Todd Paulus IV v. Troy Enger

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 26, 2026
Docket3:24-cv-00178
StatusUnknown

This text of Todd Paulus IV v. Troy Enger (Todd Paulus IV v. Troy Enger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd Paulus IV v. Troy Enger, (W.D. Wis. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

TODD PAULUS IV,

Plaintiff, OPINION and ORDER v.

24-cv-178-jdp TROY ENGER,1

Defendant.

Petitioner Todd Paulus is serving a term of extended supervision under the custody of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections’ Division of Community Corrections. Paulus seeks a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The matter is fully briefed and ready for decision. Paulus challenges his 2020 Wisconsin state-court conviction for enticement of a child with intent to have sexual contact, in violation of Wis. Stat. § 948.07(1). Fourteen-year-old KCP, who was Paulus’s ex-girlfriend’s niece, alleged that Paulus sexually assaulted her while she was spending the night at his house. At trial, Paulus argued that KCP had fabricated the allegations, and he sought to introduce evidence that KCP had viewed pornography before her interview with detectives that depicted sexual acts similar to those that she alleged Paulus had done to her. The trial judge excluded the pornography, finding that the risk of unfair prejudice substantially outweighed its minimal probative value. Paulus contends that the exclusion of

1 Petitioner originally named Maria Silao-Johnson, the superintendent of Winnebago Correctional Center, as the respondent. But petitioner has since been released on extended supervision, so the proper respondent is Troy Enger, administrator of the Wisconsin DOC’s Division of Community Corrections. See Hogan v. Hanks, 97 F.3d 189, 190 (7th Cir. 1996) (“If the petitioner is on parole, the parole board or equivalent should be named.”). The court has updated the caption accordingly. the pornography violated his constitutional right to present a defense. He also contends that the state court of appeals erred by concluding that the exclusion was harmless error. The court concludes that the exclusion of the pornography evidence did not violate Paulus’s right to present a defense, because it was at most minimally relevant to whether KCP

had fabricated the allegations, and its introduction carried a substantial risk of unfair prejudice and confusion to the jury. Nor did the state court of appeals act unreasonably in concluding that the exclusion of the pornography was harmless error. Paulus’s habeas petition will be denied.

BACKGROUND In January 2019, 14-year-old KCP accused Paulus of sexually assaulting her while she was staying overnight at his house a few weeks earlier. When she was first interviewed by detectives, KCP provided only sparse details about the assault, explaining that a friend of her

dad’s “kissed her” and then “it turned into more.” Dkt. 15-6. At a forensic interview four days later, KCP provided a much more detailed account of the assault. She said that Paulus had brought her into his bedroom, laid on his back with her sitting on top of him, and moved her back and forth over his underwear until he ejaculated. She also said that Paulus had put his finger underneath her underwear and into her vagina. Dkt. 7-1 (criminal complaint), at 1–2. Paulus denied sexually assaulting KCP. A. Trial court proceedings The state charged Paulus with one count of sexual assault of a child, in violation of

Wis. Stat. § 948.02(2), and one count of child enticement, in violation of Wis. Stat. § 948.07(1). To support his theory that KCP had fabricated the sexual assault allegations, Paulus wanted to introduce evidence that in the four days between her initial interview with detectives and her forensic interview, KCP had viewed pornography on her phone that depicted sexual acts similar to what she alleged Paulus had done to her. Specifically, KCP viewed a video called

“Grinding StepDads Cock for Cash” four separate times on the day of her forensic interview. Dkt. 18-1 (screenshot of KCP’s viewing history). She also saved several pornographic images, including one of a “woman wearing underwear sitting on a naked man’s lap while the man has his hand on her vagina over her underwear.” Dkt. 7-3 (trial transcript, day 2, 10:8–14).2 Just before trial, the court held a hearing on Paulus’s request to introduce evidence of the pornography that KCP had viewed. Paulus argued that the pornography was admissible as an “alternate source of knowledge of sexual content,” to rebut a jury inference that KCP wouldn’t know about the sexual experiences that she described unless Paulus had in fact

assaulted her. Dkt. 7-2 (trial transcript, day 1, 11:1–12:18). Paulus also argued that the evidence was admissible to explain why KCP described the sexual assault in only general terms during her initial interview with investigators but then provided significantly more detail during her forensic interview. Id. at 14:1–20. The court excluded the pornography under Wis. Stat. § 901.403, concluding that the risk of prejudice substantially outweighed any marginal relevance. Id. at 17.

2 None of the pornographic images or videos are in the record. This description of the pornographic image on KCP’s phone was provided to the trial court by defense counsel. The state did not dispute defense counsel’s description of the image, although it did dispute the extent to which the image resembled the alleged assault. Dkt. 7-3 (trial transcript, day 2, 10:15–25). The court revisited the pornography issue at the close of the first day of trial and in a pretrial hearing just before the second day of trial. Id. at 199–209; Dkt. 7-3, at 5–11. Paulus reiterated his position that the evidence was necessary to his defense, arguing: This whole case is about the allegation of sexual contact. Evidence of an alternate source of her knowledge does make the sexual contact with Mr. Paulus less likely than it does without the evidence because it gives the jury another theory to consider. Dkt. 7-2, at 202:14–18. Paulus acknowledged that the pornography evidence could be embarrassing to KCP, so he proposed introducing it through the detective who had examined KCP’s phone, instead of through KCP herself. Id at 202:19–24. After hearing Paulus’s argument and the state’s response, the court reaffirmed its decision to exclude the evidence under § 904.03. The court reasoned that the pornography was of limited relevance to explaining KCP’s sexual knowledge, because the jury would be unlikely to infer that a 14-year-old adolescent lacked knowledge of sexual matters. Dkt. 7-3, at 7–8. The court also rejected Paulus’s argument that the pornography explained how KCP had come up with additional details about the assault during her forensic interview. The judge reasoned that, in addition to the video and image described by the defense, KCP had viewed other pornographic content that was not similar to the sexual acts that she had described to investigators,

undermining Paulus’s theory that KCP used the pornography to fabricate her allegations. Nor did Paulus have any evidence about KCP’s pornography habits in the months before or after she reported the assault, so he had no reason to assume that viewing pornography like this was out of the norm for KCP. Id. at 8–9.

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