Jeffrey Weisheit v. Ron Neal

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2025
Docket23-2906
StatusPublished

This text of Jeffrey Weisheit v. Ron Neal (Jeffrey Weisheit v. Ron Neal) 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
Jeffrey Weisheit v. Ron Neal, (7th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________

No. 23-2906 JEFFREY ALAN WEISHEIT, Petitioner-Appellant,

v.

RON NEAL, Respondent-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, New Albany Division. No. 4:19-cv-00036-SEB-KMB — Sarah Evans Barker, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 25, 2024 — DECIDED AUGUST 13, 2025 ____________________

Before EASTERBROOK, ST. EVE, and PRYOR, Circuit Judges. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. An Indiana jury convicted Jeffrey Weisheit of murdering a five-year-old boy and eight-year-old girl left in his care. As recommended by the jury, his sentenc- ing judge imposed the death penalty. On direct appeal, the Indiana Supreme Court affirmed. Af- ter unsuccessfully pursuing postconviction relief in Indiana state court, Weisheit filed a habeas petition in federal court. 2 No. 23-2906

He also sought stays of the federal proceeding—one to return to state court to present certain claims and another to restore competency—and moved for additional funding in support of his defense. The district court denied his petition and related motions. It found most of his claims procedurally defaulted and the re- maining claims without merit. We agree that Weisheit has procedurally defaulted most of his claims, and we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Weisheit’s motions for stays and additional funding. As for decisions reached by the Indi- ana Supreme Court on the merits, the court neither unreason- ably applied clearly established federal law nor made unrea- sonable determinations of facts. We thus affirm the district court’s denial of Weisheit’s petition and related motions. I. Background The details of Weisheit’s brutal crime do not bear on the issues before us. We therefore recount them briefly, before chronicling the procedural history of this case. A. Factual History Jeffrey Weisheit and Lisa Lynch lived together with Lynch’s two children—Alyssa and Caleb—in Evansville, In- diana. In early 2010, Lynch discovered she was pregnant with Weisheit’s daughter. Suspicious that Lynch was having an af- fair, Weisheit told a coworker that if his suspicions proved true, “he would kill her, burn everything, and kill his self.” In late March, Weisheit stopped payment on an engage- ment ring he had purchased for Lynch, telling the jeweler that he and Lynch broke up and he was leaving the country. No. 23-2906 3

Around the same time, Weisheit quit his job and withdrew all the money in his bank account. Approximately two weeks passed. On April 9, 2010, while caring for Lynch’s children, Weisheit became enraged at Caleb. Weisheit duct taped Caleb’s hands behind his back and pushed a rag into his mouth. He then packed up clothes and some of Lynch’s jewelry and drove off toward Cincinnati. Officers responded to flames engulfing the couple’s home early the next morning. After extinguishing the fire, firefight- ers discovered the bodies of Caleb and Alyssa inside. Caleb had road flares under and around his body. In the meantime, no one could reach Weisheit. Officers eventually tracked his location to a county in Kentucky more than 200 miles away. A high speed chase ensued before local law enforcement forced Weisheit from his vehicle. When Weisheit exited, he threw a knife over an officer’s head and shouted for the officers to kill him. Two officers used tasers to stun Weisheit, who fell backward and hit his head. From there, officers took Weisheit to a local hospital where doctors administered a sedative to treat his nausea and vom- iting. Detectives Kerri Lynne Blessinger and Randy Chapman read Weisheit his Miranda warnings, which he stated he un- derstood, and questioned him about the events from the night before. Weisheit answered most questions with three words or less, providing no detail about the fire or deaths of the chil- dren. When asked how he set the fire or what happened to the children, Weisheit generally responded that he did not know or remember. The interview lasted approximately 20 minutes and ended when Weisheit asked for a lawyer. 4 No. 23-2906

B. Procedural History The State of Indiana charged Weisheit with two counts of murder and one count of felony arson resulting in serious bodily injury. See Weisheit v. State, 26 N.E.3d 3, 7 (Ind. 2015) (“Weisheit I”). The State sought the death penalty, asserting the multiple murders and the age of the victims as aggravat- ing circumstances. Id. 1. The Trial Weisheit proceeded to trial in June 2013. On the first day, juror 10 brought a box of cookies and a thank you note from his wife into the jury room. The note read: Thank you for your service for the family of Alyssa [and] Caleb Lynch. I will pray for you all to have strength and wisdom to deal with the days ahead. God bless! The trial court became aware of the cookies and note two days later and interviewed each juror to ascertain the effects of the note. Most of the jurors had not read it; the ones who had read it or otherwise learned of it generally recalled that it thanked them for serving on the jury. Juror 8 remembered the note included “words to the effect of … thank you and please do a fair job for Caleb and Alyssa.” He was “surprised” to see Caleb and Alyssa mentioned, but described the note as “very neutral” and told the court that it did not affect him “at all.” After the court questioned juror 10, who did not himself read the note, he was overheard saying “that’s ridiculous.” Other jurors responded to juror 10’s exclamation with “general chat- ter” and “nodd[ing] their heads.” The court ultimately dismissed juror 10 for bringing in the note but denied Weisheit’s motion for a mistrial, reasoning No. 23-2906 5

that the note did not affect the other jurors. It admonished the jury to reach its verdict based only on the evidence presented and not to draw any negative inferences from the dismissal of juror 10. Trial resumed. The State presented multiple witnesses who testified about the source of the fire: David Bretz, Assis- tant Chief of the German Township Fire Department; Clayton Kinder, Indiana State Fire Marshal; and Kerri Blessinger, a de- tective from the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office. Assis- tant Chief Bretz and Fire Marshal Kinder testified that the house fire was intentionally set. Detective Blessinger went a step further, identifying Weisheit as the person who set it. Trial counsel did not object to any of this testimony. After the State rested, Weisheit testified against the advice of counsel. He discussed, among other things, arguing with and duct taping Caleb, bringing flares into the house, gather- ing his belonging and Lynch’s jewelry, driving to Cincinnati, attempting to flee from the police, and urging the police to shoot him. On cross-examination, he denied setting the fire. When the State pressed him with undisputed facts—e.g., that the night Weisheit left with his belongings, he bound Caleb with duct tape and firefighters found Caleb with flares under his body—Weisheit responded, “[t]hings happen.” The jury returned a guilty verdict on all charged offenses. During the penalty phase of the trial, the State incorpo- rated all evidence it presented in the guilt phase. Weisheit pre- sented 17 witnesses in his defense, including family, friends, and neighbors; a former teacher; a counselor from the Indiana Boys School, where he spent six months in juvenile detention; 6 No. 23-2906

his former therapist; a corrections officer; and two psycholog- ical experts. Both experts testified that he suffered from bipo- lar disorder. The State presented two expert witnesses in re- buttal.

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