Weyker v. Benzel

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJune 30, 2023
Docket2:13-cv-01115
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Weyker v. Benzel, (E.D. Wis. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

PETER JOHN WEYKER,

Petitioner, Case No. 13-CV-1115-JPS-JPS v.

CHERYL EPLETT,1 ORDER

Respondent.

1. INTRODUCTION On September 30, 2013, Petitioner Peter John Weyker (“Petitioner”) filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. ECF No. 1. Nearly eight years later, he filed an amended petition. ECF No. 29. That amended petition is now before the Court. For the reasons discussed herein, the Court will deny the amended petition. 2. BACKGROUND 2.1 Criminal Complaint and Charges On July 15, 2008, a criminal complaint against Petitioner was filed in State of Wisconsin v. Peter J. Weyker, Dodge County Circuit Court Case No. 2008CF000228.2 Petitioner was ultimately charged with sixteen total

1Wisconsin offender records provide that Petitioner is currently incarcerated at Oshkosh Correctional Institution, which is overseen by Warden Cheryl Eplett. See Offender Locator, Wis. Dep’t Corrections, available at https://appsdoc.wi.gov/lop/ (last visited June 28, 2023). Accordingly, the Court will instruct the Clerk of Court to replace Jason Benzel with Cheryl Eplett as Respondent in this action. 2That criminal docket is available at https://wcca.wicourts.gov/caseDetail.html?caseNo=2008CF000228&countyNo=14 &index=0&mode=details and is cited to herein as “Circuit Court Docket.” counts—for second degree sexual assault of a child, incest with a child, repeated sexual assault of the same child, capturing an image of nudity, and attempt to capture an image of nudity3—after Petitioner’s daughter (“B.S.”) reported to police that Petitioner had sexually assaulted her. State v. Weyker, 945 N.W.2d 372, ¶ 3 (Wis. Ct. App. 2020). 2.2 July 2009 Trial is Cancelled On the morning of July 27, 2009—the day Petitioner’s jury trial was scheduled to begin—Petitioner’s trial counsel, Attorney Randall Doyle (“Doyle”), failed to appear. Doyle then appeared via speakerphone and represented that he was unable to attend trial because his uncle had died. Doyle represented that he had received a call the previous day at 4:00 p.m. alerting him to his uncle’s death and that he was “told to get down to Tennessee immediately.” ECF No. 31-9 at 2. He represented that he promptly flew to Tennessee, arriving early that morning. Id. When asked by the circuit court what, if any, efforts Doyle had made to notify anyone in the judicial system about his anticipated absence, Doyle stated that his wife was “going to contact another attorney in the district attorney’s office” to get a message to Dodge County District Attorney Bill Bedker (“Bedker”). Id. at 3. Bedker confirmed that the previous evening, he had received a call from a fellow district attorney who alerted Bedker that there was a “death in Mr. Doyle’s family.” Id. at 3–4. Bedker conveyed this “relatively cryptic” information to the court shortly thereafter. Id. at 4–5. The court prompted Bedker to “make further inquiry of Mr. Doyle” since it

3The State filed an amended information in December 2008 charging Weyker with five counts. State v. Weyker, 945 N.W.2d 372, ¶ 3 (Wis. Ct. App. 2020). Then, in July 2009, the State successfully moved to file a second amended information, adding eleven additional counts. Id. ¶ 5. One count was later dismissed on prosecutor’s motion and did not proceed to trial. “was not even entirely clear that [Doyle] would not be present and available” for trial. Id. at 5. Bedker was unable to get ahold of Doyle, however, and given the “lateness of the hour” and the “cryptic picture as to what was going on,” the circuit court planned to proceed the following morning to trial. Id. Doyle informed the court that he planned to return to Wisconsin the following day. Id. at 6. In the meantime, the circuit court assessed the cost of empaneling the jury against Doyle as a sanction. Id. at 8–9. The parties reconvened later that day, with Doyle by phone, to determine whether the trial could be postponed to later in the week. ECF Nos. 31-10 at 2, 31-11. Despite having earlier suggested that it could, Doyle called back and informed the court that he was “stuck in Chattanooga” and “w[ould] not be” returning to Wisconsin the following day. ECF No. 31-11 at 2, 3. He represented that it was “flooding [there]” and that he “ha[d] been spending today clearing out [his] mother’s house because she flooded two years ago the last time this happened.” Id. at 2. The court again reiterated that Doyle was “derelict in [his] duties. . . in not notifying [the court] immediately upon when [he] became aware that [he was] heading out of the state of Wisconsin and wouldn’t be available.” ECF No. 31-10 at 8. 2.3 Second Amended Information Just two days later, on July 29, 2009, Bedker moved the circuit court for leave to file a second amended information, which would add eleven counts against Petitioner. ECF Nos. 33-2; 33-3. A hearing was held on the motion on August 8, 2009. ECF No. 33-4. Doyle objected to the second amended information, characterizing it as “punitive.” Id. at 5. “This matter . . . has been pending for over a year . . . . [T]he evidence hasn’t changed, the videos haven’t changed, the allegations haven’t changed. And yet for more than a year there was no . . . 16 count Information . . . . [T]he timing on this is a little suspect . . . .” Id. at 9. Bedker denied this allegation, maintaining that the second amended information “gives the defendant better notice of what he’s charged with” and better accounts for “distinct incidents.” Id. at 7. Bedker stated that it was not until mid-July 2009 that he reached this conclusion, after being “able to sit down and carefully prepare,” which he had not been able to do previously. Id. at 6. He emphasized that “[t]he goal is to have the charges track with the evidence” and that the second amended complaint better accomplished that goal. Id. Bedker conceded that “the reason [he] didn’t file this motion back on July 15th or 16th is that [he] didn’t think the Court would grant it because [the parties] were nine or ten days away from trial.” Id. at 7. “But circumstances changed.” Id. The rescheduling of the jury trial following Doyle’s failure to appear gave the State additional opportunity to file such a motion, which Bedker argued gave Petitioner and Doyle “adequate notice [of] what the proposed charges are.” Id. at 8. The circuit court concluded that it was “satisfied that there [was] no retribution aspect of this amendment” and “that what Attorney Bedker did was to really take a careful look at the different videos and things that were available to him.” Id. at 10. “[C]learly the acts constitute different crimes, and it is appropriate that the defendant be given proper notice of those crimes . . . .” Id. The court accordingly granted the motion for leave to file the second amended information. See supra n.3. 2.4 Trial Goes Forward On August 24, 2009, Petitioner’s rescheduled jury trial began. ECF No. 31-12. The State presented testimony of a forensic scientist employed with the State Crime Laboratory who analyzed the sexual assault kit recovered from B.S. as well as a pair of B.S.’s underwear. Id. at 151, 160. The witness testified that she “detected partial Y-STR profiles on the vaginal swab,” and that Petitioner was “included as a possible source to the male DNA detected” therefrom, id. at 165, 167, although she confirmed that if a group of 15 Caucasian males were gathered “together, one of them w[ould] match this profile,” id. at 208. The witness similarly detected partial Y-STR profiles on “the swabbing of the inner crotch area of the underwear,” plus “a mixture of three or more male individuals on the swabbing of the waistband of the underwear,” and she confirmed that Petitioner was included as a possible source for those as well. Id. at 165, 179.

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Weyker v. Benzel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weyker-v-benzel-wied-2023.