Kevin McCloud pleaded guilty to state charges of robbery and operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent arising from a carjacking incident. He later sought post-conviction relief from the consecutive terms of imprisonment he was ordered to serve on these charges, contending that because the charges amount to the same offense when the object of the robbery is an automobile, the cumulative punishments deprived him of his constitutional right not to be twice placed in jeopardy for the same offense. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals rejected the premise of his claim, finding that robbery and operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent are separate offenses for which the Wisconsin legislature had authorized cumulative punishments. McCloud now seeks a writ of habeas corpus, contending that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals erred in determining that the two offenses are distinct for purposes of the double jeopardy analysis. However, because the state court’s error, if any, was one of state law, it is beyond the limited scope of habeas review.
David Shelby and his Mend Bette Dunn were driving through the State of Wisconsin on the evening of August 12, 1997, when they stopped at a Walgreen’s drugstore at approximately 11:00 p.m. Shelby left his keys in the ignition of his car while he ran inside a nearby Taco Bell; Dunn remained behind in the car. At that moment, McCloud and his wife, Donna McCloud, happened to drive by the Walgreen’s parking lot. Earlier that evening, the McClouds had spent several hours celebrating Donna’s birthday at a local tavern but had run out of money; they decided to find someone to rob. After driving around the city for an hour or more, the McClouds came upon the Walgreen’s lot just in time to spot Shelby getting out of his Cadillac. On further reconnaissance, McCloud noticed that the keys were in the ignition of the car. The McClouds had found their victims.
McCloud walked up to the car and entered through the unlocked driver’s-side door. He told Dunn to get out of the car and opened her door. Dunn screamed and struggled with McCloud. Shelby, on returning to the car, observed the struggle and intervened. He backed off when McCloud asked him, “Do you want to die?” As McCloud put the car in gear and began to drive away from the scene, Dunn was thrown from the vehicle through the open passenger-side door and run over. She died as a result of the injuries she sustained.
McCloud and his wife were apprehended a short time later. McCloud pleaded no contest to one count of second-degree reckless homicide, and he pleaded guilty to two counts of robbery along with one count of operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent. The Milwaukee County Circuit Court ordered him' to serve a ten-year prison term on the reckless homicide count, two ten-year terms on the robbery counts concurrent with one another and consecutive to the reckless homicide sentence, and a five-year term for operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent consecutive to all other sentences — for a total prison term of 25 years.
McCloud subsequently filed a post-conviction motion asking the state court for relief from his consecutive sentence for operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent. 1 He asserted that robbery (when the item stolen is a car) and operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent amount to the same offense and that punishing him cumulatively on both charges violated his right under the federal and Wisconsin constitutions not to be placed in jeopardy twice for the same offense. The circuit court denied the motion, and McCloud appealed both the judgment of conviction and the denial of his postconviction motion to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. The appellate court affirmed in an unreported decision. State v. McCloud, No. 98-2961-CR, Opinion & Order (Wis.Ct.App. Dec. 13,1999).
Having exhausted his state court remedies, McCloud sought a writ of habeas corpus from the district court. The parties consented to disposition by the magistrate judge, who denied McCloud’s habeas petition in an unreported decision.
McCloud v. Gamble,
No. 01 C 206, Decision & Order (E.D.Wis. March 31, 2004). The court examined the elements of robbery and operating a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent and concluded that the Wisconsin Court had not unreasonably determined that neither was a lesser included offense of the other, such that the two were the same for purposes of the Double Jeopardy inquiry.
Id.
at 3-5. The court
II.
The Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Clause, made applicable to the States via the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,
Benton v. Maryland,
This third protection is a limited one, for the Double Jeopardy Clause does not preclude the imposition of multiple punishments for the same offense, so long as the legislature has authorized cumulative punishment.
See id.;
The thrust of McCloud’s appeal is that the Wisconsin court erred in concluding that robbery and operating a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent are not the same offense. McCloud contends that operating a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent is a lesser included offense of robbery, so that the two should be treated as the same offense notwithstanding the fact that robbery requires proof of additional elements. McCloud reasons that one cannot steal a vehicle without driving it, whether in the ordinary sense of getting behind the wheel and motoring away or in the sense of having the car towed or moved in some other way. Either way, McCloud insists, the vehicle is being driven:
To “drive,” for purposes of the OAWOC [operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent] statute is to exert “the exercise of physical control over the speed and direction of 'a vehicle while it is in motion.” Wis. Stat. Ann. § 943.23(l)(a). True, if a person tows, hoists, or pushes a vehicle, the person is not driving a vehicle in the traditional sense of sitting behind a steering wheel and applying the gas pedal. But the person is still “driving” the vehicle for purposes of the OAWOC statute because to tow, hoist or push a vehicle requires exercising physical control over the speed and direction of the vehicle while it is in motion. It is not physically possible to “take” a vehicle without exercising control over the speed and direction of the vehicle. And both “driving” a vehicle and “taking” a vehicle involve asportation — carrying away and moving property.
McCloud Br. 11-12. Because, in McCloud’s view, these two offenses are one and the same, a presumption arises that the legislature did
not
intend for them to be punished cumulatively.
See Rutledge v. United States,
But the error, if any, in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ reasoning was one of state law. The court was examining the elements of two state offenses to determine whether the Wisconsin legislature had intended them to be subject to multiple punishments. The Double Jeopardy Clause did not in any way limit the Wisconsin legislature’s options. As the Fourth Circuit has noted, “There is no separate federal constitutional standard requiring that certain actions be defined as single or as multiple crimes.”
Sanderson v. Rice, 777
F.2d 902, 904 (4th Cir.1985). Thus, the only question for the Wisconsin Court of Appeals was what the legislature had intended. That is purely a matter of state law.
Lechner v. Frank,
State law errors normally are not cognizable in habeas proceedings,
Estelle v. McGuire,
The state court’s use of the Supreme Court’s
Blockburger
test does not give us a toehold into its examination of legislative intent.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) (federal court may grant habeas corpus petition where state court’s adjudication of claim “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States”). Although the
Blockburger
test has “deep historical roots” in the Supreme Court’s double jeopardy precedents,
United States v. Dixon,
Whether the Wisconsin Court of Appeals correctly gauged the Wisconsin legislature’s intent is thus beyond our purview as an interpretation of state law.
See Lechner,
For the defendant who receives multiple punishments in a single proceeding, the Double Jeopardy Clause serves only to ensure that the legislature authorized cumulative punishments; it does not preclude such punishments. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals has considered whether the Wisconsin legislature intended to permit multiple punishments as to the crimes for which McCloud was sentenced to consecutive terms: on examining the elements of the two statutes in question, the court concluded that they were distinct offenses for which the state legislature had authorized multiple punishments. The cumulative punishments imposed on McCloud therefore were consistent with the legislature’s intent and did not run afoul of the Double Jeopardy Clause. Although McCloud maintains that the state court erred in concluding that the two offenses were not the same, that conclusion is solely one of state law, and we have no power to review that conclusion. The decision of the district court to deny McCloud’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is therefore Affirmed.
Notes
. The general rule in Wisconsin is that a guilty plea waives all non-jurisdictional defects and defenses, including claims that the defendant's constitutional rights were violated prior to the plea.
Mack v. State,
.
Like the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Article I § 8(1) of the Wisconsin Constitution provides that "no person for the same offense may be twice put in jeopardy or punishment ...The Wisconsin Supreme Court’s "tradition is to view these provisions as identical in scope and purpose.”
State v. Davison,
. The Double Jeopardy Clause does not limit the number of charges that the government may bring in a single proceeding. "While the Double Jeopardy Clause may protect a defendant against cumulative punishments for convictions on the same offense, the Clause does not prohibit the State from prosecuting respondent for such multiple offenses in a single prosecution.”
Ohio v. Johnson,
. McCloud does not separately argue that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ construction of state law results in some fundamental unfairness that might be cognizable in habeas corpus,
see Lechner,
