Antonio E. Lee v. James Murphy

41 F.3d 311
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1994
Docket94-2223
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 F.3d 311 (Antonio E. Lee v. James Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antonio E. Lee v. James Murphy, 41 F.3d 311 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Circuit Judge.

Antonio Lee was convicted in Wisconsin state court of first degree intentional homicide, § 940.01(1) Wis.Stats., and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. He was given a post-conviction hearing in the trial court with new counsel, and relief was denied. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals affirmed, 168 Wis.2d 776, 486 N.W.2d 37 (1992), and the Supreme Court of Wisconsin denied a petition for review. The United States district court, E.D. Wisconsin, denied Lee’s petition for habeas corpus. We affirm.

(1) He did not make a knowing, voluntary, and effective waiver of the right to testify in his own defense.

The issues raised with this court center around the fact that Lee did not testify in his own defense. Summarizing, his contentions are:

(2) His counsel was ineffective for several reasons. He did not properly advise Lee concerning waiver. Counsel pursued a trial strategy that Lee was guilty but of only reckless homicide when he should have asserted that Lee was not guilty because he acted in self-defense. He failed to interview corroborating witnesses.

(3) He was denied due process by the trial court’s refusal to grant him a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence.

*313 (4) In the interest of justice he is entitled to a new trial because the real controversy— whether he acted in self-defense — has not been tried.

These grounds were rejected by the state trial court, or the state court of appeals, or both.

(5) Lee has raised as an additional ground that the district court erred in giving deference to factual findings of the state courts because, under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), the fact-finding procedures were not adequate, the material facts were not adequately developed, and Lee did not get a full, fair and adequate hearing in state court.

The district court deferred to state court findings on the historical facts and found against Lee on all issues. The state concedes exhaustion.

I.EVIDENCE AGAINST LEE

The evidence against Lee was powerful. It was not disputed that Lee shot Bobby Compton, and there were no substantial differences in the testimony concerning the occurrence. Lee came to the house of his former girlfriend, who was the mother of his child, to visit the child. He left to go to a bar with friends. He returned under the influence of alcohol. En route he flashed his .38 caliber revolver in the street and fired a shot in the air. When he reached the house, around 1:00-3:00 a.m., Compton, the current boyfriend, was there, and a loud verbal confrontation ensued between them beginning in the house and continuing in the front yard. Compton was unarmed. Compton went to his car, according to some of the testimony to turn down the volume on the radio. He came back in the direction of the house. Lee threatened to blow his brains out. Compton walked toward his ear again, and then Lee shot him in the back of the head from short range and shot him a second time in the lower abdomen near the groin. Lee then went to Compton’s car and “leaned” into it. Lee returned to the house, where he described Compton with a string of obscenities. Then, using more obscenities, he grabbed the former girlfriend by the neck, put his pistol to her throat or face, and told her that if she did not “straighten up”, she would be next. He threatened to kill others inside the house if they told police where he lived. He fled but within a few hours turned himself in to police.

Police searched Compton’s car and found no weapon.

All available eyewitnesses, other than Lee himself, testified for the prosecution.

II.DEFENSE/RECKLESS HOMICIDE

Understanding this ease requires understanding the Wisconsin law concerning self-defense. A Wisconsin defendant charged with first degree intentional homicide may assert self-defense as an absolute defense. Or he may assert “imperfect self-defense,” which implicates his reasonable belief that he was necessarily exerting force to prevent or terminate an unlawful interference with his person. But, since these two defenses implicate the defendant’s state of mind, he may not assert either unless he takes the stand and testifies concerning his state of mind. Or the defendant, even though he does not take the stand, can seek to have the jury decide that, if he is guilty, it is only of the lesser included offense of reckless homicide.

III.THE DEFENSE STRATEGY AND THE TRIAL

By motion made before taking of testimony began, defense counsel sought approval to introduce evidence of prior criminal acts by Compton, as tending to show character for violence, without Lee having to testify. The court did not then deny the motion but noted that evidence of prior criminal acts of violence would be relevant only to the extent it was known to defendant and thus bore on his intent, and it observed that it was not clear how counsel proposed to bring in the violent character evidence without Lee’s taking the stand. Later in the trial defense counsel twice renewed the motion, offering to prove Lee’s state of mind at the time of the altercation by having him testify outside the presence of the jury, thereby establishing a basis for the court to admit the evidence of Compton’s criminal record. The court declined.

*314 The habeas court recognized that defense counsel was trying to do what was not permitted under Wisconsin law, that is introduce a theory of self-defense without the defendant’s testifying at trial.

His effort having been unsuccessful, defense counsel concluded that the best defense strategy was that Lee should not take the stand and self-defense should not be asserted, but rather he would seek jury instructions on reckless homicide and would argue to the jury that the evidence showed only reckless homicide and not intentional murder. 1

After the prosecution rested, counsel asked for a recess to confer with his client. The court declared a recess and instructed that counsel should discuss with Lee his right to testify. After a recess, found by the district court to be 30 to 45 minutes, the following occurred in open court:

MR. BERMAN (Defense Counsel): The record should reflect that Mr. Lee is now present in the courtroom. I want the record to also reflect that we’ve taken this break and discussed this thoroughly with Mr. Lee. This was discussed thoroughly with Mr. Lee this morning as well as discussion that he and I had in the county jail previous to this, and it’s his decision at this time that he desires not to take the witness stand. This is being done with my assistance and my advice.
He has been thoroughly explained all of his options and he certainly has the right to testify. He has the right to tell the jury his side of the story.

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.3d 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonio-e-lee-v-james-murphy-ca7-1994.