Piaskowski, Michael v. Bett, John

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2001
Docket01-1159
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Piaskowski, Michael v. Bett, John, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 01-1159

MICHAEL L. PIASKOWSKI,

Petitioner-Appellee,

v.

JOHN BETT,

Respondent-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 99-C-1428--Myron L. Gordon, Judge.

Argued May 18, 2001--Decided July 10, 2001

Before EASTERBROOK, MANION, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.

EVANS, Circuit Judge. On November 10, 1992, the Green Bay, Wisconsin, police department received an anonymous tip that Keith Kutska, an employee of the James River Paper Mill, was going to steal a piece of electrical cord at the end of his shift. The police passed the tip on to the company. When Kutska left the mill that evening, a security guard stopped him and asked to search his duffel bag. Kutska refused to permit the search and left the premises, but he received a 5- day, unpaid suspension from work for not letting the guard peek into his bag.

Kutska was not happy about this, a fact that quickly became known around the mill. Later, Kutska learned that the police were tipped off by the anonymous call, and he set out to determine who blew the whistle on him. Fearing repercussions, the mill worker who provided the tip, Thomas Monfils, begged the police not to give Kutska access to the tape of his call. But, in a bureaucratic screw-up, Kutska obtained a copy of the tape with little difficulty. How Kutska obtained the tape is detailed in Monfils v. Taylor, 165 F.3d 511 (7th Cir. 1998), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 810 (1999). We won’t repeat here what we said there. Suffice to say that once Kutska got his hands on the tape, he immediately identified Monfils as the tipster.

Kutska brought the tape to the mill (on November 21) a few days after he returned from his suspension and played it a number of times for various coworkers, including once for Monfils, who admitted making the call. Michael Piaskowski and Randy LePak, who were with Monfils and Kutska for this tape playing, reacted strongly. On his way out the door after hearing the tape, Piaskowski said, "Geez, Tom, I just fuckin’ don’t believe you’d do that." LePak was more expressive, telling Monfils, "You can thank your fuckin’ lucky stars you didn’t do it to me, or I’d have killed you."

News of these events spread quickly throughout the mill. And many workers, around 20 it would appear, eventually heard the tape early that morning. Shortly after 7 a.m., Kutska took the tape to the control room for machine 9 (a/k/a "coop 9") and played it for a group that included the five men with whom he would later be convicted of Monfils’ murder: Piaskowski, Michael Hirn, Reynold Moore, Dale Basten, and Michael Johnson. Although Kutska had stolen the electrical cord, he implied that Monfils’ accusation was false, and he told Moore and Hirn to "give Monfils some shit" for snitching on a fellow union brother.

Meanwhile, Monfils left his post at coop 7 to perform a periodic task known as "turnover" scheduled for 7:34. A minute later, an altercation involving Monfils and a number of workers occurred near a water fountain (or "bubbler" in Wisconsin parlance) located between coops 7 and 9. Monfils was attacked and seriously injured. He was left, unconscious but alive, lying in a ball on the mill floor. Approximately 5 minutes later, mill worker David Wiener observed Basten and Johnson in an area which connects the paper machines with the vat that supplies pulp to the machines. Johnson was walking backwards, 5 or 6 feet in front of Basten, and they appeared to be carrying something--and on the basis of this evidence, that something was Monfils-- toward a pulp vat.

At 7:45 Kutska and Moore entered coop 7, followed within minutes by Piaskowski. Kutska told Piaskowski to alert a supervisor that Monfils was missing, purportedly to get Monfils in trouble for leaving his work station. Piaskowski did so and added that there was "some shit going down." A search was begun, and the next day Monfils’ body was discovered at the bottom of the vat. A heavy weight, usually kept near machine 7, was tied around his neck. The coroner determined that Monfils died by asphyxiation due to the aspiration of paper pulp.

No charges were immediately filed, and for over 2 years the Green Bay police investigated the crime. A break in the case came in April 1995, when mill worker Brian Kellner,/1 a friend of Kutska’s, told police that Kutska, the previous 4th of July, admitted that the six defendants (plus Jon Mineau, who was never charged) confronted Monfils near the bubbler after the 7:34 turnover. Kutska drew a diagram of where each defendant stood and told Kellner that someone slapped Monfils and that Hirn shoved him. Kutska asked "what if" some unidentified person hit Monfils with a wrench or a board. At that point in the assault, Kutska told Kellner that he left the area. According to Kellner, Kutska also stated that mill workers Dennis Servais and Pete Delvoe were present and witnessed the confrontation, but both later denied this to the police. In fact, Delvoe testified that he completed the 7:34 turnover with Monfils but stayed behind to clean the paper machine afterward. Ten to 15 minutes after the turnover, Piaskowski approached Delvoe and asked him if he had seen Monfils.

Kellner relayed Kutska’s statement at trial, although at postconviction proceedings he partially recanted andtestified that Kutska identified only himself, Hirn, and Moore as participants in the confrontation. Only one other witness testified about the confrontation--James Gilliam, a jailhouse informant and Moore’s cell mate, who repeated what Moore told him. Moore’s story, according to Gilliam, was that Kutska, Moore, and unidentified others gathered before the confrontation and decided to scare Monfils. The men from the meeting and unidentified others then confronted Monfils after the 7:34 turnover. Kutska hit Monfils in the face, and then "Mr. Monfils went in a cuddle just like this and he [Moore] say he just do it like everybody else and he was just came from with his fist over the head . . . ." All participants in and witnesses to the attack, again according to Moore via Gilliam, then went back to work. Moore, according to Gilliam, was later shocked to discover that Monfils was found dead. Based essentially on this evidence, a state court jury convicted Piaskowski and the other five defendants of first degree murder.

In our civil suit opinion in Monfils v. Taylor we affirmed a jury verdict in favor of Monfils’ estate against members of the Green Bay police department for their role in releasing the tape which started the chain of events that led to Monfils’ death. Today we turn to the criminal conviction of Piaskowski, the defendant against whom, it appears, the State presented the least evidence. After exhausting his direct appeals, see State v. Piaskowski, 1998 WL 644758 (Wis. Ct. App.), review denied, 589 N.W.2d 629 (Wis.), cert. denied, 527 U.S. 1035 (1998), Piaskowski petitioned the federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus, arguing that the record contained insufficient evidence to sustain his conviction. The district court, Judge Myron L. Gordon presiding, granted the writ and forbade the State from retrying him for Monfils’ murder. The State appeals from that order and we review it de novo. See Washington v. Smith, 219 F.3d 620, 627 (7th Cir. 2000).

Under 28 U.S.C. sec.

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Piaskowski, Michael v. Bett, John, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piaskowski-michael-v-bett-john-ca7-2001.