Under the current regime governing federal habeas corpus for state prison inmates, the inmate must show, so far as bears on this case, that the state court which convicted him applied unreasonably a federal doctrine declared by the United States Supreme Court, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
Williams v. Taylor,
Eleven months before the alleged offense, Heather had told her mother that she had been forcibly raped, and she had offered her torn clothes as evidence. She had repeated the story of the rape, with many circumstantial details, to a hospital nurse and to a police officer investigating the incident, but later had admitted making up the story (and ripping her clothes herself) in order to get her mother’s attention. Her new story was that she had had sex with the man she had accused of forcible rape, but that it had been with her consent. Since she was underage, the police continued to investigate the incident as a crime. The man was never found, and there is no evidence other than Heather’s say-so that the incident actually occurred. There is no serious doubt that her recantation of the forcible-rape story was truthful. Redmond offered more than thirty police reports of the investigation of Heather’s claim that she had been forcibly raped, convincingly demonstrating its falsity, and in addition the district attorney had instituted contempt charges against Heather. Compare
Hughes v. Raines,
Redmond wanted to bring out her lie on cross-examination in order to show that Heather would lie about a sexual assault in order to get attention, and thus had a motive to accuse him falsely. The trial judge, seconded by the Wisconsin court of appeals, refused to permit this cross-examination. The court of appeals held that although the state’s rape-shield law makes an exception for a prior false charge of sexual assault, Wis. Stat. § 972.11(2)(b)3, Heather’s false charge did not have “sufficient probative value to outweigh its inflammatory and prejudicial nature,” and therefore, under another section of the statute, § 971.31(11), it was inadmissible. The court thought the false charge merely “cumulative of other evidence which went to Heather’s credibility,” namely that she had begun using drugs at the age of 12, had stolen and occasionally danced (!) to obtain money for cocaine, had run away from the institution, had skipped school, and had told lies in the past. Furthermore, the court thought the evidence of the false charge might have “confused the issue” since “the initial recantation involved consent which was not an element of the current charges,” and also that it might have misled the jury “into focusing on Heather’s willingness to have sexual intercourse with a complete stranger, instead of on the charges against Redmond.”
State v. Redmond,
With all due respect, we believe that the court of appeals’ analysis and conclusion cannot be considered a reasonable application of the Supreme Court’s confrontation doctrine. Compare
State v. DeSantis,
The evidence thus was not cumulative, or otherwise peripheral, considering that testimony by Heather was virtually the only evidence of Redmond’s guilt that the prosecution had. Nor was the evidence of her previous false charge of rape prejudicial to the state,' except insofar as its prejudicial effect was a function of its probative weight, which of course ■ is not the relevant meaning of prejudice.
United States v. Jackson,
And thus the court’s ruling, though ostensibly based on the rape-shield statute, derives no support from that statute. The statute protects complaining witnesses in rape cases (including statutory-rape cases) from being questioned about their sexual conduct, but a false charge of rape is not sexual conduct. See Wis. Stat. § 972.11(2)(a) (defining such conduct); cf.
United States v. Bartlett,
*593
Olden
is factually very similar to the present case, which eliminates any question about the scope of the applicable federal doctrine declared by the Supreme Court, while cases such as
Hogan v. Hanks,
The judgment is reversed with directions to order the petitioner released unless the state retries him within 120 days of the date of this decision.
REVERSED.
