Anthony Siers v. Douglas Weber

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 2001
Docket00-3124
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Anthony Siers v. Douglas Weber, (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

___________

No. 00-3124 ___________

Anthony Siers, * * Appellee, * * v. * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the Douglas Weber, Warden of the South * District of South Dakota. Dakota State Penitentiary; Mark W. * Barnett, South Dakota Attorney * General, * * Appellants. * ___________

Submitted: February 26, 2001

Filed: August 14, 2001 ___________

Before WOLLMAN, Chief Judge, HANSEN, and BYE, Circuit Judges. ___________

WOLLMAN, Chief Judge.

The state of South Dakota appeals from the district court’s grant of Anthony Siers’s petition for writ of habeas corpus. We reverse and remand with directions to dismiss the petition. I.

On October 4, 1991, a Pennington County, South Dakota, jury found Siers guilty of second degree rape. As a habitual offender, Siers was sentenced to fifteen years in the South Dakota State Penitentiary. In 1994, after the South Dakota Supreme Court summarily affirmed his conviction, Siers filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the state trial court, which was eventually granted in November of 1997. The South Dakota Supreme Court reversed the grant of habeas relief in July of 1998. Siers v. Class, 581 N.W.2d 491 (S.D. 1998). In November of that year Siers filed a pro se petition for habeas relief in federal district court. After the appointment of counsel, amended pleadings were filed in December of 1999, and on August 10, 2000, the district court granted the petition. The state filed this appeal and obtained a stay of Siers’s release pending the outcome of these proceedings.

We recite the facts as determined by the South Dakota Supreme Court. On July 4, 1991, S.B., a college sophomore, went to meet friends at the Black Hills Heritage Festival in Rapid City, South Dakota. S.B. was unable to locate her friends, but met up with a man who followed her around the festival while she looked for them. He identified himself as Tony Siers. S.B. left the festival, planning to walk to a friend’s home, and Siers followed her on his bicycle, attempting to persuade her to enter secluded areas with him. Nervous, and forgetting that she had already given him her name, S.B. gave Siers a false name, prompting him to tell her that he had also lied about his real name, which he said was Tom Janis. Siers then tried unsuccessfully to persuade S.B. to accompany him to his home on Silver Street.

Siers eventually convinced S.B. to walk across a dark lot, where he raped her. After the assault, S.B., fearing for her life, agreed to go back to Siers’s house with him, but asked to stop at a convenience store. Siers waited outside the store while S.B. used the telephone. Juanita Larvie, the convenience store clerk, overheard S.B. asking a friend to pick her up and take her to the hospital. Larvie elicited from S.B. that she had

-2- been raped. At Larvie’s suggestion, S.B. called the police. She asked Larvie to remember the names Tony Siers and Tom Janis and gave both names to the police officer who answered her call.

S.B. took the police to the scene of the rape. Physical and medical evidence generally corroborate S.B.’s account of the rape. Upon visiting the Silver Street address given by S.B., a police detective determined that it was the residence of Siers’s mother and that Siers had been living there and at the home of his sister, Joanna Siers. The detective then spoke with Joanna Siers at her home and ascertained that Siers was not there. Joanna Siers was cooperative, but said nothing to the effect that her brother had been at her home at the time of the rape. When he was ultimately arrested at the Silver Street house, Siers said nothing to the arresting officers about having spent the night at his sister’s house. S.B. and Larvie both picked Siers’s picture out of photographic line-ups, although S.B. had initially described her attacker as having “sandy hair,” whereas Siers has black hair, and Larvie, who was acquainted with both Siers and Tom Janis, had initially told police that Tom Janis was the man she saw outside the convenience store.

Attorney David Wurm, who was appointed to represent Siers, called no defense witnesses at trial. According to the testimony presented at the state habeas proceeding, Siers had told Wurm that four witnesses, Loydell and Randy Williams, and Joanna Siers and her boyfriend Forest Bordeaux, could provide an alibi by placing him at a powwow that was going on near the festival, and that he had slept at his sister’s home on the night of the rape. Wurm interviewed the Williamses and concluded that because their testimony placed Siers near the scene of the rape and because they could not remember the precise time they saw Siers at the powwow, their testimony would not prove helpful. Wurm went to Joanna Siers’s house in an attempt to interview her and Bordeaux, but neither was at home. Wurm subpoenaed Joanna Siers; Bordeaux was, by then, on the Rosebud Sioux Indian Reservation and therefore beyond the reach of the subpoena. Although Wurm could not remember what other steps he took to contact

-3- Bordeaux and Joanna Siers, his normal practice would have been to ask Siers for help in contacting them, to leave his business card in the door when he visited Joanna Siers’s home, and to attach a note to the subpoena asking her to contact him. Wurm’s telephone number was written on the face of the subpoena, and it is undisputed that Joanna Siers did not contact him prior to the trial.

Both Joanna and Anthony Siers testified at the state habeas proceeding that Joanna responded to Wurm’s subpoena by coming to the trial. Wurm stated that he was unaware of Joanna’s presence and that he had received no response when he called her name in the hallway outside the courtroom during the course of the trial. Siers alleges that he asked Wurm why no alibi witnesses were called. Joanna Siers testified that she had approached Wurm during the trial and asked him when she would testify and was told that her testimony was not needed. She further testified that Siers was at her home on the night of the rape, that she, Siers, and Bordeaux were awake during the early portion of the two to three hour period prior to the rape, that all three went to bed at the same time, and that because she is a light sleeper, she would have heard Siers if he had left during the night. Wurm testified that, had he been aware of Joanna Siers’s presence during the trial and of her testimony as presented on habeas review, he would have had no strategic reason not to call her as a witness.

II.

The sole issue before us is whether the district court properly concluded that the South Dakota Supreme Court’s holding that Wurm’s failure to interview Joanna Siers did not amount to ineffective assistance of counsel was an unreasonable application of federal law. Because we conclude that the district court failed to give appropriate deference to the state court’s finding that Siers had suffered no prejudice as a result of Wurm’s dereliction of duty, we reverse.

-4- A. Standards

We review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and its findings of fact for clear error. Hadley v. Groose, 97 F.3d 1131, 1134 (8th Cir. 1996).

A state prisoner may obtain federal habeas relief with respect to a claim adjudicated on the merits in state court only through a showing that the state court’s decision was either (1) contrary to, or (2) an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court. Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 404-05 (2000); Newman v. Hopkins, 247 F.3d 848, 851 (8th Cir. 2001).

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Siers v. Class
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Anthony Siers v. Douglas Weber, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-siers-v-douglas-weber-ca8-2001.