State v. Honig

2016 WI App 10, 874 N.W.2d 589, 366 Wis. 2d 681, 2015 Wisc. App. LEXIS 885
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 22, 2015
DocketNo. 2014AP2968-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2016 WI App 10 (State v. Honig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Honig, 2016 WI App 10, 874 N.W.2d 589, 366 Wis. 2d 681, 2015 Wisc. App. LEXIS 885 (Wis. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

KESSLER, J.

¶ 1. Rafael D. Honig appeals a judgment of conviction, following a jury trial, of one count of first-degree sexual assault — intercourse with a person under age twelve, and one count of first-degree sexual assault — contact with a person under age thirteen. Honig also appeals the order denying his postconviction motion for relief. We conclude that the trial court's determination that Honig's trial counsel was not ineffective was based on errors of law. We reverse.

[689]*689BACKGROUND

¶ 2. On September 5, 2012, Honig was charged with one count of first-degree sexual assault— intercourse with a person under age twelve, and one count of first-degree sexual assault — contact with a person under age thirteen, stemming from allegations that he inappropriately touched his five-year old granddaughter, Y.H., and his three-year old granddaughter, Y.C. According to the complaint, Y.H. told her uncle, Raymond Cruz, that Honig had been "touching her cookie (vagina) and it burns." Y.H. also told Cruz that Honig put his mouth on her "cookie" and that she observed Honig touching Y.C.'s "cookie." Honig pled not guilty.

¶ 3. During their investigation, Milwaukee police conducted video-recorded forensic interviews with each of the girls. Y.H. was five years old at the time. During Y.H.'s interview, she stated that her grandfather lived in a hotel, and she described an incident in which her grandfather touched her "private" at the hotel. She stated that she was holding her mother's hand in the hotel lobby "seven months ago" and Honig pried her away from her mother by unlinking her fingers "one by one." Honig took Y.H. and her "little cousin" to room number "143," where he touched her "little cousin" by "putting his mouth on her private." Y.H. stated that her mother "was screaming" when she discovered Y.H. was missing and "scratched" on the hotel room door until her fake fingernails came off. Y.H. also called her grandfather "nasty," stating "he always like touches little girls — in the privates." She stated the "little girls" included "like me, my sister, and my. . . cousin, and my. . . other cousin." Y.H. also stated that additional alleged attacks took place at a park and in her house.

[690]*690¶ 4. Y.C. was three years old at the time. During Y.C.'s interview, Y.C. told police that "abuelo"1 was in "jail" because "Nene (Y.H.) said grandpa was touching us." Y.C. described an incident in which "Nene was sitting on the bed. Grandpa pulled down his pants then I was standing right by um um um [N]ene. He pulled down my pants, he was doing something to me and I - I was doing something I was - I was [N]ene was watching me." Later in the interview Y.C. said that Honig actually pulled Y.H.'s pants down, after which "[t]he cops came." Y.C. then told police that Honig "didn't do nothing to me" and that she was sleeping when "he just did it to [N]ene."

¶ 5. Prior to trial, the State informed the trial court that it did not plan to show Y.C.'s forensic interview to the jury because, the State asserted, it did not comply with Wis. Stat. § 908.08 (2013-14).2 Specifically, the State said that the video "didn't go far [691]*691enough" in terms of demonstrating that Y.C. was [692]*692telling the truth. The State indicated that it could "get through truth and lie" with Y.C. on the witness stand.

¶ 6. Prior to trial, defense counsel informed the court of a potential defense witness — George Colon. Counsel told the court that Colon was an acquaintance of Cruz. According to defense counsel, Colon would testify that Cruz told Colon that he (Cruz) "knew ways to frame people, including claims of sexual abuse that — and specifically regarding my client, that he had some plan to frame [Honig] by somehow getting kids to say things about things that my client allegedly did." The trial court ruled that (1) defense counsel could question Cruz about Colon's claims, but, (2) if Cruz denied the claims, counsel would not be allowed to impeach Cruz.3

¶ 7. Defense counsel's theories of defense were primarily that: (1) Cruz had "some bad feelings towards" Honig, thus Cruz planted the story with the girls; or (2) someone else assaulted the girls. Multiple witnesses then testified at trial.

¶ 8. Police Officer Shannon Orvis testified that he conducted the girls' forensic interviews. He testified that Y.H. understood the difference between the truth and a lie, but stated that Y.C.'s "ability to understand . . . the concept of truth and lie was very, very limited." Y.H.'s entire video was then played for the jury; however, Y.C.'s video interview was not played.

[693]*693¶ 9. Y.H. told the jury that Honig put his finger in her "private" and his mouth on her "private" multiple times at multiple locations — her house, a hotel and a park. Y.H. stated that she witnessed Honig do the same to her sister, and that when Honig allegedly assaulted her sister, Y.H. "told mommy. My mommy came in [Honig's] room. She got — she got shocked." Y.H. said that her mother left Honig's room, Honig assaulted Y.C. again, and her mother "got shocked again." Y.H. said that she told her mother "Grandpa had touched me," and that her mother was the first person she told. Later, Y.H. said that Cruz was the first person she told. Y.H. admitted she talked to Cruz "a lot." When asked if Cruz ever told Y.H. to accuse her grandfather of "bad things," Y.H. responded, "I don't remember."

¶ 10. Ziomara Honig, the girls' mother and Honig's daughter, told the jury that Y.H.'s story about being "snatched" from her at a hotel was simply not true. Ziomara indicated that Honig worked at a hotel, but he did not live there. Ziomara testified that she and Y.H. "did go visit [Honig], I did go enter his kitchen, but [the girls] were with me." She stated that Y.H was never "tooken from me or pulled from me in any type of way." Ziomara stated that she never witnessed Honig doing anything inappropriate to her daughters. Ziomara also told the jury that Y.H. had been having nightmares "stating that me and her walking, and somebody comes up and takes her." When asked about the "bad blood" between Cruz and Honig, Ziomara stated "that's their business. If they did I wouldn't know . . . because I don't involve in his or anybody else's lives."

¶ 11. Y.C., age four at the time of trial, was asked a series of questions that could be answered "yes" or [694]*694"no." Through this questioning by the State, she communicated to the jury that something she did not "like" happened in Honig's room. Then, using a doll, the State asked Y.C. where on the doll the incident happened. When the prosecutor touched the doll's vaginal area, Y.C. said "yes." Y.C.'s forensic interview, in which she stated Honig "didn't do nothing" to her, was not shown to the jury.

¶ 12. Cruz testified that in August 2012, Y.H. came up to him, "kind of crying," and told him that Honig "put his fingers in her cookie and that it was burning. . . and was putting his mouth all over her cookie." No other family members were present when Y.H. made these statements. Cruz admitted that he and Honig had a "beef1 "regarding [a] truck," and as a result, Cruz sent threatening messages to Honig. Cruz denied resenting Honig because Cruz had to move out of Ziomara's home when Honig moved in to make room for Honig.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 WI App 10, 874 N.W.2d 589, 366 Wis. 2d 681, 2015 Wisc. App. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-honig-wisctapp-2015.