Anthony Fawcett is on probation following his conviction on two charges of sexual contact with a minor. The sentence was two years' imprisonment on the first charge followed by ten years’ probation on the second. Wisconsin’s court of appeals affirmed,
State v. Fawcett,
*618
Section 2254 authorizes challenges to custody, and Fawcett was not “in custody” on the first conviction when he commenced this ease.
Maleng v. Cook,
Fawcett contends that his convictions violate the requirement in the sixth amendment that the accused “be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation”. He relies on many cases that interpret the indictment clause of the fifth amendment. But
Hurtado v. California,
Wisconsin originally charged Fawcett with unlawful sexual contact with M.S., who was ten at the timé, on December 7, 1985. Fawcett produced an alibi: a priest testified at the preliminary hearing that Fawcett had been on a religious retreat in Chicago from the evening of December 6 through the afternoon of December 8. Back to the drawing board. The state eventually charged Fawcett with two events of unlawful sexual contact with M.S. “during the six months preceeding [sic] December a.d. 1985”. (We disregard intermediate versions of the charges.) It is harder to come up with an alibi for a six-month period than for a day. At trial Fawcett’s lawyer did not offer an alibi but challenged M.S.’s veracity and memory, particularly contending that M.S.’s description of the place where the events occurred showed that he could not have been in Fawcett’s apartment.
Holesome v. State,
Federal courts engaged in collateral review of state judgments do not superintend the “reasonableness” of prosecutors’ conduct or state judges’ decisions. E.g.,
Estelle v. McGuire,
— U.S. —,
According to the information, Fawcett offered M.S. sweets plus an opportunity to visit the parakeet at his apartment, and during the visits he fondled M.S.’s penis and induced M.S. to return the attention. These allegations enabled Fawcett to defend. He could test M.S.’s veracity and memory; he could deny participation. M.S. said that he visited Fawcett many times from summer 1985 through the end of the year but could not remember the dates on which sexual contact occurred. True enough, it is hard to provide an alibi for a six-month period, or even for all the weekends during that time (M.S. testified that he saw Fawcett on weekends and during vacations from school). But six weeks would be little better than six months for this purpose. Although he did not testify at trial, Fawcett could have supplemented the record with an affidavit describing his whereabouts during the weekends in question. He did not. For all we can see, the only day for which he had an alibi was December 7, so that charges spanning six months, six weeks, or six. days would have been all the same. Wisconsin afforded Fawcett notice sufficient to permit him to defend against the charge.
Affirmed.
