¶ 1. Darron Jackson appeals his conviction for recklessly endangering safety while armed, contrary to Wis. Stat. §§ 941.30(1) & 939.63 (2009-10).
¶ 2. On May 28, 2008, Jackson fired a gun at, and missed, Christopher Brown. Several people were present when the crime occurred, including Brown's stepfather, who identified Jackson as the shooter. Although Jackson was only fifteen when he was charged, the charges against him were serious enough to give the adult court original jurisdiction. See Wis. Stat. § 938.183(am). Jackson petitioned for reverse waiver into juvenile court. After his petition was denied, he was tried in adult court.
¶ 3. When the police interviewed Jackson, he initially denied he was at the scene of the shooting. Eventually, he admitted he was present, but he maintained his denial of being the shooter. Before trial, Jackson moved to suppress his statements to the police alleging that his statements were involuntary and without adequate waiver of his Miranda
¶ 5. As we indicated at the outset, when both sides had rested, the State asked for a lesser included offense instruction for first-degree reckless endangerment of safety, with the penalty enhancer "while armed." Jackson's counsel objected that the facts adduced at the trial did not fit the lesser included instruction. The objection was overruled, and the instruction was given. The jury convicted Jackson of recklessly endangering safety while armed. Because Jackson was convicted of the lesser offense rather than the offense that was originally charged, he moved the court for reverse waiver for a second time after trial. His motion was denied, and he was sentenced in adult court. He subsequently filed a postconviction motion, which was denied in its entirety, and we have this appeal.
¶ 6. Jackson's brief raises three issues in addition to the one we deem to be the major issue. Those are: that his statements to police were wrongfully admitted at trial; that during closing arguments, the prosecutor made several inappropriate comments which he claims prejudiced him; and that, if we are to allow the recklessly endangering safety conviction to stand, then since that crime would not have been grounds for waiver into adult court had it been originally charged, the burden placed on him at his post-trial reverse waiver hearing was unconstitutional. We will address these arguments after the lesser included offense discussion.
Lesser Included Offense
¶ 7. Jackson argues that the lesser included offense instruction was "reversible error" because recklessly endangering safety while armed is not a lesser included offense of attempted first-degree intentional homicide. If we are to find waiver, he alternatively argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object properly to the instruction.
¶ 8. We hold that there was waiver here. The objection made, that the evidence was insufficient to support the lesser included instruction, is an altogether different one than a claim that the elements of the proposed "lesser" charge are different than the main charge and, therefore, cannot be called a "lesser included" crime. Had the proper objection been made, the prosecutor may have disregarded the "while armed" portion of the request for the lesser included in order to be safe. Or, the trial court may not have allowed the lesser included. We do not, of course, know for sure what would have happened. But we rarely reverse a trial court for something that it was never allowed to decide and we will not do so here. See Wirth v. Ehly,
¶ 9. Because we find waiver, for Jackson's lesser included offense issue to have any traction, it must come under the guise of ineffective assistance of counsel. See State v. Koller,
¶ 10. When the law is unsettled, the failure to raise an issue is objectively reasonable and therefore not deficient performance. See State v. Maloney,
¶ 11. Wisconsin uses an "elements-only" test to determine if a crime is a lesser included offense of another. State v. Carrington,
¶ 12. Recklessly endangering safety is a lesser included offense of attempted first-degree intentional homicide. Hawthorne v. State,
¶ 13. It is Jackson's contention that counsel was ineffective for failing to heed the pronouncement in Carrington I and object to the lesser included on the basis of that case. Jackson acknowledges that Carrington I was reversed by the supreme court in Carrington II.
¶ 14. The State points out that, in Carrington II, while the supreme court did analyze the case based on "while armed" being an element, it explicitly noted that the State had conceded that point. Id. at 267 n.5. The State therefore contends that Carrington II is not authority which bolsters Jackson's position. It posits that a concession for the sake of argument, which is adopted by the supreme court and is not thereafter the subject of studied discussion, cannot be considered as a holding worthy of precedential value. We agree with the State and will not consider Carrington II as authority for the proposition that "while armed" is an element. But that begs the question of whether Carrington I compelled Jackson's trial attorney to object to the lesser included.
¶ 15. To this question, the State offers a couple of different arguments, but we are convinced that they are without merit. We find it unnecessary to discuss these arguments at length and relegate them to a footnote.
¶ 16. The simple reality is that the holding in Carrington I was based on an altogether different factual situation than the one in this case. The posture of the case in Carrington I was summarized by the court thusly:
In the instant case, the record shows that the criminal complaint identified the charge against Carrington as "endangering safety by conduct regardless of life while armed," that the trial court described the charge to the jurors in those terms, and that the jury was instructed to determine whether Carrington committed the crime of endangering safety by conduct regardless of human life while using a dangerous weapon. Clearly, the element of "using a dangerous weapon" became an element of the charge against Carrington.
Carrington I,
¶ 17. The posture of the case is different here. Since recklessly endangering safety while armed was not added to the instructions until after testimony, the "while armed" component was certainly not included as part of the offense in the complaint. And, our review of the jury instructions and verdict form reveals that the "while armed" penalty enhancer had its own instruction, separate from the elements listed in the recklessly endangering safety instruction.
¶ 18. The recklessly endangering safety instruction stated that the offense has "three elements":
1. The defendant endangered the safety of another human being.
2. The defendant endangered the safety of another by criminally reckless conduct.
3.The circumstances of the defendant's conduct show utter disregard for human life.4
Then, on the jury verdict form, the jury was asked two separate questions regarding the lesser included offense: whether it found Jackson guilty of recklessly endangering safety and whether Jackson was armed while committing recklessly endangering safety. It answered "yes" to both. Under this record, it would be
¶ 19. We acknowledge that a reasonable attorney could have objected to the lesser included instruction given here, based on Carrington I. But, since the case can be reasonably limited to its specific fact situation, the trial attorney's failure to object was not deficient performance. See McMahon,
Statements to Police
¶ 20. We have a two-step standard of review for constitutional questions. First, we uphold the trial court's findings of evidentiary or historical fact unless they are clearly erroneous. See State v. Clappes,
¶ 21. Jackson asserts that his interrogation was coercive. Specifically, he contends that during the 1.5 hour interrogation, police lied to him (by claiming that multiple witnesses had identified in a photo lineup) and made "backhanded racial threats" (by stating "I'm not here to hang you from a noose and say hey your life's over"). Jackson claims that these actions, in combination with his IQ of 73 and age, resulted in an involuntary confession.
¶ 22. The State responds that, while it may not have been true that multiple people had identified Jackson in a lineup, one person had. And misrepresentation or trickery does not make an otherwise voluntary statement involuntary — it is only one factor to consider in the totality of the circumstances. State v. Ward,
Inflating evidence of [the defendant's] guilt interfered little, if at all, with his "free and deliberate choice" of whether to confess, for it did not lead him to consider anything beyond his own beliefs regarding his actual guilt or innocence, his moral sense of right and wrong, and his judgment regarding the likelihood that the police had garnered enough valid evidence linking him to the crime.
¶ 23. As far as the officer's statement to Jackson that he was not there to hang him "from a noose" is concerned, the officer testified that his intention was to minimize the offense, and that the possible racial undertones never occurred to him. The trial court, having reviewed the videotape of the interrogation, placed particular emphasis on the officer's physical demeanor while that statement was being made, as well as throughout the interview. The trial court did not view the officer's demeanor as intimidating or coercive. After our review of the video, we concur.
¶ 24. Correlatively, Jackson points out that police conduct need not be egregious to be coercive — "subtle pressures are considered to be coercive if they exceed the defendant's ability to resist." See Jerrell C.J.,
¶ 25. The test, however, requires balancing the personal characteristics of the defendant against any
State's Closing Arguments
¶ 26. Jackson complains that "[t]he prosecutor made impermissible comments about witness credibility, attempted to shift the burden of proof to Jackson, and essentially told the jury Jackson was in a gang, although neither party proffered evidence that he was." Jackson highlights three specific statements made by the prosecutor during closing arguments. First, he claims that the prosecutor accused witnesses of lying on the stand. Second, he states that the prosecutor shifted the burden of proof by stating more than once that the defendant had no obligation to put on a defense, but once he chose to do so, the jury could hold him to a certain standard. Finally, he contends that the prosecutor improperly implied that Jackson was in a gang even though there was no evidence to that effect at trial.
¶ 27. In anticipation of the State's arguing that Jackson waived these arguments by failing to object to
¶ 28. Our supreme court has explained that prosecutors have significant latitude with their closing arguments:
[C]ounsel in closing argument should be allowed "considerable latitude," with discretion to be given to the trial court in determining the propriety of the argument. The prosecutor may "comment on the evidence, detail the evidence, argue from it to a conclusion and state that the evidence convinces him and should convince the jurors."
The line between permissible and impermissible argument is thus drawn where the prosecutor goes beyond reasoning from the evidence to a conclusion of guilt and instead suggests that the jury arrive at a verdict by considering factors other than the evidence.
State v. Draize,
¶ 30. Jackson's final argument involves the following statement made by the State:
The intelligence of the City of Racine Police Department that deals with a lot of gang members, and everyone has got a street name, is that there's nobody else in the City of Racine that they're aware of with the street name Big Bub.
¶ 31. The State argues that the statement was not plain error because the comment was based on evidence and the prosecutor did not say that Jackson was a gang member. It also points out that Jackson's trial counsel testified that the decision not to object was strategic because he did not want to call the jury's attention to the gang reference. Therefore, it argues, there was no deficient performance. See State v. Cooks,
¶ 32. Neither the victim nor the victim's brother would identify Jackson from the stand. But the victim did say on the witness stand that if Jackson was "Big Bub," "that's the shooter." And a police officer testified that the victim told the officer that he did not want to press charges, he only wanted to fight "him." The victim identified "him" as "Big Bub." Another officer told the jury that "Big Bub" was Jackson's "street name." He also testified that there was no one else the police were aware of with the same "street name." The mother, who was present near the shooting, also identified the shooter as "Big Bub." Finally, even though the brother refused to identify Jackson from the witness stand, he told police after the altercation that the shooter was "Big Bub" and identified Jackson as "Big Bub." So, taking the prosecutor's comment in context, all the prosecutor was saying is that police encounter "street names" all the time, that street names are plentiful because police deal with gangs, and even though there are a plethora of street names, "Big Bub" stands out as
Post-trial Reverse Waiver
¶ 33. Jackson argues that he was denied due process and equal protection when he was required to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that reverse waiver was appropriate. This argument is based on the fact that adult courts have original jurisdiction over juveniles who are charged with attempted first-degree intentional homicide on or after their 10th birthday, Wis. Stat. § 938.183(am), but juvenile courts have original jurisdiction over juveniles who are charged with recklessly endangering safety while armed, Wis. Stat. § 938.12(1). So, if Jackson had been charged initially with recklessly endangering safety while armed, the case would have started in juvenile court and the State would have had to prove by clear and convincing evidence that waiver into adult court was appropriate. See Wis. Stat. § 938.18(l)(c) & (6).
¶ 34. According to Jackson, it follows that if the State would have had the burden had he been initially charged with endangering safety while armed, it should have the burden now. Jackson asserts that he is the victim of disparate treatment, simply because the State chose to charge the endangering safety while armed crime later than earlier. He argues that, by the State's action, it has avoided having the burden and has instead transferred it to Jackson. He contends that this is a violation of equal protection and due process.
¶ 36. In other words, Jackson stands in different shoes than the juvenile who, at the beginning stages of the process, has only probable cause showing against him or her. Jackson has now been convicted. In the jury's eyes, he did the crime, beyond a reasonable doubt. There is no valid due process or equal protection argument to be made.
Interests of Justice
¶ 37. Jackson's final argument is that we should reverse his conviction in the interests of justice. He claims that the real controversy was not tried because
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2009-10 version unless otherwise noted.
Miranda v. Arizona,
The State asserts that Carrington IIs reversal of Carrington I could lead a reasonable attorney to conclude that Carrington I was no longer good law. See State v. Carrington,
At oral argument, we asked both parties to discuss this format and questioned how the trial court's handling of the "while armed" enhancer might impact the analysis of this issue.
Jackson also cites to State v. Villarreal,
Jackson also argues that the prosecutor went outside of the evidence by encouraging the jury to punish the defendant for the witnesses' alleged insincerity. After reviewing the transcript of the closing argument, we disagree with that interpretation and note that the prosecutor actually reminded the jury at least once that its duty was to apply evidence to the law.
