Moreland v. Bradshaw, No. 09-3528 (6th Cir. 2012)
Annotate this CaseIn 1985 Moreland lived with his girlfriend Glenna and seven others. After arguing with Glenna, Moreland left, returned with a rifle, and killed Glenna and four others. An 11-year-old child and another were injured but survived. When Moreland was arrested, he told officers that it was “too late” and was uncooperative. At trial, Moreland presented expert testimony that he would have had a blood alcohol level between .30 and .36 around the time the murders were committed, suggesting that he was too intoxicated to carry out the acts as described. Other witnesses reported seeing Moreland that night and called into question his intoxication defense. A three judge panel convicted Moreland and sentenced him to death. The Ohio Court of Appeals and Ohio Supreme Court affirmed; the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari. State courts denied relief in state post-conviction proceedings. The district court denied a petition for habeas corpus (28 U.S.C. 2254), rejecting claims of insufficient evidence, that the court did not conduct an adequate evidentiary hearing on a child eyewitness’s competence to testify, that the court wrongly excluded expert testimony concerning the child, and that Moreland was denied effective assistance of counsel. The Sixth Circuit affirmed.
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