PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 94-3004-CR
†Petition for
review filed
Complete Title
of Case:
STATE OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JASON W. WRIGHT,
Defendant-Appellant.†
Submitted on Briefs: June 9, 1995
COURT COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
Opinion Released: July 26, 1995
Opinion Filed: July
26, 1995
Source of APPEAL Appeal from judgments
Full Name JUDGE COURT: Circuit
Lower Court. COUNTY: Manitowoc
(If
"Special", JUDGE: Allan J. Deehr
so indicate)
JUDGES: Anderson, P.J., Brown and Snyder, JJ.
Concurred:
Dissented:
Appellant
ATTORNEYSOn behalf of the defendant-appellant, the cause was on
the brief of Frederick P. Wilk of Sheboygan.
Respondent
ATTORNEYSOn behalf of the plaintiff-respondent, the cause was
submitted on the brief of James E. Doyle, attorney general, and Stephen
W. Kleinmaier, assistant attorney general.
COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND RELEASED JULY
26, 1995 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an
adverse decision by the Court of Appeals.
See § 808.10 and Rule
809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound
volume of the Official Reports. |
No. 94-3004-CR
STATE OF WISCONSIN IN
COURT OF APPEALS
STATE
OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JASON
W. WRIGHT,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL
from judgments of the circuit court for Manitowoc County: ALLAN J. DEEHR,
Judge. Affirmed.
Before
Anderson, P.J., Brown and Snyder, JJ.
BROWN,
J. Jason
W. Wright appeals his first‑degree intentional homicide and aggravated
battery convictions. We apply federal
case law in deciding that a refusal to answer a specific question, as Wright
did in this case, does not amount to an assertion of an overall right to remain
silent. We also hold that police had
probable cause to support Wright's detention at the police station. We further hold that one remedy a judge may
employ to enforce a sequestration order is to exclude a witness from
testifying; contempt is not the sole remedy allowed. We affirm the trial court.
Wright
first submits that statements made by him while at the police station during an
investigatory detention exceeded the original purpose of the detention, which
was to secure physical evidence from his person. Wright posits that the statements should have been suppressed
because they were gained as a result of unreasonable police conduct. But we agree with the trial court that
police had probable cause to support Wright's seizure. The trial court's finding is supported by Hayes
v. Florida, 470 U.S. 811, 815-16 (1985), which validates evidence
gained during detention where police have probable cause to seize the suspect.
The
facts showing probable cause are as follows:
A neighbor of Wright's, G. Roger Olson, was found murdered in his home
on the morning of August 4, 1993. Olson
was found lying in a pool of blood and there were no signs of forced
entry. A witness reported that, on the
day before, he had seen Wright leaving Olson's apartment and saying, “I'll see
you later, Roger.” The witness also
overheard both Wright and Olson say they would meet each other later that
night. Another witness, who lived next
door to Olson, reported that he heard an argument coming from Olson's apartment
at about 4:00 a.m. on August 4.
Based
on this information, investigating detectives went to Wright's home, about four
residences away from the apartment building in which Olson resided. They arrived at about 9:30 a.m. The detectives immediately spotted blood
outside Wright's door. The detectives
knocked on the door and were let in by a brother of Wright's. While inside, one detective observed two red
splotches of what he believed to be blood on the wall inside the house. The detective also saw what appeared to be
blood on the wall at the top of the stairs; the blood was still red, not
brown. Another spot of blood was
observed at the top of the steps going into the kitchen just off the door.
The
detectives had a conversation with all of the people present in the house. They asked if anyone knew Olson. Wright immediately answered that he did not
know him and he did not know whom the detective would be talking about. However, Wright's father then stepped
forward and said, “[W]e are not going to lie here, we do know Mr. Olson, he
comes over to our residence and parks in front of our residence and talks to
the boys on occasion.” But when asked
again if he knew Olson, Wright again denied knowing him.
When
the detectives asked Wright where he was the night before, Wright replied that
he was at a party. A detective noted
that Wright was rubbing the left side of his eye and asked Wright what was
wrong. Wright replied that he had been
head-butted trying to break up a fight at the party. When a detective noted what appeared to be dried blood on
Wright's left hand and on the inner portion of his elbow, Wright replied that
it was the rowdiest party he had ever attended with “blood all over.” He said that the blood got on him because
one of the fighters, Eddie Gamez, was bleeding.
One
of the detectives told Wright that he would have to come with them so they
could remove blood for a comparison and make a determination where it came
from. When one of the detectives told
Wright he would need his shoes, Wright's girlfriend brought him a pair which
she extended to Wright. Wright denied
that they were his shoes. When the
girlfriend told Wright that they were the shoes he always wore, he stated that
they were his work shoes and that he had not worn them in two weeks. He said he wanted his other shoes, but the
girlfriend said that these were the shoes he always wore. Wright said that he wanted a pair of tennis
shoes and the girlfriend retrieved those for Wright. One of the detectives examined the shoes the girlfriend had first
brought out and they looked wet.
While
Wright was detained at the police station, the detectives went to the
courthouse to get a search warrant for Wright's home, for an examination of the
dried blood on Wright's hand, to examine him for external injuries and
fingernail scrapings and to obtain blood samples from the interior of Wright's
body. They also contacted Gamez who
said that while it was true that he had gotten into a scuffle (with his
brother) at a party, he was not aware of any blood at the party, even when
Wright tried to break up the scuffle.
The detective also noted that Wright had said that it had been at least
two days since he had seen Olson.
Based
upon this information, the police had probable cause from which they could have
arrested Wright for Olson's murder at this point. Olson was found in a pool of blood following an argument at about
4:00 a.m. on August 4. There were no
signs of forced entry, thus indicating that Olson knew his attacker. A witness saw Wright leaving Olson's apartment
the day before and overheard the two say they would meet each other later that
night. When police entered Wright's
home, they saw what appeared to be blood.
They saw blood on Wright's person.
When police asked whether anyone knew Olson, Wright twice denied
it. He later admitted knowing Olson but
claimed that he had not seen Olson in two days. When the girlfriend brought his shoes, Wright claimed that they
were not his shoes and then claimed that they were his work shoes and he had
not worn them in two weeks. Inspection
revealed that they appeared to be wet.
Finally, Gamez denied that blood resulted from the scuffle with his
brother.
Wright's
knowing the victim is consistent with the lack of forced entry; he lived close
to the victim. His denials show a
feeling of guilt. There was fresh blood
at the murder scene, in Wright's home and on Wright's person. He lied about his shoes. The police had probable cause. As such, any statements made while in
custody cannot be suppressed on the basis that they were an unreasonable
extension of an “investigatory” detention to obtain blood samples. Besides, we have read the statements and
they are totally exculpatory. We see
nothing in those statements which prejudiced him in his trial. We reject Wright's first argument.
Wright
next complains that police did not scrupulously honor his having invoked his
right to remain silent. The facts
pertinent to this issue are: An officer
was assigned to remain with Wright while the investigating detectives were at the
courthouse obtaining the search warrants.
This officer testified that Wright said “you tried to get me for
speeding tickets one day and then a murder charge the next day.” When the officer asked Wright when he last
saw Olson, Wright said, “I'm going to do what that guy told me and plead the
Fifth on that one.” The “guy” referred
to by Wright was a state public defender who had talked to Wright earlier and
apparently told Wright not to talk to the police. Later, the investigating detective, apparently having returned
from the courthouse, gave Wright his Miranda warnings and obtained
a statement from him.
Wright
maintains that the statement made to the officer, where he “took the Fifth” in
response to the officer's question, was an invocation of his right to remain
silent and that he should not have been questioned by the investigating
detective. Aside from the fact that the
statements were exculpatory and did not in any way prejudice Wright at trial,
we hold that the trial court's decision not to suppress was correct and sustain
it. The trial court ruled that Wright
chose to remain silent only in respect to the one question asked by the officer
assigned to look after Wright.
The
law in the Ninth Federal Circuit is that a defendant may selectively waive his Miranda
rights, deciding to “respond to some questions but not others.” Bruni v. Lewis, 847 F.2d 561,
563 (9th Cir.) (quoted source omitted), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 960
(1988). The First Circuit has arrived
at the same conclusion. United
States v. Eaton, 890 F.2d 511, 513-14 (1st Cir. 1989), cert. denied,
495 U.S. 906 (1990). We also find a
United States Supreme Court case to be instructive. In Fare v. Michael C., 442 U.S. 707, 726-27 (1979),
a suspect declined to answer certain questions, claiming that he either did not
know the answer or that he would not or could not answer specific
questions. The Court ruled that the
defendant's actions “were not assertions of his right to remain silent.” Id. at 727. We agree with the State's reading of Fare
that refusals to answer specific questions do not assert an overall right to remain
silent. We decide to adopt the rule
expressed in Eaton and Bruni and apply it to cases
arising in this state.
Having
done so, however, we add this caveat:
Both Bruni and Eaton go on to hold that when
a defendant's response is equivocal, in the sense that it indicates to
the questioning officer that the defendant may want an attorney, the officer
should not continue evidentiary interrogation.
Eaton, 890 F.2d at 513;
Bruni, 847 F.2d at 563.
Thus, our adoption of the holdings expressed in Eaton and Bruni come with this
limitation. In both the Eaton
and Bruni cases, the statements were held to be unequivocal
expressions of selective invocation. In
Eaton, the defendant said that he would answer the questions he
thought were appropriate. Eaton,
890 F.2d at 514. In Bruni,
the defendant said he would answer those questions that “he felt good to answer
or that he thought his attorney would probably advise him to answer.” Bruni, 847 F.2d at 564. Likewise, here, we hold that the statement
made by Wright was an unequivocal expression of selective invocation. Wright was asked a specific question and
answered that he would do what his lawyer told him and plead the Fifth “on
that one.” We determine that any
reasonable thinking person would construe Wright's statement to mean that he
was not going to answer that specific question. We reject Wright's argument.
The
final issue is whether the trial court had authority to exclude a witness from
testifying rather than holding the witness in contempt. The facts relating to this issue are that
Frederick Honold had been mentioned by the prosecutor in his opening argument
as one of the people who were potential witnesses. The prosecutor explained that they were not necessarily witnesses
who would be called by the State, but he said he was reading the names to learn
if the jurors knew them. The State did
not call Honold. On the day before the
last day of trial, Wright's counsel indicated to the court that he intended to
call Honold to the stand. The prosecutor commented that Honold had been sitting
in the courtroom throughout the trial.
Wright's counsel responded that he had decided the day before to call
Honold as a witness and that he had assumed that the State itself was going to
call Honold. The prosecutor replied
that he never indicated that Honold was going to be a witness for the
State. The trial court warned that it
might preclude Honold from testifying.
On
the next day, Wright's counsel provided an offer of proof that Honold would
testify about hearing some younger voices arguing on the night of the
murder. Honold would also testify that
he knew about Olson keeping guns in the house and about Olson's general habits
and characteristics. Honold told the
court that he had been in court most of Monday, half of Tuesday and an hour on
Wednesday during the trial. Honold was
being called as a witness on Thursday.
The
trial court excluded Honold from testifying.
It noted that the sequestration order had been entered at Wright's
request. It further noted that Wright
knew about Honold's existence and his statements to the police. The court then stated that it was Wright's
duty to make sure that Honold was not present in court if there was a chance
that the defense would rely on Honold's testimony. The court also stated that it could not determine whether Honold
had “picked up” on other testimony or not.
Wright
claims that Loose v. State, 120 Wis. 115, 97 N.W. 526 (1903), is
the controlling precedent on the remedy for violating sequestration orders. He argues that the case stands for the
proposition that where a witness is put under a sequestration order and
violates it, punishment for the transgression is confined to the witness
himself, as for contempt. Wright
further cites Loose to say that it is no ground for excluding the
evidence if the party calling the witness is innocent in the matter. He argues that his trial counsel was
innocent.
While
Wright's recitation of Loose is correct, his reliance on it is
misplaced. Loose is
confined to the situation where the party intent on calling the witness is
innocent in the matter but the witness has violated a sequestration order,
either intentionally or otherwise. Id.
at 120, 97 N.W. at 528. In that
instance, the court wrote:
An
innocent party should not be deprived of the testimony of one of his [or her]
witnesses because of the latter's transgression of which such party is
innocent. Such transgression may well
bear on the credibility of the witness' testimony, as has often been held, many
of the cases cited being examples of that, but the direct punishment for the
offense should be visited upon the offender himself, as for a contempt of court
¼.
Id. at 121-22, 97 N.W. at 528.
Thus, for Loose to apply, two conditions must be present:
(1) the witness must be the transgressor of the rule and (2) the party wishing
to call the transgressor is innocent of violating the rule.
Here,
Wright satisfies neither condition.
Honold never knew he was a witness until he was subpoenaed late in the
trial. He can hardly be called a
transgressor of a rule that did not apply to him. Second, the trial court found, and we sustain that finding, that
Wright himself should have kept Honold from the courtroom if he had any
foreseeable belief that he would call Honold as a witness on his behalf. We add to this that the prosecutor never
told the jury that Honold was going to be a State's witness. Rather, he told the jury that Honold was a
potential witness although the State did not necessarily plan on calling
him. This statement should have alerted
Wright at that point to protect himself by making sure that Honold was not
present in court.
Since
this is not a Loose case, the controlling case on the issue is Nyberg
v. State, 75 Wis.2d 400, 409-10, 249 N.W.2d 524, 528-29 (1977). Exclusion from testifying is a remedy that
is left to the discretion of the trial court.
The trial court properly exercised its discretion on this issue.
By
the Court.—Judgments affirmed.