Blevins v. Warden, Ross Correctional Institution
Filing
82
DECISION AND ORDER - re 77 - Amended MOTION for Discovery filed by Charles Blevins. Signed by Magistrate Judge Michael R Merz on 12/8/2011. (kje1)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
WESTERN DIVISION AT DAYTON
CHARLES BLEVINS,
:
Petitioner,
Case No. 1:05-cv-038
:
-vs-
Magistrate Judge Michael R. Merz
WARDEN, Ross Correctional Institution,
:
Respondent.
DECISION AND ORDER
This case is before the Court on Petitioner’s Amended Motion for Discovery (Doc. No. 77).
The Motion was originally granted in part and denied in part when Respondent failed to oppose it
(Decision and Order, Doc. No. 78). Petitioner sought the following discovery:
1.
Unspecified discovery to present facts to show excuse of his
procedural default in failing to appeal from denial of his Ohio
App. R. 26(B) Application to the Ohio Supreme Court.
(Motion, Doc. No. 77, PageID 1435.)
2.
To conduct depositions of trial counsel Cathy Adams and
Jeffrey Whit and of appellate counsel Steve Wenke to show
ineffective assistance of trial counsel in failing “to seek
DNAtesting of critical evidence and to present expert witness
testimony to counter the DNA evidence presented by the
state.” (Motion, Doc. No. 77, PageID 1436).
3.
DNA testing of “[s]everal swabs and a rubber glove
containing specimens believed to contain DNA evidence were
collected at the crime scene and were not tested for DNA.”
The testing is sought, as the Court reads the Motion,
(1) to establish actual innocence sufficient to excuse
procedural default of other claims per Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298 (1995);
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4.
(2) to support his claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for his trial
attorneys’ failure to have these items tested;
(3)to support his claim of prosecutorial misconduct in that the State did not
have these items tested; and
(4) apparently to support a freestanding claim of actual innocence. Id. at
PageID 1439.
“[T]o depose the prosecutors and obtain the prosecutor’s files in this
matter to demonstrate that the state had information material to the
defense that was not disclosed at trial.” Id. at PageID 1440.
(Decision and Order, Doc. No. 78, PageID 1441-1442.)
Some of this requested discovery was denied finally, some was granted, and some denied
with permission to renew on certain conditions. Id. Respondent immediately moved for and was
granted reconsideration (Doc. No. 79 & Not.Ord. granting).
Positions of the Parties
Respondent opposes the previously granted deposition of appellate counsel on the basis that
Petitioner’s claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel is procedurally defaulted and nothing
counsel can add to the record could overcome that default. As to depositions of trial counsel,
Respondent asserts some sub-claims were procedurally defaulted by not being presented until
Petitioner’s motion to amend his post-conviction. As to sub-claims decided on the merits by the
state courts, Respondent asserts Cullen v. Pinholster, 131 S. Ct. 1388, 1400-01, 179 L. Ed. 2d 557
(2011), should be read to bar discovery.
Petitioner replies as follows:
1.
He can show cause to excuse his procedural default in appealing to the Ohio Supreme Court
from denial of his Application to Reopen under Ohio R. App. P. 26(B), but will need
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discovery from the Clerk of the Ohio Supreme Court to do that.
2.
Additional DNA testing would exonerate Mr. Blevins.
3.
Petitioner’s claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel are not procedurally defaulted
for reasons given in Petitioner’s Reply to the Supplemental Return of Writ (Doc. No. 73).
Even if they were, Petitioner can show excusing cause and prejudice from expected
deposition testimony of his trial counsel.
4.
Pinholster, supra, says nothing about discovery.
Analysis
1.
Discovery to show cause and prejudice excusing failure to appeal to the Ohio Supreme
Court from denial of Application to Reopen.
In his Reply in support of his current request for discovery, Petitioner says he needs to obtain
documents by written request or subpoena from the Clerk of the Ohio Supreme Court reflecting
when that court received his notice of appeal of denial of his Ohio R. App. P. 26(B) Application.
Petitioner attaches his own Affidavit of October 27, 2011, referring the Court to Exhibits 10 and 20
to the Traverse. Exhibit 10 is an original Notice of Appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court from the
August 19, 2003, decision of the First District Court of Appeals denying the Rule 26(B) Application.
(A copy of that decision is attached as Exhibit 25 to the Return of Writ, PageID 386-387.) Exhibit
10 appears to bear Mr. Blevins’ original signature and two original date stamps from the Ohio
Supreme Court purporting to show this document was received by the Clerk of that Court on
October 3, 2003 and again on October 14, 2003. Exhibit 10 contains Mr. Blevins’ Certificate that
he sent it to the Ohio Supreme Court on September 24, 2003. Exhibit 13 to the Traverse is an
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October 6, 2003, letter from a deputy clerk of the Ohio Supreme Court returning some documents
to Mr. Blevins, presumably including Exhibit 10, and advising that his affidavit of indigency was
not properly notarized because it did not show that it was signed in the notary’s presence. Exhibit
14 is a letter from a different deputy clerk returning documents, again presumably including Exhibit
10, because they had not been filed within the forty-five days allowed by Ohio Supreme Court Rule
of Practice II, § 2(A)(1). Attached as Exhibit 20 is an affidavit of indigency which does not indicate
what court it is intended to be filed in and is not signed by Mr. Blevins (either with a full signature
or by an “x”) that is dated July 15, 2003, more than a month before the Court of Appeals acted on
his Rule 26(B) Application.
The Court concludes that Respondent has not shown that Petitioner procedurally defaulted
his ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim by failing to file in the Ohio Supreme Court
because Respondent has not shown that Ohio has a rule which it regularly enforces whereby an
appeal of right, timely filed with a signed notice of appeal and memorandum in support of
jurisdiction, is dismissed because the affidavit of indigency, otherwise correct in form, does not
affirmatively show it was signed in the presence of the attesting notary. See Maupin v. Smith, 785
F.2d 135, 138 (6th Cir. 1986).
Because there is no established procedural default, Petitioner has no need to establish
excusing cause. Therefore his request to take discovery from the Clerk of the Ohio Supreme Court
is denied.
2.
Additional DNA Testing
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The Court denied additional DNA testing in its October 13, 2011, Decision and Order in part
because the request “did not state any evidence to support Mr. Blevins’ claim that the testing will
be exonerating,” but indicated such evidence might be obtained by deposing counsel (Doc. No. 78,
PageID 1447). The Order also provided “[o]n any renewed request for DNA testing, Petitioner
must propose a testing protocol.”
Upon examination, the first trial transcript references cited (Trial Tr. 330-331) do not support
any claim that new testing would be exonerating. The second reference is to testimony from a
cellmate of Petitioner repeating at first Petitioner’s story about someone else breaking in and then
a contradictory explanation about how blood got on Petitioner’s clothes (Trial Tr. 409, 411). Taken
together, the references are not independent evidence that new testing would exonerate Mr. Blevins.
The other supporting material offered is a 2002 Affidavit of Daniel Krane which criticizes
the DNA evidence which was actually presented at trial (Affidavit, Exhibit to Reply, PageID 14661467). He also avers “Had I been called as an expert witness by the defense, I or others could have
run independent tests of the samples obtained from the crime scene, and sought to include or exclude
Blevins as the source of said samples.” Professor Krane does not indicate whether he is referring
to the samples actually tested by the State or the samples sought to be tested now by Petitioner. He
gives no basis for the Court to believe that testing would lead to exoneration.
No protocol for testing is included with the new request.
The renewed request for DNA testing is denied.
3.
Depositions of Trial and Appellate Counsel
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Respondent seeks to avoid these depositions on the basis that the claims are barred by
procedural default. While procedural default, an affirmative defense, has been properly pled in this
case, the Court has not yet adjudicated that defense. Therefore its having been pled is no bar to the
requested discovery. The Court renews permission for Petitioner to depose his trial and appellate
counsel. The depositions shall be completed not later than January 31, 2012, and shall be
transcribed and filed with the Court.
4.
Cullen v. Pinholster
Respondent argues the decision in Pinholster, supra, bars all requested discovery. Petitioner
replies that Pinholster is irrelevant to the discovery question, “as that decision did not mention
discovery, the rule that covers discovery or even mention the leading Supreme Court case on the
issue, Bracy v. Gramley, 520 U.S. 899 (1997).” (Reply, Doc. No. 81, PageID 1463.)
Pinholster holds that, in deciding whether a state court decision on a federal constitutional
claim is an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court law, a federal habeas
court may not consider evidence other than that which was before the state courts when they decided
the claim. It does not purport to speak to the question whether evidence may be presented on other
issues, e.g., whether there is excusing cause for a state court procedural default.
On the other hand, Pinholster is not irrelevant to discovery in federal habeas. Rule 6 and
Bracy, supra, require a showing of good cause to conduct discovery. There cannot be good cause
to collect evidence which cannot be presented. This Court is reluctant to adopt the logic that a
federal habeas action can essentially be used as a discovery device for state court litigation. In any
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event, if that is what the Supreme Court meant in Pinholster, this Court will need more definitive
guidance from the appellate courts to interpret it that way.
The Court notes that in suggesting an appropriate interpretation of Pinholster, Petitioner’s
counsel relied on Magistrate Judge King’s decision in Conway v. Houk, 2011 WL 2119373 (S.D.
Ohio May 26, 2011). Counsel failed to cite any of the fifteen reported decisions of the undersigned
interpreting Pinholster, many of which relate to discovery and read Pinholster as having
substantially more impact on discovery in habeas cases than Judge King’s opinion. Counsel’s
attention is respectfully called to Ohio Rule of Professional Conduct 3.3(a)(2).
December 8, 2011.
s/ Michael R. Merz
United States Magistrate Judge
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