Juane T. KENNELL, Petitioner-Appellant v. Dave DORMIRE, Respondent-Appellee
No. 16-2887
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: September 20, 2017. Filed: October 17, 2017.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied December 12, 2017
871 F.3d 637
Caroline Marie Coulter, Assistant Attorney General, Stephen David Hawke, Assistant Attorney General, Attorney General‘s Office, Jefferson City, MO, Katharine Anne Dolin, Assistant Attorney General, Jefferson City, MO, for Respondent-Appellee.
Juane T. Kennell, Jefferson City Correctional Center, Jefferson City, MO, Pro Se.
Before LOKEN, ARNOLD, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
Some years ago, three men armed with guns stopped near the house of one Freddie Chew where Chew, Jeffrey Shockley, and Robert Stewart were gathered. A shootout erupted, resulting in Chew‘s death. Shockley and Stewart escaped and later identified Juane Kennell and Christopher White as two of the three attackers. Kennell and White were tried separately in Missouri state court on charges of first-degree murder, first-degree assault, and armed criminal action, and both were convicted, thanks in large part, probably, to testimony from Shockley and Stewart. After the Missouri state courts upheld their convictions on direct and collateral review, Kennell and White separately petitioned for habeas corpus relief in federal court under
Kennell first argues that the state violated Brady when it withheld evidence of an agreement between the state and Shockley requiring Shockley to testify against Kennell and White in exchange for leniency on pending drug and weapons charges that Shockley was facing. As evidence of this agreement, Kennell produced an internal public-defender form supposedly drafted by Kennell‘s first counsel, who noted that he had learned that Shockley‘s counsel had “negotiated a deal for Jeff Shockley to testify against [Kennell] ... as well as possibly another defendant, Christopher White.” Kennell also relies on notes drafted by Shockley‘s counsel regarding a meeting that he had with the prosecutor that stated that the prosecutor had hinted at a “nolle,” or dismissal, of charges. He also called the district court‘s attention to unsigned plea agreements or offers.
Kennell does not contend that Shockley and the state entered into a written agreement, and the district court found there was no oral agreement, either tacit or otherwise. The district court credited the testimony of Kennell‘s first counsel and Shockley‘s counsel that the notation in the conflict form was simply incorrect, perhaps an erroneous conclusion based on negotiations to reach a deal that was never concluded. Shockley‘s counsel also represented to the sentencing court in Shockley‘s case that there existed no quid pro quo or secret deal for Shockley‘s testimony against Kennell and White; in fact, neither he nor Shockley mentioned any agreement at Shockley‘s sentencing. Shockley and the prosecutor in his case, moreover, testified that there was no agreement, and the district court explicitly found them both credible on that point. Both Shockley‘s attorney and the prosecutor also testified that Shockley would have likely received probation in any case as a matter of course in light of his youth and unremarkable criminal history. In addition, the state never dismissed the charges after Shockley testified against Kennell and White; and the state ultimately recommended that Shockley‘s sentence be essentially consistent with the sentence that it had proposed in its first plea offer to Shockley, which did not require his testimony against anyone. Finally, the court credited Shockley‘s and his attorney‘s testimony that they merely hoped that Shockley‘s cooperation would positively influence his sentence. On this abundant record, we cannot say that the district court clearly erred in finding that there was no agreement that the government could have failed to disclose. Cf. White, 853 F.3d at 491.
Kennell‘s second Brady argument is that the state should have disclosed that it had paid Shockley around two thousand dollars to put him up in a hotel for about a week and then to move him and his mother
Kennell next maintains that the state should have disclosed that Shockley had agreed to testify against his own brother in an unrelated case because it showed Shockley‘s willingness to testify against others to advance his personal interests. But as the district court found, on a sufficient record, there is no indication that Shockley was willing to testify against his brother to receive a benefit from the state. We therefore cannot say that the district court clearly erred in finding that no agreement with the state existed, so we discern no Brady violation here.
The next set of circumstances on which Kennell stakes his Brady claim involves the gun that Shockley used during the shootout. Shockley testified at Kennell‘s trial that he disposed of the gun on the day of the shootout and never retrieved it. In fact, though, about ten days after the shootout, police found the gun in a car that Shockley, then seventeen, was driving. Shockley and Stewart, who was also in the car, were charged with minor drug offenses as a result, while another passenger was charged with possessing the gun. Kennell argues that the state suppressed information relating to the recovery of Shockley‘s gun by the police, and, had he known about this information at trial, he could have impeached Shockley with it. He also maintains that the state should have corrected Shockley‘s false testimony, and, since it did not, his conviction rested on fabricated evidence. The district court, after intimating that Kennell might have procedurally defaulted any claims involving Shockley‘s disposition of the gun by not raising them in his state proceedings, found against Kennell on the merits. We do not consider the merits because, even assuming that the certificate of appealability reaches claims of fabricated evidence, which is far from clear in this case, we are convinced that Kennell defaulted any claims that he may have had involving Shockley‘s testimony about the gun.
Though petitioners seeking habeas relief must fairly present the substance of their claims to the state court to avoid defaulting them, Wemark v. Iowa, 322 F.3d 1018, 1020-21 (8th Cir. 2003), a showing of cause and prejudice can excuse a procedural default and open the door to our review. Wooten v. Norris, 578 F.3d 767, 777 (8th Cir. 2009). Cause typically turns on whether some objective circumstance external to the defense impeded counsel from raising the claim. See Cagle v. Norris, 474 F.3d 1090, 1099 (8th Cir. 2007).
Kennell argues that cause exists here because he did not learn of the circumstances surrounding the recovery of the gun until his state proceedings had concluded. Although the district court stopped short of holding that Kennell procedurally defaulted his claims regarding the gun, it explicitly found, after a careful review of the record, that the state did not fail to disclose Shockley‘s arrest stemming from the car incident or the fact that the gun seized from the car incident had been
Kennell‘s final Brady argument is that the state suppressed evidence of agreements it had with Shockley and Stewart that they would testify against Kennell in exchange for leniency on the drug charges stemming from the stop of the car ten days after the shootout. The district court found, after reviewing the record and observing the demeanor of the witnesses, that no such agreements existed. The district court reviewed certain files in camera and determined that, within just a few days of the arrests, the state declined to prosecute Shockley because of a lack of “sufficient value” and Stewart because of an “insufficient connection.” The district court concluded that Kennell had provided no evidence suggesting that the state‘s decision not to prosecute teenagers with insignificant criminal histories for possessing a small amount of drugs was unusual. We see no clear error with that conclusion, especially when we consider that the charges were dropped more than a year before Shockley or Stewart testified against Kennell at trial. Because Kennell has failed to show that the district court clearly erred in finding that no agreement existed, the state did not suppress any information in violation of Brady.
We also reject Kennell‘s argument that the district court failed to consider the cumulative effect of the suppression of Brady materials. Not only does this argument contradict the district court‘s express statements to the contrary, but there was only one arguable instance of the suppression of Brady material (the relocation payments), and since the alleged suppression of that information does not undermine confidence in the verdict, Kennell‘s Brady claims necessarily fail.
Affirmed.
