Manning v. State
Manning v. State
Opinion
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¶ 1. In 1994, in the Circuit Court of Oktibbeha County, Willie Jerome Manning was convicted of the capital murder of Alberta Jordan and Emmoline Jimmerson who were killed during the commission of a robbery. On July 25, 1996, Manning was sentenced to death in each case. On March 31, 1999, this Court affirmed Manning's convictions and sentences on all grounds except aBatson issue. That issue was remanded to the circuit court and the circuit judge found valid race-neutral reasons for the State's two peremptory strikes. See Manning v. State,
¶ 2. After denial of the petition for writ of certiorari, this Court, in accordance with Jackson v. State,
¶ 4. Over a year later, Herbert Ashford and Kevin Lucious (both serving time or facing charges) were approached by the police and made statements implicating Willie Jerome Manning in the murders of the two elderly women. At this time, Manning was already a suspect in another murder case involving two Mississippi State University students (See Manning v. State No. 2001-DR-00230). At trial the State called Ashford, Lucious, and Larry Harris. All three testified to having seen Manning in Brooksville Gardens near the time of the murders.
A. The State knowingly presented false and perjured testimony from Kevin Lucious identifying Petitioner as forcing his way into the victims' apartment.
¶ 6. Manning argues that Kevin Lucious's testimony was false and that the State knowingly presented false evidence. Lucious stated that from the apartment he shared with his girlfriend, which is across the street from the apartment then occupied by the victims, he saw Manning force his way into the victims' apartment. However, Lucious did not live in the apartment across the street from the victims at the time they were murdered. According to Likeesha Jones Harris's affidavit, she and Lucious moved into apartment 11E after the homicides. Manning also provided the affidavit of Teresa Bush, which states that Lucious and Likeesha Jones did not live in Brooksville Gardens at the time of the murders.
¶ 7. Furthermore, Manning asserts that the State knew that Lucious did not live in Brooksville Gardens at the time of the crimes. Oktibbeha County Sheriff Dolph Bryan was informed by Likeesha's grandmother that Likeesha and Lucious were not living in apartment 11E at the time and a police officer's notes from the days following the murders indicate that apartment 11E was vacant at the time.1
¶ 8. Manning asserts that the U.S. Supreme Court has held that a State's knowing use of or its failure to correct false testimony or its presentation of evidence which creates a materially false impression of the evidence violates a defendant's right to due process. See Miller v. Pate,
¶ 9. The State's response is that this issue, as well as all of Manning's non-ineffective assistance claims, are procedurally barred from collateral review by the doctrine of waiver pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. §
¶ 10. We find that the State offers nothing in support of this position. There is no assertion that Manning or his attorneys were aware of any of these issues. The State cites Brown v.State,
¶ 11. As to Manning's claims of false testimony by Kevin Lucious, included in his petition for post-conviction relief is the affidavit of Richard Burdine, Manning's trial counsel. Burdine attests that he never saw, nor knew of the existence of materials that were in the possession of the Starkville Police Department. Included in these materials were handwritten notes by police officers who conducted a door-to-door canvas of the Brooksville Garden apartments that indicated that apartment 11E was vacant at the time of the murders, corroborating the affidavits of Harris, Lucious's girlfriend, and of Mildred Jones, Harris's grandmother, attesting that Harris and Lucious did not live in Brooksville Gardens at the time of the murders.
¶ 12. Manning supports his pleadings with affidavits and records regarding the inability to have these grounds heard on the merits at trial or direct appeal and asserts that where a petitioner shows cause and actual prejudice, this Court may grant relief from the waiver. See Miss. Code Ann. §
B. The State coerced Kevin Lucious into providing false testimony.
¶ 13. Manning presents an affidavit of Kevin Lucious in which he recants his testimony that he saw Manning enter the victims' apartment and that he heard Manning talk about the murders. Lucious now testifies that Sheriff Bryan and David Lindley of the Starkville Police Department came to Lucious while he was incarcerated in St. Louis County, Missouri, and threatened him with prosecution in Mississippi for those murders if he did not sign the statement. Manning incorporates by reference the discussion in part A above and asserts that the State presented false testimony or at least coerced a witness into providing false evidence. Given the importance of Lucious's testimony and the fact that there are indications that the testimony was false, Manning argues that he is entitled to a new trial.
¶ 14. We now find that Manning should be allowed to seek post-conviction relief pleadings as to Kevin Lucious's testimony. Lucious claims that he was coerced into testifying against Manning with the threat that he might be charged with the murders. When an important witness to a crime recanted his testimony and offered a reason for having given false testimony at trial, the defendant/petitioner is entitled to an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the witness lied at trial or on his affidavit. See Hardiman v. State,
*Page 724C. The State knowingly presented false testimony of Herbert Ashford.
¶ 15. At trial, Herbert Ashford testified that he saw Manning the day the victims were killed. Ashford testified that he was living in Building 8 in the Brooksville Gardens. He also testified that two weeks after the murders, he overheard a conversation between Willie Manning, Kevin Lucious, and Marshon Manning, Willie's brother, in which Willie Manning allegedly said that "he should have did more than he did to the ladies."
¶ 16. In his petition for post-conviction relief, Manning presents the affidavit of Kevin Lucious, who now denies ever having a conversation with Manning about harming the murder victims and the affidavit of Marshon Manning who denies that his brother ever discussed the murders with him. Manning also includes the affidavit of Teresa Bush, Herbert Ashford's girlfriend, with whom Ashford lived at the time. Bush states that she had known Manning for eight years and that she did not see him at Brooksville Gardens on the day of the crime.
¶ 17. We find no allegation that Teresa Bush or Marshon Manning were unavailable during the trial, nor any allegation or evidence that defense counsel was unable to interview either witness. Furthermore, we find nothing from Ashford, himself, recanting his testimony. This issue is not fully supported by Manning, and there is no supporting evidence to suggest that this issue could not have been raised on direct appeal. Therefore, we find that this claim is procedurally barred.
D. Petitioner was denied constitutional rights by the State's knowing presentation of false evidence concerning threats made to and deals made with Kevin Lucious.
¶ 18. Manning argues that Lucious received substantial benefit from testifying against Manning and that the State's threat to prosecute Lucious if he did not testify against Manning was never disclosed even though defense counsel attempted to cross-examine Lucious about negotiations and deals with the State. In his affidavit, Lucious states that he testified against Manning only because he was afraid of being charged with the murders. He asserts that the District Attorney convinced him that he would be charged with the murders if he did not sign the statements. Lucious also states that the statements purported by the State to be his own, were already prepared and were presented to him by Sheriff Dolph Bryan on the Sheriff's second visit to see Lucious in the St. Louis, Missouri, county jail.
¶ 19. Manning asserts that had the jury known that Lucious was testifying solely to avoid prosecution that fact would have had a substantial impact on the outcome of his trial. Manning also asserts that at trial Lucious denied that he had been offered a "deal" in exchange for his testimony, and that the State failed to correct the false impression that Lucious gave the incriminating statements of his own volition.
¶ 20. Manning fails to demonstrate any benefits that Lucious received in Missouri, where he was incarcerated, in exchange for his testimony in Mississippi. We find that it is not enough to speculate that Lucious received the "substantial benefit of not having to face double murder charges and the death penalty in Mississippi," where there is no indication, save his own fear of it, that Lucious would have been charged with the crime. This issue is without merit.
E. Petitioner was denied constitutional rights by the State's knowing presentation of false evidence or failure to correct a false impression of the evidence regarding a shoe print found in the victims' apartment; In the alternative, Petitioner's constitutional rights were *Page 725 violated by the suppression of exculpatory informationconcerning the shoe print.
¶ 21. Manning asserts that according to Stanley Sisk, a crime scene specialist who investigated the crime, a shoe print in blood was found on a rug in the victims' apartment. When questioned about the shoe print, Sisk testified that the print was insufficient for comparison purposes. What he failed to mention is that although the print could not be used for comparison, the examiner was able to measure the print and found that it was a size 8. This fact was never disclosed to Manning's defense counsel. Manning argues that this evidence was critical since Manning wears a size 10 or larger shoe and thus could not have left the bloody print in the victims' apartment. The report indicating the shoe size is included in Manning's petition as Exhibit 16, and the affidavit of Richard Burdine, Manning's trial counsel, stating that this report was never disclosed.
¶ 22. The State has a duty to disclose exculpatory material. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that the "suppression of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or punishment . . ." Favorable evidence includes items that are either directly exculpatory or can be used for impeachment purpose. Giglio v.United States,
United States v. Spagnoulo,To establish a Brady violation a defendant must prove the following: (1) that the government possessed evidence favorable to the defendant (including impeachment evidence); (2) that the defendant does not possess the evidence nor could he obtain it himself with any reasonable diligence; (3) that the prosecution suppressed the favorable evidence; and (4) that had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, a reasonable probability exists that the outcome of the proceedings would have been different.
¶ 23. In this case, Manning demonstrates by including a copy, that the shoe-print report, indicating the likely size of the shoe existed and was known to the prosecution. Manning includes the defense attorney's affidavit stating that despite seeking discovery of all exculpatory evidence, this report was not disclosed. Furthermore, evidence that a shoe-print not matching Manning's shoe size was found at the scene of the crime presents a reasonable probability that the outcome of the proceedings would have been different. We find that Manning should be allowed to proceed in the trial court on this issue.
F. The State knowingly presented false testimony concerning witness identification of Petitioner at Brooksville Gardens on the day of the homicides in violation of his Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments rights guaranteed by the federal constitution as well as analogous provisions of the Mississippi Constitution.
¶ 24. Another witness, Larry Harris, testified that he saw Manning at Manning's stepfather's apartment, Building 13, in Brooksville Gardens on the day of the murders. However, Kelvin Bishop, Manning's stepfather, did not live in Building 13 on January 18, 1993. On that date, Bishop was living with his mother, and a review of police notes taken during the door-to-door canvas indicate that neither Bishop nor his girlfriend, Betty Robinson, *Page 726 lived in Building 13 at the time of the murders. Manning asserts that Harris was called to testify even though the State knew that Harris was mistaken or making false statements. Manning also notes that the only other witnesses who saw Manning in Brooksville Gardens on the day of the murder, testified that they saw him between 2:00 and 4:00 p.m., at least three hours before the murders took place. Also, significantly that Harris and Ashford both testified that they saw Manning with other people in the early evening of January 18, 1993, and yet the State did not present any of those other witnesses.
¶ 25. Manning notes that "in adjudicating a claim involving the use of false testimony, the `any reasonable likelihood' standard has been applied to determine materiality. Under that standard, `[a] new trial is required if the false testimony could have . . . in any reasonable likelihood affected the judgment of the jury." Barrientes v. Johnson,
¶ 26. In this instance, we find that Manning makes only assertions that testimony as to Manning's presence in Brooksville Gardens, at certain hours of the day, was false, and that such assertions are not sufficient to support post-conviction relief on this issue.
G. Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights by the State's failure to disclose exculpatory information concerning Jo Jo Robinson.
¶ 27. Manning asserts that in the early stages of the investigation, several residents of Brooksville Gardens reported having witnessed suspicious activity. There were several neighbors who reported that they believed that Jo Jo Robinson, who lived in the same building as the victims, was involved in the murders. Nettie Mae Thompson, who lived just behind the victims' apartment, told police that at the time of the crime she saw three young black males running behind the victims' building and that she heard one of them say "Jo, why did you do that." She observed one man running around the side of the building in which she lived and her son later found a knife with blood on it in that location. Her son gave the knife to the police. She also reports that she saw other evidence that Jo Jo Robinson was involved, including what could have been Robinson's attempt to "clean up" after the murders.
¶ 28. While law enforcement had information implicating another suspect, they did not disclose this to defense counsel. Manning argues that reviewing courts have found failure to disclose evidence implicating other suspects is a violation of the Brady
rule. See Brady v. Maryland,
¶ 29. In Brady, the U.S. Supreme Court established the principle that "suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith *Page 727
of the prosecution."
¶ 30. Manning is granted permission to proceed with post-conviction pleadings on the issues of whether the State presented false testimony, failed to provide mandated exculpatory evidence and whether Manning's trial counsel and direct appeal counsel were ineffective for failing to properly investigate and adequately defend.
H. Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights by the State's failure to disclose exculpatory information about Herbert Ashford.
¶ 31. On this ground, Manning repeats portions of the some of the facts and assertions above. He asserts that the State failed to disclose that on numerous occasions, early in the investigation, Herbert Ashford said that he did not know anything about the murders and never mentioned Willie Manning. Manning again references the affidavit of Teresa Bush who lived with Ashford at the time and states that Ashford never mentioned Manning as having anything to do with the murders. Manning argues that disclosure of Ashford's prior denials and the fact that Bush never heard him mention Manning's involvement would have undercut Ashford's credibility. Reviewing courts have reversed convictions where the State suppressed significant impeachment evidence.See, e.g., United States v. Pelullo,
¶ 32. We find that Manning fails to support this claim with anything more than assertions which are not sufficient to warrant post-conviction relief
I. Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights by the State's failure to disclose additional exculpatory information.
¶ 33. Manning asserts that the material above indicates that the State suppressed exculpatory evidence. Other suppressed material includes most of the notes taken on the door-to-door canvas conducted in Brooksville Gardens following the murders, including statements of other neighbors implicating Jo Jo Robinson and details regarding many of the assertions discussed above. Manning argues that the materiality of some of the information included in these undisclosed notes is evident. The notes include the glaring fact that the State's key witness (Lucious) could not have testified truthfully where it is shown that he didn't live in Brooksville Gardens until after the murders. Also included is information that could have been used to impeach Herbert Ashford and David Lindley and information that Jo Jo Robinson may have been involved in the murders.
¶ 34. Manning argues that U.S. Supreme Court precedent instructs the State that its knowing use of or its failure to correct false testimony or its presentation of evidence which creates a materially false impression of the evidence, violates a defendant's right to due process. Miller v. Pate,
¶ 35. We find that Manning should be allowed to seek post-conviction relief on the question of whether the State knowingly suppressed exculpatory evidence.
J. In the alternative to grounds A through I, Manning asserts that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel at trial and on appeal.
¶ 36. Manning asserts that even through due diligence, trial counsel could not have been expected to discover the false or suppressed evidence. However, if the Court concludes that trial counsel should have ascertained the facts, then Manning argues that he is due post-conviction relief due to counsel's ineffectiveness. Manning asserts that trial counsel was ineffective for:
1. Failure to use information to impeach and discredit Lucious and law enforcement. In her affidavit, Kevin Lucious's girlfriend, Likeesha Jones Harris, states that she was shocked when she read an account of Lucious's testimony in the newspaper and that she contacted Manning's attorney (Mark Williamson). However, Williamson did not call her to rebut Lucious's testimony, nor did he conduct additional investigation as to whether Lucious lived in apartment 11E at the time of the murders. Similarly, defense counsel was ineffective for not discovering the notes on the door-to-door canvas of the apartment complex in order to use that information to discredit Lucious.2. Failure to impeach Larry Harris. If defense counsel had information that Manning's stepfather did not live in Brooksville Gardens as the time of the crime, they could have used it to discredit Larry Harris's testimony that he saw Manning near the time of the attacks. If counsel had impeached Harris (along with Lucious and Ashford), the State would have had no witness who could have placed Manning near the victims at the time of their deaths.
3. Shoe print. If counsel had been provided the Footwear Case Notes, then they would have been obliged to elicit testimony that the crime lab determined the shoe to be a size 8 and that their client wore a 10-101/2.
4. Teresa Bush. Bush's name was disclosed to defense counsel in the context of the door-to-door interviews and counsel could conceivably have located her. Bush was living with Herbert Ashford and could have shed unfavorable light on Ashford's testimony that Manning was the perpetrator.
5. Investigating Jo Jo Robinson and other suspects. At least three witnesses informed law enforcement that they saw individuals coming from the victims' apartment about the time of the murders. None of those witnesses identified Manning, but at least two of the witnesses identified Jo Jo Robinson. Margaret Diane Coleman stated that on the evening of the murder she saw Jo Jo Robinson, Keith Robinson and Bullet Johnson in the victims' apartment. She later saw the three going up the hill behind the victims' apartment. Another witness reported to police that she saw three men running from the building, and still another witness stated that she had seen a dark colored car and that one of the men running from the victims' apartment got into the car. She also described what this man was wearing. Another witness stated that she saw the *Page 729 three men running from the apartment and that she heard one refer to the other as "Jo." This witness noted that she would have been willing to talk to Manning's lawyers but that no one ever contacted her. Jo Jo Robinson's own sister refutes Jo Jo's alibi for that night and instead stated that shortly before the bodies were discovered, Jo Jo ran into the apartment and went into the bathroom. The failure to discredit the State's key witnesses, failure to make a reasonable investigation and failure to make use of evidence have all been found to constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. See, e.g., Steinkuehler v. Meschner,
176 F.3d 441 (8th Cir. 1999); State v. Dillard,338 Ark. 571 ,998 S.W.2d 750 (1999); Commonwealth v. Allison,424 Pa.Super. 341 ,622 A.2d 950 (1993). Pauling v. State,331 S.C. 606 ,503 S.E.2d 468 (1998).
¶ 37. The State argues that these issues could have and should have been raised on direct appeal and, therefore, this claim is barred by waiver. Furthermore, the State contends that Manning has neither demonstrated cause or actual prejudice sufficient to excuse the waiver.
¶ 38. The standard for determining if a defendant received effective assistance of counsel is well settled. "The benchmark for judging any claim of ineffectiveness [of counsel] must be whether counsel's conduct so undermined the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on as having produced a just result." Strickland v. Washington,
Judicial scrutiny of counsel's performance must be highly deferential. (citation omitted) . . . A fair assessment of attorney performance requires that every effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel's challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel's perspective at the time. Because of the difficulties inherent in making the evaluation, a court must indulge a strong presumption that counsel's conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged action `might be considered sound trial strategy.'Stringer,
¶ 39. Then, to determine the second prong of prejudice to the defense, the standard is "a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different." Mohr v. State,
whether there is A reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the sentencer — including an appellate court, to the extent it independently reweighs the evidence — would have concluded that the *Page 730 balance of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.Strickland,
¶ 40. We find that Manning has set forth sufficient evidence to undermine confidence in the outcome of the trial. While some of the errors that Manning alleges are based on information that was not discoverable (or easily) discoverable at the time, his petition presents sufficient material to question the performance of Manning's trial counsel and his appellate counsel in this case. Therefore, we grant him leave to seek post-conviction relief on this ground.
K. Petitioner was denied effective assistance of counsel due to trial counsel's failure to call Petitioner's brother to deny that the conversations about which Lucious testified ever took place.
¶ 41. At trial Kevin Lucious claimed to have participated in conversations in which Willie Manning implicated himself in the deaths of the victims. Lucious also testified that Manning's brother, Marshon Manning, was present during the conversation. Defense counsel did not call Marshon to rebut Lucious's testimony. In fact, defense counsel never spoke to Marshon. In his affidavit, Marshon denies that any conversations involving his brother and Luscious ever took place. Reviewing courts have found trial counsel to have been ineffective when trial counsel failed to interview a potential witness. See, e.g., Washingtonv. Smith,
¶ 42. The State asserts that Manning is barred by the doctrine of waiver because Manning's two appellate lawyers have not been assailed in post-conviction pleadings. Even if Marshon's testimony has the potential for impeaching the testimony of Lucious, it would have failed to establish to a reasonable probability the outcome of the trial or the proceedings would have been different.
¶ 43. We hold that this issue should be considered in the evidentiary hearing and determination made by the trial court.
L. Manning also asserts that he was denied his constitutional rights due to the cumulative errors in the culpability phase and the penalty phase of the trial.
¶ 44. This Court may reverse a conviction and/or sentence based upon the cumulative effect of errors that do not independently require a reversal. Jenkins v. State,
¶ 45. Manning asserts that while each of the errors above warrant reversal, when all of the errors are taken together, the combined prejudicial effect requires reversal. Randall v.State,
¶ 46. The State contends that no error in part translates into no error to the whole and asserts that there is no reversal error in any part. Consequently, there is no reversible error as to the whole.
¶ 47. We find that Manning has demonstrated sufficient evidence of cumulative errors to warrant an evidentiary hearing.
M. At the penalty phase, Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights due to the trial court's repeated statements to the jurors that they were not to rely on sympathy; In the alternative, trial counsel was ineffective for not objecting to the trial court's mistaken and prejudicial statements concerning sympathy.
¶ 48. Manning asserts that this Court has held that "a jury may not be instructed to disregard, in toto, sympathy." King v.State,
¶ 49. Manning argues, in the alternative, if the Court concludes that King is not an intervening decision, then trial counsel was ineffective for not objecting to the prejudicial comments by the trial court and prosecutor, as well as the sentencing instructions.
¶ 50. The State argues that King does not qualify as an intervening decision and that the precedent that a jury may not be instructed to disregard, in toto, sympathy in a capital case has been around since 1988. See Pinkney v. State,
¶ 51. This Court has stated that "the jury cannot be instructed to disregard sympathy altogether." Evans v. State,
N. Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights due to the defense counsel's failure to develop and present evidence in mitigation of punishment.
¶ 52. Manning asserts that trial counsel had a duty to unearth all relevant mitigating evidence and to conduct a thorough investigation into the range of possible mitigating evidence. The record indicates that trial counsel failed to interview witnesses who had knowledge of Manning's family and were willing to cooperate with defense counsel. Manning notes also that there are letters in the file from Mark Williamson (defense counsel) to Richard Burdine (co-counsel) suggesting witnesses for the mitigation portion of the penalty phase of trial. Those witnesses were apparently never contacted. Furthermore, Manning includes affidavits from an attorney in Louisiana and an investigator which declare there to be valuable mitigating evidence that was never presented at trial. Failing to do so, Manning argues, is evidence of trial counsel's deficient performance and satisfies both prongs of Strickland.
¶ 53. The State argues that this claim was raised and litigated on direct appeal and is now barred by the doctrine of res judicata.
¶ 54. We agree with the State. This claim was raised on direct appeal, and the Court found that Manning failed to show prejudice related to the trial counsel's failure to call other witnesses. Furthermore, the Court noted that "additional character witnesses would not have, with any reasonable probability, tipped the balance between mitigators and aggravators." Manning v. State,
O. Petitioner was denied his constitutional right by the State's reliance on an invalid statutory aggravating circumstance; his unconstitutionally obtained prior murder convictions.
¶ 55. Manning asserts that the prosecution relied, in part, on the statutory aggravating circumstance that "the defendant was previously convicted of another capital offense or felony involving the use or threat of violence to the person." Miss. Code Ann. §
¶ 56. The State argues that Manning's claim has already been decided and rejected on direct appeal. We agree. *Page 733
¶ 57. This Court has previously rejected Manning's claim that his conviction in the murder of two Starkville students was unconstitutional. Manning v. State,
¶ 59. We deny Manning's petition in all other respects.
¶ 60. APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO SEEK POST-CONVICTION RELIEF,GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART.
SMITH, C.J., WALLER, P.J., CARLSON AND DICKINSON, JJ., CONCUR. EASLEY, J., DISSENTS WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. COBB, P.J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. DIAZ AND RANDOLPH, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Willie Jerome Manning v. State of Mississippi.
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- 17 cases
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- Published