Jose C. Rodriguez v. Warren Young, Warden, Waupun Correctional Institution

906 F.2d 1153
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 9, 1990
Docket89-1817
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 906 F.2d 1153 (Jose C. Rodriguez v. Warren Young, Warden, Waupun Correctional Institution) 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
Jose C. Rodriguez v. Warren Young, Warden, Waupun Correctional Institution, 906 F.2d 1153 (7th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

WILL, Senior District Judge.

Following a jury trial in Circuit Court in Milwaukee in 1976, Jose C. Rodriguez was convicted of first degree murder on the basis of an identification by a single witness and sentenced to life imprisonment. The appeals process has been long and exhaustive. Fourteen years later, in this, his second petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Rodriguez asks for relief on nine separate grounds, raising substantial questions about the admissibility of the sole identification testimony, the effectiveness of his counsel’s assistance at trial, and the constitutionality of the instructions to the jury. The district court denied relief. Rodriguez v. Young, 708 F.Supp. 971 (E.D. Wis.1989). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On June 14, 1976 around 9 p.m., Jose Rodriguez (also known as “Boogie”) and his wife Maria, the Alicea brothers — Edwin and Edgar — and Manuel Navarro (also known as “Jake”) were all crowded around Ernesto Guzman (also known as “Ratone”) outside a bar in Milwaukee. Watching from across the street was Maria Ramos. Guzman had been dealing heroin to Maria Rodriguez, who apparently shortchanged him on the transaction. When Guzman *1156 squawked, there was a fight. Guzman was stabbed, and he died from the wounds.

Three people were arrested in connection with Guzman’s death: Jose Rodriguez and both Edwin and Edgar Alicea. Charges were never filed against Edwin, but Edgar and Rodriguez were each charged with murder. In the end, however, only Rodriguez’ case went to trial. The case against Edgar was dismissed after he passed a polygraph test.

At the trial, there was conflicting testimony about who stabbed Guzman. According to Maria Rodriguez, as she and Guzman were arguing, her husband “came and pushed and told [Guzman] not to be touching me because I was his wife and that was wrong.” But she said that when Guzman persisted, it was “Jake” (Manuel Navarro) who “grabbed [Guzman] and stabbed him.”

Jake Navarro did not testify.

Edgar and Edwin Alicea each testified that they were present when the fight began, along with Navarro and Jose Rodriguez, but that after watching for a while, they left together to take a drive around the' block and that when they returned, Guzman was dead on the ground. They also testified that parts of earlier statements they had given to the police had been lies, and Edwin testified in front of the jury that he would lie under oath to help Edgar beat a homicide rap. Maria Ramos testified that by the time the Ali-ceas returned, after the ride around the block, they had changed clothes.

Only Maria Ramos took the stand and identified Jose Rodriguez as the murderer. Parts of her testimony were in Spanish, through an interpreter. She said that during the fight outside the bar she “saw the hand of Boogie into the chest of Ratone” (Guzman) stabbing “two or three times.” But she said she recognized that hand as Boogie’s (Jose Rodriguez’) only later and not at the time. She did not place Jake Navarro at the scene at all but did indicate that she knew him as one of her boyfriend’s friends. She also testified that she had known Jose Rodriguez for at least a year before the night Guzman was killed. She gave a positive in-court identification for Rodriguez as the murderer and then proceeded also to describe an- earlier, out-of-court ID, given the morning after the stabbing.

The same night as the stabbing, Ramos went to the station house and looked at photos. She picked out and positively identified shots of Edgar Alicea and Guzman and told the police that besides those two there had also been a short, fat Spanish male wearing a green shirt, for whom she offered no name. She testified that she did not remember seeing photos of Rodriguez that first night, and there was no testimony, from her or the police, to indicate that she mentioned Rodriguez by name then.

The following morning, however, she returned to the police station and looked at more photos and during that session indisputably was shown a picture of Rodriguez, by a Detective Sandoval. Her reaction on seeing that photo is a matter of dispute. Sandoval did not testify at the trial. Instead, a Detective Schreiber testified, basing his testimony on a written report by Sandoval, that on the morning of the 15th Ramos picked out a photo of Rodriguez, named him as a person known to her as “Boogie,” and told Sandoval that Boogie stabbed Guzman in the chest and also held Guzman while Edgar Alicea stabbed him.

Ramos’ own recollection of what she told Sandoval on the morning of the 15th was a good deal muddier. When the question was put to her on direct, she could not recall what she had said. Portions of Sandoval’s report were read to her, in Spanish, to refresh her recollection. The district attorney then asked:

Q: Does that refresh your recollection of what you told Detective Sandoval?
A: I would like for you to tell me what it is you want or expect me to say.
Q: I don’t expect you to say anything except what is the truth and what occurred in this case. The question is: Do you remember telling Detective Sandoval after you have now reviewed that report that this photograph was a picture of one of the men involved in the murder—
*1157 Defense Counsel: Judge, I object to that as being—
The Court: Sustained. You don’t have to argue it.
Defense Counsel: I’m sorry.
Q: Do you remember seeing that photograph [a photograph of Rodriguez]? A: Yes.
Q: Do you remember telling Detective Sandoval something about that photograph?
A: (Through Interpreter). That it looked like him, but I rather identify him with his back. That's what I did. I identified him from the back, Boogie.

After the session with Sandoval, the same morning, Ramos was taken from the police station to the district attorney’s office and was shown Rodriguez in person. She saw him, apparently from the back only, and positively identified him as the murderer. On cross, Rodriguez’ lawyer repeatedly asked her whether she had ever, before that confrontation, told anyone that Rodriguez was the murderer.

Q: What did you tell the police?
A: That was Boogie.
Q: Did you tell them anything else about Boogie?
A: That I had to see his back to identify him.
Q: Pardon me?
A: I identified him from the back.
Q: Had you ever told anyone that you thought it might be Boogie before you saw his back [during the confrontation at the district attorney’s office]?.... A: Yes.
Q: Who did you tell that to?
A: I don’t remember to who.
sjs

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
906 F.2d 1153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-c-rodriguez-v-warren-young-warden-waupun-correctional-institution-ca7-1990.