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5 results for “Ronald Haynes”

Case Title Lower Court Docketed Status Tags Question Presented
24-797 Scott Speer, Superintendent, Stafford Creek Corrections Center, et al. v. Jeffrey Weller, et al. Ninth Circuit 2025-01-27 Denied aedpa-standard federal-review habeas-corpus ineffective-assistance ninth-circuit-review state-court-adjudication Whether the state courts adjudicated the merits of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) when expressly citin…
24-6360 Maximo DiazLeal-DiazLeal v. Ronald Haynes, Superintendent, Airway Heights Corrections Center Ninth Circuit 2025-01-22 Denied appellate-review certificate-of-appealability civil-procedure due-process habeas-corpus ninth-circuit Whether the district court's pro-forma denial of a Certificate of Appealability (COA) in a habeas corpus petition violates due process and the gatekee…
23A1087 Maximo DiazLeal-DiazLeal v. Ronald Haynes, Superintendent, Airway Heights Corrections Center Ninth Circuit 2024-06-06 Presumed Complete appellate-procedure constitutional-claims due-process federal-review habeas-corpus section-2254 Whether a state court's denial of a federal habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 comports with due process and federal constitutional standards
22-6032 Nicholas Sterling Little v. Ronald Haynes, Superintendent, Stafford Creek Corrections Center Ninth Circuit 2022-11-09 Denied constitutional-rights criminal-defendant other-suspect other-suspect-evidence person-a person-b post-conviction post-conviction-evidence prosecutorial-misconduct suppressed-evidence Does a criminal defendant's constitutional rights violate if prosecutors use 'other-suspect' evidence to convict 'person-a' of a crime 'person-b' is a…
19-6577 John Garrett Smith v. Ronald Haynes Ninth Circuit 2019-11-12 Denied accomplice-to-felony civil-procedure civil-rights computer-fraud-abuse-act constitutional-accountability criminal-concealment due-process due-process-violation equal-protection government-misconduct judicial-misconduct judicial-usurpation misprision-of-felony official-crimes standing Whether state and federal officials, including judges, can lawfully commit crimes, legally cover up their commission, and repeatedly usurp their own c…