Joseph Pickett appeals from a judgment of conviction entered on jury verdicts finding him guilty of five counts of second degree sexual assault involving intercourse with a fourteen-year-old girl in violation of sec. 940.225(2)(e), Stats. (1985-1986). 1 The trial court sentenced Pickett to the maximum period of incarceration: five consecutive indeterminate terms not to exceed ten years each.
The issue raised by this appeal concerns whether the trial court properly permitted a polygraph examiner to testify on rebuttal that Pickett made inculpatory nods in response to the examiner's questions posed after completion of the polygraph examination. There was no error and we affirm.
rH
Pickett voluntarily took a polygraph examination administered by a lieutenant in the Milwaukee County Sheriffs Department. At the time, Pickett had not been charged and he was not in custody. Contending that Pickett had made a number of admissions after the polygraph examination was over, the prosecutor alerted the trial court and defense counsel that he would seek to use those admissions on rebuttal to attack Pickett's credibil
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ity should he testify. After the state rested, the trial court held a hearing outside of the jury's presence to determine whether Pickett made the responses attributed to him and, if so, whether they were voluntary.
See State ex rel. Goodchild v. Burke,
Both Pickett and the lieutenant testified at the hearing, but they gave conflicting versions of what happened. Pickett testified that his attorney directed the lieutenant not to ask any questions other than those that had been disclosed to the defense prior to the examination and that the lieutenant agreed. The lieutenant, however, denied that Pickett's attorney had requested that Pickett not be asked additional questions. He also denied that the attorney had asked him not to question Pickett after completion of the polygraph test. The lieutenant noted that he would have complied with the requests if they had been made.
The lieutenant explained the procedure he followed in administering the test to Pickett. After an hour of preliminaries, designed to make the person being tested feel at ease, Pickett was connected to the machine and was told how it worked. Additionally, Pickett was given his warnings under
Miranda v. Arizona,
The actual polygraph examination took approximately four to six minutes and was run three times. After the conclusion of the test, the lieutenant told Pickett the results of the test. The lieutenant concluded that Pickett "was attempting deception" when he denied having sexual intercourse with the fourteen-year-old girl, and he told Pickett that in an attempt to get "him to *723 admit the truth." According to the lieutenant, after the test was completed, Pickett nodded in the affirmative when asked if he had sex with the young girl, when asked if he was going to tell his lawyer that, and when asked whether he was sorry. At the hearing, Pickett denied making those responses, and denied admitting the assault. "I told him that I had done wrong," Pickett testified, "that I was guilty of abuse but not sexual abuse."
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court determined that Pickett nodded affirmatively in response to the lieutenant's questions and that those "statements" were voluntary beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial court indicated it would permit the prosecution to call the lieutenant as a rebuttal witness to testify about the nods as impeachment if Pickett testified to the contrary, but that neither the prosecution nor the defense could mention that the lieutenant's questions were asked in the context of a polygraph examination. The trial court declined to determine whether the lieutenant had been told by Pickett's lawyer not to ask Pickett any questions other than those that had been previewed with the defense, whether the lieutenant had been told by Pickett's lawyer not to ask Pickett any questions other than those that had been previewed with the defense, whether the lieutenant had been told not to interrogate Pickett after the test was finished, and whether the lieutenant had agreed to those restrictions. The trial court concluded that these issues were not relevant.
Pickett took the witness stand in his own defense. On direct examination, he denied ever having sexual intercourse with the fourteen-year-old girl. On cross-examination, Pickett was asked about his conversations with the lieutenant. He denied nodding his head affirma *724 tively when asked whether he had sexually assaulted the young girl and when asked whether he was sorry for having done so. The lieutenant testified on rebuttal and contradicted Pickett's denials. The trial court instructed the jury that the lieutenant's testimony could be considered only for impeachment purposes and not as substantive proof of the facts contained in Pickett's statement.
I — I HH
The trial court's finding that Pickett nodded affirmatively in response to the post-test questions is historical fact that must be affirmed because it is neither "clearly erroneous,"
see State v. Pitsch,
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Pickett raises three related issues in connection with his claim that his rights were violated when the polygraph examiner was permitted to testify on rebuttal. First, he contends that Wisconsin law, as enunciated in
State v. Schlise,
A.
Prior to
State v. Dean,
Pickett advances the following syllogism. Absent a
Stanislawski
stipulation,
Schlise
required that a post-polygraph interview that "was so closely associated" with the actual test "both as to time and content" that it "must be considered as one event" be excluded from
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evidence.
Schlise,
Pickett's proposition would have some merit if the polygraph examiner's testimony had been received in the state's case in chief. It was not. The testimony was received in rebuttal to impeach Pickett's denials and the jury was given a proper limiting instruction. This appeal is, therefore, governed by
Harris v. New York,
In
Harris,
the defendant took the stand and denied selling heroin to an undercover police officer.
Id.
at 223. Immediately after his arrest, however, Harris had made statements to the police that were partially contradictory of his later trial testimony.
Ibid.
The pretrial statements were not admissible in the prosecution's case in chief because Harris had not been given his
Miranda
warnings.
Id.
at 223-224. Nevertheless, the trial judge permitted the prosecutor to ask Harris about those statements on cross-examination. When Harris said he could not remember making the statements, the court instructed the jury that the statements could be considered in evaluating Harris' credibility but not as evidence of guilt.
Id.
at 223. The Supreme Court affirmed Harris' conviction noting that the statements, though uncoun-seled, were neither coerced nor involuntary,
id.
at 224, and that "[t]he shield provided-by
Miranda
cannot be perverted into a license to use perjury by way of a defense, free from the risk of confrontation with prior
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inconsistent utterances."
Id.
at 226. Wisconsin follows
Harris. State v. Mendoza,
The bright-line test recognized by both the United States Supreme Court and Wisconsin in determining whether a defendant's prior inconsistent statements can be used for impeachment is whether those statements have been "compelled." Thus, for example, in
New Jersey v. Portash,
B.
We now turn to Pickett's assistance of counsel and due process arguments. The trial court declined to rule on whether Pickett's attorney instructed the polygraph examiner not to ask Pickett any questions other than those that had been reviewed by the defense prior to the examination. It also declined to decide whether the examiner had agreed with those alleged conditions. The *728 trial court reasoned that these matters were not relevant since the sole material issue was whether the "statements" were voluntary. We agree.
Although not decided in the context of a Sixth Amendment right-to-counsel claim, the underlying rationale of
Oregon v. Hass,
Here, too, the shield provided by Miranda is not to be perverted to a license to testify inconsistently, or even perjuriously, free from the risk of confrontation with prior inconsistent utterances.
*729 We are, after all, always engaged in a search for truth in a criminal case so long as the search is surrounded with the safeguards provided by our Constitution. There is no evidence or suggestion that Hass' statements to [the arresting officer after Hass said he would like to call his attorney] were involuntary or coerced.
Ibid.
As the Supreme Court has recently reiterated, the sanctity of the oath to tell the truth every witness takes must ordinarily be given precedence over competing interests.
See Nix v. Whiteside,
Although Pickett cites authority in the specific context of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel where statements have been suppressed for impeachment purposes
3
and argues that "fundamental fairness" requires
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reversal, relying on
State v. Bond,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Section 940.225(2) (e), Stats., was repealed by sec. 30, 1987 Wis. Act 332, effective July 1,1989. The provision was revised as sec. 948.02(1) and (2), Stats., which was created by sec. 55, 1987 Wis. Act 332.
These tests are the same. See
Noll v. Dimiceli's, Inc.,
Bishop v. Rose,
