Wilson v. GAETZ

608 F.3d 347, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 12423, 2010 WL 2403386
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 17, 2010
Docket09-2111
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 608 F.3d 347 (Wilson v. GAETZ) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. GAETZ, 608 F.3d 347, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 12423, 2010 WL 2403386 (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinions

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

In 2004, Daniel Wilson was convicted in an Illinois state court of murder while mentally ill, and sentenced to 55 years in prison. After exhausting his state remedies in People v. Wilson, No. 4-07-0359 (Ill.App. Mar. 3, 2008), petition to appeal denied, 228 Ill.2d 552, 321 Ill.Dec. 562, 889 N.E.2d 1122 (2008), he sought federal habeas corpus, was denied relief without an evidentiary hearing (which he had requested), and appeals. He claims to have received ineffective assistance of counsel at his trial, in violation of his federal constitutional rights. He seeks a new trial for murder, or at least an evidentiary hearing in the district court.

As early as 1987 Wilson had begun having delusions that “the Catholics” (unnamed, unspecified — his fear was of some indefinite but immensely sinister Catholic conspiracy, the sort of thing that Queen Elizabeth I and other Protestant monarchs feared with greater justification during the Reformation) were out to get him. The delusions intensified in 1998. He believed that the Catholics were planting cameras in his home to spy on him and were trying to frame him for molesting his adopted teenage daughter. He decided that she was part of the frame up and ordered her from his house. He stopped speaking to his wife after deciding she’d joined the conspiracy, and later, after they divorced, he began suspecting her of having had affairs with Catholics during the marriage. He severed relations with his parents because he thought the conspirators were in touch with them too. He was convinced that the Catholics were spreading lies and rumors about him and that Catholic doc[349]*349tors were giving him false diagnoses of his medical conditions.

His boss, Jerome Fischer, had a starring role in Wilson’s fantasy. Wilson believed that Fischer had hired a man to install the secret cameras in Wilson’s home, spread lies about Wilson, made fun of his health problems before other employees, and was scheming to keep him from home so that it would be easier for the Catholics to install surveillance cameras.

Wilson tried to stay at home as much as possible to protect his home against penetrations by the Catholics and he therefore refused to attend his employer’s company-wide meetings, held in New Hampshire, which would have kept him from his home (which was in Quincy, Illinois) for a week — in his insane thinking, an intolerably dangerous absence. He tried to enhance his home security by buying first toy guns and then real ones and leaving them where the hidden, cameras would see them, to frighten the Catholics. He bought a bulletproof vest, installed additional locks, and nailed the back porch door shut.

On November 19, 2003, Fischer insisted that Wilson accompany him the next day to a company meeting in New Hampshire. Wilson brought up the conspiracy, the cameras, and the efforts to lure him out of his house, and said that for these reasons he didn’t want to go to the meeting. Fischer told him that if he didn’t go he’d be fired.

The next morning Fischer called Wilson to tell him he was on his way to pick him up at his house. Wilson placed a loaded gun in his pocket, opened his front door when Fischer rang the doorbell, and followed Fischer to his car. As soon as Fischer got into the car Wilson shot him dead. He dialed 911 immediately, and, “extremely distraught” (as revealed by the police tape of the conversation), cried and sobbed, repeatedly saying “I can’t believe it” and telling the dispatcher what he had done and that it was a purposeful killing and not an accident. Highly emotional when arrested, he confessed forthwith, expressed regret, and declined to explain his reasons for killing Fischer beyond saying that it was “over something that has been going on for a while.”

He was charged with first-degree murder. The court appointed a psychiatrist named Sadashiv Parwatikar to evaluate his fitness to stand trial. Parwatikar concluded that Wilson was unfit — that he would be unable to assist his lawyer because the only details that he could provide of the killing were details of the imaginary Catholic conspiracy.

That was in January 2004. Five months later, after Wilson had spent most of the interim period in a mental hospital receiving medication (Olanzapine, an antipsychotic drug) for what the hospital diagnosed as a delusional disorder (Parwatikar had diagnosed Wilson as schizophrenic), a psychiatrist at the hospital pronounced Wilson fit to stand trial.

In August, the month before the trial began, Andrew Schnack, the lawyer whom Wilson’s mother had hired to represent him, wrote and then phoned Parwatikar asking him to testify at the trial about whether Wilson had been insane when he killed Fischer. Parwatikar replied that a fitness evaluation and a sanity evaluation are not the same thing and reminded Schnack that he had done only the former for Wilson. But, pressed by Schnack, Parwatikar said he could render an opinion on Wilson’s sanity at the time of the killing but added that an effective insanity defense would require testimony by a second expert as well, someone who would perform a sanity evaluation of Wilson.

[350]*350Sehnack didn’t retain a second expert and ignored Parwatikar (beyond giving him treatment reports from Wilson’s stay at the mental hospital and a tape of the 911 call) until a few hours before Parwatikar testified, when at his urgent request the lawyer agreed to talk to him.

Parwatikar testified that Wilson was a paranoid schizophrenic who had killed Fischer under “the pressure of the delusions.” Concerning the remorse that Wilson had expressed moments after the killing, Parwatikar testified, unhelpfully to Wilson, that it was like a mother whose child runs into a busy street and she hits the child in anger at the child’s recklessness and only later feels sorry for having done so. Parwatikar acknowledged on the stand having interviewed Wilson only to determine his fitness to stand trial and not his mental state at the time of the killing. Although Wilson’s mentation was now much improved as a result of his treatment in the hospital, Parwatikar had, he acknowledged, not reinterviewed him.

Parwatikar was taken apart in cross-examination by a skillful prosecutor who forced him to concede that only three paragraphs of his 14-page fitness report concerned Wilson’s mental state when he had committed the murder — the rest of the report was about his fitness when Parwatikar had interviewed him. Parwatikar conceded that his report had expressed no opinion on whether Wilson had been sane when he killed Fischer. He conceded that he had never spoken to the police officers and jail personnel who had seen and talked to Wilson immediately after the murder. He conceded that lawyer Schnaek had told him that he (Parwatikar) had all the information he needed to form an opinion on Wilson’s sanity when he had killed Fischer. He conceded that he had formed his opinion of Wilson’s sanity before listening for the first time, on the morning of his testimony, to the tape of Wilson’s statement to police on the day of the shooting. He even conceded that Wilson had been legally sane when he called the police dispatcher.

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Wilson v. GAETZ
608 F.3d 347 (Seventh Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 F.3d 347, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 12423, 2010 WL 2403386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-gaetz-ca7-2010.