On Point blog, page 1 of 3
Kentucky v. King, USSC No. 09-1272, cert. grant 9/29/10
Decision below (KY supreme court)
Question Presented (from USSC docket post):
Police officers entered an apartment building in hot pursuit of a person who sold crack cocaine to an undercover informant. They heard a door slam, but were not certain which of two apartments the trafficker fled into. A strong odor of marijuana emanated from one of the doors, which prompted the officers to believe the trafficker had fled into that apartment.
Court of Appeals Publication Orders, 9/10
court of appeals publication orders, 9/29/10
On Point posts from this list:
2010 WI App 124 State v. Donald L. Schultz
2010 WI App 129 State v. Adamm D.J. Linton
2010 WI App 132 State v. Jacquese Franklin Harrell
2010 WI App 133 State v. Christopher D. Jones
2010 WI App 134 State v.
Bullcoming v. New Mexico, USSC No. 09-10876, cert grant 9/28/10
Decision Below (New Mexico supreme court)
Whether the Confrontation Clause permits the prosecution to introduce testimonial statements of a nontestifying forensic analyst through the in-court testimony of a supervisor or other person who did not perform or observe the laboratory analysis described in the statements.
Cert. Petition
Follow-up to Melendez-Diaz v.
Henry Griffin v. Pierce, 7th Cir No. 09-3138, 9/22/10
7th circuit court of appeals decision
Habeas – Napue Issue
The Supreme Court has held that “a conviction obtained through use of false evidence, known to be such by representatives of the State, must fall under the Fourteenth Amendment.” Napue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264, 269 (1959) …. Thus, a new trial is required if a petitioner establishes that (1) the prosecution presented false testimony or failed to disclose that false testimony was used to convict,
Blogging, Interrupted
Posting will be light to non-existent, 9/27 – 10/5.
Expect, during this time frame, Wisconsin court of appeals decisions and September publication orders, and the first USSC cert grants of OT ’10 (which might include an important good-faith issue; see this Orin Kerr post).
Cesar Guajardo-Palma v. Martinson, 7th Cir No. 10-1726, 9/20/10
7th circuit court of appeals decision
Prison Mail – Access to Courts
As a matter of the due process right to a fair hearing in a civil matter, which includes the right to aid of counsel, a prison inmate is entitled to receive confidential communications from his lawyer. However, the prison is entitled, as a matter of security, to assure itself that such purported communications are indeed from a lawyer authorized to practice in the relevant jurisdiction.
State v. Arlie I. Grenie, 2010AP459-CR, District 4, 9/13/10
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Grenie: John C. Orth; Steven J. House; BiC; Resp.; Reply
Traffic Stop – Blue Lights
Traffic stop for having blue lights lit on front of vehicle, upheld. (§ 347.07(2)(a) bars display of “(a)ny color of light other than white or amber visible from directly in front.”)
¶6 Grenie essentially asks this court to credit testimony by his two witnesses suggesting that the blue lights were “never” operational over the officer’s testimony that he saw the lights lit when Grenie’s Jeep passed him.
TPR – Interest-of-Justice Review
Dane Co. DHS v. Tierra M., 2010AP1648, District 4, 9/23/10
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Tierra M.: Martha K. Askins, SPD, Madison Appellate
The court rejects the idea that Tierra M.’s termination of parental rights wasn’t “fully tried” under the theory that the subsequently decided Sheboygan County Department of Health & Human Services v. Tanya M.B., 2010 WI 55 requires departmental services relevant to implied as well as explicitly ordered conditions for the children’s return.
Defense win! County’s appeal of dismissal is moot
Milwaukee County v. Earl Z., 2010AP704, District 1, 9/23/10
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Earl Z.: Jeremy Perri, SPD, Milwaukee Appellate
County appeal of dismissal of emergency detention at probable cause stage is moot, where facts supporting that requested detention are no longer operative. Exceptions to mootness — appellate court may reach merits if the issue is sufficiently important or likely repetitious but evasive of review —
Probation Search
State v. Seneca Joseph Boykin, 2009AP2499-CR, District 2, 9/22/10
court of appeals decision (3-judge, not recommended for publication); for Boykin: Mark A. Schoenfeldt; BiC; Resp.
A probation agent may not evade the warrant requirement by acting as a “stalking horse” for the police in conducting a warrantless search of a probationer’s residence, ¶10. In this instance, probation officer Navis, acting on reliable information that Boykin was using and selling cocaine,