Eddie Brooks was convicted in a Wisconsin state court of first-degree murder of a policeman, and related crimes, and was sentenced to life in prison plus 109 years. After exhausting his state remedies in
State v. Brooks,
Before his trial began, Brooks was permitted to fire two lawyers who had been appointed in succession to represent him. A third was appointed. The judge warned Brooks that if he fired number three, he would have to represent himself. When the case was called for trial, Brooks moved to dismiss the lawyer (whose motion to withdraw at Brooks’s request had been denied) and when the judge denied the motion Brooks punched the lawyer in the face. Two days later, after jury selection, Brooks moved that he be allowed to represent himself. After quizzing him about his educational background and his knowledge of the law, the judge denied the motion.
The judge conceivably could have ruled that Brooks’s motion to represent himself was untimely.
Hamiel v. State,
92 Wis.2d
*1011
656,
He contends that anyone competent to stand trial, as he was, is ipso facto competent to waive counsel. Whether this contention is sound depends on the exact meaning of “competent.” It is one thing for a defendant to have sufficient mentation to be able to follow the trial proceedings with the aid of a lawyer, and another to be able to represent himself; and while Brooks clearly had the former, he seems equally clearly to have lacked the latter, if we may judge from his wild behavior and incomprehensible outbursts during the trial. And if he was incompetent to conduct his own defense, this is evidence that his decision to waive counsel was not “knowing and intelligent,” as all waivers must be in order to be legally effective. E.g.,
Iowa v. Tovar,
— U.S. -,
But Brooks argues that in
Godinez v. Moran,
The Court further said in
Godinez
that “states are free to adopt competency standards that are more elaborate than” the standard laid down for competence to stand trial in
Dusky v. United States,
Even more important is the distinction between what due process requires and what it permits. In the decision the Supreme Court reversed in
Godinez,
the Ninth Circuit had imposed a
federal
minimum standard of competence for self-representation in state prosecutions that was higher than the
Dusky
standard, and it was this that the Court was disapproving. The reason for disapproving it, we conjecture, was that it might enforce against the states a concept of ineffective self-representation. Suppose the Ninth Circuit’s approach (which required that the defendant be capable of a “reasoned choice” to represent himself) required a defendant to be sufficiently skilled and knowledgeable to be able to do a really creditable job of self-representation. Then if a state judge allowed a defendant to represent himself and the defendant screwed up, the state would have to give him a second bite at the apple — a second trial, this time with assistance of counsel whether he wanted it or not.
Cain v. Peters, supra,
And even if the standards for competence to stand trial and for competence to waive the right of counsel are the same, the existence of an effective waiver need not be automatically deduced from a finding that the defendant is competent to stand trial. This would be obvious if having determined that the defendant was competent to stand trial the judge had asked the defendant whether he wanted a lawyer but had not explained the consequences of going to trial without one. A judge who, having explained the consequences, finds that the defendant doesn’t *1013 understand them is entitled to conclude that although competent to stand trial, the defendant has not made an effective waiver of his right to counsel and therefore may not represent himself. This result is consistent with Godinez.
Wisconsin, as this case illustrates, has set a higher standard for waivers of the
Faretta
right than for competence to stand trial. See also
Commonwealth v. Simpson,
We may be wrong, but if so Brooks still must lose. Remember that a state court’s decision can be struck down in a federal habeas corpus proceeding only if it is contrary to “clearly established” federal law as declared by the Supreme Court. Godinez did not clearly establish a rule, which is the rule for which Brooks contends, that a defendant found competent to stand trial is automatically entitled to represent himself no matter how deficient his understanding of the consequences of going to trial without a lawyer.
AFFIRMED.
