Court Opinion

ID: 6104304
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-18 20:00:54.39365+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:53:43.296992
License: Public Domain

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
                                File Name: 22a0027n.06

                                       Nos. 19-3515/3550

                          UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                               FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

                                   )                                                   FILED
    TRACIE HUNTER,                                                               Jan 18, 2022
                                   )
         Petitioner-Appellant,     )                                         DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
                                   )
    v.                             )
                                   )
    OFFICE OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY )                           ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    GENERAL; HAMILTON COUNTY COURT )                        STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
    OF COMMON PLEAS; HONORABLE )                            THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
    PATRICK DINKELACKER,                                    OHIO
                                   )
         Respondents-Appellees.    )
                                   )
                                   )

        Before: GILMAN, KETHLEDGE, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.

        LARSEN, Circuit Judge. A former state court judge, convicted of having an unlawful

interest in a public contract, claims that she was prosecuted for political ends. She made that

argument to the jury. And she made that argument to the state courts on appeal. Her sentence

served, she makes that argument again on habeas review.1 But only a single legal issue is before

us: whether four remarks the prosecutor made during closing arguments rendered the trial

1
   One might reasonably wonder how we have jurisdiction over this case. Only a “person in
custody” may seek habeas relief from a state court judgment, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, but Hunter is no
longer in jail. Three principles answer this question. First, we determine “custody” at the time of
filing. Maleng v. Cook, 490 U.S. 488, 490 (1989). Second, a petitioner is “in custody” when her
sentence is stayed. See McVeigh v. Smith, 872 F.2d 725, 727 (6th Cir. 1989). And third, a habeas
case is not moot if there are still “collateral consequences,” which we presume in the case of a
criminal conviction. Spencer v. Kemna, 523 U.S. 1, 8 (1998). Here, when the petition was filed
in 2016, Hunter’s felony sentence had been stayed. So we have jurisdiction.
Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

inconsistent with due process. The state court reasonably concluded that they did not. Therefore,

we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment denying the petition for a writ of habeas corpus.

                                                I.

                                                A.

       Tracie Hunter was a judge on the Hamilton County Juvenile Court. Her brother, Steven,

worked as a corrections officer at the same court’s Youth Center. The events leading to Hunter’s

conviction began on July 7, 2013, when Steven allegedly hit one of the residents at the Center.

The Center’s superintendent recommended that the court fire Steven over the incident.

       On the day that Steven learned that he might be fired, Tracie Hunter sent an email to

employees at the Center, identifying general safety concerns, and scheduling a closed meeting to

discuss those issues with the corrections officers. The Center’s superintendent was troubled by

the email, both because of its timing and because many of its points echoed the explanations Steven

had given for the July 7 incident. He thought that the email was Hunter’s way of inserting herself

into the proceedings.

       A few days later, Hunter sent a second email, asking the superintendent for every report

and drug test related to the Youth Center resident whom Steven had allegedly hit.              The

superintendent found the request unusual and asked Hunter to clarify whether she wanted the July

7 incident report only or also all the “other documents related to our investigation.” Hunter

responded that she wanted “all documentation of every incident and every employee” related to

the youth. Hunter then passed the documents along to her brother, who gave them to his attorney.

The attorney accepted some of the documents but refused others because it would have been

“unethical.” Steven was eventually fired.

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Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

        Hunter was indicted for her role in these events. The charge, for having an unlawful interest

in a public contract, was tried to a jury along with eight other counts—one relating to her brother’s

employment, four counts of forgery and evidence tampering relating to her alleged backdating of

court documents, and three counts for theft and misuse of a government credit card.

        The theme of Hunter’s defense in the lengthy and contentious trial was that the entire

prosecution was politically motivated. In Hunter’s view, the prosecutor’s office had a long-

standing vendetta against her that began when she successfully contested the results of her judicial

election; in that litigation, the prosecutor’s office had represented her adversary, the Board of

Elections. The animosity grew, according to Hunter, when she later filed a grievance against the

prosecutor’s office, and several of its individual attorneys, charging them with professional

conflicts of interest and other ethical violations.

        At the end of Hunter’s criminal trial, the jury hung on eight counts and convicted her on

the single count of having an unlawful interest in her brother’s employment contract. The trial

judge sentenced her to six months in jail and one year of community control.

                                                  B.

        Following the verdict, Hunter began a protracted appeals process. First, she went to the

state appeals court and argued that the evidence wasn’t sufficient to convict her, that the trial court

should have polled the jury, and that the special prosecutor had made 51 inappropriate statements,

amounting to prosecutorial misconduct. The state court rejected her claims. On prosecutorial

misconduct, the court found that Hunter had failed to object to nearly all the statements at trial and

had forfeited all but plain-error review. The court went on to review the 51 statements and

concluded that no due process violation had occurred because Hunter had opened the door to many

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Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

of them and because the trial court had repeatedly admonished the jury that closing arguments

were not evidence. Hunter sought review at the Ohio Supreme Court, which declined jurisdiction.

       Hunter timely petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. The magistrate

judge recommended that the petition be denied but that a certificate of appealability issue, limited

to the preserved prosecutorial-misconduct claims. The district judge adopted the report and

recommendation in its entirety. Hunter filed a timely notice of appeal.2

                                                II.

       Standard of review. We review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo. Chase v.

Macauley, 971 F.3d 582, 591 (6th Cir. 2020). When a state court has adjudicated a habeas

petitioner’s claim “on the merits,” the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996

(AEDPA) instructs us not to disturb that decision unless it was “contrary to, or involved an

unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court

of the United States” or “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts.” 28 U.S.C.

§ 2254(d). The district court hesitated to apply AEDPA deference here because the state court

invoked plain error when reviewing Hunter’s prosecutorial-misconduct claim. “[I]n light of

potentially ambiguous Sixth Circuit precedent on” the appropriate standard of review, the

magistrate judge had reviewed the misconduct claim de novo. And, although the district court

thought it “counterintuitive” that de novo review would apply in this context, the district court

likewise “err[ed] on the side of caution” and reviewed Hunter’s claim de novo. That caution was

unnecessary. Following Stewart v. Trierweiler, AEDPA deference “applies to a state court’s plain-

2
  The Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas and Judge Patrick Dinkelacker originally filed a
cross-appeal but now concede that this court lacks jurisdiction to entertain it because it “does not
seek a change in the relief ordered by the judgement appealed from.” Hensley v. Gassman,
693 F.3d 681, 686 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Wheeler v. City of Lansing, 660 F.3d 931, 939 (6th Cir.
2011)).
                                                -4-
Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

error analysis if it ‘conducts any reasoned elaboration of an issue under federal law.’” 867 F.3d

633, 638 (6th Cir. 2017) (quoting Fleming v. Metrish, 556 F.3d 520, 531 (6th Cir. 2009)). Here,

there can be no doubt that the state court did just that. So the state court’s plain-error review of

Hunter’s prosecutorial misconduct claim counts as an adjudication on the merits for purposes of

§ 2254(d), and AEDPA deference applies.

       The prosecutor’s statements. On appeal, Hunter objects to four prosecution statements,

claiming they were so inflammatory as to render her trial constitutionally deficient.3 The state

court of appeals found that these statements were invited by the defense and, in any case, were

cured when the trial court repeatedly told the jury that closing arguments are not evidence. The

state court noted that the trial was “long and intense” and that the “closing arguments of both sides

were equally intense.” The court concluded that although some of the prosecutor’s statements

might have “stretched the bounds of what is acceptable,” the statements did not deprive Hunter of

a fair trial. That judgment was not an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme

Court caselaw.

       The Supreme Court has told us that the touchstone of a prosecutorial-misconduct claim is

“whether the prosecutors’ comments so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting

conviction a denial of due process.” Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 181 (1986) (cleaned

up). This is a “very general” standard, so courts have leeway when resolving such claims. Parker

v. Matthews, 567 U.S. 37, 48 (2012). And “[t]hat leeway increases in assessing a state court’s

3
  The district court granted a certificate of appealability for 16 statements. But Hunter
acknowledges that just “[f]our of the special prosecutor’s specific remarks are at issue in this case.”
Any challenges to the remaining statements—which below were mostly about burden-shifting or
referencing unsworn statements as evidence—are forfeited. See Courser v. Allard, 969 F.3d 604,
621 (6th Cir. 2020).
                                                 -5-
Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

ruling under AEDPA.” Stewart, 867 F.3d at 638–39. So Hunter must clear a high bar to obtain

relief.

          To clear that hurdle, it is “not enough” to show “that the prosecutors’ remarks were

undesirable or even universally condemned.” Darden, 477 U.S. at 181. In Darden, the prosecutor

asked the jury to impose the death penalty because “[t]hat’s the only way I know that [the

defendant] is not going to get out on the public.” Id. at 180 n.10. The prosecutor referred to the

defendant as an “animal” that should be kept on a leash. Id. at 180 n.11. And he wished that he

could see the defendant “sitting here with no face, blown away by a shotgun.” Id. at 180 n.12.

Still, the Court found that the petitioner had not been deprived of a fair trial because “much of the

objectionable content was invited by or was responsive to the opening summation of the defense,”

the “trial court instructed the jurors several times . . . that the arguments of counsel were not

evidence,” and “the weight of the evidence against petitioner was heavy.” Id. at 182.

          Although some of the statements in Hunter’s trial might have pushed the bounds of

professionalism, the state court did not defy Supreme Court precedent by concluding that Hunter’s

trial was fundamentally fair despite them. The state court reasonably concluded that each of these

remarks was “invited,” and did no more than “right the scale.” United States v. Young, 470 U.S.

1, 12–13 (1985). The state court also noted that the trial court had repeatedly cautioned the jury

not to consider counsel’s argument as evidence. And the state court rejected Hunter’s arguments

that her actions did not constitute criminal behavior under the statute, finding that the record

supported her conviction.

          “The idea of ‘invited response’” does not “excuse improper comments,” but it does help

us “determine their effect on the trial as a whole.” Darden, 477 U.S. at 182. We consider not only

the “impact of the prosecutor’s remarks, but must also take into account defense counsel’s opening

                                                -6-
Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

salvo.” Young, 470 U.S. at 12. Here, the state court characterized the “closing arguments of both

sides” as “intense.” The district court described defense counsel’s arguments as “hyperbolic.”

And the magistrate judge, fully supported by the record, summarized defense counsel’s “numerous

remarks impugning the conduct and motives of the Hamilton County Prosecutor and attorneys in

the prosecutor’s office as wrong, unfair, retaliatory, vindictive, politically motivated, arrogant and

hypocritical.” We examine the four statements Hunter challenges in this light.

        Hunter characterizes two of the prosecutor’s statements as falsely portraying her “as

someone who did not care about victims of crime or children who were abused.” The first of these

highlighted the criminal conduct of six juveniles whose identities Hunter had sought to protect.

But this statement responded almost directly to defense counsel’s opening remarks. One of

defense counsel’s themes was that Hunter was on trial, not for criminal conduct, but for being a

“judge who had the audacity . . . to reprimand high ranking officials in Hamilton County” and

“challenge influential people.” One such group of influential people, the media, had sued Hunter

for the right to publish the identities of some juveniles before her court. Hunter’s lawyer suggested

a profit motive for the suit:

        [Hunter] didn’t want juveniles identified by their name under any circumstances.
        And guess who had a problem with that? The media. They had a problem with
        that because . . . their crimes were so egregious that we want to protect the public
        by knowing their name, or . . . we want to sell papers?

        In closing, the prosecution echoed defense counsel’s words but gave an alternative

explanation for the lawsuit: The media thought that the public had a right to know about the

juveniles because they were dangerous.

        [Defense counsel] says she didn’t want juveniles identified by their names under
        any circumstances and guess who had a problem immediately? Well, of course,
        these juveniles just happen to be the six kids who beat some guy up and hospitalized
        him in North College Hill because they were bored.

                                                 -7-
Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

       Hunter next complains about a statement highlighting her choice of bailiff, a man whom

the juvenile court had previously fired for hitting children. The special prosecutor remarked:

       July was not a very good month for Tracie Hunter because . . . her brother beat up
       an inmate at the detention center. And, of course, it’s awfully coincidental when
       people look at whether Hunter cares if a juvenile gets beat up in the detention center
       and how much she cares about everybody and her first hire was the bailiff who had
       been terminated for beating children.

       This statement could reasonably be seen as responding to the defense’s repeated argument

that Hunter—a “deliberate, contemplative and thorough” person whose only care was “the best

interest for the children”—had inquired into her brother’s incident solely out of concern for the

alleged juvenile victim and others at the Youth Center.           The prosecution contested this

characterization, in part, by pointing out that she had knowingly hired a bailiff with a history of

child abuse.

       Hunter next contests two statements that insinuated that her delay in ruling on cases left

children exposed to sexual abuse in the home. These are the most inflammatory statements before

us. But a reasonable jurist could see each as a response to Hunter’s theory that the charges against

her were motivated by political and personal animosity. Hamilton County Public Defender, Ray

Faller, was the subject of one statement. The defense called him a “partisan” witness and suggested

that he had lodged a complaint against Hunter and had sought a writ to compel her to timely rule

on cases, solely for political reasons. The prosecution gave an alternative explanation:

       Ray Faller, as he told you, we have got children waiting to be adopted. We have
       got children waiting to go get services. We have got children waiting to be taken
       out of homes or placed in homes. We have got people who want finality and we
       can’t get her to rule on it.

       And the people that are adversely affected can’t appeal it because she won’t put on
       the final appealable order, so the child who is still stuck in the home where there is
       sexual abuse until she—

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Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

       The next statement, concerning County Prosecutor Joe Deters, can also be seen as offering

an alternative to defense counsel’s claim that the prosecutor’s office had targeted Hunter out of

partisan and personal animosity.      The investigation into Hunter’s conduct began when the

prosecutor’s office suspected that Hunter was backdating certain documents so that prosecutors

would not be able to timely appeal. The special prosecutor noted in closing that county prosecutors

were “sworn to protect victims . . . of crime,” including “children who are being sexually abused”

and “physically abused,” and children “in drug-infested homes, who are not being treated properly,

who are not nourished.” The county prosecutors had a duty to help remove children “from those

homes.” Hunter’s pattern of backdating and delay frustrated that duty. The special prosecutor

asked, rhetorically:

       Why can’t you get this case resolved?

       Maybe that is what Deters has to listen to. Maybe what Deters has to listen to is
       the social worker who says this child is being sexually abused and we can’t get this
       child out of the home because we can’t get Judge Hunter to rule on the case.

       The state court did not flout clearly established Supreme Court precedent by concluding

that, taken in context, Hunter’s counsel invited or “opened the door to” these four short statements,

made during a two-day closing argument, at the end of a lengthy and heated trial. Some of the

statements might have been unprofessional, or even improper, but the state court did not

unreasonably conclude that they were invited and that, taken in context, they did not unfairly

prejudice the defendant.

       Hunter offers three reasons why the state court was wrong to apply the invited-response

doctrine. None persuades. First, she says that the statements in closing could not have been invited

because the prosecution introduced two of the ideas in its opening statement: that the jury would

hear from witnesses “concerned” that “juveniles were suffering” as Hunter’s cases “languish[ed],”

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Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

and that Hunter had hired a bailiff who had been fired for “physically abusing a child.” But both

of these statements simply previewed the evidence to come; neither statement drew an objection

and such evidence was admitted at trial.            Hunter later objected to the prosecution’s

characterization of this evidence in closing argument. But, as discussed above, each of the

prosecution’s descriptions of this evidence can reasonably be seen as a response to the defense.

Hunter points to no Supreme Court precedent that says the invited-response doctrine is

inapplicable when evidence mentioned in the response is first previewed by the prosecution in its

opening statements. Second, Hunter argues that her points about political motivation did not give

the prosecution carte blanche to respond however it pleased. That is true, but the state court did

not conclude that the prosecution had carte blanche, only that Hunter had opened the door to these

particular comments. It wasn’t unreasonable for the state court to conclude as much. Third, Hunter

argues that she made no improper arguments in the first place, so the prosecution had no need to

“right the scale.” But the invited-response doctrine may apply when, as here, the defense attacks

the prosecution’s motivation. See, e.g., United States v. Lattner, 385 F.3d 947, 960 (6th Cir. 2004).

Hunter points to no Supreme Court case saying otherwise. So these arguments are unavailing.

       The state court also concluded that Hunter had not been denied a fair trial because the trial

judge told the jury repeatedly that the statements made “in closing argument are not evidence.”

That conclusion was not an unreasonable application of federal law. See Darden, 477 U.S. at 182

(noting that the trial judge “instructed the jurors several times that their decision was to be made

on the basis of the evidence alone, and that the arguments of counsel were not evidence”). Hunter

contends that such a limiting instruction is “simply inadequate.” But the Supreme Court has

blessed this very instruction as an effective tool for curtailing prejudice.       See Donnelly v.

DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637, 644 (1974). And when, as here, the court gives a curative instruction

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Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

directly after an arguably improper remark, it is even more effective. United States v. Hall, 979

F.3d 1107, 1120 (6th Cir. 2020).

       In Darden, the Supreme Court also considered the effect of any prosecutorial misconduct

in light of “the weight of the evidence against petitioner.” Id. at 182. The state court did not

expressly address this Darden factor; nor did Hunter raise this factor in state court in connection

with her prosecutorial-misconduct claim. Still, she does press it here, suggesting that the evidence

against her was weak. But Hunter does little to contest the key points of the prosecution’s case:

Hunter had emailed the Youth Center on the very day that her brother learned he might be fired,

asking for a closed meeting and echoing the same concerns that he had raised in his defense; in a

second email, she asked for detailed records of the juvenile involved in the incident; the

superintendent of the Center worried about Hunter’s conflict of interest and sought clarification,

but Hunter persisted with her request for all reports related to the juvenile, from any incident;

Hunter passed that information to her brother the night before his termination hearing; and Steven

Hunter gave those documents to his attorney, who accepted some but not others because she was

concerned that it might be unethical.

       Hunter argues instead that she is innocent as a matter of law. Hunter insists that because

“she did not secure a contract for her brother,” she cannot be guilty. But the state court did consider

this argument and squarely rejected it, concluding that the statute criminalizes “not only

interference with the initial decision to employ a family member, but also extends to other areas

of employment, including termination proceedings.” On habeas review, we are bound by a state

court’s ruling on matters of state law. Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 67–68 (1991).

       Hunter hasn’t demonstrated that the state court’s rejection of her prosecutorial-misconduct

claim unreasonably applied clearly established Supreme Court precedent, which is what AEDPA

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Nos. 19-3515/3550, Hunter v. Office of the Ohio Att’y Gen., et al.

requires. That said, we agree with the district court that the standard makes no difference to the

outcome here. The district court’s careful analysis convinces us that Hunter would not be entitled

to relief even under de novo review.

                                              ***

       We AFFIRM.

                                              -12-