State ex rel. Steven Wishom, Relator v. The Honorable Paula P. Bryant

CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 29, 2023
DocketSC99949
StatusPublished

This text of State ex rel. Steven Wishom, Relator v. The Honorable Paula P. Bryant (State ex rel. Steven Wishom, Relator v. The Honorable Paula P. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Steven Wishom, Relator v. The Honorable Paula P. Bryant, (Mo. 2023).

Opinion

SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI en banc

STATE EX REL. STEVEN WISHOM, ) Opinion issued August 29, 2023 ) Relator, ) ) v. ) No. SC99949 ) THE HONORABLE PAULA P. ) BRYANT, ) ) Respondent. )

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN PROHIBITION

Steven Wishom petitions this Court for a writ of prohibition barring the circuit court

from taking any further action in Wishom’s pending criminal case other than to dismiss the

charges pending against him. In his writ petition, Wishom alleges the circuit court violated

the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (IAD) when it continued his criminal case and failed

to conduct a trial within 180 days of his request to dispose of his pending charges. Because

the State waived any argument that Wishom failed to properly invoke his rights under the

IAD and the circuit court lacked good cause to continue Wishom’s trial when all the parties

were ready and prepared to try his pending case within the 180-day period, the IAD

mandates dismissal of Wishom’s case. For these reasons, the Court makes permanent its preliminary writ prohibiting the circuit court from taking any further action in Wishom’s

pending criminal matter other than dismissing the charges.

Background

On January 29, 2020, the State filed a complaint in the St. Louis circuit court

charging Steven Wishom with rape, sodomy, and sexual abuse. 1 Wishom was arrested and

detained, and retained counsel appeared on his behalf on March 4, 2020. After posting a

monetary bond, Wishom was taken into federal custody on criminal charges in May 2020.

He ultimately pleaded guilty to those federal charges and was sentenced to 36 months in

federal prison.

In February 2022, while Wishom was serving his federal sentence at a penitentiary

in Kentucky, a warrant issued for his arrest on the state charges in St. Louis. Based on this

warrant, a detainer was lodged with the federal penitentiary in Kentucky preventing his

release after he finished serving his sentence. Pursuant the IAD, Wishom filed a request

to dispose of the St. Louis charges. The circuit court and the State received this request on

April 14, 2022. If properly invoked, the IAD required the State to dispose of Wishom’s

pending charges within 180 days of the State’s and the court’s receipt of his request to

dispose of the charges.

In response to Wishom’s request, the State, on April 20, 2022, sent the federal prison

a request to take temporary custody of Wishom. The State’s request for temporary custody

1 A grand jury returned an indictment charging Wishom with the same offenses on March 5, 2020. Before the scheduled trial date, a substitute information in lieu of indictment was filed on October 7, 2022, charging him with rape and sodomy but not sexual abuse. 2 was made pursuant to a form titled “IAD/STATE WRIT – PROSECUTOR’S

CERTIFICATION,” which required the State to choose between two separate boxes

indicating whether the request for temporary custody was made pursuant to the “IAD” or

“State Writ.” The State checked the IAD box, causing the form to state: “I, [Assistant

Circuit Attorney], hereby request temporary custody of Steven Wishom via IAD.” Federal

officials at the penitentiary thereafter sent an offer to deliver temporary custody of Wishom

to the State under the IAD to dispose of his pending charges. In addition, the federal prison

sent a certificate of Wishom’s inmate status, stating the length of his federal sentence, the

time already served, the time remaining to be served on the sentence, the amount of good

time earned, the time of parole eligibility, and any decision of the parole agency governing

his federal sentence. This certificate was received by the State and filed by the circuit

court.

The State received custody of Wishom on June 8, 2022. On June 13, private

counsel, who had not formally entered an appearance on Wishom’s behalf, requested a

short continuance to confer with Wishom until June 21. 2 During a June 21 hearing, the

circuit court found Wishom indigent and appointed him a public defender. At the hearing,

the State notified the court that Wishom’s charged offenses were required to be disposed

by October 23, 2022, to comply with the 180-day IAD deadline. The State also notified

the court it filed a motion to compel Wishom to provide a biological sample for DNA

testing and asked the court to set a date for a hearing on the motion. In response, the court

2 The attorney appearing with Wishom on June 13 was not the same lawyer or associated with the lawyer who had previously appeared on Wishom’s behalf on March 4, 2020. 3 scheduled a hearing on the State’s motion and set Wishom’s case for trial on October 17,

2022.

On June 23, 2022, a public defender appeared on Wishom’s behalf, and Wishom,

thereafter, filed objections to the State’s motion to compel. In the objections, Wishom

noted that October 11, 2022, not October 23, was the appropriate IAD deadline. After a

hearing on the State’s motion to compel, the court entered an order sustaining the motion

to compel and rescheduled Wishom’s trial for October 11.

On October 11, 2022—within the 180-day period after the State and circuit court

received Wishom’s IAD request to dispose of the pending charges—both the State and

Wishom appeared in circuit court ready for trial. Despite two other non-IAD jury trials

commencing on that date in other divisions of the circuit court, the court failed to secure a

jury panel and continued the case on its own accord without request from either Wishom

or the State. On October 14, Wishom filed a motion to dismiss the charges on the grounds

the court failed to dispose of the charged offenses within the required IAD timeframe.

The circuit court held a hearing on October 18, 2022, regarding Wishom’s motion

to dismiss. At the hearing, and in response to Wishom’s motion to dismiss, the State

conceded Wishom “did do everything that he was supposed to do” to comply with the IAD

and the State “showed up prepared for trial within the 180 day period.” The State,

nevertheless, asked the court to find good cause for continuing the October 11 trial setting

based on the court’s inability to secure a jury panel. The court agreed with the State’s

argument and overruled Wishom’s motion to dismiss. In so doing, the court faulted

Wishom for not requesting to be put on the circuit court’s “priority list” for the October 11

4 trial setting to ensure the court secured a jury panel from the summoned jury pool and

entered an order finding “good cause for the continuance as there was not a jury panel

available.” 3 The court and parties agreed to set the case for trial on October 31, 2022, with

a backup date of January 30, 2023.

Wishom appeared October 31, 2022 in the circuit court again ready for trial, but the

court again continued the case on its own accord to January 30, 2023. On January 27,

2023, Wishom sought a writ of prohibition from this Court prohibiting the circuit court

from taking any further action in his pending criminal matter other than entering an order

dismissing the charges against him. This Court issued a preliminary writ directing the

circuit court to show cause why a permanent writ should not be entered.

Standard of Review

This Court has jurisdiction to issue original remedial writs pursuant to article V,

section 4.1 of the Missouri Constitution. The writ of prohibition is an “extraordinary

remedy” and is appropriate:

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State ex rel. Steven Wishom, Relator v. The Honorable Paula P. Bryant, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-steven-wishom-relator-v-the-honorable-paula-p-bryant-mo-2023.