On Point blog, page 29 of 49
Entitlement to Machner Hearing
State v. Jimmie C. Grayer, 2010AP1749-CR, District 1, 6/1/11
court of appeals decision (not recommended for publication); for Grayer: Bridget E. Boyle; case activity
Postconviction denial of ineffective assistance of counsel challenge without Machner hearing upheld.
1. Although counsel performed deficiently by inaccurately telling the jury in his opening statement that Grayer’s in-custody had not been recorded by the police, Grayer wasn’t prejudiced by the deficiency.
Sentencing – Discretion
State v. Dustin M. Przybylski, 2011AP1-CR, District 2, 6/1/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Przybylski: Michael S. Holzman; case activity
OWI sentence consecutive to unrelated 15-year sentence upheld, despite joint recommendations of concurrent time, against argument it was fashioned mechanistically rather than as exercise of discretion, State v. Martin, 100 Wis. 2d 326, 302 N.W.2d 58 (Ct. App.
Barion Perry v. New Hampshire, USSC No. 10-8974, cert granted 5/31/11
Decision below: New Hampshire Supreme Court, No. 2009-0590, 11/18/2010 (summary order); Perry’s brief below; New Hampshire’s brief below
When a witness in a criminal case identifies a suspect out-of-court, under suggestive circumstances which give rise to a substantial likelihood of later misidentification, due process requires the trial judge to determine whether the out-ofcourt identification and any subsequent in-court identification are reliable before either may be admitted into evidence.
U.S. v. Sidney O. Sellers, 7th Cir No. 09-2516, 5/19/11
7th circuit court of appeals decision
Counsel, of Own Choosing
By arbitrarily refusing to grant Sellers a continuance so he could retain counsel of his own choosing, the district court violated his 6th amendment right to counsel, a structural error requiring reversal without considering possible prejudice.
The facts are a bit extreme – Sellers thought he was retaining one attorney and instead he was saddled with an associate,
Standing – Generally; Counsel – Choice of, Disqualification – Civil
Susan Foley-Ciccantelli v. Bishop’s Grove Condominium Association, Inc., 2011 WI 36, on certification; case activity
Standing – Generally
Lead opinion (3-Justice):
¶5 There is no single longstanding or uniform test to determine standing in the case law. Courts have inconsistently used a variety of terminologies as tests for standing. Therefore, as a prerequisite to answering the first question, we review the law of standing.
Guest Post: Michael M. O’Hear, “Do Criminals Count?”
On Point is very pleased to publish this guest post, by Professor Michael M. O’Hear, on Brown v. Plata. Mr. O’Hear is Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Research at Marquette University Law School. He is also editor of the Federal Sentencing Reporter and author of the Life Sentences Blog. You can access his papers on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) at: http://ssrn.com/author=328167. We are deeply appreciative of his finding the time to share his expertise with our readership.
SVP – Evidence re: Screening Process and Postcommitment Treatment
State v. Scott Maher, 2010AP460, District 4, 5/26/11
court of appeals decision (not recommended for publication); for Maher: Donald T. Lang, SPD, Madison Appellate; case activity
Testimony from a State’s expert witness describing the ch. 980 screening process was irrelevant.
¶11 We addressed the issue of the admissibility of this same type of evidence in State v. Sugden, 2010 WI App 166,
Possession with Intent to Deliver (THC) – Sufficiency of Evidence, PTAC; Stipulation – Element – Right to Jury Trial
State v. Roshawn Smith, 2010AP1192-CR, District 3, 5/26/11, aff’d and rev’d, 2012 WI 91
court of appeals decision (not recommended for publication), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, 2012 WI 91; for Smith: William E. Schmaal, SPD, Madison Appellate; case activity
Evidence held sufficient to support guilty verdict, § 961.41(1m)(h)5., ptac: after agreeing to accept packages (which turned out to contained marijuana),
OWI – Blood Test, § 343.305(5)(a), Generally; Request for Blood Test
City of Sun Prairie v. Michael H. Smith, 2010AP2607, District 4, 5/26/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Smith: Tracey A. Wood; case activity
¶9 Wisconsin Stat. § 343.305(5)(a) imposes the following obligations on law enforcement: “(1) to provide a primary test at no charge to the suspect; (2) to use reasonable diligence in offering and providing a second alternate test of its choice at no charge to the suspect;
Court of Appeals Publication Orders, 5/11
court of appeals publication orders, 5/26/11
On Point posts from this list:
2011 WI App 61 State v. Carl Cornelius Gilbert, Jr. / State v. Price T. Hunt
2011 WI App 63 State v. Darron D. Jackson
2011 WI App 64 State v. Michael D. Below
2011 WI App 66 State v. Herbert O. Richard
2011 WI App 68 Adam Martine v.