COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED July 1, 2009 David
R. Schanker Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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NOTICE |
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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 II |
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State of
Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Todd E. Peterson,
Defendant-Appellant. |
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APPEAL
from a judgment and an order of the circuit court for
Before Brown, C.J.,
¶1 PER CURIAM. Todd E. Peterson appeals a judgment convicting him of first-degree sexual assault of a child as a persistent repeater and an order denying his motion for postconviction relief. He contends he merits a new trial because trial counsel was ineffective and because the trial court improperly admitted “other-acts” evidence of his prior assaults on young girls. We disagree, and affirm the judgment and order.
¶2 Peterson was charged, as a persistent repeater, with sexually assaulting Michael W., the then eight-year-old son of a friend. A jury found Peterson guilty of first-degree sexual assault of a child in violation of Wis. Stat. § 948.02(1) (2007-08).[1] The court sentenced him to life imprisonment without the possibility of extended supervision. See Wis. Stat. § 939.62(2m)(b)2.
¶3 Attorney Leonard Kachinsky was Peterson’s trial counsel. Postconviction, Peterson retained Kachinsky’s former law partner, Attorney Gregory Petit. Peterson, through Petit, filed a motion for a new trial based in part on a claim that Kachinsky rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. On its own initiative, the trial court disqualified Petit because his partnership with Kachinsky had ended bitterly. The public defender’s office appointed postconviction counsel, who continued with the motion Petit filed. After a Machner[2] hearing, the court denied Peterson’s motion for a new trial, and Peterson appealed. Without reaching the merits, this court reversed on the grounds that the trial court erred in disqualifying Petit without giving weight, on the record, to Peterson’s right to be represented by counsel of his choice, and remanded the matter for a new postconviction motion hearing. Again represented by Petit, Peterson opted to proceed on the postconviction record appointed counsel had established and filed a new notice of appeal from the 2006 judgment of conviction and the 2007 postconviction order. Additional facts taken from trial and Machner hearing testimony will be supplied as needed.
¶4 Peterson contends Kachinsky rendered ineffective assistance in a host of ways. He asserts Kachinsky failed to adequately cross-examine or impeach certain witnesses; explain the benefits of a continuance when a newly discovered “other acts” victim surfaced; keep him informed and negotiate for him; and challenge the charging period. The claim we deem to be the primary one is Peterson’s contention that Kachinsky should have moved to suppress his inculpatory statement to a woman who was, by profession, a sheriff’s deputy. Peterson argues that, although she was off-duty and out of uniform, she nonetheless was acting as an agent of the State. We begin there.
¶5 To prove ineffective assistance of counsel, a criminal
defendant must show: (1) deficient
performance by his or her lawyer and (2) prejudice. Strickland v.
¶6 Michael first disclosed the assault to two neighborhood friends in September 2004, over a year after it occurred. Peterson was outside of Michael’s house moving appliances for Michael’s mother. Michael saw Peterson and told his friends and sister about the incident.
¶7 Trisha Liethen, the sheriff’s deputy, also was at Michael’s home that day. She was the “big sister” to another of Michael’s sisters through the Big Brothers Big Sisters program. Liethen was not in uniform or on duty; due to a work-related injury, she was in the process of going on disability retirement. Liethen had been a big sister for several years, knew Peterson from seeing him at the house and called “hi” to him when she saw him. Soon after, she overheard the children talking about the assault, so she took Michael aside. He began crying and told her what happened when he spent the night at Peterson’s house “around his birthday,” which is in June. Liethen asked Peterson about Michael’s accusation. Peterson said something to the effect of “that wasn’t when it happened,” but did not deny the allegation. Liethen told Peterson she was going to call the police, and he should not leave. She went into the house and left him standing outside on the porch. Liethen called Michael’s mother to come home from work and waited with her for the police to arrive.
¶8 Peterson testified at the postconviction Machner hearing that he had known Liethen for about two years at the time of Michael’s disclosure. He knew she was a sheriff’s deputy and about her disability and testified she was not in uniform and that he knew she was there in her capacity as a big sister. Peterson also testified that after Liethen spoke to him he “wanted to confront Michael.” He said Liethen grabbed his elbow and told him he “can’t go nowhere” until the police came, making him feel as if he were “being forced to stick around.” Liethen denied touching him in any fashion.
¶9 Peterson argues that Kachinsky should have moved to suppress his statement to Liethen because it was the product of custodial interrogation and so should have been preceded by Miranda[3] warnings. He contends the statement’s admission was particularly damaging because it “left the jury with the unchallenged opinion” that he confessed to the assault.[4] Kachinsky testified that he concluded a suppression motion would not have been fruitful because he saw no basis to deem Liethen a state actor.
¶10 Miranda warnings are required only for custodial interrogation.
See
State
v. Morgan, 2002 WI App 124, ¶10, 254
¶11 This court recently has addressed in a Fourth Amendment context
whether an off-duty officer’s actions in a private capacity constituted State
or private action. In State
v. Cole, 2008 WI App 178, ¶¶5, 13, ___ Wis. 2d ___, 762 N.W.2d 711, an
off-duty police officer opened a letter delivered to her home address. It bore her address but someone else’s name.
¶12 Despite the somewhat different context, we find that reasoning
persuasive in the circumstances here and conclude Liethen was acting as a
private citizen. She was present in her
role as big sister. Upon learning what
Michael divulged, Liethen responded as any responsible adult might. She spoke privately to Peterson and Michael,
contacted Michael’s mother and waited with her for the police to arrive. She filed no report and engaged in no
official follow-up.
¶13 We also examine the totality of the circumstances to assess
whether Peterson was in custody for purposes of Miranda.
¶14 Despite testifying that subjectively he felt like he was “being
forced to stick around,” objectively, there was no restraint on Peterson’s
freedom. Liethen was not in uniform;
indeed, more than simply off-duty, she was in the process of terminating her
employment. Liethen did not reference
her position as a sheriff’s deputy or make any show of official authority. Liethen simply told him not to leave and left
him standing on the porch while she went inside to call the police. A reasonable person would not have understood
that situation to be a restraint on freedom of movement to the degree associated
with a formal arrest. Kachinsky’s
decision not to bring a suppression motion was reasonable trial strategy based
on the facts and the law. We will not
second-guess trial counsel’s selection of strategies in the face of considered
alternatives. State v. Nielsen, 2001 WI
App 192, ¶44, 247
¶15 Peterson next contends that Kachinsky failed to meaningfully cross-examine Liethen—specifically, that he should have asked her to clarify what the “it” referred to (“that’s not when it happened”) because Peterson may have meant the sleepover, not a sexual assault. Kachinsky testified that he did not want to highlight the statement or, due to Liethen’s law enforcement training, have her “put a spin on it.” He instead chose to elicit testimony that Michael did not exhibit fear of Peterson. Again, Kachinsky chose from among reasonable trial strategies.
¶16 Similarly, Kachinsky reasonably opted not to try to impeach the credibility of the “other acts” witnesses called to testify about Peterson sexually assaulting them. Peterson asserts that Kachinsky should have asked them about prior juvenile adjudications or a criminal traffic conviction. Kachinsky’s decision not to try to impeach these witnesses could have had no impact on the jury verdict. The witnesses’ credibility was bolstered when the jury heard several testify to the same facts, the brother of one victim testify that he saw Peterson assaulting his sister, and a police detective testify that Peterson admitted his attraction to prepubescent girls and his “inappropriate” conduct with one of the victims.
¶17 Peterson next contends that Kachinsky was ineffective for advice given when new other-acts evidence surfaced just before trial. Trial was set to start on a Monday. The Friday before, the brother of one of the girls who Peterson allegedly sexually assaulted reported that Peterson also had assaulted him. On the morning of trial, the prosecutor moved to admit this additional other-acts evidence. Kachinsky proposed that if the court would exclude it, he would not argue that all of the other-acts victims were girls. The court put the choice to Peterson: (1) accept Kachinsky’s proposal or (2) not exclude the evidence but delay trial to allow the defense to investigate the boy’s claim. Peterson testified at the postconviction motion hearing he did not recall the court giving him the option of a continuance or Kachinsky discussing it with him, and that he “think[s]” he would have considered delaying the trial had the option been made clear to him.
¶18 Advising Peterson to opt for excluding the new other-acts evidence not only was reasonable, it is hard to fathom why Peterson might think the alternate choice would make any sense. His defense was that Michael fabricated the assault, a point strengthened by the fact that all of the other known victims were girls. Allowing evidence in of another boy victim would undermine that claim. Even though Kachinsky could not argue that Peterson preyed only on girls, the jury would have been aware of the other victims’ genders. Kachinsky’s action on this point was neither deficient nor prejudicial.
¶19 Peterson next broadly asserts that Kachinsky breached supreme court
rules mandating that a lawyer negotiate for, consult and maintain communication
with and reasonably inform his or her client about the status of the case, that
Kachinsky did not render full and candid advice about the plea offers and that Kachinsky’s
simultaneous involvement in a judicial election materially limited the amount
of time Kachinsky could devote to his case. These conclusory allegations of ineffective
assistance, unsupported by specific factual assertions, are legally
insufficient.
¶20 Furthermore, the record belies those claims not too vague to
address. Peterson testified at the Machner
hearing that he knew: the State would
agree to drop the persistent repeater enhancer if he pled; the potential
penalties with and without the penalty enhancer; and that even on a plea he
likely would get the maximum because of his offense history. A defendant is adequately informed if made
aware of the maximum term of imprisonment, even if not explicitly instructed of
the breakdown between initial incarceration and extended supervision.
¶21 Peterson
next contends Kachinsky was ineffective for not seeking to narrow the roughly
six-month charging period and then introducing alibi evidence for a portion of
the period. A defendant is entitled to be informed of the
charges, including the time frame in which the assault allegedly occurred. State v. Fawcett, 145
¶22 Michael’s
mother testified that Michael stayed overnight at Peterson’s at least twice and
perhaps up to five times. One she could
pin to May 2003 because she was at a church retreat. Michael testified that the assault occurred “about
fifteen days” before his June 24 birthday. Kachinsky testified that he did not move to
narrow the charging period because of the nature of the evidence and the fact
that Peterson and the boy knew each other, giving the State some latitude in
charging. As to the alibi defense, Peterson
acknowledged that he never told Kachinsky about a trip he took to
¶23 The
last issue is whether the trial court improperly admitted other-acts evidence when
it allowed the State to introduce evidence of three instances in which Peterson
had sexually assaulted young girls who, like Michael, were in Peterson’s sphere
of acquaintance. We employ a three-step
analytical framework to determine the admissibility of other-acts evidence. State v. Sullivan, 216
¶24 The
court examined at length five cases the State sought to introduce as other-acts
evidence, considering each in the light of the Sullivan analysis as
tempered by Davidson. In the end, it
allowed the State to use three of them.
Before the jury heard the evidence and again before deliberations, the
court advised the jury of the limited purpose for which the evidence was
offered. See Wis. Stat. §§
904.04(2), 904.03. Cautionary
instructions help to limit the danger of unfair prejudice that might result
from other-acts evidence. Davidson,
236
By the Court.—Judgment and order affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5.
[1] All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2007-08 version unless noted.
[2]
[3] See
Miranda
v.
[4] The statement was not unchallenged. Peterson’s statement to the police denying the assault was read to the jury and made an exhibit. That statement said, “I did not have any sexual contact with Mike while he was at my home. I do not wish to sign this statement.”