State v. Walker

2019 WI App 1, 923 N.W.2d 169, 385 Wis. 2d 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 27, 2018
DocketAppeal No. 2018AP186-CR
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 WI App 1 (State v. Walker) 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. Walker, 2019 WI App 1, 923 N.W.2d 169, 385 Wis. 2d 212 (Wis. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BRENNAN, J.

¶ 1 Frederick Eugene Walker appeals from a judgment of conviction, entered on a jury verdict, of repeated sexual assault of T.C.B. between November 2011 and September 2012, when she was under sixteen years old. He also appeals the order denying his postconviction motion.

¶ 2 Walker sought a new trial for three reasons. His first two reasons related to testimony by the victim's mother when she was answering a question about her shock at learning of the assaults. She stated that she "honestly could not believe that the situation she was in took place" and added "But [T.C.B.] don't lie." Trial counsel did not object to the mother's statement or argue that it constituted vouching for the victim's honesty and was therefore a Haseltine1 violation. Walker argued that this is grounds for a new trial in the interest of justice and that counsel's failure to move for a mistrial constituted constitutionally ineffective assistance. His third reason related to evidence of T.C.B.'s sexual activity. Walker had argued at trial, after the jury heard that T.C.B. had obtained contraceptives, that the curative admissibility doctrine2 gave him the right to question her about her sexual history. He argued that without additional information about her sexual activity, the jury would infer that she had obtained contraceptives solely because she was being sexually assaulted by Walker. The trial court held that any such questioning would violate the rape shield law, WIS. STAT. § 972.11(2) (2015-16)3 , which "generally prohibits the introduction of any evidence of the complainant's prior sexual conduct 'regardless of the purpose.' " State v. Ringer , 2010 WI 69, ¶ 25, 326 Wis. 2d 351, 785 N.W.2d 448 (citation omitted).

¶ 3 The postconviction court denied Walker's postconviction motion without a hearing.4 It concluded that the mother's testimony was admissible because it "was more about her own emotional struggle rather than vouching for her daughter's truthfulness" and therefore did not violate the Haseltine rule. The postconviction court also concluded that the testimony was admissible because evidentiary rules permit the mother to testify to T.C.B.'s "truthful character" after Walker had attacked her credibility. See WIS. STAT. § 906.08(1)(b) ("evidence of truthful character is admissible only after the character of the witness for truthfulness has been attacked by opinion or reputation evidence or otherwise"). The postconviction court concluded that during trial it had correctly barred questioning about T.C.B.'s sexual history because it would have been "a fishing expedition into how the victim had been sexually active." It further concluded that he was not entitled to a new trial in the interest of justice. We agree and affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 4 On January 9, 2014, T.C.B. told her high school basketball coach that Walker, her mother's boyfriend, "had inappropriately touched her and had sexual intercourse with her[.]" The same day, the coach reported the information to the police. Police then notified T.C.B.'s mother, N.S., of the allegations. Walker was subsequently charged with repeated sexual assault of a child. The matter proceeded to a jury trial. The evidence at Walker's trial consisted of the testimony of T.C.B., her twin sister, her mother, her basketball coach, and two detectives who had investigated the case. We set forth below the portions of the trial that are relevant to the issues raised in this appeal.

Trial counsel's opening statement.

¶ 5 In his opening statement, Walker's trial counsel referred to T.C.B.'s statements as "the various versions of the truth, so many versions" and as "varying shifting, changing truth." He started with this characterization of T.C.B.:

Nobody knows what [T.C.B.]'s going to say [in her testimony] because ... every time this young woman, who didn't like her mother's boyfriend and didn't like the fact that he was coming back into her life, every time she tells somebody the truth about what happened, it's different.

¶ 6 Trial counsel repeated this characterization twice more in his short opening statement. He said, "This is the same person, who every time she comes forward to tell the truth, tells a story that doesn't sound anything like the previous time she came forward to tell the truth." He described the disclosures to the jury as "start[ing] out with a disclosure to a trusted person, her coach ... about an incident where she was inappropriately touched" and then, "after a long period of time," during an interview preparing her for trial, "all of a sudden she tells the truth," and "it becomes all of these times." He repeatedly asserted that T.C.B.'s statements lacked "any corroborating evidence" such as "semen stains" or "dirty soiled undergarments," that there were inconsistencies in her accounts, and that the number and severity of the incidents she alleged grew over time. He closed by telling the jury it would be deciding whether there is "proof beyond a reasonable doubt that anything happened other than a young girl who didn't like her mother's boyfriend."

T.C.B.'s testimony.

¶ 7 T.C.B. testified that the assaults had begun during a period when Walker had lived with her family, and she said that the inappropriate touching started happening when she was "either twelve or thirteen." She testified that the first time she noticed something unusual with Walker was "kind of like eye contact or like a brush past my butt or something" and that this touching "happened again." She described the first occasion when Walker had penis-to-vagina sex with her in her mother's bedroom. She described two separate occasions when she was in the dining room of her mother's house when Walker came up behind her, pulled her pants down, and had penis-to-vagina sex with her "bending over." She described a time after she had taken a shower when Walker had penis-to-vagina sex with her on the living room floor. She described one time when Walker came into the room where she was sleeping. She testified, "he actually like woke me up and he was, like, do it again." She testified, "I used to say no, I'm asleep, or something like that.... But we actually had sex again."

¶ 8 During T.C.B.'s testimony about one of the times they had sex in the dining room, the State asked, "How did that end? ... Do you remember whether he finished?" T.C.B.'s answer was "Yeah, he did. He did, I guess." In response to T.C.B.'s "I guess," the State immediately asked, "Were you using condoms at all?"5 When T.C.B. answered "yes," the State asked, "Whose condoms were they?" T.C.B. answered:

Since my dad asked me a question on a random day, he asked me was I having sex or being sexually active. And I told him yeah. So him and his girlfriend took me and [my sister] to Planned Parenthood. And they got me to take the Depo shot. And they gave me the pill-I mean they gave me like the extra condoms in a bag. So I kept them in the top drawer.
So he went there. I actually went in my moms's room because I didn't need them. I wasn't doing anything.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 WI App 1, 923 N.W.2d 169, 385 Wis. 2d 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walker-wisctapp-2018.