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		<title>Successful Brady/Napue Cases &#8211; Suppression of Evidence</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[Successful Brady/Napue Cases &#8211; Suppression of Evidence Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases -1 SUCCESSFUL BRADY/NAPUE CASES (Updated September 6, 2017) * capital case I. UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT *Wearry v. Cain 136 S.Ct. 1002 (2016) (per curiam) United States Supreme Court summarily reverses Louisiana court’s denial of postconviction relief on Brady claim, [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1 style="text-align: center;">Successful Brady/Napue Cases &#8211; Suppression of Evidence</h1>
<p>Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-1<br />
SUCCESSFUL BRADY/NAPUE CASES<br />
(Updated September 6, 2017)<br />
* capital case<br />
I. UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT<br />
*Wearry v. Cain<br />
136 S.Ct. 1002 (2016) (per curiam)<br />
United States Supreme Court summarily reverses Louisiana court’s denial of postconviction relief<br />
on Brady claim, holding that state prejudicially failed to disclose material evidence including<br />
inmates’ statements casting doubt on the credibility of the testimony of the state’s key witnesses.<br />
Wearry was convicted by a jury of capital murder and sentenced to death, largely on the basis of<br />
testimony of two inmates, Scott and Brown, both of whose testimony was significantly different<br />
from the various statements they had provided to law enforcement prior to trial. There was no<br />
physical evidence linking Wearry to the crime and Wearry presented an alibi defense at trial. After<br />
Wearry’s conviction became final, he obtained information that the prosecution had withheld (1)<br />
police reports that indicated that one inmate had reported that Scott “wanted to make sure [Wearry]<br />
gets the needle cause he jacked over me” and another inmate lied to investigators at Scott’s urging,<br />
stating that he had witnessed the murder; (2) information that Brown had twice sought a deal to<br />
reduce his sentence in exchange for testifying against Wearry, and that the police had told him they<br />
would talk to the DA; and (3) medical records on Hutchinson, an individual whom Scott had<br />
reported ran into the street to flag down the victim on the night of the murder, pulled the victim out<br />
of the car, and shoved him into the cargo space and got into the cargo space himself. The medical<br />
records indicated that nine days before the murder Hutchinson had undergone knee surgery and<br />
would not have been able to run, bend, or lift substantial weight. The new evidence is sufficient to<br />
undermine confidence in the guilty verdict. “The State’s trial evidence resembles a house of cards,<br />
built on the jury crediting Scott’s account rather than Wearry’s alibi.” 136 S.Ct. at 1006. “Scott’s<br />
credibility, already impugned by his many inconsistent stories, would have been further diminished<br />
had the jury learned that Hutchinson may have been physically incapable of performing the role<br />
Scott ascribed to him, that Scott had coached another inmate to lie about the murder and thereby<br />
enhance his chances to get out of jail, or that Scott may have implicated Wearry to settle a personal<br />
score. Moreover, any juror who found Scott more credible in light of Brown’s testimony might<br />
have thought differently had she learned that Brown may have been motivated to come forward not<br />
by his sister’s relationship with the victim’s sister—as the prosecution had insisted in its closing<br />
argument—but by the possibility of a reduced sentence on an existing conviction.” Id. at 1006-07.<br />
The Louisiana court improperly evaluated the materiality of each piece of withheld evidence rather<br />
than all of them cumulatively.<br />
*Smith v. Cain,<br />
565 U.S. 73 (2012)<br />
In Louisiana death penalty case, reversing denial of post-conviction relief where the prosecution<br />
failed to disclose statements by the only eyewitness to the five murders that he was unable to<br />
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-2<br />
describe or identify any of the three assailants. The suppressed evidence was material given that<br />
the eyewitness provided the only evidence linking the defendant to the murders and the<br />
undisclosed statements directly contradicted the eyewitness&#8217; emphatic identification of the<br />
defendant at trial as the first gunman to enter the room where the killings occurred. That the<br />
eyewitness made inconsistent statements on the night of the murder suggesting that he could<br />
identify the first gunman did not render the undisclosed statements immaterial. Nor did the<br />
State&#8217;s speculation that the undisclosed statements could have been made because of the<br />
eyewitness&#8217; fear of retaliation. (Dissent by Thomas.)<br />
*Banks v. Dretke,<br />
540 U.S. 668 (2004)<br />
Texas death row inmate was entitled to habeas relief from his death sentence due to the<br />
prosecution’s suppression of evidence of a trial witness&#8217;s informant status where that witness&#8217;s<br />
testimony was key to the prosecution’s claim of future dangerousness and the witness was not<br />
otherwise effectively impeached. Petitioner established cause for his failure to present the<br />
evidence establishing the Brady violation to the state court in that petitioner reasonably relied on<br />
the government’s pre-trial promise to disclose all Brady material, and the state had continued to<br />
deny that the witness was an informant at state post-conviction proceedings.<br />
*Kyles v. Whitley,<br />
514 U.S. 419 (1995)<br />
Reversing denial of habeas relief as to capital conviction and death sentence where state withheld<br />
eyewitness and informant statements, and a list of license numbers. Withheld evidence is to be<br />
evaluated collectively, not item-by-item, and the standard is a &#8220;reasonable probability&#8221; of a<br />
different result. The Court also made clear that &#8220;the individual prosecutor has a duty to learn of<br />
any favorable evidence known to the others acting on the government&#8217;s behalf in the case,<br />
including the police.&#8221; 514 U.S. at 437.<br />
Giglio v. United States,<br />
405 U.S. 150 (1972)<br />
Government failed to disclose impeachment evidence of a promise of immunity in exchange for<br />
testimony. Prosecutor&#8217;s knowing creation of a false impression requires new trial &#8220;if there is any<br />
reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the verdict.&#8221;<br />
*Miller v. Pate,<br />
386 U.S. 1 (1967)<br />
Illinois death row inmate entitled to habeas relief where prosecution knowingly misrepresented<br />
paint-stained shorts as blood-stained, and failed to disclose the true nature of the stains.<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-3<br />
*Brady v. Maryland,<br />
373 U.S. 83 (1963)<br />
Suppression of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the<br />
evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith of the<br />
prosecution. (Here, the state court had concluded that Brady was entitled to resentencing because<br />
of the prosecution’s failure to disclose an extrajudicial statement by the co-defendant where he<br />
admitted to being the actual killer. The Supreme Court affirmed the state court’s ruling that<br />
Brady was not entitled to a new guilt-innocence trial.)<br />
Napue v. Illinois,<br />
360 U.S. 264 (1959)<br />
&#8220;When reliability of a given witness may well be determinative of guilt or innocence,&#8221;<br />
nondisclosure of immunity deal with witness violates Due Process. In addition, “a conviction<br />
obtained through use of false evidence, known to be such by representatives of the State, must<br />
fall under the Fourteenth Amendment.” See Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.S. 103; Pyle v. State of<br />
Kansas, 317 U.S. 213. And “[t]he same result obtains when the State, although not soliciting<br />
false evidence, allows it to go uncorrected when it appears.” See Alcorta v. State of Texas, 355<br />
U.S. 28.<br />
II. UNITED STATES COURTS OF APPEALS<br />
United States v. Cessa,<br />
861 F.3d 121 (5th Cir. 2017)<br />
In conspiracy to launder drug proceeds case, appeals court vacates judgment of district court on<br />
Brady claim and remands for further consideration of the claim. Defendant was indicted and<br />
charged with counts of conspiring to launder drug proceeds with the Zetas, a Mexican gang, by<br />
buying, training, and racing quarter horses in the U.S. and Mexico. He was convicted and<br />
sentenced to 200 months in prison and forfeiture of his personal property and a $60 million money<br />
judgment. Prior to trial, he moved that the government provide all interview memoranda, and the<br />
district court granted the motion. The court reviewed the interview memoranda and denied<br />
defendant access to those relating to a particular witness, stating that nothing in them was helpful<br />
to the defense. The Court of Appeals holds that the district court did not consider all three prongs<br />
of Brady when determining not to disclose the memos; it is clear both from the court’s language<br />
and its timing that it considered only whether the interview memos were favorable, not whether<br />
they were material. Materiality of impeachment evidence may become clear only during or after a<br />
witness’s testimony and materiality of exculpatory evidence may become clear only upon a full<br />
review of trial evidence. Furthermore, the district court clearly erred in finding that the interview<br />
memos were not favorable to the defense. Some of the witness’s statements were exculpatory: they<br />
supported defendant’s theory that he did not buy the horses using Zeta money and instead bought<br />
the horses with his own money and gave them to the Zetas as gifts because he feared the Zetas, and<br />
that he did not join the conspiracy at all. Some of the witness’s statements in the memos were<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-4<br />
inconsistent with his trial testimony that the Zetas delivered money to defendant and that defendant<br />
was “friends” with one of the Zetas rather than afraid of him. Instead of addressing the second and<br />
third prongs of Brady (suppression and materiality), the Court of Appeals remands for full<br />
assessment of the memos and the interview notes associated with them (which the government<br />
contends not to have thoroughly reviewed).<br />
*Thomas v. Westbrooks,<br />
849 F.3d 659 (6th Cir. 2017) (cert. pet. filed Aug. 17, 2017)<br />
Court of Appeals reverses district court’s denial of Thomas’s habeas corpus petition filed under 28<br />
U.S.C. § 2254 challenging his Tennessee conviction and death sentence. Thomas was convicted of<br />
felony murder arising from the shooting of an armored truck driver in the course of a robbery.<br />
Prior to his trial on this case, he was tried and convicted in federal court of interfering with<br />
interstate commerce, carrying a firearm in relation to a crime of violence, and being a felon in<br />
possession of a firearm, all stemming from the same event. Thomas’s girlfriend testified at both<br />
trials, indicating that Thomas was present at the scene of the shooting and connecting him to other<br />
circumstantial evidence in the case. After the federal case, but before the state case, the FBI paid<br />
Thomas’s girlfriend $750, and this information was contained in the file the FBI provided to the<br />
state prosecutors, but it was not provided to the defense. Thomas’s girlfriend testified at trial that<br />
she did not receive any reward money, and the prosecutor emphasized to the jury that she testified<br />
simply because it was the right thing to do. On appeal, the state conceded that the prosecution<br />
suppressed the information about the $750 payment and that the information was favorable to<br />
Thomas, but argued that it was not material evidence and so the suppression was not prejudicial.<br />
The Sixth Circuit holds that the district court’s conclusion that the evidence was not material<br />
because there was substantial evidence linking Thomas to the crime is a mischaracterization of<br />
Brady requirements – the question is whether the guilty verdict is worthy of confidence in the<br />
absence of the suppressed evidence, and the court concludes that it is not. Thomas’s girlfriend’s<br />
testimony was vital to the prosecution’s case because she provided the only information linking<br />
Thomas to the scene, to his codefendant, and to transactions cited as circumstantial evidence of his<br />
involvement in the shooting. Without the evidence of the $750 payment, Thomas had no basis<br />
upon which to impeach her on the basis of her financial interest. “[I]f the jury had been presented<br />
with evidence of an unusual payment to an individual who can be fairly characterized as an<br />
accessory after the fact, it might well have chosen to disregard her testimony against Thomas as<br />
untrustworthy and unreliable.” 849 F.3d at 665.<br />
*Dennis v. Sec’y, Pa. Dep’t of Corr.,<br />
834 F.3d 263 (3d Cir. 2016) (en banc)<br />
In post-AEDPA capital murder case, Third Circuit affirms grant of habeas corpus relief by district<br />
court on Brady claim. Third Circuit holds that Pennsylvania state court unreasonably disregarded<br />
the impeachment value of a receipt that discredited a government’s key witness’ testimony<br />
concerning when she saw Dennis, unreasonably applied Brady in concluding that the documents<br />
suggesting that a third party committed the murder were immaterial, and acted contrary to clearly<br />
established federal law in adding an admissibility requirement to Brady where none exists. Dennis<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-5<br />
was convicted of killing a high school student, based largely on eyewitness testimony. Dennis<br />
presented an alibi defense, along with evidence of mistaken identity and good character. He and<br />
others testified that he was on a bus and at singing practice at and around the time of the murder.<br />
The prosecution withheld (1) a time-stamped receipt concerning when a witness picked up her<br />
welfare benefits, which corroborated the time which the defense theorized the witness saw Dennis<br />
on a bus; (2) a police activity sheet that indicated that one of the eyewitnesses who testified against<br />
Dennis had provided information inconsistent with her testimony; and (3) documents regarding a<br />
tip from an inmate that stated that a third party had identified himself as the killer. The<br />
Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decisions denying the Brady claims rested on unreasonable<br />
conclusions of fact and unreasonable applications of clearly established law, or were contrary to<br />
Supreme Court precedent for the following reasons:<br />
(1) With regard to the receipt, the state court’s findings that the receipt was cumulative of other<br />
testimony and also had no bearing on the alibi were unreasonable determinations of fact<br />
and an unreasonable application of Brady. The state court failed to recognize the<br />
impeachment value of the receipt, which provided documentary evidence that the witness’s<br />
trial testimony about the time she saw Dennis was false. It would have corroborated<br />
Dennis’s testimony that he saw the witness when he got off the bus – the witness’s correct<br />
testimony “would have strengthened Dennis’s and his father’s testimony that Dennis had<br />
been with his father that afternoon and was on the bus at the time of the murder.” 834 F.3d<br />
at 287. This was sufficient to demonstrate the receipt’s favorability under Brady,<br />
particularly because this was the only disinterested witness who otherwise corroborated the<br />
testimony of Dennis and his family and friends. The receipt was material – “Transforming<br />
. . . a disinterested individual with documentary support, into a defense witness, meets the<br />
requirements of Brady materiality because it would have necessarily bolstered Dennis’s<br />
alibi defense narrative and ‘put the whole case in . . . a different light.’” 834 F.3d at 295.<br />
The police had the receipt and therefore so did the prosecution; the defense had no<br />
affirmative due diligence obligation under Brady to obtain the receipt independently when<br />
the prosecution team had it: “the concept of ‘due diligence’ plays no role in Brady<br />
analysis.” 834 F.3d 291.<br />
(2) With regard to the police activity sheet, one of the eyewitnesses made a statement to her<br />
aunt and uncle that she recognized the perpetrators from high school, and this statement<br />
was not disclosed to the defense at trial. The state court’s denial of the Brady claim<br />
articulated the correct standard for materiality but applied the standard inconsistently with<br />
Supreme Court precedent. The statement could have been used as impeachment to<br />
undercut the eyewitness’s credibility in a manner not duplicated by other challenges the<br />
defense was able to level at trial and the prosecution argued that the eyewitness’s testimony<br />
was “enough to convict” Dennis. 834 F.3d at 299. “Armed with the activity sheet, defense<br />
counsel could have impeached [the witness] in a manner that very well may have led her to<br />
admit she recognized the perpetrators from her high school,” 834 F.3d at 301, as well as to<br />
challenge the adequacy of the police investigation and to mount an “other suspect” defense<br />
at trial.<br />
(3) With regard to the documents relating to an inmate’s statement that a third person had<br />
confessed to the killing, the state court’s conclusion that the documents were not material<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-6<br />
was an unreasonable application of Brady, and its conclusion that the documents were<br />
inadmissible was contrary to clearly established law, which does not have an admissibility<br />
requirement for disclosure purposes. The statement that someone else committed the crime<br />
was exculpatory. The statement “was not fruitless [as found by the state court], it was<br />
simply not rigorously pursued.” 834 F.3d at 307.<br />
The cumulative materiality of the withheld documents “commands” relief. 834 F.3d at 311-12.<br />
NOTE: This case also interprets Richter’s “gap-filling” of theories upon which the state court<br />
denied relief as “reserved for those cases in which the federal court cannot be sure of the precise<br />
basis for the state court’s ruling. . . . It does not permit a federal habeas court, when faced with a<br />
reasoned determination of the state court, to fill a non-existent ‘gap’ by coming up with its own<br />
theory or argument, let alone one, as here, never raised to the state court.” 834 F.3d at 282 (citing<br />
Premo v. Moore, 562 U.S. 115 (2011)). “[W]hen the state court pens a clear, reasoned opinion,<br />
federal habeas courts may not speculate as to theories that ‘could have supported’ the state court’s<br />
decision.” 834 F.3d at 283.<br />
Fuentes v. Griffin,<br />
829 F.3d 233 (2d Cir. 2016)<br />
Second Circuit reverses denial of habeas corpus relief by district court in non-capital case charging<br />
rape and sodomy of the first degree, which had held that the New York state court’s denial of<br />
Fuentes’ Brady claim was neither contrary to nor unreasonable application of clearly established<br />
federal law. Second Circuit holds that Fuentes’ Brady claim should have been granted on the<br />
ground that the state court’s rejection of the Brady claim was an unreasonable application (under<br />
28 U.S.C. §2254(d)(1)) of the materiality standard established by Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419<br />
(1995). The prosecution suppressed a record of a psychiatric evaluation of the complainant that<br />
impeached her testimony and supported the defendant’s version of events. The record was relevant<br />
because the issue was not whether an alleged rapist was the defendant, but rather whether the event<br />
was a consensual sexual encounter rather than a sexual assault. It was material because the<br />
complainant provided the only evidence that what occurred was a crime and the withheld<br />
document was the only evidence by which the defense could have impeached the complainant’s<br />
credibility as to her mental state. The suppressed psychiatric record indicated that the complainant<br />
reported depression, suicidal thoughts, frequent crying spells, and family problems dating back two<br />
years and cannabis abuse for a year before the alleged assault. That record could have confirmed<br />
Fuentes’ testimony that the complainant was acting erratically on the night of their encounter and<br />
also explained the complainant’s crying during her testimony. “Based on clearly established<br />
fundamental rights and principles, we think it indisputable that if the prosecution has a witness’s<br />
psychiatric records that are favorable to the accused because they provide material for<br />
impeachment, those records fall with Brady principles, and that the Supreme Court has so<br />
recognized.” 829 F.3d at 247 (citing, e.g., United States v. Abel, 469 U.S. 45, 52 (1984); Williams<br />
(Michael) v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 420, 427 (2000)). The trial court’s determination that the record did<br />
not contain anything exculpatory, and the state appellate court’s conclusion that the report<br />
supported the prosecution’s case because it corroborated the complainant’s testimony that she was<br />
upset that she had put herself in danger by walking home alone, were unreasonable because they<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-7<br />
relied upon a misreading of the withheld report, which indicated that the complainant’s symptoms<br />
were long-standing and not caused by immediate events, and that they may have provided an<br />
explanation for the complainant’s reporting the incident as a crime that corroborated the defense<br />
theory that the complainant was angry and upset about being rejected. The state’s conclusion that<br />
the suppression of the report was not prejudicial because the evidence against the defense was<br />
overwhelming was also unreasonable because the evidence against the defendant was not<br />
overwhelming, as there was no physical or medical evidence that the complainant had been<br />
subjected to force, and the complainant’s testimony was contrary to that of others in several<br />
respects.<br />
Carrillo v. City of Los Angeles,<br />
798 F.3d 1210 (9th Cir. 2015), cert. denied, 136 S.Ct. 1671 (2016)<br />
Ninth Circuit affirms district court’s denial of officer-defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffexonerees’ § 1983 lawsuit on qualified immunity grounds where “first, the law at the time of the<br />
investigations clearly established that police officers had to disclose material, exculpatory evidence<br />
under Brady, and second, that any reasonable officer would have understood that Brady required<br />
the disclosure of the specific evidence allegedly withheld.” 798 F.3d at 1213. The evidence<br />
withheld included both impeachment and exculpatory evidence. The impeachment evidence<br />
included statements to police officers by a testifying eyewitness that the eyewitness saw the<br />
shooter only in profile, asked to be hypnotized because he could not remember what the shooter<br />
looked like, and recalled the shooter did not have a mustache unlike every person in the photo<br />
lineup; statements to police officers by another testifying eyewitness that he selected the defendant<br />
in the lineup because of his face, but the hair of the perpetrator was curlier; statements by another<br />
eyewitness that he selected several other photographs from a “gang book” before selecting<br />
defendant’s, and that the officer had told him the others could not be the perpetrator but defendant<br />
was. The exculpatory evidence included evidence of a previous attempt on the victim’s life by<br />
another perpetrator.<br />
Comstock v. Humphries,<br />
786 F.3d 701 (9th Cir. 2015)<br />
In post-AEDPA case involving conviction for possession of stolen property, Comstock was<br />
entitled to habeas relief due to the prosecution’s failure to disclose a material and exculpatory<br />
statements made by the alleged victim, Street. The state’s theory was that Comstock or another<br />
person stole Street’s wrestling championship ring and Comstock pawned it; the defense at trial was<br />
that Comstock found the ring outside Street’s apartment. Comstock was sentenced to 10-15 years<br />
under Nevada’s habitual offender statute. Street testified at trial that he never loaned the ring, it<br />
never fell off accidentally, and although he had misplaced it in his apartment, he did not recall<br />
losing it outside, and that Comstock was a maintenance worker and had been inside his apartment.<br />
In a presentencing statement, Street wrote that he had told the prosecutor and investigating<br />
detective prior to trial that he was not sure the ring had been stolen at all; he remembered having<br />
taken the ring off outside his apartment and putting it on the ground or air conditioner, and that he<br />
didn’t remember putting it back on. The prosecution had not disclosed this fact to the defense, and<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-8<br />
argued in the opposition brief to the defense motion for new trial that Street had told the<br />
prosecution only that it was “possible” he could have taken the ring off, but that in fact that did not<br />
happen. The trial court denied the motion for new trial. The Court of Appeals held that Street’s<br />
statements were favorable to Comstock: they impeached Street’s credibility about how he handled<br />
his ring and cast serious doubt as to whether there was a crime at all (the Nevada Supreme Court<br />
did not make a clear determination about this). The statements were suppressed—there is no<br />
evidence to the contrary, only the prosecution’s arguments in the opposition to the motion for new<br />
trial (the Nevada Supreme Court did not make a factual finding regarding what the state knew prior<br />
to trial). The statements were material, both as impeachment of Street’s testimony and as<br />
exculpatory, particularly in light of the prosecution’s closing argument. Defense counsel attempted<br />
to cross-examine Street about the possibility he had dropped the ring, but the cross-examination<br />
fell flat, and the disclosure of Street’s pretrial statements would have transformed this cross. The<br />
prosecution argued that Street never would have lost the ring because it was too important to him,<br />
and that therefore there must have been a crime; but Street’s pretrial statements called that into<br />
question as well, and would have made the prosecution’s case significantly weaker. The Nevada<br />
Supreme Court’s findings to the contrary were an unreasonable application of Brady.<br />
Armstrong v. Daily,<br />
786 F.3d 529 (7th Cir. 2015)<br />
Seventh Circuit affirms district court’s denial of officer-defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffexoneree’s § 1983 lawsuit on qualified immunity grounds where the officers intentionally<br />
destroyed evidence:<br />
Though Brady did not announce a duty to preserve evidence, a duty to refrain from badfaith destruction flows necessarily, and obviously, from its familiar holding that<br />
suppression of material exculpatory evidence violates due process. [Citing Brady.] Brady<br />
would mean nothing if, as [the officer] argues, a prosecutor could comply with its<br />
command by deliberately destroying exculpatory evidence and then disclosing the fact of<br />
destruction to the defense. [¶] Under [the officer’s] argument, a reasonable police<br />
investigator could have believed in 1980 that if he possessed exculpatory evidence, he had<br />
an obligation to disclose it to the defense unless he deliberately destroyed it first. No<br />
reasonable police officer or prosecutor could have believed that in 1980. That is not a<br />
reasonable interpretation of Brady, and neither [the officer] nor the partial dissenting<br />
opinion has directed us to any courts that have adopted it. Under the law in 1980, including<br />
at least Killian and Brady, prosecutors had a clearly established legal duty not to act in bad<br />
faith to destroy evidence, which if suppressed or destroyed, “creates a reasonable doubt that<br />
did not otherwise exist.” See United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 112-13 (1976).<br />
Bies v. Sheldon,<br />
775 F.3d 386 (6th Cir. 2014)<br />
As in Gumm v. Mitchell, 775 F.3d 345 (6th Cir. 2014), the Sixth Circuit affirmed the grant of relief<br />
in this formerly capital case from Ohio, finding that the prosecution violated Brady by failing to<br />
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disclose favorable, material information which undermined confidence in petitioner’s convictions<br />
for the murder and attempted sexual assault of a ten year old boy in an abandoned building.<br />
Lacking any physical evidence to connect him to the crime, “[t]he State’s case against Bies rested<br />
almost entirely upon an unrecorded statement that Bies allegedly made to the police following a<br />
prolonged and highly suggestive custodial interrogation.” 775 F.3d at 388. Discovery conducted<br />
during petitioner’s federal habeas proceedings yielded “hundreds of pages of evidence,” including<br />
“a substantial collection of tips, leads, and witness statements relating to other individuals who had<br />
been investigated for the murder – two of whom had apparently confessed to the crime [including<br />
one suspect named Roger Cordray], and neither of whom was ever ruled out as the perpetrator.”<br />
775 F.3d at 394-95. After Bies was granted abeyance to present the new Brady claim to the state<br />
court, the state court declined to adjudicate the claim on the merits, resulting in de novo review in<br />
federal court. After noting that the first two elements of the Brady analysis – suppression and<br />
favorability – were not disputed, the Sixth Circuit quickly determined that the previously<br />
undisclosed information had also been “material” under Brady. The facts regarding Cordray alone,<br />
had they been disclosed, would have provided a compelling counter-narrative to the State’s theory<br />
of the case and could have created a reasonable doubt as to Bies’ guilt in the minds of the jurors.<br />
“Considering the evidence collectively,” the court concluded, “it is painfully clear that the result of<br />
the trial would likely have been different had the suppressed evidence been disclosed to the<br />
defense.” Id. at 403.<br />
Gumm v. Mitchell,<br />
775 F.3d 345 (6th Cir. 2014)<br />
The Sixth Circuit affirmed the grant of relief in this formerly capital case from Ohio, finding that<br />
the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose favorable, material information, and that the<br />
prosecutor committed additional misconduct by eliciting and emphasizing unreliable evidence of<br />
petitioner’s propensity to engage in violent and distasteful acts. Petitioner and his co-defendant,<br />
Michael Bies (see Bies v. Sheldon, 775 F.3d 386 (6th Cir. 2014)), were convicted and sentenced to<br />
death (both men’s death sentences were later set aside pursuant to Atkins v. Virginia) in connection<br />
with the 1992 murder and attempted sexual assault of a ten year old boy in an abandoned building<br />
in Cincinnati. Because there was no physical evidence linking petitioner to the crime, the<br />
prosecution’s case was built upon witness testimony placing him near the scene around the time of<br />
the crime and a confession provided after extensive interrogation. Examining petitioner’s claim de<br />
novo because it had been disposed of in state court on the basis of lack of subject matter<br />
jurisdiction, the Sixth Circuit began by describing a vast array of undisclosed evidence related to<br />
other individuals who had been investigated for the murder, including evidence that Roger Cordray<br />
had confessed to the crime. Although some of this evidence would have been inadmissible at trial,<br />
much of it, including Cordray’s confession and law enforcement’s apparent failure to pursue a<br />
wide array of leads, would have been admitted. With regard to materiality, the Sixth Circuit found<br />
that, “[c]onsidering the quality and quantity of the evidence that the state failed to disclose, the<br />
potential for that evidence to have affected the outcome of Petitioner&#8217;s trial is inescapable.” 775<br />
F.3d at 370. The prosecutor also committed misconduct by eliciting specific language from two<br />
lay witnesses in an “intentional and deliberate manner,” including claims that petitioner had<br />
“‘fucked a horse’” and had been “‘so hard up he’d do it to anyone,’” – and by using that language<br />
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to build an unreliable and improper propensity argument. The court concluded that “the case<br />
against petitioner was so weak and the prosecutor’s misconduct so ‘pronounced and persistent’ that<br />
it &#8230; had a ‘probably cumulative effect upon the jury which cannot be disregarded as<br />
inconsequential.’” Id. at 385 (quoting Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 89 (1935)).<br />
Amado v. Gonzalez,<br />
758 F.3d 1119 (9th Cir. 2014)<br />
In gang-related homicide case where petitioner was convicted under an aiding and abetting<br />
theory, he was entitled to habeas relief due to the prosecution’s failure to disclose that the key<br />
eyewitness against petitioner was on felony probation for a robbery and had been a member of a<br />
gang affiliated with the targeted victims. The state appellate court’s finding that the evidence<br />
about the witness was not newly discovered was an unreasonable determination of the facts in<br />
light of the evidence before it. In addition, the state appellate court’s ruling that petitioner was<br />
required to show that he could not have discovered the evidence through the exercise of due<br />
diligence was contrary to clearly established Supreme Court precedent. “Especially in a period<br />
of strained public budgets, a prosecutor should not be excused from producing that which the law<br />
requires him to produce, by pointing to that which conceivably could have been discovered had<br />
defense counsel expended the time and money to enlarge his investigations. No Brady case<br />
discusses such a requirement, and none should be imposed.” Because the witness had been<br />
prosecuted by the same district attorney’s office that prosecuted petitioner, the witness’s criminal<br />
history was deemed available to the prosecution. That the witness had been impeached at trial by<br />
cross-examination about his weak vision did not defeat a finding of materiality as to the<br />
undisclosed evidence. Importantly, the eyewitness provided the only evidence that petitioner<br />
brought a gun to the crime scene. Without this testimony, it was unlikely that the jury could have<br />
found the requisite mental state.<br />
*Lambert v. Beard,<br />
537 Fed.Appx. 78 (3rd Cir. 2013) (unpublished), cert. denied, 134 S.Ct. 1938 (2014)<br />
On remand from the Supreme Court for further consideration of Brady claim under §2254(d),<br />
adhering to prior judgment, and finding that alternative grounds for state court decision<br />
identified in Supreme Court’s opinion (Wetzel v. Lambert, 132 S.Ct. 1195 (2012)) were<br />
unreasonable under § 2254(d)(1) and (d)(2). Lambert was convicted and sentenced to death for<br />
his alleged participation in a 1982 robbery and double murder with another man, Reese. Lambert<br />
and Reese came to the attention of law enforcement through the claims of one Bernard Jackson,<br />
who fingered them after receiving word that an eyewitness had identified him as one of the<br />
robbers, and Jackson’s statements and trial testimony were a central component of the state’s<br />
case. See 633 F.3d at 131 (“It is undisputed that without Jackson’s statements to the police, the<br />
Commonwealth could not have indicted Lambert on these charges.”). At the joint trial of<br />
Lambert and Reese, Jackson’s credibility “was savaged” with numerous inconsistent statements<br />
and his ready admission that he was testifying to benefit himself. Id. Despite the devastating<br />
impeachment, Jackson “somewhat proudly” concluded his testimony by emphasizing that he had<br />
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always been consistent in identifying Lambert and Reese as the two robbers. Id. However a<br />
“Police Activity Sheet” discovered during state post-conviction proceedings established that this<br />
claim was also inconsistent with a prior statement by Jackson. When presented with Lambert’s<br />
Brady claim based on the prosecution’s suppression of the Police Activity Sheet, the state postconviction courts denied relief on the ground that any additional impeachment value it may have<br />
provided was merely cumulative, and that the suppressed information was therefore immaterial.<br />
In subsequent federal habeas proceedings, the district court “did not mention the Police Activity<br />
Sheet &#8230;.” 633 F.3d at 132. After describing its role under § 2254(d), the Third Circuit examined<br />
and rejected the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s conclusion that the suppressed evidence was<br />
immaterial. Relying on “the logic of” Napue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264 (1959), as “extended to the<br />
Brady context” in Banks v. Dretke, 540 U.S. 668 (2004), the Third Circuit observed that “it is<br />
patently unreasonable to presume – without explanation – that whenever a witness is impeached<br />
in one manner, any other impeachment becomes immaterial.” 633 F.3d at 134. The Third Circuit<br />
went on to explain as follows:<br />
What is critical here is that the undisclosed statement by Jackson that there was<br />
another participant – a “co-defendant,” to use his word – was not just one more<br />
piece of impeachment material to be placed in a “so what” category because<br />
Jackson had already been so thoroughly impeached. Rather, the undisclosed<br />
Police Activity Sheet would have opened an entirely new line of impeachment,<br />
and would have done far more than simply allow the defense to point out – as it<br />
did – that Jackson was inconsistent and often changed his story. The way we<br />
know that &#8230; is that by not disclosing it, the prosecution was able to rely on<br />
Jackson’s consistency in naming Reese and Lambert as the perpetrators, the only<br />
point on which he was consistent at trial. The Supreme Court has instructed that<br />
we may take the Commonwealth at its word that this was important. &#8230; Here, the<br />
prosecution’s closing argument emphasized Jackson’s consistency in naming<br />
Lambert and Reese as the perpetrators. No more, in our view, need be said to<br />
make clear that finding that Lambert had not met the requirements of Brady was<br />
an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court precedent.<br />
633 F.3d at 135.<br />
Dow v. Virga,<br />
729 F.3d 1041 (9th Cir. 2013)<br />
In robbery case, habeas relief is granted under Napue where prosecutor elicited and then failed to<br />
correct false testimony by a detective who stated that petitioner (rather than his attorney) had<br />
asked that each of the participants in a lineup wear a bandage under his right eye at the location at<br />
which petitioner had a small scar under his. The prosecutor then capitalized on the false<br />
testimony during argument by telling the jury that petitioner had demonstrated consciousness of<br />
guilt by trying to hide his scar in order to prevent the sole eyewitness from identifying him. In<br />
finding the misconduct harmless, the state court applied a standard that was “contrary to” the<br />
harmlessness standard required by Napue. (The state court asked whether it was reasonably<br />
probable that a result more favorable to petitioner would have occurred absent the misconduct,<br />
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rather than whether there was a reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected<br />
the judgment.) But even presuming the correct standard had been applied, the state court’s<br />
application of that standard would have constituted an “unreasonable application” of clearly<br />
established Supreme Court law. The evidence of guilt was weak and had resulted in a hung jury<br />
at the first trial. The eyewitness’s identification of petitioner was inconsistent but was bolstered<br />
at the retrial by the detective’s false testimony and the arguments made in reliance on it.<br />
Aguilar v. Woodford,<br />
725 F.3d 970 (9th Cir. 2013), cert. denied, 134 S.Ct. 1869 (2014)<br />
In murder case where eyewitness identification testimony was subject to challenge and the<br />
defense presented evidence that a third party was the actual shooter, the prosecution violated<br />
Brady v. Maryland by failing to disclose information demonstrating the unreliability of the<br />
&#8220;scent dog&#8221; it relied upon to connect petitioner to the shooting. The California Court of<br />
Appeal unreasonably applied Brady in concluding that the information was not material. In<br />
support of this claim, petitioner attached the transcript from another case in which the trial<br />
court excluded scent identification evidence after the prosecution stipulated to mistakes<br />
made by the dog, and a letter, dated sixth months prior to trial, in which LA County Public<br />
Defender informed the DA of the problems with the dog’s work and specifically identified<br />
that information as material subject to disclosure under Brady. The knowledge conveyed<br />
from the Public Defender to the DA was &#8220;imputed&#8221; to the prosecutor who tried petitioner’s<br />
case. Even if the DA’s office had been ignorant, the knowledge possessed by the Sheriff’s<br />
Department about the mistakes would also have been sufficient to constitute suppression.<br />
The suppressed information could have had supported a powerful argument for excluding<br />
the scent identification testimony and at the very least it provided powerful impeachment<br />
material.<br />
*Browning v. Trammell,<br />
717 F.3d 1092 (10th Cir. 2013)<br />
The Tenth Circuit affirmed the grant of guilt-or-innocence phase relief on petitioner’s Brady v.<br />
Maryland claim in this Oklahoma capital case. Petitioner was convicted and sentenced to death<br />
for killing the adoptive parents of his former girlfriend, Tackett, who was also wounded in the<br />
alleged attack and served as the prosecution’s central witness at trial. The defense theorywas that<br />
Tackett and petitioner’s co-defendant, Pethel, had conspired to frame petitioner so that Tackett<br />
could inherit the deceased victims’ property. Prior to trial, Tackett’s own attorney provided the<br />
prosecution with Tackett’s mental health records, but later insisted the records were privileged,<br />
had been disclosed by mistake, and should not be made available to the defense. The trial court<br />
reviewed the records in camera pursuant to Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39 (1987), and<br />
found that they were covered by state law privilege, and that their content was neither favorable<br />
nor material. The court therefore refused to disclose them to the defense, and the Oklahoma<br />
Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) later upheld that ruling. Petitioner then raised his Brady<br />
claim again in federal habeas proceedings. The district court conducted its own in camera review<br />
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of Tackett’s mental health records, disagreed with the state court’s assessment of their content,<br />
ordered them disclosed to habeas counsel, and later granted relief. After determining that “a<br />
Brady claim resolved through the process established in Ritchie has been ‘adjudicated on the<br />
merits’ for purposes of § 2254(d),” 717 F.3d at 1103, the Tenth Circuit observed that “neither the<br />
state trial court nor the OCCA gave any reasoned explanation” for concluding that Tackett’s<br />
mental health records contained nothing favorable or material, id. at 1104, and then found those<br />
conclusions unreasonable. The court noted that the “State does not contest the favorability” of the<br />
records, then found as follows:<br />
On the exculpatory side, [Tackett’s] records describe her as hostile, assaultive,<br />
combative, and even potentially homicidal. Such evidence tends to show that a<br />
person with a motive to kill might even have a disposition to kill. ¶ On the<br />
impeaching side, Tackett’s psychiatric evaluations evinced, among other things,<br />
memory deficits, magical thinking, blurring of reality and fantasy, and projection<br />
of blame onto others. This is classic impeachment evidence. &#8230; ¶ Accordingly,<br />
we agree with the district court’s disposition of the favorability question: “There<br />
is no reasonable argument or theory that could support the [Oklahoma courts’]<br />
conclusion that the sealed material contained nothing favorable to Browning’s<br />
defense.”<br />
717 F.3d at 1105.<br />
With regard to materiality, the Tenth Circuit observed that, “[b]y rejecting Browning’s materiality<br />
argument, the Oklahoma courts necessarily concluded that Tackett’s mental health records – had<br />
they been available for use at trial – could not have put the trial in a ‘different light’ and<br />
‘undermine[d] confidence in the verdict.’” 717 F.3d at 1106 (quoting Kyles v. Whitley, 514<br />
U.S. 419, 435 (1995)). After framing the “question for &#8230; review [a]s whether the Oklahoma<br />
courts reached that conclusion unreasonably,” id. the Tenth Circuit concluded that they did:<br />
Tackett was the prosecution’s indispensable witness, and all sides knew that<br />
Browning&#8217;s fate turned on her credibility. In case that was not obvious to the jury,<br />
the prosecution made it abundantly clear at closing argument[.] * * * If, as the<br />
prosecution told the jury at the time, Browning’s only defense was to discredit<br />
Tackett – and this was really the only possible defense in light of her powerful<br />
eyewitness testimony – then it is difficult to see how the Oklahoma courts could<br />
reasonably conclude there was nothing material about a recent diagnosis of a<br />
severe mental disorder that made her hostile, assaultive, combative, and even<br />
potentially homicidal, or that Tackett was known to blur reality and fantasy and<br />
project blame onto others.<br />
717 F.3d at 1106. The court went on to consider the state’s argument that the impact of the<br />
mental health records would have been offset by other evidence corroborating Tackett’s trial<br />
testimony, but found it insufficient. “In any event,” the Tenth Circuit concluded, “whether<br />
the jury necessarily would have reached an alternate conclusion is not the appropriate inquiry.<br />
We only inquire whether the Oklahoma courts could have reasonably decided that the mental<br />
health evidence would not have mattered. The answer is no. This evidence would have<br />
mattered, even in light of the State’s corroborating evidence.” Id. at 1107.<br />
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*Milke v. Ryan,<br />
711 F.3d 998 (9th Cir. 2013)<br />
The Ninth Circuit granted relief in this Arizona capital case, finding that the prosecution violated<br />
Brady v. Maryland by failing to disclose a substantial body of information undermining the<br />
credibility of Phoenix police detective Armando Saldate, whose uncorroborated claim that<br />
petitioner had confessed constituted the only evidence against her. Petitioner was convicted and<br />
sentenced to death for her alleged participation in a conspiracy to kidnap and murder her own<br />
four year old son. The murder was actually carried out by two men, Styers and Scott, but neither<br />
implicated petitioner or testified against her, and no physical evidence connected her to the crime<br />
scene. The prosecution’s case therefore rested on Det. Saldate’s testimony that, during a thirty<br />
minute, unrecorded interrogation, petitioner had given him a full confession to participation in<br />
the conspiracy. Petitioner consistently denied confessing to Saldate, contended that he had ignored<br />
her request for counsel and his own superior’s directive to record the interrogation, and pointed<br />
out that Saldate failed to even secure her signature on a Miranda waiver. Recognizing<br />
the importance of challenging Saldate’s account, petitioner’s trial counsel attempted to subpoena<br />
his “entire personnel file,” but the prosecution successfully moved to quash that request, and the<br />
defense acquired nothing with impeachment value. After her convictions and sentence were<br />
affirmed on direct appeal, petitioner sought state postconviction relief alleging, among other<br />
things, that the prosecution had violated Brady by failing to disclose documents establishing that<br />
Saldate had a history of misconduct and dishonesty. In support of her claims, petitioner supplied<br />
the state post-conviction judge (who had also presided over her trial) with hundreds of pages of<br />
records from other cases in which Saldate had committed various forms of misconduct, including<br />
lying under oath, violating suspects’ rights during interrogations, and abusing his authority with<br />
female suspects. “[D]espite this trove of undisclosed impeachment evidence, the post-conviction<br />
court rejected Milke’s claim that she’d been denied access to impeachment material.” 711 F.3d at<br />
1005. The Arizona Supreme Court subsequently denied a petition for review. Petitioner then<br />
sought federal habeas relief. After ordering the state to disclose Saldate’s personnel files – which<br />
yielded only two years’ worth of files from a twenty-one year career – the district court denied<br />
relief. After determining that the state post-conviction court’s denial of relief was both contrary<br />
to federal law, and based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the state court<br />
record, the Ninth Circuit proceeded to the merits of petitioner’s Brady claim. The court first<br />
reviewed the wealth of “favorable” evidence documenting Saldate’s misconduct and dishonesty<br />
to his superiors and to courts. See 711 F.3d at 1012-16. With regard to “suppression,” the court<br />
explained that Saldate’s involvement in petitioner’s case coincided with a number of other<br />
controversies involving his misconduct in other cases – all of which were handled by the<br />
Maricopa County Attorney’s Office – such that “it must have occurred to &#8230; someone in the<br />
prosecutor’s office or the police department (or both) that Saldate was also the keywitness [in<br />
this case]. Yet no one saw fit to disclose &#8230; Saldate’s misconduct to Milke’s lawyer.” Id. at 1017.<br />
The court also noted that although the “court documents showing Saldate’s misconduct were<br />
available in the public record,” the state remained obligated to disclose them because defense<br />
counsel lacked the information to find them independently. Id. The court explained that<br />
Milke was able to discover the court documents detailing Saldate’s misconduct only after a team<br />
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of approximately ten researchers in post-conviction proceedings spent nearly 7000 hours sifting<br />
through court records. &#8230; The team worked eight hours a day for three and a half months, turning<br />
up 100 cases involving Saldate. Another researcher then spent a month reading motions and<br />
transcripts from those cases to find examples of Saldate&#8217;s misconduct. A reasonably diligent<br />
lawyer couldn’t possibly have found these records in time to use them at Milke’s trial. 711 F.3d<br />
at 1018. With regard to “prejudice,” the Ninth Circuit summed up the impact of the suppressed<br />
information as follows:<br />
Milke’s alleged confession, as reported by Saldate, was the only direct evidence<br />
linking Milke to the crime. But the confession was only as good as Saldate’s<br />
word, as he’s the only one who claims to have heard Milke confess and there’s no<br />
recording, written statement or any other evidence that Milke confessed. Saldate’s<br />
credibility was crucial to the state’s case against Milke. It’s hard to imagine<br />
anything more relevant to the jury’s – or the judge’s – determination whether to<br />
believe Saldate than evidence that Saldate lied under oath and trampled the<br />
constitutional rights of suspects in discharging his official duties. If even a single<br />
juror had found Saldate untrustworthy based on the documentation that he<br />
habitually lied under oath or that he took advantage of women he had in his<br />
power, there would have been at least a hung jury. Likewise, if this evidence had<br />
been disclosed, it may well have led the judge to order a new trial, enter judgment<br />
notwithstanding the verdict or, at least, impose a sentence less than death. The<br />
prosecution did its best to impugn Milke’s credibility. It wasn’t entitled, at the<br />
same time, to hide the evidence that undermined Saldate’s credibility. ¶ Also at<br />
issue was Saldate’s claim – again, unsupported by evidence – that Milke waived<br />
her Miranda rights and didn’t ask for a lawyer. Beyond its effect on Saldate’s<br />
credibility, evidence of Saldate’s falsifications and his disregard of Miranda,<br />
would have been highly relevant to the determination of whether Milke’s alleged<br />
confession had been lawfully obtained. The suppression of evidence of Saldate’s<br />
lies and misconduct thus qualifies as prejudicial for purposes of Brady and Giglio.<br />
711 F.3d at 1018-19.<br />
The Ninth Circuit went on to remand the case with instructions that the district court not only to<br />
issue the writ, but also require the state to disclose all of Saldate’s personnel records, and then<br />
“provide a statement under oath from a relevant police official certifying that all of the records<br />
have been disclosed and none has been omitted, lost or destroyed.” 711 F.3d at 1019. The court<br />
further directed that, in the event such a certification is not produced, the district court “shall hold<br />
an evidentiary hearing to determine whether any records have not been produced, and, if so,<br />
why.” Id. Finally, the court directed that the “clerk of our court shall send copies of this opinion<br />
to the United States Attorney for the District of Arizona and to the Assistant United States<br />
Attorney General of the Civil Rights Division, for possible investigation into whether Saldate’s<br />
conduct, and that of his supervisors and other state and local officials, amounts to a pattern of<br />
violating the federally protected rights of Arizona residents.” Id. Chief Judge Kozinski (who also<br />
wrote the opinion for the court) added a separate concurring opinion expressing further<br />
skepticism of Saldate’s testimony, criticizing Arizona officials for “having given free rein to a<br />
lawless cop to misbehave again and again,” 711 F.3d at 1024, and noting that he would have also<br />
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reversed the district court’s determination that petitioner had knowingly waived her Miranda<br />
rights, see id. at 1025.<br />
Munchinski v. Wilson,<br />
694 F.3d 308 (3rd Cir. 2012)<br />
The Third Circuit affirmed the district court’s grant of the previously authorized second habeas<br />
petition in this Pennsylvania double murder case known as the “Bear Rock Murders,” noting the<br />
state’s concession on the merits of petitioner’s Brady v. Maryland claims and rejecting its<br />
contentions that the claims were barred as untimely, defaulted, and not sufficiently supported to<br />
warrant consideration in a second federal petition. After one jury hung, the prosecution’s theory<br />
at the second trial was that petitioner, a co-defendant, and one Bowen – who became the key<br />
witness after contacting law enforcement from prison and offering his assistance – went to see<br />
the victims about a drug transaction, and that petitioner and the co-defendant raped the victims,<br />
then shot them. Aside from Bowen’s testimony, the prosecution presented testimony from three<br />
acquaintances and a jailhouse informant who claimed that petitioner had made inculpatory<br />
remarks to them. Through years of investigation and court-ordered discovery, three state postconviction proceedings, and two federal habeas proceedings, petitioner amassed an array of<br />
material, previously suppressed information, including doctored investigative reports,<br />
inconsistent statements, witness-coaching, and wilful non-compliance with post-conviction<br />
orders for evidence production. Among other things, the new information established that “the<br />
murders could not have happened as the Commonwealth proposed at trial” because “the<br />
Commonwealth’s timeline is inconsistent with the physical evidence,” and “Bowen, the only<br />
witness who could provide any details supporting the Commonwealth’s theory of the case, was<br />
not even in Pennsylvania the night of the murders &#8230;.” 694 F.3d at 335-36; see also id. at<br />
336 (noting that the witnesses who claimed to have heard petitioner confess had a clear<br />
“motivation to fabricate”). After rejecting the state’s various procedural defenses, the Third<br />
Circuit noted that the state had “expressly and rightly conceded” that the state court’s denial of<br />
relief involved an unreasonable application of Brady. The court then concluded with the<br />
following observation: “It seems that the Commonwealth’s decision to appeal the District<br />
Court’s judgment may have been motivated by considerations external to this particular case,<br />
because it is difficult to discern any significant justification on this record for continuing to<br />
defend what is now acknowledged by all to be a badly tainted and highly suspect conviction.”<br />
Id. at 339.<br />
*Wolfe v. Clarke,<br />
691 F.3d 410 (4th Cir. 2012)<br />
The Fourth Circuit affirmed the grant of relief in this Virginia murder-for-hire capital case,<br />
finding that the prosecution violated Brady v. Maryland by suppressing a police report<br />
impeaching its key witness, and that petitioner had shown cause and prejudice to overcome the<br />
default of the Brady claim resulting from his failure to present it to the state courts. Petitioner’s<br />
convictions arose out of the murder of a drug dealer. While it was undisputed that the murder<br />
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was actually committed by one Barber, the theory underlying the prosecution of petitioner was<br />
that he had hired his friend, Barber, to carry out the killing. Barber testified to that effect – in<br />
exchange for a sixty year sentence – at petitioner’s trial, and petitioner was convicted of capital<br />
murder, conspiring to distribute marijuana, and a related firearms count. After petitioner’s state<br />
post-conviction proceedings were complete and his federal habeas petition had been filed, Barber<br />
signed an affidavit recanting his testimony against petitioner. Acting on that development,<br />
petitioner immediately amended his federal petition to include a Brady claim, and an argument<br />
that the claim should be reviewed on its merits via the Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298 (1995),<br />
actual innocence gateway; he later added requests for discovery and an evidentiary hearing. The<br />
district court denied relief without a hearing, but the Fourth Circuit remanded for further<br />
consideration of petitioner’s entitlement to a hearing, discovery and merits review. On remand,<br />
the district court held that petitioner had satisfied Schlup, then granted discovery and a hearing.<br />
During the “contentious” discovery proceedings that followed, the prosecution grudgingly<br />
disgorged the “Newsome report” (among many other favorable documents) which showed that<br />
Detective Newsome had suggested the murder-for-hire theory involving petitioner to Barber as<br />
a way for Barber to improve his own bargaining position. After an evidentiary hearing at which<br />
Barber recanted his testimony against petitioner under oath, the district court found a series of<br />
Brady violations and granted relief from all of petitioner’s convictions. On appeal, the Fourth<br />
Circuit found it unnecessary to look beyond the suppressed Newsome report, which it described<br />
as “[t]he single, plainly momentous item of suppressed Barber impeachment evidence &#8230;.” 691<br />
F.3d at 417. After rejecting several procedural arguments asserted by the state, the court observed<br />
that the absence of an adjudication on the merits by the state court rendered § 2254(d)<br />
inapplicable, then held that petitioner had satisfied all three components of the Brady test. The<br />
Newsome report was “favorable” because it was “indubitably impeaching, in that it establishes a<br />
motive not only for Barber to implicate someone else, but to point the finger specifically at<br />
Wolfe.” Id. at 423. After noting that “[t]he Commonwealth did not contest the suppression<br />
issue,” and that the “willfulness or inadvertence” of the prosecution’s nondisclosure is irrelevant<br />
under Brady, the Fourth Circuit made clear that, in this case, “the Commonwealth’s suppression<br />
&#8230; was entirely intentional.” Id.; see also id. at 424 (quoting district court’s criticism of<br />
prosecutor’s description of his disclosure policy, and adding that, “We sincerely hope that the<br />
Commonwealth’s Attorney and his assistants have finally taken heed of those rebukes”). The<br />
Fourth Circuit also had no difficulty finding materiality, explaining that, “[i]n these<br />
circumstances, where ‘the jury had to believe that Barber was credible and that his version<br />
of events was in fact truthful and accurate in order to support [Wolfe’s] conviction,’ the<br />
materiality of the Newsome report is manifest.” Id. at 424 (quoting district court order). Finally, a<br />
majority of the Fourth Circuit panel upheld the district court’s determination that the Brady<br />
violation resulting from suppression of the Newsome report warranted a grant of relief from<br />
petitioner’s drug conspiracy and firearms convictions as well as his capital murder conviction.<br />
While the majority acknowledged that the conspiracy and firearm convictions were supported by<br />
admissions made during petitioner’s own testimony, it also accepted his contention that those<br />
admissions had been made necessary only because of the circumstances created by the Brady<br />
violation. The majority explained:<br />
Because the Commonwealth concedes that Wolfe’s trial testimony was central to<br />
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his drug conspiracy conviction and sentence, and because the Commonwealth<br />
cannot prove that Wolfe would have testified if the Newsome report had not been<br />
suppressed, we agree with the district court that Wolfe is entitled to vacatur of all<br />
three of his state convictions.<br />
691 F.3d at 426.<br />
*Guzman v. Secretary, Dept. of Corrections,<br />
663 F.3d 1336 (11th Cir. 2011)<br />
The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the grant of guilt-or-innocence phase relief in this Florida capital<br />
case, finding that the state violated Giglio v. United States when its key witness (Cronin) and its<br />
lead investigator (Sylvester) testified falsely about the existence of a deal between the state and<br />
Cronin, and did not disclose that Sylvester had paid Cronin a $500 reward shortly before she<br />
testified to the grand jury that indicted petitioner. Although Sylvester testified at petitioner’s<br />
state post-conviction relief hearing that she never informed the prosecutor of the payment (and<br />
the prosecutor corroborated that assertion), the Eleventh Circuit agreed with the Florida<br />
Supreme Court that, pursuant to Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419 (1995), “Sylvester’s knowledge<br />
of this evidence was imputed to the prosecutor.” 663 F.3d at 1349. The Eleventh Circuit began<br />
its assessment of the state courts’ denial of relief on petitioner’s Giglio claim by agreeing with<br />
their conclusion that, given the extent to which Cronin was actually impeached at trial, “[t]he<br />
addition of the truthful testimony about the $500 reward would not have made a material<br />
difference in Cronin’s credibility to the finder of fact.” 663 F.3d at 1350. Despite this finding,<br />
however, the Eleventh Circuit went on to determine that the Florida Supreme Court’s failure to<br />
account for the impact of the $500 payment on the motivation of Cronin – a prostitute and crack<br />
addict to whom $500 was a lot of money – to lie rendered its decision defective. The Eleventh<br />
Circuit then identified “several reasons” why the Florida Supreme Court’s decision did not<br />
prevent a grant of federal habeas relief: (1) while the state court emphasized that another<br />
informant had also implicated petitioner, and that the victim’s wounds were consistent with a<br />
knife possessed by petitioner, the other informant had recanted before petitioner’s trial, and the<br />
knife wound evidence was not particularly strong; (2) the state court also discounted the extent<br />
to which the trial was a credibility contest between petitioner and Cronin, and the possibility<br />
that, had the $500 payment – and the timing of that payment – been disclosed, petitioner’s own<br />
(not implausible) account would have prevailed; (3) the state court “either did not consider or<br />
unreasonably discounted the import of the fact that both Cronin and Sylvester testified falsely,”<br />
which deprived petitioner’s defense counsel of the opportunity not only to mount a stronger<br />
challenge to Cronin, but also to impugn the credibility of the state’s lead investigator. 663 F.3d<br />
at 1351-52. The court further noted that the evidence against petitioner at trial “was<br />
circumstantial and far from overwhelming”:<br />
There were no eyewitnesses or unbiased observers who testified as to the murderrobbery. Guzman never confessed to law enforcement. Both witnesses who<br />
testified that Guzman had confessed, Cronin and Rogers [the jailhouse<br />
informant], recanted their testimony at one time or another prior to trial. There<br />
was no blood or fingerprints on the sword recovered from [the victim’s] room. &#8230;<br />
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As a result, Cronin’s and Detective Sylvester’s testimony was the crux of the<br />
State’s case &#8230;, and it was thus objectively unreasonable to discount the effect of<br />
bias on that crucial body of evidence under the totality of the circumstances in this<br />
case.<br />
663 F.3d at 1354.<br />
Finally – and without specifically explaining why it was necessary in light of the prior<br />
determinations that the state court had unreasonably applied Giglio’s materiality standard, and<br />
that petitioner’s claim was meritorious – the Eleventh Circuit examined whether the error was<br />
harmless under Brecht, and concluded that it was not. See 663 F.3d at 1355-56.<br />
*Sivak v. Hardison,<br />
658 F.3d 898 (9th Cir. 2011)<br />
In pre-AEDPA robbery-murder case, Idaho death row inmate was entitled to habeas relief as to<br />
his death sentence based on prosecutor’s knowing presentation of perjured testimony by jailhouse<br />
informant regarding his motives for testifying and his expectations of receiving preferential<br />
treatment from the State. Both Sivak and his co-defendant had admitted being present when the<br />
crime occurred but each man claimed that the other was responsible for the robbery and murder.<br />
The informant, who was in jail facing burglary and escape charges, testified that Sivak confessed<br />
to being the actual killer. The informant claimed that he was testifying because he had a wife<br />
and kids out on the streets and he didn’t want anything to happen to them. He denied seeking<br />
favoritism from State authorities. He stated that his escape charge was dismissed after the<br />
preliminary hearing and that a charge pending in another city was dismissed but the informant<br />
denied knowing whether the prosecutor’s office was involved in the dismissals. The informant<br />
also denied that he was presently free because of his testimony against Sivak and a man charged<br />
with murder in Kansas, claiming he had traveled to Kansas for “personal” reasons. Through<br />
federal discovery Sivak obtained evidentiary proof of his allegation that false testimony had<br />
knowingly been presented concerning the informant’s expectation of benefits: (1) a letter from<br />
the county prosecutor to the prosecutor in a neighboring county where the escape charge was<br />
pending urging dismissal of the charge in light of the informant’s willingness to testify against<br />
several inmates facing murder charges; (2) a letter from the same prosecutor a few days later to<br />
the chairman of the state Commission for Pardons and Parole recommending that the informant<br />
be given additional consideration for parole at an upcoming hearing based on the informant’s<br />
cooperation in several murder trials and a murder investigation; (3) a letter from the informant to<br />
a Kansas prosecutor complaining that an Idaho investigator had said the informant would receive<br />
assistance but the informant wasn’t receiving any and adding that he wanted $6000 in cash as<br />
witness fees; and (4) a subsequent letter from the Idaho investigator to the informant telling him<br />
his witness fees should arrive shortly, recounting that the informant had earlier been told after<br />
requesting a deal there could not be an guarantee of assistance but also setting out the<br />
“arrangements” that were made in anticipation of testimony in three murder trials: (a) the<br />
dismissal of criminal charges in two jurisdictions, (b) a reduced sentence, and (c) a parole from<br />
the Idaho State Correctional Institute. The fourth letter closed with a statement that the<br />
informant would still be in prison without the prosecution’s intervention. The false testimony<br />
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was not prejudicial as to the murder conviction in light of strong evidence of guilt under either a<br />
direct felony-murder theory or an aiding-and-abetting felony-murder theory. It was prejudicial as<br />
to sentence, however. Had the informant’s testimony been rejected, a second informant’s<br />
testimony would have been called into doubt. And without Sivak’s purported confessions, the<br />
aggravating factors were significantly weakened.<br />
LaCaze v. Warden Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women,<br />
645 F.3d 728 (5th Cir. 2011), cert. denied, 132 S.Ct. 1137 (2012)<br />
In murder case where the actual killer was the lover of LaCaze, who was the victim’s wife, and<br />
the killer testified that he killed the victim at LaCaze’s request, LaCaze was entitled to habeas<br />
relief because of the prosecution’s failure to disclose that the prosecutor had assured the killer<br />
that his son would not be prosecuted for his role in the killing. (The son had driven his father to<br />
and from the scene of the killing. LaCaze’s defense was that the victim had arranged for the<br />
killer to take his life because of the victim’s failing health.) That there was not an enforceable<br />
deal concerning the son did not defeat the Brady claim given that the killer received an assurance<br />
from the prosecutor that the son would not be prosecuted and the killer believed the prosecutor.<br />
The Louisiana Supreme Court employed an improper legal standard when it determined that the<br />
undisclosed agreement regarding the son was immaterial because the main source of bias and<br />
motivation to lie, i.e., the killer received a forty year sentence for a manslaughter plea, had been<br />
disclosed. “The materiality inquiry does not turn on which of two competing sources of bias a<br />
court, in hindsight, determines the jury would have considered more important. Rather, the<br />
inquiry is whether an undisclosed source of bias—even if it is not the only source or even the<br />
‘main source’ could reasonably be taken to put the whole case in a different light.” The state<br />
court also used the incorrect standard when it found the non-disclosed agreement to be<br />
immaterial because there was sufficient evidence to support LaCaze’s conviction. Given that the<br />
killer’s testimony was the only direct evidence of LaCaze&#8217;s intent, disclosure of his bias to the<br />
jury might have put the whole case in a different light. Notably, in its opening statement, closing<br />
argument, and rebuttal, the prosecutor argued that the killer had no reason to lie. “In<br />
circumstances like these, where ‘the jury&#8217;s estimate of the truthfulness and reliability of [the<br />
witness] may well be determinative of guilt or innocence,’ the failure to disclose Brady<br />
information is material.”<br />
Houston v. Waller,<br />
420 Fed.Appx. 501, 2011 WL 1496350 (6th Cir. April 20, 2011) (unpublished)<br />
Habeas relief granted to petitioner convicted of selling cocaine and aggravated assault where<br />
government withheld exculpatory evidence showing that federal agent Howell who was in charge<br />
of petitioner’s case had been using cocaine and taking cocaine from controlled buys, and was<br />
later indicted for tampering with evidence and possession of controlled substances. Brady v.<br />
Maryland required disclosure of Howell’s drug use because he was a key witness and his cocaine<br />
use “impact[ed] his credibility and recollection of events” and constituted material impeachment<br />
evidence affecting the cocaine amounts purchased.<br />
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*Breakiron v. Horn,<br />
642 F.3d 126 (3rd Cir. 2011)<br />
Habeas relief granted as to robbery conviction based on prosecution’s suppression of evidence<br />
that would have impeached a jailhouse informant who testified that Breakiron had admitted to<br />
hiding in the bar’s bathroom until the other patrons left and then attacking the bartender before<br />
taking her to his father’s house where he finished her off. This testimony contradicted<br />
Breakiron’s account of the bartender striking him first and then his blacking out before<br />
discovering the victim with a knife in her back. According to Breakiron, he only stole money<br />
from the bar as an afterthought when attempting to cover up the killing. (The district court had<br />
granted relief as to the murder conviction due to the Brady violation – the Commonwealth had<br />
failed to disclose that the informant had a prior conviction for assault with intent to rob, had<br />
sought a deal in exchange for his testimony against Breakiron, and was a suspect in an<br />
investigation pending at the time he testified. The Commonwealth did not appeal the grant of<br />
relief as to the murder charge.) The robbery-related Brady claim was reviewed de novo<br />
because it was not adjudicated on the merits by the state court. The informant’s testimony was<br />
held to be material to the robbery charge as well as the murder charge in that: (1) it suggested<br />
that the incident as a whole was a premeditated and intentional plan; (2) Breakiron “finishing<br />
off” the victim at another location suggested that the money was taken prior to the victim’s<br />
death; and (3) Breakiron’s credibility in general was was undermined by the informant’s<br />
contrary account of the incident.<br />
United States v. Kott,<br />
432 Fed.Appx.736, 2011 WL 1058180 (9th Cir. March 24, 2011) (unpublished)<br />
Conviction vacated and case remanded for new trial where newly disclosed evidence, viewed<br />
collectively, is material and prosecution’s failure to disclose it violated Brady. There was no<br />
doubt “prosecution suppressed evidence favorable to” defense, and only inquiry is whether<br />
prejudice ensued. Newly disclosed evidence of police department files suggesting key<br />
prosecution witness Allen sexually exploited minors and attempted to conceal behavior by<br />
soliciting perjury was both admissible and not cumulative because it could have been used to<br />
impeach Allen’s testimony, undermine his credibility, and aid defendant’s testimony. The new<br />
evidence also documented multiple “prior inconsistent statements” about payments defendant<br />
“allegedly received”and reasons for them which could have undermined Allen’s credibilitywhile<br />
bolstering that of defendant.<br />
Maxwell v. Roe,<br />
628 F.3d 486 (9th Cir. 2010), cert. denied, 132 S.Ct. 611 (2012)<br />
In murder case, habeas relief granted on Brady claim and claim that false evidence was presented<br />
where both claims related to jailhouse informant whose testimony was crucial to the prosecution.<br />
Maxwell was convicted, inter alia, of two murders and sentenced to life without parole. The only<br />
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evidence linking Maxwell to one murder was a palm print found on a public bench near the<br />
victim’s body in an area Maxwell often visited, some muddy and consistent footprints, and a<br />
generic Bic lighter found in Maxwell’s pocket at the time of his arrest. (The age of the palm<br />
print–the State’s “best physical evidence”&#8211;could not be determined.) Evidence linking Maxwell<br />
to the other murder was the in-courtroom voice identification of Maxwell by a witness who had<br />
been unable to pick Maxwell out of an earlier lineup in which he spoke, and Maxwell’s<br />
possession of a knife consistent with the victim’s stab wound. Without physical evidence, the<br />
state “rested its case” on informant Storch who testified Maxwell had showed him an article<br />
about the killings that referenced the palm print and then stated that the mistake Maxwell had<br />
made by leaving the print was unusual for him. (The prosecution argued that Maxwell’s remarks<br />
implicated him in all ten of the murders Maxwell was charged with having committed, although<br />
Maxwell was ultimately convicted of only two.) A hearing was held in state court on Maxwell’s<br />
claim that Storch gave false testimony. The state court ruled that while Storch later became a<br />
sophisticated informant and established liar, Storch was a “neophyte” jailhouse informant at the<br />
time of Maxwell’s trial and had not lied regarding Maxwell’s confession. The federal district<br />
court denied Maxwell relief, concluding “Storch’s lies about the deal he received from the<br />
prosecution and about his informant history did not prejudice Maxwell” and that any “withheld<br />
information was neither material nor prejudicial.” Regarding the false testimony claim, the court<br />
of appeals held that the state court’s finding that Storch had not lied about Maxwell’s confession<br />
was an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence before the state court.<br />
The appeals court first noted the numerous undisputed lies that Storch had told at the trial,<br />
including false statements about his motivation for coming forward and a false denial about<br />
whether his public defender had worked out a plea agreement before Storch personally negotiated<br />
a more favorable deal in exchange for his testimony against Maxwell. The court of appeals also<br />
observed that Storch had misrepresented his sophistication and experience as an informant at the<br />
time of the Maxwell trial. In addition, the record contained evidence about Storch’s signature<br />
modus operandi for “booking” fellow inmates – gaining physical access to a high-profile<br />
defendant, obtaining media accounts of the case, and then contacting the District Attorney or law<br />
enforcement with an offer to testify. The appeals court then noted the numerous times Storch<br />
had lied under oath in other cases, which ultimately led to a perjury indictment. After<br />
determining that Storch had lied about the confession, the appeals court applied circuit precedent<br />
under which knowledge by the prosecution of the false testimony need not be shown to establish<br />
a due process violation. Because the state court’s rejection of the claim was premised on an<br />
unreasonable determination of the facts as to whether Storch lied, the appeals court assessed the<br />
issue of materiality de novo. Given the paucity of evidence implicating Maxwell, the content of<br />
Storch’s testimony, the prosecutor’s emphasis on Storch’s testimony during argument, and the<br />
fact that the jury asked to see Storch’s testimony during deliberations, materiality was found. As<br />
to the Brady claim, because no state court issued a reasoned decision for denying the claim, the<br />
court of appeals reviewed the “factual record de novo to determine whether the California<br />
Supreme Court’s summary denial of the claim constituted an unreasonable application of Brady.”<br />
It then found “that the state court could not have reasonably determined that the suppressed<br />
evidence relating to the deal Storch received and Storch’s prior cooperation with law<br />
enforcement as an informant was not material.” While Storch admitted during cross-examination<br />
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that he had received a reduced sentence of sixteen months on pending charges as a result of his<br />
testimony against Maxwell, he lied about the fact that his public defender had earlier negotiated a<br />
less favorable deal for him. “[T]he fact that Storch pursued an additional benefit to himself—<br />
independent of and subsequent to the agreement worked out by his public defender— would have<br />
provided Maxwell with impeaching evidence relevant to Storch’s motivation for testifying and of<br />
a different character than the other impeachment evidence which came to light.” In addition, “the<br />
details of Storch’s plea negotiations would have helped to establish Storch’s sophistication and<br />
directly contradicted the naivete he professed at trial.” The appeals court found: “The<br />
prosecution’s failure to correct Storch’s false testimony about his prior deals was prejudicial.” In<br />
addition, the prosecution failed to disclose that although Storch had never testified for the district<br />
attorney, he “had on several occasions aided in investigations and acted as an informant on<br />
numerous previous occasions.” Viewed cumulatively, “[t]he prosecution’s failure to disclose this<br />
impeachment evidence undermines confidence in the outcome of Maxwell’s trial, and the<br />
California Supreme Court’s decision to the contrary was an<br />
unreasonable application of Brady.”<br />
Goudy v. Basinger,<br />
604 F.3d 394 (7th Cir. 2010)<br />
Habeas relief granted in case involving murder and attempted murder convictions where<br />
prosecution withheld three police reports detailing eyewitness statements that: (1) implicated the<br />
key prosecution witness in the crime and conflicted with the version of events he testified to; (2)<br />
contradicted an eyewitness’s statement at trial that Goudy was the shooter on the driver&#8217;s side of<br />
the vehicle; and (3) conflicted with another eyewitness’s description of the gunmen. State court<br />
agreed prosecution suppressed exculpatory evidence, but concluded the new evidence was not<br />
material. In reaching that conclusion, the state court erred in two ways. First, although the state<br />
court initially identified the correct legal principle for determining materiality, its actual analysis<br />
required Goudy to prove the new evidence “would have” established his innocence–a burden<br />
“diametrically different” than the clearly established federal law in Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S.<br />
419 (1995). Second, also contrary to Kyles, the state court failed to recognize and then assess the<br />
cumulative materiality of the suppressed evidence, but instead dismissed “each piece of<br />
suppressed evidence in seriatim.” In denying relief, the state court unreasonably applied clearly<br />
established federal law.<br />
Robinson v. Mills,<br />
592 F.3d 730 (6th Cir. 2010)<br />
Prisoner convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment was entitled to<br />
habeas relief where prosecution withheld material impeachment evidence “likely [to] have<br />
altered” the outcome of proceedings, i.e., evidence that the key prosecution witness was a<br />
confidential informant. Robinson and Smith were indicted for the murder of Irwin, a drug dealer.<br />
Robinson had agreed to meet Irwin to repay monies he owed to him. Smith agreed to accompany<br />
Robinson and provided him with a small handgun. At the arranged meeting, Irwin was driving a<br />
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car and armed with a 357 magnum. Sims was in the front seat passenger. Robinson got in the<br />
car and sat in the back seat. According to Robinson, Irwin threatened him and his family, and<br />
pointed the gun at him. Robinson then shot Irwin in self defense. Robinson testified Smith was<br />
not involved in the killing and Smith’s statement to police corroborated Robinson’s fear of Irwin.<br />
At the preliminary hearing, Sims testified that she did not see what happened when the shooting<br />
occurred and did not know if Irwin reached for his gun, but that Robinson told her “that he had to<br />
kill Irwin or Irwin would have killed him.” Sims’ trial testimony “differed significantly.” Sims<br />
testified that after picking up Robinson, Irwin turned slowly into a parking lot while eating a<br />
sandwich, “making it unlikely” Irwin “grabbed his gun with his right hand.” Sims also testified<br />
Robinson was “‘smiling,’” “paint[ing] Robinson as cold and calculating” and contradicting “his<br />
assertion that” the shooting “was self-defense rather than murder.” Unknown to Robinson at the<br />
time of trial was that Sims was “a paid confidential informant” for the police. Sims informed on<br />
Irwin’s sister and worked and received payment on “at least seven other occasions.” Just 18 days<br />
before Robinson’s trial, Sims helped a detective by making a “controlled buy” from a witness<br />
who later appeared at Robinson’s trial. The undisclosed impeachment evidence of Sims was not<br />
“merely” cumulative; it was “different in kind because the suppressed material would have<br />
offered insight into why Sims’ testimony differed from her testimony at the preliminary hearing.”<br />
The new information was “material,” demonstrating Sims’ “pro-prosecution bias” at trial.<br />
*Simmons v. Beard,<br />
590 F.3d 223 (3rd Cir. 2009), cert. dismissed, 130 S.Ct. 1574 (2010).<br />
Under AEDPA, habeas relief granted due to state’s failure to disclose impeachment evidence<br />
related to the two primary witnesses who tied the petitioner to the crimes. The victim was an<br />
elderly woman killed in her home. Three neighbors identified the petitioner as the person last<br />
seen with the victim asking to use her phone. These witnesses were all connected as they lived in<br />
the same house. They only came forward identifying the petitioner after his arrest and pictures<br />
had been publicized. Another witness testified that she had been robbed and sexually assaulted<br />
by a man described similarly shortly after the murder but before the body was found and her<br />
attacker referenced the murder. While she reported the assault on the day it occurred, she made<br />
no mention of the statement referencing the murder and she only identified the petitioner in a<br />
photo array after the murder and his picture had been publicized. She identified him a second<br />
time in a lineup requested by defense counsel. The petitioner’s girlfriend, who had initially made<br />
statements to police that would have provided the petitioner with an alibi defense, contradicted<br />
the asserted alibi in her trial testimony. The state had failed to disclose four items from the<br />
defense. First, the petitioner’s girlfriend was a suspect and was threatened with arrest if she did<br />
not cooperate with police. She cooperated and all of her in-person or phone conversations with<br />
the petitioner were recorded. Second, the other assault victim had attempted to buy a pistol soon<br />
after the assault and lied on the forms to avoid disclosing her 1951 felony conviction for<br />
burglary, which made her ineligible to purchase a weapon. The lie made her subject to<br />
prosecution for perjury. She was charged with the weapons charge, but the prosecutor and<br />
detective in this case dismissed the charges against her and did not forward the information as<br />
they did in other cases where persons were suspected of perjury. Third, lab reports of evidence<br />
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collected following her assault report showed no blood or seminal fluid and the hairs that were<br />
examined were consistent with the assault victim but not the petitioner. Finally, at some point<br />
prior to trial, the assault victim was shown a mug book containing the petitioner’s picture but did<br />
not identify him. A police officer testified in the preliminary hearing, however, that she had not<br />
been shown a mug book. This failed identification was the only Brady issue the state court<br />
reviewed on the merits. The Third Circuit’s review under AEDPA was complicated because<br />
there was a four-way split in the state court decision with no ground receiving a majority support.<br />
Because the state court found procedural bars for three of the claims, there was no adjudication<br />
on the merits. The state court’s decision on the failed mug book identification was “an<br />
unreasonable construction of the factual evidence” presented in state court because the court<br />
failed to consider the undisputed fact that the defense would not have requested a lineup if this<br />
information had been disclosed. Likewise, because the state court had reviewed the merits of<br />
only the mug book identification claim, “the [state] court did not reach the issue of the collective<br />
effect of multiple violations.” Conducting this collective analysis, the court found the suppressed<br />
evidence to be material as “it calls into question the credibility of the two witnesses at the heart<br />
of the case.” The prosecutor also recognized that the other assault victim was a “critical<br />
witness,” beginning his opening statement describing her testimony and even calling her a<br />
“critical” witness. “Overall the picture of what [the] trial would have been like had these four<br />
Brady violations not occurred is vastly different from what actually happened.”<br />
*Wilson v. Beard,<br />
589 F.3d 651 (3rd Cir. 2009)<br />
The Third Circuit affirmed the grant of guilt-innocence phase relief on petitioner’s Brady v.<br />
Maryland claim in this Pennsylvania capital case. The prosecution’s case against petitioner for<br />
the shooting death of a patron in a bar was “based almost entirely on the testimony of &#8230; three<br />
witnesses,” 589 F.3d at 656 – Jackson (a bar patron and eyewitness), Rahming (also a bar patron<br />
and eyewitness), and Gainer (a onetime cellmate who claimed petitioner had confessed to him).<br />
In state post-conviction proceedings, new information about all three witnesses came to light.<br />
Jackson’s previously undisclosed rap sheet indicated that he had been arrested for impersonating<br />
a police officer six weeks before the shooting. A presentence report produced after that arrest<br />
revealed six more out-of-state arrests, two of which involved impersonating a police officer, as<br />
well as a history of skull fractures, apparent brain damage and memory loss, a distorted<br />
perception of reality, and a strong propensity to try to assist law enforcement. With regard to<br />
Rahming, new information indicated that on the day after he testified against petitioner, a<br />
detective transported him to a local emergency center, where he was diagnosed with<br />
schizophrenia. This revelation led to a review of Rahming’s rap sheet and other documents<br />
indicating a long history of mental health problems, substance abuse, seizures, memory loss, and<br />
hallucinations. In his testimony at petitioner’s post-conviction relief hearing, Rahming further<br />
admitted that he had been intoxicated at the time of the shooting allegedly committed by<br />
petitioner. As to Gainer, new information established that his longtime police handler had<br />
provided him with interest-free loans when he acted as an informant, which contradicted that<br />
officer’s testimony that he had “never given [Gainer] anything.” 589 F.3d at 662. After<br />
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determining that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s denial of petitioner’s claim on procedural<br />
grounds did not bar federal review, and that the absence of a merits adjudication by the state<br />
court precluded application of § 2254(d), the Third Circuit addressed the merits. The court first<br />
rejected the state’s contention that Jackson’s rap sheet had not been “suppressed” because it was<br />
a matter of public record accessible to trial counsel through the exercise of due diligence. The<br />
court explained that “it is clear that the prosecutor had the information &#8230; in her file, [yet] she<br />
failed to disclose this information when asked by the court during a charging conference for the<br />
witnesses’ criminal histories &#8230;.” 589 F.3d at 664. With regard to Rahming’s trip to the<br />
emergency center and Gainer’s interest-free loans, the court had no difficulty determining that<br />
this information was known to members of the “prosecution team” for Brady purposes. The court<br />
also rejected the state’s argument that disclosure of Jackson’s rap sheet and Rahming’s<br />
emergency center visit would have led to discovery of the more detailed (and damaging)<br />
information about their histories. Emphasizing Kyles v.Whitley’s focus on what “competent<br />
counsel” could have done with favorable information, the Third Circuit concluded that, in this<br />
case, competent counsel would have pursued the additional information, and would have used it<br />
at trial. Finally, the court held that the undisclosed information was material in that it would have<br />
facilitated devastating impeachment of the three witnesses at the center of the prosecution’s case:<br />
Although the shooting occurred in a relatively crowded bar, no other eyewitnesses<br />
testified and the Commonwealth presented no physical evidence implicating<br />
Wilson as the shooter. In light of the importance of the testimony of these three<br />
witnesses and the significant impeachment value of the undisclosed information, we<br />
conclude that Wilson’s right to due process &#8230; was violated &#8230;.<br />
589 F.3d at 667.<br />
United States v. Torres,<br />
569 F.3d 1277 (10th Cir. 2009)<br />
Distribution conviction reversed on direct appeal. The defendant was convicted of distribution to<br />
a confidential informant during a controlled buy. Prior to trial, the government disclosed that the<br />
informant was paid $100, cooperated with the government for approximately eight months, had<br />
previously been a drug user but had not used in 15 months, and she had two prior felony<br />
convictions. The defense was prohibited from cross-examining the informant with criminal<br />
complaints for drug possession and forgery that had been dismissed in the year prior to the<br />
defendant’s arrest. Following trial, the defense discovered evidence related to the informant that<br />
had not been disclosed and filed a motion for new trial. The District Court improperly applied<br />
the newly discovered evidence test and denied relief. Reversal required because the government<br />
failed to disclose that (1) the informant had been retained by the DEA on two prior occasions and<br />
had been de-activated following the forgery charge, which was later dismissed; and (2) she had<br />
misidentified the defendant as his cousin.<br />
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United States v. Price,<br />
566 F.3d 900 (9th Cir. 2009)<br />
Felon in possession of firearm conviction vacated due to government’s failure to disclose key<br />
witness’ criminal record. The pistol was found under the driver’s seat of a car that was pulled<br />
over with the defendant riding in the rear. While circumstantial evidence pointed to the<br />
defendant, the key government evidence was the testimony of a witness that testified she had<br />
seen the defendant with the pistol 15 minutes before the car had been stopped. Although the<br />
defendant was aware that the witness had a prior theft conviction, the defendant was not told that<br />
the witness had a lengthy history of convictions for theft and fraudulently using false registration<br />
tags, as well as arrests for shoplifting. The undisclosed evidence was material as the prosecutor<br />
relied heavily on the witness’ testimony in closing and the defendant was acquitted of the drug<br />
trafficking charges tried at the same time. The District Court erred in finding no Brady violation<br />
simply because the prosecutor did not personally have knowledge of the witness’ history, although<br />
the record was clear that, at minimum, the prosecutor had requested a detective to obtain this<br />
information.<br />
Shortt v. Roe,<br />
342 Fed.Appx. 331, 2009 WL 2487046 (9th Cir. 2009) (unpublished)<br />
Habeas relief granted in murder and robbery case because the state failed to disclose that a state<br />
witness had been given sentencing consideration in exchange for his testimony against the<br />
petitioner and failed to correct the witness’ false testimony denying receiving consideration.<br />
Under AEDPA, the state court’s decision was an objectively unreasonable application of both<br />
Brady and Napue.<br />
*Douglas v. Workman,<br />
560 F.3d 1156 (10th Cir. 2009)<br />
Under AEDPA, habeas relief granted to two prisoners due to state’s failure to disclose deal the<br />
Oklahoma prosecution made in exchange for shooting victim/key witness’ testimony. The<br />
witness, a member of the Crips, was shot in a drive-by shooting along with a teenage girl who<br />
died. The witness initially made contradictory statements to police, but ultimately identified<br />
Powell and Douglas as the shooters. Both were charged with capital murder. The witness had<br />
cocaine trafficking charges pending at the time of the shooting. Prior to the preliminary hearing,<br />
he was also charged with throwing a rock at a police car. By the time of Douglas’ trial, he pled<br />
to a lesser offense of possession with intent to distribute and received a 10 year sentence. The<br />
other charge was dismissed. After serving four months of his sentence he was released on preparole. That status was revoked when he was arrested for receiving stolen property. He had a<br />
pre-parole interview for a second consideration and was notified that release would not be<br />
recommended just three days before he initially met with the capital prosecutor. During his<br />
testimony in Douglas’ trial, he denied any deals or help from the prosecutor in exchange for his<br />
testimony. The prosecutor even elicited his testimony that he had never asked the prosecutor for<br />
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help. His testimony was the “linchpin” in the state’s case, which culminated with the state’s<br />
closing argument emphasizing his trustworthiness. Just one day after Douglas’ trial, the<br />
prosecutor sent a detailed letter to the parole board in support of the witness’ parole application<br />
and referencing the witness’ testimony in the upcoming Powell trial. The witness was granted<br />
pre-parole status again but was reincarcerated following another violation. The witness<br />
contacted his mother, who called the prosecutor, who then contacted the sentence administration<br />
auditor just a week before Powell’s trial. Without disclosure of any of this information, the<br />
witness again served as the key witness for the state. He again denied any deals or assistance and<br />
the state again elicited his testimony that he had not even asked for help. A month after Powell’s<br />
trial, the prosecutor contacted the prison warden who approved the restoration of 400 days credit<br />
to the witness, effectively discharging his sentence and getting him released from prison. While<br />
Powell and Douglas sat on death row, the prosecutor’s assistance to the witness continued.<br />
Assault with a deadly weapon charges for shooting someone were dismissed due to “insufficient<br />
evidence of identification.” Drive-by shooting charges were dismissed “due to lack of<br />
cooperation from the victims.” The witness had an assault and battery charge for beating his<br />
girlfriend with a baseball bat and trafficking in cocaine charges. Even though the capital<br />
prosecutor was no longer in the district attorney’s office, he contacted the prosecutor on the<br />
witness’ behalf. The witness was also arrested for murder charges in Texas. The witness was<br />
sentenced to 15 years on the assault case and was then allowed to plead to the trafficking charge<br />
for a five year (“unusually lenient”) concurrent sentence. The witness was allowed to plead to a<br />
reduced aggravated robbery charge in Texas and received a twelve and a half year sentence<br />
concurrent with his Oklahoma sentences. While Powell and Douglas were pending in federal<br />
habeas, the witness disclosed that he had been unable to identify any of the shooters. He said that<br />
he would not testify against either defendant unless the state assisted him with his then-pending<br />
trafficking case. Thereafter, the prosecutor continued to assist him because he threatened to<br />
reveal his perjury in the trials. The district court granted relief to Powell but denied relief to<br />
Douglas. The Tenth Circuit held that both men were entitled to habeas relief. For Douglas,<br />
whose appeal had been pending in the Tenth Circuit when the witness recanted his testimony and<br />
revealed the deal, there were some complicated procedural holdings resolving statute of<br />
limitations and possibly second petition/successor issues in Douglas’ favor prior to reaching the<br />
merits. De novo review was applied because the state court never addressed the Brady claims on<br />
the merits. The court found that the witness’ identification of the petitioners was “indispensable”<br />
as the “only direct evidence linking [the petitioners] to the murder.” If the juries had discounted<br />
his testimony as not credible, they almost certainly would have acquitted the petitioners. While<br />
defense counsel attempted to impeach the witness on the issue of his motive to testify, they were<br />
“stonewalled” by the witness’ repeated denials and “stymied from rebutting those denials” by the<br />
state’s failure to disclose the relevant impeaching evidence. While there was less evidence of a<br />
deal prior to Douglas’ trial, the evidence still supported a finding that the state was offering<br />
assistance to the witness in exchange for his testimony. Two witnesses testified in the trial that<br />
the witness told them he had made a deal with the prosecutor in exchange for his testimony. The<br />
witness was not charged with drug or weapons offenses, even though the prosecutor knew that<br />
the witness was in possession of a loaded gun and crack cocaine at the time of the shooting. And<br />
the prosecutor sent a letter to the parole board just one day after trial. In light of the continued<br />
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assistance to the witness long after the trials were over and even after the prosecutor left the<br />
district attorney’s office, “the reasonable inference [of a deal prior to trial] becomes inescapable.”<br />
Even if the deal was tacit, disclosure was required. “A deal is a deal–explicit or tacit. There is<br />
no logic that supports distinguishing between the two.” Id. at 1186.<br />
Harris v. Lafler,<br />
553 F.3d 1028 (6th Cir. 2009)<br />
Under AEDPA, habeas relief granted in second-degree murder case due to the state’s failure to<br />
disclose three statements made by police officers to the state’s primary witness. The witness and<br />
the petitioner were in a bar fight. Later that night, a vehicle followed the car in which their<br />
opponent rode and shots were fired into that vehicle killing two passengers. The witness and the<br />
petitioner were arrested a month later. The witness testified at the preliminary hearing that he<br />
drove the vehicle and the petitioner fired into the other vehicle. Defense counsel asked him six<br />
times whether any promises or deals had been made in exchange for his testimony. The witness<br />
said no. This testimony was read into the trial evidence, after the witness invoked his Fifth<br />
Amendment rights. The state failed to disclose to the defense that police officers had told the<br />
witness: (1) his girlfriend would be released if they were satisfied with his statement; (2) he would<br />
be released if he testified at the preliminary hearing consistent with his statement; and (3) he<br />
should tell no one that police had promised him anything in return for his statements or testimony.<br />
These statements were material because they could have been used to cast doubt on the witness’<br />
credibility. The state had also “featured” the witness’ “eyewitness account” in closing arguments.<br />
The court rejected the state’s request for remand for an evidentiaryhearing because the state had<br />
never before challenged the factual accuracy of the witness’ post-conviction statements. “The<br />
time to submit evidence or seek an evidentiary hearing is before factual allegations become the<br />
basis for a decision against the State, not after.”<br />
Drake v. Portuondo,<br />
553 F.3d 230 (2nd Cir. 2009)<br />
Habeas relief granted in double murder case on Napue claim because the prosecution knowingly<br />
presented false testimony from a prison psychologist. No deference was given to the state courts’<br />
conclusions because the state court refused to permit development of the factual record. Two<br />
high school students were killed while in a car parked near a junkyard. The couple had been<br />
using the location as a lovers’ lane. Drake, another high school student, had dressed in military<br />
fatigues and fired into the car. According to his statement, he was out looking for abandoned<br />
cars to shoot at the junkyard and was not aware the car was occupied when he opened fire on it.<br />
Upon finding the couple, Drake stabbed the male victim because he was groaning and Drake was<br />
in a panic. Drake took the bodies to a dump in a neighboring town but was spotted by police.<br />
While the male victim was clothed, the female victim was not. The prosecutor ultimately<br />
developed a theory that the crime had a sexual motivation. The female victim had a bruised<br />
rectum and also had post-mortem bite marks on her breasts. (At trial, a forensic odontologist<br />
testified that such bite marks are often present in sexually-related crimes.) In addition, initial<br />
reports indicated that traces of semen believed to have come from Drake were found on a slide<br />
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from the female victim’s rectal cavity. Shortly before trial, however, the prosecutor learned this<br />
report was not accurate. When the prosecutor informed the forensic odontologist that semen<br />
evidence did not exist, the odontologist recommended that the prosecutor consult a “prison<br />
psychologist” in Michigan. The prosecutor did so two weeks before trial. After an hour long<br />
call, the “expert” said he needed to think about the case before he could give an opinion. He later<br />
informed the prosecutor he believed “picquerism” was involved, which he explained was a<br />
syndrome or criminal profile in which the perpetrator realizes sexual satisfaction from<br />
penetrating a victim by sniper activity or by stab or bite wounds. The prosecutor waited until the<br />
day before the expert testified to notify the defense of the intent to call him. This late notice<br />
prevented defense counsel from finding a competing expert and preparing for cross-examination.<br />
In his testimony, the expert gave a long list of impressive credentials. He then testified that he had<br />
been provided with information only the day before and immediately formed his opinion,<br />
which was this was a clear case of picquerism. The defense requested a two-week continuance to<br />
allow time to find a rebuttal expert, but this request was denied. After Drake’s convictions were<br />
affirmed, he discovered that the expert had exaggerated and lied about his credentials. In a<br />
federal deposition, the extent of his untruthfulness was revealed. It was also established that he<br />
had given false testimony about the extent and timing of contact he had with the prosecution<br />
about the case. Clearly established Supreme Court precedent applicable to this case required<br />
Drake to show that the prosecutor actually knew that the expert’s testimony was false. The<br />
district court’s finding that Drake failed to show the requisite knowledge was clearly erroneous.<br />
The prosecutor had to have known that the expert’s statements about the contact the two had was<br />
not true. And the prosecutor knew that, contrary to the expert’s trial testimony, the expert had<br />
not initially arrived at an opinion. Even without the depositions, the prosecutor’s delayed notice<br />
to the defense about the expert and the prosecutor’s resistance to a continuance led to an<br />
inference of knowing complicity in the false testimony. The record also strongly suggested that<br />
the prosecutor knew that the expert’s testimony about his scholarship was intentionally<br />
misleading. The prosecutor’s notes revealed that he knew the expert had not “published” any<br />
papers so he asked the expert instead if he had “written” any papers. (Notably, the prosecutor<br />
asked another expert about writing and publication.) The false testimony was material because<br />
the expert’s deception about how quickly he had arrived at his conclusion, and his lie about what<br />
case information he had been exposed to, permitted him to offer testimony that appeared<br />
credible. In fact, the expert “had two weeks to conjure up his quackery. His direct testimony on<br />
picquerism, which spans twelve pages of trial transcript, consisted largely of uninterrupted and<br />
prolix exposition, weaving the complicated facts of the case into a seemingly coherent narrative,<br />
all pointing to the symptoms of the fictive syndrome called picquerism.” The false testimony<br />
went directly to the only issue in the case, which was intent, and the Court could not conclude<br />
that there was no reasonable likelihood the false testimony could have affected the judgment of<br />
the jury.<br />
United States v. Banks,<br />
546 F.3d 507 (7th Cir. 2008)<br />
In cocaine possession case, government’s withholding of evidence impeaching government<br />
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chemist’s expert testimony with evidence she misused her government credit card warranted<br />
granting defendant’s new trial motion. Although presence of cocaine not at issue given that<br />
another chemist “allegedly tested” substance and concluded it was cocaine and there was “great<br />
deal of evidence” presented against defendant that included police surveillance, the accusations<br />
of expert’s misappropriation of funds and pending disciplinary proceedings against her were<br />
relevant to bias. While “acquittal may have been less likely than conviction” even if<br />
impeachment evidence had been disclosed, district court did not abuse discretion in finding<br />
evidence about government witness material.<br />
United States v. Triumph Capital Group, Inc.,<br />
544 F.3d 149 (2nd Cir. 2008)<br />
In racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, bribery, wire fraud and obstruction of justice case,<br />
district court abused its discretion by denying motion for new trial where prosecution failed to<br />
disclose notes taken by FBI special agent during attorney proffer and the notes supported an<br />
alternative version of an important conversation that was entirely at odds with the government&#8217;s<br />
theory of the case at trial. Defendant could have used the proffer notes not merely to support his<br />
version of the conversation with the witness, but also to impeach the witness&#8217;s credibility.<br />
Toliver v. McCautry,<br />
539 F.3d 766 (7th Cir. 2008)<br />
Where petitioner was convicted of first degree intentional murder based on brother’s murder of<br />
roommate, Brady was violated when state failed to disclose letter received before trial that<br />
“tended to show” petitioner’s brother acted alone when shooting victim and petitioner attempted<br />
to stop his brother from killing roommate. Letter’s author, Smith, offered to testify at petitioner’s<br />
trial about contents of letter if prosecutor would ask Smith’s prosecutor about favorable<br />
treatment on Smith’s pending charges. Smith would have testified that two witnesses to the<br />
murder told him petitioner tried to stop his brother’s actions, and when he asked why petitioner<br />
was being charged, a witness said prosecutor wanted to prosecute both brothers, and told<br />
witnesses if they did not cooperate, they would be charged with murder. Smith said prosecutor<br />
replied to letter, stating he could not help Smith because Smith’s pending prosecution was in<br />
another county, and Smith’s information “did not shed any new light” on case. State court denial<br />
of relief unreasonable application of clearly established law because undisputed evidence “would<br />
have bolstered&#8230;defense” and “enhanced significantly &#8230; chances of jury’s accepting” petitioner’s<br />
account of facts, and might have created reasonable doubt on whether petitioner “intentionally<br />
aided and abetted in murder” or “attempted to prevent it.”<br />
*Jells v. Mitchell,<br />
538 F.3d 478 (6th Cir. 2008)<br />
Denial of habeas relief on Brady claim reversed in case where petitioner convicted of felony<br />
murder and sentenced to death on theory that petitioner randomly kidnapped victim and her<br />
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child, and later killed victim. Although case was under AEDPA, Brady claim reviewed de novo<br />
because state court failed to address merits of four items of evidence the suppression of which<br />
petitioner had properly raised in state court. (Other items were not raised in state court and were<br />
not considered by the federal court.) The withheld evidence involved: (1) victim visited longtime friend on night of her murder, victim had a drink and was tipsy, friend walked victim to van,<br />
saw victim’s son in the van but could not see person driving, (2) victim’s sister stated victim<br />
would not take ride from stranger, and victim drinking when sister last saw her on night<br />
murdered, (3) victim’s boyfriend who indicated victim arrived at bar around 11:00 p.m. to<br />
retrieve key to apartment, and appeared to have been drinking and “was high,” and (4) police<br />
report from anonymous person later identified who called twice within 30-minutes, stating<br />
she and father saw man grabbing female and young boy about 11:00 p.m. Withheld<br />
documents refuted prosecution’s theory of random kidnapping and duress, and impeached<br />
credibility of witness who believed altercation with victim was abduction, but admitted in<br />
telephone call she couldn’t see man well. Impeachment of that witness, together with<br />
information that victim voluntarily accompanied petitioner, bolstered credibility of another<br />
witness who testified witnessed incident but did not call police because he believed victim<br />
and man knew each other. Evidence victim intoxicated undercut aggravating factor threejudge panel found supporting death: that petitioner deprived victim of freedom in methodical<br />
manner. Petitioner entitled to habeas relief as to his death sentence.<br />
Mahler v. Kaylo,<br />
537 F.3d. 494 (5th Cir. 2008)<br />
In manslaughter case, reversing denial of habeas relief because prosecution violated Brady when<br />
it failed to provide defense with pretrial witness statements that supported defense and could<br />
have been used to impeach several witnesses’ trial testimony about fight between two groups of<br />
people. State post-conviction court unreasonably applied clearly established federal law when it<br />
found statements not material. Although state court applied right standard, it “focused solely and<br />
unreasonably” on whether trial testimony provided jury “sense that ‘a struggle’ or ‘a series of<br />
struggles’” occurred at some time between two groups. But “heart of” defense was whether<br />
struggle was ongoing or had ended and victim had turned away from petitioner when shooting<br />
occurred. State’s case against petitioner “depended on reliability of the very witnesses whose<br />
pretrial statements were suppressed,” and those statements directly undermined the prosecution<br />
witnesses’ testimony that struggle had ended, and victim turned away when petitioner shot him.<br />
United States v. Aviles-Colon,<br />
536 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2008)<br />
Reversing denial of new trial motion in drug conspiracy case where prosecution withheld DEA<br />
reports that could have been important for impeachment purposes at trial by helping defendant<br />
advance his defense that he was not part of a certain drug conspiracy but rather a member of a<br />
rival conspiracy.<br />
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United States v. Chapman,<br />
524 F.3d 1073 (9th Cir. 2008)<br />
In securities-related case, district court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing indictment<br />
following flagrant prosecutorial misconduct, i.e., reckless discovery violations and<br />
misrepresentations to the court.<br />
White v. McKinley,<br />
519 F.3d 806 (6th Cir. 2008)<br />
In §1983 action initiated against former wife and investigating police officer following plaintiff’s<br />
prosecution, conviction, and later acquittal of allegedly molesting his daughter, plaintiff had right<br />
under Brady to disclosure by police officer of his romantic relationship with plaintiff’s wife and<br />
to preservation of potentially exculpatory evidence contained in plaintiff’s daughter’s diary.<br />
“[N]o reasonable police officer” under these circumstances “could have believed he could<br />
deliberately misrepresent the nature and length of his relationship with [plaintiff’s wife], or that<br />
he could deliberately fail to preserve a child victim’s diary containing potentially exculpatory<br />
information.”<br />
*Tassin v. Cain,<br />
517 F.3d 770 (5th Cir. 2008)<br />
Petitioner who was sentenced to death for capital murder committed during armed robbery was<br />
entitled to habeas relief based upon prosecution’s failure to disclose prosecution witness’s plea<br />
bargain. Petitioner denied plan to rob two men who, along with a third person, were looking for<br />
drugs. Petitioner’s wife, indicted on same charges, pleaded guilty and received 10-year sentence.<br />
At petitioner’s trial, wife testified petitioner planned robbery. Defense requested disclosure of<br />
deals for lenient treatment in exchange for wife’s testimony, but State denied any deal, wife<br />
testified no promises were made in exchange for her testimony, and State argued wife had no<br />
reason to lie because she faced potential 99-year sentence. Petitioner learned of deal postconviction when inmate forwarded him letter wife wrote to another inmate discussing possible<br />
sentencing deal. Wife’s attorney later averred judge “indicated” would sentence wife to 15 years,<br />
and possibly only 10, if she waived marital privilege. Wife testified in post-conviction<br />
proceedings she believed she would receive 10-year sentence. Relief denied by state court<br />
because trial judge, defendant’s wife and the wife’s attorney denied a final agreement existed.<br />
Federal court found that state court ruling requiring petitioner prove judge “promised” wife<br />
lenient sentence was contrary to clearly established Supreme Court law because “suppressed<br />
bargain need not have been [] firm promise” in order to mislead jury about wife’s credibility, and<br />
State never disclosed bargain. State had duty to disclose witness’s expected financial treatment<br />
even absent a “‘firm promise,’” and “nondisclosure of the understandings” violated Brady.<br />
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*Jackson v. Brown,<br />
513 F.3d 1057 (9th Cir. 2008)<br />
Affirming grant of habeas relief as to special circumstance (death eligibility) finding and death<br />
sentence where prosecutor violated Napue by failing to correct false testimony by jailhouse<br />
informants about expected benefits from testifying against petitioner. The “materiality” element<br />
of Napue was satisfied with respect to the jury&#8217;s special circumstances finding given importance<br />
of informant’s testimony on question of whether petitioner acted with the requisite “intent to<br />
cause death.”<br />
United States v. Garner,<br />
507 F.3d 399 (6th Cir. 2007)<br />
In carjacking case, prosecution violated Brady by failing to timely turn over records from the<br />
victim’s cell phone which was used to make and receive calls by the hijacker or hijackers. The<br />
records supported defendant&#8217;s theory that he had been framed by the codefendant, the<br />
codefendant&#8217;s friend, and the codefendant&#8217;s ex-girlfriend. Because of the late disclosure, defense<br />
counsel did not have time to investigate records to determine their value.<br />
U.S. v. Jernigan,<br />
492 F.3d 1050 (9th Cir. 2007) (en banc)<br />
Reversing denial of motion for new trial in case where defendant was convicted of robbing three<br />
banks and prosecution had failed to reveal that while defendant was awaiting trial, two more<br />
banks in area were robbed by a woman bearing an “uncanny physical resemblance” to defendant.<br />
The defense had been misidentification and the reliability of a surveillance video was contested.<br />
(The appeals court agreed that the video failed to identify defendant as the robber.) The<br />
suppressed evidence was material because it “substantially erode[d] the already questionable<br />
value of eyewitness identifications,” there was a “similar modus operandi in all” robberies, and<br />
the suppressed evidence magnified the “significance of gaps and inconsistencies” in the<br />
prosecution’s case, which lacked any physical evidence tying defendant to the crimes.<br />
“[C]onsidered collectively” the withheld evidence was material and defendant was denied fair<br />
trial.<br />
*Graves v. Dretke,<br />
442 F.3d 334 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 549 U.S. 943 (2006)<br />
Prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose statements by its critical witness, the alleged coperpetrator, one of which also implicated the witness’s wife in the murders, and the other of<br />
which exonerated Graves. (The only statement disclosed to Graves was one implicating both the<br />
witness and Graves. Graves had also been informed that the witness was found to have lied<br />
during a polygraph exam when he denied that his wife was involved in the crime.) The statement<br />
by the witness claiming to have committed the offense by himself would have undercut the<br />
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prosecution’s explanation for the witness’s failure to implicate Graves before the grand jury –<br />
that Graves had threatened the witness. Even more egregious than the suppression was the fact<br />
that the prosecutor knowingly elicited false and misleading testimony from the witness and a<br />
police investigator that the witness had always implicated Graves except in his grand jury<br />
testimony where he’d denied either men had been involved in the crimes. That Graves was aware<br />
of the polygraph results did not establish that he failed to exercise due diligence in seeking out<br />
the statement implicating the witness’s wife in the murder since Graves had no reason to believe<br />
such a statement had been made. Further, the prosecutor’s questioning of the witness at trial, as<br />
well as the prosecution’s discovery responses, reinforced defense counsel’s view that if the wife<br />
was involved at all, it was only after the fact. The statement about the wife’s involvement was<br />
exculpatory because it fit with the defense theory that two people committed the offense, not<br />
three as the prosecution theorized. It also provided a basis for arguing that the witness was<br />
blaming Graves in order to save his wife. The statements were material because theywould have<br />
allowed defense counsel to argue persuasively that (1) the murders were committed by the<br />
witness alone or with his wife and (2) the witness’s plan from the beginning was to exonerate his<br />
wife but since a story that he acted alone was not believable, he falsely implicated Graves. That<br />
the statements did not fit completely with the defense that was presented at trial did not render<br />
them immaterial because counsel may have acted differently had the statements not been<br />
suppressed.<br />
*Silva v. Brown,<br />
416 F.3d 980 (9th Cir. 2005)<br />
In pre-AEDPA capital case, prosecution violated Brady where although it disclosed that murder<br />
charges had been dropped against the co-defendant in exchange for his testimony against Silva, it<br />
did not reveal that part of the deal was that the co-defendant, who had previously been in a<br />
motorcycle accident and sustained severe brain damage, would forgo a psychiatric evaluation.<br />
The primary evidence against Silva was the testimony of the co- defendant. Although the codefendant’s story was corroborated in some respects, it was his testimony alone that provided<br />
proof that Silva was the triggerman. The suppressed evidence was material given that the codefendant’s testimony was crucial, and the fact that the prosecutor was concerned about the jury<br />
finding out about the witness’s mental state was evidence of the weakness of the remainder of the<br />
case. The suppressed evidence was not cumulative to other impeachment evidence. While<br />
evidence of dropped charges offered an incentive to testify falsely, it did not offer a possible<br />
explanation for the co-defendant’s confused account of events. The suppressed evidence would<br />
have diminished the credibility of the witness, and the prosecution’s desire to hide the evidence<br />
would have diminished the overall credibility of its case. Finally, the fact that the jury acquitted<br />
Silva of one of the two charged murders did not indicate that impeachment of the co-defendant<br />
had been effective.<br />
Conley v. United States,<br />
415 F.3d 183 (1st Cir. 2005)<br />
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Prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose evidence that the primary witness had expressed<br />
a desire to have his memory hypnotically enhanced, which went to his ability to recall the events.<br />
The petitioner was a police officer who was charged with perjury for his testimony about the<br />
circumstances surrounding the brutal beating of an undercover officer who had been mistaken for<br />
a fleeing suspect. The witness at issue, another police officer, had originally told internal affairs<br />
that he had seen the undercover officer chasing the actual suspect, as well as an unidentified<br />
police officer behind the undercover agent. (This contradicted the petitioner’s account whereby<br />
he claimed to have chased and captured the suspect without ever seeing the undercover agent or<br />
his beating.) Later, the witness recanted his statement that he had seen a police officer behind the<br />
undercover agent. In his grand jury testimony, which was disclosed to the defense, he explained<br />
that he had made the earlier statement about seeing someone behind the undercover agent<br />
because he felt guilty about not having seen everything and felt like he should have. What was<br />
not disclosed was a statement to the FBI where the witness said that he knew and liked the<br />
undercover agent, felt badly that he could not say what had happened, and so he convinced<br />
himself he’d seen something. He then expressed a desire to have his memory hypnotically<br />
refreshed in order to “truly recall” the events preceding the beating. This evidence was material<br />
and not cumulative of the witness’s retraction to the grand jury because the grand jury statement<br />
impeached his motive, not his ability to recall. Counsel’s choice not to impeach the witness with<br />
his grand jury testimony was supported by an independent strategy and was not proof counsel<br />
would not have relied on the hypnosis statement. Finally, the other evidence at trial was weak –<br />
the government admitted the victim’s testimony was likely impaired by the head trauma he<br />
sustained in the beating, and the actual fleeing suspect’s testimony was impeached with his<br />
felony convictions.<br />
*Hayes v. Brown,<br />
399 F.3d 972 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc)<br />
The prosecution’s knowing presentation of false evidence and failure to correct the record<br />
violated Hayes’s due process rights. Napue applies to false evidence, not just perjured testimony.<br />
The constitutional prohibition against presenting false, rather than perjured, evidence was not a<br />
new rule under Teague. The false evidence regarding whether a deal had been made with the key<br />
prosecution witness was material because there was a reasonable likelihood the false testimony<br />
affected the jury’s verdicts as to first degree murder and the death sentence. Once materiality is<br />
established, there is no need to apply Brecht.<br />
Slutzker v. Johnson,<br />
393 F.3d 373 (3rd Cir. 2004)<br />
Brady violation found where prosecution suppressed a police report recounting a statement by the<br />
neighbor of the victim that she saw someone other than petitioner speaking with the victim’s wife<br />
outside the victim’s home after the murder. At trial, she testified that it was petitioner, who had<br />
been having an affair with the victim’s wife, who she saw after the murder. The trial prosecutor’s<br />
testimony that it was her normal practice to turn over all documents was insufficient to overcome<br />
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the testimonial and circumstantial evidence indicating that the defense was not provided with the<br />
report. The evidence was exculpatory and material because the neighbor was the most credible of<br />
the witnesses against petitioner. Although the claim had been procedurally defaulted because it<br />
was never presented to the state court, cause was found to overcome the default because there<br />
was no procedurally viable way for the petitioner to exhaust the claim once the suppressed<br />
material was discovered during federal habeas proceedings. (The ability to have federal<br />
proceedings stayed while new claims were exhausted was uncertain at the relevant time and,<br />
therefore, petitioner risked losing his right to adjudication of his exhausted federal claims if his<br />
federal petition was dismissed without prejudice while he returned to state court to exhaust<br />
the Brady claim.)<br />
United States v. Sipe,<br />
388 F.3d 471 (5th Cir. 2004)<br />
In case involving border control agent’s conviction for use of excessive force and infliction of<br />
bodily injury during arrest, district court did not err in granting new trial based on Brady<br />
violations. The cumulative impact of the suppressed evidence satisfied the materiality prong of<br />
Brady. The suppressed evidence involved: (1) a statement by the government’s star witness<br />
indicating a personal dislike for the defendant, which was somewhat inconsistent with the<br />
witness’s subsequent testimony; (2) benefits provided to testifying aliens that were more<br />
substantial than the benefits the defense was told about; and (3) a prior charge against a witness<br />
of filing a false police report which the witness was acquitted of.<br />
United States v. Rivas,<br />
377 F.3d 195 (2nd Cir. 2004)<br />
A Brady violation occurred in this narcotics smuggling case where the prosecution failed to<br />
disclose until after the guilty verdict that its chief witness, the defendant&#8217;s fellow seaman who<br />
testified that defendant concealed drugs in defendant&#8217;s cabin, had told the government that he, not<br />
defendant, had brought the package of drugs on board the vessel, purportedly believing that it<br />
contained alcohol meant for defendant. Although this revelation was arguably consistent with the<br />
witness&#8217;s trial testimony that the drugs belonged to defendant, it could have led the jury to<br />
question the witness&#8217;s credibility and bolstered the defendant&#8217;s theory that the witness rather than<br />
defendant was engaged in smuggling.<br />
Mathis v. Berghuis,<br />
90 Fed.Appx. 101, 2004 WL 187552 (6th Cir. 2004) (unpublished)<br />
Grant of habeas relief affirmed in rape case where state failed to disclose that complainant had<br />
twice made false reports to the police claiming to have been the victim of violent crimes,<br />
including rape and armed robbery. The state court’s requirement that petitioner show that the<br />
prosecutor was aware of the undisclosed police reports was &#8220;clearly contrary to Supreme Court<br />
precedent.&#8221;<br />
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Norton v. Spencer,<br />
351 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2003)<br />
In Massachusetts child sexual assault case where the alleged victim, Fuentes, was the sole<br />
witness, the appeals court affirms the grant of relief on petitioner’s Brady claim. After trial,<br />
petitioner discovered evidence that the prosecution had likely been off by several months in its<br />
contention about when the assaults allegedly occurred, and petitioner had not been at the house at<br />
the relevant time. Petitioner also learned that another alleged victim, Noel, who had been found<br />
incompetent to testify, admitted to having fabricated the charges against petitioner at the<br />
insistence of Fuentes. Noel further stated that Fuentes had made up his allegations and that the<br />
prosecutor repeatedly told Noel and Fuentes how to testify even after being informed by Noel<br />
that none of the claims were true. The state court’s denial of relief involved both an unreasonable<br />
determination of the facts and an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law.<br />
Castleberry v. Brigano,<br />
349 F.3d 286 (6th Cir. 2003)<br />
Prosecution committed Brady violation during petitioner’s robbery-murder trial by withholding:<br />
(1) a description of the assailant by the victim which differed from petitioner’s appearance; (2) a<br />
statement by a witness claiming to have heard the prosecution’s key witness plotting the robbery<br />
of the victim; and (3) witness accounts of suspicious persons in the vicinity of the killing,<br />
including descriptions of &#8220;thin&#8221; individuals. (Petitioner was 5&#8217;9&#8243;, 221 pounds at the time of the<br />
crime.) Although the suppressed evidence would not have contradicted all of the testimony<br />
received at trial, it was enough to create a reasonable probability of a different outcome at trial<br />
had the Brady information been available. The state court decision denying relief was contrary to<br />
Supreme Court precedent in that the state court analyzed the suppressed evidence for materiality<br />
item by item rather than cumulatively.<br />
Hall v. Washington,<br />
343 F.3d 976 (9th Cir. 2003)<br />
In California murder case, false and material evidence was admitted in violation of petitioner’s<br />
due process rights. The false evidence took the form of a series of handwritten questions and<br />
answers allegedly exchanged between petitioner and a jailhouse informant. These notes were<br />
admitted at trial as adoptive admissions, without the testimony of the informant. In post-trial<br />
proceedings, petitioner presented evidence – including an admission from the informant and<br />
testimony from document experts – that the informant fabricated the jailhouse notes by changing<br />
the questions after petitioner had written his answers.<br />
Goldstein v. Harris,<br />
82 Fed. Appx. 592, 2003 WL 22883652 (9th Cir. 2003) (unpublished)<br />
Appeals court affirms grant of habeas relief in murder case where the prosecution suppressed<br />
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evidence related to the credibility of its two key witnesses. First, it failed to disclose a deal with<br />
the jailhouse informant. Second, it did not reveal that police investigators were impermissibly<br />
suggestive during the eyewitness’s identification of petitioner in a photo lineup, or that it advised<br />
the eyewitness that he need not retake the stand to clarify his testimony after he realized that he<br />
may have recognized petitioner because he had met him prior to the murder. Further, the<br />
prosecution violated Napue v. Illinois by failing to correct the informant’s false testimony about<br />
not having received benefits for his assistance in this and other cases.<br />
Bailey v. Rae,<br />
339 F.3d 1107 (9th Cir. 2003)<br />
In case involving convictions for sexual abuse and sexual penetration, the prosecution violated<br />
Brady by failing to disclose therapy reports concerning the victim&#8217;s mental capacity. The reports<br />
were &#8220;exculpatory&#8221; because the crimes for which petitioner was charged required that the victim<br />
be incapable of consent due to a mental defect and the reports indicated that the victim<br />
understood both what type of physical contact was not okay and that she could say &#8220;no.&#8221;<br />
Unhelpful passages in the reports did not negate their exculpatory nature since, taken as a whole,<br />
they were favorable to the defense. The state post-conviction court’s finding that the reports were<br />
not exculpatory was an unreasonable applicable of Supreme Court precedent. The suppressed<br />
evidence was material despite the fact that the victim’s trial testimony was consistent with the<br />
findings in the report. &#8220;Cumulative evidence is one thing. Unique and relevant evidence offered<br />
by a disinterested expert is quite another. By summarily dismissing the Ford reports as<br />
cumulative, the state court fundamentally mischaracterized their nature and significance. Setting<br />
aside for a moment the substance of the reports, it is implausible that one could equate a<br />
statement made by a teenage complainant whom the State has labeled intellectually deficient<br />
with a clinical assessment provided by a disinterested professional therapist who had been<br />
treating the victim over a period of years.&#8221; The state court&#8217;s denial of the Brady claim on<br />
materiality grounds was both &#8220;contrary to&#8221; and an &#8220;unreasonable application of&#8221; clearly<br />
established Supreme Court precedent. It was contrary to Supreme Court precedent because it<br />
required that the suppressed evidence &#8220;be such as will probably change the result if a new trial is<br />
granted.&#8221; The state court&#8217;s denial of the Brady claim was also objectively &#8220;unreasonable&#8221; in that<br />
&#8220;the state court&#8217;s analysis of prejudice amounted to little more than a blanket assumption that,<br />
because [the] reports were cumulative, they would have had little impact on the trial&#8217;s outcome.&#8221;<br />
The appeals court &#8220;conclude[s] that the Supreme Court&#8217;s Brady jurisprudence requires more than<br />
simply labeling the evidence as cumulative without placing it in context.&#8221;<br />
Monroe v. Angelone,<br />
323 F.3d 286 (4th Cir. 2003)<br />
In evaluating a Brady claim in a post-AEDPA case, deference to the state court’s rejection of the<br />
claim is only required as to the suppressed evidence that the state court considered. Brady<br />
material that was discovered for the first time in federal court is subject to de novo analysis. And<br />
because materiality is assessed collectively, rather than on an item-by-item basis, the federal<br />
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court &#8220;must make an independent assessment of whether the suppression of exculpatory<br />
evidence&#8211;including the evidence previously presented to the state courts&#8211;materially affected<br />
Monroe&#8217;s first-degree murder conviction.&#8221; Given the thin, circumstantial case against defendant,<br />
the prosecution committed reversible error under Brady when it failed to disclose information<br />
that could have been used to impeach its key witness, as well as other witnesses, and information<br />
that could have supported the defense theory that someone else killed the victim. (The district<br />
court found, among other things, that the prosecution suppressed evidence that its key witness<br />
was offered assistance in obtaining a sentence reduction in an unrelated case and that this witness<br />
had previously supplied information to the police.) As for respondent’s contention that there was<br />
no duty to disclose the material because the &#8220;substantive equivalent&#8221; was heard by the jury, the<br />
court states: &#8220;the prosecution has a duty to disclose material even if it may seem redundant.<br />
Redundancy may be factored into the materiality analysis, but it does not excuse disclosure<br />
obligations.&#8221;<br />
*Scott v. Mullin,<br />
303 F.3d 1222 (10th Cir. 2002)<br />
State’s suppression of evidence of a third party’s confession to the capital murder provided cause<br />
to overcome the default of petitioner’s Brady claim by the state court, and petitioner was entitled<br />
to relief on the claim. The first two prongs of Brady were satisfied because the suppressed<br />
evidence was known by police investigators prior to trial and it was clearly favorable to<br />
petitioner. The third prong &#8211; a reasonably likelihood of a more favorable result &#8211; was also<br />
satisfied even if, as the government contended, the confession could only have been used to<br />
impeach the third party. Had the third party’s credibility been called into question by the<br />
confession, doubt about the testimony of other prosecution witnesses who claimed to be with the<br />
third party at the time of the killing could have been raised.<br />
Mendez v. Artuz,<br />
303 F.3d 411 (2nd Cir. 2002), cert. denied, 537 U.S. 1245 (2003)<br />
Petitioner who was convicted of, among other things, the attempted murder of Johnny Rodriguez,<br />
was entitled to habeas relief based on the prosecution’s failure to disclose evidence that another<br />
individual had placed a contract on the life of Johnny Rodriguez prior to the shooting. The<br />
evidence was &#8220;favorable&#8221; because it directly contradicted the motive theory testified to by the<br />
prosecution witnesses. That the evidence did not suggest an alternative shooter did not mean it<br />
was not favorable, given the absence of evidence connecting petitioner to the individual who<br />
allegedly took out the contract. And although Johnny Rodriguez identified petitioner as the<br />
shooter, trial evidence raised questions about the identification. Materiality is further established<br />
by the fact that the suppressed information could have been used by petitioner &#8220;to challenge the<br />
thoroughness and adequacy of the police investigation.&#8221;<br />
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Sawyer v. Hofbauer,<br />
299 F.3d 605 (6th Cir. 2002)<br />
In sexual assault case, the state court unreasonably applied Brady by failing to correctly identify<br />
the evidence that was suppressed. Petitioner was entitled to relief on his Brady claim given the<br />
State’s failure to reveal test results establishing that petitioner was not the source of a semen stain<br />
on the victim’s underwear. This was material given evidence in the record suggesting that the<br />
perpetrator could have cleaned himself with the victim’s underwear following oral sex.<br />
United States v. Gil,<br />
297 F.3d 93 (2nd Cir. 2002)<br />
In mail fraud case, conviction vacated under Brady where the government withheld a<br />
memorandum indicating that the defendant was authorized to obtain payment for his<br />
extra-contractual work by submitting inflated subcontractor invoices, thus showing that he did<br />
not deceive or defraud municipal entity.<br />
*Jamison v. Collins,<br />
291 F.3d 380 (6th Cir. 2002)<br />
Brady violation occurred both in the suppression of exculpatory evidence by the prosecution, and<br />
in the failure of the prosecutor to weigh the evidence for purposes of Brady disclosure which was<br />
the result of an Ohio police policy to withhold potentially exculpatory information from the<br />
prosecutor. The following suppressed items are found, collectively, to be material to petitioner’s<br />
defense requiring the grant of habeas relief as to the capital conviction: (1) a positive<br />
identification of different suspects by an eyewitness to the crime; (2) prior statements by the<br />
accomplice (who was also the key prosecution witness) that omitted dramatic details provided<br />
during the accomplice’s trial testimony; (3) an eyewitness account that could have impeached the<br />
accomplice’s testimony; (4) descriptions of the suspects that undermined the accomplice’s claim<br />
that he and petitioner committed the crime together and supported petitioner’s argument that<br />
other suspects were overlooked; (5) evidence pointing to another suspect’s involvement in the<br />
crime; and (6) an offense report indicating that the victim of a similar robbery had been unable to<br />
identify her attacker at the time of the offense.<br />
*Benn v. Lambert,<br />
283 F.3d 1040 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 123 S.Ct. 341 (2002)<br />
In case under AEDPA, the panel unanimously affirms the grant of habeas relief to Washington<br />
death row inmate based on Brady violations. The prosecution failed to disclose numerous pieces<br />
of impeachment information that could have undermined the credibility of the jailhouse<br />
informant who was the key prosecution witness as to premeditation, the aggravating<br />
circumstance of common scheme or plan, and motive. The withheld evidence related to: (1) the<br />
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witness’s history of misconduct while acting as an informant; (2) the witness made a false<br />
allegation implicating petitioner in a notorious unsolved murder; (3) the witness’s exposure to<br />
prosecution in other cases; and (4) the witness’s history as an informant. An independent basis<br />
for habeas relief is the prosecution’s failure to disclose evidence that a fire at petitioner’s trailer<br />
was accidental. This was material because the prosecution’s theory was that the trailer fire was<br />
arson, and that the capital murders were related to insurance fraud connected to the arson.<br />
Killian v. Poole,<br />
282 F.3d 1204 (9th Cir. 2002), cert. denied, 123 S.Ct. 992 (2003)<br />
State court unreasonably applied the law to the facts in determining that petitioner was not<br />
prejudiced by the suppression of evidence, some of which came into existence post-trial, where<br />
the evidence exposed the motivation of the key prosecution witness to lie and tended to show that<br />
he did in fact lie at petitioner’s trial.<br />
DiLosa v. Cain,<br />
279 F.3d. 259 (5th Cir. 2002)<br />
State court applied a rule of law contrary to Supreme Court precedent when it assessed the<br />
materiality of suppressed evidence by weighing the existing evidence against the excluded<br />
evidence, rather than asking whether the excluded evidence &#8220;could reasonably be taken to put the<br />
whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict.&#8221; Kyles, 514 U.S. at<br />
435. Further, the state court’s ultimate legal conclusion cannot be reconciled with Kyles and<br />
Brady. Given that the defense to the murder charge was that unknown intruders killed<br />
petitioner’s wife, and the prosecutor highlighted the absence of evidence corroborating<br />
petitioner’s account, the State’s failure to reveal evidence potentially pointing to intruders in the<br />
house and statements indicating potential intruders in the neighborhood undermines confidence<br />
in the verdict.<br />
Boss v. Pierce,<br />
263 F.3d 734 (7th Cir. 2001)<br />
State appellate court’s apparent assumption that suppressed evidence must be exculpatory to<br />
satisfy the requirements of Brady, rather than merely impeaching, was contrary to clearly<br />
established Supreme Court precedent. State court unreasonably applied Brady in finding that<br />
defense counsel would have discovered the suppressed information by exercising due diligence<br />
given that the source was a defense witness, where nothing about the witness’s role in the case<br />
(an alibi witness) suggested that she had knowledge about statements made by the key<br />
prosecution witness around the neighborhood. &#8220;Holding that reasonable diligence requires<br />
defense counsel to ask witnesses about matters of which counsel could not have reasonably<br />
expected a witness to have knowledge is inconsistent with the aim of Brady and its progeny.&#8221;<br />
State court unreasonably applied Brady in finding that evidence uncovered after disclosure of the<br />
witness’s statement was simply cumulative, where: (1) the new witnesses were neutral and<br />
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disinterested, in contrast to the defense witnesses at trial; and (2) the new witnesses recounted<br />
confessions by the key prosecution witness, which was significantly different than the eyewitness<br />
testimony of trial witnesses.<br />
*Mitchell v. Gibson,<br />
262 F.3d 1036 (10th Cir. 2001)<br />
In case where the government did not dispute the district court’s finding that petitioner’s rape and<br />
sodomy convictions were constitutionally infirm due to the prosecution’s failure to disclose<br />
exculpatory test results, and its presentation of false testimony by Oklahoma City police chemist,<br />
Joyce Gilchrist, the Tenth Circuit concluded that petitioner was also entitled to habeas relief as to<br />
his death sentence. The district court erred in using standard of Romano v. Oklahoma is assessing<br />
whether the Brady violation required vacated of death sentence. (The appeals court noted,<br />
however, that because the Brady violation in this case deprived petitioner of his right to<br />
cross-examination and to present mitigating evidence, petitioner would still be entitled to relief<br />
under Romano without having to demonstrate that the entire sentencing was rendered<br />
fundamentally unfair.) Applying Kyles, the appeals court found that petitioner was entitled to<br />
relief even though there may have been sufficient evidence to justify the jury’s death verdict,<br />
given that the rape and sodomy convictions &#8220;impacted all three of the aggravating circumstances<br />
found by the jury: that the murder was heinous, atrocious and cruel; that it was committed to<br />
avoid arrest for the rape and sodomy; and that Mr. Mitchell posed a continuing threat to society.&#8221;<br />
Further, the defense presented considerable mitigating evidence.<br />
Leka v. Portuondo,<br />
257 F.3d 89 (2nd Cir. 2001)<br />
In this non-capital New York murder case, the Second Circuit granted relief, finding that the<br />
prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose the name of a crucial eyewitness with information favorable to<br />
the defense &#8220;until three business days before trial,&#8221; and failure to disclose the substance of the<br />
witness&#8217; knowledge at all, violated Brady. Petitioner was convicted strictly on the questionable<br />
testimony of two eyewitnesses, each of whom gave post-trial statements recanting, to varying<br />
degrees, their identifications of petitioner. The suppressed evidence consisted of the eyewitness<br />
account of an off-duty police officer, who saw the shooting from above, and gave an account<br />
which differed in important respects from that of the witnesses who testified at trial. In finding<br />
the suppressed evidence &#8220;material,&#8221; the Second Circuit observed that &#8220;[i]t is likely that [the<br />
witness&#8217;] testimony at trial would have had seismic impact.&#8221; And in concluding that the<br />
prosecution suppressed the information notwithstanding the fact that it disclosed the witness&#8217;<br />
name three days before trial, the court explained that &#8220;the prosecution failed to make sufficient<br />
disclosure in sufficient time to afford the defense an opportunity for use.&#8221;<br />
Boyette v. LeFevre,<br />
246 F.3d 76, 93 (2nd Cir. 2001)<br />
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The Second Circuit reversed the district court&#8217;s denial of relief in this New York robbery, arson<br />
and attempted murder case, finding that the prosecution violated Brady in failing to disclose<br />
several documents. The prosecution&#8217;s case rested solely on the victim&#8217;s identification of<br />
petitioner, the credibility of which was bolstered at trial by the victim&#8217;s claim that she recognized<br />
her attacker immediately. The undisclosed documents revealed that the victim had not, in fact,<br />
identified the perpetrator immediately, and tended to undermine the credibility of her memory by<br />
contradicting her claim that her attacker had smeared some type of fire accelerant on her face.<br />
Petitioner&#8217;s first trial ended when the jury hung 9-3 in favor of acquittal, and his defense at both<br />
trials centered on a relatively strong alibi supported by the testimony of multiple witnesses who<br />
placed petitioner out-of-state at the time of the crime. The court summed up its conclusion that<br />
petitioner was entitled to relief as follows: &#8220;Because this very close case depended solely on [the<br />
victim&#8217;s] credibility, the [state appellate court] applied Kyles in an objectively unreasonable way<br />
when it concluded &#8211; without any analysis &#8211; that [petitioner] was not prejudiced.&#8221;<br />
Finley v. Johnson,<br />
243 F.3d 215 (5th Cir. 2001)<br />
In this Texas kidnapping case, petitioner made a sufficient showing of actual innocence to permit<br />
him to overcome procedural default of his Brady claim by showing that the Brady material in his<br />
case &#8211; evidence that a restraining order was issued against his kidnapping victim two days after<br />
the kidnapping &#8211; was highly probative of petitioner&#8217;s defense of &#8220;necessity,&#8221; because it supported<br />
his claim that his actions were immediately necessary to protect others from being harmed by the<br />
kidnapping victim, and if accepted by the jury, would have resulted in petitioner&#8217;s acquittal.<br />
Paradis v. Arave,<br />
240 F.3d 1169 (9th Cir. 2001)<br />
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court&#8217;s grant of relief in this former Idaho capital case<br />
(death sentence commuted to life) on petitioner&#8217;s claim that the state violated Brady v. Maryland<br />
by failing to disclose a prosecutor&#8217;s notes taken at a meeting with law enforcement and the<br />
medical examiner. The notes contained, among other things, information regarding the condition<br />
of the victim, time of death, and the medical examiner&#8217;s opinions based on that information, all of<br />
which would have been useful to petitioner in impeaching the medical examiner&#8217;s testimony<br />
indicating that the victim died in Idaho, rather than in Washington. If successful, this would have<br />
negated Idaho&#8217;s jurisdiction to prosecute petitioner for murder.<br />
*Nuckols v. Gibson,<br />
233 F.3d 1261 (10th Cir. 2000)<br />
The Tenth Circuit granted relief in this Oklahoma capital case, finding that the state failed to<br />
disclose material evidence impeaching a key prosecution witness. The undisclosed evidence<br />
indicated that the witness &#8211; a deputy sheriff whose testimony provided the only support for the<br />
admissibility of petitioner&#8217;s confession, which itself was the only piece of evidence linking<br />
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petitioner to the crime &#8211; had been strongly suspected of stealing from the sheriff&#8217;s office, and had<br />
been tangentially involved in a second murder, for which petitioner was also under arrest at the<br />
time of his confession. The evidence was impeaching and material because it would have<br />
allowed petitioner to raise questions about the witness&#8217; motivation for testifying that petitioner<br />
reinitiated questioning which led to his confession, thereby turning what had been a close<br />
credibility contest between petitioner and the witness in petitioner&#8217;s favor, and securing the<br />
suppression of petitioner&#8217;s confession.<br />
White v. Helling,<br />
194 F.3d 937 (8th Cir. 1999)<br />
The Eighth Circuit granted relief in this 27 year old robbery/murder case due to the state&#8217;s<br />
nondisclosure of several documents strongly suggesting that a witness whose testimony severely<br />
undermined petitioner&#8217;s defense of coercion had initially identified someone other than petitioner<br />
as the person who took his wallet during the crime, and that the witness had been coached to<br />
such an extent that, had the evidence been revealed earlier, the trial might have excluded the<br />
witness&#8217; testimony altogether.<br />
Spicer v. Roxbury,<br />
194 F.3d 547 (4th Cir. 1999)<br />
A majority of the Fourth Circuit panel affirmed the district court&#8217;s grant of habeas relief in this<br />
post-AEDPA, non-capital habeas case from Maryland. The majority agreed with the district<br />
court&#8217;s conclusion that the prosecutor violated Brady v. Maryland by failing to appreciate and<br />
disclose to the defense a serious discrepancy between the descriptions of a key witness&#8217;<br />
knowledge as told to the prosecutor by the witness himself, and as told to the prosecutor by the<br />
witness&#8217; lawyer, who had contacted the prosecutor about the witness&#8217; knowledge in hopes of<br />
working out a plea deal. While the witness told his lawyer several times that he had not seen<br />
petitioner on the day petitioner allegedly attacked a bar owner, and the lawyer communicated this<br />
information to the prosecutor, the witness himself subsequently told the prosecutor, and later<br />
petitioner&#8217;s jury, that he had seen petitioner on the day of the attack, and that petitioner was<br />
running away from the crime scene while being chased by an employee of the victim&#8217;s restaurant.<br />
Love v. Freeman,<br />
1999 WL 671939 (4th Cir. Aug. 30, 1999) (unpublished)<br />
The Fourth Circuit granted federal habeas corpus relief in this North Carolina child sexual assault<br />
case, finding that the state violated Brady by failing to disclose: evidence that the alleged victim<br />
twice denied she had been sexually abused; numerous inconsistencies in the alleged victim&#8217;s<br />
account of the sexual assault; evidence of the alleged victim&#8217;s &#8220;perhaps pathological lying<br />
history&#8221; and self-destructive and attention-seeking behavior; a tape recording and transcript of a<br />
social worker&#8217;s interview of the alleged victim, during which the social worker utilized<br />
suggestive interviewing techniques and supplied the alleged victim with information that<br />
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subsequently became part of her story; complete records of the alleged victim&#8217;s hymenal<br />
examination; information suggesting the alleged victim&#8217;s mother ceased supporting petitioner&#8217;s<br />
claim of innocence as a result of coercion by the department of social services; and information<br />
indicating that the alleged victim had previously been raped by two boys.<br />
Crivens v. Roth,<br />
172 F.3d 991 (7th Cir. 1999)<br />
The Seventh Circuit granted relief in this non-capital murder case on the ground that the state<br />
violated Brady by failing to disclose the entire criminal record of its key witness. In so holding,<br />
the court rejected the state&#8217;s contention that no Brady violation occurred because the<br />
nondisclosure was not deliberate, but was instead a result of the witness having used aliases,<br />
thereby making parts of his criminal record more difficult to locate. The court reasoned:<br />
&#8220;Criminals often use aliases, but the police are able to link the various names to a single<br />
individual through a variety of means. If the state indeed asked for the criminal history records . .<br />
., we find it difficult to accept that the Chicago Police Department had not or could not have<br />
discovered [that the witness had been arrested under more than one name].&#8221; The court further<br />
concluded that, in light of the witness&#8217; demonstrated propensity to lie, the fact that petitioner had<br />
been afforded an opportunity to question him concerning his criminal record was not enough to<br />
render the state&#8217;s nondisclosure immaterial. Finally, the court characterized the state&#8217;s failure to<br />
disclose the witness&#8217; record in the face of a direct request and a court order &#8220;inexcusable,&#8221; and<br />
concluded that &#8220;[t]he atmosphere created by such tactics is one in which we highly doubt a<br />
defendant whose life or liberty is at stake can receive a fair trial.&#8221;<br />
Schledwitz v. United States,<br />
169 F.3d 1003 (6th Cir. 1999)<br />
The government violated Brady by failing to disclose that its key witness, who was portrayed as a<br />
neutral and disinterested expert during petitioner&#8217;s fraud prosecution, had for years actually been<br />
actively involved in investigating petitioner and interviewing witnesses against him. In granting<br />
relief, the court noted that, although &#8220;[t]aken individually, none of the [undisclosed evidence,<br />
which included items other than the nature of the expert&#8217;s involvement] would appear to raise a<br />
&#8216;reasonable probability&#8217; that [petitioner] was denied a fair trial,&#8221; this evidence, viewed<br />
collectively, entitled petitioner to relief.<br />
United States v. Scheer,<br />
168 F.3d 445 (11th Cir. 1999)<br />
The court granted relief in this bank fraud case on the ground that the government violated Brady<br />
by failing to disclose that the lead prosecutor in the case had made a statement to a key<br />
prosecution witness, who was himself on probation as a result of a conviction arising out of the<br />
same set of facts, &#8220;that reasonably could be construed as an implicit &#8212; if not explicit &#8212; threat<br />
regarding the nature of [the witness&#8217;] upcoming testimony . . ..&#8221; 168 F.3d at 452. In granting<br />
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relief, the court made clear that, to succeed, the appellant was not required to prove that the<br />
witness actually changed his testimony as a result of the prosecutor&#8217;s threat, nor was he required<br />
to establish that, had evidence of the threat been disclosed, the remaining untainted evidence<br />
would have been insufficient to support his conviction.<br />
Seiber v. Coyle,<br />
1998 WL 465899 (6th Cir. July 27, 1998) (unpublished)<br />
The court granted relief on petitioner&#8217;s claim that the state violated Brady in two instances. The<br />
first violation resulted from the state&#8217;s failure to disclose that a member of the prosecution team<br />
had promised one of two key witnesses that his probation would be transferred to another<br />
jurisdiction after his testimony against petitioner. The second violation arose out of the state&#8217;s<br />
nondisclosure of a preliminary crime scene report indicating that the perpetrator of the burglary<br />
for which petitioner was later convicted was approximately half petitioner&#8217;s age, and that no other<br />
information identifying the perpetrator was known. The contents of this report sharply<br />
contradicted the testimony of the prosecution&#8217;s only other key witness, a police officer who<br />
described the perpetrator in minute detail at trial, and identified petitioner as fitting the<br />
description.<br />
United States v. Service Deli, Inc.,<br />
151 F.3d 938 (9th Cir. 1998)<br />
The court reversed the defendant government contractor&#8217;s conviction for filing a false statement<br />
with the United States Defense Commissary Agency because the government failed to disclose<br />
notes taken by one of its attorneys during an interview with the state&#8217;s most important witness.<br />
The notes contained &#8220;three key pieces of information&#8221; useful in impeaching the witness: (1) the<br />
witness&#8217; story had changed; (2) the change may have been brought on by the threat of<br />
imprisonment; and (3) that the witness explained his inconsistent stories by claiming that he had<br />
suffered &#8220;a stroke which affected his memory.&#8221; This information was material, the court<br />
explained, because &#8220;the government&#8217;s entire case rested on [the] testimony&#8221; of the witness who<br />
was the subject of the undisclosed notes, and that witness&#8217; credibility &#8220;essentially was the only<br />
issue that mattered.&#8221; Finally, the court rejected the government&#8217;s contention that the undisclosed<br />
impeachment evidence was merely cumulative because the defendant had gone into the same<br />
areas on cross examination of the witness. The court explained: &#8220;It makes little sense to argue<br />
that because [defendant] tried to impeach [the witness] and failed, any further impeachment<br />
evidence would be useless. It is more likely that [defendant] may have failed to impeach [the<br />
witness] because the most damning impeachment evidence in fact was withheld by the<br />
government.&#8221;<br />
Singh v. Prunty,<br />
142 F.3d 1157 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 956 (1998)<br />
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The court granted habeas relief in this murder-for-hire case on the ground that the prosecution<br />
violated Brady by failing to disclose an agreement with its star witness, pursuant to which the<br />
witness avoided prosecution on several charges, and received significantly reduced sentences on<br />
other charges. The undisclosed information was material, in the court&#8217;s view, because &#8220;[i]t is<br />
likely the jury had to believe [the witness&#8217;] testimony in order to believe the prosecution&#8217;s theory.<br />
For these reasons, [the witness] was the key witness who linked [petitioner] to the murder-forhire scheme,&#8221; and his &#8220;credibility was vital to the prosecution&#8217;s case.&#8221;<br />
*Clemmons v. Delo,<br />
124 F.3d 944 (8th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1088 (1998)<br />
Petitioner was convicted of murder and sentenced to death for the killing of a fellow prison<br />
inmate. Habeas relief granted as to conviction based on prosecution’s failure to disclose an<br />
internal prison memo generated the day of the incident which indicated that someone saw a<br />
second inmate commit the murder. While petitioner did present other inmates to testify at trial<br />
that this second inmate committed the murder, the prosecution argued that these witnesses were<br />
not believable because the person they were implicating was &#8220;conveniently dead,&#8221; thus the<br />
outcome of the proceeding was sufficiently undermined.<br />
*East v. Johnson,<br />
123 F.3d 235 (5th Cir. 1997)<br />
Habeas relief granted as to death sentence where prosecution failed to disclose the criminal<br />
record of key witness used to establish future dangerousness with testimony that petitioner had<br />
raped and robbed her. If this witness&#8217; prior record had been disclosed, defense would have<br />
discovered a mental competency evaluation which reflected that the witness suffered from<br />
bizarre sexual hallucinations. District court erred in applying a sufficiency of the evidence test<br />
rather than considering whether impeachment of the witness would have undermined the jury&#8217;s<br />
sentencing recommendation.<br />
United States v. Vozzella,<br />
124 F.3d 389 (2nd Cir. 1997)<br />
Conviction for conspiring to extend extortionate loans reversed where prosecution presented<br />
false evidence and elicited misleading testimony concerning that evidence which was vital to<br />
prove a conspiracy.<br />
*Carriger v. Stewart,<br />
132 F.3d 463 (9th Cir. 1997) (en banc), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1133<br />
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Habeas relief granted as to conviction and death sentence where prosecution withheld from<br />
defense the Department of Correction file of the state&#8217;s star witness. Because the witness had a<br />
long criminal history, the prosecution had the duty to turn over all information bearing on his<br />
credibility. The DOC file contained not only information that the witness had a long history of<br />
burglaries (the crime the witness was now blaming on the defendant), but also that he had a long<br />
history of lying to the police and blaming others to cover up his own guilt.<br />
United States v. Fisher,<br />
106 F.3d 622 (5th Cir. 1997), abrogated on other grounds by Ohler v. United States, 529<br />
U.S. 753 (2000)<br />
New trial ordered where government failed to disclose FBI report directly contradicting<br />
testimony of a key government witness on bank fraud charge. Because the witness&#8217; credibility<br />
was crucial to the government&#8217;s case, there was a reasonable probability that the result would<br />
have been different if the report had been disclosed.<br />
Duran v. Thurman,<br />
106 F.3d 407 (9th Cir. 1997) (unpublished)<br />
Habeas corpus relief granted where state prosecutor told murder defendant&#8217;s counsel that charges<br />
against state&#8217;s key witness had been dismissed, when witness actually had a pending<br />
misdemeanor charge. The court rejected the state&#8217;s contention that defense counsel should have<br />
known about the pending charge, stating counsel was entitled to believe the prosecution&#8217;s<br />
representations to be truthful. The undisclosed charge was material because the witness provided<br />
the only testimony contradicting petitioner&#8217;s theory of self-defense, and his credibility would<br />
have been lessened had the jury known that charges were pending against him.<br />
United States v. Pelullo,<br />
105 F.3d 117 (3rd Cir. 1997)<br />
Denial of § 2255 motion reversed where government failed to disclose surveillance tapes and raw<br />
notes of FBI and IRS agents. The notes contained information supporting defendant&#8217;s version of<br />
events and impeaching the testimony of the government agents, who provided the key testimony<br />
at defendant&#8217;s trial for wire fraud and other charges.<br />
United States v. Steinberg,<br />
99 F.3d 1486 (9th Cir. 1996), disapproved on other grounds, 165 F.3d 689 (9th Cir.<br />
1999) (en banc)<br />
New trial ordered where prosecution failed to disclose information indicating that its key witness,<br />
an informant, was involved in two different illegal transactions around the time he was working<br />
as a CI, and that the informant owed the defendant money, thus giving him incentive to send the<br />
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defendant to prison. Although the prosecutor did not know about the exculpatory information<br />
until months after the trial, nondisclosure to the defense of this material evidence required a new<br />
trial.<br />
Guerra v. Johnson,<br />
90 F.3d 1075 (5th Cir. 1996)<br />
Grant of habeas relief affirmed where district court made detailed, legally relevant factual<br />
findings indicating that police had intimidated key witnesses to murder of police officer and<br />
failed to disclose material information regarding who was seen carrying the murder weapon<br />
moments after the shooting.<br />
United States v. Cuffie,<br />
80 F.3d 514 (D.C. Cir. 1996)<br />
Undisclosed evidence that prosecution witness, who testified that defendant paid him to keep<br />
drugs in his apartment, had previously lied under oath in proceeding involving same conspiracy<br />
was material where witness was impeached on basis that he was a cocaine addict and snitch, but<br />
not on basis of perjury, and where his testimony provided only connection between defendant<br />
and drugs found in witness&#8217; apartment.<br />
United States v. Smith,<br />
77 F.3d 511 (D.C.Cir. 1996)<br />
Dismissal of state court charges against prosecution witness, as part of plea agreement in federal<br />
court, was material and should have been disclosed under due process clause, even though<br />
prosecutor disclosed other dismissed charges and other impeachment evidence was thus<br />
available, and whether or not witness was intentionally concealing agreement. Armed with full<br />
disclosure, defense could have pursued devastating cross-exam, challenging witness&#8217; assertion<br />
that he was testifying only to &#8220;get a fresh start&#8221; and suggesting that witness might have concealed<br />
other favors from government.<br />
United States v. Lloyd,<br />
71 F.3d 408 (D.C.Cir. 1995)<br />
Defendant who was convicted of aiding and abetting in preparation of false federal income tax<br />
returns was entitled to new trial where prosecution: (1) withheld, without wrongdoing, tax return<br />
of defendant&#8217;s client for year which defendant did not prepare returns; and (2) failed to disclose<br />
prior tax returns for four of defendant&#8217;s clients. The first item would probably have changed the<br />
result of the trial, and the second group of items were exculpatory material evidence.<br />
United States v. David,<br />
70 F.3d 1280 (9th Cir. 1995) (unpublished)<br />
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New trial ordered where defendant had been convicted of operating a continuing criminal<br />
enterprise solely on the strength of testimony of two prisoners serving life sentences in the<br />
Philippines. Subsequent to the conviction, these two prisoners were released, and defendant<br />
discovered previously undisclosed evidence of a deal between the government and the two<br />
prisoners.<br />
United States v. O&#8217;Connor,<br />
64 F.3d 355 (8th Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 116 S.Ct. 1581 (1996)<br />
Brady violation occurring when government failed to inform defendant of threats by one<br />
government witness against another and attempts to influence second government witness&#8217;<br />
testimony was reversible error with respect to convictions on those substantive drug counts and<br />
conspiracy counts where testimony of those government witnesses provided only evidence;<br />
evidence of threats, combined with undisclosed statements from interview reports, could have<br />
caused jury to disbelieve government witnesses.<br />
United States v. Boyd,<br />
55 F.3d 239 (7th Cir. 1995)<br />
Trial court did not abuse discretion by granting new trial based on government&#8217;s failure to reveal<br />
to defense either drug use and dealing by prisoner witnesses during trial or &#8220;continuous stream of<br />
unlawful&#8221; favors prosecution gave those witnesses.<br />
*Banks v. Reynolds,<br />
54 F.3d 1508 (10th Cir. 1995)<br />
Habeas relief granted to capital murder petitioner where failure of prosecution to disclose to<br />
defendant that another individual had been arrested for the same crime violated defendant&#8217;s right<br />
to a fair trial. Relief is granted on the Brady claim despite possible knowledge by defense counsel<br />
of withheld material because &#8220;the prosecution&#8217;s obligation to turn over the evidence in the first<br />
instance stands independent of the defendant&#8217;s knowledge.&#8221;<br />
Smith v. Secretary of New Mexico Dept. of Corrections,<br />
50 F.3d 801 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S.Ct. 272 (1995)<br />
Habeas granted where material evidence relating to a third person/suspect was not disclosed,<br />
prosecutor&#8217;s lack of actual knowledge was irrelevant because police knew, and prosecution&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;open file&#8221; was not sufficient to discharge its duty under Brady.<br />
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United States v. Alzate,<br />
47 F.3d 1103 (11th Cir. 1995)<br />
Failure of prosecutor to correct representations he made to the jurywhich were damaging to<br />
defendant&#8217;s duress defense, despite having learned of their falsehood during the course of the<br />
trial, was Brady violation and required granting of new trial motion.<br />
United States v. Robinson,<br />
39 F.3d 1115 (10th Cir. 1994)<br />
District court did not abuse discretion in ordering new trial where, in violation of Brady,<br />
government failed to disclose evidence tending to identify former codefendant as drug courier;<br />
conviction was based largely on testimony of codefendants and defendant had strong alibi<br />
evidence.<br />
United States v. Kelly,<br />
35 F.3d 929 (4th Cir. 1994)<br />
Kidnapping conviction reversed where government failed to furnish an affidavit in support of an<br />
application for a warrant to search key witness&#8217;s house just before trial, and failed to disclose a<br />
letter written by same witness which would have seriously undermined her credibility.<br />
United States v. Young,<br />
17 F.3d 1201 (9th Cir. 1994)<br />
New trial granted where detective&#8217;s testimony regarding location of incriminating notebooks was<br />
false, regardless of whether government presented the evidence unwittingly. Reasonable<br />
probability existed that result would have been different absent the false testimony, which was<br />
highly prejudicial in light of government&#8217;s otherwise weak case.<br />
Demjanjuk v. Petrovsky,<br />
10 F.3d 338 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S.Ct. 295 (1994)<br />
Prosecutorial misconduct where government attorneys failed to disclose to petitioner and court<br />
exculpatory materials during denaturalization and extradition proceedings of alleged &#8220;Ivan the<br />
Terrible.&#8221; They acted with &#8220;reckless disregard.&#8221;<br />
United State v. Udechukwu,<br />
11 F.3d 1101 (1st Cir. 1993)<br />
New trial granted to remedy prosecutorial misconduct of failing to disclose salient information<br />
concerning defendant&#8217;s theory that she had been coerced into being a drug courier. Prosecutor<br />
argued during closing that there was no evidence to support defendant&#8217;s claim when in fact he<br />
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knew that source defendant named existed and was a prominent drug trafficker.<br />
United States v. Kalfayan,<br />
8 F.3d 1315 (9th Cir. 1993)<br />
Where defense counsel had made Brady request about whether key witness had signed<br />
cooperation agreement, and later request for missing witness instruction foundered because<br />
defense counsel did not know of the deal, Brady required government to disclose its<br />
existence.<br />
Ballinger v. Kerby,<br />
3 F.3d 1371 (10th Cir. 1993)<br />
Failure to produce exculpatory photograph, which would have undermined co-defendant&#8217;s<br />
already flimsy credibility, violated Due Process.<br />
United States v. Brumel-Alvarez,<br />
991 F.2d 1452 (9th Cir. 1993)<br />
Brady violation where government failed to disclose memo indicating that informant lied to<br />
DEA, had undue influence over DEA agents, and thwarted investigation of evidence crucial to<br />
his credibility.<br />
United States v. Kojayan,<br />
8 F.3d 1315 (9th Cir. 1992)<br />
Where government failed to disclose agreement with potential witness and later request for<br />
missing witness instruction was denied because counsel was unaware of the agreement, Brady<br />
required disclosure.<br />
United States v. Gregory,<br />
983 F.2d 1069 (6th Cir. 1992) (unpublished)<br />
Government suppressed audio from a videotape of marijuana plants being destroyed. The<br />
information in the audio would have significantly reduced defendant&#8217;s sentence. This was a<br />
Brady violation.<br />
Hudson v. Whitley,<br />
979 F.2d 1058 (5th Cir. 1992)<br />
Habeas petitioner, in fourth petition, claimed that state suppressed crucial evidence that its only<br />
eyewitness had originally identified a third party, and that third party had been arrested.<br />
Petitioner demonstrated &#8220;good cause&#8221; because state failed to disclose the info despite repeated<br />
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requests.<br />
Thomas v. Goldsmith,<br />
979 F.2d 746 (9th Cir. 1992)<br />
State obliged to turn over to petitioner any exculpatory semen evidence for use in federal habeas<br />
proceeding in which petitioner sought to overcome state procedural default through miscarriage<br />
of justice exception, for colorable showing of actual innocence, and duty was not extinguished by<br />
petitioner&#8217;s failure to argue existence of such obligation in district court; due to obvious<br />
exculpatory nature of semen evidence in sexual assault case, neither specific request nor claim of<br />
right by petitioner was required to trigger duty of disclosure.<br />
United States v. Brooks,<br />
966 F.2d 1500 (D.C. Cir. 1992)<br />
Prosecution&#8217;s Brady obligation extends to search of files in possession of police department and<br />
internal affairs division.<br />
United States v. Minsky,<br />
963 F.2d 870 (6th Cir. 1992)<br />
Government improperly refused to disclose statements of witness that he did not make at trial.<br />
Disclosure could have resulted in loss of credibility with jury based on false statements to FBI.<br />
United States v. Spagnoulo,<br />
960 F.2d 990 (11th Cir. 1992)<br />
New trial ordered on basis of Brady violation where prosecution failed to disclose results of a<br />
pre-trial psychiatric evaluation of defendant which would have fundamentally altered strategy<br />
and raised serious competency issue.<br />
Jacobs v. Singletary,<br />
952 F.2d 1282 (11th Cir. 1992)<br />
Brady violated where state failed to disclose statements of witness to polygraph examiner which<br />
contradicted her trial testimony.<br />
Brown v. Borg,<br />
951 F.2d 1011 (9th Cir. 1991)<br />
Brady violated where prosecutor knew her theory of the case was wrong but misled the jury to<br />
think the opposite was true through her presentation of testimony.<br />
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Jean v. Rice,<br />
945 F.2d 82 (4th Cir. 1991)<br />
Audio tapes and reports relating to hypnosis of rape victim and investigating officer were<br />
material under Brady, and should have been disclosed to defense where they had strong<br />
impeachment potential and could have altered case.<br />
Ouimette v. Moran,<br />
942 F.2d 1 (1st Cir. 1991)<br />
Due process violated by state&#8217;s failure to disclose long criminal record of, and deals with, state&#8217;s<br />
chief witness where evidence against petitioner came almost entirely from this witness.<br />
Campbell v. Henman,<br />
931 F.2d 1212 (7th Cir. 1991)<br />
Inmates do not forfeit right to exculpatory material before disciplinary proceeding simply<br />
because they forego option of assistance of staff representative who would have access to such<br />
material.<br />
United States v. Tincher,<br />
907 F.2d 600 (6th Cir. 1990)<br />
Prosecutor&#8217;s response to Jencks Act and Brady request was deliberate misrepresentation in light<br />
of knowledge of testimony of government agent before grand jury. Reversal was required since<br />
misconduct precluded review of the agent&#8217;s testimony by the district court.<br />
United States v. Wayne,<br />
903 F.2d 1188 (8th Cir. 1990)<br />
Government&#8217;s failure to disclose Brady material required new trial where drug transaction<br />
records would have aided cross-exam of key witness.<br />
United States v. Tincher,<br />
907 F.2d 600 (6th Cir. 1989)<br />
&#8220;Deliberate misrepresentation&#8221; where prosecutor withheld grand jury testimony of cop, after<br />
defense requested any Jencks Act or Brady material and prosecutor responded that none existed.<br />
Convictions reversed.<br />
Reutter v. Solem,<br />
888 F.2d 578 (8th Cir. 1989)<br />
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Prosecution&#8217;s failure to inform defense that key witness had applied for commutation and been<br />
scheduled to appear before parole board a few days after his testimony required habeas relief.<br />
Violation was compounded by prosecution&#8217;s statement to the jury that the witness had no<br />
possible reason to lie.<br />
United States v. Weintraub,<br />
871 F.2d 1257 (5th Cir. 1989)<br />
Impeachment evidence which was withheld would have allowed defendant to challenge evidence<br />
presented as to amount of narcotics sold, was material to sentencing and required remand for new<br />
sentencing hearing.<br />
McDowell v. Dixon,<br />
858 F.2d 945 (4th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1033 (1989)<br />
Black petitioner&#8217;s due process rights violated where state suppressed key witness&#8217;s initial<br />
statement that attacker was white and prosecutor added to the deception at trial by allowing<br />
witness to testify that she &#8220;had always described her attacker as a black man.&#8221;<br />
Jones v. City of Chicago,<br />
856 F.2d 985 (7th Cir. 1988) [Civil case]<br />
In successful § 1983 action against police officers by plaintiff who had been charged with murder,<br />
court notes that while Brady does not require police to keep written records of all their<br />
investigatory activities, attempts to circumvent the rule by keeping records in clandestine files<br />
deliberately concealed from prosecutors and defense, which contain exculpatory evidence, cannot<br />
be tolerated.<br />
United States v. Strifler,<br />
851 F.2d 1197 (9th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1032 (1989)<br />
Information in government witness&#8217; probation file was relevant to witness&#8217; credibility and should<br />
have been released as Brady material. Criminal record of witness could not be made unavailable<br />
by being part of probation file. District court&#8217;s failure to release these materials required reversal.<br />
Miller v. Angliker,<br />
848 F.2d 1312 (2nd Cir.), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 890 (1988)<br />
Habeas granted where state withheld evidence which indicated that another person had<br />
committed the crimes with which petitioner was charged. Same standard for Brady claim<br />
evaluation applies for defendant who pled not guilty by reason of insanity as for defendant who<br />
pled guilty.<br />
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Carter v. Rafferty,<br />
826 F.2d 1299 (3rd Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 1011 (1988)<br />
Lie detector reports of test given to important prosecution witness were material where witness&#8217;<br />
testimony was the only direct evidence placing petitioner at scene of crime. Fact that other<br />
contradictory statements of the witness had been disclosed did not remove the &#8220;materiality&#8221; of<br />
the lie detector results.<br />
*Bowen v. Maynard,<br />
799 F.2d 593 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 962 (1986)<br />
Violation where prosecution failed to disclose that they considered Crowe a suspect when Crowe<br />
better fit the description of eyewitnesses, was suspected by law enforcement in another state of<br />
being a hit man, and carried the same weapon and unusual ammunition used in the murders. This<br />
met even the strictest standard under Agurs.<br />
United States v. Severdija,<br />
790 F.2d 1556 (11th Cir. 1986)<br />
Written statement defendant made to coast guard boarding party should have been disclosed<br />
under Brady, and failure to disclose warranted new trial. The statement tended to negate the<br />
defendant&#8217;s intent, which was the critical issue before the jury.<br />
Brown v. Wainwright,<br />
785 F.2d 1457 (11th Cir. 1986)<br />
Habeas granted under Giglio where prosecution allowed its key witness to testify falsely, failed<br />
to correct the testimony, and exploited it in closing argument. Standard is whether false<br />
testimony could in any reasonable likelihood have affected the judgment of the jury.<br />
Lindsey v. King,<br />
769 F.2d 1034 (5th Cir. 1985)<br />
Brady violated where prosecution, after a specific request, suppressed initial statement of<br />
eyewitness to police in which he said he could not make an ID because he never saw the<br />
murderer&#8217;s face. His story changed after he found out there was a reward.<br />
United States v. Fairman,<br />
769 F.2d 386 (7th Cir. 1985)<br />
Prosecutor&#8217;s ignorance of existence of ballistic&#8217;s worksheet indicating gun defendant was accused<br />
of firing was inoperable does not excuse failure to disclose.<br />
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Walter v. Lockhart,<br />
763 F.2d 942 (8th Cir. 1985) (en banc), cert. denied, 478 U.S. 1020 (1986)<br />
State held, for over twenty years, a transcript of a conversation tending to exculpate petitioner<br />
insofar as it supported his claim that the cop shot at him first.<br />
United States v. Alexander,<br />
748 F.2d 185 (4th Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 472 U.S. 1027 (1985)<br />
Government&#8217;s equivocation in making critical factual representations to defense counsel and to<br />
district court regarding its possession of Brady materials requested in connection with new trial<br />
motion fatally compromised integrity of proceedings on the motion so that district court&#8217;s denial<br />
of the motion could not stand.<br />
*Chaney v. Brown,<br />
730 F.2d 1334 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1090 (1984)<br />
Conviction affirmed but death sentence reversed where evidence, admissible under Eddings,<br />
which contradicted prosecution&#8217;s theory of the murder and placed petitioner 110 miles from the<br />
scene, was withheld by prosecution.<br />
United States v. Holmes,<br />
722 F.2d 37 (3rd Cir. 1983)<br />
District court abused its discretion by denying defendant&#8217;s request for adjournment to permit<br />
counsel to complete examination of Jencks Act material, which was a stack of paper at least eight<br />
inches thick provided on the morning of the day before trial.<br />
Anderson v. State of South Carolina,<br />
709 F.2d 887 (4th Cir. 1983)<br />
Habeas relief granted where prosecution withheld police reports despite general and specific<br />
requests from defense counsel, and failed to furnish autopsy reports upon counsel&#8217;s request.<br />
There is no general &#8220;public records&#8221; exception to the Brady rule.<br />
United States v. Muse,<br />
708 F.2d 513 (10th Cir. 1983)<br />
Prosecutor must produce Brady material in personnel files of government agents even if they are<br />
in possession of another agency.<br />
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Chavis v. North Carolina,<br />
637 F.2d 213 (4th Cir. 1980)<br />
Habeas relief granted where prosecution suppressed an amended statement by a key witness,<br />
information concerning the witness&#8217;s favorable treatment by authorities, and records of the<br />
witness&#8217;s mental deficiencies.<br />
United States v. Auten,<br />
632 F.2d 478 (5th Cir. 1980)<br />
Prosecutor&#8217;s lack of knowledge of witness&#8217;s criminal record was no excuse for Brady violation.<br />
Martinez v. Wainwright,<br />
621 F.2d 184 (5th Cir. 1980)<br />
In homicide prosecution, deceased&#8217;s rap sheet, which prosecution failed to provide to defense<br />
pursuant to defense request, was “material” within meaning of Brady to the extent it served to<br />
corroborate petitioner’s testimony with respect to shooting incident. That the rap sheet was in<br />
possession of the medical examiner, not the prosecutor, did not defeat the claim.<br />
DuBose v. Lefevre,<br />
619 F.2d 973 (2nd Cir. 1980)<br />
Habeas relief granted where state encouraged witness to believe that favorable testimony would<br />
result in leniency toward the witness. Failure to disclose was not justified by fact that promise of<br />
state had not taken a specific form. Questions about a deal arose during examination of the<br />
witness, but nothing about the deal was disclosed.<br />
United States v. Gaston,<br />
608 F.2d 607 (5th Cir. 1979)<br />
Reversed where trial court failed to conduct an in camera review of Brady material despite<br />
defendant&#8217;s request for specific documents relating to interviews of two named witnesses, no<br />
evidentiary hearing was conducted, nor were the documents produced. The reports were sought<br />
not only for impeachment, but for substantive exculpatory use.<br />
Monroe v. Blackburn,<br />
607 F.2d 148 (5th Cir. 1979)<br />
Habeas relief granted in armed robbery case where, despite specific request by petitioner,<br />
prosecutor withheld a statement given by the victim to police which could have been useful in<br />
attacking victim&#8217;s testimony at trial. Because the request was specific, the standard of review was<br />
&#8220;no reasonable likelihood that evidence would have affected judgment of the jury.&#8221;<br />
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United States v. Antone,<br />
603 F.2d 566 (5th Cir. 1979), cert. denied, 446 U.S. 957 (1980)<br />
For Brady analysis, no distinction is drawn between different agencies under the same<br />
government &#8212; all are part of the &#8220;prosecution team.&#8221;<br />
Campbell v. Reed,<br />
594 F.2d 4 (4th Cir. 1979)<br />
Where co-defendant denied existence of agreement with prosecution during testimony,<br />
prosecution had a duty to correct. Jury was entitled to know about it and prosecution&#8217;s deliberate<br />
deception was fundamentally unjust.<br />
United States v. Herberman,<br />
583 F.2d 222 (5th Cir. 1978)<br />
Testimony presented to grand jury contradicting testimony of government witnesses was Brady<br />
material subject to disclosure to the defense.<br />
United States v. Beasley,<br />
576 F.2d 626 (5th Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 440 U.S. 947 (1979)<br />
Conviction reversed due to failure of government to timely produce statement of key prosecution<br />
witness where not only was the witness critical to the conviction, but defense and prosecution<br />
argued his credibility at length, and the statement at issue differed from witness&#8217; trial testimony in<br />
many significant ways.<br />
Jones v. Jago,<br />
575 F.2d 1164 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 883 (1978)<br />
Habeas granted under Brady and Agurs where state withheld, despite defense request, a statement<br />
from coindictee who, prior to trial, had been declared material witness for prosecution, and<br />
against whom all charges were then dropped. State&#8217;s claim that witness&#8217; statement made no<br />
express reference to petitioner and was therefore neutral was unsuccessful.<br />
United States v. Butler,<br />
567 F.2d 885 (9th Cir. 1978)<br />
New trial required where government failed to disclose whether the witness had been promised a<br />
dismissal of the charges against him, and the witness testified falsely in this regard. The standard<br />
is whether the false testimony could in any reasonable likelihood have affected the judgment of<br />
the jury.<br />
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Annunziato v. Manson,<br />
566 F.2d 410 (2nd Cir. 1977)<br />
Habeas granted where one of two key prosecution witnesses testified falsely that he received no<br />
promise of leniency when in fact he had made a deal to avoid prison on pending charges, and<br />
prosecutor knew or should have known of this fact.<br />
United States v. Sutton,<br />
542 F.2d 1239 (4th Cir. 1976)<br />
Reversed where prosecutor concealed evidence that keyprosecution witness was coerced into<br />
testifying against defendant, and then went on to falsely assure the jury that no one had<br />
threatened the witness.<br />
Boone v. Paderick,<br />
541 F.2d 447 (4th Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 430 U.S. 959 (1977)<br />
Petitioner prejudiced where prosecutor failed to disclose deal with accomplice/witness for<br />
leniency. Prosecutor knew or should have known that false evidence was being presented where<br />
witness denied deal at trial.<br />
Norris v. Slayton,<br />
540 F.2d 1241 (4th Cir. 1976)<br />
Habeas granted where state failed to furnish to rape defendant&#8217;s counsel copy of lab report<br />
showing no hair or fiber evidence in petitioner&#8217;s undershorts or in victim&#8217;s bed.<br />
United States v. Pope,<br />
529 F.2d 112 (9th Cir. 1976)<br />
Conviction reversed where prosecution failed to disclose plea bargain with key witness in<br />
exchange for testimony and compounded the violation by arguing to the jury that the witness had<br />
no reason to lie.<br />
Washington v. Vincent,<br />
525 F.2d 262 (2nd Cir. 1975), cert. denied, 424 U.S. 934 (1976)<br />
Habeas relief granted where key prosecution witness lied about his deal with the state, and<br />
prosecutor took no action to correct what he knew was false testimony. Petitioner was entitled to<br />
relief despite the fact that there was evidence that petitioner and his counsel knew of the perjury<br />
as it happened but took no steps to object.<br />
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United States v. Gerard,<br />
491 F.2d 1300 (9th Cir. 1974)<br />
Convictions reversed where defendants were deprived of all evidence of promise of leniencyby<br />
prosecutor, and prosecutor failed to disclose that witness was in other trouble, thereby giving him<br />
even greater incentive to lie.<br />
United States v. Deutsch,<br />
475 F.2d 55 (5th Cir. 1973), overruled on other grounds, United States v. Henry, 749 F.2d<br />
203 (5th Cir. 1984)<br />
Prosecution found to be in possession of information which was in the files of the Postal Service.<br />
Availability of information is not measured by how difficult it is to get, but simply whether it is<br />
in possession of some arm of the state.<br />
United States ex. rel. Raymond v. Illinois,<br />
455 F.2d 62 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 409 U.S. 885 (1972)<br />
Defendant entitled to new trial even though exculpatory evidence had been revealed to defendant<br />
himself, but not to defense counsel.<br />
Jackson v. Wainwright,<br />
390 F.2d 288 (5th Cir. 1968)<br />
In racial misidentification case, failure of prosecutor to reveal misidentification requires habeas<br />
relief even though defense counsel had name and address of the witness.<br />
Barbee v. Warden,<br />
331 F.2d 842 (4th Cir. 1964)<br />
In A.W.I.K. and unauthorized use of automobile case, wherein defendant&#8217;s gun was offered for<br />
ID purposes only and several witnesses made partial ID of gun as being used in shooting, reports<br />
of ballistics and fingerprint tests made by police, which tended to show that different gun was<br />
used and to exculpate defendant, were relevant and prosecution should have disclosed their<br />
existence.<br />
*United States ex rel. Thompson v. Dye,<br />
221 F.2d 763 (3rd Cir.), cert. denied, 350 U.S. 815 (1955)<br />
Habeas relief granted where state failed to inform defense counsel that arresting officer smelled<br />
alcohol on petitioner at the time of arrest. Absent state&#8217;s deceit, jury may have believed<br />
defendant&#8217;s physical and mental state evidence.<br />
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III. UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTS<br />
Floyd v. Vannoy,<br />
2017 WL 1837676 (E.D. La., May 8, 2017), warden’s appeal pending, (5th Cir. 17-30421)<br />
In post-AEPDA second degree murder case, district court grants habeas corpus relief on Brady<br />
claim. Petitioner Floyd was charged with two murders of homosexual men, and he had confessed<br />
to both crimes, but after a bench trial the court found Floyd guilty only of one of the murders<br />
because the evidence showed that the other had been committed by a black man with Type A<br />
blood; Floyd is white with Type B blood. 2017 WL 1837676 at *3. The Louisiana Supreme Court<br />
did not cite Brady in denying Floyd’s claim that material exculpatory evidence had been<br />
suppressed. The district court finds that the state court’s denial of Floyd’s Brady claim was an<br />
unreasonable application of federal law because among the suppressed items were test results for<br />
fingerprints located in one of the victims’ hotel room and in his car that indicated that the prints<br />
were NOT Floyd’s and not the victim’s, but a third party’s, “an obvious alternative suspect that the<br />
defense may point to as the true killer.” 2017 WL 1837676 at *9. The district court considers this<br />
evidence material, even though Floyd was in fact acquitted of the murder of that victim, because<br />
Floyd’s confession to that victim’s homicide was very similar to his confession to the homicide of<br />
the other victim, there was no physical evidence linking Floyd to either crime, there were<br />
fingerprints of a third party found at the scene involving the other victim, Floyd had been drinking<br />
when he made his confessions, the interrogating officers beat him, and Floyd was susceptible to<br />
coercion. The similarity of the two murders also suggests that one person committed both crimes.<br />
“Evidence tending to show that an unknown third party—and not Floyd—killed [one victim]<br />
therefore also points to the same unknown third party—and not Floyd—as [the other victim’s]<br />
killer.” 2017 WL 1837676 at *11. The district court also finds that a statement that a witness<br />
provided to a detective but not disclosed to the defense was favorable and material—the detective<br />
reported that the witness said that one of the victims had sex with both black and white men, but<br />
the witness actually said the victim had sex with black men, and did not mention white men. This<br />
information was favorable because it suggested that the killer was black and because it impeached<br />
the detective’s testimony that the victim had sex with black and white men. “Considering the full<br />
trial record, the Court finds that the withheld fingerprint results are—standing on their own—<br />
material to Floyd’s guilt, and that no reasonable application of clearly established federal law could<br />
support a contrary conclusion. Even if the prints alone were not enough, [the witness’s] statement<br />
to [the detective] provides additional exculpatory evidence.” 2017 WL 1837676 at *16.<br />
United States v. McClellon,<br />
___ F.Supp.3d ___, 2017 WL 2115681 (S.D. Mich, May 16, 2017), appeal dismissed, 2017 WL<br />
4317149 (6th Cir. 2017)<br />
District court grants McClellon’s motion for new trial following a conviction for felon in<br />
possession of a firearm and possession of a stolen firearm, where prosecution failed to disclose that<br />
officer who testified against him (and was the prosecution’s principal witness) was suspended by<br />
the Detroit Police Department the day after he testified against McClellon pending investigation<br />
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into charges that the officer made false reports of felony charges for weapons possession, and that<br />
the officer was criminally charged for this misconduct. McClellon’s attorney learned about the<br />
charges and asked the government’s attorney for “Giglio materials” and the government’s attorney<br />
informed counsel that the officer’s disciplinary records were clear, but the government’s attorney<br />
later learned that pending internal disciplinary investigations were confidential, so he had not been<br />
informed of the investigation against the officer. The court holds that although the government’s<br />
attorney “cannot be faulted here for nondisclosure,” because he did not actively suppress the<br />
information against the officer, nevertheless, the government’s attorney had a duty to learn of any<br />
favorable evidence, and the officer himself clearly knew that he had been suspended with<br />
investigation into his misconduct, and this information is imputed to the prosecutor. The withheld<br />
information about the officer was favorable to McClellon because it impeached the testifying<br />
officer’s credibility. The information was material, because the officer had testified at McClellon’s<br />
trial that he had pursued McClellon on foot during which he saw a handgun tucked into<br />
McClellon’s waistband and the officer was the only one who testified that he saw McClellon pull<br />
out the gun and toss it away. The officer’s “testimony is the only basis that clearly connected the<br />
dots between . . . circumstances to make an unassailable presentation,” and “[i]f that testimony is<br />
placed in serious doubt, then the case is put into a much different light.” 2017 WL 2115681 at *3.<br />
Although there was other evidence to support a conviction, “sufficiency of the evidence” is not the<br />
touchstone. Id. at *4 (quoting Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 435 n.8 (1995)).<br />
Castellanos v. Kirkpatrick<br />
2017 WL 2817048 (E.D.N.Y., June 29, 2017), warden’s appeal pending, (2nd Cir. 17-2341)<br />
In post-AEDPA case involving conviction for committing a criminal sexual act in the first degree<br />
and sexual abuse in the first degree, district court grants habeas relief on Brady claim. Following<br />
Castellanos’s conviction, the defense obtained materials related to the interrogating officer who<br />
obtained Castellanos’s confession, including documents containing information that the officer had<br />
obtained a confession in another case from a suspect in which a different individual later confessed<br />
to the crime, and the officer’s internal affairs tracking sheet showing that the officer had been<br />
investigated on six different occasions. The state court denied relief on the grounds that defense<br />
counsel obtained some of the information about the officer independently from another case file,<br />
therefore it was not suppressed, and that the information was irrelevant because Castellanos did not<br />
allege that the officer physically mistreated him in order to secure the confession. The state court’s<br />
decision was an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law. In an earlier order, the<br />
district court had determined that Castellanos met the first and second prong of Brady (suppression<br />
and favorability) but had not had sufficient facts to determine materiality/prejudice. In the instant<br />
opinion, the district court bases the materiality conclusion on its in camera review of the<br />
suppressed documents, as well as the officer’s personnel file. The court concludes that trial<br />
counsel could have impeached the testimony of the officer with his prior bad acts contained in the<br />
materials, and also that the withheld documents were relevant to the defense theory that the<br />
confession was false. The fact that trial counsel may have had information about the officer’s<br />
misconduct from another case (a fact that counsel denied) did not defeat Castellanos’s claim<br />
because there were additional withheld documents that also strengthened the inference of the<br />
defense theory that the confession was false. The suppression of the documents related to the<br />
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officer’s history for coercing and falsifying confessions was prejudicial to Castellanos because they<br />
could have been used to attack the validity of Castellanos’s confession. The six-year-old alleged<br />
victim’s statements and unsworn testimony alleging that Castellanos sexually abused him were<br />
insufficient alone to support the conviction, the medical findings did not establish that Castellanos<br />
sexually abused the child, and the only remaining evidence was Castellanos’s confession.<br />
Williams v. Williams,<br />
232 F.Supp.3d 1318 (S.D. Ga. 2017), warden’s appeal pending (11th Cir. 17-10988)<br />
Adopting Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation to grant habeas relief on Brady/Giglio<br />
claims in case involving, inter alia, felony-murder committed by two assailants. At trial,<br />
Williams’s co-defendant was identified as one of the shooters by three eyewitnesses, none of<br />
whom identified Williams as the second shooter. There was additional testimony, however,<br />
concerning a prior identification of Williams made through a photo lineup by one of these<br />
eyewitnesses – Fitzgerald. There was also testimony about Fitzgerald’s fear of telling authorities<br />
what had happened and intimidation of Fitzgerald by Williams. Although Fitzgerald had a<br />
pending drug and firearm case, he denied that he had received a plea offer in exchange for his<br />
testimony. Undisclosed to the defense was the fact that the prosecutor had told Fitzgerald that if he<br />
testified against Williams, she would inform the ADA in the drug/firearm case of Fitzgerald’s<br />
cooperation and the ADA could consider that in making a plea offer to him. Following Williams’s<br />
conviction, the prosecutor made good on her promise. She sent an email to the ADA in charge of<br />
Fitzgerald’s prosecution asking her to take into consideration Fitzgerald’s testimony in Williams’s<br />
case, which was given in spite of threats against him, and informing the ADA that she “didn’t think<br />
there would have been a conviction against Williams had [Fitzgerald] not testified.” In subsequent<br />
dealings with Fitzgerald’s defense attorney, the ADA expressly referenced Fitzgerald’s<br />
cooperation in Williams’s prosecution when providing favorable offers on Fitzgerald’s case. The<br />
failure of Williams’s prosecutor to disclose the promise she had made with Fitzgerald and to<br />
correct his false testimony about the absence of an incentive to testify violated Brady and Giglio.<br />
The state court’s finding of no deal and no materiality was unreasonable. The prosecutor’s failure<br />
to disclose the “leniency incentive” she provided to Fitzgerald undermines confidence in the<br />
verdict even though some other circumstantial evidence linking Williams to the shooting existed.<br />
Alvarado v. Warden, Ohio State Penitentiary<br />
2017 WL 878686 (N.D. Ohio, Feb. 7, 2017), adopting R&amp;R, 2017 WL 843997 (N.D. Ohio,<br />
March 3, 2017)<br />
Magistrate recommends that Alvarado’s motion to stay his mixed petition be granted under Rhines<br />
v. Weber, 544 U.S. 269, 275 (2005), in order for him to exhaust his Brady and Giglio claims in<br />
state court. Alvarado was convicted of murder in state court in Ohio and sentenced to 15 years to<br />
life. Alvarado demonstrated good cause for his failure to exhaust the claim in state court prior to<br />
filing his federal habeas petition because the basis for his Brady claim is primarily the recantation<br />
affidavit of a witness who at trial identified Alvarado as the person who killed a victim during a bar<br />
fight, but in his affidavit, obtained two years after conviction, indicated that the prosecution told<br />
him who to identify (coached him and persuaded him to lie on the stand) and promised him<br />
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leniency in his own case in exchange. Although recantation affidavits are viewed with skepticism,<br />
this witness was the key witness against Alvarado, and the court cannot say that the Brady and<br />
Giglio claims are plainly meritless. There is no evidence that Alvarado has engaged in dilatory<br />
tactics because he filed his petition one month after the witness executed his recantation affidavit.<br />
Garcia v. Hudak et al.<br />
156 F. Supp. 3d 907 (N.D. Ill. 2016)<br />
Plaintiff’s conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to deliver was reversed and plaintiff<br />
brought action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that defendant officers violated his right to due<br />
process by failing to disclose material, exculpatory evidence before he pleaded guilty. District<br />
court holds that plaintiff stated a claim under Brady because he alleged that the state suppressed<br />
evidence that the officers had fabricated the evidence used to prosecute him (they planted drugs on<br />
him), and this evidence was favorable to him because it demonstrated his innocence—that he was<br />
not in possession of narcotics when he was arrested. “The Individual Defendants did not falsely<br />
testify about the facts in the criminal matter. Instead, they fabricated a new reality—one in which<br />
Plaintiff possessed narcotics with the intent to distribute them—and then testified accordingly.<br />
This alleged behavior deprived Plaintiff of his right to receive Brady material and consequently,<br />
the Individual Defendants are not entitled to absolute immunity for their role as witnesses in<br />
Plaintiff’s criminal case.” 156 F. Supp. 3d at 917.<br />
Bailey v. Lafler<br />
209 F. Supp. 3d 955 (W.D. Mich. 2016), cross-appeals pending, (6th Cir. 16-2474 &amp; 16-2429)<br />
In post-AEDPA murder case, district court grants habeas relief on Brady claim. Petitioner Bailey<br />
was charged with first-degree premeditated murder and first degree felony murder arising from<br />
killing of 79-year old woman. An FBI profile report was prepared linking this murder with a<br />
murder that occurred years earlier, concluding that one individual was likely responsible for both<br />
because of “signature” similarities between the crimes, including that both victims were elderly,<br />
white females who lived alone in the same general area of a small town and left the door unlocked;<br />
both suffered multiple stab wounds and fractures; both had an electrical cord around the neck or<br />
head that did not appear to cause death or injury; the murder weapons were from the victims’<br />
homes; no apparent theft motive in either case; no evidence of sexual assault of either. Bailey<br />
sought to introduce the report to demonstrate that he was not likely the perpetrator of either<br />
murder, as he had been only 10 years old at the time of the earlier murder, but the trial court<br />
excluded the report and all references to the earlier murder. On appeal, the state argued that the<br />
excluded profile report was not exculpatory and in fact supported a conclusion that Bailey was<br />
responsible for both murders, including the one that occurred when he was 10. But the prosecution<br />
possessed, and failed to disclose, information that latent prints at the earlier murder scene excluded<br />
Bailey as the perpetrator. The state court’s decision that the suppressed fingerprint report from the<br />
earlier murder was irrelevant and the connection between it and the crime for which Bailey was<br />
convicted is speculative is based on an unreasonable determination of the facts and contrary to<br />
clearly established federal law. A Brady analysis requires the court to analyze whether the<br />
withheld evidence puts the whole case, not part of a case, in a different light. Here, the fingerprint<br />
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analysis and the FBI profile reports together are directly exculpatory as to both murders, because<br />
together, they lead to the conclusion that a third person—not Bailey—is likely responsible for both.<br />
The suppression of the fingerprint evidence denied Bailey a meaningful opportunity to present a<br />
complete defense. The prosecution’s case was based largely on circumstantial evidence that was<br />
not cumulatively strong.<br />
*Sears v. Chatman<br />
2016 WL 1417818 (N.D. Ga., Apr. 8, 2016) (unpublished)<br />
District court finds that Sears has established cause and prejudice to overcome procedural bars to<br />
merits consideration of his Brady claim. Sears was convicted by a Georgia jury of capital murder,<br />
kidnapping with bodily injury, and armed robbery in connection with the death of victim Wilbur,<br />
and sentenced to death. While Sears’ federal habeas corpus petition was pending, the U.S.<br />
Supreme Court granted cert from the denial of state habeas corpus relief, vacated the state habeas<br />
court ruling, and remanded for further proceedings. The state court once again denied relief,<br />
finding Sears’ Brady claim procedurally defaulted. Sears concedes that the claim is defaulted but<br />
argues there is cause for the default and he will suffer prejudice if the court does not excuse it. The<br />
prosecution knew but did not disclose that the primary witness against Sears, Williams, had been<br />
convicted of battery for a premeditated assault while incarcerated, despite Sears’ repeated requests<br />
for Williams’ criminal history. Because Sears was entitled to rely upon the prosecution’s “open<br />
file policy” to conclude that no more adverse information about Williams existed, and because the<br />
suppressed records may have allowed Sears to undermine Williams’ testimony that Sears initiated<br />
the kidnapping that resulted in the murder, and may have discredited testimony of an officer that<br />
Sears rather than Williams was the worst inmate at the detention center, cause and prejudice is<br />
established. Court permits Sears to proceed in federal habeas on this claim.<br />
United States v. Hampton<br />
109 F. Supp. 3d 431 (D. Mass. 2015), appeal dismissed (1st Cir. 15-1836, Jan. 20, 2016)<br />
Hampton pleaded guilty to one count of knowingly and intentionally conspiring to distribute 50 or<br />
more grams of cocaine base. Before the plea hearing, the government provided him with<br />
certificates of analysis reflecting that the substances recovered from controlled purchases in which<br />
he was involved contained cocaine base. At the plea hearing, Hampton did not plead to any<br />
particular transaction or amount of cocaine base; at sentencing, based on an agreement with the<br />
prosecution, he was sentenced to the mandatory minimum of 10 years followed by 60 months of<br />
supervised release, based on the government’s calculation that the substance attributable to<br />
Hampton exceeded 280 grams. The lab chemist, Annie Dookhan, who tested 14 of 18 samples of<br />
the drugs seized from Hampton, was discovered to have taken evidence from a safe, removed drug<br />
samples from the lab, and forged a coworker’s initials on an evidence log, and after she went on<br />
administrative leave she was charged and pled guilty to crimes including perjury, obstruction of<br />
justice, tampering with evidence, and falsely claiming to hold a degree. Following Hampton’s<br />
conviction, he filed a petition to vacate his sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, requesting relief<br />
because the prosecutor’s failure to disclose Dookhan’s misconduct violated Brady and made his<br />
sentencing inherently unreliable. Although other cases involving guilty pleas and Dookhan’s<br />
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misconduct have not resulted in vacation of the plea, in this case, “Hampton’s habeas petition is<br />
not about his own behavior in making a plea but is about the actual evidentiary basis provided by<br />
the government for the imposition of a mandatory minimum” sentence. 109 F. Supp. 3d at 437.<br />
Although there is no evidence that Dookhan tampered with evidence in Hampton’s case, the fact<br />
that the trial judge reluctantly imposed the sentence based on the mandatory minimum<br />
corresponding to 280 grams (and mandatory minimums are now unconstitutional) demonstrates<br />
that there is a reasonable probability that if the judge had known of the Dookhan scandal, the<br />
outcome of sentencing would have been different. The court determined that it is reasonable to<br />
“infer that, in the unique circumstances of this unusual case, [that] Dookhan was a member of the<br />
prosecution team” “in light of the government’s refusal to confront the issue by way of evidence or<br />
even briefing.” 109 F. Supp. 3d at 440. (The court made this determination because when it asked<br />
the government to retest and see whether the 280 grams was actually the correct weight, the<br />
government refused.)<br />
United States v. Christian<br />
2015 WL 13228001 (E.D.N.Y., Dec. 18, 2015)<br />
District court orders disclosure of materials that are potentially discoverable under Brady to the<br />
court for in camera review. Christian was convicted of racketeering crimes, include the murder of<br />
victim Estella, based in part through testimony of cooperating witnesses. Christian had repeatedly<br />
requested intelligence records from the NYPD and FBI suggesting that the victim was killed at the<br />
instruction of the Wu Tang Clan, a noted rap music group, rather than by order of Christian and his<br />
racketeering organization. The court concludes that no documents provided at trial demonstrated<br />
this, but that by way of a 1999 FBI report that defendant received in response to a FOIA request,<br />
the defense has made sufficient showing that there may be material in the broader investigative<br />
files that was not previously disclosed that show that the murder was at the direction of people not<br />
related to Christian’s criminal enterprise. The government seeks to avoid disclosure by arguing<br />
that the defense has not sufficiently identified materials it seeks, and the court, in balancing<br />
interests, orders the government “to conduct a comprehensive review of relevant files under its<br />
control and submit for the Court’s in camera review material relating to reported connected<br />
between the Wu Tang Clan and [the cooperating witnesses] with respect to their actions in<br />
targeting either [the victim in another case] or Estella with the Wu Tang Clan.” 2015 WL 1322800<br />
at *4.<br />
United States v. Beech<br />
307 F.R.D. 437 (W.D. Pa. 2015)<br />
This discovery order includes helpful language about the timing of disclosure of Brady material in<br />
federal cases:<br />
[C]ases by the Third Circuit have reiterated and encouraged adherence to the long-standing<br />
policy of promoting the early production of all types of Brady material, including<br />
impeachment and so-called Higgs [United States v. Higgs, 713 F.2d 39 (3d Cir. 1983)]<br />
materials. [Citations omitted.] The government’s early production of Higgs-type<br />
impeachment materials may well overlap with its subsequent production under the Jencks<br />
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Act and provide defendant with ‘advanced’ notice of certain witnesses the government<br />
intends to use at trial. Nevertheless, the court notes that after disclosure is made defense<br />
counsel can more fully advise his client regarding the appropriate development of the case,<br />
including consideration of any plea agreement offered by the government. In light of all of<br />
the circumstances, the government is encouraged to disclose all Brady impeachment<br />
material without further delay, and in any event it will be ordered to produce all such<br />
material no later than ten business days prior to trial. 307 F.R.D. at 442.<br />
Johnson v. Han et al.<br />
2015 WL 4397360 (D. Mass., July 17, 2015) (unpublished)<br />
District court denies defendant-lab chemist supervisor’s motion to dismiss plaintiff-defendant’s §<br />
1983 claim that she permitted her staff to fail to disclose exculpatory test results. Court holds that<br />
the state-employed lab chemists were members of the prosecution team with respect to the tests<br />
they conducted in Johnson’s criminal case and that a supervisor of the offending chemists may be<br />
liable for failing to disclose Brady materials.<br />
Caminata v. County of Wexford<br />
2015 WL 6472645 (W.D. Mich., Oct. 27, 2015) (unpublished)<br />
District court denies defendant-officers’ motions for summary judgment on plaintiff-exoneree’s §<br />
1983 lawsuit based on their suppression of material exculpatory evidence demonstrating that<br />
exoneree was not responsible for setting a fire that destroyed his girlfriend’s home (arson of a<br />
dwelling house). Evidence alleged to have been withheld included missing photographs that<br />
“clearly contradicted [prosecution expert’s] theory that a board covered a thimble hole at the time<br />
of the fire” and that the investigating officers were aware that the photographs directly contradicted<br />
the validity of the prosecution expert’s reconstruction of the location of the fire and cause thereof.<br />
United States v. Jones<br />
2015 WL 6872358 (W.D.N.Y., Nov. 9, 2015) (unpublished)<br />
This discovery order includes helpful language about the timing of disclosure of Brady/Jencks<br />
materials in federal cases:<br />
This Court believes that fundamental fairness and the constitutional due process<br />
requirements which underlie Brady mandate that the Court have some discretion with<br />
respect to the timing of the disclosure of such information, even if it may be considered<br />
combined Brady/Jencks material. Indeed, even with respect to purely Jencks Act materials,<br />
the Second Circuit has stated that “pretrial disclosure will redound to the benefit of all<br />
parties, counsel and the court, . . . sound trial management would seem to dictate that<br />
Jencks Act material should be submitted prior to trial . . . so that those abhorrent lengthy<br />
pauses at trial to examine documents can be avoided.” U.S. v. Percevault, 490 F.3d 126 (2d<br />
Cir. 1974); U.S. v. Green, 144 F.R.D. 631 (W.D.N.Y. 1992).<br />
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Here, the Court concludes that disclosure of such inculpatory [sic] and impeachment<br />
material, if any exists, in accordance with the common practice in this district (prior to trial<br />
so long as it is disclosed in sufficient time for the defendants to have a fair opportunity to<br />
utilize the information at trial) is sufficient. 2015 WL 6872358 at *2.<br />
Robinson v. Morrow<br />
2015 WL 5773422 (M.D. Tenn., Sept. 30, 2015) (unpublished)<br />
District court grants summary judgment and relief on Robinson’s claim in his 28 U.S.C. § 2254<br />
habeas corpus petition that the prosecution violated Brady when it withheld evidence in connection<br />
with DNA testing conducted on the knife used to kill the victim. Robinson was convicted of firstdegree premeditated murder in Tennessee and sentenced to life in prison. He presented a defense<br />
at trial that although he did stab the victim and inflict the fatal wounds, he did not intend to kill her<br />
and stabbed her after she cut him with the knife first. After rejecting other claims procedurally<br />
defaulted by the state court, the district court addresses the Brady claim as a claim “that arise[s]<br />
from facts learned through discovery in this action,” and which the court holds is not defaulted.<br />
(Later in the opinion, the court notes that Robinson has established cause and prejudice for not<br />
raising the claim in state court—the cause was the suppression, and prejudice is that the suppressed<br />
evidence was favorable and material, satisfying the elements of the Brady claim itself and also<br />
overcoming the statute of limitations and procedural default.) Prior to trial, the prosecution sent<br />
the butcher knife for DNA testing, but the prosecution provided no specific instructions for the<br />
testing, and the analyst assumed the purpose of the testing was to determine whether the butcher<br />
knife was used to stab the victim. She tested only one small spot on the knife, away from the<br />
cutting edge, and determined that the spot contained the victim’s blood. Had she known that it was<br />
important to test for the defendant’s blood as well, she would have tested more areas on the knife.<br />
The report disclosed to Robinson at trial stated only that the blood tested matched the victim’s; it<br />
did not also include the information that only one spot was tested and that it was not on the cutting<br />
edge of the knife. At trial, the prosecution’s theory was that Robinson’s claim that the victim had<br />
cut him was false and that instead he had cut himself with another knife after cutting the victim.<br />
The prosecutor argued that Robinson’s blood was not on the butcher knife. After Robinson’s<br />
conviction, during proceedings on his federal habeas corpus petition, the federal court granted<br />
discovery and Robinson obtained the documentation stating that only one spot on the knife was<br />
tested. The federal court granted Robinson’s motion to conduct further DNA testing, which proved<br />
that Robinson’s blood was on the tip of the knife on both sides, mixed with the victim’s blood, and<br />
was the major contributor of DNA on one side of the knife tip. The evidence was suppressed<br />
because the analyst knew that only one spot was tested and that knowledge is imputed to the<br />
prosecutor. Robinson properly relied on the prosecutor’s express statement that there was no<br />
exculpatory evidence that had not been disclosed, and was not required to request or conduct<br />
additional testing on the knife with the limited information provided to him. The withheld<br />
evidence was favorable because it both impeached the testimony of the analyst by calling into<br />
question the thoroughness of her analysis and because it undercut the prosecution’s theory that<br />
Robinson lied about being attacked by the victim. It was material because it undercut the<br />
erroneous construction of the DNA report as proof that Robinson’s blood was not on the knife,<br />
which “was one of the lynchpins of the prosecutor’s premeditation theory at trial and was an<br />
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important factor in the state court decisions that followed.” 2015 WL 5773422 at *25.<br />
United States v. Blankenship<br />
2015 WL 3687864 (S.D. W.Va., July 12, 2015) (unpublished)<br />
In this discovery order, district court finds that government “does not comply with the requirement<br />
of Brady by merely including all known Brady material within the four million plus pages of<br />
discovery” and orders the government to “specifically designate any known Brady material as such<br />
and disclose the same to defense counsel.” 2015 WL 3687864 at *6.<br />
*Washington v. Beard,<br />
2015 WL 234719 (E.D. Penn., Jan. 16, 2015), appeal withdrawn, (3rd Cir. 15-99001, Dec. 1,<br />
2015)<br />
This capital habeas petitioner was entitled to relief on a Brady claim, and on grounds that the<br />
prosecutor’s improper argument violated Bruton v. United States, 391 U.S. 123 (1968). Petitioner<br />
was convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of an unarmed security guard who was shot<br />
and killed during an armed robbery at a Save-A-Lot store in Philadelphia. Witnesses to the crime<br />
recounted that two men came into the store and purchased a bag of potato chips; one of the men<br />
pulled out a gun and demanded money; and then the two assailants ran away followed by the<br />
security guard. Witnesses heard shots fired outside but did not witness the shooting. Two<br />
witnesses positively identified petitioner’s co-defendant, Derek Teagle, as the robber with the gun.<br />
Teagle’s fingerprints were also found on the bag of potato chips left on the counter. Teagle gave a<br />
statement to law enforcement in which he implicated petitioner as the other robber and suggested<br />
that petitioner was the shooter. Neither petitioner nor Teagle testified at their joint trial. Over<br />
petitioner’s objection, Teagle’s statement was read into evidence and petitioner’s name was<br />
replaced with the word “Blank.” The trial court instructed the jury not to use this statement against<br />
petitioner. First, the State violated Brady by failing to disclose witnesses’ descriptions of the<br />
robbers recorded shortly after the crime and evidence that witnesses inside the store failed to<br />
identify petitioner from a photo array. The state conceded that none of these items were disclosed<br />
to the defense prior to trial. This evidence was material because the identity of the shooter was<br />
contested; the withheld evidence went directly to the issue of the shooter’s identity; and, the<br />
withheld evidence was consistent with Teagle being the only assailant seen with a gun. The<br />
undisclosed evidence would have supported the defense theory at trial and bolstered petitioner’s<br />
motion to sever his trial from Teagle’s. Moreover, the prosecutor committed misconduct by<br />
“trash[ing]” the trial court’s instructions during his closing argument by repeatedly referring to<br />
Teagle’s statement and specifically filling in the “blanks” with references to Petitioner.<br />
Washington, 2015 WL 234719 at *16. The trial judge’s attempt to fix this error with a curative<br />
instruction was “tantamount to the wizard telling Dorothy to pay no attention to the man behind the<br />
curtain.” Id. Apart from Teagle’s statement, there was no evidence that petitioner was armed.<br />
The prosecutor’s improper argument most certainly had a substantial and injurious effect on the<br />
outcome of the case, and petitioner was entitled to relief on this ground as well.<br />
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Johnson v. Cain,<br />
68 F.Supp.3d 593 (E.D. 2014)<br />
This non-capital petitioner was entitled to relief under Brady and Giglio as a result of the State’s<br />
misconduct prior to his murder trial for the shooting death of Richard McClarity during an<br />
argument at a swimming pool. Petitioner admitted to shooting McClarity but claimed he acted in<br />
self-defense or, at a minimum, heat of passion when he shot at Ira Bodere, who was attacking<br />
petitioner’s brother, and the bullet aimed at Bodere accidentally struck McClarity. The state<br />
suppressed a statement given by Ira Bodere to the police shortly after the shooting. At trial, the<br />
state relied heavily on Bodere’s testimony that after he hit petitioner’s brother during an argument,<br />
petitioner got out of his car and shot at him. Bodere claimed that he fell to the ground and<br />
pretended to be hit, but petitioner came over and started kicking him while he was laying on the<br />
ground. Bodere further asserted that McClarity attempted to help him up off the ground when<br />
petitioner started to leave, but then petitioner returned and shot twice. Bodere added that petitioner<br />
said to another witness nearby, “[i]f I had more bullets, John, I would kill you too.” Johnson, at<br />
611. In its closing argument, the State emphasized Bodere’s testimony as evidence of petitioner’s<br />
specific intent to kill. Bodere’s suppressed statement, however, flatly contradicted his trial<br />
testimony and would have been useful for supporting petitioner’s defense instead. In a police<br />
report recorded on the day of the shooting, Bodere told police that he punched petitioner’s brother<br />
in the mouth; petitioner jumped out of his car and started shooting; Bodere fell to the ground and<br />
then heard two more shots. In this version of events, petitioner did not kick Bodere while he was<br />
on the ground, nor did petitioner return to shoot McClarity while he was trying to assist Bodere.<br />
Thus, Bodere’s suppressed statement was favorable and resulted in prejudice to petitioner,<br />
particularly considering that: (1) the jury deliberated overnight and initially informed the judge<br />
that they were unable to come to a consensus; (2) the jury made several requests for additional<br />
instructions on specific intent; and, (3) the state relied exclusively on Bodere’s testimony to<br />
support is argument on that very point. (The claim was considered de novo because it was rejected<br />
on procedural grounds by the state court. The procedural default did not preclude federal review<br />
given that the state court’s ruling that the claim was untimely under state law was erroneous.)<br />
*Bridges v. Beard,<br />
941 F.Supp.2d 584 (E.D. Pa. 2013), aff’d, ___ Fed.Appx. ___ (3rd Cir. Sep. 1, 2017)<br />
The district court granted relief in this Pennsylvania capital case, finding that the prosecution<br />
violated Brady v. Maryland by failing to disclose impeachment evidence concerning a key guiltor-innocence witness. Petitioner was convicted under an accomplice liability theory, along with<br />
two co-defendants, for the murder of Gregory and Damon Banks, whom petitioner believed were<br />
responsible for an armed robbery at his home while his girlfriend was present. Petitioner<br />
admitted going to the Banks’ home to confront them about the robbery, but maintained that he<br />
had not intended to kill them and was surprised when a co-defendant began shooting. To counter<br />
that claim, the prosecution presented the testimony of one George Robles, who claimed that prior<br />
to the homicides petitioner had displayed a handgun and said he was going to kill the Banks<br />
because they went into his house and put guns to his girlfriend’s head. The jury accepted the<br />
prosecution’s theory, convicted petitioner, and sentenced him to death. Petitioner made an<br />
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unsuccessful bid for state post-conviction relief – including a failed attempt at access to<br />
information about Robles – then sought federal habeas relief, and was permitted to conduct<br />
discovery. Through that mechanism he acquired a series of police reports showing that Robles<br />
was a suspected drug dealer who had multiple run-ins with police, and regularly offered to<br />
provide information in exchange for leniency. After the state court declined to review this new<br />
information on the ground that his Brady claim had already been litigated in a prior proceeding,<br />
petitioner returned to federal court. Observing that the procedural posture of petitioner’s claim<br />
was “analogous to Cone v. Bell, 556 U.S. 449, 472 (2009),” the district court declined to apply §<br />
2254(d). 941 F.Supp.2d at 602. Examining the merits de novo, the district court held that<br />
petitioner was entitled to relief because: the police records were clearly impeaching, and thus<br />
favorable, in that they suggested Robles’ “motivation to lie to curry favor with the police to<br />
protect his drug business and to stay out of police custody,” id. at 605; the reports were generated<br />
by police agencies and not disclosed to the defense; and “the cumulative prejudicial effect of the<br />
numerous suppressed police reports about Robles shows that they are ‘material’ under Brady.”<br />
Id. at 607. “Robles’ testimony,” the court explained, “constituted the only evidence that the<br />
prosecution presented to show that [petitioner] had the intent to kill,” and the prosecution<br />
“repeatedly emphasized Robles’ trustworthiness . . . [and] describe[ed] Robles as a reluctant<br />
witness.” Id. Without the withheld evidence, petitioner could not meaningfully challenge these<br />
claims. Finally, the withheld evidence “could have led [petitioner’s] attorneys to other witnesses<br />
who could have testified about Robles’ activities and his character.” Id. at 608.<br />
*Keenan v. Bagley,<br />
2012 WL 1424751 (N.D. Ohio April 24, 2012)<br />
The district court granted relief in this Ohio capital case, finding that the prosecution committed<br />
multiple Brady v. Maryland violations. Petitioner was convicted of killing Anthony Klann after<br />
his codefendant, Edward Espinoza, testified that he witnessed petitioner slash Klann’s throat<br />
with a knife, push him into a creek, and then tell another co-defendant, Joseph D’Ambrosio, to<br />
“[f]inish him.” 2012 WL 1424751 at *2. Petitioner unsuccessfully pursued four applications for<br />
state post-conviction relief, raising some Brady claims, but much of the evidence at issue in his<br />
federal proceedings did not come to light until after his co-defendant, D’Ambrosio, obtained<br />
discovery and ultimately won relief on a Brady claim in his own federal habeas proceedings.<br />
After determining that § 2254(e)(2) did not bar expansion of the record, the district court noted<br />
that all of Keenan’s Brady claims were procedurally defaulted (either because he failed to raise<br />
them in state court or because the state court dismissed them as untimely), and proceeded to<br />
assess the merits and cause and prejudice simultaneously. Based on a review of the evidence, the<br />
court determined that Keenan had proved suppression of material evidence in the following<br />
categories: (1) evidence that another man, Paul Lewis, had motive to kill Klann because Klann<br />
had information that Lewis committed a rape for which Lewis faced charges at the time of<br />
Klann’s murder, and evidence the Lewis had information regarding the crime that was not<br />
publicly known and had asked the police to help resolve a DUI charge against him in exchange<br />
for his testimony; (2) evidence that police investigators believed that Klann’s murder occurred in<br />
some other location and his body was subsequently dumped in the creek bed because there was<br />
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no blood or evidence of a struggle near the creek where his body was found; (3) police reports<br />
concerning, and a cassette tape containing, conversations between an informant and an inmate<br />
who once lived with Klann in which the inmate may have implicated other persons in Klann’s<br />
murder; (4) evidence that two of the state’s witnesses had asked the police to assist them in<br />
relocating because they had been threatened by members of D’Ambrosio’s family; and, (5)<br />
witness reports indicating that the crime took place at a date and time inconsistent with the state’s<br />
theory at trial and implicating Lewis, not petitioner, in the events of the crime. The district court<br />
determined that each of these categories individually satisfied the first two prongs of Brady and<br />
thereby established cause and prejudice to excuse the procedural default. The court then<br />
conducted the Brady prejudice analysis by looking cumulatively at all of the withheld evidence<br />
and concluded that Keenan could have used this information in three ways. “First, Keenan could<br />
have used the evidence to impeach Espinoza, and, because Espinoza was the state’s sole witness<br />
to the crime and the only evidence linking Keenan to the murder, thereby undercut the state’s<br />
entire case.” Id. at *43. Second, “Keenan could have used the Brady material &#8230; to impeach the<br />
police and call into question the thoroughness and integrity of their investigation.” Id. at *44.<br />
And third, he “could have used the suppressed information &#8230; to implicate others in the murder,<br />
at a minimum creating a reasonable doubt regarding his participation in the crime.” Id. Viewed<br />
collectively, the court concluded that there was a reasonable probability that the suppressed<br />
evidence would have produced a different verdict sufficient to undermine confidence in the<br />
outcome of petitioner’s trial.<br />
Bies v. Bagley,<br />
2012 WL 1203529 (S.D.Ohio April 10, 2012), aff’d, 775 F.3d 386 (6th Cir. 2014)<br />
The district court granted relief on petitioner’s Brady v. Maryland claim in this formerly capital<br />
Ohio murder case (petitioner’s death sentence was previously set aside by a state court under<br />
Atkins v. Virginia). Petitioner had been convicted and sentenced to death for the kidnapping,<br />
attempted rape, and aggravated murder of a ten-year-old boy. The evidence supporting the Brady<br />
claim did not come to light until after petitioner’s federal habeas proceedings began, and his<br />
effort to exhaust the claim in state court was turned away as procedurally barred. After<br />
determining that the procedural bar was excused because the state’s misconduct had been the<br />
cause of petitioner’s delay in discovering and asserting the claim, the district court examined the<br />
merits. The court held that the state violated Brady by withholding evidence that another suspect<br />
confessed to multiple people that he had killed the victim, that two other suspects had also<br />
confessed to the crime, and that some of these suspects as well as several other sex offenders had<br />
been known to frequent the abandoned building where the victim’s body was found. The court<br />
further determined that this evidence, viewed collectively, was material, particularly in light of<br />
the state’s weak case against Bies. The state had no physical evidence connecting him to the<br />
crime, and had instead relied on a sighting of Bies at a park near the abandoned building where<br />
the victim was found and Bies’ alleged confession to the police and a jailhouse informant. The<br />
district court noted that “[t]he strength of the confession to police is undermined by the fact that<br />
Bies is a mentally retarded man who repeatedly denied involvement in the murder prior to his<br />
final unrecorded statement to police,” and that “the credibility of the jailhouse informant also can<br />
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be attacked on several bases.” 2012 WL 1203529 at *20. The court went on to reject the<br />
“stringent evidentiary standard suggested by Magistrate Judge Merz,” under which Bies would<br />
have been required to prove that the withheld exculpatory material would have led to admissible<br />
evidence at trial by offering admissible affidavits from the witnesses discussed in the police<br />
reports. Id. at *21 (citing Jamison v. Collins, 291 F.3d 380 (6th Cir. 2002), Castleberry v.<br />
Brigano, 349 F.3d 286 (6th Cir. 2003), and D’Ambrosio v. Bagley, 527 F.3d 489 (6th Cir. 2008)).<br />
The court also noted that Bies’ co-defendant had recently won relief on substantially the same<br />
Brady claim in Gumm v. Mitchell, 2011 WL 1237572 (S.D. Ohio. Mar. 29, 2011).<br />
Hash v. Johnson,<br />
845 F.Supp.2d 711 (W.D. Va. 2012)<br />
Petitioner Hash was entitled to habeas relief from his capital murder conviction due to the<br />
prosecution’s presentation of false testimony by a jailhouse informant concerning expected<br />
benefits from his testimony against Hash. The claim was analyzed de novo after a concession by<br />
respondent that Hash established cause and prejudice to overcome the default. (Much of the<br />
supporting evidence was obtained through federal discovery.) The inmate falsely denied that one<br />
of the State investigators had agreed to speak with the U.S. Attorney on the inmate’s behalf<br />
concerning reduction of a federal sentence and the Commonwealth’s Attorney admittedly made<br />
false and misleading statements in his closing argument about the absence of any agreement to<br />
assist the inmate in federal court. In finding a reasonable likelihood that the jury would have<br />
reached a result more favorable to Hash had the false testimony not been presented, it was noted<br />
that no physical evidence connected Hash to the crime and testimony by other witnesses<br />
implicating Hash was contradictory. (Habeas relief was also granted on other claims, including<br />
prosecutorial and police misconduct. It was found, inter alia, that the Commonwealth failed to<br />
disclose exculpatory evidence. Because of the conclusion that the assorted misconduct amounted<br />
to a due process violation, it was not determined whether a Brady violation also occurred.)<br />
Gillispie v. Timmerman-Cooper,<br />
835 F.Supp.2d 482 (S.D. Ohio 2011)<br />
In case involving two separate instances of kidnapping and rape, petitioner was entitled to habeas<br />
relief based on the prosecution’s suppression of evidence concerning petitioner’s elimination as a<br />
suspect by the initial investigating officers and the reasons for their conclusion that petitioner<br />
was not a viable suspect. (The reasons included a belief that a photo of petitioner did not<br />
resemble the composite sketches of the assailant, that petitioner did not match the profile of the<br />
assailant developed by the police, petitioner did not appear to be able to fit the pants size the<br />
assailant was seen to have worn, and the person who raised petitioner as a possible suspect had<br />
been exposed to the composite sketches of the assailant for a significant amount of time but only<br />
came to the police with his suspicions about petitioner after he had a nasty fight with petitioner.)<br />
Although the investigating officers opinions did not go directly to petitioner’s guilt or innocence,<br />
“they clearly go to the quality of the investigation” that took place subsequent to their<br />
investigation. In light of the total record, which included a complete absence of physical<br />
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evidence tying petitioner to the crimes, the use by the replacement investigating officer of a<br />
photo line-up almost two years after the offenses with a photo of petitioner styled differently than<br />
the other photos, and an initial jury deadlock of eight to four in favor of acquittal prior to an<br />
Allen charge, the state court’s conclusion that the suppressed evidence was not material was not<br />
entitled to deference. Although one of the initial investigating officers became a defense<br />
investigator for trial counsel on petitioner’s case, this did not defeat the Brady claim as the record<br />
established that the investigator performed only discreet tasks and was unaware that information<br />
about his work on the case had not been disclosed to trial counsel. Further, trial counsel had no<br />
reason to believe he had not been provided with everything.<br />
Munchinski v. Wilson,<br />
807 F.Supp.2d 242 (W.D. Penn. 2011), aff’d, 694 F.3d 308 (3rd Cir. 2012)<br />
Petitioner was entitled to habeas relief as to his 1986 murder convictions based on the State’s<br />
suppression of a report that provided the names of individuals who allegedly presented a version<br />
of events at the crime scene that was wholly inconsistent with the testimony of the key<br />
prosecution witness, who claimed to be an eyewitness to the murders, and omitted petitioner’s<br />
involvement entirely. Petitioner was also entitled to habeas relief because seven pieces of<br />
suppressed evidence when considered in the aggregate presented additional, non-cumulative<br />
methods to impeach the key prosecution witness. (The additional suppressed evidence included<br />
samples of physical evidence from the crime scene that, when tested, failed to implicate<br />
petitioner. The absence of any physical evidence tying petitioner to the murders supported his<br />
position at trial that he was not present during the killings.) State court’s analysis of petitioner’s<br />
Brady claims unreasonably applied clearly established federal law by imposing a heightened<br />
standard of materiality and by failing to consider the suppressed evidence collectively.<br />
Petitioner’s showing of innocence satisfied the requirements for filing a second or successive<br />
habeas petition.<br />
Harris v. Gov’t of Virgin Islands,<br />
2011 WL 4357336 (D. Virgin Islands Sept. 16, 2011)<br />
In murder of a police officer case, although defendant did not move for a new trial on the basis<br />
that the prosecutor knowingly employed the false testimony of an eyewitness who identified<br />
defendant as one of four assailants for the first time in court, a new trial is ordered based on plain<br />
error. (Prior to trial, the eyewitness had only been able to identify one of the charged men in a<br />
photo lineup, co-defendant Mosby. At trial, the eyewitness surprised everyone by identifying<br />
defendant, not Mosby.) Notably, the lower court had found the eyewitness’s post-trial<br />
recantation credible even though the eyewitness, who had been visited by the prosecutor’s<br />
investigator prior to the hearing, then repudiated his recantation. The lower court cited to the fact<br />
that the eyewitness had approached the prosecutor seven days after the trial ended and disavowed<br />
his identification of defendant. In addition, the eyewitness later met with the defense team and<br />
signed an affidavit acknowledging that he had been mistaken when identifying defendant at trial.<br />
In finding that the identification was false, the court pointed to: (1) the credible recantation; (2)<br />
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the two completely inconsistent narratives the eyewitness provided regarding how he came to<br />
observe the four assailants; (3) his three initial statements to law enforcement that he did not see<br />
any of the four men’s faces; (4) his failure to pick defendant out of a photo array before trial; (5)<br />
his subsequent failure to identify co-defendant Mosby in person, despite having previously<br />
identified his photo; and (6) defendant’s testimony regarding his non-involvement in the murder.<br />
As for whether the prosecutor knew or should have known that the identification was false, the<br />
court stated: “[W]e are certain that a reasonable prosecutor pursuing justice would have<br />
recognized the substantial question arising from [the eyewitness’s] identification testimony and<br />
would have strongly considered the possibility that this identification was made in error. . . . Here<br />
the circumstantial evidence that [the prosecutor] knew, or should have known, that [the<br />
eyewitness] made a mistake abounds: the government’s case against [defendant] was reed-thin;<br />
[the eyewitness’s] inconsistent narrative and state of mind raised questions about his ability to<br />
make an accurate identification; [the prosecutor] failed to inquire into the identification’s<br />
veracity when the opportunity presented itself at trial; and he subsequently withheld [the<br />
eyewitness’s] recantation from [defendant’s] counsel in violation of Brady for 15 months.” In<br />
addition, the prosecutor was aware that the stress from the events had led the eyewitness to seek<br />
psychiatric care. On this record, the court found the prosecutor guilty of “willful blindness”<br />
which “satisfie[d] Agur’s prosecuorial knowledge element under the plain error standard.” It<br />
also concluded that defendant met the plain error standard for prejudice.<br />
*Browning v. Workman,<br />
2011 WL 2604744 (N.D. Okla. June 30, 2011), aff’d sub nom. Browning v. Trammell, 717<br />
F.3d 1092 (10th Cir. 2013)<br />
The district court granted guilt-innocence phase relief on petitioner’s Brady v. Maryland claim in<br />
this Oklahoma capital case. Petitioner “was convicted of attempting to kill his pregnant exgirlfriend; Cenessa Tackett; killing Ms. Tackett’s parents; and setting fire to their home.” 2011<br />
WL 2604744 at *1. His defense was that “his co-defendant Shane Pethel planned and committed<br />
these acts with Ms. Tackett, who possessed a financial motive to commit the crimes.” Id.<br />
“Physical evidence linking [petitioner] to the crime was virtually non-existent.” Id. Instead, the<br />
state’s case rested on Tackett, who “was the key witness and sole eyewitness in the prosecution’s<br />
case.” Id. Prior to trial, petitioner moved the prosecution to produce Ms. Tackett’s mental health<br />
records. After an in camera review of the records, the trial court found “that they contained no<br />
exculpatory material that must be disclosed, absent a waiver [of the psychotherapist-patient<br />
privilege] from Ms. Tackett.” Id. The trial court then placed the documents under seal. Petitioner<br />
was convicted and sentenced to death in state court. On direct appeal, the Oklahoma Court of<br />
Criminal Appeals (OCCA) also reviewed the sealed documents and found that they contained<br />
“nothing material to either guilt or punishment” and “nothing favorable to the defendant.” Id. at<br />
*4. Petitioner then sought federal habeas relief, asserting that “the trial court’s refusal to order<br />
disclosure of Ms. Tackett’s mental health records, which were in the possession of the<br />
prosecution deprived him of his right to access exculpatory evidence under the Due Process<br />
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and denied<br />
him the rights to cross-examination and confrontation under the Sixth Amendment.” Id. at *3.<br />
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Because the district court granted relief on the due process claim, it did not reach the Sixth<br />
Amendment claims. The district court found that the documents showed Ms. Tackett: (1) “was<br />
suffering from severe mental illness;” id. at *6; (2) “suffered from memory deficits, poor<br />
judgment, trouble distinguishing reality from fantasy, was manipulative and was potentially a<br />
danger to others,” id.; (3) “exhibited a pronounced disposition to lie,” id. at *7; and, (4) was<br />
“dramatically impaired [in] her ability to perceive and tell the truth.” Id. The district court held<br />
that the OCCA had “identified the correct legal principles by citing Kyles, Bagley and Brady,” id.<br />
at *6 (internal citations omitted), but had unreasonably applied that law in two respects. First, the<br />
district court held, “[t]here is no reasonable argument or theory that could support the OCCA’s<br />
conclusion that the sealed material contained nothing favorable to [petitioner’s] defense.” Id. at<br />
*7. “Second, the OCCA’s conclusion that the sealed mental health records contain nothing<br />
material either to guilt or punishment was an unreasonable application of Supreme Court law to<br />
the facts of this case.” Id. Given that Ms. Tackett was the sole witness against petitioner at trial,<br />
and that “her credibility and veracity were already shown to be suspect” due to inconsistent<br />
statements and admissions she made at trial, the district court held that the state court’s decision<br />
was unreasonable because “a fair minded jurist could determine that the withheld favorable<br />
evidence put the whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict.”<br />
Id. at *9.<br />
Andazola v. Woodford,<br />
2011 WL 1225979 (N.D. Cal. March 31, 2011)<br />
In attempted murder case, habeas relief granted due to prosecution’s failure to disclose<br />
impeachment evidence regarding the investigating officer who testified for the prosecution that a<br />
witness had identified petitioner as the shooter. The victim was an acquaintance of petitioner.<br />
The victim testified that he went to petitioner’s home to clear the air after learning that petitioner<br />
suspected him of having stolen a CD player. The victim lifted weights and smoked marijuana in<br />
petitioner’s garage with petitioner. Several other people were present. The victim was told to<br />
leave the garage by another acquaintance after the victim denied having stolen the CD player.<br />
The victim initially moved towards petitioner to shake his hand but turned away when he saw<br />
petitioner’s angry look. As he turned, he blacked out and when he regained consciousness he<br />
realized he had been shot. Although the victim had told the investigating officers that the other<br />
acquaintance had been behind him when he was shot in the back, he testified he was “pretty sure”<br />
it was petitioner. The victim also stated, however, that he never saw a gun in petitioner’s hand.<br />
Other witnesses provided conflicting reports. Police officer Salgado testified that witness<br />
Delgado informed him that she saw petitioner shoot the victim but Delgado later denied making<br />
any such statement. Officer Salgado further testified that following her denial, Delgado privately<br />
repeated to him that she had indeed seen petitioner shoot the victim. At trial, Delgado admitted<br />
being present in the garage but denied seeing the shooting occur. Petitioner’s cousin<br />
acknowledged in his testimony that he had implicated petitioner as the shooter during a police<br />
interview but claimed he did so only because Salgado had “threatened to arrest him if he did not<br />
implicate someone as the shooter.” Two other witnesses testified that Andazola told them he had<br />
shot somebody. Petitioner was entitled to habeas relief because of the prosecution’s suppression<br />
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of evidence showing Salgado’s “pattern of falsifying police reports” and a later “criminal<br />
investigation” undertaken “into [Salgado’s] conduct.” This evidence was material given the<br />
prosecutor’s characterization of Salgado’s testimony “as the ‘lynchpin’ in her closing argument.”<br />
The state courts’ denial of the misconduct claim was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable<br />
application of clearly established federal law.”<br />
Gumm v. Mitchell,<br />
2011 WL 1237572 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 29, 2011), aff’d, 775 F.3d 345 (6th Cir. 2014)<br />
The district court granted relief in this previously capital (petitioner’s death sentence was set<br />
aside pursuant to Atkinsv. Virginia) Ohio murder case, finding that the prosecution violated<br />
Brady v. Maryland, petitioner’s due process rights were violated by the admission of irrelevant<br />
prior bad act evidence, and the prosecutor’s misconduct deprived petitioner of a fair trial. Based<br />
largely on his confession, petitioner was originally convicted and sentenced to death for the<br />
aggravated murder, kidnapping, and attempted rape of a 10-year-old boy. After securing relief<br />
from his death sentence under Atkins, petitioner pursued federal habeas relief from his<br />
conviction, and the district court concluded that he was entitled to relief on three grounds. First,<br />
the court found that the state had failed to turn over an array of Brady material, including: (a)<br />
inculpatory statements by three other suspects; (b) information concerning local sex offenders<br />
who were questioned about the victim’s death; (c) information concerning other individuals seen<br />
in the area at the time of the crime; (d) information about others who were with the victim on the<br />
night of the crime; (e) information that would have called into question the testimony of a state<br />
witness who claimed that the victim never played in the vacant building where his body was<br />
found; (f) evidence that was inconsistent with the prosecution’s theory about what time the<br />
victim was killed; and, (g) information that gym shoes belonging to another suspect matched the<br />
gym shoe marks found on the victim’s body. While the state court found that the undisclosed<br />
evidence was not material and did not undermine confidence in the verdict, the district court held<br />
that this conclusion involved an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law. The<br />
court explained that although much of the undisclosed evidence was not itself admissible, it<br />
could have led defense counsel to admissible evidence. The court went on to add that “[t]here<br />
was no physical evidence linking petitioner to the crime. The police officers had only petitioner’s<br />
confession which, because of his mental retardation and his heightened susceptibility to police<br />
coercion, must be viewed with some skepticism.” Id. at *8. Second, the district court held that<br />
petitioner was entitled to relief on his claim that the prosecution’s introduction of evidence that<br />
petitioner once told his neighbor that he had “fucked a horse” violated his right to a<br />
fundamentally fair trial. The state courts held that even if this evidence should have been<br />
excluded, the prosecutor did not dwell on it and, on the whole, petitioner received a fair trial. The<br />
district court held that the state court’s decision was based on an unreasonable determination of<br />
the facts in light of the evidence presented. Although the neighbor’s testimony on this issue was<br />
brief, it was “egregiously unreliable” and “among the most outrageously inflammatory evidence<br />
this Court has ever read in a capital case transcript.” Id. at *9. Additionally, the district court held<br />
that petitioner’s due process and confrontation rights were violated by the erroneous introduction<br />
of hearsay statements from his medical records which, also recounted irrelevant prior bad acts,<br />
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such as the fact that petitioner lied, became rowdy when he drank, was cruel to animals, solicited<br />
oral sex from someone, tried to rape his sister’s friend, and burned a boy with a hot spoon. The<br />
state court held that the records, including the hearsay statements they contained, were admissible<br />
because petitioner’s expert witness had reviewed them in formulating his opinion. The district<br />
court concluded that the fact that the expert reviewed the documents did not make the hearsay<br />
statements admissible and the admission of this evidence deprived petitioner of a fair trial.<br />
Finally, the district court held that the prosecutor’s improper pattern of misconduct, evidenced<br />
primarily by the Brady violation and the introduction of inadmissible prior bad act evidence,<br />
deprived petitioner of a fundamentally fair trial. The state court’s conclusions that petitioner<br />
received a fair trial and that any errors were harmless were contrary to, or involved an<br />
unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law.<br />
Merritt v. Hoke,<br />
2011 WL 198104 (N.D.W.Va. Jan. 18, 2011)<br />
Petitioner was denied a fair trial by the State’s failure to disclose its agreement with Thacker, the<br />
driver in the robbery petitioner was convicted of committing, that if she invoked the Fifth<br />
Amendment the State would request immunity for her. Disclosure of the State’s “tacit pre-trial<br />
immunity agreement” with Thacker “would have been favorable for its impeachment value.”<br />
Although the prosecutor told defense counsel the day of Thacker’s testimony that he intended to<br />
request immunity for her if she invoked her Fifth Amendment rights, the defense was unaware of<br />
the pre-trial discussions about immunity. The nondisclosure was material for two reasons. First,<br />
an “undeniable difference” exists “between the way a juror perceives the credibility of a witness<br />
ordered to testify against her will versus a witness” following “a pre-orchestrated plan” between<br />
the prosecution and the witness’ counsel. In the former, a juror could reasonably “attribute more<br />
credibility to a witness forced to testify against her will” because it would “only be human nature<br />
for a juror to expect truthful testimony from an unwilling witness.” But in the latter, a<br />
“reasonable probability” exists that “a juror would allow” the prosecution’s involvement,<br />
including the immunity request, to “cast at least some shadow of doubt on the witness’<br />
motivation to testify consistent with the State’s theory&#8230;.” Second, Thacker’s testimony was the<br />
only “particularly incriminating” evidence presented. No physical evidence implicated<br />
petitioner: no fingerprints or disguises discovered, and no money recovered. The prosecutor<br />
“compounded the Brady violation and further undermined confidence” in the outcome by arguing<br />
“‘in effect’ that the State had nothing to do with the deal,” and the deal had “come solely from”<br />
the trial judge. That argument was “misleading, at best, and untrue at worst.” The State’s<br />
“Brady violation” undermined “confidence in the outcome,” was material, and petitioner was<br />
entitled to habeas relief.<br />
Valentin v. Mazzuca,<br />
2011 WL 65759 (W.D.N.Y. Jan. 10, 2011)<br />
The district court granted relief in this New York robbery case, finding that the prosecution<br />
violated Brady v. Maryland when it failed to disclose the criminal history of the only testifying<br />
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eyewitness to the robbery. After agreeing with the state court’s determination that the evidence<br />
was favorable and had been suppressed, see 2011 WL 65759 at *17-18, the district court held<br />
that the state court had “erroneously and unreasonably performed a ‘sufficiency of the evidence’<br />
review in deciding the materiality issue.” Id. at *20. The court went on to explain that the<br />
prosecution’s case for guilt was “more akin to a house of cards than a foundationally sound<br />
structure, and that it was more than reasonably possible that the only eyewitness’s criminal<br />
record “could have been the card that toppled the house.” 2011 WL 65759 at *21.<br />
*Hodges v. Epps,<br />
2010 WL 3655851 (N.D. Miss. Sept. 13, 2010), aff’d on other grounds, 648 F.3d 283 (5th<br />
Cir. 2011)<br />
Mississippi death row inmate entitled to habeas relief as to his sentence on numerous grounds,<br />
including claim that the prosecution presented false evidence at the penalty phase about<br />
sentencing proceedings in Hodges’ prior burglary case. The murder victim, Isaac, was the<br />
brother of Hodges’ ex-girlfriend, Cora. Hodges had previously pleaded guilty to repeatedly<br />
breaking into Cora’s mother’s home to see Cora. At the time of Hodges’ plea, Cora’s mother<br />
provided a victim impact statement asserting she did not feel safe with Hodges in her family’s<br />
life. At Hodges’ sentencing, the DA told the judge that although Cora’s mother believed Hodges<br />
should be punished, “her anger had subsided.” Finding that the State made no sentencing<br />
recommendation, and Cora’s mother did not want Hodges incarcerated for a lengthy period,<br />
Hodges was sentenced to a 7-year prison term but was only incarcerated for about six months.<br />
Three weeks after Hodges’ release, Hodges broke into Cora’s home where he encountered Isaac<br />
and shot and killed him. At the capital sentencing proceeding, the prosecutor asked Hodges and<br />
his mother about Cora’s mother’s actions to keep Hodges out of prison on his earlier burglary<br />
charge. Both denied knowledge of any such action. An assistant district attorney testified that he<br />
had requested a 15-year prison term but that Cora’s mother told him she did not want Hodges<br />
sent to prison. In his closing argument, the prosecutor argued that despite Hodges’ refusal to<br />
acknowledge it, Cora’s mother had bestowed on him “a huge measure of grace” and yet he killed<br />
her son after he was given a second chance of monumental proportions. On appeal, the earlier<br />
plea hearing transcript was ordered and it showed the prosecution made no recommendation on<br />
Hodges’ sentence, and Cora’s mother never requested Hodges receive probation or leniency. The<br />
state court, however, refused to consider the transcript because it was not part of the trial court<br />
record and the court had denied Hodges’ motion to expand the record to include it. The state<br />
court also found the false evidence issue barred due to Hodges’ failure to object during his crossexamination and the questioning of his mother. Finally, without consideration of the plea<br />
transcript, the state court found the requisite evidentiary basis for the questioning in the assistant<br />
district attorney’s testimony. The state post-conviction court later barred the claim as res judicata.<br />
The federal district court expressed skepticism about the State’s argument that the claim was<br />
barred due to the lack of a contemporaneous objection, observing that trial counsel “had no<br />
reason to believe” they needed “an actual transcript” of the earlier burglary plea “to correct the<br />
State’s presentation of false evidence.” But if “cause and prejudice” were required to overcome a<br />
procedural default, Hodges established both. The court also found Hodges was improperly<br />
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denied a fair opportunity to present his claim by a “Catch-22&#8243;: the state court failed to consider<br />
the plea transcript on direct appeal, and then on post-conviction review, the state court<br />
determined the issue was “res judicata.” Considering the prior plea transcript and testimony from<br />
an evidentiary hearing ordered by the district court, the court concluded the testimony of then<br />
assistant district attorney (now Judge) Kitchens – that, although not on the record, the State<br />
sought a 15-year imprisonment term, Cora’s mother “did not want [Hodges] to go to prison” and<br />
her “wishes were relayed to the judge” – was “factually at odds” with the record, and the State<br />
“should have known” Kitchens’ testimony at the capital trial “was false.” The record showed the<br />
State made no recommendation, and nothing indicated Hodges’ attorney spoke to Cora’s mother<br />
or that Cora’s mother told him she did not want Hodges sent to prison. The court concluded that<br />
the “State seemingly unconcerned with the accuracy of the testimony to be given in a trial where<br />
the result could be death, provided the jury with false information” “elicited to show” Hodges “is a<br />
remorseless liar who was shown kindness that he refused to acknowledge and which he repaid by<br />
murdering the son of the woman who extended it.” Concluding the state court decision was based<br />
on “an unreasonable determination of the facts,” and an unreasonable application of clearly<br />
established law, and that the facts showed a reasonable probability that “the testimony affected<br />
the jury’s judgment,” the court concluded the State’s actions undermined confidence in the<br />
verdict, and Hodges was entitled to a new sentencing hearing.<br />
*Guzman v. Department of Corrections,<br />
698 F.Supp.2d. 1317 (M.D. Fla. 2010), aff’d, 663 F.3d 1336 (11th Cir. 2011)<br />
Death row inmate entitled to habeas relief where prosecution unwittingly presented false<br />
testimony from the key prosecution witness and the lead detective regarding whether the witness<br />
had received benefits for testifying against petitioner. The key witness, Cronin, lived with<br />
petitioner at the time of the capital crime. Cronin initially denied any knowledge about the<br />
murder but later told the lead detective that petitioner had confessed to her. At the time of the<br />
disclosure, Cronin had an outstanding arrest warrant for a probation violation and she sought a<br />
“deal.” Although the state attorney handling the case instructed the detective to arrest Cronin,<br />
the detective disregarded the directive and instead took her to a hotel where she was provided<br />
with food paid for by the police department. Cronin subsequently left the hotel without<br />
permission and law enforcement lost contact with her while she engaged in prostitution and crack<br />
cocaine use. She was twice arrested before testifying against petitioner before the grand jury and<br />
at his trial. She denied receiving any benefits in exchange for the testimony but did acknowledge<br />
being placed in a hotel room for “protection.” The lead detective denied that law enforcement or<br />
the State Attorney’s office had offered Cronin any deals in exchange for her testimony. During<br />
post-conviction proceedings it was learned that Cronin had received a payment. The detective<br />
then conceded that she delivered a $500 money order payable to Cronin to the jail where Cronin<br />
was housed eight days before Cronin’s grand jury testimony. This was a reward that had been<br />
publicized in the media and Cronin’s mother had contacted the detective asking if the detective<br />
could get it to Cronin. Although the detective and the prosecuting attorney further testified that<br />
the prosecuting attorney had not been informed that Cronin received a reward, the false testimony<br />
was nonetheless imputed to the prosecution. The state court’s finding that the false testimony<br />
was not material was contrary to or involved an unreasonable application of Supreme Court<br />
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precedent and was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. That Cronin’s credibility<br />
was significantly challenged at trial did not render the false testimony immaterial given her<br />
importance as a witness, that exposure of the detective’s false testimony could have cast doubt on<br />
the entire investigation, and the other evidence of guilt was not overwhelming. Petitioner was<br />
entitled to relief under both Brady and Giglio even if the Brecht standard applied.<br />
Blumberg v. Garcia,<br />
687 F.Supp.2d 1074 (C.D. Cal. 2010)<br />
Habeas relief granted in case involving convictions for attempted murder, conspiracy to commit<br />
murder and assault with a semiautomatic firearm, with a finding that the crimes were committed<br />
for the benefit of a criminal street gang, where key prosecution witnesses (police officer Hewitt,<br />
deputy sheriff Foss, and purported former gang member Reyes) provided false testimony and<br />
important impeachment and exculpatory evidence was suppressed. The prosecution theory was<br />
that petitioner and his brother had conspired to kill a rival gang member. The defense theory was<br />
that petitioner was no longer an active gang member, was unaware that his brother was armed<br />
and was surprised when his brother shot the victim. To establish motive and intent, the<br />
prosecution presented testimony from Foss linking petitioner to present gang membership.<br />
Foss’s opinions were based in part on information he had received from the Los Angeles Police<br />
Department (LAPD) CRASH division. The prosecution also called Reyes who claimed that<br />
petitioner was the shooter in an incident in a park that followed a confrontation with members of<br />
the shooting victim’s gang to which Reyes had belonged. According to Reyes, he quit the gang<br />
after the park shooting, which occurred 11 days before the shooting in this case. In addition,<br />
Hewitt described an incident some two years before the crime in this case where petitioner and<br />
his brother had been arrested in a rival gang’s territory with weapons in the car. Petitioner had<br />
been the driver and Hewitt stated he had observed the person in the front passenger seat pass a<br />
handgun to petitioner’s brother in the back seat. Hewitt also testified that the car had a hidden<br />
compartment. (Petitioner denied knowing any weapons were in the car and that there was a<br />
hidden compartment.) At the time of the arrest, Hewitt was part of LAPD’s CRASH division.<br />
After petitioner was convicted, evidence surfaced that Hewitt was terminated byLAPD for<br />
excessive force and other charges for which he was under an internal investigation at the time of<br />
petitioner’s trial. It was also learned that LAPD investigators had been told that Hewitt was well<br />
known to fabricate probable cause to arrest, plant evidence and falsify reports. At least one other<br />
officer from CRASH who Foss had relied on regarding gang information was also implicated in a<br />
corruption scandal. Also discovered after trial was evidence that Reyes had been an active gang<br />
member at the time of trial, contrary to his testimony. In granting relief, the district court found<br />
that Hewitt had “falsely testified” that he found two handguns in a “false compartment” in<br />
petitioner’s car. This false testimony was material under Napue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264 (1959),<br />
because the prosecutor relied on that testimony, repeatedly telling the jury that given Hewitt’s<br />
testimony alone, it proved petitioner lied to the jury “about everything.” The false testimony<br />
“directly undermined the core” of petitioner’s mere presence defense. The state court’s finding<br />
that the false testimony was not material because Hewitt’s testimony was merely rebutting<br />
petitioner’s claim that he was no longer an active gang member was an unreasonable<br />
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determination of the facts in light of the evidence and argument at trial. Also unreasonable was<br />
the state court’s conclusion that Hewitt’s testimony was merely cumulative to the otherwise<br />
“overwhelming” evidence of petitioner’s active gang membership at the time of the charged<br />
offense. The state court’s ultimate finding of no materiality was an unreasonable application of<br />
Napue on the law and the facts. Foss’s reliance on information from Hewitt and other later<br />
discredited CRASH officers provided an “additional consideration which undermines confidence<br />
in the jury’s decision,” notwithstanding testimony by Foss that his opinions would not have<br />
changed absent the tainted information. Regarding Reyes, the district court found by clear and<br />
convincing evidence that he provided false testimony when he claimed he quit being a gang<br />
member after the park shooting and that the prosecution knew or should have known of the falsity<br />
of his testimony. The district court also found a Napue violation involving Reyes’s testimony<br />
identifying petitioner as the park shooter. Although petitioner had not established the testimony<br />
was clearly false, the prosecution had been on notice of the real possibility that it was untrue and<br />
yet pressed ahead without attempting to resolve the issue. Further undermining confidence in the<br />
outcome of the trial was testimony by Foss that misled the jury into believing<br />
that Reyes was the only percipient source of information about the shooting when in fact Reyes’s<br />
nephew had told Foss it was too dark that night to make an identification of the shooter.<br />
“[C]ombined effect of multiple errors” violated due process and warranted habeas relief.<br />
United States v. McDuffie,<br />
2009 WL 2512194 (E.D. Wash. 2009), aff’d, 454 Fed.Appx. 624 (9th Cir. 2011)<br />
District Court granted motion for new trial in drug case due to the Government’s failure to<br />
disclose, prior to a fingerprint expert’s testimony during trial, the presence of a detective’s<br />
fingerprints on an electronic scale recovered from the defendant’s apartment at the time of his<br />
arrest. The defense had asserted the scale was new and the presence of cocaine on the scale was<br />
because the evidence had been tampered with by the detective in order to pressure the defendant<br />
into providing favorable testimony in an unrelated murder case. The fingerprint evidence was<br />
material because it would have supported the defense, especially because the detective in<br />
question, who was arguably the prosecution’s key witness, was not present in the defendant’s<br />
apartment at the time of the arrest or search. Because it was not disclosed until during the trial<br />
itself, the defense was limited to unprepared cross of the expert and unsupported and speculative<br />
arguments. If the evidence had been disclosed prior to trial, the defense could have presented<br />
“affirmative evidence regarding standard police procedures that might have supported the<br />
tampering theory.”<br />
Cardoso v. United States,<br />
642 F. Supp. 2d 251 (S.D.N.Y. 2009), aff’d sub nom United States v. Solano, 402<br />
Fed.Appx. 569 (2nd Cir. 2010)<br />
New sentencing ordered in §2255 proceeding due to government’s failure to disclose<br />
impeachment evidence relevant to a cooperating witness in drug conspiracy case. The court<br />
relied on this witness’ testimony in sentencing by finding the defendant was “a supervisor” and<br />
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adjusting her advisory offence level upwards by 3. The court also relied on this testimony in<br />
rejecting the defense argument that she was a minor participant and was eligible for a point<br />
reduction. Because of the “supervisor” finding, which disqualified her for consideration for the<br />
statutory “safety valve,” the court did not hear argument on the request to sentence the defendant<br />
below the statutory minimum. Prior to sentencing, the government discovered, but did not<br />
disclose, that the cooperating witness was actively involved in drug trafficking and actively lying<br />
to law enforcement at the time of events in this case. Because the court had relied on this<br />
witness’ testimony in making findings in sentence, new sentencing was ordered, even though the<br />
defendant had been sentenced well below the guidelines range the first time.<br />
United States v. Jiles,<br />
2009 WL 2212152 (W.D. Va. July 24, 2009)<br />
Motion for new trial granted in assaulting federal officer case due to the government’s failure to<br />
disclose six disciplinary actions against one of the four officer witnesses. The disciplinary<br />
actions, including misuse of a government credit card and making false statements, directly<br />
concerned the officer’s credibility. The defendant asserted his actions were justified and taken in<br />
self-defense. The evidence was material, especially in light of the government’s prior disclosure<br />
of evidence affecting the credibility of one of the other three officers.<br />
United States v. Gaitan-Ayala,<br />
2009 WL 901522 (D. Hawaii April 2, 2009), aff’d, 454 Fed.Appx. 538 (9th Cir. 2010)<br />
A portion of the convictions for conspiracy and distribution reversed following government’s<br />
post-trial disclosure of evidence that a cooperating witness had purchased large quantities of<br />
methamphetamine and cocaine during the period he was a cooperating witness in this case. The<br />
defendant’s motion for new trial on some counts granted where the witness’ testimony was<br />
material because the witness, while freely admitting his long history of using and dealing drugs<br />
prior to his cooperation, denied continued use and dealing during his cooperation.<br />
United States v. Friedlander,<br />
2009 WL 320861 (M.D. Fla. Feb. 6, 2009)<br />
Enticing a child to engage in sexual acts conviction vacated on motion for new trial due to Napue<br />
violation. The defendant presented a psychiatrist specializing in sexual disorders. He testified<br />
based on the DSM IV TR published in 2000. The prosecutor cross-examined him extensively in<br />
an attempt to establish that he was relying on an outdated version of the DSM when, in fact, the<br />
prosecutor was relying on a version published in 1994. Following the trial, the prosecutor gave<br />
notice that she had been mistaken and the defendant filed a motion for new trial. Although this<br />
was not a case involving the knowing use of false or perjured testimony, the prosecutor’s cross<br />
still put false and material evidence before the jury and this evidence effectively destroyed the<br />
credibility of the defense expert. Despite “compelling and overwhelming” evidence of guilt, the<br />
court granted the motion for new trial because of the court’s observation of “the jury’s reaction to<br />
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the embarrassing and humiliating cross” of the defense expert, which made it impossible for the<br />
court “to say without any confidence, that beyond a reasonable doubt” the error “did not<br />
contribute” to the conviction.<br />
United States v. Fitzgerald,<br />
615 F. Supp. 2d 1156 (S.D. Cal. 2009)<br />
District court dismissed indictment with prejudice following grant of motion for new trial due to<br />
Brady violation. The defendant, a CPA, was convicted of aiding and abetting a doctor in filing<br />
false income tax returns over a two year period. The doctor was the primary witness against the<br />
defendant. The jury acquitted the defendant on one charge and convicted on the other. The court<br />
granted a motion for new trial because the government failed to disclose the transcripts or taped<br />
conversations of the doctor talking to his tax attorney, which were made after the doctor became<br />
a cooperating witness. United States v. Fitzgerald, 2007 WL 1704943 (S.D. Cal. 2007), aff’d,<br />
279 Fed. Appx. 444 (9th Cir. 2008) (unpublished). These tapes revealed that the tax attorney<br />
believed the returns were valid, which was also part of the defendant’s defense. By the time<br />
these tapes were disclosed to the defense, the doctor had died. The court found that the<br />
government, at minimum, recklessly disregarded its discovery obligations. Thus, the court found<br />
the proper remedy for the Brady violation was dismissal of the indictment with prejudice.<br />
U.S. v. Stanford,<br />
2008 WL 4790782 (D.S.D. Oct. 31, 2008)<br />
New trial granted to three defendants in drug case where prosecution did not disclose that a key<br />
prosecution witness provided law enforcement with inaccurate information about another drug<br />
transaction, and that the witness was involved in controlled buys in order to “work” off potential<br />
charges against her. Witness’ “seriously misleading” testimony was material, and although other<br />
incriminating evidence against defendants existed, there was “a reasonable probability that the<br />
suppressed impeachment evidence would have put the case in a different light.” Although<br />
witness did not testify about one of the defendants, her “misleading testimony bolstered the<br />
integrity of the entire conspiracy investigation,” creating “a spillover effect” prejudicing that<br />
defendant.<br />
*Breakiron v. Horn,<br />
2008 WL 4412057 (W.D. Pa. Sept. 24, 2008), rev’d in part, 642 F.3d 126 (3rd Cir.<br />
2011) (finding Brady violation also required grant of relief on robbery conviction)<br />
Habeas relief granted to death row inmate on murder conviction where prosecution withheld<br />
favorable evidence that could have been used to impeach testimony of jailhouse snitch.<br />
Although claim was procedurally defaulted, the suppression of the evidence by the State<br />
provided cause to overcome the default. And because the claim was never raised in state court,<br />
review was de novo. At trial, jury was charged on 1st<br />
, 2nd and 3rd degree murder and voluntary<br />
manslaughter, and defense “effectively conceded” guilt of 3rd degree murder when it presented<br />
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defense that petitioner was too intoxicated to form specific intent to kill. Jailhouse snitch<br />
testified petitioner admitted murder and described incriminating details that contradicted<br />
petitioner’s testimony about his impaired recollection of the killing. Inmate admitted prior<br />
assault conviction, but denied that the crime was really attempted murder and denied receiving<br />
any benefits for testimony. Prosecutor relied on inmate’s testimony, arguing inmate credible<br />
and received no bargain, deal or money for testimony. In fact, inmate wrote prosecutor<br />
requesting benefits in exchange for his testimony against petitioner, i.e., relief from pending<br />
convictions not yet final. At the time of the letters, the inmate was also a suspect in another<br />
case. State’s contention it had no duty to disclose letters because it made no “deal” with inmate<br />
erroneous. Inmate received requested relief when state did not appeal decision granting inmate<br />
post-trial relief from the conviction. In addition, no charges were filed in the other case. The<br />
inmate’s letters “had impeachment value,” and, importantly, the trial prosecutor acknowledged<br />
that the letters would have been disclosed had they been in the file when he took over the case.<br />
The prosecution also violated Brady by failing to disclose that the inmate’s prior conviction<br />
was for assault with intent to rob while armed, not simply assault. Even if the prosecution was<br />
unaware of the actual nature of inmate’s conviction, it had a duty to learn the information.<br />
(The state court’s default of this allegation as untimely was not adequate to bar federal review.)<br />
By “failing to disclose impeachment evidence,” petitioner’s first degree murder conviction was<br />
rendered “unworthy of confidence” given that inmate’s testimony about petitioner’s<br />
premeditation and planning “undeniably added strength” to first degree murder case and<br />
suppressed evidence was relevant to: (1) inmate’s veracity when he testified had nothing to<br />
gain; and (2) prosecution’s assertion that inmate had no reason to be biased in favor of<br />
prosecution.<br />
U.S. v. Hector,<br />
2008 WL 2025069 (C.D. Cal. May 8, 2008)<br />
New trial granted where government’s failure to investigate and disclose impeachment material<br />
“constituted flagrant misconduct.” Despite defendant’s “numerous specific requests seeking<br />
information,” and judge’s “abundantly clear” concerns that Government had “not sufficiently<br />
complied with its Brady obligations,” including telling Government it had “an obligation to<br />
affirmatively find out information” relating “to [its] informant that you can reasonable acquire,”<br />
government “failed to make even basic inquiries about the credibility of its primary witnesses.”<br />
Although knowing informant had lengthy criminal record, government did not speak to officers<br />
involved in another case where informant was involved, and did not investigate informant’s<br />
“history of informing” for over 20 years, attempts to “manipulate officials” and willingness “to<br />
lie to help himself.” Because government’s conduct was “egregious,” defendant needed only<br />
show “flagrant conduct had ‘at least some impact on the verdict.’” If jury heard other law<br />
enforcement officials considered informant “manipulative and willing to lie,” “it would have<br />
been less likely to believe him.” Court “seriously considered dismissing indictment,” but instead<br />
granted new trial where Government will conduct “more thorough investigation&#8230;.” Given its<br />
“compromised” “credibility,” Government must “independently research this (and any other)<br />
informant.”<br />
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*Tassin v Cain,<br />
482 F.Supp.2d 764 (E.D. La. 2007), aff’d, 517 F.3d 770 (5th Cir. 2008)<br />
Habeas relief granted as to capital conviction and death sentence where critical prosecution<br />
witness provided misleading and uncorrected testimony about the sentence she was to receive as<br />
part of her plea agreement. She testified that she could be sentenced up to 99 years, that she did<br />
not know whether her testimony would affect her sentencing, and that she had been made no<br />
promises concerning her testimony. In fact, as established in state post- conviction proceedings,<br />
the witness had been informed by her attorney that the judge had told him the witness should<br />
expect a 10 year sentence if she testified, based on the consistency of her testimony. The state<br />
court had denied relief because Tassin had failed to establish that an actual promise had been<br />
made to the witness. This decision was contrary to Brady by applying “a more stringent standard<br />
than the one established by Supreme Court precedent.” Materiality is found because the witness’s<br />
testimony was crucial to the State’s case in that it provided the only evidence of a plan to commit<br />
armed robbery.<br />
Perez v. United States,<br />
502 F.Supp.2d 301 (N.D.N.Y 2006)<br />
In case involving prosecution for illegal reentry into the U.S., the prosecution violated Brady<br />
because it had constructive knowledge that the defendant was a U.S. citizen at the time he was<br />
originally deported and at the time of reentry but failed to disclose it. (The defendant had been<br />
unaware that he automatically had become a naturalized U.S. citizen derivatively through his<br />
mother&#8217;s successful naturalization.)<br />
*Wilson v. Beard,<br />
2006 WL 2346277 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 9, 2006), aff’d, 589 F.3d 651 (3rd Cir. 2009)<br />
In barroom shooting case where the prosecution’s evidence centered on two eyewitnesses and<br />
one long-time police informant, the prosecution violated Brady by withholding impeachment<br />
evidence. It failed to disclose evidence that one eyewitness had a lengthy criminal history,<br />
including impersonating a police officer, and an extensive psychiatric history as a result of<br />
several head injuries. The prosecution further withheld evidence that the other eyewitness had an<br />
extensive psychiatric history, including medication with antipsychotic drugs. Also not disclosed<br />
to petitioner was that during his trial, this witness was transported by a detective from the<br />
prosecutor’s office for emergency psychiatric care whereupon he was diagnosed with<br />
schizophrenia. Regarding the informant witness, petitioner was not told that the officer who took<br />
his statement had been giving the witness interest free loans for some time. This same officer at<br />
trial had denied providing anything to the informant. (The claim was considered de novo by the<br />
federal court because the state court had refused to reach the merits on waiver grounds but the<br />
waiver rule was not adequate to preclude federal rule.)<br />
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*Powell v. Mullin,<br />
2006 WL 249632 (W.D. Okla. Jan. 31, 2006), aff’d, 560 F.3d 1156 (10th Cir. 2009)<br />
Prosecution violated petitioner’s constitutional rights by suppressing evidence concerning<br />
benefits provided to the sole identification witness and leaving uncorrected false testimony about<br />
the absence of benefits. During habeas proceedings, petitioner offered evidence that the<br />
prosecutor had written a letter to the parole board requesting leniency following the witness’s<br />
testimony in petitioner’s co-defendant’s case, produced a letter from the witness to his mother<br />
regarding deal negotiations, and introduced testimony regarding a phone call between the<br />
witness’s mother and a member of the prosecution team about benefits to the witness. The<br />
prosecutor’s testimony that he sought benefits for the witness without being asked and without<br />
alerting the witness he had done so was rejected. (Note that co-defendant, whose trial preceded<br />
the letter to the parole board, was denied relief. Douglas v. Mullin, 2006 WL 249663 (W.D.<br />
Okla., Jan. 31, 2006). Although this was a post-AEDPA case, de novo review of the claim was<br />
conducted because the state court rejected the claim based on a procedural bar that the federal<br />
court determined was not adequate to preclude federal review.)<br />
*United States v. Hammer,<br />
404 F.Supp.2d 676 (M.D. Pa. 2005), appeals dismissed, 564 F.3d 628 (3rd Cir. 2009)<br />
Petitioner was entitled to sentencing phase relief under § 2255 based on prosecution’s<br />
suppression of evidence supporting petitioner’s version of how the murder of his cellmate<br />
occurred. The cellmate was tied to his bed with braided sheets and strangled. Prosecution<br />
theorized that the cellmate agreed to be tied up as part of a hostage ruse that would get him<br />
transferred to a different prison. Petitioner pled guilty, but specifically denied the hostage ruse<br />
scenario and that he had braided the sheets for this purpose. Prosecution failed to disclose third<br />
party statements indicating that petitioner regularly engaged in sexual activity with other inmates<br />
involving tying inmates down with braided sheets. Guilt-phase relief was denied because<br />
petitioner specifically denied the sheets/hostage ruse elements of the prosecution’s case at his<br />
plea, and yet pled guilty anyway. Penalty phase relief was appropriate because the prosecution<br />
had relied primarily on the fact of the braided sheet tie-down scenario to prove the substantial<br />
planning and premeditation aggravator, one of only two found by the jury, among many<br />
mitigating circumstances.<br />
Ramsey v. Belleque,<br />
2005 WL 1502875 (D. Or. June 10, 2005)<br />
In robbery and assault case, prosecution violated Brady by suppressing evidence of unrelated<br />
drug sales by Ramsey’s alleged victim to a confidential informant which would have impeached<br />
the victim’s testimony at Ramsey’s trial. The victim had claimed that he and Ramsey were<br />
former drug dealing partners and that after their partnership ended, Ramsey robbed him and shot<br />
him in the leg. The victim claimed he was no longer dealing drugs at the time of the incident. The<br />
suppressed evidence, which was discovered shortly after Ramsey’s conviction when drug dealing<br />
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charges were brought against the victim, could have supported Ramsey’s defense that the victim<br />
had fronted drugs to Ramsey and that the victim was accidently shot after pulling a gun on<br />
Ramsey during a dispute about payment for the drugs. Notably, the prosecutor had argued to the<br />
jurors that to find for Ramsey, they would have to believe that the victim was still dealing drugs.<br />
By refusing to grant Ramsey a new trial, the state court unreasonably applied clearly established<br />
federal law.<br />
*Bell v. Haley,<br />
437 F.Supp.2d 1278 (M.D. Ala. 2005)<br />
Habeas relief granted as to death sentence in robbery-murder case based on suppression of<br />
evidence that could have impeached the key witnesses against Bell. The victim’s body was never<br />
found, nor was a weapon or any forensic evidence recovered. The case against Bell was largely<br />
based on the testimony of two witnesses, one who claimed to have been present at the murder<br />
scene but not a participant, and another who said that Bell came to his house following the<br />
murder and showed him the robbery proceeds. This witness also corroborated some elements of<br />
the first witness’s story. The district court found three Brady violations. First, the State<br />
suppressed a prior statement of the second witness that was inconsistent with his trial testimony.<br />
Second, the State failed to disclose that the prosecutor threatened the second witness with a<br />
habitual offender prosecution if he did not testify. Third, the State suppressed a tacit agreement<br />
with the first witness not to prosecute him for his involvement in the case. The court found that<br />
while evidence in the case was sufficient to show that Bell was involved in some way in the<br />
crime, the Brady evidence was enough to establish a reasonable probability of a different<br />
outcome at sentencing.<br />
Eastridge v. United States,<br />
372 F.Supp.2d 26 (D.D.C. 2005)<br />
In case involving numerous gang members charged with killing a man, the prosecution violated<br />
Brady by failing to disclose a grand jury transcript where two unindicted gang members falsely<br />
denied being present at the club where the altercation began on the night of the killing. A witness<br />
at trial had testified that he and the petitioner were not among the group that chased and killed<br />
the victim, which was consistent with the petitioners’s account. This witness’s version of events<br />
included the presence of the two unindicted gang members. Had the false denials by the<br />
unindicted gang members been revealed, the testimony of the supporting witness would have<br />
been more credible.<br />
*Simmons v. Beard,<br />
356 F.Supp.2d 548 (W.D. Pa. 2005), aff’d, 590 F.3d 223 (3rd Cir. 2009)<br />
There was a reasonable probability of a more favorable result at Simmons’s capital trial had the<br />
prosecution not suppressed evidence that would have further impeached the two main<br />
prosecution witnesses. Simmons was charged with raping and killing an elderly woman. The<br />
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primary evidence against him came from another elderly woman who alleged that Simmons<br />
attacked her and said, “if you don’t shut your [expletive] mouth, you’ll get the same thing<br />
[victim] got,” and Simmons’s girlfriend who testified about Simmons’s behavior around the time<br />
of the crime. The prosecution suppressed evidence that (1) the girlfriend had been threatened<br />
with charges if she did not cooperate in wiretapping Simmons; (2) the elderly woman had<br />
purchased a gun following her assault, in violation of felon in possession of gun law, and charges<br />
were dismissed by investigators in Simmons’s case; (3) the elderly woman perjured herself on<br />
the gun application forms; (4) lab reports found no blood or semen on the elderly woman’s<br />
clothes, and found hair consistent only with the victim and inconsistent with Simmons; and (5)<br />
the elderly woman had failed to identify Simmons in a mug book. (The State had affirmatively<br />
denied that a mug book procedure had taken place.) Evidence regarding intimidation of the<br />
girlfriend, and disposition of gun charges against the elderly woman provided a motive for their<br />
having lied, which was missing in the impeachment at trial. Lab reports further undermined the<br />
elderly woman’s story, even though they did not point to another suspect. And had the defense<br />
known about the elderly woman’s inability to identify Simmons in a mug book, it would not have<br />
pursued a strategy of in-person identification. Cumulatively, this led to a reasonable probability<br />
of a different outcome. The state court’s conclusion that no single piece of evidence would have<br />
changed the outcome was an unreasonable application of Kyles.<br />
United States v. Lyons,<br />
352 F.Supp.2d 1231 (M.D. Fla. 2004)<br />
Brady and Giglio violations admitted to by the government which related to a drug conspiracy<br />
count also materially tainted the remaining counts because impeachable testimony as to the drug<br />
conspiracy counts affected the jury’s ability to assess the character and credibility of the<br />
defendant’s testimony about the other counts. Dismissal with prejudice of remaining counts in<br />
the indictment was appropriate where the defendant was prejudiced by the government’s<br />
numerous and flagrant Brady and Giglio violations, and its later denials and delay.<br />
United States v. Hernandez,<br />
347 F.Supp.2d 375 (S.D. Tex. 2004)<br />
Defendant’s motion to dismiss an indictment charging him with assaulting, interfering with, and<br />
resisting a border control agent was granted where the government acted in bad faith by allowing<br />
the defendant’s niece to plead to a superseding indictment without notice to the defendant and<br />
then deporting her while knowing that she was the only witness who would support the<br />
defendant’s claim of self-defense. The Government’s action violated due process and compulsory<br />
process by impeding the defense’s access to exculpatory and material evidence.<br />
United States v. Koubriti,<br />
336 F.Supp.2d 676 (E.D.Mich. 2004)<br />
Court grants government’s motion to dismiss terrorism-related charges and grants defendants’<br />
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motion for a new trial on document fraud charges where the government post-trial confessed that<br />
Brady violations had occurred and an independent review of the suppressed documents by the<br />
court confirmed that defendants’ constitutional rights were violated.<br />
Conley v. United States,<br />
332 F.Supp.2d 302 (D.Mass. 2004), aff&#8217;d, 415 F.3d 183 (1st Cir. 2005)<br />
Petitioner was entitled to habeas relief based on the prosecution’s failure to disclose an FBI<br />
memorandum which contained significant data bearing on a key prosecution witness’s inability<br />
to recall crucial events. The court rejects the government’s argument that the memorandum<br />
wasn’t material because defense counsel at trial embraced aspects of the witness’s testimony.<br />
Turner v. Schriver,<br />
327 F.Supp.2d 174 (E.D.N.Y. 2004)<br />
In robbery case where the alleged victim was the sole witness, the prosecutor&#8217;s representation that<br />
the victim had no criminal record, both to defense counsel and to the jury, when in fact he did,<br />
violated petitioner’s due process rights under Brady v. Maryland. In addition, there was also a<br />
violation of due process based upon the admission of perjured testimony which the prosecutor<br />
should have known was false.<br />
United States v. Park,<br />
319 F.Supp.2d 1177 (D. Guam 2004)<br />
In case where the government conceded that information obtained from an interview was material<br />
to guilt, the prosecutor could not satisfy its Brady obligation by providing a summary of the<br />
interview. &#8220;[W]here a prosecutor obtains exculpatory information from an interview with a<br />
government witness and where the prosecutor takes notes during the interview, the government is<br />
obligated under Brady to produce such notes.&#8221;<br />
Government of Virgin Islands v. Fahie,<br />
304 F.Supp.2d 669 (D.V.I. 2004)<br />
In case involving a charge of possession of an unlicensed firearm, the prosecution violated Brady<br />
by failing to reveal prior to trial a gun trace report that showed the weapon belonged to someone<br />
else. The prosecution’s case was one of constructive possession in that the gun was found in a car<br />
that defendant had been driving. The gun trace report was consistent with defendant’s claim that<br />
the gun was not his. Had the prosecution timely revealed the report, defense counsel may have<br />
been able to link the true owner of the gun to one of the passengers that had been in the vehicle<br />
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before the gun was found by police. Because information about the report only came out during<br />
cross-examination of a witness, defendant &#8220;had no meaningful opportunity to utilize the evidence<br />
that someone else owned the weapon to his advantage.&#8221; The trial court abused its discretion,<br />
however, in dismissing the case with prejudice as a sanction for the constitutional violation.<br />
*Willis v. Cockrell,<br />
2004 WL 1812698 (W.D.Tex. Aug. 2004)<br />
Brady violation found in Texas capital case where prosecution failed to disclose that its mental<br />
health expert had evaluated petitioner regarding future dangerousness and had written a report<br />
with two hypothetical scenarios, one of which was favorable, one of which was not, and the<br />
favorable scenario fit with petitioner’s absence of a history of violence. State appellate court’s<br />
finding that no Brady error occurred by the prosecution’s failure to disclose the report was<br />
contrary to and involved an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law because<br />
the state court applied a sufficiency of the evidence test for materiality, erroneously stated that<br />
the brief nature of the evidence presented at the penalty phase undermined, rather than supported,<br />
a finding of materiality, and failed to consider that disclosure of the report would have led to the<br />
favorable testimony of the expert.<br />
St. Germain v. United States,<br />
2004 WL 1171403 (S.D.N.Y. 2004)<br />
Defendant was entitled to a new trial where the government failed, whether deliberately or<br />
inadvertently, to disclose material exculpatory evidence in sufficient time for the defense to make<br />
use of it. In finding that the evidence was &#8220;suppressed,&#8221; the court notes, among other things, that<br />
the evidence was not disclosed until the eve of trial and it was in the misleading guise of Jencks<br />
Act material. The court rejects the government’s argument that the suppressed evidence was not<br />
material because defendant could be found guilty under an alternative theory that was consistent<br />
with the new evidence. Materiality is evaluated based on the prosecution theory that was actually<br />
presented at trial.<br />
United States v. Rodriguez,<br />
2003 WL 22290957 (E.D.Pa. 2003)<br />
In federal drug case, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose numerous statements<br />
made by the co-defendant at two proffer sessions that were favorable to the defense. First, while<br />
the government&#8217;s theory was that the defendant, who was the co-defendant’s uncle, was involved<br />
in a conspiracy with the co-defendant in which the defendant was the source of the heroin and<br />
brought the co-defendant and the drugs to some of the transactions, the information from the<br />
proffer sessions called that theory into question. Notably, the co-defendant had provided detailed<br />
information about a drug distribution network that did not involve the defendant. Second,<br />
contrary to the prosecution’s representation at trial, the co-defendant had implicated other family<br />
members while denying that defendant was involved in drug dealing. Because the prosecution<br />
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had falsely claimed that the co-defendant protected all family members in his statements, the<br />
defense had declined to admit into evidence the co-defendant’s statement that defendant was not<br />
involved. (This statement from the proffer session had been disclosed to defendant.) Finally, had<br />
defense counsel been given the complete information from the proffer sessions, he would have<br />
been able to conduct a further investigation about the sources of the co-defendant&#8217;s drugs that<br />
may have resulted in additional exculpatory evidence.<br />
United States v. Washington,<br />
263 F.Supp.2d 413 (D. Conn. 2003), on reconsideration, new trial again granted based<br />
on Brady violation, 294 F.Supp.2d 246 (D. Conn. 2003)<br />
In case involving a charge that defendant was a felon in possession of a gun where the key<br />
evidence was a taped 911 call by a person who was deceased by the time of trial, the prosecution<br />
violated Brady by its belated disclosure of the caller’s prior conviction for falsely reporting a<br />
crime to law enforcement. Although the conviction was revealed at the close of evidence on the<br />
first day of the short trial, the late disclosure denied the defense the opportunity to weave the<br />
conviction into its overall trial strategy.<br />
Norton v. Spencer,<br />
253 F.Supp.2d 65 (D. Mass. 2003), aff&#8217;d, 351 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2003)<br />
In sexual assault and battery case, petitioner is to be granted habeas relief on his allegations of<br />
Brady error unless respondent requests an evidentiary hearing. (Relief is ultimately ordered in<br />
256 F.Supp.2d 120 (D. Mass. 2003), after respondent failed to request an evidentiary hearing.)<br />
Because the state court failed to address the federal claim, de novo review is applied irrespective<br />
of Early v. Packer, 123 S.Ct. 362 (2002). The court also finds that petitioner is entitled to relief<br />
even if AEDPA is applied. Assuming the truth of petitioner’s affidavits, the prosecutor violated<br />
Brady by failing to reveal that the alleged victim’s cousin informed the prosecutor that he made<br />
up allegations against petitioner at the insistence of the alleged victim, and that the alleged victim<br />
had admitted to his cousin that his accusations against petitioner were fabricated. (The cousin<br />
had refused to answer some questions at a pretrial hearing, resulting in the dismissal of charges<br />
against petitioner related to the alleged sexual assault on the cousin.)<br />
United States v. Gurrola,<br />
2002 WL 31941469 (D. Kansas Dec. 16, 2002)<br />
New trial granted based on Brady violation where FBI agent testified that the defendant’s<br />
daughter had informed him that defendant was distributing methamphetamine, which defendant’s<br />
daughter denied, and the prosecution failed to disclose the agent’s reports of his interviews with<br />
the defendant’s daughter which contained no mention of defendant. Fact that prosecution had<br />
revealed to defense counsel prior to trial that it was not producing unrelated reports that pertained<br />
to persons other than defendant did not &#8220;adequately put defense counsel on notice that the<br />
government possessed reports favorable to the defendant.&#8221; The suppressed evidence was material<br />
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given that a key issue at trial was whether the defendant &#8220;knowingly&#8221; possessed the<br />
methamphetamine found in her home.<br />
Mathis v. Berghuis,<br />
202 F.Supp.2d 715 (E.D. Mich. 2002), aff’d, 90 Fed.Appx. 101, 2004 WL 187552 (6th Cir.<br />
2004) (unpublished)<br />
State’s failure to disclose prior police reports suggesting rape complainant had made false<br />
accusations of rape and armed robbery in the past mandated habeas relief. In denying relief, state<br />
court unreasonably applied clearly established federal law.<br />
Beintema v. Everett,<br />
2001 WL 630512 (D.Wyo. April 23, 2001)<br />
The district court granted habeas corpus relief in this &#8220;delivering marijuana&#8221; case on the ground<br />
that the prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose that a police officer had threatened the state&#8217;s primary<br />
witness that his family would be prosecuted if he refused to cooperate violated Brady.<br />
Disagreeing with the Wyoming Supreme Court&#8217;s conclusion that the evidence was not &#8220;material,&#8221;<br />
the district court observed that petitioner&#8217;s &#8220;trial was dependent almost entirely upon the<br />
testimony of a single witness, . . . and as such, impeachment evidence [petitioner]&#8217;s counsel could<br />
have used to attempt to discredit that witness or question the veracity of that witness would be<br />
material.&#8221; In concluding that 28 U.S.C. §2254(d)(1) did not bar relief on petitioner&#8217;s claim, the<br />
district court explained that &#8220;[t]he Wyoming Supreme Court&#8217;s opinion includes repeated<br />
references stating that certain evidence was not material. This suggests that &#8216;cumulative<br />
materiality&#8217; was not the touchstone of the [state] court&#8217;s opinion and that it was rather a series of<br />
independent materiality evaluations, contrary to the requirements of Bagley. This is . . . and<br />
unreasonable application of clearly established law . . .&#8221;<br />
Faulkner v. Cain,<br />
133 F.Supp.2d 449 (E.D.La. 2001)<br />
The district court granted habeas corpus relief in this murder case on the ground that the<br />
prosecution violated Brady by suppressing the names of police officers who were first on the<br />
murder scene, and evidence that homosexual pornography and rubber gloves were found at the<br />
scene. This information was favorable and material because petitioner&#8217;s defense was that his<br />
codefendant became belligerent and struck the victim in response to an unwanted homosexual<br />
sexual advance, not pursuant to a plan with which petitioner had been involved. The victim&#8217;s<br />
sexual orientation and the codefendant&#8217;s claim of self-defense were key issues at trial with regard<br />
to, inter alia, petitioner&#8217;s mens rea with respect to first degree murder as a principal. The state<br />
court’s finding that the suppressed evidence was not material because petitioner and the codefendant could have fled after the alleged unwarranted sexual advance was unreasonable in that<br />
petitioner’s failure to run for assistance did not negate the defense that he did not harbor the<br />
requisite intent to commit murder. (The habeas petition in this case was a successor petition that<br />
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had been authorized by the Fifth Circuit.)<br />
Bragg v. Norris,<br />
128 F.Supp.2d 587 (E.D.Ark. 2000)<br />
The district court granted relief and ordered petitioner&#8217;s immediate release in this &#8220;delivery of a<br />
controlled substance&#8221; case, in which petitioner established &#8220;actual innocence&#8221; to permit merits<br />
review of his Napue and Brady claims, and further established his entitlement to relief on the<br />
merits of those claims. Both claims arose out of &#8220;highly reliable&#8221; evidence that a police drug<br />
agent falsified notes and back-dated reports in order to build an otherwise nonexistent case<br />
against petitioner for selling crack. The officer&#8217;s identification of petitioner as the person who<br />
sold him crack was the only evidence supporting the conviction. Petitioner proved, however,<br />
that: the officer&#8217;s claim that he identified petitioner by running his license plate through a state<br />
records check could not be true, because the plate number in question was not issued to petitioner<br />
by the state until several weeks after the officer claimed to have run his check; the officer&#8217;s claim<br />
that he confirmed his identification by viewing a police photograph of petitioner could not have<br />
been true because the police had no photographs of him until months after the identification<br />
allegedly occurred; and, although the officer testified at petitioner&#8217;s trial that he had excluded<br />
another suspect who shared a first name with petitioner by looking at photographs of that<br />
suspect, an undisclosed set of notes written by the officer indicate the officer&#8217;s belief that the<br />
other suspect and petitioner were, in fact, the same person. In granting relief on petitioner&#8217;s<br />
Napue claim, the court acknowledged that the prosecuting attorneys may not have<br />
intentionally elicited false testimony from the officer, but found that knowledge of the<br />
contents of the officer&#8217;s notes should be imputed to the prosecutor, thereby establishing a<br />
violation of Napue. Additionally, citing the testimony of two other prosecutors that &#8220;the case<br />
would have been over&#8221; if the defense had been given access to the information about<br />
the officer&#8217;s activities, the court concluded that this evidence was &#8220;material&#8221; for purposes of<br />
petitioner&#8217;s Brady claim, such that relief was required. Finally, the court ordered petitioner&#8217;s<br />
immediate release, and allowed petitioner to be accompanied back to the jail by his counsel &#8220;to<br />
ensure he is out-processed as rapidly as possible&#8221; in order to satisfy the court&#8217;s desire that he &#8220;be<br />
released from custody . . . this day.&#8221;<br />
United States v. Peterson,<br />
116 F.Supp.2d 366 (N.D.N.Y. 2000)<br />
The district court granted a new trial in this federal prosecution, finding that the prosecution<br />
violated the Jencks Act by inadvertently suppressing investigators&#8217; notes which, if disclosed,<br />
would have revealed discrepancies with the government&#8217;s trial testimony relating to petitioner&#8217;s<br />
statement. These discrepancies created a significant possibility that the jury would have had a<br />
reasonable doubt as to defendant&#8217;s guilt.<br />
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*Benn v. Wood,<br />
2000 WL 1031361 (W.D. Wash. 2000), aff’d 283 F.3d 1040 (9th Cir.), cert. denied 123<br />
S.Ct. 341 (2002)<br />
The district court granted relief from petitioner&#8217;s conviction and death sentence, finding that<br />
although the state had been ordered to search for and disclose evidence of its confidential<br />
informant&#8217;s prior dealings with law enforcement, it failed to conduct the search, and therefore<br />
failed to locate and disclose a wealth of impeaching material. The undisclosed information<br />
included: evidence that the informant had been a police snitch for fifteen years; &#8220;significant<br />
evidence of unreliability and dishonesty in [the snitch&#8217;s] dealings with police; perjury by the<br />
snitch in another case; protection by the prosecution from charges for other crimes; use and sale<br />
of drugs by the snitch while staying in a hotel at government expense during petitioner&#8217;s trial.<br />
The undisclosed information was material because the snitch, who claimed petitioner had<br />
confided in him in jail, provided the only evidence to support the prosecution&#8217;s theory that<br />
petitioner&#8217;s killing of the victims was premeditated, and was the result of an insurance fraud<br />
scheme gone bad. With regard to the insurance fraud scheme, the prosecution also withheld<br />
evidence of an official determination that a fire in petitioner&#8217;s trailer, which the prosecution<br />
alleged to be a component of the insurance scheme, had actually started accidently.<br />
*Jamison v. Collins,<br />
100 F.Supp.2d 647 (S.D.Ohio 2000), aff’d 291 F.3d 380 (6th Cir. 2002)<br />
In pre-AEDPA case, The court held that the cumulative effect of undisclosed exculpatory<br />
evidence in this Ohio capital case raised a reasonable probability that, had it been revealed,<br />
petitioner would not have been convicted of capital murder or sentenced to death. The evidence<br />
included: statements by a cooperating codefendant that were significantly inconsistent with his<br />
testimony at petitioner&#8217;s trial; statements of eyewitnesses suggesting the perpetrator did not match<br />
petitioner&#8217;s description; and statements of eyewitnesses to robberies admitted as other acts<br />
evidence against petitioner. This evidence was material in that it could have been used to direct<br />
suspicion to others, including the codefendant, to impeach the codefendant&#8217;s testimony, and to<br />
discredit eyewitness identifications of petitioner in connection with robberies admitted as other<br />
bad acts. Although petitioner&#8217;s Brady claims were procedurally defaulted, the court found the fact<br />
that the state continued to withhold the evidence during petitioner&#8217;s state court proceedings<br />
constituted &#8220;cause,&#8221; and concluded further that the materiality of the undisclosed evidence under<br />
Brady and its progeny constituted &#8220;prejudice&#8221; sufficient to overcome the default.<br />
Watkins v. Miller,<br />
92 F.Supp.2d 824 (S.D.Ind. 2000)<br />
After finding that petitioner&#8217;s DNA evidence conclusively refuting the prosecution&#8217;s theory that<br />
he alone raped and murdered the victim established a miscarriage of justice sufficient to entitle<br />
him to merits review of his procedurally barred Brady claims, the court granted relief on those<br />
claims. The court found that the state failed to disclose exculpatory evidence indicating that a<br />
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witness saw the victim being abducted at a time for which petitioner had a firm alibi, and that<br />
another potential suspect had taken and failed a polygraph examination about the victim&#8217;s<br />
murder.<br />
United States v. McLaughlin,<br />
89 F.Supp.2d 617 (E.D.Pa. 2000)<br />
The court granted defendant&#8217;s motion for a new trial in this federal tax evasion case, finding that<br />
the government&#8217;s nondisclosure of a witness&#8217; grand jury testimony contradicting the trial<br />
testimony of defendant&#8217;s accountant on the critical point of whether the accountant had<br />
knowledge of defendant&#8217;s bank account, and nondisclosure of documents supporting defendant&#8217;s<br />
claim that certain income was legitimately entitled to tax deferred status, violated Brady.<br />
Reasonover v. Washington,<br />
60 F.Supp.2d 937 (E.D.Mo. 1999)<br />
After finding that petitioner had satisfied the &#8220;miscarriage of justice&#8221; standard and permitting her<br />
to pass through the Schlup actual-innocence gateway in order to obtain merits review of her<br />
procedurally defaulted claims, the court granted relief in this Missouri murder case in which the<br />
state sought, but did not obtain, the death penalty, on the ground that the prosecution committed<br />
numerous Brady violations, including: failure to disclose two audiotapes, one containing<br />
petitioner&#8217;s conversation with an ex-boyfriend in which she credibly asserted her innocence, and<br />
another containing petitioner&#8217;s conversation with a snitch which is consistent with petitioner&#8217;s<br />
claims of innocence and inconsistent with the snitch&#8217;s subsequent trial testimony; failure to<br />
disclose the existence of an extremely favorable deal between the prosecution and its main<br />
snitch, whose testimony was the &#8220;linchpin&#8221; of the state&#8217;s case; and failure to disclose a prior deal<br />
between the state and its secondary snitch, who testified falsely that she had never before made a<br />
deal with the state.<br />
United States v. Locke,<br />
1999 WL 558130 (N.D.Ill. July 27, 1999)<br />
The government violated Brady in connection with defendant&#8217;s federal trial for conspiracy to<br />
import heroin by suppressing a statement made by a co-defendant at his change-of-plea hearing,<br />
in which the co-defendant indicated that neither he nor defendant had knowledge that their travel<br />
abroad with another co-defendant was for the purpose of importing heroin. Noting the weakness<br />
of the government&#8217;s case against defendant at trial, the court found this statement material and<br />
granted defendant&#8217;s motion for new trial. In reaching this conclusion, the court rejected the<br />
government&#8217;s contention that it did not &#8220;suppress&#8221; the statement since defendant&#8217;s attorney was<br />
free to have attended the co-defendant&#8217;s change-of-plea hearing, at which he would have heard<br />
the statement first hand. The court reasoned that a defendant&#8217;s counsel had not failed to act with<br />
reasonable diligence in not attending the hearing, since such hearings do not ordinarily produce<br />
exculpatory evidence for co-defendants.<br />
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Cheung v. Maddock,<br />
32 F.Supp.2d 1150, 1159 (N.D.Cal. 1998)<br />
The state violated Brady in this attempted manslaughter case by failing to disclose medical<br />
records indicating that the victim of the shooting of which petitioner was convicted had a blood<br />
alcohol content substantially higher than the victim&#8217;s testimony acknowledged. This blood<br />
alcohol evidence was favorable to petitioner in several ways: it drew into question the victim&#8217;s<br />
identification of petitioner, rather than one of petitioner&#8217;s two companions, as the shooter; it<br />
undermined the victim&#8217;s credibility, since his claim that he only consumed one drink on the night<br />
of the shooting could not possibly have been true in light of his blood alcohol content; and it<br />
undermined the credibility of the victim&#8217;s companions, who testified in corroboration of his claim<br />
that he only consumed one drink on the night of the shooting.<br />
Spicer v. Warden, Roxbury Correctional Institute,<br />
31 F.Supp.2d 509, 522 (D.Md. 1998), rev’d in part on other grounds, 194 F.3d 547 (4th<br />
Cir.<br />
1999)<br />
The prosecution violated Brady by failing to reveal that counsel for one of three eyewitnesses<br />
upon whom its case rested had told the prosecutor that the witness would say he had seen<br />
petitioner in the days before and after the crime, but not on the actual day of the crime. At trial,<br />
however, this witness testified that he had actually seen petitioner running from the scene of the<br />
crime. The district court concluded that this development in the incriminating quality of the<br />
witness&#8217; testimony was sufficiently inconsistent with how his counsel had previously described<br />
what he knew as to render nondisclosure of counsel&#8217;s description to the prosecutor a violation of<br />
Brady.<br />
United States v. Dollar,<br />
25 F.Supp.2d 1320, 1332 (N.D.Ala. 1998)<br />
The district court dismissed charges of conspiracy and concealing the identity of firearms<br />
purchasers as a result of the government&#8217;s repeated, egregious violations of its disclosure<br />
obligations under Brady. These violations centered on nondisclosure of materially inconsistent<br />
pre-trial statements of several of the government&#8217;s key witnesses. The court explained that,<br />
&#8220;[f]rom the outset of this case, defense counsel have been unrelenting in their effort to obtain<br />
Brady materials. The United States&#8217; general response has been to disclose as little as possible,<br />
and as late as possible&#8211;even to the point of a post-trial Brady disclosure. * * * [A]fter having<br />
assured the court that it had produced all Brady materials, the United States continued to<br />
withhold materials which clearly and directly contradicted the direct testimony of several of its<br />
most important witnesses.&#8221;<br />
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United States v. Colima-Monge,<br />
978 F.Supp. 941 (1997)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s due process rights would be violated if the INS withheld information concerning the<br />
co-defendant which may be relevant to defendant&#8217;s motion to dismiss. Motion for protective<br />
order denied.<br />
United States v. Patrick,<br />
985 F.Supp. 543 (E.D.Pa. 1997), aff’d 156 F.3d 1226 (3rd Cir. 1998)<br />
Motion for a new trial granted when government failed to disclose evidence which would have<br />
impeached one of its main witnesses. This evidence could not have been obtained by the<br />
defendant through the exercise of due diligence as the government never identified the<br />
information that was contained in the withheld documents. Thus, the defendant could not have<br />
known of the essential facts that would have permitted him to make use of the evidence.<br />
Ely v. Matesanz,<br />
983 F.Supp. 21 (1997)<br />
After an evidentiary hearing, the district court found that a plea agreement between the state and<br />
its witness had not been disclosed to the defense. Additionally, the state failed to correct false<br />
testimony presented by the witness that no deal existed. Writ of habeas corpus conditionally<br />
granted.<br />
Chamberlain v. Mantello,<br />
954 F. Supp. 499 (N.D.N.Y. 1997)<br />
Relief granted where police officers gave perjured testimony, even though the prosecutor was<br />
unaware of the misconduct.<br />
United States v. Fenech, 943 F.Supp. 480 (E.D.Pa. 1996)<br />
New trial ordered where government&#8217;s undisclosed file on informant indicated that his motivation<br />
for cooperating was monetary, yet prosecution elicited testimony from him at trial that he did not<br />
cooperate for the money, but rather because he felt that he was &#8220;doing something real good for<br />
the world.&#8221;<br />
Banks v. United States,<br />
920 F.Supp. 688 (E.D.Va. 1996)<br />
Guilty plea successfully challenged where government failed to disclose information regarding<br />
conjugal visits government allowed informant to receive; information was useful to attack<br />
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credibility of informant and government agents and would probably have convinced defendant to<br />
proceed to trial since defendant&#8217;s actions were only criminal when viewed in context supplied by<br />
the agents and the informant.<br />
United States v. Ramming,<br />
915 F.Supp. 854 (S.D.Tex. 1996)<br />
Motion to Dismiss for, inter alia, prosecutorial misconduct granted where, in multi-count bank<br />
fraud indictment, government failed to disclose, despite court order to the contrary, numerous<br />
items of evidence tending to support defendants&#8217; claims of innocence and refute government&#8217;s<br />
theory of the case.<br />
*Williamson v. Reynolds,<br />
904 F.Supp. 1529 (E.D. Okla. 1995), aff’d on other grounds, 110 F.3d 1508 (10th Cir.<br />
1997), and abrogated on other grounds, Nguyen v. Reynolds, 131 F.3d 1340 (10th Cir.<br />
1997)<br />
The prosecution’s withholding of a videotaped interview of petitioner following a polygraph<br />
examination, in which petitioner denied involvement in the murder, tainted his conviction and<br />
death sentence. The crux of the prosecution case was alleged admissions by petitioner. &#8220;If the<br />
1983 videotape had been accessible during trial, defense counsel could have countered the<br />
prosecution&#8217;s testimony regarding alleged oral admissions with the powerful tool of visual<br />
evidence of Petitioner&#8217;s denials.&#8221; Further, the videotape would have allowed defense counsel to<br />
conduct a more thorough cross-examination of a police witness who failed to tape some of the<br />
alleged admissions. Statements on the tape, which were consistent with petitioner’s trial<br />
testimony, also would have assisted the case in mitigation, including by allowing defense counsel<br />
to suggest that the codefendant played the primary role in the capital murder.<br />
*Rickman v. Dutton,<br />
864 F.Supp. 686 (M.D.Tenn. 1994), aff’d on other grounds, 131 F.3d 1150 (6th Cir.<br />
1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1133 (1998)<br />
Habeas granted where prosecution permitted witness to falsely testify that he had not been<br />
promised favorable treatment including immunity for incriminating statements and preferential<br />
treatment during his incarceration.<br />
Jackson v. Calderon,<br />
1994 WL 661061 (N.D.Cal. 1994)<br />
Habeas granted where defendant was denied the opportunity to elicit exculpatory testimony from<br />
an anonymous informant whose identity the government failed, in violation of Brady, to disclose.<br />
Defendant demonstrated a &#8220;reasonable possibility that the anonymous informant . . . could give<br />
evidence on the issue of guilt which might result in [his] exoneration.&#8221;<br />
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Xiao v. Reno,<br />
837 F.Supp. 1506 (N.D.Cal. 1993), aff’d 81 F.3d 808 (9th Cir. 1996)<br />
Due process was denied to alien when United States official had alien paroled into United States<br />
to be used as witness in heroin conspiracy trial, even though official was aware that prosecutors<br />
in Hong Kong declined to prosecute him because he may have been mistreated during<br />
interrogations; failure to produce memorandum concerning Hong Kong officials&#8217; concerns was<br />
flagrant Brady violation. District court permanently enjoined government from returning him to<br />
foreign country.<br />
United States v. Burnside,<br />
824 F.Supp. 1215 (N.D. Ill. 1993)<br />
Brady requires disclosure of impeachment information of which government personnel, but not<br />
prosecutors personally, are aware. Knowledge of warden and others at facility housing witnesses<br />
could be imputed to prosecution.<br />
Bragan v. Morgan,<br />
791 F.Supp. 704 (M.D.Tenn. 1992)<br />
Nondisclosure of plea agreement between prosecution and witness, whether or not it was quid<br />
pro quo, required new trial for defendant where witness&#8217;s testimony that he faced life in prison,<br />
and prosecutor&#8217;s claim in closing argument that witness faced habitual criminal count were false,<br />
regardless of a quid pro quo arrangement and the witness was the key prosecution witness.<br />
Ouimette v. Moran,<br />
762 F.Supp. 468 (D.R.I. 1991), aff&#8217;d, 942 F.2d 1 (1st Cir. 1991)<br />
Habeas relief granted where failure of prosecutor to disclose to defendant that state&#8217;s chief<br />
witness had 24 more criminal convictions than the four disclosed by the state, or to disclose the<br />
inducements, promises, and rewards offered to the witness for his testimony, violated defendant&#8217;s<br />
due process rights.<br />
Hughes v. Bowers,<br />
711 F.Supp. 1574 (N.D.Ga. 1989), aff&#8217;d, 896 F.2d 558 (11th Cir. 1990)<br />
Habeas granted where evidence was suppressed that the state&#8217;s sole eyewitness to the murder<br />
stood to benefit from the life insurance policy of the victim if the defendant were shown to be the<br />
aggressor. Court evaluated this under the standard for knowing use of perjured testimony, i.e.<br />
whether there is any reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the jury&#8217;s<br />
verdict.<br />
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Orndorff v. Lockhart,<br />
707 F.Supp. 1062 (E.D.Ark. 1988), aff&#8217;d in part, vacated in part, 906 F.2d 1230 (8th Cir.<br />
1990), cert. denied, 499 U.S. 931 (1991).<br />
Due process and right to confrontation violated where prosecution failed to disclose that<br />
witness&#8217;s memory was hypnotically refreshed during pretrial investigation. Violation was<br />
compounded by prosecutor&#8217;s statement during opening that the jury would be &#8220;amazed at the<br />
recollections&#8221; of the witness.<br />
Silk-Nauni v. Fields,<br />
676 F.Supp. 1076 (W.D.Okla. 1987)<br />
Exculpatory evidence was unconstitutionally withheld when state failed to disclose a statement<br />
which would have revealed inconsistencies as to sequence of events leading up to shootings, and<br />
directly related to insanity defense by showing that defendant held and acted upon certain beliefs<br />
which lacked a foundation in reality.<br />
Troedel v. Wainwright,<br />
667 F.Supp. 1456 (S.D.Fla. 1986), aff&#8217;d, 828 F.2d 670 (11th Cir. 1987)<br />
Bagley and Napue violated when prosecution pushed expert to say that, in his expert opinion,<br />
Troedel fired the gun, despite the fact that his reports and his habeas testimony indicated that he<br />
could not tell who really fired it. Prosecutor was found to have misled the jury in his questioning<br />
of the expert, and the evidence was material because it was the only thing linking Troedel to the<br />
crime.<br />
Carter v. Rafferty,<br />
621 F.Supp. 533 (D.N.J. 1985), aff&#8217;d, 826 F.2d 1299 (3rd Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S.<br />
1011 (1988)<br />
Habeas relief granted where prosecution failed to comply with a specific request for a polygraph<br />
report which substantially undermined witness&#8217;s testimony which was the &#8220;cracked and shaky<br />
pillar&#8221; supporting the state&#8217;s case.<br />
Scott v. Foltz,<br />
612 F.Supp. 50 (E.D.Mich. 1985)<br />
Habeas granted where a witness testified falsely that she had not entered into a plea bargain with<br />
the prosecution before testifying, and that witness&#8217; credibility was a key issue in the case.<br />
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United States v. Stifel,<br />
594 F.Supp. 1525 (N.D.Ohio 1984)<br />
Conviction for willfully and knowingly mailing infernal machine with intent to kill another<br />
vacated where prosecution failed to disclose evidence implicating another suspect, statement by<br />
defendant&#8217;s girlfriend attesting to his innocence in contradiction to her trial testimony, and results<br />
of investigation tending to show that defendant did not buy the switch used in the bomb.<br />
Raines v. Smith,<br />
1983 WL 3310 (N.D.Ala. 1983)<br />
Habeas granted where the police failed to tell prosecution that, while three witnesses identified<br />
one suspect, only one&#8212;an elderly man whose ability to accurately identify was highly<br />
suspect&#8212;identified defendant. There was no other evidence linking defendant to the crime.<br />
Sims v. Wyrick,<br />
552 F.Supp. 748 (W.D.Miss. 1982)<br />
Where promises were made to key prosecution witnesses in habeas petitioner&#8217;s firebombing case,<br />
and those promises were unlawfully concealed from petitioner and his counsel, so that petitioner<br />
suffered obvious prejudice of being deprived of his right to cross-examine those witnesses,<br />
petitioner was deprived of due process and fair trial.<br />
Anderson v. State of South Carolina,<br />
542 F.Supp. 725 (D.S.C. 1982), aff&#8217;d, 709 F.2d 887 (4th Cir. 1983)<br />
Habeas granted where right to fair trial was denied by prosecution&#8217;s failure to make autopsy<br />
report and investigative notes available to trial counsel, because the withheld materials might<br />
well have created reasonable doubt in minds of jurors, who deliberated 32 hours before returning<br />
a guilty verdict.<br />
United States v. Tariq,<br />
521 F.Supp. 773 (D.Md. 1981)<br />
Government violates defendant&#8217;s Fifth Amendment right to due process and Sixth Amendment<br />
right to compulsory process when it acts unilaterally in a manner which interferes with<br />
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defendant&#8217;s ability to discover, to prepare, or to offer exculpatory or relevant evidence, by<br />
deporting a witness who is an illegal alien, if the Government knows or has reason to know that<br />
the witness&#8217; testimony could conceivably benefit defendant and if deportation occurs before<br />
defense counsel has had notice and a reasonable opportunity to interview and/or depose the<br />
illegal alien.<br />
Blanton v. Blackburn,<br />
494 F.Supp. 895 (M.D.La. 1980), aff&#8217;d, 654 F.2d 719 (5th Cir. 1981)<br />
New trial ordered where state failed to fully disclose all of agreements and understandings it had<br />
with key government witnesses and failed to correct testimony which it knew or should have<br />
known was false, even though witnesses&#8217; answers to questions concerning agreements were<br />
technically direct, and even though no formal plea agreements had been entered into.<br />
Cagle v. Davis,<br />
520 F.Supp. 297 (E.D.Tenn. 1980), aff&#8217;d, 663 F.2d 1070 (6th Cir. 1981)<br />
Habeas granted where, despite lack of request by petitioner for exculpatory material, fundamental<br />
fairness required prosecutor to disclose the availability of a witness, who was &#8220;planted&#8221; in<br />
petitioner&#8217;s jail cell soon after his arrest to interview him in violation of his constitutional rights<br />
and who could have testified that, prior to petitioner&#8217;s alleged confession to witness, petitioner<br />
had continually denied his involvement in victim&#8217;s murder.<br />
United States ex rel. Merritt v. Hicks,<br />
492 F.Supp. 99 (D.N.J. 1980)<br />
Habeas granted where failure, despite specific request, to disclose police report which cast<br />
substantial doubt on credibility of witness whom New York state court twice characterized as<br />
being &#8220;in many respects unreliable,&#8221; and upon whom the state&#8217;s entire case rested, deprived<br />
defendant of due process and fair trial.<br />
United States v. Turner,<br />
490 F.Supp. 583 (E.D.Mich. 1979), aff&#8217;d, 633 F.2d 219 (6th Cir. 1980), cert. denied, 450<br />
U.S. 912 (1981)<br />
New trial granted where DEA agent, who had entered into a leniency agreement with the defense<br />
counsel for a prosecution witness, not only failed to correct the witness&#8217; testimony disclaiming<br />
any such arrangement but took the stand and buttressed the witness&#8217; false testimony through an<br />
affirmative material misrepresentation that no agreement existed, and such conduct was an<br />
affront to the court&#8217;s dignity and honor and to the nation.<br />
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Jones v. Jago,<br />
428 F.Supp. 405 (N.D. Ohio 1977), aff’d, 575 F.2d 1164 (6th Cir. 1978), cert.<br />
denied, 493 U.S. 883 (1978)<br />
Habeas granted where state, despite a specific request from defense counsel, suppressed<br />
statement of co-indictee which, though somewhat ambiguous, appeared on its face to be<br />
favorable to the defense and was sufficiently material to compel disclosure.<br />
United States ex rel. Annunziato v. Manson,<br />
425 F.Supp. 1272 (D.Conn. 1977)<br />
Habeas granted where trial court&#8217;s refusal to permit cross-examination of key prosecution witness<br />
as to pending criminal charges to show bias and motive violated right of confrontation,<br />
particularly in light of prosecution&#8217;s nondisclosure of impeachment information concerning<br />
extensive immunity and aid offers to the witness.<br />
Kircheis v. Williams,<br />
425 F.Supp. 505 (S.D.Ala. 1976), aff&#8217;d, 564 F.2d 414 (5th Cir. 1977)<br />
Habeas granted where state, despite a court order, failed to produce motel records tending to<br />
exonerate defendant, and failed to inform the defense of an oral agreement with a key<br />
prosecution witness which could have affected the witness&#8217; credibility.<br />
Moynahan v. Manson,<br />
419 F.Supp. 1139 (D.Conn. 1976), aff&#8217;d, 559 F.2d 1204 (2nd Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 434<br />
U.S. 939 (1977)<br />
Habeas granted where prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose that its key witness was a target of police<br />
investigation for the same criminal scheme for which defendant stood accused, was threatened<br />
with prosecution, but was never charged, deprived defendant of due process because it raised<br />
reasonable doubt as to guilt.<br />
Emmett v. Ricketts,<br />
397 F.Supp. 1025 (N.D. Ga. 1975)<br />
No privilege existed between chief prosecution witness and psychologist in connection with &#8220;age<br />
regression&#8221; sessions, and since psychologist was an investigative arm of the prosecution, both he<br />
and the DA were required to produce files for in camera inspection. Habeas granted for failure to<br />
disclose.<br />
Ray v. Rose,<br />
371 F.Supp. 277 (E.D.Tenn. 1974)<br />
Conviction set aside due to failure of prosecution to reveal that it had made a standing plea<br />
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bargain with codefendant, who pleaded guilty only after he gave testimony during trial which<br />
implicated defendant, which resulted in defendant&#8217;s being deprived of due process of law.<br />
Hawkins v. Robinson,<br />
367 F.Supp. 1025 (D.Conn. 1973)<br />
Where government informant was the only witness who was not a law enforcement officer, and<br />
his testimony would have been highly relevant to identification and alibi defense, defendant was<br />
deprived of a fair trial when the trial court refused at his request to require the government to<br />
identify informant and furnish information as to his location.<br />
Simos v. Gray,<br />
356 F.Supp. 265 (E.D.Wisc. 1973)<br />
Where witnesses identified defendant from police photos six weeks after offense and never<br />
wavered from their identifications, the state had a duty to disclose police reports which indicated<br />
that, of the night of the offense, witnesses declined to view photos because they were sure they<br />
could not identify the couple they saw, that five days later a witness made a mistaken<br />
identification, and the witnesses gave inaccurate physical descriptions.<br />
Simms v. Cupp,<br />
354 F.Supp. 698 (D.Ore. 1972)<br />
Conviction vacated where state suppressed original description of witness&#8217; assailant, which<br />
differed substantially with her trial testimony, in order to corroborate inculpatory story of<br />
children who had been riding with defendant.<br />
Bowen v. Eyman,<br />
324 F.Supp. 339 (D.Ariz. 1970)<br />
Habeas granted where trial court&#8217;s refusal to appoint expert to test seminal fluid removed from<br />
vaginal tract of rape victim and to test petitioner&#8217;s blood type, which could have negated guilt,<br />
denied petitioner fundamental fairness and was tantamount to a suppression of evidence in<br />
violation of Brady.<br />
Clements v. Coiner,<br />
299 F.Supp. 752 (S.D.W.Va. 1969)<br />
Police polygraph report and psychiatrist&#8217;s letter to prosecutor raising possibility of petitioner&#8217;s<br />
defective mental condition were material to issue of limitation of criminal responsibility and<br />
failure of prosecutor to produce documents, even though not requested, rendered conviction on<br />
guilty plea violative of constitutional due process.<br />
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Imbler v. Craven,<br />
298 F.Supp. 795 (C.D.Cal. 1969), aff&#8217;d, 424 F.2d 631 (9th Cir. 1970), cert. denied, 400 U.S<br />
865 (1970)<br />
Petitioner was denied due process where prosecution permitted witness to give material<br />
testimony which prosecution knew or should have known was false, suppressed an exculpatory<br />
fingerprint, and failed to disclose negative evidence indicating that coat, which prosecution<br />
claimed was worn by petitioner, was not petitioner&#8217;s.<br />
Hernandez v. Nelson,<br />
298 F.Supp. 682 (N.D.Cal. 1968), aff&#8217;d, 411 F.2d 619 (9th Cir. 1969)<br />
Habeas granted where petitioner denied culpability in illegal sale of heroin, informer was<br />
material witness on issue of petitioner&#8217;s guilt, and prosecution knowingly engaged in conduct<br />
which permitted informer to be unavailable at time of trial.<br />
IV. STATE COURTS<br />
Moody v. Florida<br />
210 So.3d 748 (Fla. App. 2017)<br />
Florida appellate court reverses Moody’s denial of motion to withdraw nolo contendere plea to<br />
two counts of child abuse and orders an evidentiary hearing to consider whether evidence<br />
disclosed after his plea that the child’s stepmother had engaged in abuse against the minor child<br />
was Brady material the suppression of which rendered Moody’s plea involuntary. Moody<br />
contended that he would not have entered the plea had he had the information about the sheriff’s<br />
investigation of a child abuse claim involving the child and her stepmother. Under state law, the<br />
adjudication of a claim that a plea was involuntary requires an evidentiary hearing to determine<br />
whether the defendant understood his legal rights and voluntarily entered the plea; that did not<br />
happen here, so reversal and remand is required.<br />
Nebraska v. Harris<br />
693 N.W.2d 317 (Neb. 2017)<br />
Harris was convicted on charges of first degree murder and use of a deadly weapon to commit a<br />
felony. Nebraska Supreme Court holds that although the lower court did not err in denying relief<br />
to Harris on his claim that the state failed to disclose exculpatory information it obtained years<br />
after Harris’s conviction, the lower court did err in concluding that exculpatory information that<br />
police officers knew about at the time of trial, but the prosecutor did not, was not suppressed,<br />
because the officers’ knowledge is imputed to the prosecutor. The lower court did not consider<br />
whether the suppressed evidence would have impeached a witness’s credibility or whether it was<br />
exculpatory, and the Supreme Court remands for further consideration and clarification of this<br />
point.<br />
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State v. Coverdale<br />
2017 WL 1405815 (Del., Apr. 18, 2017) (unpublished)<br />
Delaware Superior Court grants motion for postconviction relief and vacates plea of guilty to four<br />
cases involving nine counts of drug dealing and possession of a firearm by a person prohibited<br />
because prosecution failed to disclose information that the chemist who tested the drugs related to<br />
one of the cases had a history of failing to follow proper testing procedures, was not candid about<br />
his errors and omissions, and did not follow protocols for avoiding sample contamination and<br />
mislabeling. When the defense asked for information about the chemist, the prosecution insisted<br />
there was nothing to disclose on the chemist other than that he resigned because he of problematic<br />
turnaround time on his case work. Whether or not the prosecution had the information on the<br />
details of the chemist’s improper procedures, the knowledge is imputed to the prosecutor. The<br />
prosecutor “knew that the Brady materials on [the chemist] were significant to defendant, who was<br />
facing a trial where an undisputed identification of drugs and an undisputed linking of those drugs<br />
to defendant were essential elements of the State’s case against him.” 2017 WL 1405815 at *4.<br />
The defense could have used the information to impeach the reliability of the chemist’s<br />
conclusions. The defense relied on the prosecution’s misrepresentation that there was no Brady<br />
information to be disclosed when Coverdale entered a guilty plea. The misrepresentation justifies<br />
the withdrawal of the plea to correct a manifest injustice, because Coverdale entered a plea he<br />
would not otherwise have entered had he had the information about the chemist—that information<br />
would have placed him in an “entirely different plea bargaining position.” 2017 WL 1405815 at<br />
*9.<br />
State v. Easterling<br />
2017 WL 588442 (Wash. App., Feb. 14, 2017) (unpublished)<br />
Court of Appeals of Washington affirms in part and reverses in part trial court order dismissing<br />
charges of rape of a child and communication with a minor for immoral purposes based on<br />
allegations that Easterling had sexually assaulted sisters, 9 and 10 years old. The state failed to<br />
disclose reports of examinations of the children upon multiple requests by Easterling, stating that<br />
the examinations had not been performed. During trial, the prosecution learned that the<br />
examinations in fact had been performed and provided the reports to Easterling. The reports<br />
indicated that one of the children had submitted to a genital exam and the other had not; the child<br />
who had been examined did not show obvious signs of sexual assault. The trial court determined<br />
the reports were exculpatory and dismissed all the charges. The Court of Appeals holds that the<br />
report of the examination of the child who had not submitted to genital exam was not necessarily<br />
exculpatory and that the charges stemming from possible abuse of her should not have been<br />
dismissed. The court holds that dismissal of the charges related to the first child was appropriate;<br />
that the trial court considered and rejected lesser sanctions on grounds that were well-reasoned.<br />
Felder v. Florida<br />
198 So.3d 951 (Fla. App. 2016)<br />
Florida appellate court reverses post-conviction court’s summary denial of Felder’s Brady claim<br />
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and remands for further proceedings. Felder was convicted of robbery with a firearm and<br />
aggravated battery with a deadly weapon arising from an incident in which three people attacked<br />
two victims at gunpoint. One of the victims identified Felder as one of the perpetrators. Felder<br />
claimed in post-conviction proceedings that the prosecution had failed to disclose favorable<br />
impeachment evidence that the victim who had identified him to police officers had identified a<br />
third person as her attacker. The post-conviction court denied the claim, stating that Brady was a<br />
trial court error not cognizable in a motion for post-conviction relief, and also stating that the trial<br />
counsel had knowledge of the identification of the third person. The District Court of Appeal<br />
concludes both that Brady claims may be raised in post-conviction proceedings and also that the<br />
record does not conclusively show that trial counsel was aware of the identification of the third<br />
person by the victim.<br />
Bosque v. Florida<br />
202 So.3d 888 (Fla. App. 2016)<br />
Florida appellate court reverses on Brady grounds the judgment and sentence on Bosque’s charge<br />
of tampering with a witness/victim. Bosque was a police officer who, along with other officers,<br />
responded to a domestic dispute regarding the custody of an infant. Bosque and the child’s father<br />
engaged in a physical struggle, and the child’s father later went to the police station to file a<br />
complaint against him, at which time Bosque handcuffed him, having heard that the child’s mother<br />
complained that the child’s father tried to run over her with his car. Bosque was charged with<br />
false imprisonment, tampering with a witness/victim, and battery, on the theory of abuse of<br />
authority and retaliation. Following his conviction on the false imprisonment and tampering with<br />
a witness/victim charges, the state disclosed dispatch audio recordings that demonstrated that<br />
Bosque learned after the incident at the house of the allegation that the child’s father tried to run<br />
over the child’s mother, establishing that when he handcuffed him at the station he had probable<br />
cause to arrest him for aggravated assault. The audio recordings also would have served as<br />
impeachment evidence regarding the testimony of at least one witness. They were material<br />
because, had the jury heard them, the jury could have viewed Bosque’s arrest of the child’s father<br />
as proper and independent of the internal affairs complaint against him.<br />
State v. Robertson<br />
182 So.3d 942 (La. 2016)<br />
Supreme Court of Louisiana grants writ of certiorari, reverses decision of court of appeals, and<br />
reinstates judgment of the trial court on the ground that the trial court had discretion to order and<br />
conduct an in camera inspection of documents to determine whether disclosure was required under<br />
Brady.<br />
People v. Dimambro<br />
897 N.W.2d 233 (Mich. App. 2016)<br />
Michigan Court of Appeals affirms trial court’s order granting motion for a new trial based on<br />
prosecution’s failure to disclose autopsy photographs in possession of the medical examiner.<br />
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Dimambro was convicted of first-degree felony murder and first-degree child abuse stemming<br />
from the death of the two-year-old child of his former girlfriend, which occurred after the child<br />
went into a coma following a series of incidents that occurred while he was in Dimambro’s care.<br />
Following Dimambro’s conviction, the prosecutor obtained a disk from the medical examiner<br />
containing 32 photographs that had not previously been provided to the prosecution, the defense,<br />
or the defense expert medical examiner. The trial court entered an order granting defendant’s<br />
motion for a new trial. The Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court properly concluded that<br />
a Brady violation had occurred because the photographs were withheld by the prosecutor (the<br />
inadvertence does not matter for Brady purposes), the photographs were favorable to Dimambro,<br />
and the photographs were material. The prosecution had an obligation to learn of the favorable<br />
evidence known to the government, and the medical examiner, under state law, has a “duty to act<br />
on the government’s behalf in cases involving violent or unexpected deaths” and so “(1) the<br />
medical examiner may be understood as ‘acting on the government’s behalf’ in a particular case, .<br />
. . and (2) responsibility for evidence within the medical examiner’s control may be imputed to the<br />
government, even if ‘unknown to the prosecution.’” 897 N.W.2d at 215 (internal citations<br />
omitted). The suppressed photos were favorable to Dimambro because they provided a basis for<br />
impeaching the testimony of the medical examiner who conducted the autopsy. The medical<br />
examiner had testified that the bruising on the child’s brain was the result of blunt-force trauma<br />
and non-accidental inflicted trauma. But the suppressed photographs, analyzed by the defense,<br />
demonstrated that the bruising solely resulted from medical intervention, and that the medical<br />
evidence did not support the conclusion that the injury was intentionally inflicted. The<br />
undisclosed photos were material because they were not cumulative to evidence that was presented<br />
at trial by the defense pathologist, but instead “provided a basis for the defense to directly<br />
challenge [the state’s medical examiners’] conclusion that the autopsy revealed that the child’s<br />
injuries were intentionally inflicted.” 897 N.W.2d at 221. This was important in this case “which<br />
involve[d] issues of abusive head trauma but include[d] no eyewitnesses, no physical evidence<br />
confirming the cause of death, and no explicit intent to kill.” Id.<br />
Tempest v. Rhode Island<br />
141 A.3d 677 (R.I. 2016)<br />
Supreme Court of Rhode Island affirms trial court’s grant of post-conviction relief and vacation of<br />
second-degree murder conviction on Brady grounds. Tempest was convicted following a nineyear investigation of the homicide of one victim by beating and the near-homicide of another<br />
victim who survived but whose memory was impaired. Four witnesses testified that Tempest<br />
confessed to the crime. Seventeen days before trial, one of these witnesses told the prosecutor that<br />
Tempest’s brother, who was a detective at the time, hid the murder weapon—a pipe—in a closet in<br />
order to protect his brother, and that on the day of the murder, Tempest’s children were excited<br />
about getting a puppy. The prosecutor took notes about this statement and wrote that it was new<br />
information: “too late-don’t volunteer new info-will cause big problems.” 141 A.3d at 683. The<br />
prosecutor clearly and intentionally failed to disclose this evidence. The witness’s statement about<br />
the brother was inconsistent with her other statements that Tempest had said that his brother was<br />
not aware of his involvement in the murder, and that if he learned about it, he would turn Tempest<br />
in. Even if this statement was inculpatory, as the state contended, it nevertheless could have been<br />
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used to impeach the witness’s credibility, which was already shaky. The statement about the<br />
puppy also had impeachment value because it established that Tempest was not living in the same<br />
complex at the time of the murder, and so it was unlikely that the witness could have seen<br />
Tempest’s children and Tempest on the day of the murder as she testified. Although “the<br />
materiality of the evidence is not germane when the prosecution’s failure to disclose the evidence<br />
is deemed to be deliberate” 141 A.3d at 686 (citing state law), the evidence was in fact material,<br />
because the witness was the most credible of the “four less-than-stellar witnesses” who testified<br />
that Tempest confessed to the murder. Id.<br />
State ex rel. Lorenzetti v. Sanders<br />
792 S.E.2d 656 (W.Va. 2016)<br />
West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals denies writ brought by state challenging trial court order<br />
permitting defendant’s counsel to review files concerning a child that are confidential under state<br />
law but that may contain material exculpatory or impeachment information. Defendant was<br />
charged with sexual abuse of his child. He sought to review files pertaining to the child<br />
maintained by the Department of Health and Human Services and in the possession of the<br />
prosecution. The trial court conducted an in camera review of the records following a request by<br />
counsel on the grounds that they might contain information that the child recanted her accusation<br />
against the defendant and that the child’s mother might have taken a misleading position against<br />
the defendant in order to be reunited with her daughter. The trial court determined that the records<br />
contained exculpatory information material to the defense including recantations, and that defense<br />
counsel had a constitutional right to review them. The Supreme Court of Appeals notes that the<br />
information in the files is favorable as impeachment evidence and material because it could cast<br />
doubt on the child’s credibility as a witness, so suppression would violate defendant’s right to due<br />
process. Although the records are generally confidential, there are statutory exceptions, among<br />
which is when the court finds, upon review, that the evidence is relevant and material to the issues<br />
in the proceeding and should be made available to the defendant. The trial court must conduct an<br />
in camera review and balance the defendant’s interest in a fair trial with the state’s interest in<br />
protecting the child’s confidentiality, and determine whether an order limiting the examination and<br />
use of records is necessary for the child’s safety. The trial court did so in this case.<br />
Betancourt v. Warden<br />
2016 WL 490285 (Conn. Super. Ct., Jan. 12, 2016) (unpublished)<br />
Superior Court of Connecticut grants habeas corpus petition on Brady claim. Betancourt was<br />
convicted of first degree kidnapping, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, first degree burglary,<br />
conspiracy to commit burglary, second degree robbery, and conspiracy to commit robbery. One of<br />
the perpetrators (a codefendant) testified against Betancourt at trial, giving testimony that directly<br />
implicated Betancourt in the kidnapping, burglary, and robbery, and the state’s case rested almost<br />
exclusively on this codefendant’s testimony. The prosecution did not disclose any benefits given<br />
to the codefendant, and on cross-examination, the codefendant testified falsely that he had no<br />
intention of applying for or hopes of obtaining a sentence modification. Nevertheless, the<br />
prosecution intended to and did present the court in codefendant’s case with an agreed-upon<br />
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disposition reducing the codefendant’s prison term by 50% and cited his cooperation against<br />
Betancourt as a basis for modifying his sentence. This evidence would have been a powerful<br />
impeachment tool for the defense and therefore was material.<br />
People v. Horton<br />
2016 IL App (2d) 141059-U (Ill. App., Oct. 12, 2016) (unpublished)<br />
Appellate Court of Illinois reverses trial court’s denial of Horton’s request for leave to file a<br />
successive post-conviction petition and remands for new trial. Horton was convicted of first<br />
degree murder and armed robbery and sentenced to life in prison. Post-conviction, he learned that<br />
one of the prosecution’s key witnesses had two prior juvenile convictions, was on juvenile<br />
probation at the time of his trial testimony, and had been identified although not charged as the<br />
gunman in a shooting two weeks prior to when his cooperation in the case against Horton began.<br />
None of this information had been disclosed to Horton pretrial. The late discovery of this<br />
information established cause for failing to raise the claim earlier. Horton can establish prejudice<br />
if he is not permitted to raise the claim now because the suppressed information impeached the<br />
testifying witness by raising issues of his credibility due to his juvenile adjudications and<br />
probationary status and also his motives to testify as he was under investigation by the prosecution<br />
and was motivated to assist in order to obtain leniency. The witness’s testimony against Horton at<br />
trial was central because he was the only one who testified that he arranged Horton’s purchase of<br />
the murder weapon before the murder, that he saw Horton with the weapon after the shooting, that<br />
Horton said he was going to rob the victims, and that Horton asked for the name and number of a<br />
person interested in buying the gun following the murder. Furthermore, “[t]he use of a convicted<br />
felon who was suspected of shooting at a person in an ongoing investigation would have provided<br />
an opportunity to challenge the thoroughness and integrity of the officers and their failure to even<br />
consider [defendant’s cousin] as an alternate suspect.” 2016 IL App (2d) 141059-U at *43.<br />
Although ordinarily the court would remand with directions to the trial court to give leave to the<br />
defendant to file his Brady claim, here that would be a waste of judicial resources as the state has<br />
already admitted that the witness was involved in the prior shooting, so the court simply resolves<br />
the claim and finds that the Horton is entitled to a new trial.<br />
*Adams v. Nevada<br />
2016 WL 315171 (Nev., Jan. 22, 2016) (unpublished)<br />
On appeal of denial of post-conviction petition for writ of habeas corpus in death penalty case,<br />
Supreme Court of Nevada remands to the trial court for evidentiary hearing to determine whether<br />
the state’s withholding of evidence constituted good cause to overcome procedural default rules on<br />
a Brady claim. Adams was convicted of two counts of first degree murder and burglary for the<br />
shooting of his wife and three-year-old daughter and sentenced to death. The Nevada Supreme<br />
Court determines that Adams has provided sufficient support for his claim that the state withheld<br />
impeachment evidence concerning a key witness in the form of the witness’s true identity and<br />
criminal history in order to proceed.<br />
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Ex parte Temple<br />
2016 WL 6903758 (Tex. Crim. App., Nov. 23, 2016) (unpublished)<br />
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirms trial court’s grant of habeas corpus relief to petitioner<br />
Temple, convicted of the murder of his wife and sentenced to life in prison, due to state’s failure to<br />
timely disclose police reports. Investigating officers had suspected a high school student who<br />
lived next door to the Temple family, and had questioned him, but told defense counsel that he<br />
was not a suspect. The prosecutor had police reports that she did not disclose to the defense<br />
because she believed she was not required to disclose favorable evidence if, in her opinion, it was<br />
irrelevant, inconsistent, or unreliable. Defense counsel asked for police reports, knowing that it<br />
was rumored that the high school student and his friends had some involvement in the murder, and<br />
counsel “made every attempt . . . to develop an alternate perpetrator defense.” Many of the reports<br />
counsel requested were not provided at all, and some were provided only during trial, when it was<br />
too late for counsel to “strongly develop[ ] an alternative suspect theory and start[ ] it from the<br />
very beginning of the trial,” because the trial court denied a requested continuance.<br />
*Reynolds v. Alabama<br />
2015 WL 5511503 (Ala. Crim. App., Sept. 18, 2015)<br />
On appeal of dismissal of petition for post-conviction relief, Court of Criminal Appeals of<br />
Alabama finds that Reynolds has pled a facially meritorious Brady claim and reverses and<br />
remands with instructions for trial court to provide Reynolds an opportunity to prove his claim.<br />
Reynolds was convicted of five counts of capital murder [note that it appears from the opinion that<br />
there were only three victims – a couple and a small child] and sentenced to death. At trial, the<br />
state presented testimony from West, Reynolds’ girlfriend, that she was present in the car while<br />
Reynolds went inside the victims’ home. She heard one of the victims screaming and went in the<br />
house and saw the body of the male victim and Reynolds stabbing the female victim, and during<br />
her attempts to stop Reynolds, she was stabbed as well. She followed Reynolds’ instructions and<br />
took items out of the house. West also testified that she received no benefit in exchange for her<br />
testimony. Reynolds testified in his own defense that he did not participate in the homicides and<br />
was not present but instead that West told him she had been stabbed trying to protect the female<br />
victim when another perpetrator was stabbing her, and he took West to the victims’ home and left<br />
her in the car when he went inside and saw the male and female victims, and tried to burn the<br />
house down to cover up West’s involvement in the homicides. After his conviction, and during<br />
appellate proceedings, Reynolds learned that West received a deal from the prosecution in<br />
exchange for her testimony. Although West was arrested nearly a year prior to the homicides for<br />
drug offenses, charges were not filed until a few days after the homicides. After West testified at<br />
trial, the prosecution dismissed three of the pending drug charges against her, and she pleaded<br />
guilty to two other charges, for which she was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment. Six<br />
months later, the prosecution recommended that the rest of her sentence be suspended and she be<br />
placed on probation; she was released immediately. The Court of Criminal Appeals finds that the<br />
claim was not procedurally barred, contrary to the trial court’s conclusion, because the facts were<br />
unknown to Reynolds until the government recommended that her sentence be suspended, after he<br />
filed his reply brief in support of his appeal. The petition pled facts that, if true, require relief<br />
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under Brady and Giglio, because West’s testimony was important to the state’s case—the jury’s<br />
determination regarding Reynolds’ guilt depended upon weighing West’s testimony against<br />
Reynolds’.<br />
*Isom v. Arkansas<br />
462 S.W.3d 682 (Ark. 2015)<br />
Supreme Court of Arkansas grants petition to reinvest jurisdiction in the circuit court to consider<br />
petition for writ of error coram nobis on grounds that state committed Brady violation in failing to<br />
disclose evidence to capital petitioner regarding alternative suspect. Isom was convicted by a jury<br />
of capital murder, attempted capital murder, aggravated robbery, residential burglary, and two<br />
counts of rape, and sentenced to death, along with life and terms of years sentences, arising from<br />
the robbery and killing of a 79-year old man and the rape and attack on his 72-year old caregiver.<br />
The female victim identified Isom’s photo from a photo lineup on April 5, 2001. A rape-kit<br />
examination of a hair found in the female victim’s vaginal opening concluded that the hair did not<br />
belong to the male victim or Isom. In his petition, Isom alleged that the state withheld (1)<br />
evidence that the female victim did not identify him as the attacker in a photo array shown on<br />
April 4, 2001; (2) evidence that she did not identify Isom from a photo array shown on April 5,<br />
2001; (3) investigative notes about interviews with the female victim while she was in the hospital;<br />
(4) evidence that another witness knew that Isom was the main suspect before he identified him;<br />
(5) evidence that that a second witness had reason to curry favor with the police; and (6) evidence<br />
of alternative suspects. Isom also alleged that the state suppressed DNA evidence by turning over<br />
illegible copies of documents and incomplete copies of gel strips and that the state failed to correct<br />
the female victim’s false testimony that she was not on pain medication in the hospital and did not<br />
make an identification without her glasses. The Arkansas Supreme Court focuses on the<br />
suppressed evidence regarding alternative suspects, and concludes that the state suppressed<br />
evidence that, pursuant to information provided by an inmate that a third party had stated that he<br />
committed the crime and that a weapon could be found in a particular location, law enforcement<br />
went to the location, found a pair of scissors and, in consideration, released the inmate who<br />
provided the information. A law enforcement officer had testified falsely during a hearing on<br />
pretrial motions that although the inmate provided this information, no weapon was found in the<br />
location he named and the inmate was not released from custody. As a result of the false<br />
testimony and suppressed evidence, the defense was precluded from presenting the officer as a<br />
witness before the jury and developing the theory that the third party had committed the murder.<br />
Because Isom’s Brady claims appear to be meritorious, reinvestment of jurisdiction in the circuit<br />
court is the proper remedy.<br />
*State ex rel. Clemons v. Larkins<br />
475 S.W.3d 60 (Mo. 2015)<br />
Supreme Court of Missouri grants habeas corpus petition seeking vacation of conviction of two<br />
counts of first degree murder on grounds that the prosecution withheld evidence that could have<br />
led to the suppression of Clemons’ confession, a critical part of the case against Clemons.<br />
Clemons, along with three other men, was accused of raping sisters aged 19 and 20 and killing<br />
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them by throwing them off a bridge. Initially the sisters’ male cousin was suspected by police of<br />
having committed the offenses, and he testified that he was beaten by the police in the course of<br />
his interrogation and before he was cleared. Clemons and one of the other men charged with the<br />
rapes and homicides also contended that they had been beaten by investigators during their<br />
interrogation and were forced to confess to raping the sisters in order to stop the abuse. At trial,<br />
the officers denied beating Clemons, and although medical records and family members indicated<br />
that Clemons had bruising to his cheek following the interrogation, other witnesses testified that he<br />
did not, and Clemons did not testify. The trial court concluded that there was no evidence<br />
presented about how Clemons sustained his injuries, and precluded the defense from arguing that<br />
the police coerced Clemons’ confession. In post-conviction proceedings, Clemons presented<br />
testimony of Weeks, a bail investigator working for the Missouri Board of Probation and Parole<br />
who had screened Clemons less than three hours after his arrest. Weeks testified that during the<br />
screening he observed a large bump or bruise on Clemons’ right cheek and had noted it on his<br />
pretrial release form. He discussed the bruise with his supervisor, Lukanoff, who said that he<br />
believed the injury occurred during Clemons’ interrogation. Weeks testified that several months<br />
later, another supervisor, Coleman, told him that the prosecutor wanted to speak with Weeks about<br />
his observation of the injury. The prosecutor showed Weeks photos of Clemons that did not depict<br />
the bruising, but Weeks told the prosecutor that the photos didn’t change his mind about what he<br />
had seen and everyone else in the room during the pretrial screening had seen the same thing. The<br />
prosecutor seemed annoyed. Weeks was shown his pretrial release form and noted that the<br />
reference to the bruise/bump had been edited out. The prosecutor also testified during postconviction proceedings that Weeks had made references to Clemons’ face being swollen and that<br />
he “assumed” that a witness like Weeks would have been important to the defense. The Missouri<br />
Supreme Court determines that Clemons established cause and prejudice to overcome the<br />
procedural bars to the habeas claim because the state deliberately concealed Weeks’ observations<br />
and suppressed the information in the pretrial release form by altering it. And “[t]he determination<br />
of whether prejudice resulted from the underlying error under a cause and prejudice standard is<br />
identical to this Court’s assessment of prejudice in evaluating Mr. Clemons’ Brady claims.” The<br />
undisclosed evidence from Weeks, an objective, impartial witness, corroborating Clemons’<br />
statements about being beaten by officers, was favorable—it was the most immediate account of<br />
Clemons’ physical appearance following the interrogation, it also impeached the credibility of the<br />
state’s witnesses who testified that Clemons did not have any injuries, and it might have led the<br />
trial court to sustain Clemons’ motion to suppress his confession, which was the only direct<br />
evidence that the rapes were planned, that he was on the platform when the sisters were pushed off<br />
the bridge, and that the sisters were conscious and aware of what was happening, all of which<br />
likely influenced the jury to vote for death. Even if the trial court did not suppress the confession,<br />
it may have permitted defense counsel to argue that the police beat Clemons to coerce his<br />
confession. All of the Weeks evidence (including the fact that he was urged to change his report<br />
and that he refused but the report was changed anyway) supports a reasonable inference that<br />
Clemons was beaten during his interrogation. It was material because the trial court made the<br />
decision not to suppress the confession without it—indicating that Clemons was not given a fair<br />
trial, not just at the motion to suppress but also at the trial itself, during which Weeks’ testimony<br />
could have convinced the jury that Clemons had been beaten to confess.<br />
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People v. Hubbard<br />
132 A.D.3d 1013, 18 N.Y.S.3d 681 (2d Dep’t. 2015)<br />
The Supreme Court of New York, Appellate Division, affirms grant of motion for new trial.<br />
Hubbard was convicted of second degree murder arising from a shooting that occurred when he<br />
was 15 years old. The crucial evidence against Hubbard at trial was his admission to the shooting,<br />
taken by Detective Ronald Tavares, and testified to by Tavares. There was no physical evidence<br />
connecting Hubbard to the crime and eyewitnesses could not identify him. The state failed to<br />
disclose that Tavares had secured a false confession in a different case that led to an internal<br />
affairs investigation and a federal lawsuit against him. This evidence was favorable to the defense,<br />
known by the prosecutor, and material.<br />
Buffey v. Ballard<br />
782 S.E.2d 204 (W.Va. 2015)<br />
West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals reverses denial of habeas corpus petition and remands<br />
for entry of order granting habeas relief and permitting withdrawal of Buffey’s guilty plea due to<br />
Brady violation. Buffey was arrested and charged with robbery and sexual assault of an 83-year<br />
old widow. Approximately a week after the assault, he was arrested for three non-violent breaking<br />
and entering offenses at businesses and was questioned for nine hours. He admitted the burglaries<br />
and initially denied responsibility for the offenses against the widow. At 3:25 a.m. he admitted<br />
breaking into an old lady’s house but denied sexual assault and the limited information he<br />
provided was inconsistent with the victim’s repeated, consistent descriptions of the event. After<br />
more questioning, Buffey retracted his account of the incidents and said he was not responsible.<br />
He was appointed counsel who requested the production of discoverable materials and the state<br />
was ordered to provide them within seven days of arraignment. Six weeks prior to Buffey’s<br />
entering a guilty plea, entered pursuant to a time-limited plea offer made by the prosecution, an<br />
officer with the police forensic laboratory reported that Buffey was excluded as a donor of seminal<br />
fluid recovered from the rape kit, but this report was not provided to the defense despite “repeated<br />
inquiries.” 782 S.E.2d at 208. Following the filing of a habeas petition, new DNA testing was<br />
conducted and concluded that Buffey was not a primary or secondary sperm contributor, and a<br />
CODIS search indicated that the primary sperm contributor was a prison inmate who lived a few<br />
blocks away from the victim at the time of the assault and was the victim’s paper boy. The court<br />
notes that the United States Supreme Court has held that no Brady violation occurs when<br />
impeachment evidence is withheld prior to the trial (during the plea negotiation stage), see United<br />
States v. Ruiz, 536 U.S. 622 (2002), but notes that Ruiz “specifically distinguished impeachment<br />
evidence from exculpatory evidence.” 782 S.E.2d at 213 (citing Ruiz, 536 U.S. at 630). The court<br />
notes that there is a circuit split as well as other court split about whether exculpatory evidence<br />
must be revealed during the plea negotiation stage, and concludes that “the better-reasoned<br />
authority supports the conclusion that a defendant is constitutionally entitled to exculpatory<br />
evidence during the plea negotiation stage,” 782 S.E.2d at 217, and that a defendant may seek to<br />
withdraw a guilty plea based upon the prosecution’s exclusion of material, exculpatory evidence.<br />
The court also concludes that the fact that the police were aware that the DNA evidence excluded<br />
Buffey is imputed to the prosecution whether or not the prosecutor personally actually had this<br />
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information. The DNA results were favorable to Buffey, were withheld from the defense, and<br />
were material because both Buffey and his counsel asserted that Buffey would have pleaded not<br />
guilty had they been aware of them.<br />
Ex parte Carlos Flores<br />
2015 WL 5453293 (Tex. Crim. App., Sept. 16, 2015) (unpublished)<br />
Court grants application for writ of habeas corpus where parties agreed during post-conviction<br />
proceedings that the state failed to disclose evidence prior to Flores’s guilty plea that the arresting<br />
officer was suspended for 30 days for misconduct in connection with Flores’s case.<br />
Danforth v. Chapman,<br />
771 S.E.2d 886 (Ga. 2015)<br />
Petitioner was entitled to a new trial on charges of arson and felony murder because the State<br />
violated Brady and Giglio by failing to disclose three items of evidence which would have<br />
impeached the testimony of Joseph White, a jailhouse snitch who testified at trial that petitioner<br />
told him he intentionally started the fire that killed the victim. White was the only witness who<br />
testified that petitioner had confessed to the crime. It was uncontested that the State failed to<br />
disclose the following: (1) a video recording of an interview between White and the prosecutor<br />
which clearly showed that White was seeking assistance from the prosecution in exchange for his<br />
testimony – in direct contradiction to White’s testimony at trial; (2) a statement from William<br />
Liner, whom White claimed had also heard petitioner’s confession, in which Liner stated that<br />
petitioner never confessed and White was actively seeking help with his then-pending charges;<br />
and, (3) one page of an otherwise disclosed written statement from White to his pastor which<br />
contained instructions from White to “[h]old off on giving my statement to police. I want to see<br />
what’s going on for a few days,” thereby undermining White’s trial testimony that he went to<br />
authorities immediately and was not seeking help with his own charges. This evidence was<br />
material to the defense and therefore the lower court did not err when it awarded petitioner state<br />
habeas relief pursuant to Brady and Giglio.<br />
Propes v. Commonwealth,<br />
2015 WL 1778198 (Ky. App. 2015)<br />
On direct appeal, defendant was entitled to a new sentencing proceeding on charges of drug<br />
trafficking after the prosecution used incorrect testimony regarding his parole eligibility in<br />
violation of Napue. After jurors found defendant guilty of second-degree trafficking in a<br />
controlled substance, they were asked to fix a term of punishment. At the sentencing hearing,<br />
defendant’s probation officer inaccurately testified that if defendant was sentenced to a ten-year<br />
term, he would serve a minimum of 18 months under the fifteen percent rule before he would be<br />
eligible for parole. This testimony was inaccurate because, if the jury convicted defendant of a<br />
Class D felony (instead of a Class C felony), his parole eligibility date would be calculated using<br />
the twenty percent rule, under which he would serve a minimum of 24 months of a ten year<br />
sentence before becoming eligible. The Commonwealth characterized this testimony as “at best<br />
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incomplete, or inaccurate at worst,” but the state court concluded “we discern no saving grace and<br />
deem it necessary to vacate the sentence and remand for a new penalty phase limited to the issue<br />
of punishment.” Propes, 2015 WL 1778198 at *4.<br />
Lapointe v. Commissioner of Correction,<br />
112 A.3d 1 (Conn. 2015)<br />
Petitioner was deprived of a fair trial on charges of murder and arson because the State violated<br />
Brady when it failed to disclose a note, authored by Detective Michael Ludlow, containing details<br />
concerning the length of time the fire burned inside the victim’s apartment prior to being<br />
discovered (the Ludlow note). The victim, eighty-year old Bernice Martin, was raped, bound and<br />
murdered in her apartment, which her killer then set ablaze in an apparent effort to destroy<br />
evidence of the crime. Petitioner, then the forty-two year old mentally impaired husband of the<br />
victim’s granddaughter, Karen Martin, discovered that the victim’s apartment was on fire after a<br />
relative called and asked petitioner to make the ten-minute walk to her apartment to check on her<br />
because she was not answering her phone. Petitioner suffers from physical and mental<br />
impairments as the result of Dandy-Walker syndrome, a congenital brain disorder known to cause<br />
poor motor skills and cognitive impairments. Petitioner’s IQ is approximately 92. He was not an<br />
initial suspect in the case, had no criminal record or history of violence, and did not seem<br />
physically, mentally or temperamentally capable of the crime. However, after the murder<br />
remained unsolved for approximately two years, the case was reassigned to Detective Paul<br />
Lombardo, who decided to re-interview individuals who previously had been questioned by police.<br />
On June 8, 1989, Lombardo interviewed petitioner and took a saliva sample from him (petitioner’s<br />
blood type matched a semen stain found at the scene of the crime; petitioner is a secretor with type<br />
A blood, as is approximately one third of the male population). On July 4, 1989, Lombardo asked<br />
petitioner to come to the police station for questioning. Officers later acknowledged that the<br />
intended purpose of the interrogation was to obtain a confession from petitioner. By this time,<br />
Lombardo had become convinced of petitioner’s guilt because of his blood type, his peculiar<br />
nature and mannerisms, and his repeated questions to police about whether he was a suspect in the<br />
victim’s murder. Over the course of the next nine hours, petitioner gave three written statements<br />
in which he purported to take responsibility for the crime, although he told police that he had no<br />
recollection of the killing and stated he was confessing only because they wanted him to do so.<br />
Based on this evidence, petitioner was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment without the<br />
possibility of release. It was undisputed that the Ludlow note was first disclosed to petitioner’s<br />
habeas counsel in 1999, in connection with his state habeas proceedings. The Ludlow note<br />
demonstrated that, a few days after the homicide, Detective Ludlow met with state fire marshals<br />
who opined that the fire in the victim’s apartment had been burning for a minimum of 30 to 40<br />
minutes before the first responding firefighters arrived. Petitioner’s trial counsel testified in the<br />
habeas proceedings that if this information had been known at the time of trial, counsel would<br />
have called petitioner’s wife, Karen, to testify that petitioner was at home when the fire first<br />
started. Petitioner also offered opinions from two additional experts, which were consistent with<br />
the notation contained in the Ludlow note. The State offered its own expert testimony concerning<br />
the likely burn time of the fire. Under the far longer estimate proffered by the State’s expert,<br />
petitioner could not establish, even with Karen’s testimony, that he was home during the entire<br />
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period in which the fire could have started. The state habeas court found that the testimony of the<br />
State’s expert was far more persuasive than the testimony of petitioner’s experts and thus,<br />
concluded that the withheld information in the Ludlow note was not material because it was not<br />
reasonably probable that, if the jury had heard the testimony of petitioner’s experts, it would have<br />
credited that testimony and reached a different result. The interim appellate court reversed this<br />
decision, concluding that the determination of which experts were most persuasive was an issue to<br />
be decided by the jury at a new trial. The Supreme Court of Connecticut affirmed, holding that<br />
“the testimony of petitioner’s experts was more than sufficient to call into question the reliability<br />
of the petitioner’s conviction. Indeed, even if that expert testimony only tended to support the<br />
petitioner’s claim that he could not have murdered the victim, in view of the tenuous nature of the<br />
state’s case against the petitioner – based as it was on his suspect admissions – the state’s Brady<br />
violation would warrant a new trial because, as the United States Supreme Court has recognized,<br />
exculpatory evidence of even ‘minor importance’ may well be ‘sufficient to create a reasonable<br />
doubt’ when, as in the present case, ‘the [guilty] verdict is already of questionable validity.’”<br />
(quoting United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 113 (1976)).<br />
*Manning v. State,<br />
158 So.3d 302 (Miss. 2015)<br />
State committed Brady violation by failing to disclose that the apartment from which the State’s<br />
key witness testified he observed defendant enter the victims’ apartment was vacant at the time of<br />
the crime. Defendant was convicted of murdering two elderly women in Starkville, Mississippi,<br />
and sentenced to death. Although numerous other witnesses placed defendant at the apartment<br />
complex on the day of the murder, Kevin Lucious was the only witness to testify that he saw<br />
defendant entering the women’s apartment shortly before their bodies were discovered. At the<br />
time of his testimony, Lucious was a convict serving two life sentences without parole in Missouri.<br />
No witnesses testified to seeing defendant leave the apartment. Police conducted a canvass of all<br />
residents of the apartment complex during their investigation and recorded the results on index<br />
cards. An entry on the cards revealed that the apartment from which Lucious testified he observed<br />
defendant enter the victims’ apartment was vacant at the time of the crime, and neither Lucious<br />
nor his girlfriend was listed as a resident on any of the apartments canvassed. The State conceded<br />
this information was not disclosed to the defense prior to trial. The Supreme Court of Mississippi<br />
concluded: (1) the evidence was favorable to defendant for impeachment of Lucious’s testimony;<br />
(2) defense counsel could not have obtained this evidence themselves with reasonable diligence,<br />
given that they were not even appointed to represent defendant until three-and-a-half years after<br />
the crime; (3) the evidence was suppressed; and, (4) the evidence was material because both<br />
defense counsel and the district attorney testified that their actions in preparing and presenting the<br />
case would have been different had they possessed the evidence. “Any attorney worth his salt<br />
would salivate at impeaching the State’s key witness using evidence obtained by the Starkville<br />
Police Department.” Manning, 158 So.3d at 307. Moreover, the district attorney’s admission that<br />
“he would have investigated the discrepancy between Lucious’s testimony and the cards is also<br />
crucial to prong four, bolstering that a reasonable probability exists that the outcome of the<br />
proceedings would have been different.” Id.<br />
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Biles v. United States,<br />
101 A.3d 1012 (D.C. 2014)<br />
As a matter of first impression, the D.C. Court of Appeals held that Brady applies when the<br />
government fails to disclose information material to a suppression hearing. Defendant was<br />
arrested for peddling counterfeit DVDs at a flea market after he asked an undercover officer if the<br />
officer wanted to buy any DVDs. In the middle of defendant’s bench trial, a police officer<br />
revealed that police located and searched defendant’s backpack and a box of DVDs underneath the<br />
backpack as a result of a tip from a paid confidential informant, which the officers received after<br />
defendant was arrested, and thus the items were not retrieved incident to arrest, from the area of<br />
defendant’s wingspan, as the police reports initially suggested. After receiving the tip, police<br />
opened the backpack and found defendant’s identification inside and later determined that the<br />
DVDs in the box underneath were counterfeit. Defense counsel objected that there had been no<br />
mention of a confidential source in the pretrial discovery materials; she argued that she did not<br />
have an opportunity to do motions or investigate this issue, and she asked the court to exclude any<br />
evidence found as a result of the tip. The trial court denied the motion to suppress. Defendant was<br />
later convicted again on separate charges for a subsequent offense based largely on the same<br />
officer’s testimony that she recognized defendant’s backpack near a case of counterfeit DVDs<br />
because of the previous search. First, the court held that “suppression of material information can<br />
violate due process under Brady if it affects the success of a defendant’s pretrial suppression<br />
motion.” Biles, 101 A.3d at 1019; see also, id. (“[t]he only courts we know to have squarely<br />
addressed the issue on the merits have held that a failure to disclose information material to a<br />
ruling on a Fourth Amendment suppression motion can constitute a Brady violation.”). “[T]he<br />
withheld information here, which tended to show that the search could not be justified as a routine<br />
search of a suspect’s wingspan incident to arrest, was favorable for purposes of the Brady<br />
doctrine.” Id. at 1020. Next, this information was suppressed because the delayed, mid-trial<br />
disclosure “foreclosed any meaningful opportunity on [defendant’s] part ‘to use the information<br />
with some degree of forethought,’ and to frame and litigate what should have been a successful<br />
[suppression] motion.”) Id. at 1022-23 (internal quotation omitted). The evidence was material to<br />
both the first and second trial because defendant could have filed a timely suppression motion that<br />
would have been granted, thus depriving the government of the most important evidence in both<br />
cases – the DVDs and the identification cards linking defendant to them.<br />
Mitchell v. United States,<br />
101 A.3d 1004 (D.C. 2014)<br />
Defendants were entitled to relief on a Napue claim where the government conceded it relied on<br />
false testimony at trial, which was not harmless. Defendants were convicted of murder based on<br />
two items of evidence: (1) the testimony of Eric Lindsay that he was a passenger in the victim’s<br />
car when he witnessed defendants drive by and shoot the victim; and, (2) testimony from Detective<br />
Ray Crawford that defendants knew the victim planned to testify against them in a different<br />
murder trial because the defendants were present at a preliminary hearing in which Crawford<br />
testified that the victim had identified them in connection with that crime. Crawford claimed that<br />
he specifically identified the victim by name at the preliminary hearing. However, this testimony<br />
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was false. The transcript of the preliminary hearing plainly showed that the victim’s name was<br />
never mentioned in any way and he was not identified as a witness against defendants. The<br />
government conceded a Napue violation occurred, but argued any error was harmless. The lower<br />
court concluded that defendants failed to show a reasonable likelihood that the false testimony<br />
affected the verdict, but the D.C. Court of Appeals reversed, noting “the burden of showing<br />
harmlessness is on the government rather than the appellants and harmlessness must be proven by<br />
the constitutional standard of beyond a reasonable doubt.” Mitchell, 101 A.3d at 1008. The<br />
government was unable to meet its burden where it had previously characterized the false evidence<br />
as “crucial to the government’s theory of prosecution,” and where “the testimony of the<br />
government’s sole identification witness, Lindsay, was attacked in significant respects beyond the<br />
chaotic and relatively fleeting nature of the sighting, such as the fact that Lindsay did not make a<br />
positive identification of the killers for over a month following [the victim’s] death and the<br />
shifting identification of the car of the killers.” Id. at 1009. The court concluded: “[n]one of this<br />
suggests that the evidence was insufficient to convict appellants, but, in the posture of one of the<br />
two major props of the government’s case resting on false testimony, the outcome of the case falls<br />
significantly short of constitutional impregnability.” Id.<br />
Clack v. Ridgeland,<br />
139 So.3d 778 (Miss. App. 2014)<br />
In driving under the influence/careless driving case, remand for new trial where city prosecutor<br />
unintentionally failed to provide defendant with potentially exculpatory video evidence of the<br />
stop by police. (The defendant had argued there had not been probable cause for the stop. The<br />
arresting officer falsely claimed there was no video footage of the stop. Because the City failed<br />
to file an appellee’s brief, the court was unable to affirm the lower court’s denial of relief.)<br />
*Wright v. State,<br />
91 A.3d 972 (Del. 2014)<br />
In robbery-murder case at a liquor store, capital conviction and death sentence reversed due to<br />
cumulative effect of multiple items of suppressed evidence, including one item the court<br />
previously found not to be material when considered alone. The suppressed evidence was: (1) a<br />
deal made by the jailhouse snitch, who claimed Wright confessed to him, in a case six months<br />
earlier where the snitch agreed to testify against his co-defendant for reduced charges and<br />
sentence; (2) a recent robbery indictment against two cousins (Jamison and Curtis) whom the<br />
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defense claimed where the actual perpetrators of this crime which would have impeached<br />
Jamison’s testimony that the two cousins were not close; (3) the delayed arrest of Jamison, which<br />
occurred a month after the indictment against him and his cousin and two days after his<br />
testimony in Wright’s trial; and (4) a robbery had been attempted of a nearby liquor store shortly<br />
before the robbery-murder in this case by similar looking men also involving a handgun and<br />
Wright had been excluded as a suspect. Even assuming that the prosecutor in Wright’s case was<br />
unaware of the indictment of Jamison and Curtis for the unrelated robbery, “the fact that others in<br />
the Attorney General’s Office were aware of the indictment at the time of trial suffices to make<br />
the evidence Brady material.” That Jamison was technically a defense witness did not absolve<br />
the State of its duty to disclose impeaching information given that his was not a typical defense<br />
witness. And even if it would have been possible for the defense to learn of Jamison’s<br />
indictment, “the fact that the State chose not to arrest Jamison until after his testimony at<br />
Wright’s trial would not have been a publicly available fact at the time. Thus, the State failed to<br />
disclose exculpatory and impeachment evidence relating to Jamison that would have been useful<br />
to Wright.” Similarly, the prosecutor’s personal lack of knowledge about the attempted robbery<br />
did not preclude a finding of suppression. Nor did the fact that the robbery attempt received<br />
publicity demonstrate lack of suppression given that the media reports did not include the fact<br />
that Wright had been ruled out as a suspect in the attempted robbery and did not reveal the<br />
descriptions of the suspects or the existence of videotape and photographic evidence. In finding<br />
materiality when considering the suppressed evidence cumulatively, despite Wright’s initial<br />
confession, the court noted that the “evidence cuts across multiple, substantive bases supporting<br />
the jury&#8217;s conviction and would have permitted Wright to attack the State&#8217;s case from every<br />
angle.” In addition, the suppressed evidence was relevant to penalty in that it supported a<br />
residual doubt argument.<br />
*State v. Ziegler,<br />
159 So.3d 96 (Ala. Crim. App. 2014)<br />
In capital murder case, lower court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the state<br />
violated Brady by failing to disclose evidence contradicting testimony that petitioner had been at<br />
a party the night before the murder where he threatened the victim by referring to him as “a<br />
walking dead man.” The witness who provided this testimony at trial recanted in the postconviction proceeding and stated that she had informed law-enforcement both before and after<br />
her testimony that she did not know petitioner. Her post-conviction testimony was found to be<br />
credible and was supported by her son who also stated that petitioner had not been present at the<br />
party and that he told this to the police. The suppressed evidence was material to the issue of<br />
intent.<br />
J.E. v. Superior Court,<br />
168 Cal. Rptr. 3d 67 (Cal. App. 2014)<br />
In juvenile dependency proceeding, the court erred in refusing to conduct an in camera<br />
inspection of a prosecution witness’s juvenile dependency file for Brady evidence. The petition<br />
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was filed under a statute that allows a juvenile court to release information from juvenile files to<br />
persons who are otherwise not authorized to access the confidential files. The appellate court<br />
held that when a petitioner invokes the statute and requests that the court review a confidential<br />
juvenile file, if the petitioner has provided a reasonable basis to support a claim that the file<br />
contains Brady exculpatory or impeachment material, the juvenile court is required to conduct an<br />
in camera review.<br />
People v. Bueno,<br />
P.3d , 2013 WL 6118364 (Colo. App. Nov. 21, 2013)<br />
In prison killing case, trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting defendant a new trial<br />
based on the prosecution’s failure to disclose information supporting part of the defense theory –<br />
that the victim had been killed by white inmates. The suppressed evidence included a letter<br />
found by a nurse at the correctional facility approximately thirty-five minutes after the victim’s<br />
body was discovered. The letter announced that The Aryan Nation and the Neo Nazi Skin Heads<br />
planned to exterminate white inmates who refused to “accept their proud race . . ..” While the<br />
letter specifically targeted certain individuals, it stated those inmates were only the beginning.<br />
The nurse prepared an employee incident report about the letter that also was not provided to<br />
defense counsel. Two days after the letter was discovered, one of the targeted inmates died from<br />
a pulmonary embolism; blunt force trauma to his chest was observed. The third piece of<br />
suppressed evidence was a report by a gang intelligence officer at the prison who opined that the<br />
two deaths were related. That the letter and report by the nurse were “available” to defense<br />
counsel because they were permitted to review records at the correctional facility did not defeat<br />
the Brady claim. Because it was undisputed that the letter and the report were in the prosecutor’s<br />
file, there was an affirmative duty to disclose them.<br />
Liggins v. State,<br />
841 N.W.2d 356 (table), 2013 WL 5963013 (Iowa App. Nov. 6, 2013) (unpublished)<br />
In child-murder case, post-conviction relief is granted due to the prosecution’s failure to disclose<br />
that one of its crucial witnesses was a paid informant in drug cases. The absence of a direct<br />
connection between the payments and the witness&#8217;s testimony in petitioner’s case was<br />
immaterial: “What matters is the fact that payments were made. Whether in this case or another,<br />
they provided a powerful incentive for the witness to cooperate with the State.” Also immaterial<br />
was the supervising detective’s denial of knowledge of payments to the witness. The detective<br />
had ample opportunity to verify the status of the witness as a paid informant prior to the witness&#8217;s<br />
testimony and he had an obligation to do so. “[T]he State could not shirk its duty to obtain the<br />
exculpatory evidence of the witness&#8217;s status as a paid informant by pointing to the fact that the<br />
payments were made in other cases or by denying knowledge of the payments. The State was<br />
obligated to unearth and disclose this critical information.” In addressing materiality, the court<br />
rejected the State’s argument that it could not consider 77 suppressed police reports that the court<br />
had found failed the materiality test in a prior post-conviction proceeding. “A materiality<br />
analysis must consider all the suppressed evidence, including evidence that was addressed in a<br />
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prior proceeding.” When considered together, along with a suppressed FBI report that was<br />
presented in this second post-conviction proceeding, confidence in the verdict is undermined.<br />
The reports could have, inter alia, called into question certain trial testimony, bolstered the<br />
defense’s contention that another person had a motive to kill the victim, and cast suspicion on<br />
another party.<br />
Ferguson v. Dormire,<br />
413 S.W.3d 40 (Mo. App. 2013)<br />
Habeas relief granted in robbery-murder case where prosecution suppressed evidence of an<br />
interview with the wife of one of the prosecution’s key witnesses at trial. “The undisclosed<br />
evidence was favorable because it impeached [the witness’] explanation for his ability to identify<br />
Ferguson. The undisclosed evidence was material because of the importance of [the witness’]<br />
eyewitness identification to the State&#8217;s ability to convict Ferguson, because the evidence would<br />
have permitted Ferguson to discover other evidence that could have impacted the admissibility or<br />
the credibility of [the witness’] testimony, and because of the cumulative effect of the<br />
nondisclosure when considered with other information the State did not disclose.” The other<br />
evidence that could have been discovered absent the suppression included the fact that the police<br />
had contacted the eyewitness while he was in prison pre-release, which would have enabled<br />
Ferguson to argue that the witness felt threatened or intimidated, resulting in his sudden ability to<br />
identify Ferguson and the co-defendant. Additional evidence that had been suppressed (although<br />
discovered by the defense prior to trial) was (1) a statement by a witness as to the time a bar<br />
Ferguson and the co-defendant had been drinking in closed that contradicted the prosecution’s<br />
theory of the case; (2) a statement by the second eyewitness indicating her inability to identify<br />
either Ferguson or the co-defendant; and (3) the testifying eyewitness’s sudden ability to identify<br />
Ferguson and the co-defendant from pictures in a newspaper that the eyewitness claimed to have<br />
received from his wife while in prison. Although Ferguson learned of these bits of undisclosed<br />
information prior to trial, the delay in receiving the information impacted his ability to use the<br />
evidence in his defense. Relief was required even though a co-defendant implicated Ferguson in<br />
the robbery-murder. This was because the co-defendant’s confession was severely challenged by<br />
Ferguson, as were the investigative and interrogation tactics employed by the State in securing<br />
that confession.<br />
State ex rel. Woodworth v. Denney,<br />
396 S.W.3d 330 (Mo. 2013)<br />
In murder, assault, burglary, and armed criminal action case with weak circumstantial evidence<br />
and a third party culpability defense, convictions vacated due to suppressed evidence and newly<br />
discovered evidence undermining confidence in the verdict. The first suppressed evidence was a<br />
series of letters involving the surviving victim, the original trial judge, the local prosecutor and<br />
the special prosecutor. Letter 1 was from the surviving victim to the judge complaining about the<br />
local prosecutor’s handling of the case and begging the judge to remove him so that the case<br />
against defendant could go to the grand jury. Letter 2 was from the local prosecutor to the judge<br />
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explaining that the surviving victim had earlier been adamant that a third party, the ex-boyfriend<br />
of the victims’ daughter, be charged with the crimes. The local prosecutor nevertheless requested<br />
that the judge appoint the attorney general’s office to represent the State. Letter 3 was from the<br />
judge to the special prosecutor thanking the attorney general’s office for taking the case,<br />
enclosing Letter 1, and explaining that was what prompted the judge to initiate the grand jury<br />
inquiry. These letters could have diminished the surviving victim’s credibility when he denied<br />
having told others that the ex-boyfriend was the shooter and would also have assisted the defense<br />
in demonstrating that the State&#8217;s investigation was not impartial by showing that the investigation<br />
improperly focused on defendant rather than on the ex-boyfriend once the surviving victim put<br />
pressure on the judge. Also suppressed were complaints by the victims’ daughter to the police<br />
that the ex-boyfriend was violating a protection order that had issued shortly after the crimes and<br />
that he was making threats. This information would have impeached the daughter’s deposition<br />
testimony denying threats by the ex-boyfriend and her denial that she informed the police when<br />
the ex-boyfriend contacted her in violation of the protection order. Finally, newly discovered<br />
evidence called into question the credibility of the ex-boyfriend’s alibi and supported defendant’s<br />
claim of innocence.<br />
People v. Gutierrez,<br />
153 Cal. Rptr. 3d 832 (Cal. App.), cert. denied, 134 S.Ct. 684 (2013)<br />
Refusing to overturn existing precedent holding that prosecution&#8217;s duty to disclose exculpatory<br />
evidence under Brady applies to preliminary hearings.<br />
People v. Gayden,<br />
111 A.D.3d 1388 (N.Y. 2013), appeal withdrawn by 18 N.E.3d 1142 (N.Y. 2014)<br />
In murder case, defendant was entitled to have his judgment vacated due to the prosecution’s<br />
failure to inform the defense that an essential prosecution witness was a paid informant.<br />
Adams v. Commissioner of Correction,<br />
71 A.3d 512 (Conn. 2013)<br />
In gang-related murder and assault case, petitioner was entitled to habeas relief as a result of the<br />
prosecution’s failure to correct false and misleading testimony by one of the surviving victims<br />
(Andre) about the consideration he was receiving in two unrelated criminal cases in exchange for<br />
his testimony against petitioner and his co-defendants. (The trial prosecutor was unaware of the<br />
consideration because another prosecutor was handling Andre’s case and they had agreed to<br />
create a “firewall” in order for the trial prosecutor to remain in the dark about anydeals made. It<br />
was the judge in Andre’s case that had conducted the plea discussions. At the time, the<br />
prosecutor of Andre believed there was no duty to disclose the deal because it was the product of<br />
negotiations between the judge and the surviving victim, a position abandoned in this appeal.) In<br />
finding that petitioner met the strict materiality standard applicable to Napue violations, the court<br />
engaged in a lengthy analysis of the evidence against petitioner and its weaknesses, and noted the<br />
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difficulty the jury had in reaching a verdict. The court acknowledged that Andre, both as a<br />
victim of the attack and as a witness to the fatal shooting of his cousin, had reason to testify<br />
against his assailants wholly apart from any promise of leniency. The court further acknowledged<br />
that Andre&#8217;s veracity as a witness was tested by the vigorous cross-examination of defense<br />
counsel. The court nevertheless concluded that is was “highly probable that Andre&#8217;s credibility<br />
would have been further undermined, and most likely seriously so, if the jury knew, first, that he<br />
had been promised leniency on his pending charges in return for his cooperation and, second, that<br />
he was lying when he denied that he had been promised consideration for such cooperation.<br />
Because a witness&#8217; motivation to avoid prison time is invariably a strong one, the fact that<br />
Andre&#8217;s credibility otherwise had been called into question was not a substitute for<br />
cross-examination about the relationship that in fact existed between the leniency that he had<br />
been promised and his testimony on behalf of the state.”<br />
State ex rel. Koster v. Green,<br />
388 S.W.3d 603 (Mo. App. 2012)<br />
In capital murder case involving a sexual assault where the mentally ill petitioner confessed to<br />
the offense, habeas court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that undisclosed evidence<br />
could reasonably be taken to put the petitioner&#8217;s whole case in such a different light as to<br />
undermine confidence in the verdict. The undisclosed evidence consisted of: (1) serological test<br />
results showing that foreign semen or other biological fluids — which could not have been<br />
deposited by petitioner or by the victim&#8217;s boyfriend or estranged husband — were found on the<br />
robe the victim was wearing at the time of the attack; (2) internal police documents showing that<br />
the police lab reported the exculpatory findings to the police investigating the case, and that<br />
police relied on the undisclosed serological results to exclude suspects until they obtained a<br />
confession from petitioner; (3) documents showing that fingerprints found at the crime scene,<br />
which the State claimed were mere smudges unusable for comparison, were in fact usable and<br />
excluded petitioner as the source, and were tested against numerous alternate suspects even after<br />
police obtained petitioner’s confession; (4) a drawing of the crime scene made by petitioner,<br />
which a detective had asked petitioner to draw to determine if his confession was credible and<br />
which the detective concluded was not consistent with the actual layout of the crime scene; and<br />
(5) evidence that a key State witness, whose testimony that she yelled out the victim&#8217;s name was<br />
pivotal to corroborating petitioner&#8217;s confession, had to be hypnotized in order to provide the<br />
certain trial testimony she offered. The suppressed serological evidence, which included a<br />
handwritten report with an exculpatory finding that was crossed out and omitted from the final<br />
report that was disclosed to the defense, could have been used to both bolster the defense<br />
argument that petitioner was not the perpetrator and impeach the credibility of the investigation.<br />
Similarly, the fact that the police had arranged to have a key prosecution witness hypnotized to<br />
clarify her memory, which was not documented or disclosed to the prosecutor or defense<br />
counsel, could have been used both to impeach the witness’s credibility and the integrity of the<br />
police investigation.<br />
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Rios v. State,<br />
377 S.W.3d 131 (Tex. App. 2012)<br />
In case where applicant pleaded guilty to charge of driving while intoxicated, he was entitled to<br />
habeas relief based on the revelation that the breath results he had been informed of prior to the<br />
plea were invalid because the technician in charge of the intoxilyzer used to test application’s<br />
blood alcohol concentration had falsified the calibration records for that machine. The plea was<br />
deemed involuntary because it had been induced by the invalid test result.<br />
Ex Parte Miles,<br />
359 S.W.3d 647 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012)<br />
In murder and attempted murder case, applicant was entitled to habeas relief on both a Brady<br />
claim and a claim of actual innocence. The undisclosed evidence was two police reports, one of<br />
which expressly identified a third party as the perpetrator and the other of which disclosed an<br />
altercation between the victims and another party five days prior to the shootings. The second<br />
report also contained a claim by the deceased victim’s brother that the shooter was someone<br />
named Deuce. The reports could have been used both to impeach testimony by a detective that<br />
there were no other suspects and to develop an alternate theory of the crime. The report about<br />
the altercation could have impeached testimony from the surviving victim that his possession of a<br />
sawed-off shotgun was purely for personal protection and his denial of having had problems with<br />
others before the crime. In finding the suppressed evidence material, the court found significant<br />
the additional evidence that could have been developed had the first report been disclosed<br />
suggesting the third party was in fact the perpetrator. The significance of the suppressed reports<br />
was “even more obvious” when considered in the context of the trial record, which included<br />
questionable gunshot-residue analysis, suggestive eyewitness identifications, disparities between<br />
the descriptions of the shooter and applicant, and applicant&#8217;s alibi.<br />
*Velez v. State,<br />
2012 WL 2130890 (Tex. Crim. App. June 13, 2012) (unpublished)<br />
Reversal of death sentence where prosecution presented false testimony concerning the conditions<br />
of custody defendant would be subject to should he receive a sentence of life imprisonment<br />
without possibility of parole rather than death. The testifying witness and the prosecutor knew or<br />
should have known about a 2005 regulation that precluded the less restrictive conditions that the<br />
witness testified were possible for defendant to receive. In finding that the false testimony was<br />
not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, the court noted: (1) the witness’s extensive credentials<br />
that “increased his credibility as a person knowledgeable about violence in prisons and future<br />
dangerousness”; (2) the witness’s testimony about the “horribles” that occur in prison, including<br />
murders and his descriptions of prison as a very violent place; (3) the witness’s observation that<br />
rules can change after conceding that life without parole inmates are not allowed out on work<br />
detail without an armed guard; (4) the circumstantial nature of the case against defendant; (5) the<br />
fact that the prosecution presented no psychiatric evidence supporting a<br />
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finding of future dangerousness, nor sought to rebut the defendant’s psychiatric evidence that he<br />
would not pose a future danger; (6) that other than a bar fight some 17 years prior to trial,<br />
defendant’s criminal record was non-violent; and (7) that defendant had been in custody for<br />
some time prior to trial and had a clean disciplinary record.<br />
State v. Hollin,<br />
970 N.E.2d 147 (Ind. 2012)<br />
In conspiracy to commit burglary case, Brady violation found where prosecution failed to<br />
disclose, inter alia, that there was a charge pending against the testifying former co-defendant<br />
(Vogel) for battery with a deadly weapon in a neighboring county, that there were petitions<br />
pending to revoke Vogel’s probation in the neighboring county as well as the county of trial,<br />
and that Vogel’s theft conviction in the other county would be reduced to a misdemeanor if he<br />
completed probation successfully. In finding the suppressed information was favorable, it is<br />
noted that Vogel did not implicate Hollin in the burglary until after he was charged with<br />
battery with a deadly weapon and two petitions to revoke his probation were filed. The<br />
suppressed evidence was deemed material given that the case involved a credibility contest<br />
between Vogel and Hollin.<br />
Bunch v. State,<br />
964 N.E.2d 274 (Ind. App.), transfer denied, 971 N.E.2d 1215 (Ind. 2012)<br />
In felony-murder/arson case, post-conviction court clearly erred in denying petitioner’s claim that<br />
the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose an ATF report that directly contradicted the<br />
report and testimony by an ATF agent at petitioner’s trial about the presence of a heavy<br />
petroleum distillate (HPD) on two of the ten samples that had been tested. (After obtaining the<br />
actual gas chromatographs for the samples at issue, petitioner’s post-conviction expert evaluated<br />
them and concurred with the findings in the suppressed report.) The post-conviction court was<br />
incorrect when it found that the ATF report was not suppressed because it constituted work<br />
product that was not discoverable. First, the State never claimed that the report was work<br />
product. Second, “the Brady rule can require disclosure of evidence not otherwise discoverable<br />
if the evidence is shown to be exculpatory.” The post-conviction court also erred in finding no<br />
suppression because the report at issue was in the possession of the ATF and not the prosecution.<br />
“That the ATF kept the complete file on its premises does not mitigate the State&#8217;s obligation to<br />
disclose exculpatory evidence in that file.” The post-conviction court further erred in finding that<br />
because petitioner had the testifying ATF agent’s report, petitioner did not demonstrate<br />
reasonable diligence when she made no specific request for the ATF file. Here, there was<br />
nothing in the information that petitioner possessed suggesting that the complete ATF file would<br />
contradict what had been disclosed. On this record, the complete ATF file was suppressed for<br />
purposes of meeting the first prong of the Brady test. As to whether the suppressed report was<br />
favorable, although it agreed with the testifying agent’s finding of HPD on three of the samples,<br />
the disagreement on one of the samples was significant because that sample was the only one<br />
taken from the victim’s bedroom and the prosecution’s theory was that because HPD was found<br />
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in both the living room and the bedroom, there were multiple, and therefore incendiary, fires. In<br />
addition, the second sample on which there was disagreement was taken from what was<br />
identified as a pour pattern in the living room. With a finding that it tested negative for HPD,<br />
then the significance of the alleged burn pattern was significantly undercut. “The undisclosed<br />
evidence is therefore exculpatory, as it directly contradicts the State&#8217;s theory of the case.” In<br />
addition, the report could have been used to impeach the ATF’s agent at trial. Finally, because<br />
the undisclosed report directly contradicted the trial testimony supporting fires originating in two<br />
places, there was a reasonable probability that but for the prosecutorial failure to disclose this<br />
evidence, the result of the trial would have been different.<br />
*In re Bacigalupo,<br />
283 P.3d 613 (Cal. 2012)<br />
Habeas relief granted as to death sentence where prosecution failed to disclose evidence that<br />
would have supported a case in mitigation at the penalty phase that petitioner committed the two<br />
murders because of a Columbian drug cartel’s death threats against petitioner and his family.<br />
(Under California law, having acted under duress is a statutory mitigating factor.) At trial, the<br />
jury heard petitioner’s confession in which he claimed that he had been ordered to kill the<br />
victims by the Columbia Mafia under threats to himself and his family. The man petitioner<br />
claimed had ordered the killings denied having done so and the prosecutor at both phases of the<br />
trial emphasized the absence of evidence supporting petitioner’s account of the crime. The<br />
prosecution failed to reveal to defense counsel that a confidential informant had tied a high level<br />
drug dealer with a connection to a Columbian drug cartel to the killings, that the informant had<br />
been present when the drug dealer met with petitioner the night before the murders, and that the<br />
informant had been told that the killings were a contract killing rather than for robbery as the<br />
prosecution asserted at petitioner’s trial. That the trial court in a pre-trial ruling had concluded<br />
that the confidential informant was not a material witness as to guilt was not dispositive of the<br />
informant’s materiality as to the sentencing phase.<br />
*In re Stenson,<br />
276 P.3d 286 (Wash.), cert. denied, 133 S.Ct. 444 (2012)<br />
In double murder case where defendant claimed one victim killed the other before committing<br />
suicide and the key evidence implicating defendant in the killings was gun shot residue (GSR)<br />
found in his front pants pocket and blood spatters on the pants, the State violated Brady by<br />
suppressing an FBI file and a photograph showing how the pants had been handled prior to the<br />
GSR testing. The file was favorable because it revealed that an FBI employee other than the one<br />
who testified at trial had actually conducted the GSR testing. Knowledge of this would have<br />
allowed the defense to challenge the credibility of the testifying FBI agent. In addition, the file<br />
showed that only a few particles of GSR was found in the pocket, a fact the defense was unaware<br />
of at the time of trial. Also suppressed was a photograph showing that prior to the GSR testing a<br />
detective had placed his ungloved hand in the front pant pocket. Suppression was found even<br />
assuming that a defense investigator had viewed the photograph prior to trial because there was<br />
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no disclosure to defense counsel at the time the FBI agent testified or at any other time “that<br />
something had gone into the pocket. . . .” In finding the suppressed evidence to be material, the<br />
court explained: “Had the FBI file and photographs been properly disclosed here, Stenson&#8217;s<br />
counsel would have been able to demonstrate to the jury that a key exhibit in the case—Stenson&#8217;s<br />
jeans—had been seriously mishandled and compromised by law enforcement investigators. It is<br />
also likely that exposure of the State&#8217;s mishandling of the jeans with regard to GSR testing would<br />
have led to further inquiry by Stenson&#8217;s counsel into possible corruption of the blood spatter<br />
evidence. In that regard, Stenson&#8217;s defense theory at trial could have taken into account the fact<br />
that the jeans may have been folded over when the blood spatter was wet. Instead, the jury was<br />
left with only one explanation for the blood spatter, which was that it could not have appeared on<br />
Stenson&#8217;s jeans after [the victim] came to his final resting place.”<br />
Commonwealth v. Murray,<br />
957 N.E.2d 1079 (Mass. 2011)<br />
In murder case, grant of new trial affirmed where prosecution failed to disclose information<br />
known to the police regarding the gang activities of “KST,” whose members included the victim<br />
and several eyewitnesses to the killing. This information, inter alia, could have been used for<br />
impeachment and to show bias.<br />
Freshwater v. State,<br />
354 S.W.3d 746 ( Tenn. Crim. App. 2011)<br />
Conviction for first degree murder reversed due to suppression of the portion of a statement from<br />
a witness claiming that Freshwater’s co-defendant told him that he was the sole shooter of the<br />
victim. Provision to the defense of another part of the witness’s statement, which appeared to be<br />
the complete statement, misled defense counsel who could not then be faulted for failing to<br />
discover the missing part of the statement. There was a reasonable probability that the jury, which<br />
decided sentence at the time of the 1969 trial, would have imposed a sentence less than ninetynine years had the statement not been suppressed.<br />
Pena v. State,<br />
353 S.W.3d 797 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011)<br />
In marijuana possession case, the court of appeals erred in concluding that the due process<br />
protections afforded under Brady did not apply when the State failed to disclose or provide to<br />
appellant, after specific request, the audio portion, containing exculpatory statements made by<br />
appellant to police, of a videotape used by the State before the jury. The audio was favorable<br />
because it included appellant’s denial that the plant material was marijuana and the charge<br />
required proof that possession of the drug was intentional and knowing. It was also favorable in<br />
that it could have impeached the arresting officer’s failure to recall whether appellant had asked<br />
for testing of the plant material in that the audio confirmed appellant’s claim that he did. The<br />
audio would also have precluded the prosecutor from arguing that appellant only requested testing<br />
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of the material after he knew it had been destroyed. In finding the suppressed evidence material,<br />
the court accepts appellant’s argument that his defense would have been different had the audio<br />
been available in that he would have focused on lack of intent rather than on the destruction of<br />
the evidence. Also noted is how the prosecution’s case would have had to change.<br />
Jordan v. State,<br />
343 S.W.3d 84 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2011)<br />
In granting post-conviction relief in second degree murder case, the appellate court ruled that the<br />
state&#8217;s open file policy did not discharge its affirmative duty under Brady to disclose favorable,<br />
material evidence to the defendant and that the defendant was entitled to rely on the state&#8217;s<br />
assertion that it provided him with its entire file. Evidence concerning the discovery of a knife<br />
near where the victim’s body was found with a slashed throat was favorable even though the<br />
knife was not linked to the killing because it demonstrated a failure by the police to further<br />
investigate. In addition, defense counsel may have been able to develop exculpatory evidence<br />
through his own investigation of the knife. Also favorable was a suppressed police memorandum<br />
that impeached a third party suspect’s later claim that he was not in the area at the time of the<br />
crime. Because the suspect’s denial of being in the area was the basis of his being cleared by<br />
police after a caller implicated him in the murder, the memorandum could have been used by<br />
defense counsel to question the reliability of the state&#8217;s investigation. After reviewing the record,<br />
the appellate court could not be “‘reasonably confident that every single member of the jury,’<br />
after hearing evidence impugning the police investigation, would have found the<br />
petitioner guilty because the margin of sufficiency was so slim that any favorable evidence would<br />
be material.”<br />
State v. Ferguson,<br />
335 S.W.3d 692 (Tex. App. 2011)<br />
In aggravated sexual assault case where alleged victim was between eight and eleven years old<br />
when the assaults occurred, trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting a new trial based on<br />
the State’s failure to disclose a forensic sexual assault examination report that at least arguably<br />
undermined the alleged victim’s claim to have been subjected to vaginal intercourse regularly for<br />
more than three years and supported defendant’s assertion that no intercourse occurred. Had<br />
defense counsel possessed the report, he could have shifted “from the defensive argument used—<br />
that there was no physical evidence of sexual assault—to a more offensive<br />
argument—that there was physical evidence strongly suggesting that there was no sexual assault,<br />
or at least that the regularity reported by complainant was incredible.”<br />
Ex Parte Ghahremani,<br />
332 S.W.3d 470 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011)<br />
In sexual assault case, applicant was entitled to resentencing based on the State’s presentation of<br />
misleading testimony by the parents of one of the victims creating the false impression that the<br />
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victim’s physical, emotional, and psychological problems resulted solely from her sexual<br />
encounter with applicant. Undisclosed to applicant, and known by the prosecution, was evidence<br />
showing additional sources for the victim’s problems.<br />
Aguilera v. State,<br />
807 N.W.2d 249 (Iowa 2011)<br />
In second degree murder case where petitioner claimed the shooting was accidental, a Brady<br />
violation occurred through the prosecution’s failure to disclose an Iowa Division of Criminal<br />
Investigation (DCI) file containing several witness statements, including statements from the two<br />
alleged eyewitnesses to the incident. Although a DCI agent had revealed in a pretrial deposition<br />
that eyewitness Guido had at one point claimed to have been inside when he heard the shot fired,<br />
and only then went outside where the shooting had occurred and never saw a gun, this was not<br />
enough to allow petitioner to take advantage of the evidence as the agent did not reveal: (1) the<br />
date the statement was made &#8211; the day after the shooting; (2) that Guido made a contradictory<br />
statement two days later which still differed from later deposition and trial testimony on the key<br />
issue of whether Guido saw the actual shooting; and (3) that Guido had also placed the other<br />
alleged eyewitness, Lopez, inside the house when the shooting happened. Defense counsel<br />
would have been able to far more effectively cross-examine Guido had he been provided the two<br />
statements that were inconsistent not only with the deposition and trial testimony, but with each<br />
other. Also suppressed was a statement by a witness unknown to petitioner who recounted<br />
someone shout “they’re fighting” before hearing a gunshot. This account better supported the<br />
testimony of Lopez that the gun went off as petitioner and the victim were struggling, as opposed<br />
to Guido’s trial testimony that the men were two meters apart when petitioner fired the shot. The<br />
State did not appeal the lower court’s finding that an additional statement was suppressed, a<br />
statement expressing the belief that petitioner was extorting money from other Hispanics at work,<br />
many of whom were present at the party where the shooting occurred. Defendant’s strategy at<br />
trial may have changed had he been provided with the statement as it may have uncovered bias<br />
against defendant by trial witnesses. Although the statement may not have been material in and<br />
of itself, “when viewed in connection with the other statements the State failed to turn over, it<br />
supports a finding if materiality.” Additional suppressed statements contributed to the<br />
materiality finding as they made the defense theory of accidental shooting far more likely.<br />
DeSimone v. State,<br />
803 N.W.2d 97 (Iowa 2011)<br />
In sexual abuse case, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose a witness’s timecard<br />
showing that the witness could not possibly have seen the events to which she testified. (The<br />
witness, who befriended the victim prior to trial, described almost hitting a girl with her car on<br />
the night the alleged assault occurred. This corroborated the part of the victim’s testimony about<br />
fleeing the petitioner’s home and nearly being struck by a car.) In the post-conviction<br />
proceeding, the trial prosecutor suggested that he had hand-delivered the timecard information to<br />
defense counsel. Defense counsel in turn denied receiving it but admitted he had not reviewed<br />
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the file prior to the hearing. On this record, suppression was found because: (1) it was<br />
inconceivable that the prosecutor would have used the witness knowing that her testimony was<br />
false and that he had provided proof of the falseness to defense counsel; (2) defense counsel<br />
testified that he shared all material with petitioner and petitioner would have brought the<br />
discrepancy to the attention of defense counsel; and (3) given defense counsel’s experience, it<br />
was difficult to believe that he would not have used the timecard information if he had possessed<br />
it. The suppression prong of the Brady test was not defeated by the fact that defense counsel had<br />
been aware that the witness’s timecard was going to be sent to the police department. A<br />
reasonable attorney would have concluded that the timecard had corroborated the witness’s<br />
account rather than being exculpatory and so would not have independently sought the<br />
information. The suppressed timecard was material because there was no physical evidence and<br />
the case turned on the victim’s questionable credibility for which there was little corroboration.<br />
The defense theory at trial was that the victim was collaborating with persons who disliked<br />
petitioner in order to convict him. Bringing the false testimony into the conspiracy theory<br />
“completes the picture.”<br />
State ex rel. Griffin v. Denney,<br />
347 S.W.3d 73 (Mo. 2011)<br />
In prison killing case, petitioner was entitled to habeas relief because of the State’s failure to<br />
disclose that within minutes of the stabbing prison guards confiscated a sharpened screwdriver<br />
from another inmate as the inmate attempted to leave the area where the stabbing occurred. The<br />
evidence was favorable because it supported a viable alternative perpetrator defense. In finding<br />
prejudice, additional new evidence is discussed, including an admission by another inmate that<br />
he was the actual killer and had been assisted by the inmate who was caught with the<br />
screwdriver, the recantation of one of the witnesses who claimed to have witnessed petitioner<br />
committing the stabbing and evidence that the prosecution’s other eyewitness was actually in the<br />
law library when the stabbing occurred. (There was a dissent that contended the Brady claim<br />
should fail because testimony by the medical examiner refuted the possibility that the screwdriver<br />
caused the victim’s wounds.)<br />
State ex rel. Koster v. McElwain,<br />
340 S.W.3d 221 (Mo. App. 2011)<br />
In case involving the murder of petitioner’s mother, grant of habeas relief affirmed in part<br />
because of the State’s suppression of evidence that the victim had made numerous reports of<br />
abuse by her estranged husband and evidence that the victim was so fearful of her husband that<br />
she armed herself with a gun. In finding evidence of the abuse to be favorable, it is observed that<br />
such evidence could have been used to attack the thoroughness and even good faith of the police<br />
investigation. In finding prejudice, it is noted, inter alia, that the sheriff to whom the victim had<br />
reported the abuse had denied at trial that there had been any reports of domestic abuse. In<br />
addition, the evidence would have rebutted testimony suggesting that the victim had been<br />
nervous and upset in the months before her death because of her fear of petitioner.<br />
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Jackson v. State,<br />
714 S.E.2d 584 (Ga. App. 2011)<br />
In robbery/assault case with two co-defendants, defendant Phillips was entitled to a new trial<br />
based on the prosecution’s failure to provide the defense with a pretrial statement by one of the<br />
victims that contradicted the victim’s trial testimony. In the statement the victim provided to<br />
police, he asserted that he and his mother-in-law had been robbed by two armed men. At trial,<br />
the victim testified that not only were three men involved in the crime, but that Phillips was one<br />
of the three men. Defense counsel had received a police report which indicated the victim had<br />
reported three men being involved, including the driver of the getaway car. Defense counsel did<br />
not receive a second police report that tracked the written statement. Because the witness was<br />
the only one to identify Phillips as a participant in the robbery and the other evidence was not<br />
overwhelming, the suppressed statement was material.<br />
State v. Bai,<br />
2011 Ohio 2206, 2011 WL 1782113 (Ohio App. May 9, 2011)<br />
Conviction for gross sexual imposition is reversed due to the prosecution’s failure to disclose a<br />
handwritten statement by the alleged victim that was prepared not long after the incident and that<br />
presented a rather detailed recollection of the events that occurred, in contrast to her testimony<br />
where she claimed lack of a clear memory due to intoxication. The statement was highly<br />
probative of the alleged victim’s claimed substantial impairment and defendant’s knowledge of<br />
her alleged impaired ability to resist or consent. It also corroborated defendant’s testimony about<br />
the initial consensual nature of the encounter.<br />
Flores v. Iowa,<br />
801 N.W.2d 32 (table), 2011 WL 1376777 (Iowa App. Apr. 13, 2011) (unpublished)<br />
Murder and terrorism convictions reversed and new trial granted in post-conviction proceedings<br />
based on previously undisclosed FBI interview with a witness suggesting that another person was<br />
the actual perpetrator. Although Flores’ convictions had been affirmed on direct appeal, it was<br />
noted that the evidence of his guilt “was far from overwhelming,” and it was a close case<br />
involving circumstantial evidence. The report was “[c]learly” favorable to the defense and its<br />
suppression affected counsel’s trial preparation and undermined confidence in verdict.<br />
State v. Sinha,<br />
84 A.D.3d 35, 922 N.Y.S.2d 275 (N.Y.A.D. 2011), aff’d, 976 N.E.2d 223 (N.Y. 2012)<br />
Invoking its “interest of justice jurisdiction,” the court reversed defendant’s conviction for<br />
bribing a witness “because the prosecution failed to fulfill basic disclosure obligations that are<br />
essential to a fair trial.” The prosecution possessed, but did not disclose until after its witness<br />
(and victim) testified, emails another prosecutor sent to the victim’s mother stating she would<br />
“do everything in [her] power’ to make” the prosecutors handling the case “see that [her son]<br />
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deserved a break because of what had happened to him&#8230;.” Another undisclosed email described<br />
the privileges the prosecutors arranged for the victim who was incarcerated on a probation<br />
violation, including phone privileges at the youth institution and preventing his transfer to an<br />
adult facility. The prosecution’s “tardy” disclosure of the emails was “‘unexcusable.’”<br />
Miller v. United States,<br />
14 A.3d 1094 (D.C. App. 2011)<br />
In a case involving, inter alia, charges of assault with intent to commit murder, the prosecution<br />
violated Brady by not disclosing until the evening before opening statements that the<br />
government’s principal eyewitness had told the grand jury that the shooter used his left hand to<br />
shoot the victim. This was material given that the defendant was right-handed and, had defense<br />
counsel known about the witness’s testimony earlier, evidence could have been developed<br />
showing that an alternative suspect was likely left-handed. (Defense counsel did attempt to<br />
present a videotape showing that the alternative suspect signed his Miranda waiver card with his<br />
left-hand but the trial court refused to allow it because both sides had rested and instructions to<br />
the jury had begun by the time defense counsel noticed this.) Defense counsel’s failure to simply<br />
ask the alternative suspect, who was “a patently untrustworthy witness,” whether he was lefthanded, or to request a continuance or mistrial, did not defeat the Brady claim. “Deferral of<br />
disclosure of what might well (and in fact did) turn out to be critically important exculpatory<br />
information, until the night before opening statements . . . is not compatible with the<br />
Constitution, with our case law, or with applicable professional standards.” Id. at 1108. While<br />
not dispositive, the ABA Standards for Criminal Justice, The Prosecution Function, informed the<br />
court’s analysis.<br />
State v. Green,<br />
2011 WL 709726 (N.J.Super.A.D. Mar. 2, 2011) (unpublished)<br />
Green’s motion for discovery and new trial granted on appeal based on prosecution’s failure to<br />
disclose pending criminal charges against its key witness, Muhammad, who implicated Green in<br />
the kidnapping and murder of the victim, Williams. When defense counsel requested<br />
information about any pending charges against Muhammad, the prosecutor told the judge she<br />
would “look[] into it,” and later advised the judge she had “checked” the computer and there<br />
were no pending charges. According to the prosecutor, Muhammad’s “rap sheet is in error,”and<br />
“[e]verything has been disposed of.” Id., at *1. On cross-examination, Muhammad admitted<br />
pleading guilty to drug crimes and receiving a minimum sentence. He testified that he had<br />
reported his knowledge of Williams’ homicide to an investigator while incarcerated on drug<br />
charges, but denied favorable treatment in exchange for information. In closing, prosecutor<br />
emphasized that Muhammad “has nothing to gain,” and noted his testimony that he had “nothing<br />
pending.” In fact, that was untrue. When Muhammad testified, he had pending charges against<br />
him, including an indictment for armed robbery, possession of a handgun without a permit for<br />
use against another, and possession of a firearm for unlawful purpose and possession of a<br />
machine gun. The prosecution was obligated to disclose that information but failed to do so.<br />
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The trial judge erred in finding defendant should have discovered the withheld information<br />
“sooner than 19 years after” trial, and that even if the prosecution had disclosed the pending<br />
charges against Muhammad, a different verdict was not probable. That was the wrong legal<br />
standard as Green needed only to show that the prosecution suppressed favorable, material<br />
evidence.<br />
State v. Russell,<br />
2011 Ohio 592, 2011 WL 494744 (Ohio App.), appeal not allowed, 951 N.E.2d 1046 (Ohio<br />
2011)<br />
In gross sexual imposition case, defendant was entitled to a new trial due to the prosecution’s<br />
failure to disclose the specific dates the sexual incidents allegedly occurred. With knowledge of<br />
the exact dates, defendant could have provided documented proof of his whereabouts on those<br />
days.<br />
*Johnson v. State,<br />
44 So.3d 51 (Fla. 2010)<br />
Three death sentences vacated in successive post-conviction proceedings where prosecutor<br />
violated Giglio by knowingly presenting false testimony and misleading argument at suppression<br />
hearing in order to hide agency relationship with jailhouse informant who obtained incriminating<br />
statements from Johnson. If the true facts of the informant’s status as a government agent had<br />
been known, his testimony would have been inadmissible in both the guilt and penalty phases.<br />
The prosecution’s use of the informant’s testimony concerning crime details was immaterial to<br />
the guilty verdict, however, given that the defense conceded Johnson had committed the crimes<br />
and relied on an insanity defense. The testimony was material to sentence because: (1) the<br />
prosecutor twice emphasized the informant’s testimony that Johnson “play[ed] like he was<br />
crazy”; (2) there is a lesser burden of proof needed to establish mitigation; (3) the facts of the<br />
murders were not “necessarily inconsistent” with proposed mental health mitigation; and (4) the<br />
proposed mitigation was “extensive, consistent and unrebutted.”<br />
Bly v. Commonwealth,<br />
702 S.E.2d 120 (Va. 2010)<br />
In drug distribution case, Brady violation occurred where the prosecution failed to disclose<br />
evidence that the paid confidential informant who allegedly made controlled “buys” from<br />
defendant had been giving false accounts to the drug task force of other alleged drug purchases.<br />
The lower court incorrectly assumed that the trial court, having been the trier of fact, would have<br />
convicted defendant based on other evidence even if the confidential informant’s testimony had<br />
been entirely excluded. This failed to take into account how the suppressed evidence could have<br />
been used to discredit the entire police investigation, thereby tainting the remaining evidence in<br />
the case.<br />
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Baker v. State,<br />
238 P.3d 10 (Okla. Crim. App. 2010)<br />
In case involving assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, the prosecution violated Brady by<br />
failing to disclose the victim’s pending drug charges, plea agreement, and prior felony<br />
conviction. Because the victim’s credibility was critical, defendant had made a specific request<br />
for information that could be used to attack his credibility. In response, the “State attempted to<br />
keep relevant information from [defendant] through the use of semantics or a play on words. . . .<br />
This Court has repeatedly held that a criminal trial is not a game of hide and seek.” Id. at 12.<br />
State ex rel. Engel v. Dormire,<br />
304 S.W.3d 120 (Mo. 2010)<br />
In armed kidnapping case, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose that the chief<br />
prosecution witness who purportedly hired petitioner to commit the crime was paid for his<br />
testimony against petitioner and a co-defendant, that investigators coached the witness, and that<br />
investigators sought leniency for the witness based on his cooperation in the cases. That<br />
documents memorializing the deal did not exist at the time of trial did not defeat defendant’s<br />
allegation of suppression – “it is enough that the evidence shows that the ‘deal’ itself already<br />
existed, even if it had not yet been documented.” Id. at 127. And that the investigators at issue<br />
were from outside Missouri was irrelevant since they were part of Missouri’s prosecutorial team<br />
in the cases against defendant and the co-defendant. That the witness was impeached on other<br />
points at trial did not defeat the Brady claim. “The unknown impeachment information,<br />
especially when coupled with the impeachment information presented at the time of trial, could<br />
have led the jury to a different assessment of [the witness’] credibility.” Id. at 128. Having<br />
shown a valid Brady claim, defendant also established the cause and prejudice necessary to<br />
overcome the procedural bar to granting him habeas relief.<br />
State v. Piety,<br />
2009 WL 3011107 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2009) (unpublished)<br />
Aggravated rape conviction vacated due to state’s failure to disclose photographs taken of the<br />
alleged victim’s “private parts” during her physical examination. The alleged victim was<br />
engaged to the defendant and lived with him. During a fight, the defendant conceded that he beat<br />
her and choked her. That night and the next morning, the defendant testified they had consensual<br />
vaginal and anal sex. The alleged victim, however, testified that she was raped. Police were<br />
called after the alleged victim’s mother and sister arrived and saw the victim’s injuries. While<br />
there was plenty of evidence and the aggravated assault conviction was affirmed, the rape<br />
conviction was supported only by the alleged victim and a nurse, who testified about injuries to<br />
the alleged victim’s buttocks and vaginal area. The state failed to disclose the pictures of the<br />
alleged victim’s buttocks and vaginal area, however, which did not reflect the injuries described<br />
by the nurse in her testimony.<br />
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Deren v. State,<br />
15 So. 3d 723 (Fla. App. 2009)<br />
Battery and disorderly conduct charges vacated due to the State’s failure to disclose workers’<br />
compensation records detailing payments of $24,000 to the alleged victim. The charges arose out<br />
of a disturbance between the defendant and his friend and the victim, a bar bouncer. The<br />
evidence was material to show the victim’s financial motive to paint the defendant and his friend<br />
as the aggressors in the initial fight.<br />
Harris v. State,<br />
966 A.2d 925 (Md. 2009)<br />
Murder, conspiracy, and solicitation to commit murder convictions vacated in post-conviction<br />
proceedings. The state’s theory was that the defendant had solicited and conspired with a codefendant to kill the defendant’s fiancee. The co-defendant went along with the plan and made<br />
numerous statements to others as events unfolded. Ultimately, the fiancee was killed and the<br />
defendant was shot in the leg. The co-defendant, who had pled guilty to murder in exchange for<br />
a 50-year sentence, testified that he had changed his mind at the last minute and that the<br />
defendant took the gun and killed the victim and then ordered the co-defendant to shoot him in<br />
the leg which he did. The co-defendant also testified that his initial confessions to police and his<br />
younger brother were false. The defendant denied guilt. A jailhouse snitch testified that the codefendant admitted involvement in the murder plot but claimed he was too scared to go through<br />
with it. The snitch also testified that the defendant had twice offered to pay him if he would tell<br />
the defendant’s lawyer that the co-defendant admitted shooting the victim. The jailhouse snitch<br />
had also been facing a number of charges but pled guilty prior to the defendant’s trial pursuant to<br />
a deal in which he received a 30-year sentence. Both the co-defendant and the snitch<br />
acknowledged during testimony that they could seek a sentence reduction but denied any<br />
promises from the state in that regard. Reversal was required because the state had, in fact,<br />
promised not to oppose their motions for reduction if the state was satisfied with their testimony.<br />
The co-defendant’s sentence was reduced to 30 years and the snitch’s sentence was reduced to 25<br />
years. This evidence was material as both of these witnesses had prior criminal records and<br />
credibility issues while the defendant had no prior record and no apparent motive to have his<br />
fiancee killed since he was not even the beneficiary on her life insurance policy.<br />
State v. Soriano-Clemente,<br />
2009 WL 2432052 (Minn. App. 2009) (unpublished).<br />
Aggravated robbery case vacated due to state’s failure to disclose the victim’s prior convictions.<br />
The victim testified that she and her mother were robbed at gunpoint by two men in her sister’s<br />
store. When the robbers left, the victim ran out and saw a Jeep drive away. Sometime later, the<br />
Jeep with the license plate number provided by the victim was stopped and defendant, who had<br />
been a passenger before running when the vehicle stopped, was arrested. The victim identified<br />
the Mexican defendant as an assailant at trial (even though she initially described the assailant as<br />
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Asian) but her mother could not identify the assailants. The defendant testified that he had been<br />
in the Jeep with three other men only for the purpose of buying drugs. He waited in the Jeep<br />
while two others went inside the store. Following conviction but prior to sentencing, defense<br />
counsel discovered that the victim had a significant conviction history including drug possession,<br />
perjury, use of different names and addresses during prior arrests, and multiple crimes of<br />
dishonesty, including financial transaction fraud. While there was no evidence the prosecutor on<br />
defendant’s case knew about this prior record, some of the victim’s prior convictions were<br />
prosecuted by the same state office.<br />
Sarber v. State,<br />
2009 WL 2366097 (Minn. App. 2009) (unpublished)<br />
Drug possession conviction vacated in post-conviction. The defendant was a passenger in the car<br />
driven by the state’s primary witness. When police stopped the car, drugs were found either in<br />
the console between the seats or under the driver’s seat. The defendant was the only one<br />
charged. While the evidence of non-disclosure was not clear, it was clear that the witness had<br />
been arrested only weeks before on a drug charge in which he attempted to shift blame to his<br />
companion. In addition, the witness had met with a detective on numerous occasions to discuss<br />
working as an informant in order to gain assistance with his pending charges. While defense<br />
counsel was aware of the prior arrest and incident report, the state did not challenge the findings<br />
that the discussions with the detective were never disclosed. Likewise, it was not disclosed that<br />
the detective did approach the prosecutor and speak on the witness’ behalf. While there was no<br />
formal agreement, the witness still had incentive to testify against the defendant. Because the<br />
record was unclear, the court found alternatively that if the evidence was disclosed by the state,<br />
counsel was ineffective in failing to impeach the witness with this information.<br />
Ex parte Johnson,<br />
2009 WL 1396807 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (unpublished)<br />
Relief granted in post-conviction proceedings due to Brady violation in aggravated sexual assault<br />
of a child case. The per curiam opinion does not discuss the facts but the concurrence does. The<br />
day before the scheduled trial, the prosecutor interviewed the alleged victim who denied any<br />
sexual abuse. Also, shortly before trial, the prosecutor’s investigator had been informed by<br />
school officials that the alleged victim was a “great liar.” On the day of trial, the alleged victim<br />
did not appear to testify. None of this was disclosed prior to the defendant entering a guilty plea<br />
and later being adjudicated and sentenced to life. The complainant’s recantation was directly<br />
exculpatory and the non-disclosure required a grant of relief.<br />
State v. Smith,<br />
2008 WL 5272480 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2008) (unpublished)<br />
Rape of child convictions reversed due to state’s failure to disclose the alleged victim’s juvenile<br />
adjudications for car theft and joyriding and her prior allegations of physical abuse by her<br />
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grandfather that were not substantiated by social service workers.<br />
Ex parte Toney,<br />
2008 WL 5245324 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (unpublished)<br />
Relief granted in post-conviction proceeding due to “Agreed Findings of Fact &amp; Conclusions of<br />
Law” of Brady violation. The per curiam opinion does not discuss the facts.<br />
*Taylor v. State,<br />
262 S.W.3d 231 (Mo. 2008)<br />
In prison killing case, denial of post-conviction relief as to death sentence reversed in part due to<br />
prosecution’s failure to disclose: (1) letters sent by the state&#8217;s jailhouse witness to the lead<br />
investigator for the prosecutor that the investigator then destroyed; (2) a memorandum the<br />
investigator composed memorializing one of his conversations with the jailhouse witness in<br />
which the latter referenced the likelihood of his testimony being needed against petitioner and<br />
contained false allegations of corruption on the part of two police officers; and (3) the state&#8217;s<br />
intention to ask prosecutors to extend favorable treatment to the jailhouse witness on his pending<br />
charges if he gave helpful testimony against petitioner.<br />
People v. Hunter,<br />
892 N.E.2d 365 (N.Y.App. 2008)<br />
In case where defendant was charged with multiple sexual offenses against the alleged victim and<br />
was convicted of sodomy despite his defense that what occurred was consensual, petitioner’s due<br />
process rights were violated by the suppression of evidence that the complainant had later (but<br />
before defendant’s trial) accused another of rape under similar circumstances, i.e., in both cases,<br />
the alleged assaults took place in the accused man’s home. The other alleged assailant also<br />
contended that the encounter was consensual but sometime after defendant’s trial pleaded guilty<br />
to attempted rape. That plea, however, did not cure the due process violation that occurred from<br />
the prosecution’s failure to reveal the accusation – “If the information known to the People when<br />
this case was tried was ‘favorable to [the] accused’ and ‘material’ within the meaning of Brady,<br />
defendant had a due process right to obtain it, and that right could not be nullified by post-trial<br />
events.” And although the trial court did have the discretion to preclude the defendant from<br />
impeaching the complainant with the second accusation, it also had the discretion to allow the<br />
impeachment. In finding that the suppressed information was material, it was noted that the<br />
prosecutor at defendant’s trial highlighted the implausibility of defendant’s account and that<br />
evidence of a similar accusation may have left the jury more skeptical of the complainant. Also,<br />
that the jury did learn of the complainant’s earlier threat to falsely accuse her own father of rape<br />
did not render the withheld evidence cumulative.<br />
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*In re Miranda,<br />
182 P.3d 513 (Cal. 2008)<br />
In capital case, habeas relief granted as to death sentence where prosecution suppressed inmate<br />
letter tending to rebut its “star penalty phase witness” and contradicting prosecution’s suggestion<br />
in argument that evidence that another person killed the second victim “didn’t exist.” State’s<br />
argument that letter not material under Brady because it was inadmissible hearsay was erroneous<br />
as inadmissible evidence may be material under Brady. The trial judge, not prosecutor, is arbiter<br />
of admissibility, and prosecutor’s disclosure obligations do not turn on prosecutor’s view of<br />
whether or how defense might use particular evidentiary items. Prosecutor’s disclosure<br />
obligation depends on collective effect of all suppressed evidence favorable to defense, not effect<br />
of evidence considered item by item.<br />
People v. Beaman,<br />
890 N.E.2d 500 (Ill. 2008)<br />
In first degree murder case where evidence against petitioner was not particularly strong,<br />
prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose information about an alternative suspect, “John<br />
Doe.” Doe was known to defense counsel as having been involved in a relationship with the<br />
victim but counsel had no evidence pointing to him as the killer. The undisclosed evidence about<br />
Doe consisted of the following: (1) Doe failed to complete a polygraph examination; (2) Doe was<br />
charged with domestic battery and possession of marijuana with intent to deliver prior to<br />
petitioner&#8217;s trial; (3) Doe had physically abused his girlfriend on numerous prior occasions; and<br />
(4) Doe’s use of steroids had caused him to act erratically. That some of the undisclosed<br />
evidence may have been inadmissible at trial did not mean it was not “favorable” given that it<br />
could have assisted in gaining admission of critical alternative suspect evidence. First, the<br />
undisclosed polygraph evidence would have bolstered a claim by petitioner that Doe was a viable<br />
suspect because the circumstances of his avoidance of the exam could be viewed as evasive, and<br />
also because the polygraph examiner indicated that Doe was specifically identified as a suspect.<br />
The evidence that Doe was charged with domestic battery and had physically abused his<br />
girlfriend on many prior occasions could also have been used by petitioner at a pretrial hearing to<br />
establish Doe as a viable suspect given that Doe was in the process of renewing his romantic<br />
relationship with the victim prior to her death. And the undisclosed evidence of Doe&#8217;s steroid<br />
abuse may have explained his violent outbursts toward his girlfriend and supported an inference<br />
of a tendency to act violently toward others. Finally, the undisclosed evidence that Doe had been<br />
charged with possession of marijuana with intent to deliver could have been used by petitioner as<br />
part of Doe&#8217;s motive to commit the murder in light of evidence that the victim owed Doe money<br />
for drugs.<br />
People v. Williams,<br />
854 N.Y.S.2d 586 (N.Y.A.D. 2008)<br />
In robbery case, defendant “substantially prejudiced” by untimely disclosure of Brady materials.<br />
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Although victim could not identify robber, defendant was convicted based on testimony of<br />
possible accomplice and another witness who defendant and accomplice visited later that day.<br />
During cross-examination of police officer, defense counsel discovered defendant and<br />
accomplice made statements that had not been disclosed, and prosecution file contained other<br />
“potentially exculpatory material.” Motion to dismiss charges based on Brady violations denied<br />
but trial judge instructed jury it could infer that had additional cross-examination been conducted<br />
on one witness, witness would have been “further impeached.” This instruction failed to<br />
ameliorate prejudice defendant suffered because jury not informed how witness’s testimony<br />
would have been impeached or how it was different than before.<br />
State v. Williams,<br />
660 S.E.2d 189 (N.C.App. 2008), aff’d, 669 S.E.2d 628 (N.C. 2008)<br />
Affirming dismissal of charges in assault on government employee case where government<br />
officials destroyed booking photographs taken of defendant in different county before and after<br />
the alleged assault and also destroyed a poster that had been made by prosecutors using those<br />
same photographs. (After defendant was booked in StanlyCounty on unrelated charges, he filed<br />
a lawsuit against a Stanley County Assistant District Attorney, as well as other Stanly County<br />
officials. Defendant was then transferred to Union County, where the alleged assault on an<br />
officer occurred. Defendant contended that he had in fact been the victim of assault byUnion<br />
County officers. Defendant was transferred back to StanlyCounty where a second booking<br />
photo was taken. The photos, according to the captions created by the prosecutors for the poster,<br />
showed defendant “before and after” defendant filed his StanlyCounty lawsuit. The “before”<br />
picture showed defendant at the initial booking in Stanly County. The “after” photo showed<br />
injuries sustained by defendant during the assault incident in Union County. At the time this all<br />
occurred, Union and Stanly Counties were in the same prosecutorial district.) The poster was<br />
material because it would have been admissible as impeachment evidence. It was also relevant<br />
to any defense that could have been offered, including self-defense. Noting that a judge refused<br />
to admit testimony about the contents of the destroyed poster in the unrelated Stanly County trial,<br />
the court found defendant was irreparably prejudiced by destruction of the poster and<br />
photographs as to the Union County charge.<br />
People v. Uribe,<br />
76 Cal.Rptr.3d 829 (Cal.App. 2008)<br />
In case where defendant was charged with various sexual crimes against his granddaughter, the<br />
prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose a videotape of a medical examination of the<br />
alleged victim. In the motion for new trial, the defense expert explained how the videotape<br />
provided further support for his trial testimony that there was no evidence of penetration, and<br />
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contradicted the opinions offered by the prosecution experts. Knowledge of the videotape, which<br />
was taken during an examination at a local medical center, was imputed to the prosecution given<br />
that the medical center conducted such examination at the initiation of a police officer who was<br />
investigating possible criminal conduct. This meant that the medical center was acting on the<br />
government’s behalf and was part of the prosecution team for Brady purposes. The prosecution<br />
also had greater access to records generated from the examination given that the examiner, in<br />
accordance with law, forwarded the final report to law enforcement.<br />
*State v. Brown,<br />
873 N.E.2d 858 (Ohio 2007)<br />
Where evidence established defendant was involved in deaths of two victims and the defense<br />
theory was that defendant lacked the level of intent needed to establish “prior calculation and<br />
design,” the prosecution breached its duty to provide all material evidence when it withheld<br />
police reports containing statements implicating other persons in the murders, including<br />
statements that someone other than Brown claimed responsibility for the murders. Even though<br />
statements were “hearsay and might not be admissible,” they were material because they<br />
suggested someone other than Brown “pull[]ed the trigger” which could have impacted the<br />
sentencing decision. In addition, trial counsel&#8217;s decision not to contest Brown&#8217;s involvement in<br />
the murders was based upon the evidence that had been disclosed. Had counsel known that<br />
someone else had claimed to have fired the gun that killed the two victims, a different defense<br />
strategy may have been employed. Undisclosed police reports “put the reliability of the verdict<br />
in question,” and required new trial.<br />
State v. Farris,<br />
656 S.E.2d 121 (W.Va. 2007)<br />
Prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose to defendant, who was charged with sexually abusing children in<br />
his care, evidence obtained by forensic psychologist during interview with defendant&#8217;s cousin,<br />
that alleged victims&#8217; mother had attempted to convince her to falsely accuse defendant of sexual<br />
abuse, and that one of the alleged victims had inserted a toothbrush into her own vagina,<br />
constituted a Brady violation. The undisclosed evidence provided impeachment evidence,<br />
supported defendant&#8217;s claim that alleged victims&#8217; mother convinced her children to lie, and<br />
provided alternate explanation for physical evidence of vaginal penetration. The knowledge<br />
obtained by the psychologist during the forensic examination, conducted at the request of the<br />
West Virginia prosecution team investigating sexual abuse allegations against defendant, would<br />
be imputed to West Virginia prosecuting authorities.<br />
Ex Parte Elliff,<br />
2007 WL 1346358 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (unpublished)<br />
Summarily affirming grant of habeas relief in murder case where prosecution failed to disclose<br />
the existence of a witness who possessed information indicating that someone else committed the<br />
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offense.<br />
State v. Youngblood,<br />
650 S.E.2d 119 (W.Va. 2007)<br />
Following remand from the Supreme Court for full consideration of defendant’s Brady claim,<br />
defendant’s convictions for numerous sexual and weapons offenses are reversed and a new trial<br />
ordered based on the suppression of a note that corroborated the defendant’s claim that the sexual<br />
encounters were consensual and might have impeached the testimony of the alleged victim’s<br />
friends who denied knowing about sexual activity between the defendant and the alleged victim.<br />
Suppression is found given testimony that a police officer read the note and then urged the person<br />
who discovered it to destroy it. Although the prosecutor was unaware of the note, a police<br />
officer’s knowledge of it is imputed to the prosecutor.<br />
Buchli v. State,<br />
242 S.W.3d 449 (Mo. App. 2007)<br />
In murder case, post-conviction relief is granted based on the State’s failure to disclose the entire<br />
building surveillance tape which would have cast doubt on the prosecution’s timeline theory.<br />
The complete tape would have provided petitioner “with plausible and persuasive evidence to<br />
support his theory of innocence by supporting his theory that he did not have enough time to<br />
commit the crime. If believed, this evidence would have established that [petitioner] had only<br />
three and a half minutes to club [the victim] nine times with a blunt object, clean any blood from<br />
himself, and get down 13 floors to leave the building. Although the jury was free to believe that<br />
[petitioner] could have done all of these acts in less than four minutes, [petitioner] conceivably<br />
could have used [the complete tape] to persuade the jury that the ‘time window’ was too brief.”<br />
Walker v. Johnson,<br />
646 S.E.2d 44 (Ga. 2007)<br />
In case involving various charges, including kidnaping and robbery, the prosecution violated<br />
Brady by suppressing taped statements by a witness who explained in detail why she believed the<br />
victim had actually set up the crime to recover insurance monies, by the victim, and by the<br />
defendant. Although the State did provide a one paragraph reference to the witness’s 48-page<br />
statement, this did not comply with Brady given that these notes “omitted much of the potentially<br />
exculpatory material contained in the complete transcript” and incorrectly reported that the<br />
witness had offered no justification for her belief that no crimes occurred. “Rather than informing<br />
the defense of the substantive nature of [the witness’s] statement, there is a significant likelihood<br />
that the State&#8217;s incomplete and inaccurate response to Johnson&#8217;s discovery and Brady motions<br />
induced defense counsel to believe either that the taped statements were not in existence or that<br />
they contained no information beneficial to the defense.” Inconsistencies in the victim’s<br />
statement would have assisted the defense during cross-examination. Finally, the defendant’s<br />
statement would have been useful at trial because in it the defendant clearly told the interrogating<br />
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officer where he was at the time of the crime and who could corroborate this, which would have<br />
contradicted the officer’s trial testimony that the defendant never provided him with the names of<br />
any alibi witnesses. Suppression of the defendant’s statement permitted the prosecutor to argue<br />
that the alibi defense was recently fabricated.<br />
Ex Parte Masonheimer,<br />
220 S.W.3d 494 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)<br />
Double jeopardy under the state and federal constitutions barred a third trial of defendant charged<br />
with murder where his prior mistrial motions were necessitated primarily by prosecution’s<br />
intentional failure to disclose exculpatory Brady evidence with the specific intent to avoid the<br />
possibility of an acquittal. The defendant contended that he killed the victim, who was his<br />
daughter’s boyfriend, in self-defense. According to the defense, the victim had grown<br />
increasingly aggressive toward the daughter due to his use of anabolic steroids. Suppressed by<br />
the prosecution, among other things, was evidence that the victim had a hidden supply of<br />
steroids.<br />
Stewart v. Commonwealth,<br />
2007 WL 89476 (Va. App. Jan. 16, 2007) (unpublished)<br />
Brady violation found where prosecution belatedly revealed information about a third party who<br />
could have been responsible for the check forgery that the defendant was charged with. Although<br />
the information came out during the trial, defense counsel had cross-examined several witnesses<br />
and the defendant had already testified in his own defense, “thus potentially compromising<br />
whatever alternative trial strategy the evidence might have suggested.”<br />
In re Sodersten,<br />
53 Cal.Rptr.3d 572 (Cal.App. 2007)<br />
In murder case where no physical evidence directly implicated petitioner, habeas relief was<br />
granted based on the prosecution’s failure to disclose “tape-recorded statements of the two key<br />
trial witnesses that contained inconsistent statements, as well as admissions of lying and coercive<br />
interrogation of one of the witnesses.” The evidence was material even though other witnesses<br />
placed petitioner at or around the victim’s residence before and after her bodywas discovered,<br />
contrary to his alibi, given that the key prosecution witnesses were the only ones who identified<br />
petitioner as the victim’s attacker/killer. And the fact that one of the suppressed tapes, which was<br />
made surreptitiously when petitioner and one of the key witnesses were in custody, included<br />
statements by petitioner that conflicted with his trial alibi did not defeat materiality because<br />
petitioner offered an explanation for the conflict at the habeas hearing and he could have altered<br />
his defense at trial had the tape been disclosed. That petitioner passed away before the court of<br />
appeal ruled did not render the proceeding moot given that petitioner spent 20 years in prison for<br />
a crime he may not have committed, and the integrity of the judicial system was undermined by<br />
the prosecution’s actions.<br />
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Workman v. Commonwealth,<br />
636 S.E.2d 368 (Va. 2006)<br />
In homicide case where defendant’s claim that victim was shot in self-defense depended on the<br />
jury believing defendant’s assertion that victim’s friend had a gun, which the friend denied,<br />
Brady violation occurred where prosecution failed to reveal that a witness in another case had<br />
brought up this case during a police interview and reported having been told that the victim’s<br />
friend had tried to pass the victim a gun during the altercation and then fled the scene with the<br />
weapon. (The police never informed the prosecutor about this statement.) Because the police<br />
failed to follow up on this witness’s statement, it was material because it would have been a<br />
powerful tool to support the defense’s contention that the police investigation was inadequate. In<br />
addition, once the defense team learned of the statement, the witness was interviewed and he<br />
revealed personal knowledge about two recent “shoot outs” involving the victim’s friend. The<br />
witness also led the defense to someone else who recounted a separate recent shooting by the<br />
victim’s friend. Thus, even if the first statement was not admissible, it was material because its<br />
disclosure would have led to exculpatory admissible evidence. There was no lack of diligence in<br />
failing to discover the first statement even though defense counsel happened to interview one of<br />
the officers who conducted the witness interview and that officer testified at trial. Under<br />
Strickler, defendant could not be faulted for relying on the Commonwealth’s “open file” response<br />
to defendant’s discovery motion. Finally, given how recent the new shooting incidents were, the<br />
evidence could not be deemed cumulative of evidence at trial about the victim’s friend pointing a<br />
weapon at a Deputy Sheriff four years earlier.<br />
People v. Harris,<br />
825 N.Y.S.2d 876 (N.Y. A.D. 2006)<br />
Summary reversal of attempted murder and robbery convictions where prosecution failed to<br />
disclose exculpatory material obtained by an investigator for the Monroe County District<br />
Attorney and the subject material was Brady material because it affected the credibility of a key<br />
prosecution witness. “Reversal of defendant&#8217;s judgment of conviction is required, moreover,<br />
because defendant made a specific request for such material and ‘there is a “reasonable<br />
possibility” that, had that material been disclosed, the result would have been different’”<br />
*Riddle v. Ozmint,<br />
631 S.E.2d 70 (S.C. 2006)<br />
In case where the capital conviction rested almost entirely on the testimony of petitioner’s<br />
mentally retarded younger brother, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose a<br />
statement made by the brother close to a year after his original statement which contained major<br />
inconsistencies and the fact that three days before trial, the officers took the brother to the scene<br />
for a re-enactment. Evidence about the trip would have underscored the defense position that the<br />
brother was unreliable and needed to be coached. The lower court’s finding that the defense<br />
could have found the statement by interviewing the officer who took it is rejected as “unrealistic”<br />
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and not what Brady requires. The lower court also erred in finding that the defense could have<br />
discovered the information through the prosecution’s “open-file” policy, given that the<br />
prosecution routinely removed work product and other information on a “case-by-case” basis. In<br />
addition, because the trip occurred only three days before trial, this further hindered any attempt,<br />
even if required, to discover it. Finally, the brother testified that he had made no statements or<br />
had any contact with officers after his first statement, and the prosecutor let this testimony go<br />
uncorrected. The lower court was wrong to accept the State’s assertion that the brother simply<br />
must not have understood the question or not recalled the events.<br />
State v. Williams,<br />
896 A.2d 973 (Md. 2006)<br />
In murder case where key prosecution witness was a jailhouse snitch, a Brady violation occurred<br />
by the suppression of evidence that the snitch was a paid informant and that he was seeking<br />
leniency in another case based on his testimony in petitioner’s case, contrary to his claim on the<br />
stand that he was testifying against petitioner solely because it was the right thing to do.<br />
Although the particular Assistant State’s Attorney prosecuting petitioner was unaware of this<br />
information, Brady mandated “that, under the circumstances of this case, the State&#8217;s duty and<br />
obligation to disclose exculpatory and mitigating material and information extend beyond the<br />
individual prosecutor and encompass information known to any prosecutor in the office.”<br />
Defense counsel could not be blamed for failing to discover the impeachment evidence given that<br />
the snitch’s status as a paid informant could only have been revealed by the prosecution or the<br />
police. That defense counsel had conducted a “superb” cross-examination of the snitch failed to<br />
render the suppressed impeachment evidence immaterial.<br />
Sykes v. United States,<br />
897 A.2d 769 (D.C. 2006)<br />
Defendant convicted of robbery-murder and other charges was entitled to a new trial based on the<br />
prosecution’s failure to timely provide grand jury testimony of two witnesses, who were<br />
unavailable at the time of trial, which directly contradicted the confidential informant’s testimony<br />
with respect to defendant&#8217;s alleged express and adoptive admissions. That the defendant was<br />
permitted to introduce portions of the grand jury testimony did not cure the error because the<br />
prosecutor was able to suggest that the witnesses had not been truthful before the grand jury and<br />
the jury was not able to observe the witnesses’s demeanor and make a credibility determination.<br />
State v. Anderson<br />
2006 WL 825270 (Ohio App. Mar. 31, 2006) (unpublished)<br />
DUI charges properly dismissed where defendant requested that videotapes taken of him and his<br />
interaction with police be preserved and the State destroyed them. Due to the specificity of<br />
defendant’s request, State is found to bear the burden of demonstrating that the evidence would<br />
have been wholly inculpatory, which it could not. In addition, the destroyed videotapes would<br />
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have resolved several matters in dispute and provided the only possible impeachment of the<br />
officers.<br />
*Simpson v. Moore,<br />
627 S.E.2d 701 (S.C. 2006)<br />
In case involving charges of robbery-murder at a convenience store, the prosecution’s failure to<br />
disclose that a bag of money was found behind the counter violated Brady. One victim/witness<br />
testified that after some shots were fired, petitioner took money from the cash register. Petitioner<br />
claimed that he “chickened out” of the robbery, only shot the owner after the owner accosted<br />
petitioner, and did not take any money from the store. The bag of money at the crime scene was<br />
determined to be critical evidence regarding the robbery charge/aggravator. A new trial was<br />
ordered on the robbery charge, with a resentencing to follow based on the outcome of that retrial.<br />
State v. Larkins,<br />
2006 WL 60778 (Ohio App. Jan. 12, 2006) (unpublished)<br />
Indictment on robbery charges is dismissed where defendant’s initial conviction was overturned<br />
based on the State’s failure to disclose a wealth of Brady material and the defendant now would<br />
be unable to use the information that had been suppressed because eight defense witnesses were<br />
now deceased and 10 had no known address.<br />
State v. Scheidel,<br />
844 N.E.2d 1248 (Ohio 2006)<br />
In prosecution for kidnaping, rape and attempted rape, the prosecution violated Brady by<br />
suppressing notes from an interview with the child victim before trial, in which the child stated<br />
that defendant did not penetrate her vagina. Materiality is found even though the notes did not<br />
constitute a “statement” by the victim and despite a clear description by the child of the rape to a<br />
nurse, evidence of vaginal scarring, and testimony by a friend of the defendant who claimed on<br />
one occasion to have walked into the child’s room and discovered the defendant with his pants<br />
down standing over the bed of the naked, crying child.<br />
Commonwealth v. Lykus,<br />
2005 WL 3804726 (Mass. Super. Dec. 30, 2005)<br />
In kidnaping and murder case where evidence against defendant included dye from ransom<br />
money that was found in his car and on his belongings, same kind of bags that ransom money<br />
was in were found in his truck, bullets in victim were consistent with those fired from his gun,<br />
and several witnesses identified his voice on tapes demanding ransom money, a Brady violation<br />
is found from the Commonwealth’s failure to disclose FBI lab reports indicating that defendant’s<br />
voice could not be conclusively established to be the voice on the tapes. Although the prosecutor<br />
had requested production of this evidence, supervisors at the FBI specifically directed agents not<br />
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to produce it. The suppression of the lab reports is nonetheless imputed to the Commonwealth<br />
because the FBI had been “intimately involved” in the investigation of the case. Even if the<br />
suppression could not be imputed to the Commonwealth, the lab reports would then be<br />
considered newly discovered and still provide grounds for a new trial given that the voice<br />
identification was a “major component” of the case against defendant.<br />
*Schofield v. Palmer,<br />
621 S.E.2d 726 (Ga. 2005)<br />
Despite the existence of “considerable” evidence implicating petitioner in the murders of his<br />
estranged wife and step-daughter, habeas relief was required based on the prosecution’s<br />
suppression of evidence that the Georgia Bureau of Investigation had paid a witness $500 for<br />
providing information implicating petitioner. Petitioner’s nephew testified that he went to the<br />
victims’s home with petitioner, cut the phone lines at petitioner’s request, and petitioner then<br />
kicked in the door and shot the victims. The defense theory was that the nephew alone was<br />
responsible for the crime. The witness at issue testified to seeing petitioner’s car parked in the<br />
location described by the nephew. Evidence of the payment was material because it provided a<br />
basis for impeaching the witness. Suppression of the evidence provided cause to overcome the<br />
procedural default of the claim.<br />
People v. Proventud,<br />
802 N.Y.S.2d 605 (N.Y. Sup. 2005)<br />
In attempted murder case, prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose that the victim<br />
identified defendant’s brother in a photo array and wrote down “looks like him.” Notably, the<br />
conduct of the jury during trial indicated that identification was a major issue. Relief was<br />
required despite the fact that the identification was tentative and that defendant’s brother was<br />
incarcerated at the time of the crime.<br />
People v. Blackman,<br />
836 N.E.2d 101 (Ill. App. 2005)<br />
State violated Brady when it failed to disclose the payment of $20,000 in relocation expenses to a<br />
witness where the witness in question was one of only two to put defendant at the scene and the<br />
only one who was not chemically impaired at the time. Nondisclosure of information prevented<br />
defendant from the impeaching witness and making a knowing choice of jury trial over bench<br />
trial. Court’s offer of continuance following disclosure of information insufficient to cure error.<br />
Robinson v. Commonwealth,<br />
181 S.W.3d 30 (Ky. 2005)<br />
Napue violation occurred at the sentencing proceedings following defendant’s conviction for<br />
various drug offenses when the parole officer erroneously testified that good time credits would<br />
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be factored into the parole eligibility date and the prosecutor not only failed to correct this<br />
incorrect information in his argument to the jury, but relied heavily on the parole officer’s<br />
testimony in arguing that the jury should impose the maximum penalty.<br />
People v. Garcia,<br />
2005 WL 2387474 (Cal. App. Sept. 29, 2005) (unpublished)<br />
In attempted murder case, the prosecution’s failure to disclose a letter requesting leniency for a<br />
witness for his participation in the case and requesting his placement in a witness protection<br />
program, when considered in combination with misconduct by the prosecutor during argument,<br />
justifies a new trial. At trial, the witness had claimed that he was testifying because he received a<br />
deal that released him from juvenile hall. The lead investigator testified that the State had<br />
requested leniency for the witness in a separate case. With regard to another witness, the<br />
investigator testified that she was absolutely sure of her photo identification while the witness<br />
said she had equivocated. It is found that the suppressed information would have assisted in the<br />
impeachment of one witness and also have damaged the credibility of the investigator with<br />
regard to the disputed circumstances of the other witness’ photo identification.<br />
Bowlds v. State,<br />
834 N.E.2d 669 (Ind. App. 2005)<br />
In case of criminal recklessness resulting in serious bodily injury, the prosecution&#8217;s suppression of<br />
three police reports violated Brady. The reports included information about the arrest of another<br />
suspect matching the description of the assailant, incriminating statements by another person<br />
present at the scene, hearsay statements regarding culpability of a third possible suspect, and<br />
prior-conviction impeachment material concerning two witnesses who identified petitioner in a<br />
lineup.<br />
*McCarty v. State,<br />
114 P.3d 1089 (Okla. Crim. App. 2005), cert. denied, 126 S.Ct. 660 (2005)<br />
Post-conviction relief granted in rape-murder case because of the conduct of forensic analyst<br />
Joyce Gilchrist, who withheld evidence, most likely destroyed exculpatory evidence, provided<br />
flawed analysis and documentation, testified in a manner that exceeded the limits of forensic<br />
science, and altered lab reports to avoid detection.<br />
*Tillman v. State,<br />
128 P.3d 1123 (Utah 2005)<br />
Petitioner was entitled to relief from his death sentence where, following conclusion of federal<br />
habeas proceeding and while execution date was active, petitioner discovered partial transcripts<br />
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of pre-trial interviews conducted with state’s star witness. Because the State had affirmatively<br />
represented that no recordations of interviews had been made, petitioner was not under an<br />
obligation during the first round of post-conviction proceedings to have found them and<br />
petitioner demonstrated good cause under state common law to overcome the procedural default<br />
of his Brady claim. The key witness, who was present at the crime scene, was granted complete<br />
immunity and presented the only evidence against petitioner. The transcript contained indications<br />
that the witness was not as certain about the sequence of events as she was at trial; evidence that<br />
an officer was attempting to coach her testimony; inappropriate laughter when recounting details<br />
of the gruesome murder; and evidence that petitioner was suicidal prior to the incident. The<br />
evidence was material as to the sentence because discrepancies, coaching, and laughter tended to<br />
decrease the witness’s credibility and therefore could have increased the jury’s perception of her<br />
moral culpability. If the witness was more culpable than she indicated, the State’s attempt to<br />
portray her as an innocent victim under the sway of petitioner would have been undermined. An<br />
increase in her moral culpability could also have underscored to the jury the disparate treatment<br />
of granting the witness full immunity while sentencing petitioner to death. Evidence of<br />
petitioner’s suicidal ideation was found to be mitigating.<br />
*Floyd v. State,<br />
902 So.2d 775 (Fla. 2005)<br />
In robbery-murder case with an African-American defendant, prosecution violated Brady by<br />
suppressing statements of a neighbor who saw two white men park their truck in the victim’s<br />
driveway and enter the victim’s house, heard “scrambling” noises while the men were inside, and<br />
saw the men leave hurriedly, all within the time period the medical examiner had estimated as the<br />
time of death. This was Brady evidence particularly when combined with other evidence in<br />
police reports that was inconsistent with the State’s presentation at trial, including<br />
inconsistencies in reports of pry marks on interior window frames, and arguments regarding the<br />
presence of Negroid hair on the victim’s sheet despite the fact that the bed was made at the time<br />
of the crime. Also suppressed were letters written by a jailhouse snitch seeking a bonus for his<br />
help. The court found that the Brady evidence warranted relief, despite the fact that it did not<br />
amount to “irrefutable evidence” or “smoking gun” for innocence. (The evidence against the<br />
defendant included his ownership of a coat which contained a sock with the victim’s blood on it<br />
and his having cashed a check belonging to the victim.)<br />
Prewitt v. State,<br />
819 N.E.2d 393 (Ind. App. 2004)<br />
In murder case involving the death of the defendant’s husband, who the defendant claimed she<br />
found dead in the bathroom with a gunshot wound in the head after she awoke from a blackout,<br />
the prosecution violated Brady by suppressing evidence that could have supported a third party<br />
guilt defense. Without the evidence, the only available defense had been suicide. A State<br />
detective had indicated that there was no exculpatory evidence, but withheld the following<br />
information: (1) the known presence of defendant’s son at the crime scene during a key time<br />
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period coupled with statements that he went by a witness’s house and said that he would be going<br />
to California if something happened that night and then left a blood trail from there back to the<br />
bar where he was later seen; (2) a witness’s statement that the son and a friend moved the<br />
victim’s body, which was consistent with crime scene evidence; and (3) witness statement that<br />
the son had hired him to beat up the victim. The defendant was not guilty of lack of due diligence<br />
in obtaining this information because the State had misrepresented the status and results of its<br />
investigation. Although the body moving evidence was not independently material, it was found<br />
to fall under Brady as a part of a cumulative analysis.<br />
*Mordenti v. State,<br />
894 So.2d 161 (Fla. 2004)<br />
In murder-for-hire case where the prosecution’s case turned almost completely on the testimony<br />
of petitioner’s former wife, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to turn over the ex-wife’s<br />
date book which contradicted part of her testimony and affected the credibility of other parts of<br />
her testimony. In addition, an entry on the date of the murder implicated the ex-wife’s then<br />
boyfriend in the killing. The prosecution also violated Brady by failing to turn over the results of<br />
an interview with the lawyer who had represented the victim’s husband who had been charged<br />
with hiring petitioner to commit the murder. (The victim’s husband had committed suicide prior<br />
to trial and the trial court, unbeknownst to defense counsel, issued an ex parte order finding that<br />
the attorney- client privilege no longer applied and ordering the attorney to submit to an<br />
interview with the State.) The attorney revealed in the interview that petitioner’s ex-wife and the<br />
victim’s husband had had an affair and the victim’s husband believed that the ex-wife had<br />
orchestrated the murder. The victim’s husband had also claimed that a phone call to petitioner<br />
on the day of the murder was related to business and had been set up by the ex- wife. This was<br />
consistent with petitioner’s explanation about the call. Even if the attorney’s testimony was<br />
inadmissible hearsay, it was nevertheless material because it would have led defense counsel to<br />
discover evidence for impeaching the ex-wife. Further, the testimony may have been admissible<br />
for impeachment purposes. “Cumulatively, the total picture in this case-the State&#8217;s Brady<br />
violations in failing to disclose [the ex-wife’s] date book and the undisclosed information<br />
obtained from [the attorney’s] interview with the State, in addition to other Brady violations<br />
where the State failed to disclose information obtained from interviews with key witnesses<br />
coupled with misrepresentations by the prosecutor-compels us to grant Mordenti relief in the<br />
instant case.”<br />
Herndon v. Commonwealth,<br />
2004 WL 2634420 (Ky. App. Nov. 19, 2004) (unpublished)<br />
In sexual abuse case, investigating detective is found to have lied in order to mislead the jury.<br />
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Commonwealth v. Vettraino,<br />
2004 WL 2320319 (Ky. App. Oct. 15, 2004) (unpublished)<br />
Grant of post-conviction relief upheld where detective remained silent when prosecution argued<br />
that petitioner’s defense – that he only shot the two victims after the surviving victim raised his<br />
arm revealing a silver gun – was unbelievable because no such gun was found at the crime scene.<br />
In fact, the detective had discovered a silver gun in the male victim’s night stand. By smelling<br />
and examining it, the detective concluded it hadn’t been fired. He also found it to be irrelevant<br />
because he saw no blood trail leading from the kitchen, where the shooting occurred, to the night<br />
stand. The evidence was material because defense counsel would have tested for blood between<br />
the kitchen and night stand.<br />
State v. Johnson,<br />
599 S.E.2d 599 (N.C. App. 2004)<br />
Trial court erred in violation of defendant’s rights under Brady v. Maryland in this sexual<br />
offenses case when it failed to order that defendant be provided with Department of Social<br />
Service records concerning the minor victim which indicated: (1) the victim’s brother had a<br />
history of physical violence; (2) the victim and her brother suffered yeast infections at the same<br />
time; (3) the victim and her brother were sometimes left in the house alone together; (4) the<br />
victim admitted lying to a social worker on one occasion about injuries; and (5) the victim’s<br />
mother believed that she could have caused at least one of the victim’s injuries.<br />
State v. Martinez,<br />
86 P.3d 1210 (Wash. App. 2004)<br />
Prosecution violated Brady by withholding an exculpatory police report until shortly before it<br />
rested its case. &#8220;The State prosecutor’s withholding of exculpatory evidence until the middle of a<br />
criminal jury trial is . . . so repugnant to principles of fundamental fairness that it constitutes a<br />
violation of due process.&#8221; Defendant had been charged with being an accomplice to numerous<br />
crimes. The actual perpetrators claimed that defendant had been the mastermind and had<br />
provided them with the two guns used in the offense – one black, one silver. A co-worker of<br />
defendant was shown a line-up of guns and picked out the guns recovered by the perpetrators as<br />
the guns shown to her by defendant in December 1999 which he had offered to sell to her. What<br />
the prosecution failed to reveal until well into the trial was a police report establishing that the<br />
silver gun had been owned by a third party who had not reported it stolen until October 2000.<br />
Thus, the silver gun earlier possessed by defendant, which he had reported stolen in the summer<br />
of 2000, could not have been the gun recovered by one of the perpetrators. On this record, where<br />
the jury hung 10-2 in favor of acquittal, the appeals court concludes that the trial court did not<br />
abuse its discretion in dismissing the refiled charges as a sanction for the prosecution’s<br />
misconduct.<br />
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State v. Hill,<br />
597 S.E.2d 822 (S.C. App. 2004)<br />
Trial court erred as a matter of law in holding that Brady and the state discovery statute did not<br />
apply in probation revocation proceedings. The Probation Department was required to disclose<br />
exculpatory documents in the possession of investigating agencies, even though it was a<br />
separate entity from those agencies. The suppressed evidence was found to be material even<br />
though it had been considered during a motion for reconsideration that was denied. The court<br />
reasoned: &#8220;Having already found Hill violated his probation and having imposed a sentence,<br />
we believe it would have been difficult for the court to be completely objective during the<br />
subsequent proceeding.&#8221; Further, Hill was denied the opportunity to thoroughly cross-examine<br />
the witnesses when armed with full information.<br />
State v. Bright,<br />
875 So.2d 37 (La. 2004)<br />
Second degree murder conviction reversed where prosecution suppressed evidence of its key<br />
witness’s criminal history, including the fact that he was on parole at the time of his<br />
identification of petitioner, and could have been subject to parole revocation due to his drinking<br />
at the time of the offense. In concluding that the suppressed evidence was material the court<br />
noted that no physical evidence or other witnesses implicated petitioner, and the defense alibi<br />
witnesses had been impeached by their prior criminal convictions.<br />
State v. White,<br />
680 N.W.2d 362 (Wisc. App. 2004)<br />
In armed robbery case, petitioner was entitled to post-conviction relief based on the prosecution’s<br />
failure to disclose the probationary status of the alleged victim/key prosecution witness. While<br />
the alleged victim, who was a store clerk, claimed that petitioner robbed him at gunpoint,<br />
petitioner testified that the alleged victim had willingly given him money from the cash register<br />
to compensate petitioner for a shortfall in a prior marijuana purchase. Although the jury did learn<br />
that the witness had a prior conviction, there was a reasonable probability of a more favorable<br />
verdict had the jury been given evidence showing a possible motive for the witness to shape his<br />
testimony, i.e., to avoid having his probation revoked.<br />
People v. Richardson,<br />
2004 WL 1879506 (Cal.App. 2004) (unpublished)<br />
In case where defendant was charged with, among other things, resisting arrest and battery on<br />
peace officers, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose a complaint against one of<br />
the arresting officers alleging that the officer used excessive force in arresting the complainant.<br />
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This was material because it supported defendant’s contention that the same officer used force on<br />
him, without provocation, and then falsely claimed that the force was justified by defendant’s<br />
conduct. That the complainant recanted his story when ultimately interviewed by the defense did<br />
not defeat the Brady claim.<br />
People v. Stein,<br />
2004 WL 1770418 (N.Y.A.D. 2004)<br />
Defendant who had been convicted of numerous sexual offenses, as well as endangering the<br />
welfare of a child, was entitled to a new trial based on the prosecution’s failure to disclose that<br />
two of the complainants had filed notices of civil claims against defendant’s employer, a school<br />
district, attempting to hold it responsible for defendant’s alleged criminal conduct. Evidence of<br />
the civil claims was highly relevant to the issue of the complainants’ credibility. The failure to<br />
disclose this evidence was aggravated by the prosecutor’s argument during summation that there<br />
was no evidence that the complainants were bringing civil lawsuits.<br />
Commonwealth v. Adams,<br />
2004 WL 1588108 (Mass. Super. 2004)<br />
Petitioner who had been convicted of murder and robbery was entitled to a new trial based on the<br />
prosecution’s suppression of evidence including the prior criminal records of Commonwealth<br />
witnesses, and police notes and reports showing prior inconsistent statements of a key<br />
Commonwealth witness.<br />
Toro v. State,<br />
2004 WL 1541917 (R.I.Super. 2004) (unpublished)<br />
Under Rhode Island’s &#8220;variable standard for applying Brady,&#8221; a new trial is granted automatically<br />
where there was a deliberate failure to disclose by the state regardless of the degree of harm.<br />
Here, defendant was entitled to a new trial based on an investigating officer’s failure to disclose<br />
to the defense that an uninterested witness claimed that a key prosecution witness had admitted to<br />
him that he had not actually seen defendant commit the murder. That the prosecutor was ignorant<br />
about this new witness was irrelevant, as was the alleged &#8220;good faith&#8221; of the officer who claimed<br />
to have withheld the information because he concluded it was not credible.<br />
Babich v. State,<br />
2004 WL 1327986 (Minn. App. 2004) (unpublished)<br />
In drug sale and possession case, prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose the full<br />
statement of the key witness which contradicted trial testimony by the witness and a police<br />
officer claiming that the witness had not mentioned petitioner’s drug activities during an initial<br />
interview. The full statement was also exculpatory in that it contained a basis for suggesting that<br />
someone other than petitioner could have had exclusive control over the methamphetamine<br />
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petitioner was charged with possessing and selling.<br />
Williams v. State,<br />
831 A.2d 501 (Md. App. 2003)<br />
Brady violation is found in homicide case where the prosecution failed to disclose that jailhouse<br />
snitch was a paid police informant for a drug unit, that he received benefits in criminal cases<br />
because of his assistance to the drug unit, and that he had requested leniency from the judge in a<br />
pending criminal case based in part on his testimony against petitioner. Although neither the<br />
trial prosecutor nor the homicide investigators were aware of this information, under the<br />
circumstances of this case – which included the fact that a judge had notified the prosecutor’s<br />
office of the informant’s requests for leniency – the appeals court finds that &#8220;it is not<br />
unreasonable to charge the prosecution with knowledge of impeachment information about [the<br />
informant] that, in violation of Brady v. Maryland, it failed to divulge to appellant&#8217;s counsel.&#8221;<br />
The court explained: &#8220;When, as here, there is an obvious basis to suspect the motives and<br />
credibility of a proposed witness for the State, it may be incumbent upon the State&#8217;s Attorney, in<br />
an office with many Assistant State&#8217;s Attorneys, to establish a procedure to facilitate compliance<br />
with the obligation under Brady to disclose to defense material that includes information ‘casting<br />
a shadow on a government witness&#8217;s credibility[.]’ Moreover, the police officers who are part of<br />
the prosecution team should be required to make some investigation into the background of the<br />
jailhouse snitch.&#8221; (Footnote and citation omitted.) In finding that the undisclosed information<br />
was material, the court pointed out that the snitch provided direct evidence against petitioner and<br />
that the only other direct evidence was from a witness whose testimony was confused and<br />
contradictory.<br />
People v. Stokes,<br />
2003 WL 22707339 (Cal. App. 2003) (unpublished)<br />
Defendant was denied a fair trial in case involving charges of sexual offenses where the<br />
prosecution failed to disclose a lengthy police report until nearly a year after the alleged victim’s<br />
conditional examination and the report contradicted some of the testimony given by the alleged<br />
victim during the examination. Because the victim died prior to trial, the conditional examination<br />
was offered into evidence and defendant was unable to cross-examine the witness about the<br />
police report.<br />
State v. Larkins,<br />
2003 WL 22510579 (Ohio App. 2003) (unpublished)<br />
In robbery-murder case where no physical evidence linked defendant to the crime, the trial court<br />
properly found a Brady violation by the prosecution’s failure to disclose, inter alia, that: (1) a<br />
witness’s description of the assailant who was allegedly defendant, i.e., &#8220;Road Dog,&#8221; did not<br />
match defendant; (2) this same witness claimed &#8220;Road Dog&#8221; and the codefendants were at his<br />
home at a time when a trial witness stated she was with defendant; (3) another witness provided a<br />
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statement which contradicted some trial testimony, implicated a third party as being &#8220;Road Dog,&#8221;<br />
and provided a possible alibi for defendant; (4) all the eyewitness descriptions obtained from<br />
people present at the crime scene differed from defendant’s appearance; and (5) the testifying<br />
co-defendant lied when asked if the prosecution had promised her anything in exchange for her<br />
testimony and about her past criminal convictions.<br />
Ex Parte Molano,<br />
2003 WL 22349039 (Tex.Crim.App. 2003)<br />
In case involving conviction for bodily injury to a child, record supported trial court’s grant of<br />
relief on Brady claim. Although there was no intentional suppression by the trial prosecutors,<br />
police agencies and other prosecutors in the same office were aware of written statements by<br />
witnesses that would have impeached two of the trial witnesses and supported the defense.<br />
People v. Lee,<br />
2003 WL 22100843 (Cal.App. 2003) (unpublished)<br />
The prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose a dispatch tape containing a description of<br />
the suspect that did not match defendant. Although defendant was aware of the description<br />
because it was mentioned in a police report, and the names of officers from various jurisdictions<br />
were included in that report, defense counsel had been unable to find the source of the<br />
description and so was without admissible evidence on this issue. Once he received the dispatch<br />
tape, after defendant had been convicted, defense counsel was able to identifythe officer and<br />
obtain favorable testimony. The court rejects the State’s argument that it met its Brady<br />
obligations by giving defendant notice of the description and names of possible sources.<br />
&#8220;Respondent&#8217;s position here would support a prosecutor&#8217;s disclosure of exculpatory statements,<br />
and a list of names of possible witnesses, accompanied by a deliberate refusal to divulge which,<br />
if any, of the listed witnesses made the exculpatory statements. This turns the important<br />
constitutional mandate of Brady into a childish game of hide-and-seek. Reasonably diligent<br />
defense counsel should be able to operate under the assumption that the prosecutor has complied<br />
with Brady at least to the extent of disclosing evidence of exculpatory statements made by police<br />
officers that were part of the investigative team in the case being prosecuted.&#8221;<br />
*Head v. Stripling,<br />
590 S.E.2d 122 (Ga. 2003)<br />
In Georgia capital case, the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose petitioner’s<br />
confidential parole records for his prior convictions, where the records revealed that State<br />
officials and petitioner’s mother had characterized him as mentally retarded, that a State official<br />
characterized an above-average IQ test result as &#8220;questionable,&#8221; and that petitioner had sub-70 IQ<br />
score on another IQ test taken when he was 16 years old. Such evidence was material given the<br />
prosecution’s assertion at trial that petitioner had recently concocted his mental retardation claim,<br />
and the prosecution relied on the above-average IQ test score as direct evidence of his actual<br />
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intelligence. That the State had an alleged good motive in keeping the records from petitioner –<br />
the statutorily-imposed confidentiality of parole files – was irrelevant to the Brady claim. A state<br />
statute regarding parole file confidentiality cannot trump a capital defendant&#8217;s constitutional<br />
rights.<br />
State v. Bennett,<br />
81 P.3d 1 (Nev. 2003)<br />
The prosecution committed a Brady violation where it failed to disclose a statement by a<br />
jailhouse informant that the co-defendant had admitted that he planned the murder of the victims<br />
during the robbery and had convinced petitioner to do the killing. Although the statement was<br />
obtained after the jury returned a death verdict against petitioner, it was before formal sentencing<br />
and its revelation to petitioner when it was obtained would have entitled petitioner to a new<br />
penalty hearing. The statement was favorable at the sentencing stage in that: (1) it was relevant to<br />
refute the aggravating circumstance that the murder was random and without apparent motive;<br />
and (2) it provided mitigating evidence by characterizing petitioner as a follower who was<br />
convinced by the co-defendant to participate. In finding a reasonable probability of a more<br />
favorable result had the information been disclosed, the court notes that the statement<br />
corroborated petitioner’s contention that he had fallen under the influence of the co-defendant<br />
who had planned the crime, and that the prosecution also failed to disclose the prior criminal<br />
history contained in the co-defendant’s juvenile records from Colorado, and the fact that a<br />
prosecution witness had been a paid informant in Utah.<br />
State v. Greco,<br />
862 So.2d 1152 (La. App. 2003)<br />
In non-capital robbery-murder case where the defendant had claimed self-defense, the trial court<br />
did not abuse its discretion in finding that the defendant was entitled to relief based upon the<br />
recantations of two prosecution witnesses and their claims that law enforcement officers and the<br />
prosecutor’s investigator suborned perjury. The witnesses testified in post-conviction<br />
proceedings that the prosecution’s key witness was the one who stated he planned to &#8220;roll&#8221; the<br />
victim, and that they had falsely attributed the remark to defendant at trial because of threats by<br />
authorities. The credibility of trial testimony by the officers regarding the circumstances of taking<br />
defendant&#8217;s confession, in which a detective admitted paraphrasing certain statements and<br />
omitting others, was sufficiently undermined and called into doubt the validity of other<br />
statements and the confession, thus entitling defendant to a new trial.<br />
Brownlow v. Schofield,<br />
587 S.E.2d 647 (Ga. 2003)<br />
Prosecutor violated Brady in child molestation case by failing to reveal that during an interview<br />
10 days before trial the alleged victim shook his head negatively when asked by the prosecutor<br />
whether the defendant had committed oral sodomy on him. The trial court erred in denying relief<br />
on the ground that the prosecution had disclosed to the defense similar and more weighty<br />
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exculpatory evidence, i.e., a videotape of an earlier interview with the alleged victim in which he<br />
denied that any improper touching occurred. Given that the only evidence of defendant’s guilt<br />
was the alleged victim’s trial testimony claiming oral sodomy had occurred, there was a<br />
reasonable probability of a more favorable verdict on that count had the prosecutor disclosed the<br />
second denial.<br />
People v. Kazakevicius,<br />
2003 WL 21190612 (Mich.App. May 20, 2003)(unpublished)<br />
In case involving charges of criminal sexual conduct, a Brady violation occurred when the<br />
prosecution effectively suppressed the alleged victim’s counseling records that &#8220;could be read to<br />
indicate that the victim had suppressed her memories of the alleged sexual abuse for several<br />
years; that it was through counseling that these memories resurfaced; that the victim still did not<br />
have a complete memory of what allegedly happened; and that the victim&#8217;s memories may have<br />
been triggered by a form of hypnosis during counseling.&#8221; (The records were in the possession of<br />
the prosecution and the trial court denied defendant’s request for in camera review of the<br />
records.) The counseling records were material given that the victim&#8217;s testimony was the<br />
principal evidence against defendant, and the counseling records &#8220;would have allowed defendant<br />
to explore possible alternative explanations for the origin of the allegations of sexual abuse,<br />
including whether they were the product of outside influences affecting both the reliability of the<br />
allegations and the credibility of the victim.&#8221;<br />
State v. VanWinkle,<br />
2003 WL 1798945 (Neb.App. April 8, 2003)(unpublished)<br />
In case involving charges of burglary and criminal mischief, the prosecution violated Brady v.<br />
Maryland when it suppressed a letter written by its key prosecution witness – who was the<br />
alleged accomplice– which stated that defendant was innocent of the crimes. The fact that the<br />
information was not sought by Van Winkle through a discovery request was irrelevant. And the<br />
letter was not cumulative to other evidence which also impeached the alleged accomplice. &#8220;The<br />
fact [the alleged accomplice] was impeached to a degree by evidence that he had lied when he<br />
accused VanWinkle of another similar crime in Palmer, that he was an unwilling witness<br />
testifying under the threat of prosecution for additional crimes, and that he had told [another<br />
person] that VanWinkle was not there is not the same as a written statement to the prosecutor<br />
that [the alleged accomplice] was lying when he accused VanWinkle of the crime.&#8221;<br />
Keeter v. State,<br />
105 S.W.3d 137 (Tex. App. 2003)<br />
In case involving charges that defendant sexual abused his stepdaughter, his claim of Brady error<br />
was properly preserved through his amended motion for new trial which was accompanied by an<br />
affidavit from the victim’s stepmother stating that the victim had changed her story so many<br />
times that she was not believed by the stepmother, and that the prosecutor told the stepmother<br />
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that she would not be called as a witness in light of her disbelief of the victim. Based on the<br />
evidence presented at the hearing on the motion for new trial, it is found that the prosecution<br />
suppressed favorable evidence that neither the victim’s father nor her stepmother believed the<br />
victim, that they thought she was a constant liar, and that the victim had made contradictory<br />
statements to them about defendant. This evidence was material given that the case against<br />
defendant rested on the testimony of the victim, and the suppressed evidence could have raised<br />
doubts about the victim’s credibility. The court squarely rejects the argument that the evidence<br />
did not have to be disclosed because it could have been discovered by defense counsel acting<br />
with due diligence. &#8220;The cases do not hold that the prosecution is relieved of its duty under Brady<br />
to disclose exculpatory evidence when defense counsel (a) knows or should know a witness<br />
exists, and (b) might discover the exculpatory evidence if defense counsel asks the right<br />
questions of the witness. Implementation of such a rule could effectively undermine Brady<br />
because it would almost always relieve the prosecutor of disclosing Brady information.&#8221;<br />
State v. Lindsey,<br />
844 So.2d 961 (La.App. 2003)<br />
In homicide case where the defense at trial centered on petitioner’s intoxication, the prosecution<br />
violated Brady by failing to reveal that two witnesses who testified to petitioner’s sobriety at trial<br />
had previously stated that he was intoxicated at the time of the shooting. Although petitioner’s<br />
trial counsel could not be found, and so there was no definitive proof that the prior statements<br />
had not been disclosed to him, the appellate court rejected the trial court’s conclusion that<br />
petitioner had failed to meet his burden of establishing suppression. The trial prosecutor, who<br />
had not been on the case throughout the proceedings, testified that she would have turned over<br />
the statements had she been aware of them. Given that defense counsel presented an intoxication<br />
defense but did not impeach the witnesses with the prior statements, the prosecutor presumed<br />
that defense counsel did not receive the statements. Further, the prosecution’s file indicated that<br />
the State&#8217;s answer to discovery was that the defense was not entitled to the witnesses’ statements.<br />
Finally, the suppressed statements were material under Brady, contrary to the finding of the trial<br />
court.<br />
Hutchison v. State,<br />
118 S.W.3d 720 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2003)<br />
In burglary and assault case, the trial court did not err in considering a claim of Brady error that<br />
was raised after the statute of limitations had run in light of its finding that petitioner Harper had<br />
raised the claim within one year of learning about the existence of an exculpatory FBI report<br />
indicating that petitioner Hutchinson’s tools had not been used in the burglary. The trial court<br />
also properly permitted the petitioners to amend their petitions, despite a limited remand from the<br />
appellate court, given the discovery of additional exculpatory evidence. Evidence supported the<br />
trial court’s finding that the state, acting in good faith, unintentionally failed to disclose<br />
exculpatory material, i.e., the FBI report and a statement by a witness which would have lent<br />
some support to the defense theory that the assault was committed by the victim’s cousin and<br />
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was unrelated to any burglary. The grant of post-conviction relief on the claim of Brady<br />
violations is affirmed.<br />
Harrington v. State,<br />
659 N.W.2d 509 (Iowa 2003)<br />
Approximately twenty-five years after his murder conviction, petitioner was granted postconviction relief based on the suppression of police reports that provided &#8220;abundant material for<br />
defense counsel to argue that [a third party] had the opportunity and motive to commit the crime.&#8221;<br />
Although trial counsel had some information about a suspicious third party, he was denied &#8220;the<br />
‘essential facts’ of the police reports so as to allow the defense to wholly take advantage of this<br />
evidence.&#8221; In order to show materiality petitioner was not required to establish that the police<br />
reports would have &#8220;led to evidence that someone else committed [the] crime.&#8221; If the evidence<br />
would create a reasonable doubt about the petitioner’s guilt, &#8220;it is material even if it would not<br />
convince the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that [the third party] was the killer.&#8221;<br />
People v. Martinez,<br />
103 Cal.App.4th 1071 (Cal.App. 2002)<br />
Habeas relief granted where prosecution failed to investigate and confirm allegations that critical<br />
prosecution witness had prior felony convictions that had been expunged and also failed to reveal<br />
that charges were pending against the witness at the time of trial.<br />
Ramirez v. State,<br />
96 S.W.3d 386 (Tex.App. 2002)<br />
In &#8220;official oppression&#8221; prosecution, State’s knowing use of false and misleading testimony by<br />
key witness against defendant entitled him to a new trial. The State violated the<br />
Mooney-Pyle-Napue line of cases by permitting the witness to testify that her contact with an<br />
attorney was not about seeking money, even though the prosecution was aware that a civil suit<br />
had been or soon would be filed by that attorney against the city. That the witness did not know<br />
that the lawsuit had actually been filed at the time she testified was irrelevant since the State<br />
knew that the testimony was false or misleading.<br />
*Ex parte Richardson,<br />
70 S.W.3d 865 (Tex. Crim.App. 2002)<br />
Capital conviction and death sentence reversed based on prosecution’s suppression of a diary<br />
kept by one of the police officers who was guarding the State’s sole eyewitness to the crime. The<br />
diary revealed the officer’s belief that the witness was not a truthful person, and also identified<br />
five other members of the protective team who harbored the same opinion. In finding the<br />
suppressed evidence material, the appeals court notes that the eyewitness’s credibility was the<br />
key issue, and when her credibility was successfully challenged at the separate trials of the two<br />
co-defendants, both were acquitted. Although petitioner did challenge the witness’s credibility at<br />
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the time of his own trial, &#8220;nothing that [petitioner’s] attorney presented . . . could compare with a<br />
parade of six law enforcement officers testifying that, in their opinion, [the purported eyewitness]<br />
was not a credible witness and not worthy of belief under oath.&#8221;<br />
Nickerson v. State,<br />
69 S.W.3d 661 (Tex.App. &#8211; Waco 2002)<br />
Murder conviction is reversed due to prosecution’s untimely disclosure of a videotape showing<br />
defendant’s bizarre behavior in jail prior to trial. (The tape was revealed for the first time during<br />
the punishment phase of the proceedings.) It was clearly favorable to an insanity defense, which<br />
defendant had considered raising, and it was undisputed that the tape was in the possession of<br />
agents acting on behalf of the State. In light of the uncertainty regarding defendant’s sanity, his<br />
personal &#8220;knowledge&#8221; of the taped event had no bearing on what his attorney should have known.<br />
The tape was deemed &#8220;material&#8221; given that two mental health experts expressed strong<br />
reservations about their initial sanity diagnoses after their review of the videotape, and despite<br />
the fact that two experts presented by the prosecution did not believe that the tape established<br />
defendant’s insanity at the time of the crime.<br />
*Conyers v. State,<br />
790 A.2d 15 (Md. 2002)<br />
Post-conviction relief granted regarding capital conviction and death sentence where the State<br />
suppressed evidence that the jailhouse snitch requested a benefit when he first approached the<br />
police and that he refused to sign his written statement absent such a commitment. That the jury<br />
was aware that the informant later received a plea agreement in return for his testimony against<br />
defendant did not vitiate the State’s error in withholding the other evidence. The suppressed<br />
evidence is found to be material for a number of reasons, including: (1) the snitch was a key<br />
witness as to defendant’s principalship in the murder and principalship directly governed<br />
eligibility for the death penalty; and (2) the prosecution emphasized the snitch’s credibility in<br />
argument.<br />
Hensley v. State,<br />
48 P.3d 1099 (Wy. 2002)<br />
Where the state suppressed evidence which could have been used to impeach a confidential<br />
informant, the Court held that such evidence was material and warranted a reversal of the<br />
defendant’s conviction. The evidence at issue was an audio recording of the informant allegedly<br />
using methamphetamine, which was inconsistent with her testimony that she was addressing her<br />
addiction and only used methamphetamine once during the two years that she worked for the<br />
government.<br />
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*Martin v. State,<br />
839 So.2d 665 (Ala. Crim. App. 2001)<br />
Post-conviction relief granted to Alabama death row inmate in light of prosecution’s<br />
suppression of several pieces of material evidence. The undisclosed evidence included: (1) the<br />
fact that the sole eyewitness to defendant’s presence near the crime scene had undergone<br />
hypnosis; (2) a statement made by the sole eyewitness while under hypnosis; (3) a description of<br />
the perpetrator (which did not match defendant) and an identification of someone other than<br />
defendant at a pretrial lineup by a witness who testified at trial she was unable to identify the<br />
perpetrator because she had been focused on the gun; (4) the presence of unidentified<br />
fingerprints on evidence related to the murder; and (5) a suggestive photo array regarding<br />
defendant’s car.<br />
Hoffman v. State,<br />
800 So.2d 174 (Fla. 2001)<br />
Where the state failed to disclose results of scientific hair analysis which excluded petitioner,<br />
codefendant and male victim as the sources of hairs found in the female victim’s hands,<br />
petitioner was prejudiced. In addition, under circumstances where another person also confessed<br />
to the crime, the state’s failure to disclose information regarding the existence of other suspects<br />
prejudiced petitioner.<br />
State v. Barber,<br />
554 S.E.2d 413 (N.C. 2001)<br />
Due process violation found where prosecution failed to disclose telephone records that were not<br />
merely corroborative, but rather lent crucial factual support to a defense witness whose<br />
credibility was questioned by the prosecution. Evidence proffered by the petitioner to establish<br />
materiality included affidavits from two jurors confirming that, had the phone records been<br />
introduced at trial, it &#8220;would have&#8221; and &#8220;could have&#8221; affected the verdict.<br />
Atkinson v. State,<br />
778 A.2d 1058 (Del. 2001)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s conviction of attempted unlawful sexual intercourse second degree and related<br />
charges was reversed due to the state&#8217;s failure to disclose notes of witness interviews done by an<br />
investigating prosecutor until that prosecutor testified as the state&#8217;s final witness. The notes<br />
revealed that the complainant, who was the state&#8217;s main witness, had not initially described the<br />
sexual component of the alleged assault to three of the state&#8217;s witnesses; if the notes had been<br />
made available to defense counsel before trial, cross-examination of those witnesses may have<br />
changed outcome of defendant&#8217;s trial.<br />
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State v. Kemp,<br />
828 So.2d 540 (La. 2002)<br />
Second degree murder conviction reversed where the prosecution failed to timely reveal a taped<br />
statement of an eyewitness which mentioned a comment by the victim that lent support to<br />
petitioner’s self-defense contention. Although the statement came out towards the end of the trial,<br />
reversal was still required. &#8220;[T]he details provided by [the witness] in her taped statement which<br />
had [the victim] offering an option to ‘shoot it out’ possess such potential to give the evidence at<br />
trial an entirely different cast that undermines confidence in this jury&#8217;s rejection of [Kemp’s] selfdefense claim. To this extent, the state&#8217;s failure to provide timely disclosure impacted the<br />
fundamental fairness of the proceedings leading to [Kemp’s] conviction.&#8221;<br />
*Hoffman v. State,<br />
800 So.2d 174 (Fla. 2001)<br />
The court reversed the denial of post-conviction relief in this Florida capital case, and remanded<br />
for the grant of a new trial. The state violated Brady by failing to disclose the results of analysis<br />
performed on strands of hair found in one victim&#8217;s hands; those results excluded defendant, his<br />
co-defendant, and both victims as possible sources of the hairs, prejudiced the defense and<br />
entitled defendant to new trial, where only other evidence linking defendant to murders was a<br />
single fingerprint found on pack of cigarettes in victims&#8217; motel room, and defendant&#8217;s<br />
confessions, and where another suspect had also confessed; defendant challenged both of his<br />
confessions at trial, and saliva samples taken from cigarette butts found at murder scene did not<br />
match defendant&#8217;s blood type.<br />
*State v. Huggins,<br />
788 So.2d 238 (Fla. 2001)<br />
The state violated Brady in this Florida capital case by failing to disclose the statement of a<br />
witness indicating that he saw the defendant&#8217;s wife driving a vehicle similar to the victim&#8217;s<br />
vehicle. The substance of this statement contradicted the testimony of the defendant&#8217;s wife, who<br />
was a key prosecution witness. The court found that the state suppressed the information even<br />
though it had provided the defense with a &#8220;lead sheet&#8221; naming the witness, because that sheet<br />
inaccurately reflected that the witness had seen a male driving the victim&#8217;s vehicle, thereby<br />
making the witness&#8217; account seem unfavorable to the defense.<br />
Spray v. State,<br />
2001 WL 522004 (Tex.App. May 17, 2001)<br />
The court reversed the defendant&#8217;s conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a child under<br />
fourteen, finding that the state violated Brady by failing to disclose a Child Protective Services<br />
report reflecting that the alleged victim&#8217;s sister, who corroborated the abuse allegations at trial,<br />
had denied any sexual abuse when questioned by investigators. On appeal, the court concluded<br />
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that &#8220;[c]learly the CPS report was favorable and material in that [alleged victim&#8217;s sister], the only<br />
other witness who can corroborate the sexual assault allegations, made statements contained<br />
therein that directly contradict her testimony at trial.&#8221;<br />
State v. Gonzalez,<br />
624 N.W.2d 836 (S.D. 2001)<br />
The South Dakota Supreme Court reversed defendant&#8217;s conviction of attempted statutory rape,<br />
finding that the state failed to disclose &#8211; in direct violation of the trial court&#8217;s order &#8211; the alleged<br />
victim&#8217;s counseling records. Those records were favorable and material because theycontained a<br />
version of the alleged sexual encounters that differed from that offered by the complainant &#8211; who<br />
was the state&#8217;s only witness on this issue &#8211; with respect to the number of encounters, and the<br />
events which took place during those encounters.<br />
Garrett v. State,<br />
2001 WL 280145 (Tenn.Crim.App. March 22, 2001)<br />
The prosecution violated Brady in this arson/felony murder case by failing to disclose an<br />
investigative report containing a statement by the first fireman to reach the victim, who was<br />
found in a utility room in a burning house. At trial, the state contended that the utility room door<br />
had been locked from the outside, raising the implication that the defendant locked the victim in<br />
the room prior to setting the house on fire. The report, however, indicated that the first person to<br />
reach the utility room found the door unlocked. The court found this information favorable and<br />
material even though the state presented additional evidence in post-conviction proceedings<br />
suggesting that the person who made the report had misquoted the fireman, who had actually<br />
stated that the door was locked at the time he arrived.<br />
Wilson v. State,<br />
768 A.2d 675 (Md.App. 2001)<br />
The court upheld the grant of post-conviction relief in this case involving robbery and related<br />
charges on the ground that the state violated Brady by failing to disclose written plea agreements<br />
between the state and two key codefendant witnesses. Although defense counsel was able to<br />
elicit some information about the witnesses&#8217; deals during their testimony, that testimony was not<br />
completely accurate, and the inaccuracy was compounded by the state&#8217;s characterization of those<br />
deals, and of the witnesses&#8217; lack of motivation to lie, during closing arguments.<br />
*Rogers v. State,<br />
782 So.2d 373 (Fla. 2001)<br />
The court granted post-conviction relief in this Florida capital case, finding that the state violated<br />
Brady by failing to disclose: (1) a second confession by defendant&#8217;s alleged co-perpetrator, who<br />
also testified for the prosecution, which could have been used to show that although defendant<br />
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participated in other robberies with co-perpetrator, he had not participated in the one for which<br />
he was being tried; and (2) an audiotape of a witness preparation session on which the<br />
prosecution can be heard attempting to influence the testimony of its chief witness.<br />
State v. McKinnon,<br />
2001 WL 69214 (Ohio.App. Jan. 29, 2001)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s rape conviction was reversed due to the prosecution&#8217;s nondisclosure of an<br />
investigative report quoting a security guard from the apartment complex where the alleged<br />
victim claimed to have been raped as having been told by the alleged victim that her attacker<br />
made her take off all her clothes and do it on the floor. At trial, on the other hand, the alleged<br />
victim testified that her attacker &#8220;tore off&#8221; her clothes. The court found the undisclosed report<br />
favorable and material because it could have been used to undermine the alleged victim&#8217;s<br />
credibility, and rebut the prosecution&#8217;s argument that she had been consistent in her account<br />
of the attack every time she spoke about it &#8211; both crucial points given that the alleged victim&#8217;s<br />
testimony was the only evidence tying defendant to the attack.<br />
*Johnson v. State,<br />
38 S.W.3d 52 (Tenn. 2001)<br />
In this Tennessee capital case, the court granted sentencing phase post-conviction relief on the<br />
ground that the state violated Brady by withholding a police report containing favorable<br />
information material to the issue of the applicability of an aggravating sentencing factor. The<br />
withheld police report showed that petitioner could not have fired the bullet that grazed a<br />
customer during a grocery store robbery. The state relied on the theory that petitioner fired that<br />
bullet to support the aggravating circumstance that he knowingly created great risk of death to<br />
two or more persons, other than the murder victim, during the act of murder. The court found the<br />
information in the police report material because, had it been disclosed, there was a reasonable<br />
probability that the aggravating circumstance would not have been applied to petitioner; absent<br />
evidence that petitioner fired the bullet in question, the state failed to prove that he placed any<br />
other people at great risk of death.<br />
Lay v. State,<br />
14 P.3d 1256 (Nev. 2000)<br />
The court granted post-conviction relief from petitioner&#8217;s murder conviction after concluding that<br />
the state violated Brady by withholding evidence that a paramedic, who testified that the victim<br />
identified petitioner as the shooter, had stated in several pretrial interviews that the victim did not<br />
tell her anything while she was treating him. This information was favorable and material<br />
because, apart from evidence of petitioner&#8217;s fingerprints on the stolen car from which shots were<br />
fired, the paramedic was the only neutral witness to provide evidence that petitioner either fired<br />
shots or drove the car.<br />
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Commonwealth v. Hill,<br />
739 N.E.2d 670 (Mass. 2000)<br />
The court affirmed the grant of a new trial in this Massachusetts murder case, concluding that the<br />
state violated Brady by deliberately failing to disclose a leniency agreement with a key<br />
prosecution witness, despite requests for such information. The state&#8217;s nondisclosure deprived<br />
defendant of his right to cross-examine the witness effectively, and the harm resulting from this<br />
nondisclosure was exacerbated by the conduct of the prosecutor, who allowed the witness to<br />
mislead the jury about his own sentencing expectations and his motive for testifying for the state,<br />
and suggested in closing argument that the jury should assess credibility by considering whether<br />
the witness had &#8220;something to lose,&#8221; and that defendant was the only witness with anything to<br />
lose.<br />
*Commonwealth v. Strong,<br />
761 A.2d 1167 (Penn. 2000)<br />
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court reversed the denial of post-conviction relief in this capital case,<br />
finding that the state violated Brady by failing to reveal the existence of an understanding<br />
between the state and petitioner&#8217;s co-perpetrator, pursuant to which the co-perpetrator was<br />
offered a sentence of two years on charges of murder and kidnapping in exchange for his<br />
testimony, and eventually received a sentence of 40 months after pleading guilty. The court found<br />
it irrelevant that the trial prosecutor had been unaware that his superior had been negotiating the<br />
co-perpetrator&#8217;s deal with his counsel, and found the evidence of that deal &#8220;material&#8221; because<br />
there were obvious discrepancies between petitioner&#8217;s and the co-perpetrator&#8217;s testimony, and<br />
because the co-perpetrator was the key witness who put the gun in petitioner&#8217;s hand at the time of<br />
the murder.<br />
Byrd v. Owen,<br />
536 S.E.2d 736 (Ga. 2000)<br />
The Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the grant of habeas relief in this drug-related murder case<br />
on the ground that the state deprived petitioner of due process by withholding evidence that it<br />
had reached an immunity agreement with its key witness, and by failing to correct the witness&#8217;<br />
misleading testimony about the existence of such an agreement. The court further found that the<br />
state&#8217;s nondisclosure deprived petitioner of his right to effective assistance of counsel at trial and<br />
on direct appeal. Counsel testified in habeas proceedings that he would not have advised<br />
petitioner to waive trial by jury if he had known of the state&#8217;s deal with the witness; with regard<br />
to direct appeal, the state&#8217;s suppression of evidence of its agreement with the witness deprived<br />
counsel of the ability to raise all meritorious issues. The state&#8217;s misconduct in this case was made<br />
more egregious by the fact that petitioner&#8217;s direct appeal focused on the suppression of<br />
information about deals with two other witnesses, which the appellate court held should have<br />
been turned over pursuant to Brady before concluding that petitioner had not demonstrated<br />
materiality.<br />
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State v. Harris,<br />
2000 WL 1376459 (Ohio App. Sept. 26, 2000)<br />
The Ohio court of appeals reversed defendant&#8217;s attempted murder and felonious assault<br />
convictions due to the prosecution&#8217;s suppression of the victim&#8217;s grand jury testimony, in which<br />
the victim denied having a gun prior to the fight which led to his stabbing. At trial, the victim<br />
acknowledged having had a gun prior to the fight. Although the version provided by the victim at<br />
trial was more favorable to defendant than the version he gave to the grand jury, the court of<br />
appeals concluded that the suppression of the grand jury testimony prejudiced defendant by<br />
depriving him of information which would have been useful for impeaching the victim&#8217;s trial<br />
testimony. In reaching this conclusion, the court noted that &#8220;the prosecution placed emphasis on<br />
the veracity of [victim]&#8217;s account of losing possession of the handgun [before being stabbed] . . .<br />
[and] challenged the jurors to contrast [victim]&#8217;s testimony against the testimony of &#8216;defendant<br />
and his friends who have already lied to both the police and on the stand.'&#8221;<br />
People v. Ellis,<br />
735 N.E.2d 736 (Ill.App. 2000)<br />
The appellate court reversed the denial of post-conviction relief in this murder case, finding that<br />
the prosecutor violated Brady by failing to inform defense counsel and the jury about benefits, of<br />
which prosecutor knew or should have known, which were orally promised to prosecution<br />
witnesses in exchange for their testimony. In so holding, the court imputed a detective&#8217;s<br />
knowledge of these promises to the prosecutor.<br />
State v. Hunt,<br />
615 N.W.2d 294 (Minn. 2000)<br />
The prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose that a psychological examination of its key<br />
witness against defendant revealed that the witness was incompetent to stand trial.<br />
Buck v. State,<br />
70 S.W.3d 440 (Mo.App.E.D. 2000)<br />
The state&#8217;s failure to inform defendant about five of a prosecution witness&#8217; six convictions<br />
prejudiced defendant at his trial for tampering with a witness; although the prosecutor told<br />
defendant about one of the convictions, the witness was central to the prosecution&#8217;s case in that<br />
he provided the only evidence that defendant tampered with a witness, and the other convictions<br />
would have been useful for impeachment.<br />
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State v. Henderson,<br />
2000 WL 731472 (Ohio App. 1 Dist. June 9, 2000)<br />
The state violated Brady in prosecution arising out of a drive by shooting by failing to disclose<br />
the taped statement of another individual who claimed to have been driving the car in which<br />
defendant was riding. This statement was significant because it contradicted the prosecution&#8217;s<br />
two witnesses, both of whom testified that defendant was both the driver and the shooter.<br />
State v. Larimore,<br />
17 S.W.3d 87 (Ark. 2000)<br />
The state&#8217;s suppression of evidence of a state medical examiner&#8217;s change of opinion concerning<br />
time of death following his conversation with police about his initial time of death determination<br />
providing defendant with an &#8220;iron-clad alibi&#8221; violated Brady.<br />
State v. Nelson,<br />
749 A.2d 380 (N.J.App.Div. 2000)<br />
The state&#8217;s failure to reveal that one of its witnesses in this drug case had a prior sexual assault<br />
conviction violated Brady; the witness was important to the state&#8217;s case, the trial involved a<br />
credibility contest, the defendant was impeached with his own prior conviction, and the jury<br />
deliberated for over two days, reaching a verdict only after hearing a read-back of witness&#8217;<br />
testimony.<br />
Harridge v. State,<br />
534 S.E.2d 113 (Ga.App. 2000)<br />
In this vehicular homicide case, the state violated Brady by failing to reveal the existence of lab<br />
results generated by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation indicating that cocaine and marijuana<br />
had been detected in the decedent&#8217;s urine. In reaching this conclusion, the court noted that, &#8220;[f]or<br />
purposes of Brady, we decide whether someone is on the prosecution team on a case-by-case<br />
basis by reviewing the interaction, cooperation and dependence of the agents working on the<br />
case. . . . Here, the GBI laboratory was fully involved in the investigation of this case in that it<br />
was responsible for testing not only [the decedent&#8217;s] blood and urine, but also [defendant&#8217;s]<br />
blood. Moreover, both the medical examiner and the prosecutor were completely dependent on<br />
the crime lab for determining the amount of drugs and alcohol present in [the decedent&#8217;s and<br />
defendant&#8217;s] bodies. Because the GBI laboratory was part of the prosecution team and based on<br />
[the GBI doctor&#8217;s] affidavit, we find that the state had possession of the test results showing<br />
drugs in Smith&#8217;s urine.&#8221;<br />
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*Mazzan v. Warden,<br />
993 P.2d 25 (Nev. 2000)<br />
The court granted relief in this 1979 capital murder case, finding the prosecution violated Brady<br />
by failing to disclose numerous documents indicating that an alternate suspect with a motive had<br />
been in the area with an associate on the night of the murder. Had this information been<br />
disclosed, it would have supported petitioner&#8217;s claim that he heard two people running from the<br />
murder scene. The withheld information revealed suspicion among law enforcement that the<br />
decedent had been killed as a result of his involvement in a major drug dealing organization, and<br />
the alternate suspect was believed by law enforcement to have been a key figure in that<br />
organization.<br />
State v. Sturgeon,<br />
605 N.W.2d 589 (Wis.App. 1999)<br />
Defendant established his right to withdraw a guilty plea to burglary due to the state&#8217;s failure to<br />
disclose an interview transcript and an officer&#8217;s personal recollection indicating that he twice<br />
denied any knowing involvement in the crime; the evidence was within the exclusive control of<br />
the prosecution, and defendant established that the Brady violation caused him to plead guilty.<br />
Robles v. State,<br />
1999 WL 812295 (Tex.App. Oct. 7, 1999)<br />
The court reversed defendant&#8217;s convictions for sexual assault and indecency with a child on the<br />
ground that the prosecution acted in bad faith in misleading the trial court as to the existence of a<br />
tape recording of the alleged victim, who recanted at trial, being interviewed, and possibly<br />
coerced and threatened, by the prosecutor and a child protective services worker. Assuming that<br />
the tape no longer exists, the court remanded for a development of evidence of the tape&#8217;s contents<br />
to be followed by a determination whether, in light of the tape&#8217;s destruction, defendant can be<br />
afforded a fair trial.<br />
*Mooney v. State,<br />
990 P.2d 875 (Okla. Crim. App. 1999)<br />
Although not expressly relying on Brady, the appeals court vacates the death sentence due to the<br />
prosecutor’s failure to timely disclose letters from the State’s star witness on the continuing<br />
threat aggravator, where investigation into the contents of the letters would have provided<br />
substantial evidence to effectively confront and impeach the witness concerning his motive for<br />
testifying. He claimed in one letter, and while testifying, that his reason for coming forward was<br />
because his grandfather had been murdered under circumstances similar to the capital offense. In<br />
fact, his grandfather had not been killed and his true motive for testifying was to obtain<br />
relocation within the prison system.<br />
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State v. Castor,<br />
599 N.W.2d 201 (Neb. 1999)<br />
The state&#8217;s failure, despite a Brady request by the defense, to disclose statements of two<br />
witnesses, one of which directly contradicted the state&#8217;s theory that the victim was shot in his<br />
home, and one of which supported defendant&#8217;s theory that the victim disappeared after getting<br />
into a brown pickup truck parked in front of the victim&#8217;s house, violated Brady, and warranted<br />
grant of defendant&#8217;s motion for new trial.<br />
Johnson v. State,<br />
1999 WL 608861 (Tenn.Crim.App. Aug. 12, 1999), aff&#8217;d, 38 S.W.3d 52 (Tenn. 2001)<br />
The state violated in connection with the sentencing phase of petitioner&#8217;s capital trial by<br />
withholding a crime scene report indicating that a bullet which grazed a bystander could not have<br />
been fired from the location the state contended petitioner was in at the time of the offense. This<br />
evidence was material because the state argued to the jury that petitioner had fired that shot in<br />
support of the aggravating circumstance of creating a great risk of death to others, which the jury<br />
ultimately found.<br />
*Young v. State,<br />
739 So.2d 553 (Fla. 1999)<br />
The Florida Supreme Court vacated petitioner&#8217;s death sentence and remanded for resentencing<br />
due to the prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose attorney notes indicating that one of its key witnesses<br />
who testified to the sequence and type of gunshots he claimed to have heard during petitioner&#8217;s<br />
altercation with the decedent had initially indicated that he was not even sure whether he had<br />
heard gunshots or firecrackers. In addition, the prosecution withheld statements from other people<br />
which, if disclosed, would have provided corroboration for petitioner&#8217;s theory that the decedent<br />
had fired first and petitioner returned fire in self-defense. In the course of granting relief, the court<br />
rejected the state&#8217;s contention that the exculpatory notes were attorney work product and therefore<br />
exempt from disclosure. The court explained that &#8220;the [disclosure] obligation exists even if such a<br />
document is work product or exempt from the public records law.&#8221;<br />
People v. Torres,<br />
712 N.E.2d 835 (Ill. App. 1999)<br />
The court reversed petitioner&#8217;s convictions for murder and two counts of attempted murder where<br />
the prosecution failed to disclose that two of its witnesses were promised release from probation<br />
in exchange for their testimony, and failed to correct one witness&#8217; false testimony that he had not<br />
been promised leniency in exchange for his testimony. This evidence was material because, aside<br />
from these witnesses, only two others identified petitioner as a shooter, and all of the<br />
prosecution&#8217;s witnesses were members of a gang that was at odds with petitioner&#8217;s gang.<br />
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Little v. State,<br />
736 So.2d 486 (Miss. App. 1999)<br />
The court reversed defendant&#8217;s embezzlement conviction on the ground that the prosecution<br />
violated Brady by failing to disclose the existence and contents of a &#8220;cash receipts journal&#8221; which<br />
documented that &#8220;the bulk&#8221; of the $96,000 he was accused of embezzling had in fact been<br />
deposited into the company account.<br />
State v. DelReal,<br />
593 N.W.2d 461 (Wis. App. 1999)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s conviction for second degree recklessly endangering safety while armed was<br />
reversed due to the prosecution&#8217;s failure to reveal that his hands had been swabbed for gunshot<br />
residue, but that the swabs were not analyzed prior to trial. This evidence was material both<br />
because the results of the post-trial tests requested by defendant were negative, and because the<br />
fact that the swabs had been taken directly contradicted the testimony of the self-proclaimed lead<br />
investigator, who testified unequivocally that no swabs had been taken. In the context of this<br />
case, which involved questionable eyewitness identifications of defendant and inconsistent<br />
testimony as to the location of the perpetrator relative to others at the scene, there was a<br />
reasonable probability of a different result had the residue evidence been revealed.<br />
In re Pratt,<br />
82 Cal.Rptr.2d 260 (Cal. App. 1999)<br />
The court affirmed the trial court&#8217;s grant of state habeas relief on the ground that the state<br />
violated Brady by failing to disclose a substantial amount of evidence indicating that the only<br />
prosecution witness to claim that petitioner had confessed to the murder for which he was<br />
convicted had been a long-time informant for state and federal law enforcement agents, and had<br />
received favorable treatment in return for his cooperation with authorities. In the course of its<br />
decision, the appellate court provided a useful discussion of how Brady claims should be<br />
analyzed on state habeas in California.<br />
Gibson v. State,<br />
514 S.E.2d 320 (S.C. 1999)<br />
The court affirmed the grant of state post-conviction from petitioner&#8217;s guilty plea to voluntary<br />
manslaughter on the ground that the prosecution violated Brady by failing to disclose that a state<br />
witness could not have seen the crime in the manner she claimed because the view from the<br />
position she described was obstructed. When confronted with this fact by state authorities with<br />
whom she visited the crime scene, the witness changed her story. If disclosed, this evidence<br />
would have been favorable to petitioner as additional proof of the witness&#8217; propensity to lie. The<br />
evidence was material because, had it been disclosed, there was a reasonable probabilitythat<br />
petitioner would have chosen to go to trial instead of pleading guilty.<br />
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Rowe v. State,<br />
704 N.E.2d 1104, 1109 (Ind. App. 1999)<br />
The court granted post-conviction relief from petitioner&#8217;s convictions for murder and attempted<br />
murder. At trial, petitioner&#8217;s &#8220;intoxication and insanity defenses were completely hamstrung by&#8221;<br />
the testimony of his roommate/lover that petitioner had not ingested any drugs prior to shooting<br />
several members of his own family. The state violated Brady, however, by failing to reveal that<br />
this witness had been convicted of burglary and theft and was on probation at the time of his<br />
testimony. This information would have been useful to petitioner in order to establish that the<br />
witness had strong motivation to deny taking part with petitioner in the consumption of illegal<br />
drugs &#8212; namely, admitting taking drugs would have strengthened the state&#8217;s case at the witness&#8217;<br />
probation revocation proceeding scheduled to take place a few months after petitioner&#8217;s trial.<br />
State v. Allen,<br />
1999 WL 5173 (Tenn. Crim. App. Jan 8, 1999)<br />
Defendants&#8217; attempted rape convictions were reversed on the ground that the state breached its<br />
Brady obligation by failing to comply with a court order to review the alleged rape victim&#8217;s<br />
psychiatric treatment records for exculpatory information. Citing concerns for the alleged victim&#8217;s<br />
privacy, the prosecutor never undertook the order examination, and therefore failed to uncover<br />
and disclose evidence indicating that the alleged victim had a documented history of, among other<br />
things, psychotic behavior. Because the outcome of defendants&#8217; trial &#8220;primarily turned on the<br />
credibility of the victim,&#8221; the appellate court concluded that they were entitled to relief.<br />
Commenting on the prosecutorial inaction which led to the Brady violation in this case, the court<br />
stated that &#8220;[a] &#8216;hear no evil, see no evil&#8217; attitude is inconsistent with prosecutorial<br />
responsibilities.&#8221;<br />
*In re Brown,<br />
952 P.2d 715 (Cal. 1998)<br />
Writ of habeas corpus granted in capital case where crime lab neglected to provide the defense a<br />
copy of the worksheet attached to defendant&#8217;s toxicology report, even though the prosecution was<br />
unaware of the error. The prosecution was obligated to review the lab files for exculpatory<br />
evidence and provide any such evidence to the defense. The worksheet reflected that PCP was<br />
present in the defendant&#8217;s system at the time of the incident, which would have supported his<br />
claim of diminished capacity.<br />
State v. Copeland,<br />
949 P.2d 458 (1998)<br />
Conviction of second-degree rape reversed where prosecution failed to disclose that the<br />
victim/witness had a prior felony conviction. Such information could have been used by the<br />
defense to impeach this key witness, and there is a substantial likelihood that the failure to<br />
disclose the prior record affected the jury&#8217;s verdict.<br />
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*State v. Parker,<br />
721 So.2d 1147 (Fla. 1998)<br />
The court granted sentencing phase relief in this Florida capital case as a result of the state&#8217;s<br />
suppression of evidence from a jailhouse informant indicating that a co-defendant, not petitioner,<br />
actually shot and killed the victim. In concluding that this evidence was material, the court noted<br />
that petitioner had been sentenced to death by a vote of eight to four, and that the only evidence<br />
suggesting petitioner had been the shooter was the testimony of another co-defendant&#8217;s girlfriend,<br />
who claimed petitioner admitted the shooting while the girlfriend was visiting his co-defendant<br />
in jail. That co-defendant received a life sentence.<br />
State v. Calloway,<br />
718 So.2d 559 (La. App. 1998)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s convictions for two counts of first-degree murder were reversed due to nondisclosure<br />
by the prosecution and the trial court (which reviewed the information in camera) of statements<br />
made by two of the prosecution&#8217;s primary eyewitnesses. These statements, which were taken<br />
shortly after the murders occurred, contradicted the eyewitnesses&#8217; trial testimony in several<br />
important respects, including the height, weight, age and attire of the assailant. The court<br />
explained that the failure to make these statements available to the defense &#8220;not only . . . deprived<br />
[defense counsel] of the opportunity to cross examine the witnesses about these inconsistencies,<br />
but . . . also deprived [defendant] of the opportunity to show the weakness in the [witnesses&#8217;]<br />
identifications. Further, it might have bolstered the defense theory that the witnesses colluded to<br />
cover up what really happened on the night in question.&#8221;<br />
*State v. Nelson,<br />
715 A.2d 281, 285-288 (N.J. 1998)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s death sentence was vacated on the ground that the prosecution violated Brady by<br />
failing to reveal that an officer wounded during defendant&#8217;s shootout with police had served<br />
notice of, and later filed, a lawsuit against local authorities alleging that they had failed to<br />
provide training and instruction necessary to ensure the safety of police officers in situations such<br />
as the one that occurred in this case. The court reasoned as follows concerning the materiality of<br />
the officer&#8217;s allegations to the sentencing phase of defendant&#8217;s trial: &#8220;Had the jury been aware that<br />
this crucial witness, the brother of one of the dead police officers, agreed with defendant that<br />
inadequate police training had sparked defendant&#8217;s violent reaction, it is at least reasonably<br />
probable that an additional juror or jurors would have found the existence of one or more of<br />
defendant&#8217;s mitigating factors.&#8221;<br />
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State ex rel. Yeager v. Trent,<br />
510 S.E.2d 790 (W.Va. 1998)<br />
Petitioner was entitled to a new trial on murder charge where substantial evidence developed<br />
post-trial indicated that a critical prosecution witness had an undisclosed plea agreement.<br />
Little v. State,<br />
971 S.W.2d 729 (Tex. App. 1998)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s DWI conviction was reversed due to the prosecution&#8217;s failure to reveal to defense<br />
counsel that its expert on blood alcohol content had lost the graphical information necessary to<br />
assess the accuracy of the state&#8217;s blood alcohol analysis. Although this information was not<br />
directly exculpatory, it was impeaching in the sense that &#8220;the graphical results are necessary to<br />
analyze the reliability . . . of the results of the blood test.&#8221; In concluding that relief was warranted<br />
under Brady, the court reasoned: &#8220;[H]ad the State disclosed the loss of the evidence as soon as it<br />
became aware of the fact, defense counsel would have had the option of employing a different<br />
trial strategy&#8211;one that may have resulted in exclusion of the testimony altogether. * * * The<br />
testimony was the only quantitative evidence of appellant&#8217;s intoxication. * * * Thus, we conclude<br />
the State&#8217;s failure to inform the defense of the lost evidence is a failure to disclose material<br />
information which undermines confidence in the outcome of the trial.&#8221;<br />
People v. Diaz,<br />
696 N.E.2d 819 (Ill. App. 1998)<br />
Defendant, a county jail correctional officer, was convicted of three charges arising out of his<br />
alleged involvement in drug dealing within the jail. The court reversed the convictions on the<br />
ground that the prosecution violated Brady and Napue by failing to disclose that an important<br />
inmate witness had been given a deal resulting in an illegal concurrent sentence, and by failing to<br />
correct that witness&#8217; false testimony that he had not received favorable treatment in exchange for<br />
his testimony. Rejecting the state&#8217;s contention that the witness had not been given a deal, the<br />
court noted a clear indication in the State&#8217;s Attorney&#8217;s undisclosed file that the witness&#8217; &#8220;illegal<br />
sentence was &#8216;OK&#8217;d&#8217; by a supervisor in the State&#8217;s Attorney&#8217;s office because [the witness] had<br />
worked as an informant for the State&#8217;s Attorney&#8217;s public integrity unit,&#8221; and explained that &#8220;this<br />
court does not have to ignore common sense.&#8221; &#8220;An agreement between the State and its witness,&#8221;<br />
the court continued, &#8220;does not have to be so specific that it satisfies the traditional requirements<br />
for an enforceable contract.&#8221; Here, the &#8220;circumstances, taken as a whole, indicate that a deal was<br />
made between [the witness] and the State . . ..&#8221; Turning to the prosecution&#8217;s failure to correct the<br />
witness&#8217; false denial that a deal existed, the court stated: &#8220;We consider the State&#8217;s conduct to have<br />
been outrageous and we will not tolerate it. . . . That [conduct] raises questions about the State&#8217;s<br />
integrity and goes to the heart of the judicial system&#8211;confidence in the factfinding process.&#8221;<br />
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State v. Harris,<br />
713 N.E.2d 528 (Ohio App. 1998)<br />
The court of appeals affirmed the trial court&#8217;s dismissal of felony possession of marijuana charges<br />
against defendants following disclosure by a prosecution investigator during trial that he had long<br />
possessed an airport log indicating that defendants had not been given baggage claim tickets<br />
when they boarded the flight on which the prosecution contended the defendants were smuggling<br />
marijuana. This evidence was consistent with defendants&#8217;, which was that a third party who<br />
purchased defendants&#8217; tickets and encouraged them to fly to Ohio to look for work had actually<br />
placed the marijuana in their luggage without their knowledge. The court of appeals found that<br />
the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the charges rather than imposing a lesser<br />
sanction in light of the fact that the information had been purposely withheld, and continuing the<br />
case would result in undue prejudice to the defendants.<br />
People v. Johnson,<br />
666 N.Y.S.2d 160 (N.Y.A.D. 1997)<br />
In prosecution for sale of a controlled substance, prosecution erred in not disclosing lab analysis<br />
that contained alterations testified to by a police officer. New trial ordered.<br />
People v. Kasim,<br />
66 Cal. Rptr.2d 494 (Cal. App. 1997)<br />
Reversal required where prosecution withheld impeachment evidence that keywitnesses had<br />
received deals for lenient treatment in their own criminal cases in exchange for their testimony<br />
against defendant. Such evidence was material as the result of the trial depended in large part on<br />
the credibility of the witnesses.<br />
State v. Blanco,<br />
953 S.W.2d 799 (Tex. App. 1997)<br />
Trial court did not abuse discretion in granting a motion for a new trial due to state&#8217;s failure to<br />
disclose in the prosecution of an aggravated assault case that the defendant&#8217;s brother had<br />
confessed to the crime.<br />
People v. LaSalle,<br />
243 A.D.2d 490 (N.Y.A.D. 1997)<br />
First degree sodomy conviction reversed due to prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose that complainant<br />
indicated at a prior hearing that she was unfamiliar with her attacker&#8217;s full name.<br />
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Ware v. State,<br />
702 A.2d 699 (Md. 1997)<br />
Reversal required where prosecution failed to disclose that its key witnesses had a motion to<br />
reconsider sentence pending which was being held in abeyance until the conclusion of<br />
defendant&#8217;s trial. The Maryland Court of Appeals held that this was an implied deal which should<br />
have been revealed.<br />
State v. Kula,<br />
562 N.W.2d 717 (Neb. 1997)<br />
Murder conviction reversed and new trial ordered where prosecution failed to disclose material<br />
evidence regarding investigation of other suspects before the first day of trial and trial court<br />
abused its discretion and committed plain error by refusing to grant a continuance following<br />
disclosure of the evidence to allow counsel to investigate other suspects and prepare a defense.<br />
*State v. Phillips,<br />
940 S.W.2d 512 (Mo. 1997)<br />
New penalty phase ordered where state withheld audiotape containing hearsay statement<br />
indicating that defendant&#8217;s son claimed sole responsibility for dismembering murder victim. The<br />
statement was material because the prosecution specifically argued that defendant deserved the<br />
death penalty because she had cut up the victim&#8217;s body herself, and the sole aggravating<br />
circumstance found by the jury was depravity of mind, which was based upon the<br />
dismemberment of the victim&#8217;s body.<br />
People v. Ariosa,<br />
660 N.Y.S.2d 255 (N.Y.Co.Ct. 1997)<br />
Indictment for three counts of forcible rape dismissed where prosecution waited until jury<br />
deliberations had begun to turn over an envelope it had possessed for several months containing<br />
numerous items directly contradicting the victim&#8217;s assertions at trial, some of which were written<br />
in the victim&#8217;s own hand. While the court expressed its belief that the prosecution&#8217;s nondisclosure<br />
was not motivated by malice, it nevertheless decided to send a message to the state that its review<br />
of discoverable materials must be &#8220;a pro-active, vigorous attempt to respond to the requests made<br />
by defense counsel or to seek protective orders in circumstances they feel are inappropriate for<br />
discovery.&#8221;<br />
Ohio v. Aldridge,<br />
1997 WL 111741 (Ohio App. 2 Dist. March 14, 1997) (unpublished)<br />
Order granting relief from multiple convictions for forcible rape of a child and gross sexual<br />
imposition of a child affirmed where prosecution failed to disclose full length report detailing:<br />
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numerous instances of highly suggestive questioning techniques employed with child accusers;<br />
medical evidence indicating absence of sexual abuse; inability of alleged child victim to identify<br />
picture of defendant; and numerous threats made by police investigator against child witnesses in<br />
the face of their denials that sexual abuse occurred. Rather than full report, defense counsel were<br />
furnished with a redacted version which made no mention of the exculpatory and impeaching<br />
information contained in the full length version.<br />
Flores v. State,<br />
940 S.W.2d 189 (Tex. App. 1996)<br />
Murder conviction reversed where prosecution failed to disclose written and verbal statements<br />
made by disinterested witness corroborating defendant&#8217;s contention that victim, who was<br />
defendant&#8217;s roommate, shot herself during an argument with defendant. Because there were no<br />
eyewitnesses to the shooting other than defendant her credibility was crucial, and undisclosed<br />
statements fully supported defendant&#8217;s version of events such that, had they been disclosed, the<br />
result of the trial would likely have been different.<br />
Ex parte Mowbray,<br />
943 S.W.2d 461 (Tex.Crim.App. 1996)<br />
Murder conviction reversed where prosecution waited until two weeks before trial to disclose<br />
blood spatter expert&#8217;s report tending to support defendant&#8217;s contention that victim shot himself in<br />
bed next to her despite having received the report seven months earlier; prosecution purposely<br />
delayed disclosure and caused defense counsel to erroneously believe that the expert who had<br />
written the exculpatory report would be a witness for the state and be available for<br />
cross-examination.<br />
*Cook v. State,<br />
940 S.W.2d 623 (Tex.Crim.App. 1996)<br />
Defendant&#8217;s conviction and death sentence for a 1977 murder reversed where testimony of a key<br />
prosecution witness from defendant&#8217;s first trial was introduced against defendant at his third trial<br />
after the witness had died. The introduction of the testimony at the third trial undermined the<br />
reliability of defendant&#8217;s conviction because the prosecution&#8217;s earlier failure to disclose the<br />
witness&#8217; prior inconsistent statements to police and to the grand jury had precluded the defense<br />
from effectively investigating the witness&#8217; testimony and impeaching him with his prior<br />
statements.<br />
State v. Oliver,<br />
682 So.2d 301 (La.App. 1996)<br />
New trial ordered where conviction hinged on credibility of two alleged victims who were key<br />
prosecution witnesses and prosecution failed to disclose statements made by each near time of<br />
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offense differed significantly from their trial testimony.<br />
State v. Ponce,<br />
1996 WL 589267 (Ohio App. Oct. 10, 1996)<br />
Rape conviction reversed where prosecution failed to turn over a police report and records from<br />
the county children&#8217;s services authority. The police report contained a description of the alleged<br />
rape which was significantly inconsistent with the alleged victim&#8217;s trial testimony, and the<br />
children&#8217;s services records revealed information supportive of the defendant&#8217;s theory at trial that<br />
the alleged victim&#8217;s story had been fabricated. The court found that, &#8220;[c]ollectively, the<br />
prosecution&#8217;s refusal to disclose the [materials] serve to undermine confidence in the outcome of<br />
defendant&#8217;s trial.&#8221;<br />
*Craig v. State,<br />
685 So.2d 1224 (Fla. 1996)<br />
Death sentence reversed and new sentencing hearing ordered where prosecutor elicited false and<br />
misleading testimony from codefendant indicating that he was serving two life sentences for his<br />
role in the crime and argued severity of codefendant&#8217;s punishment to the jury when prosecutor<br />
knew that codefendant was already in a work release program and would soon be paroled; this<br />
information was material because it affected codefendant&#8217;s credibility and prevented jury from<br />
considering actual disparity between sentences of each defendant.<br />
Carroll v. State,<br />
474 S.E.2d 737 (Ga. App. 1996)<br />
Defendant who pleaded guilty to homicide by vehicle and serious injury by vehicle allowed to<br />
withdraw plea due to state&#8217;s failure to disclose that sole state expert had indicated, shortly before<br />
defendant entered plea, that calculation of speed at which defendant was driving when she lost<br />
control of vehicle was incorrect and that it was not possible to calculate her speed based on data<br />
provided by investigating officer, and opined that road conditions contributed to accident.<br />
State v. Womack,<br />
679 A.2d 606 (N.J.), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 1011 (1996)<br />
For purposes of defendant&#8217;s prosecution for practicing medicine without a license, evidence that<br />
defendant told investigator his professional status as doctor of naturopathy and not medical<br />
doctor was not probative on state&#8217;s theory regarding practice of medicine without a license, but<br />
was probative on state&#8217;s alternative theory of holding oneself out as a medical doctor; failure to<br />
disclose such exculpatory evidence to grand jury required dismissal of portion of indictment<br />
asserting alternative theory.<br />
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Frierson v. State,<br />
677 So.2d 381 (Fla. App. 1996)<br />
Prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose police report and deposition of officer regarding incident<br />
strikingly similar to shooting incident for which defendant was convicted and which indicated<br />
that date of event was day after that indicated by witnesses required new trial; fact that witnesses<br />
who testified were alcohol and substance affected and could have mistaken date of incident,<br />
along with officer&#8217;s description and other undisclosed discrepancies in eyewitness testimony,<br />
undermined confidence in jury&#8217;s verdict.<br />
State v. Knight,<br />
678 A.2d 642 (N.J. 1996)<br />
Murder conviction reversed on cumulative impact of suppressed exculpatory evidence which<br />
included: state&#8217;s alleged eyewitness got no prison time on unrelated offense carrying potential<br />
364-day confinement period, despite prosecution&#8217;s claim that she had no incentive to lie; woman<br />
eyewitness who claimed to have spoken to witness just prior to crime had made statement that<br />
she was not near crime site at critical time; and FBI agent had testified that he lacked certain<br />
information regarding case at time he interrogated defendant when teletype records showed he<br />
had received information.<br />
Farmer v. State,<br />
923 S.W.2d 876 (Ark. App. 1996)<br />
New trial ordered where prosecution failed to disclose impeachment evidence that officer upon<br />
whose testimony state&#8217;s case was built was not a police officer at time of trial because he had<br />
resigned shortly before after wrecking his police car and filing a false police report to cover up<br />
his violation of police rules; prosecutor admitted that decision had been made not to ask witness<br />
at trial where he was employed.<br />
People v. May,<br />
644 N.Y.S.2d 525 (N.Y.A,D. 1996)<br />
Convictions for second degree murder, second degree attempted murder and first degree assualt<br />
reversed where prosecution failed to disclose arrangement with witness who was promised<br />
favorable sentence on unrelated charges in exchange for testimony against defendant, and failed<br />
to correct witness&#8217; false statement to effect that he had not been promised any consideration in<br />
return for testimony; nondisclosure was not harmless in light of significance of witness&#8217;<br />
testimony that he witnessed actions alleged in indictment.<br />
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People v. Lantigua,<br />
643 N.Y.S.2d 963 (N.Y.A.D. 1996)<br />
Sole eyewitness&#8217; recantation of identification testimony was not incredible or collateral to<br />
defendant&#8217;s guilt or innocence in second-degree murder prosecution; credibility of eyewitness&#8217;<br />
testimony at trial, not of her recantation, was relevant issue, and there were questions as to<br />
conflicting testimony by eyewitness and her brother, and where eyewitness was at time of<br />
murder, and People&#8217;s failure to disclose existence of another witness deprived defense of<br />
opportunity to investigate what that witness might have observed and of ability to conduct<br />
knowledgeable cross-examination of eyewitness as to her whereabouts, her view of events,<br />
distractions caused by presence of another person, and her general credibility.<br />
*Jiminez v. State,<br />
918 P.2d 687 (Nev. 1996)<br />
Post-conviction relief granted in capital case where prosecution failed to disclose evidence of<br />
other possible suspects which was relevant to informant&#8217;s impeachment and to challenge methods<br />
and reliability of police investigation, and failed to disclose evidence that informant had assisted<br />
police in other cases in exchange for dismissal of charges while police witness and informant<br />
both testified informant had no relationship with police in other cases; information could have<br />
altered outcome where evidence against defendant was circumstantial, informants&#8217; testimony that<br />
he overheard defendant&#8217;s telephone conversation with his father in which he admitted to killing<br />
was impeachable, and police did only slight investigation of other possible suspects.<br />
Smith v. State,<br />
471 S.E.2d 227 (Ga. App. 1996)<br />
Conviction for selling crack cocaine reversed where special agent and probation officer had<br />
agreement that as part of informant&#8217;s undercover work, officer would not serve outstanding<br />
warrant on informant and informant had crucial role in drug transaction, but state failed to fully<br />
disclose relationship with informant upon defendant&#8217;s request and special agent testified that<br />
informant &#8220;didn&#8217;t have any charges pending or anything.&#8221;<br />
Dinning v. State,<br />
470 S.E.2d 431 (Ga. 1996)<br />
New trial ordered on Giglio violation where prosecution failed to disclose evidence of immunity<br />
agreements with material prosecution witnesses where evidence against murder defendant was<br />
circumstantial and witnesses&#8217; testimony was critical to state&#8217;s case; withheld evidence included<br />
videotape of one witness&#8217; interview with police which contained protracted discussion of<br />
immunity in exchange for testimony.<br />
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Shields v. State,<br />
680 So.2d 969 (Ala.Crim.App. 1996)<br />
Murder conviction reversed where state withheld evidence of victim&#8217;s prior conviction for assault<br />
and other information tending to show victim was aggressive and prone to violent acts. This<br />
information was material to defendant&#8217;s claim of self-defense.<br />
Cotton v. Commonwealth,<br />
1996 WL 12683 (Va.App. Jan. 16, 1996)<br />
Statutory burglary and arson convictions reversed where state failed to timely disclose its<br />
relationship with a key witness who was incarcerated with defendant prior to trial. In exchange<br />
for testimony, prosecutor had agreed to make efforts on the witness&#8217; behalf with the parole board,<br />
and witness had been furnished with a copy of defendant&#8217;s statement to police, which he was seen<br />
reading prior to defendant&#8217;s trial.<br />
Brummett v. Commonwealth,<br />
1996 WL 10209 (Va.App. Jan. 11, 1996)<br />
Convictions on five counts of sexual crimes reversed where trial court erroneously failed to order<br />
disclosure, after in camera review, of statements of victim and forensic evidence indicating<br />
semen found was not that of defendant.<br />
*Hamilton v. State,<br />
677 So.2d 1254 (Ala.Crim.App. 1995)<br />
Conviction and death sentence reversed where key witness perjured himself with regard to<br />
statements he claimed were made by defendant regarding lack of remorse and pride resulting<br />
from the murder, and falsely denied the existence of a deal for his testimony. Police had led<br />
witness to believe he would be freed from jail in exchange for his testimony, and their actions<br />
were taken as part of the prosecution team, despite fact that prosecutor had no knowledge of the<br />
deal.<br />
*Padgett v. State,<br />
668 So.2d 78 (Ala.Crim.App.), cert. denied, 668 So.2d 88 (Ala. 1995)<br />
Capital murder conviction is reversed due to the prosecution’s delayed disclosure of test results<br />
calling into question whether the blood sample allegedly provided by defendant, which was tied<br />
to the victim, had in fact come from defendant. Defendant’s opportunity to cross examine the<br />
serologist the afternoon he found out about the second test result was inadequate to cure the<br />
violation.<br />
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People v. Jackson,<br />
637 N.Y.S.2d 158 (N.Y.A.D. 1995)<br />
State violated Brady in second-degree murder prosecution by failing for three years to disclose<br />
statements by learning-disabled witness who, by time of disclosure, had no substantive memory<br />
of many details of events at issue; statements&#8217; exculpatory value was evident on their face, as<br />
witness stated numerous times that defendant was outside apartment when shots were fired, and<br />
witness gave leads as to other possible perpetrators of crime.<br />
*Kills On Top v. State,<br />
901 P.2d 1368 (Mont. 1995)<br />
Confidence in the death sentence was undermined by the prosecution’s failure to disclose<br />
evidence related to a key guilt-phase witness that could have been used by the defense to<br />
challenge her credibility or argue bias. The undisclosed evidence concerned the witness’s<br />
criminal history and her allegation that she had been raped by a jailer.<br />
Jackson v. Commonwealth,<br />
1995 WL 710112 (Va.App. 1995)<br />
Conviction for abduction with intent to defile reversed where trial court erroneously failed to<br />
order state to disclose victim&#8217;s statements to police. These statements contained information<br />
inconsistent with victim&#8217;s testimony on several points. Because victim&#8217;s credibility was the<br />
crucial issue in the case, nondisclosure of the statements deprived defendant of the opportunity to<br />
explore and expose victim&#8217;s inconsistencies.<br />
People v. Wright,<br />
658 N.E.2d 1009 (N.Y. 1995)<br />
Alleged assault victim&#8217;s status as police informant was material and favorable to defendant, and<br />
prosecution&#8217;s failure, despite Brady requests, to reveal that alleged victim was informant denied<br />
defendant due process. If information had been revealed, defendant could have presented it as<br />
motive for police to corroborate alleged victim&#8217;s testimony and to disbelieve defendant&#8217;s claim<br />
that she stabbed alleged victim because she believed he was going to rape her. Information also<br />
would have refuted state&#8217;s explanation that victim did not want to go to hospital after stabbing<br />
because police would have thought he &#8220;did something&#8221; due to of his criminal record.<br />
People v. Curry,<br />
627 N.Y.S.2d 214 (N.Y.A.D. 1995)<br />
Motion to withdraw guilty plea granted where state failed to disclose information about<br />
investigation into police corruption in violation of due process. Case would hinge on credibility<br />
contest of defendant and cop, who allegedly stole defendant&#8217;s money during arrest, and DA had<br />
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serious information about the cop&#8217;s criminal activities.<br />
State v. Laurie,<br />
653 A.2d 549 (N.H. 1995)<br />
New Hampshire constitutional right to present all favorable evidence affords greater protection to<br />
criminal defendant than federal Brady standard; it requires state to prove beyond a reasonable<br />
doubt that favorable evidence knowingly withheld would not have affected verdict.<br />
State v. Gardner,<br />
885 P.2d 1144 (Idaho App. 1994)<br />
Defendant entitled to withdraw guilty plea where prosecutor violated Brady by failing to disclose<br />
eyewitness statement tending to show that collision and resulting death were caused by tire<br />
blowout, not by defendant&#8217;s fatigue or drug use.<br />
People v. Rutter,<br />
616 N.Y.S.2d 598 (N.Y.App.Div. 1994), opinion adhered to on reargument, 623 N.Y.S.2d<br />
97 (N.Y.App.Div. 1995)<br />
Appellate counsel held ineffective for failing to raise and argue: (1) People&#8217;s disclosure, on<br />
morning after key witness was excused, of transcript of polygraph in which this witness denied<br />
knowledge of the homicide as Rosario and Brady violation; and (2) failure of trial court to allow<br />
the witness to be recalled and cross-examined with the transcript.<br />
Bowman v. Commonwealth,<br />
445 S.E.2d 110 (Va. 1994)<br />
Prosecution&#8217;s failure to earlier disclose police officer&#8217;s report violated Brady; had defendant been<br />
aware of discrepancies in police officer&#8217;s report and officer&#8217;s failure to mention defendant&#8217;s facial<br />
scars, he could have strengthened his defense of mistaken identity. Trial court abused its<br />
discretion in refusing to review in camera police officer&#8217;s report as requested by defendant.<br />
Jefferson v. State,<br />
45 So.2d 313 (Ala.Crim.App. 1994)<br />
Writ of error coram nobis granted where prosecution failed to disclose prior inconsistent<br />
statements of two witnesses who testified to seeing defendant fleeing the scene. Earlier<br />
statements identified the fleeing suspect as someone else.<br />
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*State v. Gilbert,<br />
640 A.2d 61 (Conn. 1994)<br />
Capital murder conviction reversed where state failed to disclose, after specific defense request,<br />
reports from victims&#8217; family and friends in which they said that two other individuals had been in<br />
the store earlier the same day&#8212;carrying guns and threatening to kill someone.<br />
State v. Perry,<br />
879 S.W.2d 609 (Mo.App. 1994)<br />
State&#8217;s failure to disclose defendant&#8217;s girlfriend&#8217;s pretrial statement violated Brady where<br />
statement was directly contrary to girlfriend&#8217;s trial testimony, supported claim that he was<br />
&#8220;framed&#8221; and confessed solely in response to police beating, he specifically requested statement,<br />
and defense did not know statement existed until after trial.<br />
State v. Munson,<br />
886 P.2d 999 (Okla.Crim.App. 1994)<br />
New trial granted where state failed to disclose hypnosis of key prosecution witness, withheld<br />
over 165 exculpatory photographs and willfully suppressed hundreds of pages of exculpatory<br />
reports.<br />
*Commonwealth v. Green,<br />
640 A.2d 1242 (Pa. 1994)<br />
Conviction and death sentence reversed where state failed to disclose two out of court statements<br />
by co-conspirator in which she claimed she shot and killed a cop.<br />
State v. White,<br />
640 A.2d 572 (Conn. 1994)<br />
State&#8217;s failure to disclose exculpatory Brady material prior to probable cause hearing mandated<br />
reversal of convictions and new probable cause hearing even though material was disclosed to<br />
defense during jury selection; although defendants made use of evidence, witnesses whose<br />
statements were initially not revealed were unavailable at time of trial.<br />
Commonwealth v. Galloway,<br />
640 A.2d 454 (Pa. Super. 1994)<br />
Commonwealth&#8217;s Brady violation in failing to disclose that its key witness&#8217; recollection was<br />
hypnotically refreshed prior to trial entitled defendant to new trial on one murder where witness<br />
was only one to testify that she saw him possess and shoot a gun, and one of two witnesses to<br />
testify that she heard defendant confess.<br />
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State v. Landano,<br />
637 A.2d 1270 (N.J. Super. App. Div. 1994)<br />
Brady violated where cop&#8217;s handwritten notes indicating that witness rejected defendant&#8217;s photo<br />
were suppressed, and only an official report saying witness failed to make an ID was disclosed.<br />
State v. Florez,<br />
636 A.2d 1040 (N.J. 1994)<br />
Conviction reversed where state failed to disclose fact that informant had been involved in<br />
reverse sting drug transaction, even though defendants knew he was involved in crime, but did<br />
not know he was an informer. This was material because the informer played a central role in<br />
setting up the drug deal.<br />
People v. White,<br />
606 N.Y.S.2d 172 (N.Y.App.Div. 1994)<br />
Convictions vacated under Brady and Rosario where undisclosed statement indicated that<br />
prosecution witness said he could not identify person who shot victim, while at trial he testified<br />
to knowing defendant vaguely and seeing him chase victim and fire weapon at him, and link of<br />
defendant to second murder was in significant part through ballistics evidence that same gun was<br />
used in both murders.<br />
West v. State,<br />
444 S.E.2d 398 (Ga.App. 1994)<br />
Conviction reversed where State&#8217;s failure to disclose tape recording of alleged drug deal<br />
involving defendant prior to trial violated due process; tape was exculpatory in that it might have<br />
shown that informant gave perjured testimony.<br />
Jefferson v. State,<br />
645 So.2d 313 (Ala.Crim.App. 1994)<br />
Brady violated where undisclosed exculpatory evidence was material to murder prosecution<br />
because it would have tended to show that someone other than defendant committed crime and<br />
would have been relevant to impeach credibility of two witnesses who testified for prosecution.<br />
Ex parte Williams,<br />
642 So.2d 391 (Ala. 1993)<br />
Brady violated where state failed to produce lineup photographs from which victim had<br />
identified a person other than defendant, hat which had led police to that person, and statement in<br />
which victim had failed to mention supposedly identifying raincoat found in defendant&#8217;s home.<br />
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Burrows v. State,<br />
438 S.E.2d 300 (Va.App. 1993)<br />
Commonwealth&#8217;s failure, in response to murder defendant&#8217;s Brady request for exculpatory<br />
material, to provide defendant with information respecting Commonwealth witness&#8217; criminal past<br />
and apparent long-standing relationship with Commonwealth&#8217;s attorneys, warranted new trial.<br />
People v. Gaines,<br />
604 N.Y.S.2d 272 (N.Y.App.Div. 1993)<br />
Brady violation, which required reversal of convictions, occurred where prosecutor did not<br />
disclose cooperation agreement reached between trial assistant&#8217;s superior and attorney for<br />
principal prosecution witness under which witness would not be required to go to prison on<br />
pending felony charges if he testified against defendant.<br />
People v. Steadman,<br />
623 N.E.2d 509 (N.Y. 1993)<br />
Convictions reversed under Brady where trial assistants, as representatives of DA&#8217;s office, were<br />
chargeable with knowledge of promises made by assistant DA to prosecution witness&#8217; attorney<br />
for purposes of duty to disclose Brady material, and assistants were obligated to clarify record<br />
after witness falsely testified that no promises were made.<br />
State v. Avelar,<br />
859 P.2d 353 (Idaho App. 1993)<br />
Prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose that party to whom cocaine was delivered could not identify<br />
defendant as one who delivered cocaine violated due process and required that conviction be set<br />
aside; disclosure would likely have altered defendant&#8217;s trial strategy significantly.<br />
People v. Garcia,<br />
17 Cal.App.4th 1169 (Cal.App. 1993)<br />
Habeas granted where state failed to disclose evidence that tended to impeach reliability of state&#8217;s<br />
accident reconstruction expert, by showing that expert had used faulty methodology and made<br />
errors in other cases.<br />
Swartz v. State,<br />
506 N.W.2d 792 (Iowa App. 1993)<br />
PCR granted where state failed, in violation of Brady, to disclose evidence of alleged coperpetrator&#8217;s threatening and overbearing nature, and where rebuttal witness, who was the only<br />
witness available to directly contradict defendant&#8217;s compulsion testimony, falsely denied<br />
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existence of a deal for his testimony.<br />
*Garcia v. State,<br />
622 So.2d 1325 (Fla. 1993)<br />
Conviction and death sentence reversed where prosecution failed to disclose statement to police<br />
given by a key prosecution witness which corroborated defendant&#8217;s assertion that someone else<br />
committed the murder. Violation was compounded because prosecution denied the existence of<br />
the person defendant identified, despite the fact that police had arrested him and knew he was<br />
going by the name defendant gave them.<br />
State v. Lindsey,<br />
621 So.2d 618 (La.App. 1993)<br />
Conviction reversed where state failed to disclose a promise to give accomplice favorable<br />
consideration if she testified credibly, and exacerbated the Brady violation by failing to correct<br />
the witness&#8217; assertion at trial that she was not expecting consideration.<br />
State v. Spurlock,<br />
874 S.W.2d 602 (Tenn.Crim.App. 1993)<br />
Murder conviction reversed where prosecution failed to disclose: (1) statements, which had been<br />
taken by the sheriff&#8217;s department, which stated or implied that someone else did the murder; and<br />
(2) audio and video recordings of key prosecution witness giving statement incriminating<br />
defendant after being promised he would be released from jail.<br />
Jones v. State of Texas,<br />
850 S.W.2d 223 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 1993)<br />
Conviction and sentence reversed where prosecution failed to timely disclose exculpatory,<br />
material information in a victim impact statement which tended to negate the only evidence of<br />
defendant&#8217;s intent to shoot the victim.<br />
Funk v. Commonwealth,<br />
842 S.W.2d 476 (Ky. 1993)<br />
Life sentence (state did seek death penalty) reversed where state failed to turn over various pieces<br />
of exculpatory hair and fiber evidence.<br />
Averhart v. State,<br />
614 N.E.2d 924 (Ind. 1993)<br />
Negative results from gunshot residue tests that were withheld by the prosecution during trial<br />
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were material at sentencing phase, even though they were not at the guilt phase. Although the test<br />
results did not establish that petitioner had not failed the fatal shot, &#8220;[t]he absence of gunshot<br />
residue . . . form[ed] part of a chain of circumstantial evidence pointing away from [petitioner] as<br />
the triggerman. Confidence in the manner in which the jury evaluated the aggravating<br />
circumstances with respect to [petitioner] cannot be maintained in this atmosphere.&#8221;<br />
People v. Davis,<br />
614 N.E.2d 719 (N.Y. 1993)<br />
Brady violated by failure to disclose, despite specific request, hospital records of third party<br />
whom complainant identified as one of his attackers, indicating that third party was admitted to<br />
hospital shortly before the attack.<br />
McMillian v. State,<br />
616 So.2d 933 (Ala.Crim.App. 1993)<br />
Brady violated where prosecution failed to disclose: (1) earlier statements by its key witness<br />
claiming to know nothing about the crime and then argued to jury that witness had told same<br />
story from the beginning; (2) statement of fellow inmate who overheard key witness discussing<br />
plan to frame defendant.<br />
State v. Bryant,<br />
415 S.E.2d 806 (S.C. 1992)<br />
Once defendant has established basis for his claim that undisclosed evidence contains<br />
exculpatory material or impeachment evidence, State must produce undisclosed evidence for trial<br />
judge&#8217;s inspection; trial judge should then rule on materiality of evidence to determine whether<br />
State must produce it for defendant&#8217;s use.<br />
*Gorham v. State,<br />
597 So.2d 782 (Fla. 1992)<br />
Conviction and death sentence vacated where state failed to disclose that key witness had been a<br />
paid CI in defendant&#8217;s case and in others. The fact that the witness had received substantial<br />
payments in other cases made the evidence material for challenging his credibility.<br />
People v. Holmes,<br />
606 N.E.2d 439 (Ill.App.1 Dist. 1992), appeal denied, 612 N.E.2d 518 (Ill. 1993)<br />
Conviction reversed where prosecution told jury that chief witness was just an innocent<br />
bystander when in fact he participated in the crime, and violated Napue by lying about the<br />
benefits witness was to receive for his testimony.<br />
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People v. Clausell,<br />
182 A.D.2d 132 (N.Y.App.Div. 1992)<br />
Due process violated where prosecution failed to disclose a buy report in a drug prosecution until<br />
after conviction since defense specifically requested the report twice, officer&#8217;s testimony was<br />
essential, and report contained useful impeachment material.<br />
People v. Jackson,<br />
154 Misc.2d 718 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. 1992), aff&#8217;d, 603 N.Y.S.2d 410 (N.Y.Sup. 1992),<br />
appeal denied, 633 N.E.2d 487 (N.Y. 1994)<br />
Convictions for second degree arson and six counts of felony murder reversed where detective<br />
and fire department, despite their independent duty to disclose under Brady, failed to reveal that<br />
it was the expert opinion of the detective that the fire was an accidental electrical fire.<br />
Savage v. State,<br />
600 So.2d 405 (Ala.Crim.App.), cert. denied, 600 So.2d 409 (Ala. 1992)<br />
Manslaughter conviction reversed where prosecutor failed, in violation of Brady, to disclose<br />
statements of two witnesses who said defendant acted in self-defense; statements were arguably<br />
exculpatory and could have been used to impeach the testimony of the witnesses at trial.<br />
Commonwealth v. Moose,<br />
602 A.2d 1265 (Pa. 1992)<br />
Murder conviction reversed where state failed to disclose deal with jailhouse snitch despite a<br />
general request by the defense. Defendant&#8217;s failure to seek criminal records of state witnesses was<br />
directly traceable to state&#8217;s failure to identify the prisoner.<br />
People v. Janota,<br />
181 A.D.2d 932 (N.Y.App.Div. 1992)<br />
Rape conviction reversed due to prosecution&#8217;s delay in turning over notes of complainant&#8217;s initial<br />
version of the incident which would have brought her credibility into serious question. Counsel<br />
found out about the notes after he had cross-examined her for a day and a half, and did not recall<br />
her for fear such a move would be seen as harassment.<br />
State v. Knapper,<br />
579 So.2d 956 (La. 1991)<br />
Reversed where prosecution failed to disclose a police report in which eyewitness gave<br />
description of murderer&#8217;s clothes which was opposite that of chief state witness. The report also<br />
mentioned another group of men who were committing crimes that night, one of whom was<br />
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found in possession of the murder weapon.<br />
People v. Godina,<br />
584 N.E.2d 523 (Ill.App. 1991), appeal denied, 591 N.E.2d 26 (Ill. 1992)<br />
Second-degree murder conviction reversed where pending burglary prosecution of state&#8217;s witness<br />
was material and thus subject to disclosure under Brady where the witness&#8217; testimony assisted<br />
state in convicting defendant.<br />
Commonwealth v. Santiago,<br />
591 A.2d 1095 (Pa.Super. 1991), appeal denied, 600 A.2d 953 (Pa. 1991)<br />
Because the point of the disclosure requirement is to ensure a fair trial, the trial judge had an<br />
obligation to disclose to the defense prior inconsistent statements made in camera by prosecution<br />
witness.<br />
State v. Davis,<br />
823 S.W.2d 217 (Tenn.Crim.App. 1991)<br />
Drunk driving conviction reversed where state failed to disclose police department memoranda<br />
revealing knowledge of incorrect readings, malfunctions, and tampering with intoxilizer<br />
machine; although evidence also included police observations of defendant, the intoxilizer was<br />
central to the state&#8217;s case.<br />
Perdomo v. State,<br />
565 So.2d 1375 (Fla.App. 1990)<br />
Trial court should have held Richardson hearing on potential Brady violation and its potential<br />
to prejudice defendant where potentially exculpatory evidence might still be in state custody,<br />
even though state did not disclose evidence because it believed it had been stolen.<br />
*Bevill v. State,<br />
556 So.2d 699 (Miss. 1990)<br />
Conviction and death sentence reversed where defense was not allowed to adduce at trial whether<br />
prosecution helped its key witness to have one of his prior convictions expunged in exchange for<br />
his testimony.<br />
Ex parte Adams,<br />
768 S.W.2d 281 (Tex.Crim.App. 1989)<br />
Conviction reversed where prosecution suppressed prior inconsistent statements of its key<br />
witnesses. These statements seriously eroded the credibility of both witnesses.<br />
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Ex parte Brown,<br />
548 So.2d 993 (Ala. 1989)<br />
Conviction reversed where state failed to disclose, until introduction at trial, physical evidence<br />
which contradicted victim&#8217;s statement despite the granting of defense&#8217;s motion requiring<br />
disclosure of tangible evidence expected to be introduced at trial.<br />
Ham v. State,<br />
760 S.W.2d 55 (Tex. App. 1988)<br />
Conviction reversed where state failed to turn over evidence, following Brady request, of chief<br />
medical examiner&#8217;s testimony which tended to confirm defense expert&#8217;s position and draw into<br />
question the state&#8217;s evidence of defendant&#8217;s guilt.<br />
*State v. Johnston,<br />
529 N.E.2d 898 (Ohio 1988)<br />
Conviction and death sentence reversed where prosecution failed to disclose evidence which<br />
undermined its theory of where the murder occurred and who did it.<br />
Ex parte Womack,<br />
541 So.2d 47 (Ala. 1988)<br />
Conviction reversed where prosecution failed to disclose: (1) transcript of a meeting with a<br />
witness who recanted his grand jury testimony and attempted to implicate himself in the crime,<br />
only to be dissuaded by his counsel and the district attorney; (2) plea arrangements with two<br />
witnesses; (3) police reports and memos which included prior inconsistent statements and<br />
jailhouse confessions.<br />
State v. Smith,<br />
504 So.2d 1070 (La. App. 1987)<br />
Defendant should have been permitted in camera inspection of alleged prior statement of victim<br />
for material inconsistencies or Brady information, in light of defendant&#8217;s specific requests for<br />
such statements, which were based on differences between opening statement and victim&#8217;s<br />
testimony.<br />
State v. Osborne,<br />
345 S.E.2d 256 (S.C.App. 1986), aff&#8217;d as modified, 353 S.E.2d 276 (S.C. 1987)<br />
Nondisclosure, despite timely Brady motions prior to trial, of two recorded statements by State&#8217;s<br />
primary witness, who was a heavy alcohol and drug user, had long criminal record, and had<br />
changed his story to an eyewitness account in exchange for near immunity, denied defendants<br />
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due process, where verdict was questionable, and defense counsels&#8217; cross-exam might well have<br />
shifted weight of evidence to establish reasonable doubt had State complied with motion.<br />
State v. Wyche,<br />
518 A.2d 907 (R.I. 1986)<br />
Prosecutor&#8217;s failure to disclose existence of blood test, which indicated that sexual assault<br />
victim&#8217;s blood-alcohol concentration was .208, was deliberate, violated due process and Brady,<br />
and required new trial, where prosecutor knew of test results on evening before testimony of<br />
physician, who knew about test, and where prosecutor made no disclosure of test until guilty<br />
verdict.<br />
Bloodworth v. State,<br />
512 A.2d 1056 (Md. 1986)<br />
Under Bagley, exculpatory material does not have to be in the prosecutor&#8217;s possession. Here, fact<br />
that prosecutors were not in physical possession of detective&#8217;s report of another possible suspect<br />
with respect to three offenses was immaterial to whether failure to disclose report to defendant<br />
was Brady violation.<br />
Cipollina v. State,<br />
501 So.2d 2 (Fla.App. 1986), review denied, 509 So.2d 1119 (Fla. 1987)<br />
State committed Brady violation by failing to inform defense counsel of name and address of<br />
witness who obtained alibi information for defendant from codefendant in prison, even though<br />
State had informed defense that same witness had inculpated codefendant.<br />
People v. Buckley,<br />
501 N.Y.S.2d 554 (N.Y.Sup. 1986)<br />
Updated rap sheet on prosecution witness, showing disposition of a charge not appearing on<br />
sheet given to defense was material which prosecution was obligated to disclose to defense.<br />
Knight v. State,<br />
478 So.2d 332 (Ala.Crim.App. 1985)<br />
Evidence that both defendant and rape victim were A and H secretors (substances in saliva), and<br />
that person who smoked cigarettes found ground out on victim&#8217;s card table was an H secretor, was<br />
clearly favorable to defendant&#8217;s claim of innocence, and State&#8217;s failure to disclose such evidence<br />
was a due process violation.<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-195<br />
*Binsz v. State,<br />
675 P.2d 448 (Okl.Crim.App. 1984)<br />
Convictions and death sentence overturned where prosecution tried to avoid telling the jury of<br />
key witness&#8217;s leniency deal by keeping the witness ignorant of the bargain struck with her<br />
counsel.<br />
Commonwealth v. Wallace,<br />
455 A.2d 1187 (Pa. 1983)<br />
Prosecution failed to correct false statements by its key witness and suppressed parts of his<br />
criminal record. Defense made numerous requests for full disclosure of the witness&#8217;s criminal<br />
record and the prosecution repeatedly failed to deliver.<br />
Granger v. State,<br />
653 S.W.2d 868 (Tex.App. 1983), aff&#8217;d, 683 S.W.2d 387 (Tex. 1984), cert. denied, 472 U.S.<br />
1012 (1985)<br />
Life sentence reversed where prosecutor, judge, and witness&#8217;s counsel all failed to disclose<br />
existence of a deal that changed witness&#8217;s sentence from death to life. Also, because prosecution<br />
failed to correct the witness&#8217;s testimony regarding the deal, her testimony from the first trial was<br />
not admissible at the second, after she refused to testify, because defendant&#8217;s right to<br />
cross-examine her had been violated.<br />
State v. Perkins,<br />
423 So.2d 1103 (La. 1982)<br />
Reversed under Brady where State failed to disclose statement of eyewitness, which substantially<br />
corroborated defendant&#8217;s version of shooting, despite defendant&#8217;s request of a copy of any<br />
statements of any person interviewed by agent of State in connection with subject matter of case.<br />
Statement might have affected outcome as to either guilt or punishment.<br />
People v. Angelini,<br />
649 P.2d 341 (Colo.App. 1982)<br />
Where defendant requested tapes of prosecution&#8217;s interviews with key prosecution witness,<br />
prosecution&#8217;s failure to disclose that witness had been hypnotized on morning witness testified<br />
required new trial.<br />
Habeas Assistance and Training 09/06/17 Successful Brady/Napue Cases<br />
-196<br />
State v. Goodson,<br />
277 S.E.2d 602 (S.C. 1981)<br />
In prosecution for housebreaking, grand larceny and safecracking, state&#8217;s failure to disclose<br />
existence of roll of film showing a person other defendant on premises where crime occurred<br />
deprived defendant of a fair trial, in that film could possibly cast serious doubt on credibility of<br />
state&#8217;s only witness implicating the defendant.<br />
State v. Fullwood,<br />
262 S.E.2d 10 (S.C. 1979)<br />
Where defendant pled self-defense when victim attacked him with a knife and cut him, where<br />
investigating officer, who was asked for disclosure, falsely told counsel that he had no<br />
information beneficial to defendant, and where prosecutor argued several times that victim had<br />
no knife although prosecutor had knife in his possession during the trial, concealment of the<br />
knife deprived defendant of fundamental fairness in his trial.<br />
Deatrick v. State,<br />
392 N.E.2d 498 (Ind.App. 1979)<br />
New trial ordered where, in response to defendant&#8217;s request, prosecutor and codefendant denied<br />
existence of a &#8220;deal&#8221; for codefendant&#8217;s testimony, and on direct exam prosecutor elicited denial<br />
from codefendant that any promises for his testimony were made. Prior to trial prosecutor made<br />
promises and wrote a letter to parole board. This could have affected verdict, especially<br />
considering eyewitnesses&#8217; were inability to identify faces of perpetrators and prosecutor&#8217;s<br />
repeated emphasis of codefendant&#8217;s sincerity.<br />
Dozier v. Commonwealth,<br />
253 S.E.2d 655 (Va. 1979)<br />
Conviction reversed where prosecutrix had made written statement which did not refer to alleged<br />
rape and did not refer to defendant by name. Statement was constitutionally material to charges,<br />
in that it affected credibility of the witness, even though the written account of the abduction was<br />
substantially consistent with the prosecutrix&#8217;s testimony at trial. Failure of Commonwealth to<br />
disclose pursuant to defendant&#8217;s request required new trial.<br />
V. MILITARY CASES<br />
United States v. Winningham,<br />
2006 WL 2266827 (A.F. Crim. App. July 26, 2006) (unpublished)<br />
Brady violation found in rape case where prosecution failed to disclose identity of and statement<br />
by a witness who was told by defendant, sometime after the alleged offense, that the sexual<br />
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-197<br />
encounter had been consensual and that the victim had been awake, contraryto her allegations.<br />
United States v. Stewart,<br />
62 M.J. 668 (A.F. Crim. App. 2006)<br />
Prosecution violated Brady in rape case by belatedly disclosing the alleged victim’s medical<br />
records which indicated a wide variety of medical conditions and drugs which could have<br />
provided an alternative explanation for the symptoms she displayed after drinking a beverage<br />
provided by defendant. The prosecution theory was that defendant intentionally drugged the<br />
victim and then raped her after she was unconscious. Although there was a suggestion of a type<br />
of “date rape” drug found in the victim’s urine sample, it was too small to be considered a<br />
“positive” result. The defense did not receive the medical records until after the prosecution’s<br />
case in chief had concluded. The remedy offered – a new opening argument, re-cross of the<br />
victim, and stipulated testimony by the prosecution toxicologist – was inadequate to cure the<br />
harm in light of the defense’s explanation about the ways its strategy would have been different<br />
had it possessed the records earlier.<br />
United States v. Mahoney,<br />
58 M.J. 346 (C.A.A.F. 2003)<br />
In court-martial proceedings for use of cocaine, the government violated Brady by failing to<br />
provide the defendant with a letter that had been written by a command staff judge advocate<br />
criticizing the prosecution’s expert witness for his testimony in prior court-martials and<br />
questioning whether his employment should be continued. In particular, the letter complained<br />
about the expert’s lack of enthusiasm for the military’s drug testing program and his criticism of<br />
studies that other forensic toxicologists rely upon. In finding that disclosure of this letter was<br />
required, the appeals court rejected the government’s defense that the trial prosecutor did not<br />
know of the letter. The court concluded that &#8220;it would have become known to him by the exercise<br />
of reasonable diligence,&#8221; and that appropriate inquiry would have led to discovery of the letter.<br />
Because the letter arguably created a significant motive for the expert to testify positively about<br />
lab procedures and underlying scientific studies, cross-examination about the letter could have<br />
enhanced the defense case which centered on attacking the procedural regularity and reliably of<br />
urinalysis.<br />
United States v. Sebring,<br />
44 M.J. 805 (N.M.Crim.App. 1996)<br />
Under Kyles, prosecutor&#8217;s obligation to search for favorable evidence known to others acting on<br />
the government&#8217;s behalf extends to information concerning levels of quality control at<br />
government&#8217;s controlled substances testing laboratory. Failure of prosecuting officer to discover<br />
and disclose report indicating that laboratory had experienced significant quality control<br />
problems required reversal of defendant&#8217;s conviction.</p>
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