Harrison Franklin v. Gary R. McCaughtry Warden

398 F.3d 955, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3208, 2005 WL 427539
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 24, 2005
Docket03-1031
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 398 F.3d 955 (Harrison Franklin v. Gary R. McCaughtry Warden) 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
Harrison Franklin v. Gary R. McCaughtry Warden, 398 F.3d 955, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3208, 2005 WL 427539 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

WOOD, Circuit Judge.

In February 1996, Harrison Franklin was convicted by a Wisconsin court of armed robbery, reckless endangerment, and bail jumping. To make matters worse, at the time he committed these crimes he was a repeat offender and free on bond pending his appeal of a prior battery conviction. After exhausting his remedies in the state courts, Franklin filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court denied the petition but granted a certificate of appealability on the issues of trial-judge bias and ineffective assistance of counsel. On appeal, Franklin alleges that the state court judge was actually biased and that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ rejection of this point was contrary to, and constituted an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States. Although the burden is high on habeas corpus petitioners, *957 we conclude that Franklin has met these demanding standards here; we therefore vacate and remand for issuance of the writ.

I

In 1996 Franklin was charged with armed robbery, reckless endangerment, and bail jumping. His case was assigned to Judge Bruce E. Schroeder, of the Circuit Court of Kenosha County, Wisconsin. At the time, Judge Schroeder was presiding over another case, State v. Taylor, No. 95 CM 1326. In Taylor, Judge Schroeder had denied Taylor release without bail and set an appeal bond. Taylor sought relief from the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, alleging that the appeal bond was contrary to the rule established in State v. Lipke, 186 Wis.2d 358, 521 N.W.2d 444 (1994). In Lipke, the court held that a defendant cannot be denied the right to release pending an appeal solely on the ground of indigence. Lipke, 521 N.W.2d at 448.

In April 1996, Judge Schroeder took the highly unusual step of filing a memorandum with the state court of appeals in support of his decision to deny Taylor’s request for release without bail. In that memorandum, he asserted that the remarks in Lipke regarding the subject of bail were dicta and therefore not binding precedent. He further opined that Lipke would result in “absurd and unreasonable” outcomes “because the same indigent defendant who is held pretrial for failure to post bail is entitled to immediate release without cash bail upon establishment of his guilt.”

To illustrate his point, Judge Schroeder pointed to Franklin’s case. He began by stating, “I have also now pending before me the case of State v. Harrison Franklin, 96 CF 126.” The judge then gave a detailed account of Franklin’s" five previous convictions, relying on information that he had gleaned from a pre-sentence report in one of Franklin’s earlier cases. The last conviction, in 1995, resulted in a three-year sentence, but Franklin was released without posting bail pursuant to Lipke. Judge Schroeder concluded his point with the following statement:

Although the Court of Appeals accepted his attorney’s no merit report on December 20, 1995, he was not reincarcer-ated until February 21, 1996, when he was taken into custody in a tavern where it is alleged, according to the current file, that he stabbed one man four times and another twice, during an armed robbery.

Franklin was convicted in May. In July, before sentencing, an article appeared in the Kenosha News titled, “Legislators Oppose Freeing Indigent Without Bail.” The article referred to two cases, Franklin’s and Taylor’s. The article further reported that both Judge Schroeder and Assistant District Attorney Dooley (the attorney who prosecuted Franklin’s case) had sent their written challenges to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.

Prompted by the article, Franklin moved to recuse Judge Schroeder from further proceedings in the case “based on the appearance of partiality and impropriety arising from the Judge’s opinion of a defendant’s release pending appeal.” Judge Schroeder heard the motion to re-cuse prior to sentencing. While Franklin was presenting his recusal motion, Judge Schroeder interrupted Franklin and asked, “What did I have to do with the article?” After Franklin explained that the article had mentioned and quoted him, Judge Schroeder changed tacks and asked, ‘What did I do that suggests some lack of impartiality towards your client?” _

Judge Schroeder continued to deny that his impartiality was in doubt, making this statement on the record:

I am . really — I want, so the record is clear, because I refuse to accept respon *958 sibility for what a reporter wrote in the newspaper unless you are claiming that I said this to this reporter or that I in some Way acted in a manner which suggests lack of impartiality towards the case of Mr. Franklin. I am not clear on what you are claiming I said or did and under what circumstances that give rise to your claims.

He then asked Franklin, “Did you call this reporter and ask the reporter where did you get the quotes that you attribute to Judge Schroeder?” Franklin stated' that he had, but the reporter had not returned his call. After Franklin said that his motion relied on the newspaper article, Judge Schroeder finally admitted his role in the article and stated,

All right. Well, for the record a reporter did seek me out with respect to this issue and I declined to discuss it. When I say this issue, I am talking about the rule of the Court of Appeals in State v. Lipke. I have no idea why the reporter had an interest in the Lipke issue.
I did absolutely nothing to stoke the fire with respect to that decision. In the course ' of the written memorandum, which I filed in this case, I did make reference to this case as it was then pending in writing. And when I was approached by Mr. Krekowiez from the newspaper, I did tell him that I had issued a written memorandum .... And when he asked to interview me, I declined an interview and told him that what I had to say was already of record in the memorandum which was in the file, which was 95-CM-1326. Now, in that memorandum there is reference to Mr. Franklin’s case. •

At this point in the hearing, Judge Schroeder read aloud the paragraphs of the Taylor memorandum that referred to Franklin. This was the first time Franklin learned about the memorandum.

Following Judge Schrofeder’s reading of the memorandum, Franklin commented that the court had included information in the memorandum that was not in the record of the present case. Franklin argued that by reading the memorandum into the record, the information Judge Schroeder had independently obtained was now a part of the record in this case. Furthermore, Franklin pointed out that he could not be certain about what information the court would be relying on to determine the appropriate sentence in the case at hand.

Judge Schroeder denied the motion to recuse, stating that he was not biased against Franklin and that the memorandum contained only factually accurate'information.

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Bluebook (online)
398 F.3d 955, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3208, 2005 WL 427539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-franklin-v-gary-r-mccaughtry-warden-ca7-2005.