admission was not raised
at trial. In his reply brief, he explains that “evidence of movement of the bodies did not come
about until trial and thus . . . couldn’t have been raised at [a pre-trial] suppression hearing,”
where the trial court apparently made its ruling allowing the photos to be admitted. Mr. White
requests that the Court “independently reach the merits of this claim and grant habeas relief as
was the case in Spears v. Mullin, 343 F.3d 1215, 1225 (10th Cir. 2003). Spears indicates that a
habeas court can reach an issue that was not addressed on its merits by the state court if the
30
claim “is not otherwise procedurally barred.”
Mr. White’s invocation of Spears is misplaced. This is not a situation in which the state
courts simply failed to address an issue that he raised; the Court of Appeals refused to reach the
merits of Mr. White’s argument that the photographs were improperly admitted because Mr.
White did not lodge a contemporaneous objection to the photographs on that ground during trial.
Habeas review of state court rulings is precluded where the ruling rests on a state-law ground
that is independent of the federal question and adequate to support the judgment. Smith v.
Addison, 373 Fed.Appx. 886, 888 (10th Cir. 2010) (unpublished), citing Beard v. Kindler, 130
S.Ct. 612, 614 (2009). A state-law ground is “independent” if it relies on state law rather than
federal law, and “adequate” if it is firmly-established and regularly-followed. Id. A state court’s
refusal to reach a claim because a party did not lodge a contemporaneous objection to the ruling
at trial is one that can be deemed to rest on an independent and adequate state-law ground. See
e.g. Glacken v. Dickhaut, 585 F.3d 547, 550-51 (1st Cir. 2009).
Here, the requirement of a party to lodge a timely objection to an evidentiary ruling is
firmly-established in Colorado. Wilson v. People, 743 P.2d 415, 419 (Colo. 1987), citing
C.R.Crim.P. 52(b); People v. Salazar, 964 P.2d 502, 507 (Colo. 1998) (“It is axiomatic that
issues not raised in or decided by a lower court will not be addressed for the first time on
appeal”). It is a rule that derives entirely from state law, with no apparent federal nexus, and by
all appearances, is consistently applied by the Colorado courts. Id. Thus, in rejecting Mr.
White’s argument for lack of contemporaneous objection, the Colorado Court of Appeals
resolved the issue on an independent and adequate state ground.
Under these circumstances, Mr. White must show “cause and prejudice” for his failure to
31
preserve the objection to the photographs’ admission, or show that this Court’s failure to reach
the claim would amount to a fundamental “miscarriage of justice.” Smith, 373 Fed.Appx. at 88889. Mr. White does not offer any argument on these points, and thus has not carried his burden.
In any event, this Court cannot find that the admission of the photographs was particularly
prejudicial to Mr. White. Nothing prevented Mr. White from exploring the crux of his objection
– that the bodies shown in the photographs had been moved from their original locations before
the photos were taken – through cross-examination or presentation of evidence to that effect. At
that point, it would be up to the jury to determine whether the photographs did or did not
accurately depict the locations of the bodies.
Accordingly, Mr. White is not entitled to relief on this claim.
8. Prosecution’s closing argument
Mr. White contends that the prosecution argued in closing that “it was the jurors’ ‘job’
and ‘responsibility’ to hold Mr. White ‘accountable’ for the victims’ death.” Mr. White
contends that this language “encouraged the jury to retaliate against [him] and conveyed [the
prosecutor’s] personal belief that Mr. White had committed the offense with which he was
charged.”
The Colorado Court of Appeals found that “the prosecutor began and ended by informing
the jury that it had the power and responsibility of ‘holding somebody accountable for their
actions’ and this function, after weighing the evidence presented, was its ‘job.’” On its rebuttal
argument, the State returned to that theme, “requesting that the jury ‘hold defendants
accountable for all of their actions . . . and for first degree murder.” The Court of Appeals
evaluated these statements “in the context of the prosecutor’s entire argument,” and concluded
32
that “the limited commentary requesting the jury to hold [Mr. White] accountable was not
improper.” It noted that “the commentary was a small part of the closing argument in which the
prosecutor fairly summarized the evidence,” and furthermore, that “there was overwhelming
evidence of guilt presented at trial, including eyewitness testimony that [Mr White] shot and
killed the victims.”
In his reply brief, Mr. White contends that it is impermissible for a prosecutor to
“appeal[] to jurors to act as the conscience of the community or [to] make remarks intended to
inflame the jurors’ passions, leading them to convict for some reason other than the facts of the
case.” Mr. White concedes that, in focusing on the prejudicial effect of the State’s remarks, the
Court of Appeals “correctly identified the controlling legal principle,” but contends that it
incorrectly applied that principle, largely on the strength of his ninth claim for relief, based on
insufficiency of the evidence (addressed below). Mr. White acknowledges that “the merits of
this claim [regarding the closing argument] turn on this Court’s rulings on Claim Nine.”
Improper remarks by a prosecutor are grounds for habeas relief only if they are so
prejudicial that they rendered the trial fundamentally unfair, either because they evinced
persistent and pronounced misconduct or because the evidence was so insubstantial that, in all
probability, no conviction would have occurred but for the prosecutor’s remarks. Hughes v.
Quarterman, 530 F.3d 336, 347 (5th Cir. 2008). Mr. White acknowledges that this was the
standard that was properly applied by the Court of Appeals, and further concedes that resolution
of this claim turns on the disposition of the following claim regarding sufficiency of the
evidence. Because, as discussed below, this Court finds no error in the Court of Appeals’
conclusion that there was overwhelming evidence of Mr. White’s guilt, the Court finds that any
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improper comments made by the prosecution in its closing argument – which is not necessarily
to say that this Court finds any of the cited comments inappropriate – did not prejudice Mr.
White. This claim for relief is without merit.
9. Sufficiency of the evidence
Mr. White claims that there was insufficient evidence presented to disprove his
contention that the shootings were done in self-defense. He points out that “evidence provided at
trial showed that the alleged victims were known drug dealers who were armed and that had
robbed Mr. White.” He states that “one of the alleged victims went for his gun and Mr. White
shot him before he would be shot himself.”
The Court of Appeals addressed Mr. White’s sufficiency of the evidence claim by first
noting that, on such a claim, the evidence must be assessed in the light most favorable to the
prosecution. It noted that
The People presented eyewitness testimony establishing that [Mr.
White] was the aggressor and the sole shooter and that the thirteen
shell casings found at the crime scene came from the same gun.
No evidence was presented that either victim fired a weapon or
that victim S.K., who was unarmed, ever reached for any of the
weapons that were across from him in the bedroom. Although
there was conflicting eyewitness testimony that victim D.J. had a
weapon in the pocket of his pants, there was no evidence that he
reached for his weapon.
On the strength of this evidence, the Court of Appeals concluded that “sufficient evidence was
presented to disprove [Mr. White’s] self-defense claim.”13
13
The Court of Appeals appears to agree with Mr. White that, under Colorado law, once a
defendant raises a colorable claim of self-defense, the burden is on the State to prove, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the defendant did not act in self-defense. For purposes of Mr. White’s
sufficiency of the evidence claim, this Court will thus assume that the State bore the burden of
proof on this issue.
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Mr. White does not dispute these factual findings, but contends that “there was no
evidence whatsoever that Mr. White did not act in self-defense.” He contends that “there was
evidence that both of the victims were known to be heavily armed and dangerous and that Mr.
White was well aware of this fact.” He further notes that “there was evidence of weapons being
available to the victims” and that “it was clear that the victims had asked Mr. White to bring
some $5,000 worth of cocaine for them to purchase and that they had no money with which to
purchase said.” From this, Mr. White believes that “it could reasonably be inferred that the
victims attempted to jack Mr. White and he responded in self-defense.”
Colorado’s law on self-defense is found at C.R.S. § 18-1-704. A defendant is entitled to
resort to physical force in order to defend himself “from what he reasonably believes to be the . .
. imminent use of unlawful physical force by that other person.” C.R.S. § 18-1-704(1). Where
deadly physical force is used in defense, the defendant must reasonably have been in fear of an
“imminent danger of being killed or of receiving great bodily injury.” C.R.S. § 18-1-704(2)(a).
Neither the statute nor Colorado caselaw supplies a specific definition of the term “imminent.”
People v. Yaklich, 833 P.2d 758, 760 (Colo. App. 1991). In cases interpreting the self-defense
statute, however, the Colorado courts have construed that term somewhat narrowly.
Most illuminating is People v. Laurson, 15 P.3d 791, 794-95 (Colo. App. 2000). There,
the defendant had previously met with a group of drug dealers for the purpose of making a
purchase, but the dealers robbed him instead. The defendant sought revenge, arranging for an
acquaintance to meet dealers in a parking lot under the pretense of completing another drug deal.
Instead, the dealers began assaulting the acquaintance. When the defendant arrived at the
parking lot, the group of dealers fled. The defendant chased after the group and shot two of the
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dealers in the back. At trial, the defendant sought an instruction to the jury on self-defense, but
the trial court refused, finding that the evidence did not justify a reasonable belief by the
defendant “that he needed to use force to protect himself against the use of force.” The court
acknowledged that there was evidence that the defendant was concerned that the dealers might
be armed, but noted that “this belief, either by itself or in conjunction with other evidence, does
not establish a reasonable belief that the use of physical force against defendant was actually
about to occur.” Id. at 795. Similarly, the court rejected an argument that a fear of imminent
injury was reasonable because he knew “the victims had a character for aggression and liked to
fight.” The court found that “character evidence concerning the victims is also insufficient to
establish a reasonable belief that unlawful physical force was about to be used against defendant
. . . given the flight of the victims’ group.” Id. at 795. The court concluded that the defendant
may have been entitled to an instruction regarding defense of another, but that the evidence “is
insufficient to support a self-defense instruction in a case where, as here, there is no evidence
that any member of the victims’ group acted aggressively toward defendant.” Id.
From Laurson, this Court can derive certain insight into the meaning of the term
“imminent” in Colorado’s self-defense statute. A threat of harm cannot be imminent absent the
victim “act[ing] aggressively” toward the person claiming the need to act in self-defense. Id.
Laurson makes clear that facts such as the victim being armed or the victim having a reputation
for violence are, of themselves, insufficient to give rise to the right to act in self-defense;
otherwise, the defendant in Laurson would have been entitled to a self-defense instruction
notwithstanding the victims’ failure to act aggressively towards him, as it was undisputed that
the victims otherwise possessed these characteristics. It is entirely logical to limit the scope of
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the term “imminent” to those harms that are “about to occur” as evidenced by “aggresive[ness]”
towards a defendant. Id. To attenuate the meaning of “imminent” further would expand the
scope of self-defense beyond all reasonable limits. For example, Mr. White’s contention that he
reasonably believed that harm was imminent simply because he knew the victims had a
reputation for violence and were known to be carrying (or have ready access to) weapons would
suggest that he could have been acting in self-defense had he shot both victims the moment they
opened the door to the house. In such a circumstance, all Mr. White’s predicates for self-defense
were present – the victims’ reputation preceded their opening of the door, as did their possession
of or access to weapons, even though the victims had given no indication that they were about to
harm Mr. White.
Without the necessity of the victim initiating an aggressive physical act triggering the
right to act in self-defense, there is no temporal connection between the threat of harm and the
defensive act. Such a rule would negate the holding of Yaklich, 833 P.2d at 763. There, a
woman claiming to have suffered severe physical abuse at the hands of her husband hired men to
kill him. Charged with murder, the woman sought to raise self-defense, arguing that she
believed that she was in imminent danger of being injured or killed by a future episode of abuse.
The Colorado Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the trial court to give a self-defense
instruction in such circumstances, holding that a definition of “imminent” that included harm
that was “impending, but not immediate” was improper. Id. Under Mr. White’s conception of
the term “imminent,” the defendant in Yaklich should have received the requested instruction –
she believed that her husband had a propensity towards violence and, presumably, believed he
had ready access to weapons capable of causing severe injury (if nothing else, his fists). Mr.
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White’s rule would thus suggest that the woman was free to kill her husband during a peaceful
interlude, simply because it was possible that he might choose to harm her at some indeterminate
point in the future.
Under existing Colorado precedent, this Court cannot say that the evidence against Mr.
White, when taken in the light most favorable to the State, supports any reasonable doubt with
regard to Mr. White’s claim of self-defense. According to the undisputed findings of fact by the
Court of Appeals, neither of Mr. White’s victims brandished or even reached for a weapon
before Mr. White shot them. Without an aggressive move by either victim, no reasonable juror
could have concluded that Mr. White reasonably believed a threat of harm to him was imminent.
Accordingly, the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that there was substantial evidence to support the
verdict against Mr. White was a correct application of the law to the facts, and Mr. White is not
entitled to relief on this claim.
10. Cumulative error
Mr. White argues that, even if none of his claims of error are sufficient to support relief
in their own right, the accumulation of those errors combined to render his conviction
unconstitutional.
The cumulative error doctrine “aggregates all errors found to be harmless and analyzes
whether their cumulative effect on the outcome of the trial is such that collectively they can no
longer be determined to be harmless.” Young v. Sirmons, 551 F.3d 942, 972 (10th Cir. 2008). In
the habeas context, the doctrine operates to aggregate only those constitutional errors that
proved harmless; it does not take into account errors of state law that do not rise to constitutional
level. Id.
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This Court finds no merit in Mr. White’s claim of cumulative error. As noted by the
Colorado Court of Appeals – an observation this Court agrees with – the record, when properly
taken in the light most favorable to the State, overwhelmingly supports a verdict of guilt against
Mr. White. What constitutional errors there may have been – which is not to say that this Court
finds any – are far too insignificant to have affected the verdict against Mr. White in light of
such overwhelming evidence. Accordingly, this claim is without merit.
11. Ineffective assistance of trial counsel
Although somewhat temporally displaced in the analysis, Mr. White’s final claim asserts
that his trial counsel was ineffective for two reasons: (i) counsel failed to elicit certain evidence
at trial, such as the fact that the victim’s girlfriend had moved bodies and hid one of the victim’s
guns from the police, the fact that there was gunshot residue on a victim’s hand, or the fact that
additional shell casings were found by a witness “several days after the shooting”; and (ii)
counsel failed to adequately challenge the introduction of Mr. White’s 2000 illegal discharge
conviction, in that counsel failed to have counsel from the 2000 case testify at the hearing
regarding exclusion of that conviction.
Unlike each of the prior claims, which were presented by Mr. White to the Colorado
Court of Appeals on direct review, this claim was presented through a post-conviction motion
under C.R.Cr.P. 35. The trial court denied this motion, apparently on the grounds that the claims
therein had previously been raised and rejected. The Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed in a
order dated September 10, 2009, albeit on different grounds. The Court of Appeals’ decision
disagreed that Mr. White’s claims on direct appeal had been framed in the context of ineffective
assistance of counsel (rather than the appointment of conflicted counsel), but concluded that the
39
denial of the motion on its merits was nevertheless appropriate. With regard to the various
claims that Mr. White’s counsel failed to adequately explore certain areas at trial, the Court of
Appeals found that his co-defendant’s counsel fully explored each area with the relevant
witnesses. Because the evidence Mr. White wished to have introduced was properly before the
jury, regardless of who developed the record, the Court of Appeals concluded that Mr. White
could not show that any ineffectiveness by his counsel caused him to suffer any prejudice. With
regard to the claim that his counsel was ineffective in presenting evidence to support the request
to exclude the 2000 illegal discharge conviction, the Court of Appeals found that Mr. White’s
counsel “highlighted several perceived deficiencies in prior counsel’s performance,” but that the
trial court “found that the prior counsel’s strategy was effective because he was acquitted of two
attempted murder charges.” Thus, the Court of Appeals concluded, Mr. White “fails to
demonstrate how the [request to exclude the conviction] would have been any different had
defense counsel called additional witnesses to provide the same information.”
To the extent the discussion supra does not dispose of this claim, this Court finds no
merit in Mr. White’s contentions. The Colorado Court of Appeals properly applied the
Strickland analysis to this claim and correctly concluded that, with regard to the contention that
trial counsel failed to adequately inquire of certain matters with trial witnesses, any such error
was harmless because his co-defendant fully explored those areas. Mr. White does not dispute
that his co-defendant’s counsel addressed each of these matters, nor does he offer any
explanation as to why his own counsel’s exploration of these matters would not simply have
been cumulative.
With regard to his trial counsel’s failure to call his prior counsel from the illegal
40
discharge case to testify in support of excluding that conviction, this Court again finds that the
Colorado Court of Appeals properly applied the Strickland analysis and properly concluded that
any error by Mr. White’s trial counsel was harmless. Mr. White has come forward with no
evidence to demonstrate that calling prior counsel to testify would likely have changed the
outcome; indeed, Mr. White has not proffered an affidavit or any other evidentiary material that
would indicate that his prior counsel’s testimony would have been favorable to him. At best, the
Court has only Mr. White’s speculation that his prior counsel, if called to testify at the hearing,
would have admitted to having failed to render effective assistance in the 2000 illegal discharge
case. Mr. White’s sheer supposition on this point is insufficient to carry his burden of
demonstrating that the outcome of the proceeding to exclude the prior conviction would have
been different had his trial counsel performed differently.
Accordingly, Mr. White is not entitled to relief on this claim.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Mr. White’s Amended Petition (# 7) is DENIED in its entirety
on the merits. The Court has sua sponte considered whether a Certificate of Appealability
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c) is warranted, and the Court finds that none of Mr. White’s
41
claims make a substantial showing of a denial of a constitutional right under the standard of
Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473 (2000). Accordingly, the Court DENIES Mr. White a
Certificate of Appealability.
Dated this 11th day of May, 2011
BY THE COURT:
Marcia S. Krieger
United States District Judge
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