MOSBY V. SEKNOWSKI
470 F.3d. 515 (2nd Cir. 2006)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Mosby (P), inmate, appealed a judgment denying his petition for a
writ of habeas corpus. The instant court granted a certificate of appealability limited to
the issue of whether failure to raise the suppression issue on direct appeal constituted
ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
FACTS: A witnesses observed an assailant known only by the nickname 'Florida' shoot and
kill two men. Five days later, Rochester police officers conducted an unrelated 'buy and
bust' operation, in which P sold a $20 bag of crack cocaine to a police informant, with an
undercover officer present. The drug deal took place through the window of a house at 46
Costar Street, two miles from the site of the homicides. Four uniformed police officers
arrived without a warrant for P's arrest. They knocked at the front door of the house, which
was answered by P's ten-year-old son. The child informed them that his father was upstairs,
sleeping. After four or five attempts to coax him downstairs, the uniformed officers entered
the house and took P into custody. The undercover officer then identified P as the person he
had observed selling cocaine earlier, and P was placed under arrest. A passing neighbor
notice P in the police car and asked an officer what was happening with 'Florida.' The
arresting officers contacted investigators working on the Bloomingdale Street homicides.
Police presented a photo array including P's photo to four different witnesses to the
homicides. All four identified P as the shooter. After being read Miranda warnings, P
declined an attorney, and the police questioned him about the homicides. P confessed, and
the police prepared a written statement which he reviewed and signed after midnight, on the
same night as his arrest. He was subsequently indicted, tried, and convicted on homicide
charges. P moved to suppress the confession and photo identifications on the ground that his
warrantless home arrest violated the Fourth Amendment. P claimed that he had been living at
46 Costar Street for at least two months. The trial court held that P did not have standing
to assert a Fourth Amendment claim since he was merely a 'casual visitor' with a 'transient
presence' at 46 Costar and thus had no 'legitimate expectation of privacy' there. P
testified that he shot the two individuals in self-defense. The four eyewitnesses testified,
identifying P as the gunman. His confession was admitted during the state's rebuttal case. P
was convicted on two counts of murder in the second degree, and the court sentenced him to
consecutive terms of twenty-five years to life. On direct appeal, P's attorney did not
challenge the adverse suppression ruling. The New York Court of Appeals denied P leave to
appeal. P then filed an application for a writ of coram nobis seeking to vacate his
conviction on the ground of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel for failure to raise
several issues, including the trial court's suppression ruling. The Appellate Division
summarily denied the application. P then filed a habeas corpus petition asserting the same
claim as his coram nobis petition, which the district court denied. A certificate of
appealability was granted and limited to the issue of whether failure to raise the
suppression issue on direct appeal constituted ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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