RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
File Name: 09a0196p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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GERALD L. BROWN,
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Petitioner-Appellant,
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Nos. 06-4037/4043
v.
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Respondent-Appellee. -
KHELLEH KONTEH, Warden,
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Ohio at Columbus.
No. 05-00540—John D. Holschuh, District Judge.
Argued: April 25, 2008
Decided and Filed: June 2, 2009
Before: DAUGHTREY, GILMAN, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges.
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Andrew P. Avellano, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. M. Scott Criss, OFFICE
OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF:
Andrew P. Avellano, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. M. Scott Criss, OFFICE OF THE
OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee.
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OPINION
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MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. A violent rampage through the
Beacon Hill Apartment complex in Columbus, Ohio, on August 14, 2001, resulted in the
burglary of two apartments, three aggravated robberies, two vicious beatings, and a murder.
The petitioner, Gerald L. Brown, Jr., was eventually convicted for the numerous crimes.
Although the State of Ohio sought to execute Brown for his participation in the offenses, a
three-judge panel that heard the evidence against him sentenced him instead to life in prison
without consideration for parole for 69 years. The petitioner then unsuccessfully attempted
1
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to overturn his convictions both through the Ohio state court appeals process and through
habeas corpus proceedings in federal district court. Brown now appeals from the district
court’s denial of his habeas petition, alleging only that the Ohio state courts unreasonably
concluded that the evidence adduced at his trial was legally sufficient to support the various
convictions. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court’s ruling in part,
reverse in part, and remand the case for entry of such orders as are appropriate and necessary
to comply with this opinion.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Because Brown’s habeas petition is governed by the provisions of the Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214
(1996), factual determinations made by the state courts are presumed to be correct. See 28
U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Moreover, only by clear and convincing evidence can a petitioner
overcome that statutory presumption. See id. To demonstrate the enormity of Brown’s task
in this appeal, we quote at length from the recitation of the pertinent trial evidence by the
Ohio Court of Appeals and thus highlight just how extensive and thorough that recapitulation
was. In its opinion, the state appellate court summarized the evidence at the petitioner’s trial
as follows:
According to the state’s evidence, on or about August 14, 2001,
LaToya Dixon, who was 16 years old at the time, paged Dennis Michael
Williams, aka “Mikey,” and invited him to her apartment. At that time,
Dixon lived in apartment 2F at 4611 Refugee Road, Columbus, Ohio, in an
apartment complex that was then called the Beacon Hill Apartments.
Within about an hour, Williams, who was accompanied by male
friends whom Williams later introduced to Dixon as “cousins” and with
whom Dixon was unfamiliar, arrived at Dixon’s apartment complex in two
cars. Dixon met Williams and his companions in the parking lot of the
apartment complex, and Dixon escorted Williams and his companions to her
apartment. At trial, Dixon could not recall Williams’[s] companions’ names.
One of Williams’[s] companions asked Dixon if he could use her
telephone. Dixon agreed. However, when the telephone apparently did not
work, Williams’[s] companion attempted to break the telephone. Although
Williams attempted to calm Dixon, Dixon became concerned and asked
Williams’[s] companion why he was attempting to break her telephone.
Dixon, who was now concerned about her safety, then went across
the hall to the apartment of a neighbor, Emmitt Grant, and asked for a
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“Black & Mild” cigar. According to Dixon, Grant was aware that Dixon did
not smoke and by asking for the cigar Dixon had hoped “to let [Emmitt
Grant] know that I felt like something was about to happen in my house.”
While Dixon was talking with Grant, some of the individuals that Dixon had
allowed into her apartment observed Dixon through the peephole.
After talking with Grant, Dixon returned to her apartment. Upon
returning to her apartment, Dixon and Williams went into the bathroom to
talk. The men that accompanied Williams remained in Dixon’s living room.
At some point, Williams’[s] companions left Dixon’s apartment.
Dixon and Williams then retired to Dixon’s bedroom to have sex.
However, Dixon ultimately decided against having sex with Williams and
left the apartment. As she exited the apartment, Dixon passed Williams’[s]
companions, who were entering Dixon’s apartment.
After exiting her apartment, Dixon went by the apartment complex’s
pool and came upon Jerramie Hill and John Hill, who inquired of Dixon
what was happening. Dixon told the Hill brothers that she was waiting for
Williams and his companions to leave her apartment and “[t]hey were acting
crazy.” Dixon also told the Hill brothers that they should not intervene.
Dixon then began walking with the Hill brothers. At some point,
Williams and his companions jumped out from an entryway, surrounded the
Hill brothers, and attacked them.
Dixon then ran to her apartment to change her clothes, “[b]ecause I
didn’t have-really have no clothes on. I had like a dress on. I didn’t have
no shoes or nothing on * * *.” She later peered through a broken window
into the Hill brothers’ apartment. Dixon observed a man with many compact
discs in his hand. She recognized this man as one of Williams’[s]
companions. The apartment was in disarray and there was blood on the
walls. Dixon also observed someone being beaten in the bathroom. She
also heard screams and stomping sounds from the apartment. Dixon also
recognized Williams’[s] voice coming from the Hill brothers’ apartment.
She did not hear any gunshots, nor did she observe anyone being hit with a
commercial blower that purportedly was in the Hill brothers’ apartment.
Fearing for her own safety, Dixon fled to a friend’s house. The next
day she contacted police.
According to Emmitt Grant, who lived in apartment 2E across from
Dixon’s apartment, after a female friend with whom Grant had spent the
evening left his apartment between 1 and 1:30 a.m. on August 14, 2001,
Grant remained in his apartment and played video games. Because the
weather was pleasant, he left the door to his apartment open.
According to Grant, at approximately 2 a.m. on August 14, 2001, he
observed Dixon leave her apartment. Approximately five minutes later,
Dixon returned to her apartment and was accompanied by some black males.
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 4
Approximately five minutes later, Grant observed two men exit Dixon’s
apartment and go down the stairs. After a couple of minutes, these men
returned to Dixon’s apartment. Grant also heard one man, upon exiting
Dixon’s apartment scream, “Fuck, that. Who is he? Who is he?”
At some point, Grant closed the door to his apartment. As he
retreated to his seat, there was a knock at his door. Dixon was at the door
and asked Grant for a cigar. She did not appear to be upset. Dixon returned
to her apartment and, as she opened the door to her apartment, Grant
observed several men in Dixon’s apartment.
As Grant turned to return to his apartment, one of the men greeted
Grant. Grant returned the greeting, entered his apartment, and closed the
door. Later, however, because Grant felt that he should not have to close his
door, he reopened the door to his apartment and left it halfway open.
A few minutes after Grant reopened his door, a man stood in the
doorway to his apartment with his back toward Grant. The man looked over
his shoulder and inquired as to what Grant was doing. Grant replied that he
was playing a Dreamcast game.
As the man stood at the doorway, another man entered Grant’s
apartment without invitation from Grant and stood in front of a table by the
couch. Next, the man who had been standing in the doorway entered
Grant’s apartment also without invitation and swung at Grant. A fight
ensued. Two other men entered Grant’s apartment and attacked Grant.
During the fight, Grant saw a person run toward the back of his apartment.
This same person slammed Grant’s entertainment center to the floor.
During the fight, Grant observed a gun fall from the hip of the
person that had first swung at him. Grant then heard others in the
background scream, “Get your gun, get your gun. * * * He’s about to get
your gun.” Grant’s hand was then kicked away from the gun that had hit the
floor. A cable cord from Grant’s videocassette recorder (“VCR”) was
wrapped around Grant’s neck, and later an attacker hit Grant’s head with a
little table. After being struck three times in the head with the table, Grant
fell to the floor. The man that had wrapped the cord around Grant’s neck
then said, “Fuck it. Let’s drag his ass to the back.” In court, Grant could not
identify defendant as one of the men who had been in his apartment.
At some point, Grant escaped from his attackers. Grant ran across
the apartment complex to an apartment that was illuminated. An elderly
resident came to the door. Grant asked the resident to call Grant’s family or
friends. Instead, the resident called 911.
Officers Patrick Seaman and Aaron Dennis of the Columbus
Division of Police responded to the location where the 911 call was placed
by the elderly resident. Earlier police had also received another call from
the resident in the apartment below Grant’s apartment concerning a
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commotion or fight in Grant’s apartment. After viewing Grant, Officers
Seaman and Dennis summoned paramedics to attend to Grant’s injuries.
Officers Seaman and Dennis then went to Grant’s apartment to
investigate and secure the crime scene. When Officers Seaman and Dennis
arrived at Grant’s apartment, Officer Seaman observed that the apartment
was torn apart and it appeared that a fight had occurred in the apartment. In
the bedroom, Officers Seaman and Dennis found what appeared to be crack
cocaine on a plate on a dresser. Officers Seaman and Dennis found no
suspects in Grant’s apartment.
While Officer Dennis remained at Grant’s apartment, Officer
Seaman returned to the location where the paramedic was treating Grant.
Officer Seaman, along with a paramedic, then escorted Grant back to his
apartment. During the walk to Grant’s apartment, Officer Seaman saw a
PlayStation game on the grass in the courtyard near another apartment.
Because it was unusual to see an unattended PlayStation game in the middle
of the grass, Officer Seaman remained to investigate while the paramedic
and Grant continued toward Grant’s apartment.
Near the location where the PlayStation game was found, Officer
Seaman noticed a ground floor apartment with an open window. Because
it was unusual to have a wide-open window in a ground floor apartment in
this particular apartment complex that had a high crime rate, Officer Seaman
went to the apartment to investigate. Looking through the window, Officer
Seaman observed debris in the apartment. Next, Officer Seaman noticed that
the door to the apartment was wide open. Officer Seaman radioed his
location. Shortly afterward, Officer Seaman noticed blood on the door and
a blood trail that appeared to start from the apartment and continue through
the stairwell.
After announcing his presence, Officer Seaman entered the
apartment. The apartment was torn apart and there was blood on the walls.
As Officer Seaman passed the bathroom, he saw blood and noticed the
bathroom was torn apart. As Officer Seaman entered the bedroom, he saw
one white male, Jerramie Hill, curled in a fetal position on the bed and
covered in blood. Another white male, John Hill, who was also covered in
blood, was lying facedown on the floor. Officer Seaman radioed his
findings. Officer Dennis, who had been in Grant’s apartment, then left
Grant’s apartment to assist Officer Seaman.
Officer Seaman observed shell casings and one spent bullet. Next
to John Hill, Officer Seaman noticed a pool of blood on the floor and a
bullet wound on the body with burn marks around it. According to Officer
Seaman, John Hill was dead.
Officer Seaman initially believed Jerramie Hill, who appeared badly
beaten, was also dead. However, after determining Jerramie Hill was alive,
Officer Seaman summoned a paramedic.
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According to Jerramie Hill, a witness for the state, he and his
brother, John Hill, were walking in the apartment complex when they saw
Dixon standing underneath some steps. Dixon appeared upset and the Hill
brothers asked her what she was doing. Dixon responded that there were
some individuals in her apartment. While Jerramie and his brother were
walking with Dixon toward their apartment, four black males confronted
Jerramie Hill and his brother. The men stopped the Hill brothers, asked the
brothers to put their arms in the air, and patted them down. Then one man
punched John Hill in the mouth and cut his lip. John Hill went toward some
steps and spit blood out of his mouth. Then the Hill brothers went to their
apartment.
At the apartment, John Hill went to the bathroom to clean his lip. As
Jerramie Hill was trying to shut the screen to a window that had been broken
the night before, one of the individuals that had stopped the Hill brothers
came in through the broken window, opened the front door to the apartment,
and let in the other two members of the group that had earlier confronted the
Hill brothers.
After members of the group entered the apartment, the intruders
queried Jerramie Hill about items in the apartment. Jerramie Hill attempted
to represent that the items did not belong to him and he told the intruders
they could take the items, such as a television and a Sega Dreamcast game
system. The intruders questioned Jerramie Hill about who was in the
apartment’s back room. Jerramie Hill informed the intruders that his brother
was in the back room.
The intruders ordered Jerramie Hill to help them carry items out of
the apartment. At one point, Jerramie Hill attempted to flee the apartment.
One of the intruders grabbed Jerramie Hill, threw him to the floor
and began to stomp on his head. Two other intruders went to the back of the
apartment. According to Jerramie Hill, during the attack he drifted in and
out of consciousness. However, Jerramie Hill recalled being hit over the
head with a carpet blower that had been placed in his apartment to dry the
carpet because the apartment previously had been flooded. Hill did not hear
any gunshots.
Jerramie Hill regained consciousness while paramedics were
attending to his injuries. According to Hill, he was hospitalized for more
than a week following the attack, and that due to the attack his “balance is
not the same.” Further, he stated, “I’ve lost three of my jobs ‘cause my
movement wasn’t fast enough.” Hill could not identify any of the intruders.
According to the state, in addition to the attacks of the Hill brothers
and Grant, items were also stolen from the Hill brothers’ apartment and from
Grant’s apartment. According to Jerramie Hill, a television, compact discs,
a dragon statue, and a Sega Dreamcast system were missing from his
apartment. According to Grant, clothes, shoes, boots, a PlayStation 1 video
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 7
game machine, Sega Dreamcast video game machine, a video game, jewelry,
and a cell phone were missing from his apartment.
At trial, portions of a videotaped interview of defendant that was
conducted on November 6, 2001, by Detective Carl Rankin of the Columbus
Police Department were played and transcribed into the record. Detective
Rankin also testified at trial. According to Detective Rankin, following
Grant’s assault, he had linear bruising from ear to ear, which was consistent
with Grant’s account of being choked with the VCR cable cord.
According to Detective Rankin, prior to interrogating defendant,
defendant voluntarily waived his constitutional rights under Miranda.
During the videotaped interview, defendant provided police with his factual
account of the events of August 14, 2001. At the interview, defendant
admitted to involvement with the attacks of Grant and the Hill brothers.
However, defendant denied killing John Hill.
According to Dr. Dorothy E. Dean, forensic pathologist and deputy
coroner, based upon her evaluation, John Hill sustained blunt-force injuries
and eight entrance gunshot wounds, although two of these entrance gunshot
wounds may have been reentry wounds, thereby suggesting he had been shot
six times in total. According to Dr. Dean, John Hill died from bullet wounds
to his torso that injured his heart and arteries. Based upon the autopsy, Dr.
Dean opined that John Hill had not been beaten severely prior to his death.
In contrast to the state’s evidence, defendant presented a differing
version of the events of August 14, 2001.
According to defendant, on the evening of August 14, 2001, LaToya
Dixon paged Mikey Williams, a “cousin” of defendant, and invited Williams
to Dixon’s apartment. At the time Williams received Dixon's page, Williams
was with defendant, James Ingram, aka “Rock,” and Cortez Smith. Prior to
this time, defendant was not acquainted with Cortez Smith.
Defendant, who had been drinking, James Ingram, and Cortez Smith
accompanied Williams to Dixon’s apartment. Defendant and Ingram rode
with Williams while Smith drove another vehicle and followed the others to
Dixon’s apartment.
Although Dixon did not know Williams’[s] companions, she allowed
Williams and his companions to enter her apartment. According to
defendant, there may have been an understanding between Williams and his
companions that they would have sex with Dixon.
At one point, Dixon left her apartment and later returned. After the
planned sex did not materialize, defendant, Ingram, and Smith left Dixon’s
apartment. Williams remained in the apartment.
While defendant and the others were outside Dixon’s apartment,
defendant and Emmitt Grant exchanged stares and words. Defendant
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informed Williams about the encounter with Grant. Defendant, Williams,
and Ingram then entered Grant’s apartment and fought with Grant. Williams
was the first person to punch Grant. During the fight, defendant held Grant
and punched him in the ribs while Ingram punched Grant in the face.
During the fight, defendant did not know the whereabouts of Smith. At
some point, Grant escaped and fled. Williams pursued Grant. Defendant
and Ingram followed.
Defendant, Ingram, and Smith then came upon the Hill brothers. A
fight ensued and continued in the Hill brothers’ apartment. Defendant
admits that he beat Jerramie Hill while he was in the Hill brothers’ apartment
and that he struck John Hill. However, defendant denies that he struck
Jerramie Hill with a commercial blower or that he ever threatened the use of
a handgun. Defendant also claimed he was not in the bedroom when John
Hill was shot. According to defendant, he did not shoot John Hill, nor did
he hear any gunshots.
After fighting with the Hill brothers, defendant, along with Williams,
Ingram, and Smith, headed toward Williams’[s] car. Smith, however,
decided to return to the apartments to steal a video game. Because Smith
was gone awhile, defendant searched for him. While searching for Smith,
defendant reentered the Hill brothers’ apartment and observed that neither
Jerramie Hill nor John Hill was moving. Smith was not in the Hill brothers’
apartment.
Defendant then observed Smith coming downstairs from the area of
Grant’s apartment. Smith was carrying a video game. Defendant also
observed a shiny object in Smith’s hand, which Smith put in his pocket.
Defendant believed the shiny object was a gun.
Defendant, Williams, Ingram, and Smith then left the apartment
complex. Defendant and Ingram rode with Williams, while Smith drove
away separately.
According to Tom Stanley, a fire department paramedic who
attended to Emmitt Grant on August 14, 2001, the courtyard where Grant
was examined was dark and Stanley could not recall observing any bruising
along Grant’s neck. Cf. testimony of Detective Rankin who testified Grant
had bruising on his neck. Additionally, according to Stanley, Grant refused
to be transported to the hospital.
Detective Edward Cox of the Columbus Police Department testified
regarding the arrest of Cortez Smith related to a series of robberies that
occurred in November 2001. Detective Cox also testified about the items
that were recovered from Smith at the time of his arrest in November 2001.
These items included two chrome .32 caliber semiautomatic pistols and a
pair of red work boots. However, according to earlier cross-examination
testimony of Detective Rankin in the state’s case in chief, although a .32
caliber weapon was used in the killing of John Hill, the weapons recovered
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 9
from Smith in November 2001 were not the weapons used in the killing of
John Hill.
Officer Aaron Dennis of the Columbus Police Department testified
that he did not observe any linear bruising of Emmitt Grant’s neck.
According to Officer Dennis, after he and Officer Seaman investigated
Grant’s apartment, both he and Officer Seaman returned to Grant, who was
receiving medical treatment by paramedics. He and Officer Seaman
intended to escort Grant to his apartment and question him about the events
that occurred in his apartment and about the suspected crack cocaine that
Officers Seaman and Dennis found in his apartment.
According to Officer Dennis, he and Grant headed toward Grant’s
apartment while Officer Seaman stayed behind. While Officer Dennis was
with Grant in Grant’s apartment, Officer Dennis heard Officer Seaman’s
radio transmissions. After hearing Officer Seaman’s second radio
transmission, Officer Dennis left to assist Officer Seaman.
Approximately 20 minutes later, Officer Dennis returned to Grant’s
apartment. After returning to Grant’s apartment, Officer Dennis noticed that
the suspected crack cocaine that was in Grant’s bedroom was no longer
there.
Cortez Smith, who at the time of his testimony was incarcerated
related to charges arising from the circumstances of this case as well as
another case and who had entered into a plea agreement with the state,
testified that he stole a Sega Dreamcast video system, a video game, and
clothes, including red boots, from Emmitt Grant's apartment. On direct
examination, Smith admitted to a history of substance abuse, which included
the use of alcohol, “weed,” ecstasy, and cocaine.
According to Smith, on the morning of August 13, 2001, he had used
alcohol, marijuana, and ecstasy. Later that same day, Smith went to an
apartment where he met Williams, Ingram, defendant, and others.
According to Smith, at that apartment, alcohol was consumed and there also
might have been cocaine use.
From this apartment, Smith drove in a separate car to the Beacon
Hill apartment complex, while Williams, defendant, and Ingram rode to the
Beacon Hill apartment complex in Williams’[s] car. According to Smith, the
first time he met LaToya Dixon was on the night of August 14, 2001, in her
apartment. Smith confirmed that a fight had occurred in Emmitt Grant’s
apartment, but Smith did not recall hearing anyone state, “Let’s open him
[Grant] up” or words that could be vaguely construed as this.
According to Smith, he was in Grant’s apartment approximately
three to five minutes. After taking the Sega Dreamcast video system and
other items, Smith testified he went to the car that he was driving and put the
stolen items into the backseat. Then, according to Smith, he returned to both
Grant’s apartment and Dixon’s apartment and found no one there. Smith
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 10
then left. According to Smith, he was at the Beacon Hill apartment complex
a total of approximately 15 to 20 minutes. According to Smith, when he left
the apartment complex, Williams’[s] car was still in the parking lot.
On cross-examination, Smith testified that he observed defendant
and the others fighting Emmitt Grant in the living room of Grant’s
apartment. According to Smith, he entered Grant’s apartment after the fight
had begun. After entering Grant’s apartment, Smith went to Grant’s
bedroom to investigate whether there was anything of value that he could
steal. Smith admitted to stealing items from Grant’s closet, but he denied
rummaging through Grant’s dresser drawers. After stealing items from
Grant’s bedroom, Smith stole a Sega Dreamcast video system on his exit
from Grant’s apartment.
On redirect examination, Smith testified that he recalled seeing the
Hill brothers; however, Smith did not recall exactly when he saw them.
According to Smith, during the fight in Grant’s apartment, a gun
dropped to the floor. Smith did not pick up the gun, but he did observe
someone else pick up the gun. Smith described the gun that fell to the floor
as “[l]ike them guns that Germans have in them old German movies, like-
like dark-dark black, like a black gun. I think it was a wood handle with like
funny kind of-kind of nozzle on it or barrel, whatever you call it.”
According to Smith, he thought he had seen the gun earlier in the evening.
Smith denied handling the gun.
By an 11-count indictment filed November 15, 2001, defendant was
charged with two counts of aggravated burglary, each count with two
specifications; three counts of aggravated robbery, each count with two
specifications; two counts of attempted murder, each count with two
specifications; two counts of felonious assault, each count with two
specifications; and two counts of aggravated murder, each count with five
specifications.
On September 6, 2002, defendant waived his right to a jury trial and
elected to be tried by the court. A panel of three judges was assigned to hear
the case.
On September 17, 2002, the lead prosecutor filed an affidavit that
requested the disqualification of one judge who was assigned to the three-
judge panel that was scheduled to hear the case. On October 9, 2002, the
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio denied the requested
disqualification of the assigned panel member.
A trial was held in late November 2002. The three-judge panel
found defendant guilty of all charges in the indictment. However, with
respect to count ten, aggravated murder as it related to aggravated burglary,
the panel found defendant was not the principal offender in the commission
of the aggravated murder and the aggravated murder was not committed
with prior calculation or design. Furthermore, with respect to count eleven,
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aggravated murder as it related to aggravated robbery, the panel found
defendant was not the principal offender in the commission of the
aggravated murder and the aggravated murder was not committed with prior
calculation and design.
Finding that several mitigating factors existed according to a
preponderance of the evidence, the trial court excluded the death penalty as
a possible sentence. Instead, the trial court sentenced defendant to life with
no consideration for parole for 69 years.
State v. Brown, No. 03AP-130, 2004 WL 1277498, at *2-9 (Ohio App. 10 Dist. June 10,
2004) (footnotes, citations, and internal quotation marks omitted).
After recounting that evidence, two judges of the Ohio Court of Appeals engaged in
an equally thorough and meticulous exposition of how an application of relevant Ohio
criminal law precepts to those facts supported Brown’s felony-murder conviction, as well
as his convictions for the additional charged offenses. The majority first noted that Brown
failed to challenge four of his convictions: the aggravated burglary of Emmitt Grant (Count
1); the felonious assault of Emmitt Grant (Count 4); the aggravated burglary of the apartment
of the Hill brothers (Count 5); and the felonious assault of Jerramie Hill (Count 9). The
legitimacy of those convictions thus was not properly before the appellate court.
In addressing the petitioner’s challenge to his three aggravated robbery convictions,
the state-court majority first conceded that “there is no evidence that defendant himself
possessed or had under his control a gun during the aggravated robberies of August 14,
2001, and therefore the evidence does not support a finding that defendant was a principal
offender with respect to the charges of aggravated robbery” of Emmitt Grant, Jerramie Hill,
and John Hill. Id. at *11. Nevertheless, the court noted that Ohio law permits an aggravated
robbery conviction, even if the defendant did not personally possess a weapon, if that
defendant “supported, assisted, encouraged, cooperated with, advised, or incited the
principal in the commission of the crime, and that the defendant shared the criminal intent
of the principal.” State v. Johnson, 754 N.E.2d 796, 801 (Ohio 2001). Finding that Brown
did so assist in the robberies, the majority affirmed those convictions.
Similarly, the majority of the Ohio Court of Appeals concluded that Brown could be
held responsible for the murder of John Hill and for the charged gun specifications, in part
because the petitioner knew that at least one of his companions possessed a firearm.
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 12
Furthermore, the court reasoned that Brown, “through his participation in the crimes that
occurred in the Hill brothers’ apartment, supported, assisted, encouraged, cooperated with,
advised, or incited the principal in the commission of aggravated murder, and that the
[petitioner] shared the criminal intent of the principal in the purposeful killing of John Hill.”
Brown, 2004 WL 1277498, at *16.
One judge of the state appellate court dissented in part. In that partial dissent, Judge
Bryant stated that, because the murder of John Hill was not necessary to carry out the
purposes of the group’s criminal activities, and because the evidence at trial did not
necessarily place Brown in the back bedroom where Hill was murdered, the constitutional
evidentiary standard for criminal convictions had not been satisfied. See id. at *20 (Bryant,
J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
After Brown filed his habeas corpus petition in federal court, the district judge
referred the matter to a magistrate judge for an initial determination of facts and a
recommended disposition. Noting the federal courts’ limited discretion in most habeas
review, the magistrate judge quoted extensively from the state appellate court opinion and
recommended denial of the petition. The district court adopted that recommendation,
entered an order finding the trial evidence constitutionally sufficient to sustain Brown’s
convictions, and denied the petition for habeas corpus relief in its entirety. Following denial
of the petitioner’s subsequent motion to alter or amend that judgment, Brown perfected this
appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
At the outset, it is important to recognize, as did the magistrate judge in this case, just
how limited is our review in a habeas proceeding. Pursuant to the provisions of AEDPA,
a federal court may not grant the writ unless the state court adjudication on the merits either:
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable
application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based upon an unreasonable determination
of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 13
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
As explained by the United States Supreme Court in Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S.
362, 412-13 (2000):
Under the “contrary to” clause, a federal habeas court may grant the writ if
the state court arrives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by this Court
on a question of law or if the state court decides a case differently than this
Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts. Under the
“unreasonable application” clause, a federal habeas court may grant the writ
if the state court identifies the correct governing legal principle from this
Court’s decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the
prisoner’s case.
In deciding whether a state court ruling involved an “unreasonable application” of federal
law, a habeas court does not focus merely upon whether the state court decision was
erroneous or incorrect; rather, a federal court may issue a writ of habeas corpus only if the
state court’s application of clearly-established federal law was objectively unreasonable. See
id. at 409-11.
In an appeal from a denial of habeas relief, in which a petitioner challenges the
constitutional sufficiency of the evidence used to convict him, we are thus bound by two
layers of deference to groups who might view facts differently than we would. First, as in
all sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenges, we must determine whether, viewing the trial
testimony and exhibits in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of
fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). In doing so, we do not reweigh the evidence,
re-evaluate the credibility of witnesses, or substitute our judgment for that of the jury. See
United States v. Hilliard, 11 F.3d 618, 620 (6th Cir. 1993). Thus, even though we might
have not voted to convict a defendant had we participated in jury deliberations, we must
uphold the jury verdict if any rational trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty after
resolving all disputes in favor of the prosecution. Second, even were we to conclude that a
rational trier of fact could not have found a petitioner guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, on
habeas review, we must still defer to the state appellate court’s sufficiency determination
as long as it is not unreasonable. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 14
Cognizant of these mandated glosses upon our review, we undertake an examination
of the sufficiency of the evidence for each of the counts of the indictment under which
Brown was convicted. Again, we emphasize, before beginning this evaluation, that we
cannot rely simply upon our own personal conceptions of what evidentiary showings would
be sufficient to convince us of the petitioner’s guilt. We cannot even inquire whether any
rational trier of fact would conclude that petitioner Brown is guilty of the offenses with
which he was charged. Instead, we must determine whether the Ohio Court of Appeals itself
was unreasonable in its conclusion that a rational trier of fact could find Brown guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt based upon the evidence introduced at trial. See, e.g., Knowles
v. Mirzayance, 129 S. Ct. 1411, 1420 (2009) (“The question ‘is not whether a federal court
believes the state court’s determination . . . was incorrect but whether that determination was
unreasonable – a substantially higher threshold.’”) (quoting Schriro v. Landrigan, 550 U.S.
465, 473 (2007)).
B. Crimes Committed Against Emmitt Grant
Aggravated Burglary (Count 1)
Brown has not challenged, either in this appeal or before the Ohio Court of Appeals,
his conviction for the aggravated burglary of Emmitt Grant’s apartment. Consequently, we
deem any objection to the legal sufficiency of the evidence offered to prove the petitioner’s
guilt of that offense to have been waived. See, e.g., Bickel v. Korean Air Lines Co., 96 F.3d
151, 153 (6th Cir. 1996).
Aggravated Robbery (Count 2)
Under Ohio law, “[n]o person . . . committing a theft offense . . . shall . . . [h]ave a
deadly weapon on or about the offender’s person or under the offender’s control and either
display the weapon, brandish it, indicate that the offender possesses it, or use it[,] [or]
[i]nflict, or attempt to inflict, serious physical harm on another.” See O.R.C.
§§ 2911.01(A)(1) and (3). Should an individual commit such a theft offense while using,
displaying, or brandishing a weapon, or while inflicting serious physical harm on another,
that person will be guilty of aggravated robbery.
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 15
A wrongdoer need not personally steal items from another; personally use, display,
or brandish a weapon; or personally inflict serious physical harm on a victim in order to
justify conviction pursuant to the provisions of section 2911.01(A) of the Ohio Revised
Code. Rather, an individual like Brown may be found guilty of aggravated robbery simply
by aiding or abetting another person in the commission of the offense. To be liable as an
aider or abettor, however, “mere association with a principal offender is not enough . . . .
[T]here must be some level of active participation by way of providing assistance or
encouragement.” State v. Nievas, 700 N.E.2d 339, 343 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997) (citation
omitted). In the words of the Ohio Supreme Court, “the evidence must show that the
defendant supported, assisted, encouraged, cooperated with, advised, or incited the principal
in the commission of the crime, and that the defendant shared the criminal intent of the
principal. Such intent may be inferred from the circumstances surrounding the crime.”
Johnson, 754 N.E.2d at 801. Indeed, the intent necessary to support a conviction “may be
inferred from presence, companionship and conduct before and after the offense is
committed.” State v. Mootispaw, 674 N.E.2d 1222, 1224 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).
In this case, Brown insists that he was merely present in Grant’s apartment – albeit
beating the victim mercilessly – while co-defendant Cortez Smith was vandalizing the
property. Furthermore, because the petitioner had met Smith only that evening, he claims
that he cannot be held accountable for the aggravated robbery because he was not then in a
position to know of Smith’s criminal intentions when Smith entered Grant’s apartment after
the petitioner began his assault on the victim.
As explained above, however, the Ohio state law offense of aggravated robbery is
complete upon the commission of any “theft offense” accompanied by the infliction of
“serious physical harm on another.” O.R.C. § 2911.01(A)(3). Brown clearly committed a
“theft offense” and clearly inflicted “serious physical harm on” Emmitt Grant. Pursuant to
the provisions of section 2913.01 of the Ohio Revised Code, a “theft offense” includes,
among other things, “[a] violation of section . . . 2911.11 . . . of the Revised Code.” O.R.C.
§ 2913.01(K)(1). Section 2911.11 criminalizes aggravated burglary, an offense to which
Brown has admitted by failing to contest it in state and federal court proceedings. In any
event, even had the aggravated burglary conviction been challenged, the statutory definition
of “theft offense” also includes simple burglary, O.R.C. § 2911.12, which entails merely
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 16
trespassing in an occupied structure with an intent to commit “any criminal offense.”
Brown’s entry into Grant’s apartment to assault the victim thus satisfies one prong of the
aggravated robbery evidentiary requirement. The brutal beating of Grant that included
hitting him in the head with furniture and tightening a cable around his neck so securely that
ligature marks were later seen by witnesses further satisfies the “serious physical harm”
component of the offense and justifies the state court decision to find sufficient evidence of
petitioner Brown’s guilt of aggravated robbery. Because the Ohio Court of Appeals’s ruling
on the claim of insufficient evidence relating to the charge of aggravated robbery of Emmitt
Grant thus was not unreasonable, the district court did not err in denying habeas relief on this
issue.
1
Attempted Murder (Count 3)
The petitioner was also convicted at trial of the attempted murder of Emmitt
Grant. Grant testified that he was severely beaten in his own apartment, that he was
struck multiple times in the head with a small table, and that a cable cord was wrapped
around his neck tightly enough that ligature marks could be seen. Brown insists on
appeal, however, that he could not be held responsible for that crime because no trial
witness identified him as one of Grant’s assailants.
Pursuant to the provisions of section 2903.02(B) of the Ohio Revised Code, “[n]o
person shall cause the death of another as a proximate result of the offender’s
committing or attempting to commit an offense of violence that is a felony of the first
or second degree and that is not [voluntary manslaughter] or [involuntary
manslaughter].” Nor shall a person attempt to murder another individual by “purposely
or knowingly, and when purpose or knowledge is sufficient culpability for the
commission of an offense, [engaging] in conduct that, if successful, would constitute or
result in [murder].” O.R.C. § 2923.02(A).
1
No discussion of any habeas corpus claim related to the charge in Count 4 of the indictment
alleging felonious assault of Grant is required, because that charge merged into the attempted murder
conviction under Count 3.
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 17
Brown is correct that the testimony of no other witness definitively identifies him
as one of the assailants in Grant’s apartment at the time of the beating and partial
strangulation of the victim. The petitioner’s own statement to the police, however,
indicates that he was indeed an active participant in the brutal beating of Emmitt Grant.
In Brown’s own words, “I’m standing up against the wall like this with the guy like this;
and I’m punching him in the ribs, you know what I’m saying. [A companion] hit him
in the head, and I’m punching him in the ribs.” Although Brown disclaimed knowledge
of any cord being placed around Grant’s neck, other evidence of the petitioner’s
involvement in the attack was placed before the finders-of-fact; as a result, the Ohio
Court of Appeals clearly was not unreasonable in concluding that Brown at least aided
and abetted those individuals who assaulted Grant so viciously that the attack could have
resulted in the victim’s death. The district court’s denial of habeas relief on this ground
thus must be affirmed under prevailing AEDPA standards.
C. Crimes Committed Against Jerramie and John Hill
Aggravated Burglary (Count 5)
Brown has not challenged, either in this appeal or before the Ohio Court of
Appeals, his conviction for the aggravated burglary of the Hill brothers’ apartment.
Consequently, we deem any objection to the legal sufficiency of the evidence offered to
prove the petitioner’s guilt of that offense to have been waived. See, e.g., Bickel, 96 F.3d
at 153.
Aggravated Robbery (Counts 6 and 7)
As stated previously, Ohio law defines aggravated robbery, in part, as a theft
offense accompanied by the infliction, or attempted infliction, of serious physical harm
on another. See O.R.C. § 2911.01(A)(3). Although Jerramie Hill could not positively
identify any of the individuals who broke into his apartment in the early morning hours
of August 14, 2001, in Brown’s own statement to the police he admitted that he and at
least one of his companions that night had indeed broken into the Hills’ apartment and
assaulted the brothers. Furthermore, LaToya Dixon, from the vantage point of her own
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 18
apartment, was able to see one of Brown’s companions leaving the apartment that night
with a stack of compact discs. Jerramie Hill also testified that not only were numerous
compact discs taken from his apartment, but he was also missing a video game and video
game player, a television, and a statue of a dragon.
In any event, the petitioner has conceded, through his failure to challenge the
propriety of his aggravated burglary convictions in either state or federal court, that he
is guilty of committing a “theft offense” against the Hills. See O.R.C. § 2913.01(K)(1)
(defining “theft offense” as, among other crimes, a violation of the statute criminalizing
aggravated burglary). That concession, in conjunction with Brown’s own statement to
the police admitting that he “inflict[ed] . . . serious physical harm on another”
established all the necessary elements of the offense of aggravated robbery. Indeed, the
petitioner told police that he began assaulting Jerramie Hill in Hill’s own apartment, with
the beating occurring both in the front room of the dwelling and in the back bedroom.
According to Brown:
I’m hitting him – hitting him, hitting him – just I’m hitting him. He hit
– you know what I’m saying. I’m hitting.
.....
He – I think he was probably was unconscious or something, ‘cause I hit
him a pretty good amount of times with my hand ‘cause like I said, my
whole – I mean, I was at work, and I had to go home because my whole
hand was swollen.
Furthermore, while Brown was beating Jerramie Hill, James “Rock” Ingram was also
in the apartment “fighting the other guy” -- John Hill.
On direct appeal, the Ohio Court of Appeals construed the evidence at trial in the
light most favorable to the prosecution and concluded that “by assaulting Jerramie Hill
in the Hill brothers’ apartment while one of defendant’s companions burglarized the Hill
brothers’ apartment, . . . [the] defendant was connected to or involved with the
aggravated robber[y] of . . . the Hill brothers.” The state court thus found that a
reasonable trier of fact could “conclude defendant supported, assisted, or cooperated in
the aggravated robber[y] of . . . the Hill brothers.” Such a conclusion is not unreasonable
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 19
in light of the evidence contained in the appellate record. Consequently, we are not
authorized to reverse the district court’s denial of habeas relief on this ground.
Attempted Murder of Jerramie Hill (Count 8)2
The petitioner argues ineffectively that he should not have been convicted of the
attempted murder of Jerramie Hill because Hill could not identify Brown as his assailant
and because no other witness testified that Brown was indeed the person who brutally
beat Jerramie Hill. Those argumentative statements are true – as far as they go. What
the petitioner fails to mention, however, is the fact that Brown’s own statement to the
police contains his admission and detailed description of his entry into the Hills’
apartment and of his savage attack upon Jerramie Hill. In fact, that beating was so
violent that Hill lost consciousness and Brown later was forced to leave work and return
home because his hand was swollen from repeatedly striking the victim.
The Ohio Court of Appeals, “construing the evidence in favor of the prosecution,
[found] a trier of fact reasonably could conclude that defendant engaged in conduct that,
if successful, would result in purposely causing the death[ ] of . . . Jerramie Hill.” Such
a conclusion that the prosecution established the elements of the offense of attempted
murder, see O.R.C. §§ 2903.02 and 2923.02(A), is nothing if not reasonable. We thus
affirm the district court’s conclusion denying habeas relief on the petitioner’s claim
related to his conviction for the attempted murder of Jerramie Hill.
2
Just as the indictment count alleging felonious assault upon Emmitt Grant merged with the
petitioner’s conviction for the attempted murder of Grant, Count 9 of the indictment alleging a felonious
assault upon Jerramie Hill merged with the conviction of Brown for the attempted murder of Hill.
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 20
Aggravated Murder of John Hill (Counts 10 and 11)3
On appeal, Brown also challenges the constitutionality of his conviction for
aiding and abetting the aggravated murder of John Hill during the commission of an
aggravated robbery. He contends that the prosecution could not establish his guilt of that
offense beyond a reasonable doubt because “[t]he record is bereft of any evidence that
Gerald Brown intended to purposefully cause the death of John Hill,” because there was
no testimony or evidence that Brown planned to commit an aggravated robbery, and
because no evidence linked the petitioner to the actual killer. See Appellant’s Br. at 21.
In addressing the challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence for this conviction
on direct appeal, the Ohio Court of Appeals explained:
Pursuant to [the version of Ohio Revised Code Section 2903.01 in effect
at the time of the commission of the crimes at issue]:
(A) No person shall purposely, and with prior calculation
and design, cause the death of another * * *.
(B) No person shall purposely cause the death of
another * * * while committing or attempting to commit,
or while fleeing immediately after committing or
attempting to commit, kidnapping, rape, aggravated
arson, arson, aggravated robbery, robbery, aggravated
burglary, burglary, or escape.
***
(F) Whoever violates this section is guilty of aggravated
murder, and shall be punished as provided in section
2929.02 of the Revised Code.
Here, we find there is no evidence that defendant purposely, and with
prior calculation and design, caused the death of John Hill (see former
R.C. 2903.01[A]), nor is there evidence that defendant purposely caused
the death of John Hill while committing or attempting to commit one of
the enumerated crimes under former R.C. 2903.01(B).
3
The conviction of the petitioner for Count 10 (aggravated murder of John Hill during the
aggravated burglary of the Hills’ apartment) merged with the conviction of the petitioner for Count 11
(aggravated murder of John Hill during the aggravated robbery of Hill).
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 21
Therefore, construing the evidence in favor of the prosecution, we must
determine whether there is sufficient evidence that defendant aided and
abetted the principal in the aggravated murder of John Hill. For
defendant to have aided and abetted the principal in the aggravated
murder of John Hill, the evidence must show that defendant supported,
assisted, encouraged, cooperated with, advised, or incited the principal
in the commission of aggravated murder and that defendant shared the
criminal intent of the principal to commit aggravated murder.
***
In this case, defendant participated in the assault of Emmitt Grant during
which a gun fell from the pants of one of Emmitt Grant’s assailants and
landed upon the floor of Grant’s apartment. During the fight, Grant
heard others in the background scream, “Get your gun, get your gun. *
* * He’s about to get your gun.” Grant’s hand was then kicked away
from the gun that had hit the floor. Furthermore, Cortez Smith testified
that he saw an unidentified person pick up a gun after it dropped to the
floor.
Based upon this evidence, we find a trier of fact reasonably could infer
that defendant was aware that someone in the group may have had a gun
when defendant and his companions later committed crimes in the Hill
brothers’ apartment, which resulted in the shooting and death of John
Hill. Furthermore, under these circumstances, we find a trier of fact
reasonably could infer defendant acquiesced in the use of a gun.
Moreover, construing the evidence in favor of the prosecution, because
the endangerment of John Hill’s life began in the apartment courtyard
wherein John Hill and his brother were accosted, and then in apparently
short order the endangerment progressed to the Hill brothers’ apartment
where John Hill was murdered, we find that a trier of fact reasonably
could find that the attack on the Hill brothers in their apartment, which
resulted in the murder of John Hill, was a natural and probable
consequence of the attack that had initially begun in the courtyard.
Additionally, we find that, beyond a reasonable doubt, a trier of fact
reasonably could conclude that defendant engaged in a common design
with others to rob the Hill brothers by the use of force and violence, and
that John Hill’s murder was a natural and probable consequence given
the force and violence used in the robbery, which created circumstances
that in all probability would endanger human life.
Accordingly, . . . we find sufficient evidence showing that defendant,
through his participation in the crimes that occurred in the Hill brothers’
apartment, supported, assisted, encouraged, cooperated with, advised, or
incited the principal in the commission of aggravated murder, and that
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 22
defendant shared the criminal intent of the principal in the purposeful
killing of John Hill.
State v. Brown, 2004 WL 1277498, at *13, 16 (citations and internal quotation marks
omitted).
Brown’s objections to the district court’s denial of habeas relief on this ground
are meritless. Although it is true that no evidence adduced at trial established that the
petitioner personally intended, with prior calculation and design or even during the
commission of another felony, to kill John Hill, demonstration of such an intent is not
the only manner in which criminal liability for the murder may be imposed upon Brown.
Indeed, evidence was before the triers of fact that Brown and his cohorts engaged in an
unprovoked attack upon both John and Jerramie Hill, an attack that escalated into a full-
blown, strong-arm robbery. Given Brown’s active participation in the physical beatings
and home invasion, there is no question that had John Hill died as a result of a physical
beating that was coordinated with Brown’s beating of Jerramie Hill in furtherance of a
robbery, the petitioner would be liable for aiding and abetting that death. The fact that
the beating of John Hill escalated into a shooting death in no way exonerates the
petitioner from complicity in the criminal deed, especially given the record evidence that
Brown had to have been aware, at least since the beating of Emmitt Grant, that one of
his companions – other than Cortez Smith – was in possession of a handgun.
The petitioner, and the dissenting judge on the Ohio Court of Appeals panel,
insist that the Ohio case of State v. Trocodaro, 301 N.E.2d 898 (Ohio Ct. App. 1973),
requires that Brown’s aggravated murder conviction be overturned. In Trocodaro, the
state court held that “unless one is in pursuance of a conspiracy previously formed, his
involvement in an altercation which although connected with, is not the specific
altercation occasioning, a homicide should not be held as a principal under the theory
of aiding and abetting where he has neither actually incited, nor encouraged the
perpetrator of the homicide.” Id. at 902-03 (emphasis added).
Obviously, Brown believes that the appellate record contains no evidence that
he did, in fact, incite or encourage at least one of his companions to engage in actions
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 23
likely to lead to John Hill’s death. The majority of the Ohio Court of Appeals panel that
reviewed the petitioner’s convictions believed, however, that Brown was indeed guilty
of such encouragement.
The petitioner did indicate in his statement to the police that he “was pretty
heated too from that first previous fight (with Grant),” that his adrenaline was “still
pumping,” and that he was “ready to go.” He also admitted that he was hitting Jerramie
Hill, “hitting him, hitting him -- just I’m hitting him,” and that his attack was so vicious
that Hill lost consciousness and that Brown’s hand became swollen. In light of such
evidence, it is clearly possible that the fact-finders believed that Brown’s agitated state
incited other individuals with him to escalate the fury with which they also attacked the
Hill brothers. Whether such is in fact the case is, again, beside the point in this habeas
appeal. As long as we can conclude that the Ohio Court of Appeals was not
unreasonable in determining that Brown was guilty of aggravated murder beyond a
reasonable doubt, we must affirm the district court’s decision denying habeas corpus
relief.
Additionally, in an apparent effort to intimate that John Hill must have been
murdered at some later time by some other individual, Brown also has emphasized
throughout this prosecution that no gunshots were heard during the assaults on the Hills.
Of course, such “negative evidence” is of little import in this case, because even though
no one testified to hearing gunshots later that night, it is undeniable that John Hill was
murdered by gunfire. Regardless of the presence or absence of such evidence, moreover,
Brown’s challenge to the district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief on this claim must
fail. As we held just last year in another Ohio habeas corpus appeal challenging the
sufficiency of the convicting evidence:
Even if we were to conclude, after reviewing the record and drawing all
inferences in favor of the prosecution, that [the petitioner’s] convictions
were not supported by sufficient evidence, the question would remain
whether the Ohio Court of Appeals was unreasonable in concluding
otherwise. “State court findings of fact are to be presumed correct unless
the petitioner rebuts the presumption with clear and convincing
evidence.” Sandgathe v. Maass, 314 F.3d 371, 376 (9th Cir. 2002). A
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 24
federal habeas court may not grant habeas relief “simply because that
court concludes in its independent judgment that the state-court decision
applied a Supreme Court case incorrectly.” Price v. Vincent, 538 U.S.
634, 641 (2003) (internal brackets omitted). It must further conclude that
the state-court decision was objectively unreasonable. Williams v.
Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 409 (2000).
Saxton v. Sheets, 547 F.3d 597, 607 (6th Cir. 2008).
Regardless of how we, as individual jurists, would have viewed the evidence of
Brown’s guilt had we been called to evaluate the strength of the prosecution’s case, we
cannot escape the fact that the Ohio Court of Appeals was not unreasonable in choosing
to put upon this case the gloss it did. As a result, we are compelled to conclude that the
district court did not err in also denying habeas corpus relief to the petitioner on his
challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence adduced to convict him of the aggravated
murder (felony-murder) of John Hill.
D. Gun Specification Convictions
Brown also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions
for the various gun specifications charged in the indictment returned against him. The
main thrust of this argument again appears to be a suggestion that we should view the
evidence offered on the charges differently than did the Ohio Court of Appeals. We
emphasize once more, however, that on habeas review, our task is not to reweigh or re-
evaluate individual pieces of evidence but, rather, to determine only whether the state-
court rulings on the merits of the issue were unreasonable.
Each of the 11 counts of the indictment against Brown contained specifications
alleged in accordance with the provisions of sections 2941.141 and 2941.145 of the Ohio
Revised Code. Pursuant to section 2941.141, a one-year prison term may be imposed
upon a defendant if “the offender had a firearm on or about the offender’s person or
under the offender’s control while committing the offense.” Section 2941.145 authorizes
a three-year prison term for a defendant who “had a firearm on or about the offender’s
person or under the offender’s control while committing the offense and displayed the
firearm, brandished the firearm, indicated that the offender possessed the firearm, or
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 25
used it to facilitate the offense.” (Emphasis added.) Furthermore, the Ohio Supreme
Court has recognized that the statutory firearm specifications may be applied to
defendants even if those defendants were not themselves in actual control of the
weapons. See, e.g., State v. Powell, 571 N.E.2d 125, 127 (Ohio 1991) (defendant “may
be charged under [the statute] on the basis of the possession of a firearm by any
accomplice involved” in the charged offense).
In addressing the propriety of the gun specifications found in this prosecution,
we are again cognizant of our jurisprudential rule holding that issues not adequately
developed or argued in the appellate briefs are deemed abandoned and thus not
addressed by this court. See, e.g., United States v. Hough, 276 F.3d 884, 891 (6th Cir.
2002). Consequently, because Brown alludes to the gun specifications imposed upon
convictions for offenses alleged in Counts 1, 4, 5, and 9 of the indictment in only the
most perfunctory of manners, if at all, we choose not to disturb those judgments.
Additionally, the charge of aggravated murder committed during an aggravated burglary
(Count 10) merged, by operation of law, with the charge of aggravated murder
committed during an aggravated robbery, as alleged in Count 11 of the indictment, and
thus can result in no further punishment for the petitioner.
The Ohio Court of Appeals and the district court concluded that sufficient
evidence existed in the record to support convictions for each gun specification on every
count of the indictment against Brown. We disagree, however, with that blanket
assertion and find some of those conclusions by the state court unsupported by any
evidence and, therefore, unreasonable.
Aggravated Robbery of Emmitt Grant (Count 2)
As the rampage at the Beacon Hill Apartments began to unfold during the early
morning hours of August 14, 2001, the petitioner and his cohorts engaged in a vicious
assault upon Emmitt Grant in Grant’s apartment. During that beating, a handgun fell out
of the clothing of one of the attackers and landed on the floor, before being kicked away
out of Grant’s reach and being retrieved and re-hidden by one of the attackers.
Consequently, evidence in the record establishes that the petitioner was aware, at least
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 26
at the time the gun fell to the floor, that one of his cohorts possessed a firearm. Because,
as discussed in Section II.B. of this opinion, the Ohio Court of Appeals was not
unreasonable in concluding that Brown was guilty of the aggravated robbery of Emmitt
Grant by inflicting serious physical harm upon him during a theft offense, the state court
was also not unreasonable in concluding that the petitioner could be held accountable
for the possession of a firearm by one of his accomplices during that crime. See O.R.C.
§ 2941.141.
Moreover, the state court was not unreasonable in upholding the application of
the section 2941.145 firearm specification to the conviction for the aggravated robbery
of Grant. A legitimate argument could be advanced that the momentary, accidental
viewing of the firearm in Grant’s apartment when the gun fell to the floor does not
constitute either “display” or “brandishing.” It is equally plausible, however, that the
victim’s viewing of the weapon facilitated the offense by emphasizing to Grant the
futility of resistance. Given our restrictive standard for reviewing the state court
decision, we conclude that the district court did not err in denying habeas corpus relief
on these grounds.
Attempted Murder of Emmitt Grant (Count 3)
The petitioner was aware of and was a willing participant in the brutal beating
of Emmitt Grant that resulted in one of Brown’s attempted murder convictions. The
attack on the victim continued after a handgun fell onto the floor, was kicked away from
Grant, and was retrieved by another of Brown’s companions. Clearly then, the petitioner
was aware of the possession of a firearm by one of his accomplices and was properly
held accountable for the section 2941.141 specification. Furthermore, although a
legitimate argument could be proffered that a gun is neither “displayed” nor
“brandished” when it merely falls accidentally to the floor and is immediately retrieved
and rehidden, it is also far from unreasonable to believe that such a momentary
exhibition of the weapon facilitated the offense by indicating to the victim the dangers
inherent in resistance. Thus, the district court did not err in determining that the Ohio
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 27
Court of Appeals was not unreasonable in applying both the section 2941.141 and the
section 2941.145 firearm specifications to the petitioner for the Count 3 conviction.
Aggravated Robberies of Jerramie and John Hill; Attempted Murder of Jerramie
Hill (Counts 6, 7, and 8)
Following the beating of Emmitt Grant, Brown and his companions broke into
the Hills’ apartment and assaulted and robbed the brothers. By that time, the petitioner
was aware that someone in his group was in possession of the firearm that had fallen
onto the floor in Grant’s apartment. The state court’s findings that the specifications of
section 2941.141 (possession of a firearm) were applicable to the crimes of aggravated
robbery of the brothers and the attempted murder of Jerramie Hill thus were not
unreasonable.
Furthermore, because the state court was not unreasonable in surmising that the
aggravated robbery and murder of John Hill occurred in relative temporal proximity, the
application of the section 2941.145 specification for use of a firearm in the aggravated
robbery of John Hill was proper. On the other hand, affirmance of the section 2941.145
specification for either displaying, brandishing, indicating possession of, or using the
firearm to facilitate the offenses of aggravated robbery and attempted murder of
Jerramie Hill would require us to engage in mere speculation. No evidence in the record
indicates that a gun was actually used or even displayed in the perpetration of those two
specific crimes. Consequently, the Ohio Court of Appeals decision to the contrary was
necessarily unreasonable and the petitioner is entitled to relief on those bases.
Aggravated Murder of John Hill During an Aggravated Robbery (Count 11)
The Ohio Court of Appeals also affirmed the application of both the section
2941.141 and section 2941.145 firearm specifications to Brown’s conviction for the
aggravated murder of John Hill. Having concluded that the petitioner can be held
accountable for John Hill’s death, we do not find the state court’s firearm determination
to be unreasonable. Medical evidence offered at the petitioner’s trial explained that John
Hill died from multiple gunshot wounds. Logically, then, the principal in the actual
murder of the victim not only possessed a firearm, but clearly brandished it in the
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commission of the offense. We thus affirm the district court’s denial of habeas corpus
relief on this ground.
E. Motion to Alter or Amend the Judgment
In a final appellate issue, Brown raises the somewhat scurrilous allegation that
the district judge in this habeas matter adopted the report and recommendation of the
magistrate judge without adequate review and consideration of the record. The
petitioner bases his argument in this regard solely upon the fact that “only eight working
days” passed between the filing of objections to the report and recommendation and the
filing of the district court order adopting the magistrate judge’s submission. According
to Brown, because the transcript of the petitioner’s trial was 661 pages long, the district
judge could not have performed a detailed review of that transcript in such a compressed
time period. Brown’s appellate brief concedes, however, that 13 total days actually
elapsed between the filing of his objections to the report and recommendation and the
district court’s order. Despite what Brown may think, federal judges do work on
weekends and holidays, at night, and during lunch periods. Over the span of 13 days,
and even over a mere eight days, a conscientious jurist could review 661 pages of
transcript, digest objections offered by a lawyer to an adverse ruling, and issue a brief
order adopting the magistrate judge’s recommendation. The petitioner’s challenge to the
denial of his motion to alter or amend the judgment is thus patently without merit.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part the
denial of petitioner Brown’s habeas corpus petition. Specifically: as to Count 1 of the
indictment (aggravated burglary of Emmitt Grant), because Brown did not challenge the
decision rendered regarding this conviction, we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on
the conviction itself and on both firearm specifications; as to Count 2 of the indictment
(aggravated robbery of Emmitt Grant), we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the
conviction and on both firearm specifications; as to Count 3 of the indictment (attempted
murder of Emmitt Grant), we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the conviction and
Nos. 06-4037/4043 Brown v. Konteh Page 29
on both firearm specifications; as to Count 4 of the indictment (felonious assault of
Emmitt Grant), because Brown did not challenge the decision rendered regarding this
conviction, we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the conviction itself as well as on
both firearm specifications; as to Count 5 of the indictment (aggravated burglary of the
Hill brothers), again because the petitioner failed to challenge properly the district court
decision regarding this conviction, we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the
conviction and on both firearm specifications; as to Count 6 of the indictment
(aggravated robbery of Jerramie Hill), we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the
aggravated robbery conviction and on the section 2941.141 specification, but REVERSE
the denial of habeas relief on the section 2941.145 specification; as to Count 7 of the
indictment (aggravated robbery of John Hill), we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief
on the conviction and on both firearm specifications; as to Count 8 of the indictment
(attempted murder of Jerramie Hill), we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the
actual conviction and on the section 2941.141 specification, but REVERSE the denial
of habeas relief on the section 2941.145 specification; as to Count 9 of the indictment
(felonious assault on Jerramie Hill), because Brown failed to challenge properly the
district court determination, we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief on the substantive
conviction and on both firearm specifications; as to Count 10 of the indictment
(aggravated murder of John Hill during an aggravated burglary), we acknowledge that
any conviction under this count necessarily merged with the conviction for the
aggravated murder of John Hill alleged in Count 11; and, as to Count 11 of the
indictment (aggravated murder of John Hill during an aggravated robbery), we AFFIRM
the denial of habeas relief on the conviction itself and on both firearm specifications.
We also AFFIRM the district court’s denial of the petitioner’s motion to alter or
amend the judgment and REMAND this matter to the district court for entry of an order
consistent with this opinion.