MEMORANDUM & ORDER
On September 19, 2000, petitioner, Ricardo Guzman (“Guzman”), following a jury trial in New York Supreme Court, Kings County, was acquitted of intentional murder but convicted of depraved-indifference murder;
1
he was sentenced on October 10, 2000, to an indeterminate sentence of twenty-five years to life imprisonment. He now seeks a writ of
habeas corpus
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on the grounds that (A) the evidence supporting his conviction was legally insufficient; (B) the trial court improperly instructed the jury; (C) his inculpatory statements should have been suppressed as the fruits of an unlawful arrest, in violation of the Fourth Amendment; (D) the identification testimony violated his due process rights; and (E) his trial counsel was ineffective on various grounds. All claims were fully exhausted on direct appeal or in a proceeding under N.Y.Crim. Pro. Law § 440.10.
See People v. Guzman,
No. 5238-99 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Nov. 28, 2003) (rejecting ineffective-assistance claim based on counsel’s failure to raise the government’s violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations),
leave to appeal denied,
No. 04-00716 (2d Dep’t Mar. 17, 2004);
People v. Guzman,
I.
Only federal issues may be raised on
habeas
review.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(a);
Estelle v. McGuire,
“When the state court fails to articulate the rationale behind its ruling, [the Court] must independently review the record and the applicable law.”
Bell v. Jarvis,
If, instead of reaching the merits, the state court denies a federal claim based on an “independent and adequate state .procedural rule, federal
habeas
review of [the] elaim[ ] is barred unless the prisoner can demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law, or demonstrate that failure to consider the claim[] will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
Coleman v. Thompson,
The Court will apply AEDPA deference in reviewing Guzman’s insufficiency-of-evidence claim because the Appellate Division rejected it on the merits,
see Guzman,
II.
A. Sufficiency of Evidence for Depraved-Indifference Murder
Guzman argues that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of depráved-indifferenee murder because the
only
reasonable view of the evidence was that he acted with an intent to kill — not with depraved indifference; if his argument proves successful, the result would be disturbing: Guzman could be set free; he could not be retried for intentional murder since he has been acquitted of that charge.
See Policano v. Herbert,
1. Facts
Guzman was charged with the murder of Phillip Menzies (“Menzies”). Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, the following was established at trial:
Menzies’s girlfriend testified that the following events transpired on June 30, 1999: She, her sister and Menzies were walking in McCaren Park when two men, each riding a bike, passed them. About three minutes later, the two bike-riders returned with a third bike-rider; one of the bike-riders asked Menzies, in Spanish, if he “ha[d] a problem?” and Menzies responded, also in Spanish, “never”. Tr. at 20-21. Next, one of the bike-riders dismounted, threw his bike at Menzies and ran towards him; the other two bike-riders then also dismounted and also ran towards Menzies. The three bike-riders began to punch Menzies and a fistfight erupted, causing Menzies’s girlfriend to intervene and punch one of the bike-riders; the other two bike-riders remained with Menzies. She then observed one of the men holding a knife and ultimately witnessed Menzies profusely bleeding. The medical examiner testified that Menzies died following three stab wounds — two in his chest that punctured his heart and left lung — and one in his back.
In rejecting Guzman’s insufficiency-of-evidence claim on the merits, the Appellate Division summarily stated that “[v]iewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, we find that it was legally sufficient to establish the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Guzman,
2. Analysis
Under clearly established Supreme Court precedent, a conviction is supported by sufficient evidence if, “after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
a. Legal Requirements for Depraved-Indifference Murder
Under New York law, a defendant may be found guilty of depraved-indifference murder where, “[u]nder circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life, he recklessly engages in conduct which creates a grave risk of death to another person, and thereby causes the death of another person.” 5 N.Y. Penal Law § 125.25(2).
A person acts recklessly with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense when he is aware of and consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that such result will occur or that such circumstance exists. The risk must be of such nature and degree that disregard thereof constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation. A person who creates such a risk but is unaware thereof solely by reason of voluntary intoxication also acts recklessly with respect thereto.
Id. § 15.05(3).
b. Policano v. Herbert
In
Policano,
the Second Circuit reiterated that under the law of New York an element of depraved-indifference murder is “that the defendant was indifferent to whether his or her acts would result in the victim’s death!,]”
One who acts intentionally in shooting a person to death — that is, with the conscious objective of bringing about that result ([N.Y.] Penal Law § 15.05[1] )— cannot at the same time act recklessly— that is, with conscious disregard of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that such a result will occur ([N.Y.] Penal Law § 15.05[3]). The act is either intended or not intended; it cannot simultaneously be both.
Id.
at 87-88 (quoting
People v. Gallagher,
Applying this principle, the court reversed a conviction for depraved-indifference murder where the defendant shot the victim at point-blank range, six days after the victim had attacked him with a pipe and after the defendant had vowed revenge. See id. at 89. The court explained:
This evidence plainly supports a rational finding by the jury that [the defendant’s] conscious objective [wa]s to cause [the victim’s] death. As the district court pointed out, by shooting [the victim] three times in the head and neck, [the defendant] was not recklessly creating a grave risk of death, but was creating a virtual certainty of death born of an intent to kill.
Conversely, the evidence does not support a rational finding by a jury that [the defendant’s] firing of a nine-millimeter gun three times into [the victim’s] head and neck from close range was an act of conscious[ ] disregard of the risk that [the victim] would die as a result. There is no evidence in the record that [the defendant] meant to threaten or frighten [the victim], that the gun fired accidentally, or that [the defendant] acted otherwise than with the deliberate intent to kill.
Id. (emphasis in original; internal citations and quotations omitted).
However, the court noted that its “conclusion that the State’s proof of intentional murder was inconsistent with proof of depraved-indifference murder restfed] on the specific facts of th[at] case," and contrasted Policano with three New York state cases “in which the evidence could have supported a finding of either intentional or depraved indifference murder.” Id. at 90 (emphasis in original).
In the first such case,
People v. Tankleff
In the second case,
People v. Sanchez,
Based on these facts, the court held that it was not inappropriate for the trial court to let the jury decide whether the defendant should be convicted of intentional or depraved-indifference murder. In that latter regard, it framed the issue as “whether, on this record, based on an objective assessment of the risk defendant recklessly created and disregarded, the likelihood of causing death from defendant’s conduct was so obviously severe that it evinced a depraved indifference to human life[,]” and stated that “it was virtually a
knowing,
although not intentional, homicide.”
Id.
at 384,
The court ultimately relied upon the following facts in holding that the jury could “reasonably have concluded that defendant’s conduct was either reckless and depraved, or intentional,”
Id.
at 386,
Defendant felt insulted by his victim, a person known to him; they were both celebrating the birthday of the three-year-old daughter of defendant’s paramour. Instead of amicably settling their dispute, defendant-with at least one other person (the eyewitness) in the hallway-spontaneously turned, his arm came from around the door, he pointed the gun in the direction of the victim who was standing behind the door, and he pulled the trigger. The bullet hit the victim in the left upper chest and moved in a downward trajectory. Defendant fled.
Accordingly, the circuit court in
Polica-no
stated that “[w]e read
Sanchez,
like
Tankleff,
to hold that the evidence may be sufficient to support a conviction for depraved indifference murder if the jury could rationally infer that the defendant did not act with intent to kill the victim even if it might, on the same facts, properly conclude that the murder was intentional.”
Policano,
In the third case,
Fama v. Commissioner of Corr. Servs.,
The present case, at first blush, would appear to present yet another factual setting, as in
Tankleff, Sanchez
and
Fama,
where the jury was permitted to choose between intentional and depraved-indifference murder. On the one hand, since Guzman fatally stabbed Menzies by plunging a knife into him at least two times, the jury could have concluded that this was consonant with an intent to kill. On the other hand, the facts have a
Sanchez-like
ring to them to justify the jury’s finding of depraved-indifference murder: There was sufficient evidence that Guzman instigated a fight because of the manner in which Menzies had looked at him; that Guzman hastily stabbed Menzies in apparent self-defense; that there was no prior relationship between them; that Guzman had no motive — other than the look — to kill Menzies; and that the stabbing was impulsive in nature, without regard to its consequences, committed essentially to fend off Menzies. Under this view of the evidence, unlike
Policano,
the defendant, even if “recklessly creating a grave risk of death,” was not “creating a virtual certainty of death born of an intent to kill.”
Policano,
Unfortunately, resolution of Guzman’s insufficiency claim is not that simple because analysis of the New York Court of Appeals recent
per curiam
decision in
People v. Suarez,
c. The Law at the time of Conviction and at the time of Appellate Review
i. People v. Suarez
Suarez
is a curious
per curiam
since it spawned a joint concurring opinion by three of the seven judges of the court, a separate concurring opinion by another judge, and a part concurring, part dissenting opinion by yet another judge, befitting of the effort by the court to serve a quietus to the ongoing debate, reflected in its 4-3 decisions in
Sanchez
and
People v. Regis
Concerned that “[t]he proliferation of the use of depraved indifference murder as a fallback theory under which to charge intentional killers reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of the depraved indifference murder statute,” and noting that “depraved indifference murder properly applies only to a small, and finite, category of cases where the conduct is at least as morally reprehensible as intentional murder[,]” the
per curiam
opinion reversed the depraved murder convictions in the two cases before
it
— People
v. Suarez
and
People v. McPherson
— and, in the process, decided “for now and the future — to revisit what is unique and distinctive about that crime as defined by the Legislature.”
Suarez,
The court began by noting that although the taking of the life of another “can itself, in a sense, be considered a ‘depraved’ act,” it “does not, however, turn every killing into depraved indifference murder as proscribed by the Penal Law.” Id. at 726. Rather,
[t]o constitute depraved indifference, the defendant’s conduct must be so wanton, so deficient in a moral sense of concern, so devoid of regard for the life or lives of others, and so blameworthy as to warrant the same criminal liability as that which the law imposes upon a person who intentionally causes the death of another. The vast majority of killings simply do not meet this standard. They are suitably punished by statutes defining intentional murder or manslaughter in the first or second degree or criminally negligent homicide.
Id.
at 728 (internal citations and quotations omitted). Thus, as the court explained, “someone who intends to cause serious physical injury does not commit depraved indifference murder because the intended victim dies[,]”
id.;
rather, he “is guilty only of manslaughter in the first degree. Otherwise, every intentional manslaughter would also establish depraved indifference murder — a result plainly at odds with the discrete classifications set forth in the statute.”
Id.
at 728. Consequently, “a one-on-one shooting or knifing (or similar killing) can almost never qualify as depraved indifference murder.”
Id.
(quoting
People v. Payne,
The court noted but two fact patterns that have recurred over the past four decades since the revisions to New York’s Penal Code where “[a] defendant may be convicted of depraved indifference murder when but a single person is endangered.” Id.
First, when the defendant intends neither to seriously injure, nor to kill, but nevertheless abandons a helpless and vulnerable victim in circumstances where the victim is highly likely to die, the defendant’s utter callousness to the victim’s mortal plight-arising from a situation created by the defendant-properly establishes depraved indifference murder. Thus, in
People v. Kibbe
[,
Second, although we have reversed depraved indifference murder convictions in most cases involving isolated attacks, we have held that the crime is nevertheless established when a defendant-acting with a conscious objective not to kill but to harm-engages in torture or a brutal, prolonged and ultimately fatal course of conduct against a particularly vulnerable victim. When a defendant’s actions serve to intensify or prolong a victim’s suffering, they bespeak a level of cruelty that establishes the depravity mandated by statute. Thus, in
People v. Poplis
[,
Both of these categories of cases reflect wanton cruelty, brutality or callousness directed against a particularly vulnerable victim, combined with utter indifference to the life or safety of the helpless target of the perpetrator’s inexcusable acts. We have also upheld convictions for depraved indifference murder in a few other extraordinary cases involving conduct that endangered only one person, where the evidence showed not just recklessness, but depraved indifference to human life (see
e.g. People v. Roe,
Id. at 728-30. The court concluded that “[w]here comparable facts are not shown ... a jury is foreclosed, as a matter of law, from considering a depraved indifference murder charge whenever death is the result of a one-on-one confrontation.” Id. at 730.
The court believed that this restrictive view of depraved-indifference murder was consistent with its holding in
Register
that the depraved-indifference murder statute “requires in addition not only that the conduct which results in death present a grave risk of death but that it also occur ‘[u]nder circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life.’ ”
Id.
at 731 (quoting
Register,
In
Register,
where the court held that intoxication is not a defense to depraved-indifference murder, it explained that the additional requirement, “[i]f it states an element of the crime at all, ... is not an element in the traditional sense but rather a definition of the factual setting in which the risk creating' conduct must occur— objective circumstances which are not subject to being negatived by evidence of defendant’s intoxication[,]”
Register,
In
Suarez,
however, the court chose to
“depart slightly
from the
Register
formulation” to “make clear that the additional requirement of depraved indifference has meaning independent of the gravity of the risk[,]”
Suarez,
In sum, whether a small, finite or rare category, depraved indifference murder should not be routinely charged to a jury. Focus on the three statutory factors that distinguish depraved indifference murder — ‘circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life,’ recklessness and ‘a grave risk of death to another person’ — -should again make clear that the statute properly applies only to the unusual ease.
Id. at 731-32. In light of the explication in Suarez of the proper application of depraved-indifference murder, Guzman’s conviction would have to be reversed if this were the applicable law governing the resolution of his habeas petition since the two cases which were reversed in Suarez are conceptually indistinguishable from the present case, each involving, as here, a one-on-one knifing devoid of the unusual circumstances that would warrant a depraved-indifference murder conviction: In People v. Suarez, the defendant had stabbed his girlfriend three times — in the throat, chest and abdomen — and the victim bled to death; the defendant asserted a justification defense, alleging that the victim had lunged at him with a knife and testified that he did not intend to kill her. The court held that this “did not, as a matter of law, constitute depraved indifference murder” because “[w]hether [defendant] intended to kill her or merely to cause her serious injury — and either of these findings, supported by sufficient evidence, might have been properly made by the jury — defendant’s actions in no way reflected a depraved indifference to her fate.” Id. at 732. In People v. McPherson, the defendant stabbed the father of her- child once in the chest following an argument over child support; the defendant also asserted a justification defense, alleging that the victim had raised his hand as if to hit her. The court simply noted that although “defendant’s conduct may have reflected recklessness, [it] did not fall within the small, and finite, category of cases evidencing utter depravity, uncommon brutality and inhumane cruelty required for depraved indifference murder[,]” id.; that is, the evidence supported manslaughter but not depraved-indifference murder.
The Court gleans from its reading of the three additional opinions in
Suarez
that Guzman’s conviction would have to be reversed based on the applicable law at the time the Appellate Division affirmed the
In their joint concurrence, Judges G.B. Smith, Rosenblatt and R.S. Smith viewed the court’s earlier decisions in
Register
and
Sanchez,
“which was based in significant part on
Register,”
to have given “too expansive a definition to depraved indifference murder[,]” and opined that the court “properly limited the force of those decisions in
People v. Hafeez
(
The “other recent decisions” obviously refer to the three judges’ references in their joint concurring opinion to Hafeez and Gonzalez, each of which was decided after Sanchez, but before Guzman’s conviction was affirmed by the Appellate Division, and to Payne, which was decided after leave to appeal was denied but before the conviction became final. 8
In her separate concurring opinion, Judge Read concurred with the result in
People v. Suarez
on “constraint” of the court’s decision in
Payne,
and concurred with the result in
People v. McPherson
on “constraint” of
Hafeez
and
Payne, Suarez,
Judge Graffeo concurred in
McPherson
and dissented in
Suarez,
and opined that the majority’s decision “deviate[d] from [the court’s] precedent in
Sanchez, Register,
and other cases decided by this Court,” signaling “a fundamental shift in our homicide jurisprudence.”
Suarez,
Since in their joint concurring opinion the three judges viewed Hafeez, Gonzalez and Payne as limiting the force of Register and Sanchez, the Court assumes that they would conclude that those three cases reflect the applicable law at the time when Guzman’s case was on direct review; so too, presumably, would Judge Read, based upon her begrudging reliance on Hafeez and Payne in her concurring opinion — • compelling her to conclude on constraint of those decisions that neither Suarez’s nor McPherson’s conduct could support a conviction for depraved-indifference murder. As explained below, the Court’s view of Hafeez, Gonzalez and Payne leads it to conclude that they would require the granting of Guzman’s habeas petition if the law at the time of direct review were determinant.
ii. Hafeez, Gonzalez and Payne
In
Hafeez,
the defendant was found guilty of depraved-indifference murder under an accomplice theory of liability for aiding and abetting his codefendant’s revenge killing. The codefendant “plotted his revenge for months in advance and effectuated his plan on the night of the stabbing by a scheme intended to place the victim in a position where he would be vulnerable to attack.”
Hafeez,
The court noted that under
Register,
in order to qualify for depraved-indifference murder, the People had to show “that defendant’s acts were ‘imminently dangerous and presented a very high risk of death to others.’ ”
Id.
at 259,
Judge Read, in dissent, disagreed that there was no rational view of the case to support depraved indifference murder since there was evidence the jury could have credited that defendant and the code-fendant never intended to kill the victim, but simply “lured [him] out of a bar ... to beat him” up.
Id.
at 261,
In a brief concurring opinion, Judge Rosenblatt' “applaud[ed]” the majority’s opinion for “limiting
Sanchez
by properly rejecting the incongruous notion that an intentional killing can reflect depraved indifference,” noting that it is “reassuring, therefore, that there are now six Judges of this Court who recognize that even under
Sanchez
(with whom I have disagreed) depraved indifference murder does have its limits.”
Id.
at 260,
In
Gonzalez,
the court similarly recast
Sanchez
when it unanimously upheld the defendant’s conviction for intentional murder where he shot the victim in a barbershop twice before the victim fell to the floor, and a total of eight more times, collectively, in the head and back as the victim lay prone on the floor, after which he waived his gun at the only eyewitness— the barber — and warned him not to say anything, before the defendant walked out the door. The court explained that in
Sanchez
the defendant created a “heightened risk of unintended injury” by “flr[ing] into an area where children were playing,”
Gonzalez,
The court drew the same distinction in
Payne
in reversing a depraved-indifference murder conviction where there was a point-blank shooting after the victim did not heed the defendant’s advice never to communicate with defendant’s girlfriend.
See Payne,
Notably, in
Suarez,
the
per curiam
opinion reinforced the distinction which it drew in
Gonzalez
and
Payne
that the depraved-indifference murder was upheld in
Sanchez
“because ‘others were endangered.’ ”
Suarez,
Based on its reading of Hafeez, Gonzalez and Payne, the Court would be compelled to grant Guzman’s habeas petition if the law applicable during direct review were controlling. 10 Plainly, there are no other circumstances, as envisioned under those cases, to allow the Court to conclude that this one-on-one knifing could be considered under any view of the evidence as a depraved-indifference murder; it does not fall within the two narrow lines of exceptional cases collated by the court in Suarez, and, unlike Sanchez and like Gonzalez, the only person actually endangered was the victim. Thus, under this view of the law, the Appellate Division’s application of Jackson v. Virginia would, as a matter of law, have been objectively unreasonable because, under any reasonable view of the case, there was insufficient evidence to support its finding that the petitioner was guilty of depraved-indifference murder. 11
However, the Court would hold otherwise if the applicable law were to date back to the time of conviction in 2000 because it was not until
Hafeez, Gonzalez
and
Payne
that the New York Court of Appeals limited the force of
Register,
which was the applicable law at the time of Guzman’s trial. Under
Register,
it was not improper for the trial court to have permitted the jury- to decide whether Guzman could be convicted of depraved-indifference murder since, although the law admittedly required, even at that time, “an objective assessment of the degree of risk presented by [the] defendant’s reckless conduct,”
Register,
d. Retroactivity of New York Law
The Court’s foray into New York law does not stop with ascertaining the law at
Under New York law, once a conviction has become final, a new rule will not be retroactively applied “absent manifest injustice.”
People v. Pepper,
However, whether
Hafeez, Gonzalez
and
Payne
is to be retroactively applied is governed by evaluating three factors applicable to new rules that are established during direct review.
See People v. Hannigan,
Although the proper inquiry, therefore, “is to determine whether the conviction was obtained in violation of the defendant’s rights as defined by the law at the time of the conviction or by present law which is properly applied to it under recognized principles of retroactivity[,]”
People v. Catalanotte,
The holding in
Hill
is simply that a conviction cannot stand if an element of the crime at the time of trial has not been
Do
Suarez,
as well as
Hafeez, Gonzalez
and
Payne,
represent cases more akin to
Hill
and
Fiore,
where the elements of a crime are clarified subsequent to conviction, or are they more like cases signaling “a fundamental shift in [the State’s] homicide jurisprudence” — which is how Judge Graffeo referred to the
per curiam
opinion in
Suarez? Suarez,
At least five of the judges of the Court of Appeals would view
Suarez
as creating new law; Judge Graffeo has explicitly so stated, the three-judge concurrence considers
Register
and
Sanchez
as having been overruled, and Judge Read’s concurrence suggests that she would agree. Conceptually, it is difficult to conclude that they would view
Hafeez, Gonzalez
and
Payne
in a significantly different light. The Court reads those cases as holding that cases like Guzman’s can never as a matter of law be charged as depraved-indifference murder — and hence never can be submitted to a jury — a significant change in the law compared to this Court’s view of the law as of the time of Guzman’s conviction. All that
Suarez
did by “makfing] clear that ... depraved indifference has meaning independent of the gravity of the risk,” was to reinforce that “the statute properly applies only to the unusual case,”
Suarez,
As for Suarez, it cannot be said that it would be manifestly unjust if it were not applied retroactively to the time of conviction; even if the jury had been given the choice of first-degree murder or first-degree manslaughter, it is certainly not unjust, let alone manifestly unjust, to keep a murderer in jail. As for Hafeez, Gonzalez and Payne, the analysis of the three factors applicable to cases under direct review should not produce a different retro-activity result.
In considering these factors, “the extent of the reliance and the nature of the burden on the administration of justice are of substantial significance only when the answer to the retroactivity question is not to be found in the purpose of the new rule itself.”
Hill,
This, however, is not the end of the case. Since AEDPA deference applies, the Court must also decide whether the failure to retroactively apply a new criminal rule of state law would violate clearly established Supreme Court law.
e. Relevant Supreme Court Law
The Supreme Court has never addressed this issue. In
Griffith v. Kentucky, 479
U.S. 314,
The failure of the Supreme Court to state that its holding applies
only
to new
constitutional
rules has created some confusion. For example, some federal courts have applied
Griffith
to new constructions of federal criminal statutes.
See, e.g., United States v. Mauldin,
Moreover, the New York Court of Appeals has construed
Griffith
as not requiring it to apply new rules of state law retroactively to cases pending on direct review. Thus, in
People v. Mitchell,
the court adhered to its three-factor retroac-tivity rule under
Pepper,
commenting, in rejecting the defendant’s position that it was bound by
Griffith:
“If no Federal constitutional principles are involved ... the question of retroactivity is one of State law. The Supreme Court has no concern with the uniformity of our law and if only a local question is presented, the state courts generally have the authority to determine the retroactivity of their own deci
In
Fiore,
however, the Supreme Court granted
certiorari
in part “to decide when, or whether, the Federal Due Process Clause requires a State to apply a new interpretation of a state criminal statute retroactively to cases on collateral review.”
Since there is no Supreme Court holding addressing the issue of whether the states must retroactively apply a new criminal rule of state law, it cannot be concluded under AEDPA that the Appellate Division’s rejection of Guzman’s insufficiency claim was contrary to clearly established Supreme Court precedent.
See McKinney v. Artuz,
B. Juror Instructions
In his claim regarding juror instructions, Guzman argues that the trial court unfairly (1) marshaled the evidence, (2) refused to instruct the jury in regard to flight and (3) refused to provide the pattern jury instruction on impeachment by bias and prejudice. In reviewing an allegedly improper jury charge, the Court must determine “whether the ailing instruction by itself so infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process.”
Cupp v. Naughten,
1. Marshaling of Identification Evidence
Viewing the trial court’s instructions as a whole, the trial court’s marshaling of the evidence did not rise to a due process violation. The trial court both outlined the testimony that the prosecution elicited in regard to the identification of Guzman as the stabber and noted the defense’s arguments about the flaws in the prosecution’s case; furthermore, the trial court clearly stated that the jury were “the sole judges” of whether Guzman was the perpetrator, Tr. at 589, repeatedly reminded the jury that Guzman was presumed innocent, and never opined about its view of the evidence.
See Brown v. Greiner,
2. Flight
Guzman argues that the trial court, which informed the jury that Guzman’s flight was further evidence of his guilt, should have reminded the jury that
3. Impeachment
There was no error in the trial court’s failure to provide the requested pattern-jury instruction on impeachment because the trial court gave the jury an impeachment instruction that did not differ from the requested instruction in any material manner.
C. Fourth Amendment
In
Stone v. Powell,
New York has a corrective procedure for Fourth Amendment violations, which is facially adequate. See id. at 70 n. 1. Indeed, Guzman availed himself of that procedure by making a motion to suppress, which the trial court denied after a hearing, and by appealing that denial. Further, having reviewed the record, the Court concludes that there was no unconscionable breakdown in, the underlying process. Guzman’s Fourth Amendment claim for habeas relief is, therefore, barred by Stone.
D. Identification
With respect to his identification claim, Guzman contends that the Due Process Clause required the trial court to exclude Michael Huayamave’s testimony pertaining to his identification of Guzman as the stabber; Guzman argues that the showup at which Huayamave identified Guzman was suggestive. Due process requires that testimony from an eyewitness identifying the witness as the perpetrator of a crime be “reliable.”
Raheem v. Kelly,
Based on its review of the record, the Court concludes that Huayamave’s identification was sufficiently reliable: He witnessed the entire duration of the stabbing, the showup occurred within a short time of the commission of the crime and he expressed no hesitation in his identification.
See, e.g., United States v. Mohammed,
E. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
Under
Strickland v. Washington,
1. VCCR
Article 36(l)(b) of the Vienna Convention provides that when “a national of [another nation] is arrested or committed to prison or to custody pending trial or is detained in any other manner[,]” the United States upon request “shall, without delay, inform the consular post of [that nation].” Circuit courts, however, have held that a violation is neither a basis to dismiss an indictment,
see, e.g., United States v. De La Pava,
2. Constitutionality of Depraved-Indifference Murder
Guzman’s claim based on his counsel’s failure to argue that the depraved indifference statute was unconstitutionally vague is similarly without merit. Courts have repeatedly upheld the constitutionality of the statute.
See, e.g., Mannix v. Phillips,
CONCLUSION
The petition is denied, but a certificate of appealability is issued on Guzman’s insufficiency claim, and counsel will be assigned forthwith to protect Guzman’s right to file a Notice of Appeal. Unfortunately, unlike the Second Circuit, which has the power to certify issues of New York law to the New York Court of Appeals,
see
N.Y. Court Rules, Court of Appeals, § 500.17(a); Second Circuit Local Rule § 0.27, district courts in this circuit have no choice but to be in the business of deciding difficult state law issues.
See Spargo v. New York State Comm’n on Judicial Conduct,
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The trial court instructed the jury that if it found the defendant guilty of either intentional murder or depraved-indifference murder it was not to consider the other count. See Tr. at 604. Nonetheless, the jury returned a verdict of not guilty with respect to intentional murder. See Tr. at 631-32.
. Guzman's application for leave to appeal was denied on September 24, 2004; thereafter, he moved for reargument, which was denied on February 9, 2005.
See People v. Guzman,
. The decision does not contain page numbers.
. Although the recitation of facts includes only those facts necessary to present the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, the Court notes that Menzies’s girlfriend's sister and two other eyewitnesses also testified as to what transpired during the fight. Menzies’s girlfriend's sister’s testimony mirrored his girlfriend’s testimony. One of the other eyewitnesses, Michael Huayamave ("Huayamave”), testified that he saw Guzman throw a bike at Menzies, who tried to throw it back towards Guzman but missed; Guzman and another individual then threw Menzies to the ground and Guzman then stabbed Menzies while the other individual punched Menzies. The other eyewitness, Nestor Moncayo, testified that he observed Guzman stab Menzies as Menzies was holding a bike.
. Prior to 1965, depraved-indifference murder "embracefd] those cases only where the act resulting in death is such as to imperil indiscriminately the lives of
many persons,
without being aimed at any one in particular[.]”
Darry
v.
People,
. The New York Court of Appeals rejected Tankleffs insufficiency claim as "either merit-less or unpreserved."
Tankleff,
. In Register, the court, after rejecting the intoxication defense, upheld a depraved-indifference murder conviction where the defendant shot and killed one man and seriously injured two others in a packed barroom after a series of arguments with patrons; the person he killed was simply walking by the defendant and there was no apparent reason why the defendant shot him.
. Sanchez was decided on July 9, 2002. Since leave to appeal was denied on September 24, 2004, Guzman's conviction became final on December 24, 2004, when die 90-day period to file a petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court expired. See Sup.Ct. R. 13. In between, Hafeez was decided on June 10, 2003 (one year before the Appellate Division denied Guzman's insufficiency claim on June 28, 2004); Gonzalez was decided on March 24, 2004 (three months before the Appellate Division's decision); Payne was decided on October 19, 2004 (one month after leave to appeal was denied).
. In her dissent in
Suarez,
Judge Graffeo takes exception to "[t]he majority[’s] attempt[] to reconcile its decision with the principles articulated in
Sanchez
by stating that the depraved indifference murder conviction in that case was upheld only because others were endangered,”
Suarez,
. Even if the Court were to assume that Guzman’s conviction became final when the Court of Appeals denied leave to appeal, rather than after the 90-day
certiorari
period expired (an issue the Court need not reach), it would nevertheless be appropriate to consider
Payne
since it did not create new law but simply applied new facts to the articulation of die law under
Hafeez
and
Gonzalez. See Poli-cano,
.In light of the absence of any evidence to support depraved-indifference murder, the Appellate Division's determination could not be viewed as simply erroneous or incorrect. To do so under the facts of this case would take the "increment [of incorrectness beyond error],” which would limit
habeas
relief "to state court decisions so far off the mark as to suggest judicial incompetence.”
Eze v. Sen-kowski,
. The Court notes that in
Policano,
in citing to cases decided after Policano's trial because they explained and reaffirmed the principles of New York law, the circuit court referred to them as "clearly established.”
Policano,
