Riley v. Wainwright, 84-5522

Decision Date11 December 1985
Docket NumberNo. 84-5522,84-5522
Citation778 F.2d 1544
PartiesWardell RILEY, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Louie L. WAINWRIGHT, et al., Respondent-Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Eleventh Circuit

Mark F. Kelly, Frank, Kelly & McKee, P.A., Tampa, Fla., for petitioner-appellant.

Jack B. Ludin, Asst. Atty. Gen., Dept. of Legal Affairs, Miami, Fla., for respondent-appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.

Before TJOFLAT, HILL and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

Wardell Riley is a Florida death row inmate. He petitioned the district court for a writ of habeas corpus setting aside two first-degree murder convictions and a conviction for assault with intent to commit first-degree murder. The district court denied habeas relief, and Riley appealed. We affirm.

I.
A.

Wardell Riley became employed as a delivery truck driver for Sunset Bottling Company (Sunset), located in Miami, in May 1975. The events in question took place on Monday, September 15, 1975. At the time, Sunset was owned and operated by Peter Enea and his son, Peter Enea, Jr. Robert Lisenby was Sunset's supervisor of truck drivers. Enea, Jr. is the sole survivor of the acts for which Riley was convicted and was the State's only eye witness.

Shortly after Riley began to work for Sunset, Enea and Enea, Jr. began a practice of picking him up on their way to work in the morning. For reasons not appearing in the record, Riley was not on the job several days during the week prior to September 15, and the Eneas did not pick him up on that date. Riley called Sunset's office on the morning of September 15 and asked if he should come in. Enea, Jr. called him back and told him that he could report to work. Riley reported for work and was the last driver to check in at Sunset's plant office at the end of the day. When he arrived at the office he was accompanied by a man known only as Jerome. 1 According to Enea, Jr., while his father was checking Riley in, Lisenby appeared with his hands in the air; Jerome was behind him with a gun. Jerome fired two random shots into the air. Riley pulled a gun from under his shirt and fired two more random shots. Riley then instructed Enea, Enea, Jr., and Lisenby to lie on the floor.

Enea and Enea, Jr. lay face down on the floor in an "L shape" with their heads about a foot and a half apart. Lisenby lay down somewhere below Enea, Jr.'s feet. Riley bound and gagged the two Eneas and removed Enea, Jr.'s .25 caliber pistol and other valuables from his pockets. Riley then ransacked the office. Enea, Jr. saw Riley return to where the men were lying and step over his father. While Riley was standing between the Eneas, Enea, Jr. heard a shot fired and saw his father's head come off the floor. He did not see who actually fired the shot, but could see Riley's shoes and the bottom of his pants. Enea, Jr. heard a second shot, which struck him in the head, and then a third shot.

After some time passed, Enea, Jr., believing that Riley and Jerome had left, rose from the floor, cut the ropes binding his hands, and telephoned the police. He next went to a file cabinet where he obtained Riley's identification card. When the police arrived, he gave them the card and stated that the man identified on the card worked for Sunset and had shot his father. Enea, Jr. was taken to the hospital, and he survived. Nothing could be done for Enea, Sr. and Lisenby; both died from their gunshot wounds.

The police found five .38 caliber bullets and one .25 caliber cartridge casing at the scene of the shooting. A .22 caliber bullet was removed from Lisenby's head. The police arrested Riley at his home in the early morning of September 16. They subsequently searched his home and found the pants and boots he wore on September 15, nine .22 caliber bullets, and six .25 caliber bullets. The murder weapons were never found. Seven of the nine .22 caliber bullets were of the same manufacture as the .22 caliber bullet removed from Lisenby's head. All six of the .25 caliber bullets were produced by the same manufacturer as the .25 caliber cartridge casing the police discovered at the murder scene. The pants and boots disclosed minute amounts of blood. Because of the small amount of blood involved, the police laboratory was unable to draw any conclusion other than the presence of human blood.

B.

Riley was indicted by a Dade County grand jury on October 7, 1975. The indictment charged him with two counts of first-degree murder and one count of assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree. Riley went to trial before a jury on February 10, 1976. The jury convicted him as charged four days later.

Peter Enea, Jr. testified for the prosecution and related the events we have described. The State also presented several expert witnesses. A blood analysis expert testified that he found a small amount of human blood of unknown type on Riley's left shoe and pants. Medical experts testified as to the victims' cause of death and the nature of the wounds they received. A firearms and ballistics expert testified as to the items found at the scene and at Riley's residence, noting the similarity of manufacturer of the bullets.

Riley was represented at trial by Frederick Robbins. 2 Robbins did not employ his own experts, but relied on the assistance of Jack Karkowski, a former police officer with some knowledge of ballistics, to prepare his cross-examination of the State's experts. Robbins was able to get the State's ballistics expert to admit that the .22 caliber bullet found in Lisenby's head could have been a .22 long rifle, a .22 long, or a .22 short. The .22 caliber bullets found at Riley's home were long rifle and long. The ballistics expert therefore could not say that the bullets were the same. He also conceded that the bullets were very common and available at any gun store. The expert admitted that the manufacturer's markings on the .25 caliber cartridge casing found at the murder scene and the casings of the .25 caliber bullets uncovered at Riley's residence were somewhat different, meaning that the bullets may have come from different boxes. In addition, these bullets were very common and readily available. The State's medical expert testified that a bullet wound such as the one Enea, Sr. received would have caused a back splatter of blood. Robbins was able to argue that the small amount of blood found on Riley's clothes made it unlikely that he had shot Enea, Sr.

Riley's defense was an alibi. Riley took the stand and testified that he left the Sunset plant prior to the shooting. At that time, the Eneas and Lisenby were still working. Riley explained away the small amount of blood on his clothing by stating that he had probably cut himself handling fragile glass items, something that frequently occurred on the job. Riley also provided an innocent explanation for the bullets found at his home. 3

On February 16, following a sentencing hearing before the jury on Riley's first-degree murder convictions, the jury recommended that Riley be sentenced to death for the murder of Enea, Sr. and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Lisenby. The trial court accepted the jury's recommendations and sentenced Riley accordingly. The court also sentenced Riley to fifteen years imprisonment for the assault upon Enea, Jr.

On direct appeal, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed Riley's convictions, but it set aside his death sentence because the trial judge had considered aggravating circumstances not provided for by statute. Riley v. State, 366 So.2d 19 (Fla.1978) (per curiam). 4 The court therefore remanded the case "for the sole purpose of allowing the trial judge to reconsider the imposition of the death sentence for the murder of Peter Enea, Sr." Id. at 22.

Following his receipt of the supreme court's mandate and after notice to Riley, the trial judge held a second sentencing hearing. Riley was now being represented by an assistant public defender. After receiving evidence from the State and from Riley, the court concluded that the aggravating circumstances continued to outweigh the mitigating circumstances 5 and imposed a sentence of death. Riley appealed to the Florida Supreme Court.

On appeal, Riley challenged his death sentence on two grounds, both rooted in the previous sentencing proceeding before the jury. Riley's first ground was that the prosecutor, in his closing argument, urged the jury to consider aggravating circumstances not recognized by Florida law. His second ground was that the trial judge compounded this error by failing to instruct the jury not to consider these inappropriate aggravating circumstances. These dual errors, according to Riley, rendered the jury's death sentence recommendation invalid under Florida law and the United States Constitution. The Florida Supreme Court rejected Riley's claims because he failed seasonably to present them to the trial judge at the time the alleged errors occurred or raise them at the second sentencing hearing. Riley v. State, 413 So.2d 1173, 1174 (Fla.) (per curiam), cert. denied, 459 U.S. 981, 103 S.Ct. 317, 74 L.Ed.2d 294 (1982). 6 The supreme court then stated that, even if Riley's claims were properly before it, no error had occurred. The court accordingly affirmed the second death sentence. Id. at 1174-75.

On May 12, 1983, the Governor of Florida signed a death warrant for Riley. On May 23, Riley moved the sentencing court to vacate his three convictions and sentences pursuant to Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.850. His motion was denied on May 27. Riley petitioned the Florida Supreme Court for a writ of habeas corpus the same day. On May 31, he took an appeal to the Florida Supreme Court from the trial court's denial of his Rule 3.850 motion. On June 1, Riley petitioned the Florida Supreme Court for leave to apply for a writ of error coram nobis. The supreme court consolidated Riley's three pending actions and denied relief in each...

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