On Point blog, page 240 of 263
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel; Multiplicity; Postconviction Discovery; Trial Judge Adopting State’s Brief in Toto
State v. Kelvin L. Crenshaw, 2010AP1960-CR, District 1, 8/2/11
court of appeals decision (not recommended for publication); for Crenshaw: Joseph E. Redding; case activity
Counsel wasn’t ineffective with respect to: failure to argue a theory of defense unsupported by the evidence; failure to introduce medical records asserted to show police bias in conducting the investigation; failure to object to the concededly erroneous inclusion of “party to a crime”
Discovery Violation – Harmless Error; Defendant’s Right not to Testify – Evidentiary Hearing
State v. Daniel E. Krueger, 2011AP571-CR, District 3, 8/2/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Krueger: Ana Lyn Babcock; case activity
Prosecutorial failure to disclose a police report containing his statements that “were incriminating and any reasonable prosecutor would have planned on using them at trial” violated Krueger’s right to discovery, ¶23, citing State v. DeLao, 2002 WI 49,
TPR – Motion to Reopen, § 806.07
Shelly J. v. Leslie W., 2011AP753, District 4, 7/28/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Shelly J.: Amy J. Lamerand Zott; case activity
Shelly’s motion to reopen her TPR judgment, 7 years after she successfully petitioned for voluntary termination, was untimely under the 1-year deadline imposed by § 806.07(1)(a) and (c), nor did she show “extraordinary circumstances” under subs. (h). As to her claim that the judgment was void under subs.
IAC – Rebuttal Witness
State v. Jeremy M. Bootz, 2010AP2795-CR, District 2, 7/27/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Bootz: Craig S. Powell; case activity
Counsel “had no obligation to object to” the testimony of “a bona fide rebuttal witness,” hence didn’t perform deficiently.
The court summarizes ground-rules relative to rebuttal witnesses, overarching principles being: “A bona fide rebuttal witness is a witness whose testimony only becomes necessary and appropriate after the defense presents its case-in-reply.
Delinquency Adjudication – Theft – Sufficiency of Evidence
State v. Juan I. C., 2010AP3114, District 4, 7/21/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Juan I.C.: Susan E. Alesia, SPD, Madison Appellate; case activity
Credibility determination made by trial judge supported delinquency adjudication for theft of iPod that Juan borrowed but failed to return.
¶11 On the disputed issue of whether Juan repeatedly assured Max and JeVaughnte that he would either return the iPod or pay for it,
TPR – Totality of Circumstances Test
D’Ann K. v. Benjamin J. G., 2010AP1655, District 4, 7/20/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Benjamin J.G.: Gina Frances Bosben; case activity
With failure to assume parental responsibility as the ground for termination, Benjamin G. “argues that the court did not properly apply the totality of the circumstances test established in Tammy W-G. because it failed to consider Benjamin’s testimony that D’Ann [the guardian] failed to return his phone calls.”
Terry Stop – Reasonable Suspicion – Citizen-Informant; Duration
State v. Michael D. Walters, 2010AP3156-CR, District 2, 7/20/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Walters: Thomas E. Hayes; case activity
Tip provided by citizen informant’s 911 call reporting drug use in car traveling on highway was sufficiently reliable to support stop, given that the informant provided her name, phone number, description of her vehicle, her proximate location and direction of travel, and remained on the line with updates:
¶23 According to Williams,
Traffic Stop – Air Freshener
State v. Cathy Ann Currie, 2011AP322-CR, District 3, 7/19/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Currie: Jon Stanek; case activity
¶7 Lear testified he stopped Currie because he observed “a very large air freshener” hanging from her rearview mirror. The court determined that any object hanging from a rearview mirror would obstruct a driver’s clear view through the front of the windshield. The court also found Lear’s testimony about his observations credible.
TPR – Failure to Assume Parental Responibility; GAL Appointment for Parent; Parent’s GAL: Dispositional Recommendation – Harmless Error
Waukesha County DH&HS v. Jennifer L. H., 2010AP2990, District 2, 7/13/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Jennifer L.H.: Suzanne L. Hagopian, SPD, Madison Appellate; case activity
Evidence held sufficient to prove Jennifer’s failure to assume parental responsibility as TPR ground, notwithstanding that she lived with the child and helped raise him from birth until he was removed from her home: “although Jennifer did live with Kurt for most of his life,
Search & Seizure – Private Action
County of Jefferson v. Karla J. Raue, 2010AP3131, District 4, 7/7/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Raue: Walter Arthur Piel, Jr.; case activity
Act of bar patron (turning off car and taking key from Raue) was private, non-governmental action, therefore didn’t implicate Raue’s 4th amendment rights. State v. Butler, 2009 WI App 52, 317 Wis. 2d 515, 768 N.W.2d 46 (acts of private security guard not subject to 4th amendment scrutiny),