Becker v. Luebbers

578 F.3d 907, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19295, 2009 WL 2615810
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2009
Docket07-3031
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 578 F.3d 907 (Becker v. Luebbers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Luebbers, 578 F.3d 907, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19295, 2009 WL 2615810 (8th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

In 1995, a Missouri jury convicted Donald G. Becker of sodomizing and attempting to rape his minor daughters in violation of Missouri Revised Statutes §§ 566.060 and 566.030, Cumulative Supplement 1991. He currently is serving a life sentence for the attempted rape conviction and has completed a concurrent, seven-year sentence for the sodomy conviction. 2 Becker exhausted his present claims in state court and filed a timely petition for federal habeas relief.

Becker argues that trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to: call certain witnesses or offer written statements, police reports, hospital records, or juvenile records to show that the victims were not credible; call other witnesses to contradict a victim’s description of one of the offenses; cross-examine the victims more vigorously; and impeach the victims more completely with prior false statements, prior false allegations of sexual abuse, and purported motives for falsely accusing Becker. The district court 3 re *910 jected Becker’s claims, applying the standards of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), codified in part at 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). We affirm.

I. Background

Becker and his wife had two daughters, TKB born in 1977 and TRB born in 1980. Becker separated from his wife shortly after the younger daughter, TRB, was born, and he moved to California. TKB and TRB stayed near St. Louis. The daughters visited Becker three times in California after about 1987 and also saw him during some holiday visits in St. Louis when Becker returned for Christmas with his family at his mother’s home. Eventually, Becker moved back to St. Louis, but his daughters saw him infrequently after his return. Neither girl made allegations against Becker contemporaneously with any sexual abuse. Rather, the crimes came to light several years after the fact.

In 1994, the older daughter, TKB, was placed under general anesthesia for oral surgery. While TKB was in a semi-conscious state during administration of the anesthesia, a nurse and an anesthesiologist heard her say that she had been sexually molested by her father. This statement prompted an investigation that led to more specific allegations from TKB and TRB and, eventually, to Becker’s indictment. The State brought numerous sexual abuse charges against Becker, alleging various degrees of lascivious contact with both of his daughters between April 1987 and July 1991.

At trial, both daughters testified that Becker touched their vaginas with his hands on several occasions. In addition, TKB testified that Becker had attempted to have intercourse with her on at least one occasion. Regarding this attempted rape, TKB testified that in July 1991, at her grandmother’s house in St. Louis, Becker had been “touching her all day” and ultimately attempted to have intercourse with her. According to TKB, she attempted to jump out of an upper-story window after this encounter.

Testimony from another family member who was present on the day of the attempted rape corroborated TKB’s claim regarding her attempt to jump out of the window. In fact, TKB was admitted to a hospital in July 1991 for injuries sustained in an attempt to jump out of a window. At the time of this hospital admission, officials asked TKB about possible abuse, but she denied that she was a victim of abuse. She blamed her actions on problems and ongoing disagreements with her mother and trouble with her boyfriend.

Becker’s trial counsel cross-examined TKB but did not question her as to specific details regarding her prior juvenile-court record or prior allegations of sexual abuse that she purportedly had made against police officers. In addition, trial counsel did not question TKB extensively about the attempted rape or events surrounding the attempted rape. Through the testimony of other witnesses, including a psychiatrist who treated TKB, the jury heard that TKB had psychological problems, suffered depression, experienced suicidal ideation, and had attempted suicide repeatedly. In addition, the jury learned that TKB had been hospitalized several times and involved in several run-ins with the law. The psychiatrist also testified as to his diagnoses and treatment of TKB regarding each hospital admission. The jury also learned that TKB had been in trouble with juvenile authorities in Illinois starting around 1991 for absenteeism from school, fighting, staying out late, running away from home, and drinking. Importantly, and consistent with the defense theory of the case, the jury heard that, as a consequence of TKB’s allegations against Becker, she avoided having to serve a then- *911 pending term of juvenile detention in Illinois related to a 1993 assault.

The jury also heard that, not only had TKB denied being a, victim of sexual abuse at the time that she attempted to jump through the window, she had repeatedly denied being a victim of sexual abuse when asked by hospital personnel at the time of several other hospital admissions. During her hospital admissions, she repeatedly blamed her actions and psychological problems on her boyfriend, her mother, and her mother’s boyfriend. Finally, the jury learned that TRB, TKB’s younger sister, did not make any allegations of sexual abuse until after her sister had done so.

TKB and TRB testified that Becker also molested their female cousin, JB, who was a minor, and that a male relative who was also a minor had witnessed Becker’s crimes. These two relatives testified at trial, denied having witnessed Becker abuse TKB or TRB, and denied being victims of Becker’s abuse. JB claimed that TKB had attempted to coerce her into making allegations of sexual abuse against Becker. In fact, JB had surreptitiously recorded a telephone call from TKB that JB characterized as an attempt by TKB to convince her to make false allegations against Becker. Prosecutors characterized the tape as a show of support by TKB encouraging JB to reveal abuse rather than an attempt by TKB to have JB fabricate allegations of abuse. The jury listened to the tape, and based on the verdict, it is clear that the jury believed TKB’s testimony and the prosecutors’ characterization of the tape and disbelieved JB. The jury heard from TKB and TRB, as well as other family members, that the girls’ allegations against Becker had caused a split in Becker’s extended family and that the two other family-member minors referenced above were aligned with the side of the family that supported Becker.

The jury also heard descriptions of two instances of suspicious conduct or statements that preceded TKB’s revelation of abuse. First, a neighbor testified that she saw Becker kiss TKB and TRB inappropriately when they were very young by putting his tongue in their mouths. Second, the wife of one of TKB’s cousins testified that, on one occasion after TKB had been very upset, TKB stated that she hated her father “because he always treats me like I’m his girl friend or something.” TKB herself recited this statement in her own testimony when asked whether she had ever spoken of the abuse to an adult prior to her anesthesia-induced revelation in the operating room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 F.3d 907, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19295, 2009 WL 2615810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-luebbers-ca8-2009.