State v. Jonathan P. Medeiros

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 12, 2023
Docket2022AP001768-CR
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Jonathan P. Medeiros (State v. Jonathan P. Medeiros) 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. Jonathan P. Medeiros, (Wis. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. December 12, 2023 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Samuel A. Christensen petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2022AP1768-CR Cir. Ct. No. 2021CF12

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT III

STATE OF WISCONSIN,

PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,

V.

JONATHAN P. MEDEIROS,

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from a judgment and an order of the circuit court for Buffalo County: THOMAS W. CLARK, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Stark, P.J., Hruz and Gill, JJ.

Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent

or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).

¶1 PER CURIAM. Jonathan P. Medeiros appeals from a judgment convicting him of first-degree reckless homicide and from an order denying his No. 2022AP1768-CR

postconviction motion for resentencing. He claims that his trial counsel provided constitutionally ineffective assistance by failing to object to comments made by the prosecutor at sentencing—which Medeiros contends undermined the sentence recommendation bargained for in the plea agreement. We conclude that the prosecutor’s comments did not breach the plea agreement and, therefore, his trial counsel did not provide ineffective assistance. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and postconviction order.

BACKGROUND

¶2 According to police reports cited in the complaint and the presentence investigation report (PSI), Medeiros called 911 to report that he had shot and killed his wife, Jolene.1 Responding medical personnel discovered Jolene deceased with a shotgun wound to the head. During a police interview, Medeiros stated: “I stood up out of bed, grabbed a shotgun, and fucking shot once. She was screaming at me, going ape shit screaming at me, and I shot again.” At various points during the interview, Medeiros stated that he had aimed the shotgun at Jolene’s chest, but that he had never intended to shoot her. When asked why he had shot Jolene, however, Medeiros responded that she “just kept bitching.” Medeiros further stated that he and Jolene had been drinking and arguing all day. Medeiros also acknowledged during the interview that he had threatened to kill Jolene about six months prior to the shooting and he had, in recent weeks, threatened to burn down the house he and Jolene shared if Jolene tried to kick him out.

1 Although Medeiros referred to the victim as his wife in his 911 call, he later explained that the two were not “legally married” but considered themselves to be married.

2 No. 2022AP1768-CR

¶3 Based on these allegations, the State initially charged Medeiros with first-degree intentional homicide. The parties eventually reached a plea agreement, whereby Medeiros agreed to waive his right to a trial and pled guilty to a reduced charge of first-degree reckless homicide, while the State agreed to recommend a sentence of twenty-five years’ initial confinement followed by fifteen years’ extended supervision.

¶4 Before ultimately allowing the Information to be amended and accepting the plea, the circuit court questioned the State as to why the reduced charge was appropriate, and it inquired as to the position of Jolene’s family. The State responded that Medeiros’s consumption of alcohol, the fight between Medeiros and Jolene, and Medeiros’s denial of intent to kill Jolene could “mitigate” the intent element of intentional homicide. The State also explained that Jolene’s family did not want to go through a trial.

¶5 The PSI included additional information from family members of both Jolene and Medeiros, a neighbor, and other friends and coworkers of Jolene’s about Medeiros’s possessive and abusive behavior toward Jolene and his repeated threats to kill Jolene. The neighbor said that, about three weeks before the shooting, she and Jolene “had devised a safety plan for Jolene in order to hide or get away if she needed it.” One of the coworkers described a time when Jolene’s mother had removed the guns from the home Jolene shared with Medeiros because Medeiros had been drinking and threatening to kill Jolene.

¶6 At the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor recommended a sentence of twenty-five years’ initial confinement followed by fifteen years’ extended supervision, as the State had agreed to do. The prosecutor stated that he had conferred with the family, law enforcement, and other prosecutors, who all agreed

3 No. 2022AP1768-CR

that the proposed sentence would be a “just resolution,” and the prosecutor further noted that nothing in the PSI altered his belief that the recommendation was appropriate. The prosecutor reiterated that because the State would have had to prove intent at trial and the family did not want to go to trial, he had agreed to reduce the charge to “reckless endangerment [sic] which, of course, the [c]ourt understands is a possibility of a 60-year prison sentence.”

¶7 While discussing Medeiros’s character, the prosecutor noted that Medeiros’s acceptance of responsibility—by entering a plea—was “somewhat muted by the fact that if [the matter] had gone to trial and [the State had] won … [Medeiros] would have faced a mandatory life imprisonment.” The prosecutor then commented that the “hard part” of the case for him was that Medeiros had told Jolene on more than one occasion that he was going to kill her and then “carried through with his threat to kill her.” The prosecutor characterized Medeiros’s conduct as “the ultimate act of domestic violence” evincing a “depraved mind, which goes to the character of the offender and the rehabilitative needs.” The prosecutor suggested that Medeiros would “need extensive rehabilitation for the thinking that [led him] to the conclusion that” he had the right to take the life of the woman he professed to love because she did not do what he wanted her to do.

¶8 As to the gravity of the offense, the prosecutor observed that, generally, there are no more serious crimes than homicides and he then noted that the shooting here was selfish, senseless, and deprived two children of their mother, as well as two parents of their daughter. As part of his discussion of the impact of Jolene’s death, the prosecutor also made reference to a letter from one of Jolene’s friends, who asked the circuit court to impose a life sentence.

4 No. 2022AP1768-CR

¶9 The prosecutor next opined that the recommendation in the PSI for twenty years’ initial confinement followed by ten years’ extended supervision would be insufficient to protect the public because it underestimated the risk that Medeiros would engage in future violence. The prosecutor pointed out that twenty-five years of initial confinement would put Medeiros into his sixties when he was released to extended supervision, by which age the prosecutor believed Medeiros’s dangerousness would have decreased “significantly.” The prosecutor concluded that a forty-year total sentence was justified to protect the public from “somebody who had essentially executed his significant other because she wouldn’t shut up.”

¶10 Medeiros asked the circuit court to follow the thirty-year total sentence recommended in the PSI. Ultimately, the court rejected the recommendations of both the parties and the PSI, and it imposed a sentence consisting of thirty years’ initial confinement followed by twenty years’ extended supervision.

¶11 Medeiros filed a postconviction motion seeking resentencing.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Jonathan P. Medeiros, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jonathan-p-medeiros-wisctapp-2023.