Jerry Wilson v. Dan Cromwell

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 2023
Docket21-1402
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry Wilson v. Dan Cromwell (Jerry Wilson v. Dan Cromwell) 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
Jerry Wilson v. Dan Cromwell, (7th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 21‐1402 JERRY S. WILSON, Petitioner‐Appellant, v.

DAN CROMWELL, Respondent‐Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 2:13‐cv‐01061 — Nancy Joseph, Magistrate Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 7, 2022 — DECIDED JANUARY 23, 2023 ____________________

Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and HAMILTON and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge. Melvin Williams was shot and killed on May 23, 2009, and two other men—Robert Taylor and Romero Davis—were injured in the same shooting. A Wisconsin jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that Jerry Wilson was the gunman. He appeals from the district court’s denial of his habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, claiming 2 No. 21‐1402

that he received constitutionally ineffective assistance from his trial and postconviction counsel. We do not reach the merits of Wilson’s claims because both are procedurally defaulted. Wisconsin state courts disposed of Wilson’s ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim on ad‐ equate and independent state procedural grounds. And Wilson failed to present his ineffective assistance of postcon‐ viction counsel claim for one complete round of state court review. The default of these claims is not excused by a suffi‐ cient showing of actual innocence, barring federal review of the merits. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of habeas relief. I The Shooting, Investigation, and Charges. In the early morn‐ ing hours of May 23, 2009, three people were shot during an “after‐set” party1 at a two‐story duplex unit on North 44th Street in Milwaukee. The party was large enough that at‐ tendees were both inside the duplex and outside in the street. Just before gunfire began, two vehicles passed through the crowded street in front of the duplex, and the cars’ occupants exchanged insults with party attendees in the roadway. The drivers parked nearby, and the passengers—who included the three eventual victims—walked back to the party to find the people who had yelled at them. A fistfight broke out in the street, and then the shooting started. Melvin Williams suffered a fatal gunshot wound to the chest and died that day. The two other victims survived. A

1 According to witnesses at trial, an after‐set party is like a house party

or block party, where guests pay an admission fee and alcohol is served. No. 21‐1402 3

bullet struck Robert Taylor in the foot, and Romero Davis re‐ ceived wounds to his stomach and right calf. Neither Taylor nor Davis could identify who shot them. Investigation of the crime scene yielded only a modest amount of physical evidence. Law enforcement recovered five .40 caliber bullet casings, four .38 caliber casings, a .40 caliber bullet, and several bullet fragments at the scene but never lo‐ cated the murder weapon. In general, the .38 caliber casings were damaged and flattened while the .40 caliber casings were in better condition. Police spoke with eyewitnesses early in the investigation. Shakira King attended the after‐set party and identified Wilson as the gunman to law enforcement. She also picked Wilson out of a photo lineup. Antwan Smith‐Currin, who lived in the upstairs duplex unit at the time, also identified Wilson as the gunman in a photo array. According to detective testimony, Samantha Coats and Sanntanna Ross identified Wilson as the shooter as well, alt‐ hough at trial the women either denied having made such identification or sharply qualified their prior statements. Of‐ ficers arrested Wilson in July 2009, and the State charged him with one count of reckless homicide and two counts of reck‐ less endangerment. Smith‐Currin testified at Wilson’s preliminary hearing and identified him as the gunman. When asked whether he saw other gunmen besides Wilson, Smith‐Currin answered, “No, sir,” but acknowledged that “People w[ere] trying to say 4 No. 21‐1402

that I was shooting because I was on the porch.”2 At the hear‐ ing, the trial court found probable cause to believe that Wilson committed a felony and ordered him bound over for trial. Jury Trial. In August 2010, Wilson went to trial with attor‐ ney Glen Kulkoski as his counsel. Given the minimal physical evidence, the case centered on the testimony of four eyewit‐ nesses. Smith‐Currin took the stand and identified Wilson as the gunman, consistent with his previous statements to law enforcement. He testified to seeing Wilson walk between two houses, approach the crowd in the street, and open fire with a handgun. Yet Smith‐Currin’s testimony contained discrep‐ ancies. For instance, he testified to standing on the porch when he saw Wilson open fire, but he was cross‐examined with his prior sworn statement that he had been in the street when he saw the shooting. King also testified at trial and identified Wilson as the shooter. King’s account largely mirrored Smith‐Currin’s: Wil‐ son emerged from between two houses on the same side as the duplex and opened fire. But King also provided certain discrepant details. For example, she was neither consistent in describing her position relative to the gunman, nor certain of the distance between them. At trial, she first suggested that she was two feet from the gunman. But following a courtroom distance demonstration, she changed that estimate to fifteen feet. She also said that the shooter had a ponytail but had pre‐ viously told police that he wore his hair in braids. Finally, King testified she was not involved in the street fight, but pre‐ viously told officers that she had participated.

2 The two‐story duplex has an upper and a lower porch. Smith‐Currin

testified at trial that he was on the lower porch at the time of the shooting. No. 21‐1402 5

The State also called two other eyewitnesses to testify. Sanntanna Ross said she did not see who shot because she was fighting in the street during the shooting. That prompted the State to try to impeach her with her prior statements to law enforcement inculpating Wilson. Per testimony from investi‐ gating detectives, Ross identified Wilson as the shooter and recognized his face in a photograph. In response to the im‐ peachment evidence, Ross claimed she felt pressure from po‐ lice to “get [her] to say things that [she] didn’t want to say.” Samantha Coats testified that, in the seconds before the shooting, she was looking out of a nearby second‐story win‐ dow with a view of the street. She described seeing an indi‐ vidual come into the street near the duplex and start shooting. When asked at trial, she agreed that the gunman’s silhouette fit Wilson’s description, but she did not make an affirmative identification. As with Ross, the State tried to impeach Coats with prior statements. According to police documents and testimony, Coats selected Wilson’s photograph during a photo lineup, indicated he was the shooter, and wrote “I’m sure is the shooter” on the photo lineup paper near her signa‐ ture. In response, Coats explained she was “under a lot of pressure” from law enforcement and believed that she “was going to be taken into custody.” Coats likewise agreed with defense counsel that her statements to police were made to please the detectives and to avoid getting herself in trouble. The State called other witnesses to talk about the physical evidence. Detectives described where they found the different bullet casings and explained that the location of the .40 caliber casings was generally consistent with a gunman firing from an alleyway near the duplex. A firearm examiner opined that 6 No. 21‐1402

the .38 caliber casings were all fired out of one gun while the .40 casings were all fired from a second weapon.

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