Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-azd-2_13-cv-02278/USCOURTS-azd-2_13-cv-02278-2/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 530
Nature of Suit: Prisoner Petitions - Habeas Corpus
Cause of Action: 28:2254 Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus (State)

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WO

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

Alfred Copeland,

Petitioner,

v. 

David Shinn, et al.,

Respondents.

No. CV-13-02278-PHX-JJT

ORDER 

At issue is whether Petitioner has sufficiently established his actual innocence of 

Counts 3 and 6 of the Indictment—which correspond to Grounds 1 and 2 of his Habeas 

Corpus Petition. Grounds 1 and 2 allege ineffective assistance of trial counsel (IAC) 

relating to Counts 3 and 6. However, Petitioner’s IAC claims are defaulted and barred 

unless the Court concludes that Petitioner has shown his actual innocence of Counts 3 and 

6. For the following reasons, the Court concludes that he has not. 

I. BACKGROUND

In June 2015, Judge Rosenblatt ordered an evidentiary hearing in this matter to 

determine whether Petitioner could sufficiently establish his innocence of Counts 3 and 6 

to pass through the Schlup “gateway” and receive substantive consideration of his IAC 

claims. (Doc. 28.) Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298 (1995). On January 23, 2020, this Court 

vacated the evidentiary hearing upon the Parties’ joint request and ordered simultaneous 

briefing on whether Petitioner has met his burden of proving actual innocence under 

Schlup. (Doc. 143.) 

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The Court has reviewed the Parties’ briefs and all of the evidence. It sets forth the 

relevant factual and procedural history below. 

A. Petitioner’s Trial

In 2002, a jury convicted Petitioner of 11 counts of sexual misconduct, including 

Count 3 (sexual conduct with a minor) and Count 6 (incest). (Doc. 15–4 at 140–43.) LP, 

Petitioner’s granddaughter, was the victim of Count 3, and DP, Petitioner’s daughter, was 

the victim of Count 6.1 Specifically, Count 3 charged Petitioner with intentionally or 

knowingly engaging in sexual intercourse or oral sexual contact with LP while she was 

under 15 years old between February 1, 2001 and August 24, 2001. (Doc. 1 at 17–18.) 

Count 6 charged Petitioner with committing incest with DP between January 1, 2001 and 

August 24, 2001. (Doc. 1 at 18–19.) 

Various witnesses testified against Petitioner and described his charged and 

uncharged sexual conduct over the span of decades. Several members of his family 

testified, including LP, DP, Tracy Beauchamp (Petitioner’s daughter), Carla Grant 

(Petitioner’s stepdaughter), Kathy Underwood (Petitioner’s stepdaughter), Ernest 

Copeland (Petitioner’s son), and KC (Petitioner’s grandson). (Doc. 15–2, 15–3, 15–4.)

Other witnesses testified for the State, including child forensic interviewer Wendy Dutton, 

pediatrician Dr. Catherine Coffman, and Phoenix Police Detective Jerry Barker.

(Doc. 15-2, 15–4.)

1. Trial Evidence proving Count 3.

LP testified that she did not remember or did not know the answer to several 

questions regarding Petitioner. She never specifically testified that Petitioner had sexual 

intercourse or oral sexual contact with her. (Doc. 15–2 at 139, 146–47). However, LP 

testified that Petitioner touched her on her “private.” (Doc. 15–2 at 135.) Specifically, LP 

testified that Petitioner touched her in the living room while she was sleeping. (Doc. 15–2 

at 137.) She testified there were no other times that Petitioner touched her on her private. 

1 Count 6 corresponds to Petitioner’s IAC claim in Ground 1 of his habeas petition. 

(Doc. 28 at 10.) Count 3 corresponds to his IAC claim in Ground 2. (Doc. 28 at 13.) 

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(Doc. 15–2 at 138.) LP also testified that Petitioner pinched her chest but could not 

remember if anything ever happened to the inside of her private. (Doc. 15–2 at 140.) 

Finally, she testified that she was afraid of Petitioner but was not afraid of other family 

members, and that other family members had not done anything to her private areas but 

she was unsure whether Petitioner had. (Doc. 15–2 at 144–46.) 

LP did not remember her interviews with forensic interviewer Wendy Dutton, but 

Dutton testified at trial regarding those interviews. (Doc. 15–2 at 159.) LP did not disclose 

abuse during the first interview, but she did so disclose during the second interview six 

months later. (Doc. 15–2 at 175.) During the second interview LP described various acts 

by Petitioner, including: (1) touching her in places he was not supposed to, (2) locking her 

in his room, (3) touching her “fish,” (4) hurting and pinching her, (5) touching her under 

her clothes, and (6) touching her in DP’s room. (Doc. 107, Ex. F; Doc. 112.) This interview 

was played for the jury at trial. (Doc. 15–2 at 177.)

Dr. Coffman, a pediatrician who specializes in child abuse evaluations, testified 

regarding her August 30, 2001 evaluation of LP. (Doc. 15–3 at 4.) Dr. Coffman testified 

that LP’s hymen was abnormal and the missing and narrowed hymenal tissue indicated that 

LP’s vaginal canal had been repeatedly penetrated. (Doc. 15–3 at 13–20.) These findings 

were consistent with sexual abuse. (Doc. 15–3 at 20.) Dr. Coffman also rejected the 

possibility that LP’s abnormal hymen was caused by an accidental injury. (Doc. 15–3 at 

17–19.) 

KC and Cathy Underwood both testified about an incident where LP went missing 

from home for some amount of time. (Doc. 15–2 at 102, Doc. 15–3 at 83.) KC testified that 

two weeks before Petitioner was arrested, LP could not be located after school and 

members of the family went looking for her. (Doc. 15–2 at 102–05.) They called her name 

throughout the house but could not find her for 30 minutes according to KC. KC found her 

in Petitioner’s bedroom after he knocked on Petitioner’s bedroom door and called his name 

repeatedly. It took Petitioner five minutes to open the door, and when he did KC saw LP

laying on his bed staring at the ceiling. Cathy Underwood described the incident similarly, 

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except she testified that they looked for LP for over two hours and when Petitioner opened 

the door he was in his underwear. (Doc. 15–2 at 85–87.) 

2. Trial evidence proving Count 6.

DP testified that she had sex with Petitioner during the Summer of 2001. (Doc. 15–

3 at 122.) She also testified that they first had sex when DP was 13 years old and that her 

first sexual encounter with Petitioner was when she was five years old, but he blamed the 

encounter on her. (Doc. 15–3 at 114, 116–17.) She had previously accused Petitioner of 

sexual misconduct in the 1970’s but recanted after being pressured by her mother and 

grandmother. (Doc. 15–3 at 120–21.) 

DP was the only witness who testified that she had sex with Petitioner during the 

relevant period. However, other witnesses testified about uncharged sexual activity they 

witnessed between DP and Petitioner. KC testified that DP told him Petitioner had 

molested DP since adolescence. (Doc. 15–2 at 92–93.) Carla Grant described sexual acts 

Petitioner made her participate in with DP and Petitioner. (Doc. 15–3 at 32–35.) Cathy 

Underwood testified that she witnessed Petitioner sexually touch DP and that Petitioner 

told her that he had sex with DP. (Doc. 15–3 at 77–78.) Tracy Beauchamp testified that 

Petitioner told her that he impregnated DP when she was 19 and made her have an abortion. 

(Doc. 15–4 at 16.) 

The trial court’s instructions allowed the jurors to consider circumstantial evidence 

in deciding the case. (Doc. 15–4 at 61–63.) Jurors could also consider whether Petitioner 

had a character trait that predisposed him to commit the charged crimes if they determined 

by clear and convincing evidence that he committed other uncharged illicit sexual acts.

(Doc. 15–4 at 63–64.) Nevertheless, the jury could not convict Petitioner simply because 

of his character or because he committed prior illicit sexual acts. (Doc. 15–4 at 64.) Finally, 

the trial court instructed the jurors to decide each count separately. (Doc. 15–4 at 63.) 

. . . . 

. . . . 

. . . . 

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B. DP’s and LP’s recantations.

1. The 2009 Letters

Petitioner attached to his habeas petition notarized letters signed by DP and LP in 

2009 that recanted their trial testimony, alleged coercion and coaching of their testimony 

by the State, and offered an alternative cause for LP’s abnormal hymen. (Doc. 1 at 28, 

Doc. 1–1 at 3.) LP’s letter was signed on June 5, 2009 (LP Letter 1). (Doc. 1–1 at 3.) DP’s 

letter was signed on August 7, 2009 (DP Letter 1). (Doc. 1 at 28.) LP claimed that she 

testified against Petitioner because she had been taken away from her family, and that a 

severe yeast infection and attendant scratching likely caused her abnormal hymen. (Doc. 

1–1 at 3.) DP claimed that the incest charge was false and that the State coerced her 

testimony against Petitioner by threatening her with prison time and losing LP. (Doc. 1 at 

28.) LP reaffirmed her first letter in a second letter dated June 19, 2009 (LP Letter 2) and 

added that her recantation was not the product of coercion or influence. (Doc. 1–1 at 4.) 

2. The 2015 Letters

After Magistrate Judge James Metcalf issued a Report and Recommendation to 

dismiss Petitioner’s habeas petition in 2015, Petitioner submitted additional letters 

purportedly authored by LP and DP. (Doc. 23, 24, 26.) LP’s letter was signed on March 18, 

2015 (LP Letter 3). (Doc. 26.) DP’s letter was signed on February 5, 2015 (DP Letter 2).

(Doc. 23.) These letters generally recanted LP’s and DP’s trial testimony, and LP 

specifically claimed that her aunts, her brother, and the prosecutor told her she had to 

accuse Petitioner. However, these letters were not notarized. 

Petitioner submitted additional letters in 2015 signed by LP and DP. LP’s letter was 

signed on August 28, 2015 (LP Letter 4). (Doc. 60–2 at 2–3.) DP’s letter is unsigned, but 

it was notarized in 2018 and filings indicate it was drafted in 2015 (DP Letter 3). (Doc. 60–

1 at 3.) DP’s letter disputes that Petitioner groped LP under her clothes or hurt her, and 

asserts this claim was made up by the prosecutor. (Doc. 60–1 at 3.) The letter further states 

that the incident when LP was missing and found in Petitioner’s room did not happen.

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(Doc. 60–1 at 3–4.) LP’s letter recants her testimony and claims she was coached to 

incriminate Petitioner. (Doc. 60–2 at 3.)

3. DP’s 2015 Telephonic Interview 

On September 21, 2015, DP participated in a telephonic interview with counsel for 

Petitioner and Respondents. (Doc. 148.) During the interview DP stated that there was 

never any sexual contact between her and Petitioner and that she was coerced by the 

prosecutor to testify that there was. (Doc. 148 at 9–10.) She also stated that she understood 

she could be charged with perjury for recanting her testimony if she testified consistent 

with her recantation. (Doc. 148 at 10.) She claimed that she drafted some of the recantation 

letters authored by her and LP despite the inconsistent handwriting across the letters.

(Doc. 148 at 6.)

Specifically, DP claimed that she was threatened with going to prison for 25 years 

unless she inculpated Petitioner. (Doc. 148 at 11.) . She also described an incident where 

she took LP to an emergency clinic because LP had a yeast infection and scratched herself 

and caused herself to bleed. (Doc. 148 at 15–16.) However, she did not have any medical 

records to corroborate the event. (Doc. 148 at 15–16.) Respondent’s counsel asked DP 

questions regarding the timing of her recantations and the circumstances surrounding DP’s 

trial testimony and the alleged coercion. DP claims she wrote Petitioner one month after 

trial explaining why she erroneously accused him. (Doc. 148 at 23–25.) She also claims 

she waited years to officially recant because there was no longer a risk of her losing her 

children. (Doc. 148 at 26.) Finally, DP stated that she would likely be unable to attend a 

live hearing or deposition because of financial hardship. (Doc. 148 at 48.)

4. LP’s 2019 Deposition

LP appeared for a deposition on September 13, 2019. (Doc. 152.) LP admitted to an 

incomplete recollection of everything that happened during the time period surrounding 

Petitioner’s trial. (Doc. 152 at 73.) However, she testified unequivocally that Petitioner did 

not touch her sexually and that she would remember if he did. (Doc. 152 at 16.) She also 

testified that she testified untruthfully at trial and did so because she was coached by the 

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prosecutor and was told that her testimony was the only way she could return home after 

she was taken from her parents’ custody. (Doc. 152 at 18–19.) Furthermore, she claimed 

that she had a history of yeast infections and previously had scratched herself until she 

bled. (Doc. 152 at 34.) She could not say whether the infections caused her abnormal 

hymen, but she stated that DP took her to an emergency clinic in August 2001 for treatment. 

(Doc. 152 at 35.) Finally, she adopted the recantations in the letters submitted by Petitioner 

but claimed that Petitioner drafted LP Letters 1, 2, and 4, and that Petitioner or DP drafted

LP Letter 3.

II. LEGAL STANDARDS

A habeas court can reach a petitioner’s procedurally defaulted or barred substantive 

claim if the petitioner passes through the Schlup actual innocence gateway. Schlup, 513 

U.S. at 314–15. This occurs when the petitioner provides evidence of his “innocence so 

strong that a court cannot have confidence in the outcome of the trial unless the court is 

also satisfied that the trial was free of nonharmless constitutional error.” Schlup, 513 U.S. 

at 316. The gateway is not itself substantive relief; it provides only a path to consideration 

of an otherwise barred claim for substantive relief. The gateway exists to prevent “a 

fundamental miscarriage of justice.” Id. at 314–15. Tenable actual innocence claims are

rare. McQuiggin v. Perkins, 569 U.S. 383, 386 (2013). 

To pass through the gateway to a merits review, a petitioner must provide new and 

reliable evidence that makes it more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have 

found him guilty at trial. Schlup, 513 U.S. at 329. The Court must first determine whether 

the petitioner has offered evidence that is both new and reliable. Then the Court must 

evaluate whether no reasonable and properly instructed juror would have convicted the 

petitioner considering all the evidence, new and old. Thus the Court makes a probabilistic 

determination about what a reasonable juror would do if she considered all of the evidence 

supporting and undermining a petitioner’s guilt on a given count. If no reasonable juror 

would convict, then the petitioner passes through Schlup’s gateway. The Court is not bound 

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by the evidentiary rules of admissibility and may consider evidence that was available, 

unavailable, or excluded at trial. Id. at 327–28. 

III. ANALYSIS

Petitioner and Respondents focus their arguments at different points along Schlup’s

actual innocence standard. Petitioner essentially assumes that the recantations constitute 

“new and reliable” evidence of his innocence on Counts 3 and 6, and therefore primarily

focuses on whether a reasonable juror would have convicted him in light of that evidence.

(Doc. 144, Pet. Br. 4–11.) Petitioner claims that the trial evidence on Counts 3 and 6 was

thin, and consequently, the recantations undermine the already thin evidence such that no 

reasonable juror would have convicted him of those counts.

Respondents assert that the Court need not consider whether a reasonable juror 

would have convicted Petitioner of those counts because Petitioner has not provided 

“reliable” evidence of his innocence. (Doc. 146, Resp. Br. at 22.) Respondents base this 

argument on various circumstantial irregularities, which they claim undermine the 

creditability of the recantations. (Resp. Br. at 22–30.) For example, Respondents highlight 

that the written recantations were not made under oath, were made by Petitioner’s family 

members, were created several years after Petitioner’s trial, and, in some cases, appear to 

be written by Petitioner himself. (Resp. Br. at 22–30.) See Jones v. Taylor, 763 F.3d 1242, 

1249 (9th Cir. 2014) (finding that the reliability of a recantation can be affected by its 

timing or the witness’s relation to the accused). Nevertheless, Respondents assert in the 

alternative that even if the recantations are “new and reliable,” a reasonable juror would

still convict Petitioner on both counts. (Resp. Br. at 30.) 

Notwithstanding the circumstantial peculiarities of the recantations that 

Respondents identify, the Court concludes that the recantations are “new and reliable” 

evidence of Petitioner’s innocence on Counts 3 and 6. The written recantations of DP and 

LP, DP’s telephonic interview, and LP’s deposition are all new and contain sufficient 

indicia of reliability to constitute “new and reliable” evidence.2 Nevertheless, the Court 

2 Though DP did not appear for a deposition, the Court still considers her telephonic 

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considers the irregularities noted by Respondent in its analysis of whether a reasonable 

juror would convict Petitioner. 

Though Petitioner provides new and reliable evidence of his innocence, the Court 

still concludes that a reasonable and properly informed juror with all the evidence would 

find him guilty of Counts 3 and 6. The recantations implicate the credibility of DP and LP, 

but the juror would still likely conclude that the collective truth of all of their statements

was that they were sexually assaulted by Petitioner consistent with the allegations of 

Counts 3 and 6. Furthermore, their victim testimony was not the sole evidence of those 

counts, so the evidence at trial was not as thin as Petitioner asserts.

A. A reasonable juror considering all the available evidence would convict 

Petitioner of Count 3. 

To evaluate Petitioner’s actual innocence claim on Count 3, the Court must weigh 

all of the evidence and determine whether a reasonable juror would convict Petitioner. LP’s 

four letters and her deposition testimony do not substantially undermine the evidence 

available at trial, so the Court cannot conclude that a reasonable juror would not convict 

Petitioner on Count 3. The Court reaches this conclusion for four reasons. First, LP’s 

recantations do not necessarily contradict her trial testimony. Second, her recantations 

contradict established facts at trial and her memory is admittedly incomplete. Third, a 

reasonable juror considering all of the evidence would still believe LP’s accusations rather 

than her recantations. Fourth, other witness testimony at trial proved Count 3. 

1. LP’s testimony regarding her yeast infections does not necessarily 

undermine Petitioner’s guilt of Count 3.

In her recantations, LP provided an alternate theory regarding her abnormal 

hymen—severe yeast infections that caused her to scratch herself until she bled. (Doc. 152. 

interview because Schlup instructs the habeas court to consider all available evidence. 

Schlup, 513 U.S. at 327–28. Whether the interview constitutes “new and reliable” evidence 

under Schlup is a different issue than whether it would have been admissible at the vacated 

evidentiary hearing. (Doc. 139.) Nevertheless, in evaluating the weight of DP’s interview, 

the Court will consider her failure to appear for a deposition, her explanation that her 

absence was due to financial inability, and the opportunity of counsel for the parties to 

examine her telephonically. 

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at 34–36.) These yeast infections occurred throughout LP’s childhood before the alleged 

conduct underlying Count 3. (Doc. 152. at 34–36.) DP referenced the yeast infections 

during her interview with a police office before trial, although she claimed they only 

occurred when LP was a baby. (Doc. 60–2 at 5.) 

However, LP testified that she did not know whether her yeast infections and

scratching caused her abnormal hymen. (Doc. 152. at 35.) Thus the hypothetical reasonable 

juror would not hear definitive testimony that LP’s abnormal hymen was caused by yeast 

infections. Instead, a juror would only be presented with conjecture that could raise an 

inkling of doubt about the cause of LP’s abnormal hymen.

Furthermore, this competing cause does not square with the rest of the evidence. 

During a police interview, DP stated that the yeast infections only occurred while LP was 

a baby. (Doc. 60–2 at 5.) This aligns with DP’s trial testimony that LP had a rash that did 

not require medical attention. (Doc. 15–3 at 130.) Although Petitioner’s trial counsel 

elicited that LP could not remember all of her injuries, this fact does not provide definitive 

proof that Petitioner did not sexually assaulted her. After all, the jury heard this fact at trial 

and still convicted Petitioner. (Doc. 15–2 at 155.) 

Even if LP had yeast infections, the available medical evidence does not prove that 

they caused her abnormal hymen. Dr. Coffman testified that the damage to LP’s hymen 

was caused by trauma i.e., penetration. (Doc. 15–3 at 16.) She testified that it was consistent 

with abuse and not associated with fondling. (Doc. 15–3 at 20.) She did not testify that it 

could be caused by scratching or a yeast infection. Thus, even if a reasonable juror was 

presented with evidence of LP’s yeast infections and scratching, the medical evidence still 

indicates that her damaged hymen was caused by trauma.

Finally, LP’s yeast infections are unsubstantiated. During her phone interview, DP 

stated that she did not have any medical records to substantiate the claims related to the 

yeast infections. (Doc. 148 at 15–16) And although LP recalls going to a clinic for yeast 

infections, she could not remember where she was treated. (Doc. 152 at 34.)

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Ultimately, even if LP did have yeast infections and scratched herself aggressively, 

a juror could still find that fact consistent with Petitioner sexually assaulting LP. Indeed, 

the weight of the evidence indicates that a reasonable juror would find that LP’s history of 

yeast infections does not undermine Petitioner’s guilt. 

2. LP’s independent memory of the events surrounding Count 3 

undermines her recantations because it is incomplete and 

contradicts facts established at trial. 

LP unequivocally recanted her trial testimony stating that Petitioner did not touch 

her, and if he had, she would remember it. (Doc. 152 at 16.) Furthermore, she testified that 

she lied at trial because she was coached by the State and was told that it was the only way 

she would return to her family after being removed from her parents’ custody. (Doc. 152 

at 18–19) However, LP admits that she does not independently remember the events 

surrounding Count 3, remembers nothing about her childhood, and allowed the recantations 

to be drafted for her because of her lack of memory. (Doc. 152 at 40, 73.) Significantly, LP 

acknowledged that her memory was better at trial than it is now. (Doc. 152 at 74.)

LP’s memory undermines her recantations more than it does her trial testimony. LP 

admits to having very little memory regarding the events surrounding Count 3. And her 

requests that DP or Petitioner draft her statements because of her lack of memory casts 

doubt that her recantations truly reflect her recollection. Indeed, it is unclear whether LP 

has any recollection. Thus, her spotty memory highlights the problems inherent with 

recantations. See Jones, 763 F.3d at 1249 (“As a general matter, [r]ecantation testimony is 

properly viewed with great suspicion.”) 

Additionally, LP’s recantations contradict established facts at trial. During her 

deposition she testified that she was not returned home until months after trial. (Doc. 152 

at 53.) However, at trial LP and DP testified that she had already been returned home by 

the time of trial. (Doc. 5–2 at 130, Doc. 5–3 at 98.) This fact does not necessarily prove 

that LP’s testimony was not coerced because she could still have believed (or been told)

she would be removed from her home again if she did not accuse Petitioner. Still, it

undermines her recantation because her memory of this fact is untrue. Similarly, LP also 

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testified at trial that no one coerced or coached her testimony, although her recantations 

directly contradict that testimony. (Doc. 15–2 at 157.) And while she did not recall any 

abuse during her first interview with Wendy Dutton, which favors Petitioner, there was 

testimony at trial by Dutton regarding possible dissociation from abuse. (Doc. 15–2 at 169–

170.)

Ultimately the evidence points in either direction. LP’s recantation asserts that she 

was coerced into testifying, but her memory was admittedly better on the day of trial than 

it is now. Although LP has maintained her recantations for over ten years, she could not 

remember the details of her coercion without assistance from DP and Petitioner, and she 

did not assert them for serval years after trial. See Allen v. Woodford, 395 F.3d 979, 994 

(9th Cir. 2005). Thus a reasonable juror would likely conclude that Petitioner is guilty of 

Count 3 based on LP’s memory.

3. LP’s demeanor and exculpation of other family members 

inculpates Petitioner.

The trial court instructed the jurors that when deciding the credibility of a witness

the jurors could consider: “the manner of the witness while testifying; whether the witness 

seemed to have an accurate memory; whether the witness had some interest in how the case 

should be decided; whether the witness appeared to have any motive, bias, or prejudice 

which might affect the reliability of what the witness said; [and] whether the witness made 

any inconsistent statements before the trial or during the trial.” (Doc. 15–4 at 60.) 

Importantly, the jurors were not required to disregard a witness’s testimony if it was 

contradicted by another witness’s testimony or the witness’s own testimony. Instead, the 

jurors were instructed to “consider each witness’s testimony in light of all the other 

evidence in the case.” (Doc. 15–4 at 60–61.) Finally, although the jurors were instructed to 

consider each count separately, they were also permitted to consider circumstantial 

evidence, and if they concluded that certain uncharged acts were proven, they could 

consider whether Petitioner has a character trait that gives him a propensity for committing 

unlawful sexual conduct. 

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At trial, LP was asked whether various family members had hurt her, whether they 

had put anything in her private, and whether she was afraid of them. With respect to each 

family member—her mother, father, brothers, and uncle—LP testified that she was not 

afraid of them, they had not touched her private, and they had not hurt her. (Doc. 15–2 at 

144–46.) 

When the prosecutor asked LP about Petitioner, her answers changed. She testified 

that she did not like Petitioner, she was afraid of him, and that she did not know if he 

touched her private or put anything inside of her. (Doc. 15–2 at 144–46.) She did not testify 

that Petitioner penetrated her, and she did not know why she was afraid of him. Instead,

LP’s only trial testimony directly proving sexual conduct by Petitioner was her testimony 

that he touched her private area when she was in the living room and that Petitioner pinched 

her chest. But the living room incident was not the subject of Count 3 and neither was the 

alleged pinching. 

Still, the jury instructions reveal that a properly instructed juror need not weigh LP’s 

trial testimony and her recantations in a vacuum. A reasonable, properly instructed juror 

could also consider the juxtaposition between LP’s exculpation of her other family 

members with her failure to exculpate Petitioner. Though she did not outright testify that 

Petitioner penetrated her, she testified that he committed sexual misconduct against her. 

Additionally, in contrast to her definitive exculpation of her other family members, LP did 

not say that Petitioner did not penetrate her. This juxtaposition would allow a reasonable 

juror to conclude that LP’s accusations against Petitioner were true, and that more serious 

conduct than she specifically testified to, in fact, occurred.3Indeed, her interview with 

Wendy Dutton that was played for the jury presented greater claims of abuse than LP 

testified to at trial.

3 The Court notes that LP testified specifically that she was not testifying “I don’t 

remember” because she did not want to talk about the subject matter of certain questions. 

(Doc. 15-2 at 140.) Still a juror would also have to consider LP’s admitted nervousness, 

her fear that Petitioner would hurt her, and the relative ease with which she talked about 

other family members. 

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Furthermore, a juror would also be allowed to consider LP’s alleged fear of 

Petitioner. Based on other circumstantial evidence presented at trial, including testimony 

regarding uncharged sexual misconduct by Petitioner, a juror could conclude that similar 

conduct formed a basis for LP’s fear of Petitioner. Then a juror could conclude that LP 

might be afraid to confront Petitioner not only because she was testifying in court at nine 

years old, but also because he had sexually assaulted her.

4

4. Other witnesses’ testimony, the forensic interview video, and Petitioner’s 

propensity to commit the charged sexual conduct prove Count 3. 

KC and Cathy Underwood testified about an incident where LP went missing from 

her home after school. (Doc. 15–2 at 102–05, Doc. 15–3 at 83–84.) The family searched 

for LP in and nearby the house but could not find her. KC and Underwood differed on the 

length of time they searched for LP, but she was missing between half an hour and two and 

a half hours. During the search, KC knocked on Petitioner’s bedroom door a few times. He 

did not answer for a couple of minutes and then asked, “What do you want?” (Doc. 15–2 

at 102–05.) Petitioner did not open the door for several minutes, and when he did, he was 

in his underwear, according to Underwood but not KC. LP was laying in his bed on her 

back staring at the ceiling. This incident was essentially unrefuted at trial. 

A reasonable juror would consider this testimony circumstantial evidence of 

Petitioner’s guilt of Count 3. The evidence about this incident basically points in only one 

direction. Although DP claims that the incident did not occur because she claims Petitioner 

was working that day and his bedroom was always locked during the day, her refutation is 

incredible. (Doc. 60–1 at 3–4.) She lacks first-hand knowledge of the incident and her 

refutation is based on habit evidence about what Petitioner usually did. Moreover, her 

claims do not specifically refute the events since Petitioner’s door could have been locked 

during the incident while he was in the room with LP. Ultimately, because Petitioner had 

4 The Court also notes that the substance of the testimony LP claims the State

coached her to give––that Petitioner touched her private––does not match the charged 

conduct of Count 3. (Doc 1 at 17–18.) Therefore, the State needed more than LP’s 

testimony to convict Petitioner on that count. The hypothetical diminution in the credibility 

of her testimony based on the recantations is not necessarily fatal to proving that count. 

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the opportunity to commit the acts underlying Count 3, the incident provides circumstantial 

evidence that he did commit those acts. 

Other acts evidence also prove that Petitioner has a character that predisposed him 

to commit the acts underlying Count 3. Extensive evidence was produced at trial of 

Petitioner’s uncharged sexual acts with DP, Carla Grant, Kathy Underwood, and Tracy 

Beauchamp during their adolescences. (Doc. 15–3 at 34, 43, 69–70, 79; Doc. 15–4 at 16–

17.) The Court can consider what a properly instructed juror would conclude about this 

evidence and the recantations. At trial, a juror would consider this evidence and determine 

that Petitioner “had a character trait that predisposed him to commit the crimes charged.” 

(Doc. 15–4 at 63–64.)

The Court concludes that a reasonable and properly instructed juror would conclude 

that Petitioner committed the uncharged sexual conduct and had a propensity for such 

conduct. A reasonable juror would further conclude that Petitioner’s propensity would be 

circumstantial evidence of his guilt of Count 3. The recantations do not seriously 

undermine the testimony regarding the uncharged sexual conduct, nor do they counteract 

the likelihood that a reasonable juror would conclude that Petitioner has a character trait 

that gives him a propensity for committing the charged conduct. Instead the recantations 

focus on explaining the motivations behind the testimony of DP and LP, but they do not 

implicate the motivations of other witnesses testifying against Petitioner. 

Finally, LP’s trial testimony was not the only evidence the jury heard or saw in 

which LP accused Petitioner. Her second forensic interview with Wendy Dutton was also 

played for the jury. (Doc. 15–2 at 177.) During the interview, LP recounted that Petitioner 

touched her in places he was not supposed to, including her private parts. (Doc. 107, Ex. F;

Doc. 112.) She stated that it hurt, that he did it more than once under her clothes, and that 

at he locked her in his room. (Doc. 107, Ex. F; Doc. 112.) She also stated that Petitioner 

touched her in DP’s room. (Doc. 107, Ex. F; Doc. 112.) The jurors were also able to view 

LP scribbling furiously while describing Petitioner’s conduct, and a reasonable juror would 

conclude that she was nervous during the interview. Although there are competing 

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explanations for why she could be nervous, the weight of the evidence points to her being 

afraid of Petitioner because of what he did to her. 

Consequently, a reasonable and properly instructed juror considering all of the 

evidence, including the recantations, would conclude that Petitioner is guilty of Count 3. 

Accordingly, Petitioner cannot pass through the Schlup gateway and receive consideration 

of his IAC claim on that count. 

B. A reasonable juror considering all the evidence would convict Petitioner 

of Count 6. 

Though the evidence proving Count 6 was possibly more limited than the evidence 

proving Count 3, the weight of the evidence still supports the Court’s conclusion that a 

reasonable juror would convict Petitioner of Count 6. There was no direct evidence of 

Count 3; there was no witness that testified they saw Petitioner sexually assault LP. 

Conversely, there was direct evidence of Count 6 because DP testified that she had sex 

with Petitioner during the relevant time period. (Doc. 15–3 at 122.) DP recanted this 

testimony but her history of recantation, the testimony of other witnesses, and established 

facts that contradict her recantations indicate that her accusations rather than her 

recantations are true. 

1. DP’s previous recantation and her uncooperativeness with the 

investigation of Petitioner indicate that her accusations against 

Petitioner are true.

DP testified at trial that she previously recanted accusations of sexual abuse by 

Petitioner in the 1970s. (15–3 at 120–21.) DP testified at trial that Petitioner first had sex 

with her when she was 13 years old and also sexually abused her in other ways. (Doc. 15–

3 at 119.) Nevertheless, after she was removed from her home and talked to her mother 

and grandmother, she changed her statement to police and recanted the abuse allegations 

against Petitioner. She never accused Petitioner again because she was afraid. (Doc. 15–3 

at 122.) 

Undeniably, DP’s testimony required the jury to sort through seemingly 

contradictory facts to evaluate her credibility. Her recantation via her letters and telephonic 

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interview complicate that task. The crux of her recantation is that she was threatened with 

prison and the loss of her child if she did not accuse Petitioner. Moreover, DP testified at

trial that she was not cooperative in the investigation of Petitioner at the outset. Her 

explanation at trial for being uncooperative was that she was concerned that the accusations 

against Petitioner would not be taken seriously like when she was younger. Thus LP 

provides competing explanations for why she eventually cooperated with the investigation 

and prosecution of Petitioner. At trial it was that she saw that the investigation was being 

taken seriously and that Petitioner had gotten away with abuse for too long. Now it is that 

she was coerced. 

Ultimately, it would be very difficult for a juror to perfectly square DP’s motivations 

for changing her story at different times. DP now claims that there has never been sexual 

activity between her and Petitioner. This recantation contradicts her accusations in the 

1970’s against Petitioner and her reason for recanting then––fear and coercion. 

Furthermore, her present recantation implies that her initial lack of cooperation with 

investigators was because Petitioner, in fact, had done nothing wrong. 

But in light of all of the other evidence, it is DP’s present recantation that a 

reasonable juror considering all the evidence would conclude is false. Consistent with her 

trial testimony, a juror would conclude that DP recanted when she was younger because 

she was pressured and was afraid of being away from her family. A juror would also 

conclude that DP was initially uncooperative with the investigation of Petitioner because 

she was embarrassed about her sexual activity as an adult with Petitioner and she was afraid 

of the consequences of accusing him. (Doc. 15–3 at 125.) 

Finally, in light of her testimony that Petitioner was intimidating and manipulative, 

DP’s present recantations would be looked at with suspicion. (Doc. 15–3 at 108.) This is 

especially true in light of the fact that she did not recant for several years after Petitioner’s 

trial, and first recanted only two weeks after visiting him in prison for the first time.5

5 DP initially could not explain the delay during her telephonic interview, but 

eventually claimed that it was because she no longer lived with her children, and thus there 

was no longer a risk of losing them. 

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(Doc 148 at 29.) Additionally, a reasonable juror would conclude that Petitioner would be 

uniquely able to influence DP because there is evidence that his sexual abuse of her began 

when she was five years old and it continued through adulthood, and she continues to write 

him letters every day.

6 A reasonable juror would also need to weigh DP’s credibility in 

light of her unwillingness to appear for a deposition. During her phone interview, she stated 

that she understood she could be charged with perjury because of her recantations, so it is 

noteworthy that she, in fact, has not recanted under oath or subjected herself to cross–

examination.7

2. Other witnesses provided circumstantial evidence proving Count 6.

DP was not the only testifying witness at trial regarding sexual activity between 

Petitioner and DP. Carla Grant, Kathy Underwood, and Tracy Beauchamp all testified 

about Petitioner’s sexual abuse of DP. A reasonable juror could properly consider this 

evidence in determining whether Petitioner had a character trait that, in turn, would make 

it more likely that he committed the conduct underlying Count 6. The widespread evidence 

of uncharged conduct with DP and others makes it probable that a juror would find that 

Petitioner had a character trait that made it more likely he committed Count 6. 

The character evidence introduced against Petitioner, some of which included 

evidence provided by DP herself, undermines her current recantations. Essentially, a 

reasonable juror would conclude that DP’s present recantation contradicts Petitioner’s 

substantial history and character for the type of sexual conduct that DP is now claiming 

has never happened. But because the accusatory evidence also comes from several other 

witnesses, a reasonable juror would conclude that DP’s recantations are false and her 

accusations are true. 

6 A reasonable juror would also have to reconcile how much influence, if any, 

Petitioner had in the drafting the recantation letters. Especially since some of the letters are 

drafted in noticeably different handwriting despite DP claiming to have drafted all of them 

without Petitioner’s input and LP claiming that Petitioner drafted some of them. Doc. 148 

at 6; Doc. 152 at 27.)

7 The Court notes that DP claimed she was financially unable to appear to testify.

(Doc. 148 at 48.) 

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3. DP’s recantations contradict other established facts and are 

unsubstantiated. 

It was established at trial that LP had already been returned home by the time of 

trial. (Doc. 5–2 at 130, Doc. 5–3 at 98.) Therefore, DP’s claim that she faced the loss of LP 

if she did not accuse Petitioner is undermined by the fact that she already had been returned

LP. Though it is possible that DP could have been told that LP would be removed from her 

custody again if DP did not testify against Petitioner, this is not what DP claims happened. 

Instead, DP claims that LP was not returned home right after DP testified and the charges 

against her were dropped. (Doc. 148 at 14.) However, the charges against DP had not been 

dropped as of trial, yet LP was already home, so this aspect of DP’s recantation is plainly 

contradicted. (Doc. 15–3 at 126.)

Moreover, DP testified that she had not been offered any benefits in exchange for 

her testimony. (Doc. 15–3 at 126.) She also testified that she reached out to the State to 

discuss the criminal case against her before Petitioner’s trial but the prosecutor refused to 

discuss her case with her. (Doc. 15–3 at 126.) She acknowledged that the prosecutor she 

now accuses of coercing her testimony had never met with her outside the presence of DP’s 

attorney. Of course, DP’s recantations contradict this and essentially assert that this 

testimony was a lie. Nevertheless, a reasonable juror would conclude, based on a 

consideration of all the evidence, that the State did not coerce DP’s testimony. Moreover, 

DP testified at trial that she met with a detective at her own request and inculpated herself 

and Petitioner before she was ever arrested or charged with a crime. Therefore, the evidence 

indicates that she incriminated Petitioner before being charged with a crime, rather than in 

response to being charged with a crime. (Doc. 15–3 at 139.) 

Finally, there is no independent evidence that the State coerced DP’s testimony. 

And despite DP’s claim that she was threatened with serving 25 years in prison unless she 

testified against Petitioner, there is no evidence that she was ever charged with a crime for 

which the penalty could have been 25 years in prison.8 Furthermore, there is no independent 

8 DP claims that the prosecutor threatened her with three charges to make sure she 

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proof of DP’s claim that she wrote Petitioner one month after his trial explaining why she 

testified falsely against him. (Doc. 148 at 23–25.) Consequently, her recantations lack 

proof, do not align with the rest of the evidence, and are undermined by the evidence. 

Accordingly, the Court concludes that a reasonable juror considering all of the 

evidence for and against Petitioner’s guilt of Count 6, would find him guilty beyond a 

reasonable doubt. 

Therefore, Petitioner has not presented “innocence so strong that [the] Court cannot 

have confidence in the outcome of the trial.” See Schlup, 513 U.S. at 316. Finally, the Court 

concludes that it is unnecessary to reach Petitioner’s defaulted and barred claims to prevent 

a fundamental miscarriage of justice. 

IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the remaining portion of Ground 1 of the 

Petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 for a Writ of Habeas Corpus (Doc. 1)––the claim for 

ineffective assistance of counsel related to Count 6 of the indictment––is DISMISSED.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the remaining portion of Ground 2 of the 

Petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 for a Writ of Habeas Corpus (Doc. 1)––the claim for 

ineffective assistance of counsel related to Count 3 of the indictment––is DISMISSED.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED directing the Clerk of Court to close this case. 

Dated this 27th day of March, 2020.

got a minimum sentence of 25 years. (Doc. 48 at 42.) However, at the time of Petitioner’s 

trial DP was only being prosecuted for obstruction of justice. (Doc. 15–3 at 126.) 

Honorable John J. Tuchi

United States District Judge

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