Cheney v. Washington

614 F.3d 987, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15970, 2010 WL 2991388
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 2010
Docket08-35204
StatusPublished
Cited by200 cases

This text of 614 F.3d 987 (Cheney v. Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheney v. Washington, 614 F.3d 987, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15970, 2010 WL 2991388 (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

IKUTA, Circuit Judge:

James Cheney claims he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel because his defense counsel failed to object properly at two points during his trial. This appeal raises the question whether the state court’s decision rejecting this claim was objectively unreasonable. Applying “the doubly deferential judicial review that applies to a Strickland, claim evaluated under the [28 U.S.C.] § 2254(d)(1) standard,” Knowles v. Mirzayance, — U.S.-,-, 129 S.Ct. 1411, 1420, 173 L.Ed.2d 251 (2009), we hold that the state court’s decision was not contrary to or an unreasonable application of Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984).

I

One day in January 1998, Cheney visited the home shared by his friends Tina Deitz and Deitz’s boyfriend, Tony Martin. Deitz’s nine-year-old daughter, T.D., and twelve-year:old son were home alone, because their school had been cancelled due to snow. Cheney testified that, once at the house, he carried T.D. into her bedroom to retrieve his hat, which T.D. had hidden during one of Cheney’s previous visits. T.D.’s brother reported observing, through a crack in the door connecting the bedroom to a bathroom, Cheney rubbing T.D.’s chest and attempting to put his tongue inside her mouth, while T.D. lay frozen on her bed with “an extremely scared look on her face.” T.D.’s brother immediately called his grandparents, who removed the children from the house and contacted Deitz. Deitz instructed Cheney to leave the house, which he did. Deitz also contacted law enforcement, who sent Detective Dwayne Troxel and a case worker from the State Office for Services to Children and Families (“SCF”) to interview the children that evening.

Based on this incident and two others reported by T.D., Cheney was charged with four counts of first-degree sexual abuse. In the government’s case-in-chief, T.D. testified about three instances in which Cheney had touched her sexually. First, T.D. stated that Cheney had held her on his lap and rubbed her vaginal area underneath her underpants while on a camping trip. Second, T.D. reported that Cheney touched her “private” while alone in a room in her house. The third incident was the one witnessed by her brother on the snow day. The government also presented T.D.’s videotaped interview with *991 the SCF ease worker, which related information similar to T.D.’s trial testimony. In addition, T.D.’s brother testified to what he had seen through the crack in the door. The balance of the government’s case consisted of witnesses intended to bolster T.D. and her brother’s credibility or impeach Cheney’s.

The defense denied the abuse allegations. Cheney testified that he and T.D. would play a “kissing game,” where T.D. would tease Cheney by threatening to kiss him and by making kissing noises, but denied that there was ever any sexual purpose behind these contacts. Cheney admitted that, on the snow day, after T.D. had given him “a little peck on the lips,” he had tickled her and given her a blubbery kiss while she laid on her bed, but maintained that this was merely an act of horseplay.

The defense’s theory at trial was that the investigation into the sexual abuse allegations was biased, and that investigators wrongly assumed Cheney was guilty from the outset and manipulated the evidence to confirm this belief. The defense challenged T.D.’s credibility through experts who testified that children are susceptible to suggestion when interviewed by police. The defense also called Detective Troxel to testify regarding his work with the Hood River Interagency Child Abuse Protection Team. The defense’s questioning suggested that Troxel’s Child Abuse Protection Team had an institutional bias toward establishing guilt, as shown by the agency’s published credo, which stated that “the role of the Hood River County Sheriffs Department is the securing of evidence to issue criminal charges and to obtain a conviction.”

In response, the prosecutor engaged in the following line of cross-examination:

[Prosecutor]: Detective Troxel, you investigate sexual abuse cases on a regular basis as part of your job?
[Troxel]: Unfortunately too regular.
[Prosecutor]: Okay. And sometimes reports turn out not to be true, or unfounded, don’t they?
[Troxel]: Yes, they do.
[Prosecutor]: Sometimes no one’s ever charged with any crimes; isn’t that true?
[Troxel]: That’s very true.
[Prosecutor]: So you wouldn’t, in that case, choose to prosecute or recommend prosecution of a case, would you?
[Troxel]: If, based on the information I received, I believed that no crime had been committed, I would not — I would write up my findings and send it to the D.A.’s office, but not recommend prosecution, no.

Cheney’s defense counsel did not object to this questioning.

In closing argument, defense counsel argued that the police and prosecutor’s efforts to convict Cheney were motivated by ego, stating:

The State is desperate to get a conviction. This is a big deal. Resources are put into this and, frankly, there’s egos too. The State is trying to twist Mr. Cheney’s statements to people to make you think it’s some kind of confession.
[T]he evidence is weak, because the children themselves have said in their statements, consistently, when they give narratives, that the first — the first time they talk about it, that there was no touching, and the only reason rubbing and private parts come into it is because the police are collecting evidence of a crime so they can obtain a conviction. And once the district attorney gets involved, there’s — there’s, you know, there’s no stopping it. The — the freight train is on the tracks and it’s going down *992 the road and the kids are on board and they know that everyone’s relying upon them. This is a really big show.

In rebuttal, the prosecutor responded with the following:

[Defense counsel] talked about my ego being at stake and the fact that we always want convictions no matter what, and that is simply untrue. Let me tell you about what — what my job is.
My job as a prosecutor — and I’ve been a defense attorney. I’ve been where [defense counsel] is sitting right now. And the role I have now is very different, and I am different. I cannot just advocate for whatever my client tells me to say. And whether it’s true or not, I cannot get up here and say that. My job, by law, is I — I can only advocate for cases where I believe that it’s true, where I believe that it happened. If I think it’s a close case, if I think it’s a case I could win, and I still don’t feel good about it, I’m required by law not to go through with it. That’s a very different job than [defense counsel] has. Very different.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
614 F.3d 987, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15970, 2010 WL 2991388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheney-v-washington-ca9-2010.