COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED February 28, 2008 David R. Schanker Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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Appeal No. |
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STATE OF WISCONSIN |
IN COURT OF APPEALS |
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DISTRICT III |
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State of Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Fredrick J.
B., Defendant-Appellant. |
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APPEAL
from a judgment and order of the circuit court for
Before Higginbotham, P.J., Vergeront and Lundsten, JJ.
¶1 PER CURIAM. Frederick J.B. appeals a judgment convicting him of two counts of second-degree sexual assault of a child and two counts of incest. He also appeals an order denying his postconviction motion alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. We conclude there was no prejudice from any of the alleged errors made by counsel, and therefore affirm the judgment of conviction.
BACKGROUND
¶2 The charges stemmed from allegations made by the defendant’s teenaged daughter, Alissa. At trial, the prosecutor prefaced his opening argument with the following remarks:
[T]his is a case about a violation of family. It’s about a violation of trust. It’s about a violation of parental responsibility. It’s about a violation of innocence.
¶3 Alissa testified that on two separate occasions her father had reached a hand inside her pants and touched her vagina. One incident occurred in a pantry or laundry room and the other occurred in a bedroom while they were watching television. On each occasion, Alissa was able to break free after her father had been moving his fingers around for about a minute. Alissa further testified that her father was both physically and verbally abusive, and that there was tension in the household. She said she did not feel comfortable at first disclosing the incidents to anyone other than her friends. However, one day when her parents came into her room to question her about whether she had been smoking, she told them she did it only to cope with her father touching her. She did not disclose the matter to the police until several weeks later, when a friend called 911 in response to a cutoff phone call with Alissa that led the friend to believe that Alissa might be in danger from her father.
¶4 The dispatched police officer testified that when he arrived, Alissa was outside of the house and appeared to have been crying. Alissa told him that her parents were fighting about her father touching her. The officer took Alissa and her mother, Kathleen, to the police station, where they each wrote out statements.
¶5 Kathleen, the defendant’s wife, also testified. She said that after Alissa had first blurted out that her father needed to stop touching her:
I was in shock.
I looked at her, I saw she was terrified; and I looked at Fred and he
went past—I’ve known him so long I knew it was true.…
Kathleen and Frederick then went into the basement to talk, and Kathleen told her husband she knew her daughter was telling the truth. Kathleen testified:
I asked him, “Did you put your hand down her pants?” He said yes. I asked him again, “Did you put your hand down her pants?” He said, “Yes, I was testing her.”
Kathleen asked him how he could do something like that, but he didn’t respond. She told him she wanted to get him help, and he said he didn’t need help, that Alissa was overreacting and he was testing her. He also said he wasn’t going to leave the home, and he would burn down the house before he would ever leave. Kathleen initiated divorce proceedings sometime after the disclosure.
¶6 The defendant did not testify or present any witnesses. Defense counsel argued to the jury that Alissa had fabricated the molestation allegations to shift attention away from the fact that she had been smoking and because there were “bad feelings” among the family members. Counsel said Alissa’s claim that she had been smoking as a response to abuse just did not make any sense. Counsel further suggested that the mother had motive to support the allegations in order to obtain custody in the subsequently initiated divorce proceeding.
¶7 After the jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8 Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel present mixed
questions of law and fact. Strickland v.
The test for ineffective assistance of counsel has two prongs: (1) a demonstration that counsel’s performance was deficient, and (2) a demonstration that the deficient performance prejudiced the defendant. To prove deficient performance, a defendant must establish that his or her counsel “made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.” The defendant must overcome a strong presumption that his or her counsel acted reasonably within professional norms. To satisfy the prejudice prong, the defendant must show that counsel’s errors were serious enough to render the resulting conviction unreliable. We need not address both components of the test if the defendant fails to make a sufficient showing on one of them.
State v. Swinson, 2003 WI App 45, ¶58, 261
DISCUSSION
¶9 Frederick alleges that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by: (1) failing to object to the prosecutor’s opening remarks that the case was about a violation of family, trust, parental responsibility and innocence; (2) failing to object on the grounds of improper vouching contained in the mother’s testimony—that she could tell by looking at her daughter and husband that the allegations were true and that she told her husband she knew it was true; and (3) failing to request a limiting instruction regarding the other acts evidence that Frederick had hit his daughter and wife on numerous occasions. We will briefly address the deficient performance aspect of each claim before discussing the prejudice prong with respect to all of the claims.
¶10 First, we are not persuaded professional norms should have
compelled defense counsel to object to the prosecutor’s opening comments. As the trial court correctly noted, an incest
case is essentially by definition about violations such as the prosecutor
described. The prosecutor was merely
giving a brief rhetorical characterization of the offenses at issue before
going into specifics about the evidence the State would present. We do not view such general prefatory
comments as suggesting that the jury should arrive at its verdict by
considering factors other than the evidence.
See generally State v. Neuser, 191
¶11 Second, we agree with the defendant that the admissibility of some of the mother’s comments was questionable. While it was certainly permissible for the mother to describe the physical reactions of her husband she observed when the allegation was made, and perhaps permissible to relate the out-of-court statement she made to her husband that she believed her daughter in the context of the conversation they had, her testimony that, “I’ve known him so long I knew it was true” might be impermissible vouching. We need not, however, decide whether counsel’s failure to object to this testimony constituted deficient performance in light of our conclusion discussed below that there was no resulting prejudice.
¶12 Third, we agree with
¶13 The key evidence demonstrating
By the Court.—Judgment and order affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5.