Tenisha Carter v. Sheryl Thompson , 690 F.3d 837 ( 2012 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 11-2202
    T ENISHA C ARTER,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    S HERYL T HOMPSON, Warden,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 10 C 1270—William J. Hibbler, Judge.
    A RGUED JANUARY 13, 2012—D ECIDED A UGUST 14, 2012
    Before P OSNER, W OOD , and H AMILTON, Circuit Judges.
    W OOD , Circuit Judge. After enduring 55 hours of inter-
    rogation at the police station, Tenisha Carter (then just
    16 years old) confessed to the murder of her roommate,
    Brandy Thompson. In due course, Carter was convicted
    of first-degree murder by a jury and sentenced to 30
    years’ imprisonment. Her case comes to this court on
    appeal from the district court’s decision denying her
    petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
    Applying the required deference to the decisions of the
    2                                            No. 11-2202
    state courts rejecting her constitutional challenges to
    the use of her confession, we affirm.
    I
    A state court’s factual findings are “presumed to be
    correct” in a federal habeas corpus proceeding unless
    they are rebutted by “clear and convincing evidence.” 28
    U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Carter does not challenge the
    Illinois Appellate Court’s factual findings, and so our
    account of the facts is drawn exclusively from its opin-
    ion. Like the state court, we report some of the incon-
    sistencies in the evidence as it developed, because this
    information provides useful context for the central ques-
    tion before us. In the final analysis, of course, the
    state court resolved those issues against Carter.
    Thompson’s body was found on December 2, 2000, by
    someone living in the neighborhood close to the apart-
    ment building where Carter and Thompson lived. The
    medical examiner confirmed that the murder was espe-
    cially brutal: Thompson had been stabbed at least 117
    times. Carter was then 16 years old and Thompson was 19.
    The Chicago Police assigned Officers John Riordan
    and Kevin Carney to investigate the murder. Initially,
    they did not suspect that Carter was involved. No finger-
    print, DNA, or other physical evidence connected the
    murder to Carter, or for that matter to anyone else. On
    December 4, however, two Chicago detectives picked up
    Carter at 5:40 a.m. at her grandmother’s house and
    took her to the Area 4 police station. She was not given
    No. 11-2202                                            3
    Miranda warnings, and no one told her that she was free
    to leave and did not need to answer any questions.
    Officer Riordan offered Carter food, something to drink,
    a cigarette, and access to the bathroom. She asked for
    a soda, and Officer Riordan brought her one. Carter
    then gave him the contact information for her father,
    Calvin Robinson. At the time, Carter’s mother was incar-
    cerated. Robinson had never been Carter’s legal
    guardian, nor had she ever lived with him. Despite her
    minority, Carter was thus effectively without any legal
    guardian.
    Robinson arrived at the police station at around 9:45
    a.m. He testified that he had to wait for more than an
    hour before he was given the opportunity to speak with
    the detectives or his daughter. He further testified that
    they permitted him to speak with Carter alone for
    only two or three minutes. As the state court noted,
    Officer Carney provided conflicting testimony, stating
    that Robinson was taken to his daughter shortly
    after arriving at the station and was allowed to
    speak alone with her for 30 minutes before the detec-
    tives questioned her.
    Carter informed the detective during questioning that
    she and Thompson had a party at their apartment on
    the evening of December 1. After their friends left, she
    stated, Tyrone Weeks came over with marijuana and
    smoked it with them. Thompson left the apartment
    around midnight to visit Timothy Watkins, her boy-
    friend, but she never made it there. Watkins called
    Carter the next day to find out if Thompson was still at
    4                                            No. 11-2202
    the apartment. Another one of Thompson’s boyfriends
    later stopped by the apartment looking for her. Carter
    initially told the detective that she was not aware
    that Thompson was dead until December 4. Even
    though Thompson’s cousin and neighbor gave state-
    ments to the police on December 5 and 6 that contra-
    dicted Carter’s answers, Officer Carney did not yet
    doubt Carter’s credibility.
    Carter was released to Robinson’s custody after
    giving her statement on December 4. Mysteriously, a few
    hours after Carter’s release, her apartment building
    caught fire. The investigation revealed that the cause
    was arson, and that the fire started in the apartment
    where Carter and Thompson lived. The investigators
    found lighter fluid, but none of the fingerprints on
    the bottle matched Carter or any other person tested by
    the police.
    The police brought Carter back to the Area 4 station on
    December 10. After unsuccessfully attempting to
    contact Robinson, they proceeded to question her even
    though she had no adult—not her father, a guardian, or
    a youth counselor—present. Only Carter’s boyfriend
    and a police officer were in the room during Officer
    Riordan’s questioning. According to Officer Riordan,
    Carter was still not considered a suspect. Again, no
    one informed her of her rights. During this encounter,
    Carter’s original story remained largely intact, with a
    few notable exceptions. She stated that Weeks had re-
    turned intoxicated to their apartment at 3 a.m., and that
    he grabbed at Carter. She also said that she overheard
    No. 11-2202                                            5
    Weeks say that he planned to rob Thompson. Carter’s
    boyfriend corroborated her answers, stating that Carter
    had told him that Weeks came out of Thompson’s
    bedroom at around 12:30 a.m. the night she died. At the
    conclusion of the questioning, Carter reviewed photo-
    graphs for a few hours. The police could not locate
    her father, and so they released her to her boyfriend’s
    father.
    Officer Riordan visited Robinson’s home on Decem-
    ber 18, hoping to find Carter to discuss the murder.
    Robinson explained that Carter did not stay at his home
    often, and that he was unable to keep her from running
    away. He also stated that he feared for her safety, in
    light of the murder and arson. He was confident, how-
    ever, that Carter knew who murdered Thompson. Two
    days later, Robinson called the police to give them
    Carter’s latest contact information. When Officers
    Riordan and Carney arrived at the address, a woman
    opened the door with a knife. She thought they had
    come in response to a domestic violence call and let
    them in after they said they wanted to speak with
    Carter. Carter was indeed there; she told Officer Riordan
    she had attempted to contact him and agreed to return
    to the Area 4 station. The police later testified that
    Carter was still considered a witness, which is why they
    again did not inform her of her rights. This time, Carter
    would end up staying at the station for 55 hours.
    When she arrived, the officers unsuccessfully at-
    tempted to contact Robinson. They then located a youth
    counselor who, after speaking with Carter, concluded
    6                                             No. 11-2202
    that his presence was unnecessary if she was only a
    witness. The youth counselor later left the station and
    did not return. When the detectives resumed questioning
    her, Carter’s story started to fall apart. She admitted
    that she had lied about seeing Weeks at 3 a.m. on Decem-
    ber 1. She then agreed to take a polygraph test. The de-
    tectives scheduled the test for the following afternoon,
    so that Robinson could attend. They contacted
    Robinson and asked if he would take Carter into his
    custody for the evening. According to the detectives,
    Robinson stated that he was worried that she would
    run away if they brought her there. (Robinson’s account
    was different: he testified that they never offered to
    release her to him.) Officer Riordan then changed his
    testimony, stating that it was Carter—not Robinson—who
    had asked if she could stay at the station.
    Officer Carney secured authorization from his super-
    visors for Carter to stay at the station overnight. No one
    explained to Carter that she was free to go, and she
    wound up sleeping on a bench in the interview room.
    She was allowed to move around the station
    freely, with the exception that she was escorted to the
    restroom. She was not given the opportunity to
    shower, and no one gave her a change of clothes, pillow,
    or blanket. Officer Riordan gave her a box of tampons
    after she requested it.
    The next day, Carter was taken to the polygraph officer
    after again agreeing to take the test. The youth officer
    and Robinson were present. At that point, the officer
    gave Carter her Miranda warnings, asking after each one
    No. 11-2202                                              7
    whether she understood it. The officer conducted a
    pretest interview and concluded that Carter was not
    being honest. When Carter learned the results, she burst
    into tears and confessed to Officer Riordan: “John, I’m
    going to jail. Tyrone [Weeks] killed Brandy [Thompson]
    and he made me help clean up.” She explained that
    she helped Weeks clean up after the murder because
    she was scared of him and his gang-affiliated family
    members. After this, the officers took Carter back to
    Area 4, where she had a meal and watched television
    with Robinson and two sisters in the roll call room.
    The police contacted an Assistant State’s Attorney
    (ASA) to inform him that Carter had witnessed Thomp-
    son’s murder. The ASA promptly came to the station
    and interviewed Carter with Robinson, her two sisters,
    and three officers in the room. He also read Carter her
    Miranda rights and cautioned that she could be tried as
    an adult. After the interview, the police arrested Weeks.
    Carter stayed in the roll call room, on Officer Riordan’s
    advice, because Weeks and his family were arriving at
    the station. Robinson asked an officer within earshot of
    Carter if there was any evidence from the crime scene
    and was informed that they had found a fingerprint on
    the car bumper where Thompson’s body was discovered.
    Officer Carney said that the identity had not yet been
    determined. Carter then gave Officer Carney a note,
    stating, “I lied again.” She explained that she and her
    boyfriend tried to find Thompson the morning after
    the murder. They discovered her body and moved a
    brick onto her feet. Carter said she was scared, apologized
    for lying, and said maybe someone had touched the
    8                                               No. 11-2202
    bumper. That evening, Robinson left to tend to his
    younger children. He asked that Carter stay at the
    station for her safety. It is not clear whether Carter was
    given the opportunity to leave the station: it seems that
    she had nowhere to go other than the street. Once again,
    she was not given clothes, a shower, a pillow, or a blanket.
    While escorting Carter to the restroom at 2 a.m., Officer
    Riordan asked if she needed anything. Carter requested
    a soda, and Officer Riordan got her one. After returning
    to the roll call room, Carter inquired whether Weeks
    was in custody. Officer Riordan said yes. Carter then
    said, “I killed Brandy [Thompson]. I got in a fight with
    Brandy over Darnell and while I was fighting I stabbed
    Brandy.” Carter asserted that she was merely defending
    herself. She confessed that Weeks had nothing to do
    with the murder. Officer Riordan decided to relocate
    Carter to the interview room, and locked her there until
    9 a.m. The police notified Robinson that he should
    return to the station the next morning.
    At 9:30 a.m., Officer Riordan read Carter her Miranda
    rights with Robinson in the room. She acknowledged her
    understanding of her rights and was prepared to answer
    the officers’ questions. Without prompting from the
    officers, Carter said to her father, “Dad, I killed Brandy
    [Thompson].” Robinson said, “You’re talking crazy girl.
    I should get you a lawyer.” Carter said, “No Dad, I did
    it.” Carter then told the officers that Thompson had
    punched her in the face, then went to the kitchen, got
    a knife, and stabbed herself in the chest. Carter said that
    she followed Thompson to her bedroom and repeatedly
    No. 11-2202                                             9
    punched her, which, she speculated, was how Thompson
    was stabbed. A little while later, Carter confessed to the
    arson, explaining that she set the fire to destroy any
    evidence connecting her to the murder.
    An ASA interviewed Carter that afternoon with both
    of her parents in the room. (Carter’s mother had appar-
    ently been released at this point.) The ASA read Carter
    her Miranda and juvenile rights. Carter said that she
    understood her rights and was willing to speak with
    him. She proceeded to explain the events leading up to
    Thompson’s death. She said that Thompson attacked
    her with a knife, and they fought for a while. Eventually
    they got tired, and Thompson went to her bedroom.
    An hour later, Carter went into Thompson’s room, at
    which point Thompson put her in a headlock. Carter
    stabbed Thompson with a knife to free herself. She and
    her boyfriend then moved Thompson’s body to the
    street. The ASA decided not to charge her, and Carter
    was released later that evening. It was not until nearly
    two weeks later, on January 5, 2001, that Carter was
    arrested for first-degree murder and aggravated arson.
    The arson charge was later dropped.
    While in jail awaiting her trial, Carter was in a
    15-month intimate relationship with another inmate,
    Shirena Lando. When they were not cellmates, Carter sent
    Lando letters known as “kites” through other inmates to
    communicate. In one of the kites, Lando testified, Carter
    described Thompson’s murder. The details in the kite
    were not entirely consistent with Carter’s final confes-
    sion, but she did describe Thompson’s wounds, where
    10                                            No. 11-2202
    the body was left, and how it was hidden under leaves
    and a slab of concrete.
    Cutting through the ever-shifting and sometimes pre-
    posterous nature of Carter’s several confessions, the
    jury ultimately concluded that Carter was guilty of first-
    degree murder and she was sentenced to 30 years’ impris-
    onment. She appealed to the Illinois Appellate Court.
    Among other arguments, she asserted that her con-
    fession was involuntary and thus that the trial court
    erred in admitting it into evidence. After describing the
    facts fully and acknowledging the various conflicts in
    the evidence, the appellate court rejected her argument;
    it concluded that “[b]ased on the totality of the circum-
    stances, the manifest weight of the evidence supports
    the trial court’s finding of voluntariness.” It expressly
    acknowledged that a juvenile’s confession is a “sensitive
    concern,” and emphasized that such cases must be care-
    fully evaluated to ensure that the confession was not
    caused by unfair influence or overwhelming emotion.
    Several reasons persuaded the court that Carter’s confes-
    sion was voluntary: it was not prompted by a police
    question; she had access to her father; and she was
    allowed to move freely around the station. Carter then
    sought leave to appeal from the Supreme Court of Illinois,
    but her request was denied.
    Carter then petitioned the district court for a writ of
    habeas corpus, arguing among other things that the
    admission of her confession violated her Fifth Amend-
    ment right because the confession was involuntary. The
    district court found that the state court’s ruling did not
    No. 11-2202                                               11
    involve an unreasonable application of federal law, but
    it granted her a certificate of appealability, “given the
    unusual and unfortunate circumstances surrounding
    Carter’s interrogation, and the fact that the state appel-
    late court did not address those circumstances in de-
    tail.” This appeal followed.
    II
    We review de novo the district court’s denial of a peti-
    tion for a writ of habeas corpus, Ebert v. Gaetz, 
    610 F.3d 404
    , 411 (7th Cir. 2010), bearing in mind the deferential
    standard that applies. Carter acknowledges as she
    must that she is entitled to relief only if the state court’s
    decision “involved an unreasonable application of . . .
    clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
    Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
    We will not disturb the state court’s decision unless it is
    “both incorrect and unreasonable.” Etherly v. Davis, 
    619 F.3d 654
    , 660 (7th Cir. 2010). That standard is not met
    unless the decision in question is objectively unrea-
    sonable, falling “well outside the boundaries of permissible
    differences of opinion.” 
    Id. (internal citations omitted).
      To determine whether Carter’s confession was invol-
    untary, the state court was required to evaluate the
    “totality of the circumstances” surrounding it. Schneckloth
    v. Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    , 226 (1973); 
    Etherly, 619 F.3d at 661
    (stating that the Schneckloth test applies to
    juveniles, but that their confessions must be examined with
    “special care”). The state court was obligated to consider
    Carter’s individual characteristics, including her “age,
    12                                              No. 11-2202
    experience, education, background, and intelligence”
    and “whether [she] has the capacity to understand the
    warnings given [her], the nature of [her] Fifth Amend-
    ment rights, and the consequences of waiving those
    rights.” Fare v. Michael C., 
    442 U.S. 707
    , 725 (1979). The
    context of the interrogation is also relevant, especially
    the “length of time that the juvenile was questioned by
    the authorities and the absence or presence of a parent
    or other friendly adult.” Gilbert v. Merchant, 
    488 F.3d 780
    ,
    791 (7th Cir. 2007). Finally, the court had to consider
    whether Carter’s confession arose from “excessive
    coercion or intimidation.” 
    Etherly, 619 F.3d at 661
    (quoting
    Hardaway v. Young, 
    302 F.3d 757
    , 765 (7th Cir. 2002)).
    Carter argues that the state court failed to consider
    the fact that she—a 16-year-old child—was in the police
    station for 55 hours under stressful and uncomfortable
    circumstances, when it was evaluating whether her
    confession was voluntary. But this does not do justice
    to the court’s opinion. In fact, it did discuss in detail
    the relevant facts surrounding her confession; it just did
    so in the background and unlawful seizure sections of
    its opinion. The question, therefore, is a narrow one that
    practically answers itself: Did the state court violate
    Schneckloth when it did not repeat these facts in the part
    of its opinion dedicated to the voluntariness of Carter’s
    confession? We cannot imagine why a federal court
    should care whether a state court believes that its
    readers will remember the content of the background
    section of an opinion or if it thinks it preferable to
    review again the facts relevant to each issue. In Carter’s
    case, the court devoted the latter section of its opinion
    No. 11-2202                                                13
    to three factors: the lack of physical abuse, the fact that
    Carter’s “will was not overcome,” and the fact that her
    confession was volunteered rather than being given
    in response to a police question. It also repeated that
    Carter was allowed to move freely around the station
    and was given unlimited access to her father.
    Particularly in light of the highly deferential standard
    due to the state court, we have no reason to doubt that
    it took into account all of the relevant facts, highlighting
    only those that seemed especially pertinent to the volun-
    tariness of the confession. 
    Etherly, 619 F.3d at 662
    (“How
    much weight to assign each factor on facts similar to
    those in Etherly’s case may differ from court to court,
    and reasonable jurists may certainly disagree.”); Gilbert
    v. Merchant, 
    488 F.3d 780
    , 794 (7th Cir. 2007) (affirming
    the state court’s finding of voluntariness even though
    the record “did not speak to a number of relevant con-
    siderations”). This is just what the Supreme Court found
    in Early v. Packer, 
    537 U.S. 3
    (2002). In that case, the peti-
    tioner asserted that the California state court failed to
    consider certain factors in its evaluation of the “totality
    of the circumstances” with respect to a jury-coercion
    claim. The Court brushed that argument aside, noting
    that the California court had discussed those factors
    elsewhere in the opinion and commented that “[t]he
    contention that the California court ‘failed to consider’
    facts and circumstances that it had taken the trouble
    to recite strains credulity.” 
    Early, 537 U.S. at 9
    .
    In the end, while it is unsettling that Carter was in
    the police station for 55 hours without a blanket, pillow,
    14                                            No. 11-2202
    change of clothes, or access to a shower, and without
    being told that she could leave, the state court’s deci-
    sion was not objectively unreasonable. She entered the
    police station on December 20 voluntarily as a witness
    to the murder. During the lengthy time she was at the
    station, she was permitted to move freely until her con-
    fession on December 22 in the wee hours of the morning.
    The evidence suggests that Carter slept at the station
    because her mother was in jail and her father was con-
    cerned for her safety outside the station. She had spoken
    with her father and a youth officer prior to confessing
    and had been read her Miranda rights before taking the
    polygraph. Unprompted by the police officers, she gave
    her initial confession on her way to the bathroom. She
    turned down her father’s offer to get her a lawyer.
    Her father was with her when she gave two of her con-
    fessions, and her mother was allowed to join her for
    one of them. This is enough for the state court to con-
    clude that her confession was voluntary.
    III
    We A FFIRM the district court’s denial of Carter’s peti-
    tion for a writ of habeas corpus.
    8-14-12