On a March day in 2000, loggers working in rural Pepin County, Wisconsin, found a dead, nearly naked body lying in the snow. Hypothermia was evident, but Mother Nature was not the cause of death. As a subsequent investigation discovered, the body was that of Ronald Ross, a man who several other men assaulted at a house party two days earlier in Red Wing, Minnesota. The body was left for dead in Wisconsin that night. Jeffrey Burr, 15 years old at the time, was the chief assailant. He attacked Ross at the party and suggested slitting his throat as he and three confederates drove the unconscious Ross to Wisconsin. When Ross came to during the drive, Burr beat him with a machete. After Burr and his companions unloaded Ross from the SUV they were using, two of the men went back to the car, but Burr and one other stayed with Ross, kicking him several times. Upon returning to the SUV, Burr said they had “killed him.”
A Wisconsin state court jury convicted Burr of first-degree murder.
1
Under Wisconsin law, a defendant convicted of first-degree murder must serve a life sentence. Wis. Stat. §§ 940.01(1), 939.50(3)(a). The judge, however, can influence the actual time of confinement by setting an eligibili
*830
ty date for “extended supervision.”
See
Wis. Stat. § 973.014(lg)(a). When an inmate is released on extended supervision, he still serves his sentence, but in a different manner — outside the prison walls.
See State v. Larson,
An eligibility date for extended supervision became an issue at Burr’s sentencing. The presentence report stated Burr bullied a boy named Andy Rush in school. 2 Burr disputed that allegation, and his attorney asked the court to strike the information or hold an evidentiary hearing to determine its validity. The judge went with option one, stating that he would not consider the allegation for sentencing purposes. Yet, when it came time to announce the sentence, that ruling apparently slipped his mind. The judge remarked, “All through school and his contact with other kids, [Burr has] been a bully.” After recounting the events concerning the beating and murder of Ross, the judge imposed the mandatory life term and ordered that Burr would be eligible for “extended supervision” after 60 years, in 2061.
The judge subsequently refused to modify the sentence, stating that he premised the extended supervision date on the fact that it was a “brutal murder,” and 60 years would ensure that Burr “would be old enough when he got out that he couldn’t hurt anyone else.” The judge said he did not consider the bullying issue “as a factor at sentencing.”
Burr also contended in his motion to modify that the judge punished him for exercising his right to remain silent. Burr did not take the stand at trial, and he declined to say any thing during the sentencing hearing. The judge at sentencing said he was disturbed that Burr didn’t show “one ounce of remorse or repentance” and had an “absolutely flat affect” in his court appearances. As the judge saw it, Burr failed to exhibit “tenderness towards anybody on the stand.”
Later, the judge handed out lighter sentences (at least in terms of extended supervision) to Noah and Arlo White, two brothers who were also convicted of Ross’s murder. There, the judge contrasted their actions in court with those of Burr. The White brothers, who pleaded guilty, would be eligible for earlier extended supervision because they acknowledged their crimes. Burr, on the other hand, “took no responsibility. He did not say one word in this court. He never acknowledged any guilt whatsoever.”
Burr sought relief in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.
State v. Burr,
With his state court remedies exhausted, Burr filed a habeas corpus petition with the federal district court. 3 The district court dismissed Burr’s petition, concluding that the “bullying” reference was not necessarily based on the same information stricken by the judge — the stricken information referred to a specific individual; the judge at sentencing said Burr bullied “kids” — and, in any event, the appellate court’s harmless error analysis was consistent with Supreme Court precedent. The court further rejected the Fifth Amendment claim, explaining that the finding of no remorse rested upon circumstances other than mere silence. Burr now appeals the dismissal of his petition.
We review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions
de novo. Rizzo v. Smith,
Burr renews his claim here that his due process rights were violated when the judge considered the “bullying” allegation after striking it from the record and that his Fifth Amendment rights were infringed when the judge enhanced the confinement component of his sentence because he remained silent.
Taking the issues in turn, Burr contends the state court of appeals applied the wrong standard of review in resolving the “bullying” claim. The appellate court said the sentencing judge’s error was harmless because there was “no reasonable
probability
” — as opposed to “possibility” — that it resulted in a longer period of incarceration. As Burr points out, the Supreme Court has held that courts conducting harmless error review on direct appeal should determine whether the error was “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Chapman v. California,
So, too, did the district court reach the right result with respect to the Fifth Amendment claim. The Fifth Amendment protects an accused’s right to remain silent at trial and sentencing.
Mitchell v. United States,
The district court’s order denying Burr’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is AFFIRMED.
