Rodney Lass v. Jason Wells

105 F.4th 932
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 2024
Docket23-2880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 F.4th 932 (Rodney Lass v. Jason Wells) 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
Rodney Lass v. Jason Wells, 105 F.4th 932 (7th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 23-2880 RODNEY L. LASS, Petitioner-Appellant, v.

JASON WELLS, Warden, Respondent-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 2:21-cv-00578-WED — William E. Duffin, Magistrate Judge. ____________________

ARGUED MAY 13, 2024 — DECIDED JUNE 26, 2024 ____________________

Before SCUDDER, ST. EVE, and PRYOR, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. After Rodney Lass’s state court trial on charges of misdemeanor domestic abuse ended in a mistrial, prosecutors recharged the case and, the second time around, added multiple felony counts. The second case ended in a guilty verdict on all but one charge, leaving Lass to pur- sue relief on direct appeal, in state post-conviction proceed- ings, and then in federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. All along his primary contention has been that the second set of 2 No. 23-2880

charges were the product of an unconstitutional vindictive prosecution. The district court denied relief, and we affirm. Even on the generous assumption that Lass has not forfeited contentions he now presses on appeal, we see no way to read the state court’s denial of post-conviction relief as reflecting any unreasonable application of law or determination of fact. I A The facts come from the record compiled in the Wisconsin state court proceedings. Rodney Lass faced misdemeanor domestic abuse-related charges in Wisconsin’s Milwaukee County Circuit Court in the summer of 2012. This first case ended in a mistrial when the alleged victim, Lass’s former girlfriend, disregarded a court order and made irrelevant and unduly prejudicial state- ments to the jury. About a year later Assistant District Attor- ney Jennifer Williams, who second chaired the first case but did not make the misdemeanor charging decision, brought a second round of charges, including nine felonies and two mis- demeanors. These eleven counts incorporated the conduct underpinning the original misdemeanor charges and also in- cluded new allegations of misconduct dating back to 2008. Lass saw the new case as vindictive—as violating his rights under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause—and asked the trial court to dismiss it. He contended that the prosecutors leveled the expanded charges against him in retaliation for his seeking and receiving a mistrial in the misdemeanor case. Lass supported his motion with an af- fidavit from Robert Haney, his counsel at the first trial. Haney’s affidavit recounted statements ADA Williams made No. 23-2880 3

about what accounted for the broader charges in the second case. According to Haney, “ADA Williams stated that alt- hough her assignment within the Office of the District Attor- ney [was] changing, she was not going to allow the case against Mr. Lass to be assigned to another ADA. ADA Wil- liams stated that even if she were to leave the District Attor- ney’s Office and go into private practice, she would return under the District Attorney’s pro bono program to personally see to the prosecution of Mr. Lass.” Haney’s statement got the trial court’s attention, with the judge asking ADA Williams to explain the new wave of broader, more serious felony charges against Lass. ADA Wil- liams then appeared in open court and stated: I learned about the history of domestic violence from the victim in a face-to-face conversation at some point in my interaction with her, I know for a fact, in December, during—either before, during, or after the misdemeanor trial. When she told me about the incidents, I was not aware whether police reports had been filed …. At that point, I began to research whether or not I could bring additional charges, whether they were within the statute of limitations, which I found out later they were, and then I also dis- covered that there were police reports support- ing what the victim was telling me. I don’t re- member when I learned about the police re- ports. But I can tell the Court, in all candor, when I heard about what he had done to her to inflict 4 No. 23-2880

these injuries in the past during the course of their relationship, considering my oath as a prosecutor, I was almost convinced that I had no choice but to file these charges. That explains my rationale. The trial court credited this explanation, finding that the new charges were not vindictive because ADA Williams did not learn of the full range of Lass’s criminal conduct until the misdemeanor prosecution was underway. Even more specif- ically, the court determined that the prosecutor could not have charged Lass with the felony counts the first time around because she did not yet have knowledge of the full scope of his criminal conduct. So the trial court denied Lass’s request to dismiss the second case. The jury found Lass guilty of all charges, save for one of the felony counts, with the trial judge later imposing a sen- tence of 40 years’ imprisonment. Lass then began his pursuit of post-conviction relief, first in Wisconsin state court and later in federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. B Lass’s post-conviction motion proceeded not before the judge who tried the felony case, but instead before a different member of the Milwaukee County Circuit Court. The court denied Lass’s request for post-conviction relief. It did so by renewing the reasoning underpinning the trial judge’s prior rejection of the vindictive prosecution contention. Nor did the court see any need for an evidentiary hearing given the prior findings made in response both to attorney Haney’s affidavit and ADA Williams’s explanation for broadened charges in the second case. The court also denied Lass’s request for post- No. 23-2880 5

conviction relief on an unrelated ground regarding the admis- sion at trial of a personal journal Lass kept while receiving anger management counseling. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals affirmed. The court de- termined that the lower court committed no error—either during trial or in the post-conviction proceeding—in denying Lass an evidentiary hearing because he failed to allege facts that, if true, would establish a presumption of vindictiveness or actual vindictiveness. Instead, the facts that Lass did allege, the appellate court reasoned, were consistent with ADA Wil- liams’s stated reason for bringing the array of felony charges in the second case—in particular, the information she learned during the prosecution of the first case about the duration and extent of the domestic abuse. The Wisconsin appellate court then made short work of Lass’s separate claim for relief based on his trial counsel’s fail- ure to object to the admission into evidence of his personal journal. The court declined to consider the claim on the merits because, contrary to requirements of Wisconsin law, Lass made no effort to show any prejudice. The court likewise ap- plied Wisconsin law in finding that Lass forfeited an alto- gether new claim—raised for first time on appeal in the state post-conviction proceedings—that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment rights by excluding his presence at side- bars throughout the trial. The Wisconsin Supreme Court then declined review. C Lass’s application for relief in federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 likewise fell short. As for the vindictive pros- ecution claim, the district court seemed of the view that the 6 No. 23-2880

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Bluebook (online)
105 F.4th 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodney-lass-v-jason-wells-ca7-2024.