OPINION
Marvallous Keene, an Ohio death row inmate, appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Two issues were certified for appeal: (1) whether Keene was denied equal protection when the prosecutor allegedly selectively prosecuted him because he is African-American; and (2) whether his due process rights were violated when a pretrial identification procured by allegedly unduly suggestive procedures was admitted into evidence at trial. We аffirm the district court’s denial of Keene’s habeas petition.
BACKGROUND
In 1992, Keene went on a crime spree and committed multiple homicides. The, details of his crime spree can be found at.
State v. Keene,
In 2000, Keene filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Hе raised 30 claims of constitutional error, but the magistrate judge reported that his arguments lacked merit and that his petition should be denied. In 2005, the district court overruled Keene’s objections and adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendations.
ANALYSIS
We review de novo the district court’s denial of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Cone v. Bell,
Equal Protection Claim
Keene first argues that his equal protection rights were violated because the prosecutor for Montgomery County, Ohio, sought the death penalty against him because he is African-American. In support of this argument, he asserts that African-Americans constitutе 17 percent of the county’s population but account for 64 percent of capital indictments. He points to a “factually similar aggravated murder” case in which the prosecutor did not seek the death penalty against three white males. He argues thаt the other adult defendant in this case, Heather Matthews, who is a white female, was similarly situated to him but was not charged with capital specifications. The Ohio Supreme Court denied Keene relief on this claim because it found that there was no evidence that similаrly-situated defendants could have been prosecuted but were not.
Keene,
The Ohio Supreme Court stated that Keene’s argument regarding the racial disparity:
appears to rest on a presumption that, if seventeen percent of the county’s population is black, then blacks must have committed about seventeen (or, at any rate, substantially less than sixty-four) percent of potentially capital crimes. Appellant argues that even to question that presumption would constitute forbidden racial stereotyping. However, that cannot be correct, for the Armstrong court itself rejected a presumption “that people of all races commit all types of crimes.”
Keene,
Keene’s argument that the prosecutor did not seek thе death penalty against similarly-situated white defendants has no merit. In addition to showing a discriminatory purpose, an equal protection claimant must show that a prosecutorial policy had a discriminatory effect.
Armstrong,
Three white men, Elofskey, Howe, and Poison, robbed and murdered two men under the guise of providing sexual favors in exchange for money.
State v. Howe,
Keene argues that his co-defendant, Matthews, is similarly situated to him and the prosecutor’s decision not to seek the death penalty against her shows the prosecutor’s racial bias. However, Mathews is not similarly situated because, unlike Keene, she was not the triggerman for any of the murders.
Keene,
Eyewitness Testimony
Keene argues that his due process rights were violated when a pretrial identification procured by unduly suggestive procedures was admitted into evidence аt trial. From two sheets of police photographs, Kathie Henderson identified Keene as the man who stole her car from her at gunpoint. She testified that she did not recall giving a description of the man to the police. She later testified that she told the pоlice that the man “had a hairstyle like the boy in the movies — the box, squared ham, you know.” She picked Keene from the photo sheets but no other person in the photo sheets had a box haircut.
The Ohio Supreme Court and the district court found that even if the identification procedure was unduly suggestive, any error was harmless. We agree. The admission of the pretrial identification did not violate clearly established Federal law. “The Supreme Court has held that an identification violates a defendant’s right to due process where the identification procedure was so unnecessarily suggestive as to run the risk of irreparable mistaken identification.”
Howard v. Bouchard,
Even if the identification was unduly suggestive, it was reliable under the totality of the сircumstances. First, Henderson had ample opportunity to view Keene at the initial observation. We are more likely to find an identification reliable when the witness was able to view the assailant with a heightened degree of attention, as compared with disinterеsted bystanders or casual observers.
See Haliym v. Mitchell,
Moreovеr, taking into consideration other circumstances, Henderson’s identification is reliable because there is overwhelming evidence that Keene accosted Henderson at the gas station and stole her car. Keene confessed to stealing a cаr at the gas station on the morning in question.
Keene,
AFFIRMED.
