Supreme Court Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas J.
Hammer
Criminal Procedure
Guilty Plea Procedures - Withdrawal of Pleas - The
Bangert Test
State v. Van Camp, Nos.
96-06-CR & 96-1509-CR (filed 23 Oct. 1997)
The defendant was charged with kidnapping and false imprisonment. On
the second day of trial, he pled no contest to false imprisonment and
had the kidnapping charge read in. The prosecutor noted the defendant's
"reticence" to enter the plea. The judge ordered probation but the
defendant filed a timely motion to withdraw the no contest plea on the
grounds of manifest injustice and because he had not freely, voluntarily
and knowingly waived his rights. The circuit court rejected the motion
and the court of appeals affirmed.
The supreme court, in a decision authored by Justice Steinmetz,
unanimously reversed and ordered the plea withdrawn. The court applied
the procedures setforth Instate v. Bangert (1986). The defense
easily met its prima facie burden showing that the plea failed to
conform to section 971.09 and other mandatory duties imposed by the
supreme court. The State and the defense agreed that the "plea colloquy
was woefully inadequate." For example, the judge never mentioned the
defendant's constitutional rights and nothing in the transcript
indicated that the defendant understood the range of punishments he
faced.
The burden thus shifted to the state to demonstrate by clear and
convincing evidence that the plea was valid despite the inadequate
record. The state failed the test. For example, defense counsel at the
plea testified that it was his "invariable" practice to advise clients
of their rights, but the court charitably characterized the attorney's
"mental checklist" of rights as a "confusing muddle which even those
educated in the law would have a difficult time following."
Finally, the supreme court held that under Bangert it is
inappropriate for trial judges to consider the likely outcome of a new
trial or the "victim's feelings" when deciding motions to withdraw a
plea.
Eyewitness Identifications - Right to Counsel - Suppression of
In-court ID
State v. McMorris, No.
95-2052-CR (filed 30 Oct. 1997)
A defendant was charged with armed robbery. While formal charges were
pending, police staged a lineup at which the sole eyewitness identified
the defendant as the robber. The police were unaware that the defendant
had a Sixth Amendment right to the presence of counsel at this corporeal
identification procedure. The trial court denied the defendant's motion
to suppress both the out-of-court lineup identification and any in-court
identification by the witness. Granting leave to appeal the suppression
order, the court of appeals reversed in part: The lineup identification
was ordered suppressed but the in-court,identification was nevertheless
admissible. The defendant appealed only the latter determination.
The supreme court, in a decision authored by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, reversed and ordered the suppression of the in-court
identification as well. In a fact-intensive decision, the majority found
that the state failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the
in-court identification was"independent" of the tainted lineup. Among
the factors considered were the witness's opportunity to observe the
robber, differences between the pre-lineup description and the
defendant's actual appearance (for example, height, facial hair and so
on), any identifications of other suspects, photo identifications, the
failure to identify the defendant on prior occasions, the time lapse
between the crime and the identification, and the conduct of the tainted
lineup (here police failed to photograph or otherwise record the
lineup). The court refused to consider the witness's level of certainty
in making the in-court identification. This factor is appropriate when
considering the reliability of identifications challenged on due process
grounds (unnecessarily suggestive police procedures), but not in
analyzing the taint flowing from a denial of the right to counsel.
Justice Crooks, joined by Justice Steinmetz and Wilcox, dissented.
This column summarizes all decisions
of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Prof. Daniel D. Blinka and Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer invite comments and questions about the digests. They can be
reached at the Marquette University Law School, 1103 W. Wisconsin Ave.,
Milwaukee, WI 53233, (414) 288-7090.
Wisconsin Lawyer