Mark Wilkinson v. Roger D. Cowan, Warden

231 F.3d 347, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27298, 2000 WL 1634994
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 2000
Docket99-1220
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 231 F.3d 347 (Mark Wilkinson v. Roger D. Cowan, 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
Mark Wilkinson v. Roger D. Cowan, Warden, 231 F.3d 347, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27298, 2000 WL 1634994 (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge.

Convicted of murdering his estranged wife, Mark Wilkinson sought post-conviction relief in Illinois state court. Among other things, he argued that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate (or to provide him with a copy of) the coroner’s autopsy report, which contained certain obvious discrepancies. After the circuit court summarily dismissed Wilkinson’s petition, his appellate counsel sought leave to withdraw, asserting that his case presented no issue of arguable merit. The Illinois appellate court, upon review of the record, agreed. It granted the motion to withdraw, and without further ado, affirmed the circuit court’s judgment. When he later sought federal habeas relief, the district court determined that Wilkinson had procedurally defaulted the ineffectiveness claim by failing to present the claim to the Illinois appellate court. We disagree. The state appellate court, when it elected to affirm the circuit court’s judgment outright, without inviting Wilkinson to brief his appeal pro se, implicitly reached the merits of all of the issues he had raised in his post-conviction petition. We therefore remand the ineffectiveness claim to the district court for consideration on the merits.

I.

Wilkinson, an airline pilot, was in the process of divorcing his wife Gilda in 1991. He claims that on May 26 of that year, after driving his daughter to their home in the Chicago suburb of Hoffman Estates, he and Gilda began to argue about the divorce settlement. The argument escalated and, according to Wilkinson, Gilda began to hit him, grabbed his wrist, and then bit into his little finger and refused to let go. In an effort to free himself, Wilkinson says, he fought back — he tripped her, pushed her nose, punched her in the face, and, ultimately, squeezed her neck. Although Wilkinson claims it was not his intent to kill Gilda, that is what he did: she died of strangulation.

It turns out that Wilkinson previously had talked about the possibility of killing Gilda with several of his friends, and he had even detailed a variety of murder scenarios on his computer. Realizing that the circumstances were incriminating, Wilkinson consulted the print-out of murder scenarios he had carried with him in his car and decided that he should cremate Gilda’s body and claim that she was missing. He went so far as to wrap her body in plastic (conveniently, he had a roll of plastic in the trunk of his car) and to partially dismember the corpse (so that it would fit into a fireplace). He was interrupted when his fiance, her suspicions aroused by a telephone call canceling their dinner date, came to the house and confronted him. Eventually, Wilkinson told her that he had killed Gilda. She took the Wilkinsons’ daughter from the house and telephoned his parents.

Wilkinson later stole a plane from a suburban airport and flew it into a storm front, purportedly in the hope of ending his life. The plane remained airborne, however, which Wilkinson interpreted as a sign of divine intervention. He landed the plane intending, he says, to turn himself in, but took off again when he spotted a police car approaching. He flew to an airport near Kankakee, Illinois, where he *349 spent the night. He was arrested there the following morning.

A central issue at Wilkinson’s trial was whether he intended to kill Gilda. Among the evidence that the State relied upon to show that Wilkinson deliberately strangled her was the autopsy report, which indicated that Gilda’s Adam’s apple had been crushed. Wilkinson alleges that he asked his attorney to provide him with a copy of the report in advance of trial so that he could review the report himself, but his attorney failed to do so. When he examined the report after the trial, Wilkinson discovered several discrepancies. Among other things, the report indicated that the coroner had removed the gallbladder and sent it for toxicological examination, but Gilda’s gallbladder, Wilkinson alleges, had been surgically removed fourteen months prior to her death. The report also indicated that the body was free of scars, although Gilda had obvious scars not only from the removal of her gallbladder but also from the Caesarian section that had been performed when she gave birth to her daughter. Neither these nor any of the other asserted discrepancies in the report were raised by Wilkinson’s attorney at trial, however.

A jury convicted Wilkinson in 1992 of first degree murder and of concealing a homicide. After the jury opted not to impose the death penalty, the trial judge ordered him to serve consecutive prison terms of 70 years for the murder and 10 years (reduced on appeal to five years) for concealment. The appellate court affirmed his conviction and sentence (as modified) in 1995, and the following year the Illinois supreme court denied his petition for leave to appeal.

Meanwhile, Wilkinson filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief in the circuit court. Among the many claims he included in that petition was the contention that he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of an attorney when his trial counsel failed to tender a copy of the coroner’s report for his review and failed to review and investigate the report more thoroughly. See, e.g., R. 30-9 at C42, C79, C91-92, C97-98. One month after Wilkinson filed the petition, the trial judge dismissed it as frivolous in a one-sentence order. R. 30-10 at C348. Wilkinson filed a notice of appeal, and at his request, the public defender’s office was appointed to represent him. Invoking Pennsylvania v. Finley, 481 U.S. 551, 107 S.Ct. 1990, 95 L.Ed.2d 539 (1987), the defender’s office filed a two-page motion to withdraw from representation. R. 11, Ex. E. The ten-line “brief in support” included in the body of the motion asserted without elaboration that “[Wilkinson’s] petition fails to allege any facts that give rise to a claim of a constitutional deprivation. Therefore, there are no appealable issues in this case.” Id. at 2 (citations omitted). Wilkinson was served with a copy of the motion, but he was not invited to file a response and he did not do so of his own initiative. Eleven months later, the Illinois appellate court issued an order granting the motion, stating:

We have carefully reviewed the record in this case and the aforesaid brief in compliance with the mandate of Pennsylvania v. Finley and find no issues of arguable merit. Therefore, the motion of the. public defender for leave to withdraw as counsel is allowed and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

Affirmed.

R. 11, Ex. F. at 2. Wilkinson sought leave to appeal to the Illinois supreme court, reasserting each of the claims he had included in his post-conviction petition (see R. 11, Ex. G), but that court denied his petition. R. 11, Ex. H.

In 1998, Wilkinson filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. His petition, as amended, included the claim of ineffectiveness based on his trial attorney’s failure to give Wilkinson a copy of the coroner’s report and to appropriately investigate that report. R. 20 at 7-8.

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Bluebook (online)
231 F.3d 347, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27298, 2000 WL 1634994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-wilkinson-v-roger-d-cowan-warden-ca7-2000.