Piaskowski v. Casperson

126 F. Supp. 2d 1149, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119, 2001 WL 65737
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 8, 2001
Docket2:99-cv-01428
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 126 F. Supp. 2d 1149 (Piaskowski v. Casperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piaskowski v. Casperson, 126 F. Supp. 2d 1149, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119, 2001 WL 65737 (E.D. Wis. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

GORDON, District Judge.

Thomas Monfils worked at the James River paper mill in Green Bay, Wisconsin until November 21, 1992, when an unknown number of his coworkers beat him nearly to death, tied a heavy weight to his neck, and dumped his unconscious body into a vat of paper pulp to die. Six defendants were convicted of participating in the murder, including petitioner Michael Piaskowski, who seeks a writ of habeas corpus.

No physical evidence tied Mr. Piaskow-ski to the crime, no testifying witness saw him participate in it, no one confessed, there was no testimony from the petitioner or any other witness establishing that he took part in the murder or intended to. The state argued that although he did not kill Mr. Monfils directly, he either conspired with or aided and abetted those who did. The theory has only two sources of support: (1) the fact that the petitioner *1151 reported the victim missing only minutes after his disappearance and (2) evidence that suggested that Mr. Piaskowski was with the other five defendants shortly before the crime began and with some of those defendants a few minutes later.

This evidence is insufficient to sustain the petitioner’s conviction for party to the crime of first degree murder. Because I find that the Wisconsin appellate court’s decision to the contrary resulted from an unreasonable application of the constitutional standard set forth in Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979), this court will grant Mr. Piaskowski’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. In light of this disposition, I need not consider the petitioner’s other arguments in favor of issuing the writ.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The 911 Call

On November 10, 1992, the Green Bay Police Department received an anonymous 911 call that Keith Kutska, an employee at the paper mill, intended to steal an expensive electrical cord from his employer. The caller was Thomas Monfils, also an employee at the mill. When Mr. Kutska tried to leave at the end of his shift, a security guard asked to inspect his bag. Although employees are required to submit to such checks, he refused and left the plant. He received a five-day unpaid suspension for refusing to open the bag.

Mr. Kutska became determined to uncover the identity of the caller, and he told others at the mill, including Mr. Monfils, that he planned to obtain a tape of the call from the police. Mr. Monfils, fearing for his life, called the police and begged them not to give the tape to Mr. Kutska. They did anyway. Mr. Kutska picked it up on Friday, November 20, 1992 and upon listening to it immediately recognized the voice on the tape as that of Mr. Monfils.

Mr. Kutska hatched a plan to file “union charges” against Mr. Monfils. In order to get Mr. Monfils to admit that he was the caller, Mr. Kutska decided to surprise Mr. Monfils by playing the tape in the presence of two witnesses. Randy LePak and Mr. Piaskowski, who would both be at work with Mr. Kutska and Mr. Monfils the next day, agreed to witness the confrontation.

B. November 21,1992

Early the next morning, on November 21, 1992, Mr. Kutska returned from suspension and brought the tape to play for his coworkers. Mr. Kutska was assigned to the No. 9 paper machine, along with three fellow workers. Mr. Monfils and Mr. Piaskowski were among the four employees working the No. 7 paper machine. The machines, which were long and very large, were placed end-to-end in a long line. Across from and parallel to the machines were four control rooms or “coops”; each machine had a large and small coop across from it. Halfway between the two large coops was a water fountain or “bub-bler”.

Mr. Kutska repeatedly played the tape for his coworkers, and news of the tape spread throughout the mill. About twenty people heard the tape before Mr. Monfils disappeared. Shortly after seven, Mr. Monfils and Mr. Piaskowski went into the No. 7 coop, and Mr. Kutska and Mr. Le-Pak followed them in. As planned, Mr. Kutska played the tape and got Mr. Mon-fils to admit that he had made the call. Mr. Kutska told him that his conduct had been malicious, then left. On his way out Mr. Piaskowski said, “Geez, Tom, I just fuckin’ don’t believe you’d do that.” Mr. LePak said to Mr. Monfils, “you can thank your fuckin’ lucky stars you didn’t do it to me, or I’d have killed you”, then Mr. Le-Pak also left.

Mr. Kutska then went to the No. 9 coop and played the tape for a number of people, including the five other men who would later be convicted with him for participating in Mr. Monfils’ murder: Mr. Piaskowski, Michael Hirn, Reynold Moore, Dale Basten and Michael Johnson.

*1152 Mr. Monfils left the No. 7 coop to perform a periodic task called a “turnover” on the No. 7 machine. He finished at about 7:35 a.m. Between 7:45 and 8:00, Mr. Pias-kowski, at Mr. Kutska’s urging, called his supervisor to report that Mr. Monfils was missing, ostensibly for the purpose of getting him in trouble. Mr. Piaskowski told the supervisor that “some heavy shit [was] coming down”. A search began.

Mr. Monfils’ body was found the next day in a pulp vat. A heavy weight had been tied around his neck with a rope. He died from inhaling the pulp or from being strangled by the rope, or both. He had been beaten severely.

C. Investigation, Trial and Subsequent Proceedings

The crime prompted a massive investigation and intense media attention. The sensationalist nature of the story was no doubt enhanced by the police department’s decision, on the day before the murder, to give Mr. Kutska the 911 tape. The facts recited above came to light soon after the murder, and investigators surmised that Mr. Monfils was murdered between 7:30 and 8:00 a.m. on November 21. However, the lack of evidence to show who committed the crime delayed the filing of charges for more than two years.

The charges were brought in April 1995, when Mr. Kutska’s friend, Brian Kellner, told police that Mr. Kutska had drunkenly admitted that he, Reynold Moore, Michael Hirn, Michael Johnson, Dale Basten and Mr. Piaskowski confronted Mr. Monfils by the bubbler shortly after the 7:35 turnover. Mr. Kellner told police that Mr. Kutska said that certain members of this group (he did not include Mr. Piaskowski), yelled at Monfils, then pushed and hit him. According to Mr. Kellner, Mr. Kutska claimed that he had to leave at that point in order to fix a problem with his machine.

The trial lasted 28 days, and more than 60 witnesses testified. Very little of the evidence was relevant to Mr. Piaskowski’s guilt. Besides Mr. Kellner, only two other witnesses gave testimony relevant to precisely how the murder occurred and who did it: David Wiener and James Gilliam.

On November 21, Mr. Wiener was working near the vat where the victim was found. He told police that he saw nothing on that day. He testified to that effect in March 1993, but in May of that year, Mr. Wiener claimed to have a sudden recovered memory in which he saw Mssrs. Basten and Johnson carrying something heavy toward the vat on the day in question.

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Related

State v. Hicks
2018 WI App 66 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
126 F. Supp. 2d 1149, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119, 2001 WL 65737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piaskowski-v-casperson-wied-2001.