Foster, James T. v. Schomig, James M.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 31, 2000
Docket99-1398
StatusPublished

This text of Foster, James T. v. Schomig, James M. (Foster, James T. v. Schomig, James M.) 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
Foster, James T. v. Schomig, James M., (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

Nos. 99-1398 & 99-1482

James T. Foster,

Petitioner-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,

v.

James M. Schomig,

Respondent-Appellant, Cross-Appellee.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 95 C 5037--Robert W. Gettleman, Judge.

Argued September 21, 1999--Decided May 31, 2000

Before Coffey, Manion, and Rovner, Circuit Judges.

Manion, Circuit Judge. James Foster was convicted by an Illinois jury of murdering his girlfriend by beating her with a baseball bat, and was sentenced to death because he also sexually assaulted her by forcing pieces of the broken bat into her rectum. The Illinois Supreme Court affirmed and denied collateral relief. He brought this Section 2254 motion to argue that his counsel were ineffective for, among other things, failing to call a psychiatrist to testify during the sentencing phase of his trial. He asserts that had such an expert been called, he would have informed the court that Foster suffered from an extreme emotional disturbance, which is a mitigating factor under Illinois law. The district court accepted this argument and granted Foster’s petition. The State appeals, arguing that the district court erred in finding that Foster’s attorneys were ineffective. Foster cross-appeals, arguing that the district court erred in holding that the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) was applicable to this case and in finding that one of his attorneys was not ineffective for telling the jury that Foster "killed the woman he loved." Because the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision was not contrary to clearly established law, we reverse the district court in part and affirm in part.

I.

In 1985, James Foster was having an adulterous relationship with Jacqueline Simmons. Despite Foster’s own infidelity to his wife, he became angry at Simmons when he suspected she was unfaithful to him. So on the night of January 9, 1985, Foster went to confront her at an apartment she shared with her roommate-- Theresa Williams. He began yelling at Simmons and ordered her to disrobe in front of him so that he could look for signs of her involvement with other men. Screaming and crying, Simmons complied. Foster then threw her to the floor and proceeded to hit and kick her repeatedly, all the while ignoring her pleas to stop. He then picked her up by her hair with such force that tufts of it were torn out. After taking a short break, Foster proceeded to beat Simmons with a baseball bat while calling her a "bitch" and a "whore" and accusing her of "messing around" on him. After the bat broke, Foster forced part of it into Simmons’s rectum. During the attack, Simmons’s young child and two other children were sleeping in another room of the apartment. Williams, Williams’s boyfriend, and a friend of Foster were also in an adjoining room during the beating. From there they could hear Simmons’s screams and they periodically witnessed portions of the two-hour attack. They were also the audience for Foster’s vaunts about how far he had inserted the bat into Simmons’s rectum. He showed them a piece of the bat and said "look at how much the bitch took."

After hearing Foster’s boasts, Williams went to assist Simmons and found her breathing irregularly and suffering a seizure. Although Williams told Foster that Simmons desperately needed medical attention, Foster responded that Simmons was drunk and she just needed to sleep it off. Foster then departed for a local tavern; when he returned about twenty minutes later, Simmons was dead. Not sur prisingly, the coroner found that both of Simmons’s lungs were collapsed and that she suffered blunt trauma injuries on her head, chest, abdomen, and legs, as well as lacerations on her anus and liver. He determined that her death was caused by multiple blunt trauma, which resulted in swelling of the brain and internal hemorrhage of the liver. Foster eventually confessed to beating Simmons with a baseball bat, which made the jury’s task at the guilt phase of his trial easier. On June 7, 1985, after hearing witnesses describe the details of the crime and reading Foster’s written confession, the jury convicted him of murder. The State asked for the death penalty because the victim was killed in the course of an aggravated sexual assault. See 720 ILCS sec. 5/9- 1(b)(6)(c). Because no judge in Kane County had ever sentenced a defendant to death, Foster and his attorneys decided to have the judge, rather than a jury, determine his penalty.

Foster was represented at trial and sentencing by attorneys Frank Giampoli, a part-time, Assistant Kane County Public Defender, and George Chabalewski, a full- time Public Defender. After the jury convicted Foster, his attorneys contacted a psychiatrist, Dr. Lyle H. Rossiter, Jr., to evaluate whether Foster suffered from any psychological condition which might prevent the imposition of the death penalty. Rossiter examined Foster on June 8 and June 19, and submitted a full report on June 21, 1985. The report states that Foster had a history of serious head injuries and substance abuse and that he suffers from an antisocial personality disorder. While some aspects of Dr. Rossiter’s report indicated the presence of mitigating factors, it also candidly stated that Foster had "pronounced tendencies toward explosive anger and aggressive physical outbursts."

Believing that Dr. Rossiter’s testimony would do more harm than good, and after seeing the prosecutors effectively cross- examine some of the other defense witnesses, Foster’s attorneys decided not to present Dr. Rossiter’s testimony. Instead, they called various family members and friends who characterized Foster as a generous, hard-working, religious, family man. The mother (not his wife) of two of his six children testified that his generosity occasionally entailed the provision of financial support for the two children. The defense also tried to show that one shooting incident in which Foster was purportedly involved was simply a case of mistaken identity. Foster’s young son also testified that his father played basketball with him, exhorted him to lead a good life, and all in all was an excellent father. Other family members and friends testified that he was generous with his time and would help sick relatives and repair automobiles for free.

Of course, the State also presented its own witnesses to show the presence of aggravating factors. They described Foster’s previous convictions for battery, armed robbery, theft, and illegally possessing firearms. One witness testified that Foster and his comrades gang-raped him while they were in jail. Another witness described how Foster beat and raped her at gunpoint when she was fifteen years old and how when he was finished with her Foster ordered her to urinate on herself. Other witnesses described an incident similar to the beating of Simmons. Foster and his friends tied up a woman and repeatedly beat her with a stick, after which Foster picked her up and dropped her on her face. The judge also heard that Foster once stabbed a police officer with a concealed knife while he was in police custody. On another occasion, Foster forcibly entered the home of one family by blowing apart their door with a shotgun, the blast from which wounded one of the occupants. The prosecution closed its case by describing the crime and asking the court to remember Foster’s lack of remorse and the pain suffered by Jacqueline Simmons.

Judge, I ask you when you go back into chambers to consider this, to look, again, at the photograph of this woman. This is an attractive young girl who was turned into this mess of mush with a broken jaw and a torn liver.

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