¶ 1. Amos Small appeals the judgment
entered on a jury verdict convicting him of
I.
¶ 2. The State accused Small of being a stalking horse for his cousin Brandon Joiner when Joiner used a gun to rob the owners and employees of a furniture store. Small was tried alone.
¶ 3. The store's co-owner told the jury that Small came into the store around 5 p.m. and acted suspiciously. A few minutes later, a masked gunman walked in and took approximately ninety to one-hundred dollars. The co-owner testified that when he saw the armed robber he yelled " 'Gun. Gun.'" to alert his co-owner brother, and that Small responded " 'No. No. No.'" The gunman also took a cell phone from one of the store's employees.
¶ 4. Police ultimately focused on Joiner as the gunman, and there was no dispute at Small's trial that Joiner was the armed robber who took the money and the employee's cell phone. Smart police work connected Joiner to the robbery.
¶ 5. Some two months before the robbery, police had stopped a car in which Joiner was a passenger. The driver, Lamar Truss, gave his phone number to the police. A police officer testified that he got "a document" from the store employee whose cell phone the gunman took that "show[ed] the phone numbers called on her phone" after the furniture-store robbery. The officer discovered that the stolen phone had dialed Truss's phone number after the robbery. Further, a cell phone the police found in a car that Joiner drove had called the employee's stolen phone. The contact list on Small's cell phone had two of Joiner's phone numbers. Joiner's mother testified that Small was her nephew and that Joiner and Small would see each other often.
¶ 6. We now turn to Small's contentions on this appeal.
II.
¶ 7. Small's appellate claims largely implicate his right to a constitutionally effective trial lawyer. To establish constitutionally ineffective legal representation, a defendant must show: (1) deficient representation; and (2) prejudice. Strickland v. Washington,
A. Right to a public trial.
¶ 8. The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees "a public trial" to every criminal defendant.
THE COURT: Sir, you are now banned from this trial. You will not come back. You are forbidden from coming into this courtroom.
Anything else, Mr. [prosecutor]?
[The Prosecutor]: No, sir.
[The Defense Lawyer]: If I may, Judge.
[The Prosecutor]: Sorry, I know what the other thing was. [The witness]'s stepfather also indicated that people in the gallery while she was testifying were making hand gestures to the effect, oh, that's baloney or that's not true, whatever she was saying.
The trial court then warned the spectators that if it saw "any reaction to anything that happens in this courtroom, if you have any contact whatsoever with any of the witnesses, you'll be subject to arrest and banned from this courtroom just like the gentleman that I ordered out of the courtroom already."
¶ 10. The defense lawyer objected to excluding the man who allegedly approached the witness, but declined the trial court's offer to hold an evidentiary hearing as to whether the exclusion was justified.
[The Defense Lawyer]: Judge, I would object to the banning of the gentleman. I don't think the court has that authority to ban. This is an open trial open to the public. All we have right now is a hearsay statement from —
THE COURT: Do you want me to take testimony? I'll interrupt this trial at 1:30 and we'll take testimony from the witness, her father, anybody else that saw it, and this gentleman.
If that's what you want me to do, I'll do that. Or I will simply make the order and hope that he obeys it based on the representation of [the prosecutor].
Your choice, Mr. [defense lawyer]. You want to think about it over the noon hour and let me know me [sic], that's fine too. Right now the order is he's out of the courtroom based upon the representation [the prosecutor] made to me.
[The Defense Lawyer]: We don't want a delay in the trial.
¶ 11. The trial court handled the situation with aplomb and appropriate caution. First, preventing witness intimidation of both those who have already testified and those who have not yet testified ensures three of the four reasons underlying the right to a public trial that Ndina adopted: (a) fairness of the trial; (b) encouraging persons to testify; and (c) discouraging fear-based perjury. Smith's trial was open to everyone but the man who, according to what we have in the Record, had implicitly threatened the witness. Further, the trial court's order was no broader than necessary to protect those interests. See id.,
¶ 12. Small has not even alleged that the exclusion from the trial of the man who allegedly approached the witness deprived him of a fair trial, and by no stretch of the imagination did the trial court's exclusion of that person come anywhere near justifying imposing a per se rule here that would force a do-over. See id.,
B. Police officer's testimony.
¶ 13. As we have seen, when the gunman walked into the furniture store, the co-owner yelled " 'Gun. Gun.'" to alert his brother. The co-owner testified that Small responded " 'No. No. No.'" During the testimony of Milwaukee police officer Richard Litwin, the jury saw and heard part of a surveillance video that covered those moments. Apparently the sound was not terribly clear because the officer said that he had watched the video "[pjrobably between 50 and 100" times. The prosecutor then asked Litwin to interpret what the video revealed Small said after the store's co-owner yelled "Gun. Gun."
Q. Are you able to tell ■— Are you able to tell us what Mr. Small says based on your repeated listening after [the co-owner] says gun, gun?
A. Yes.
Q. What is it?
A. No, no, there is no gun."
The prosecutor played that segment for the jury four times, and Litwin interjected a correction:
A. To be honest with you, to me it sounds like he says at this point no, no, what's going on in here. But again, I was privy to watching this 50 to 100 times so I don't know if I documented that it was at this exact time but to me, right now, it sounds a little different.
Q. It doesn't sound like gun at this point, does it?
A. I think [the co-owner] is saying gun, gun, but I believe Amos Small says something slightly different here.
Q. So you would agree with me that as you listen to this video, the audio can be difficult unless someone is shouting, it's difficult to understand what they are saying?
A. Yes.
Small's trial lawyer did not object to any of this. Thus, we consider the issue in an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel context. See State v. Carprue,
¶ 14. First, Wis. Stat. Rule 907.01, permitted the officer to give his opinion because it was "rationally based" on his "perception." Rule 907.01 provides:
If the witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness's testimony in the form of opinions or inferences is limited to those opinions or inferences which are all of the following:
(1) Rationally based on the perception of the witness.
(2) Helpful to a clear understanding of the witness's testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.
(3) Not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of a witness under s. 907.02(1).
Wisconsin Stat. Rule 907.02(1) reads:
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.[5 ]
¶ 15. Absent the use of specialized scientific or technical equipment to analyze the audio, the officer was able to give his lay opinion as to what Small said because expert opinion is not needed if the matter is within the ken of the general population. See Gregory E Joseph & Stephen A. Saltzburg, Evidence in America, The Federal Rules in the States, ch. 50 at 3 (Michie 1987) (The lay witness's opinion is admissible as such if it is based on knowledge that is "common to members of the community.") (commenting on Rule 701 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, on which Wis. Stat. Rule 907.01 was based). Thus, in United States v. Begay,
¶ 16. Second, as noted, this issue is presented to us in an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel context. Small has not shown how, under any conceivable view of the circumstances here, he was prejudiced by Litwin's testimony, especially because the jury heard the audio four times, and the co-owner testified what he heard Small say. Moreover, Small has not even alleged that a sophisticated technical analysis would reveal that any of the versions of what he said in the store were not essentially accurate. He has not, therefore, even come close to showing Strickland
C. Alleged hearsay.
¶ 17. Small also claims that an officer's recitation at the trial of the number that Truss gave to the police some two months before the furniture-store robbery was inadmissible hearsay. Small's trial lawyer did not object, however, and a sustained objection would have permitted the State to prove Truss's phone number in other ways (such as, perhaps, subpoenaing telephone-company records).
By the Court.—Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Dennis R. Cimpl presided over Amos Small's trial.
The Honorable Michael D. Goulee denied Small's motion for postconviction relief.
The Sixth Amendment reads in full:
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.
Article I, § 7 reads in full:
In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to be heard by himself and counsel; to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him; to meet the witnesses face to face; to have compulsory process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf; and in prosecutions by indictment, or information, to a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county or district wherein the offense shall have been committed; which county or district shall have been previously ascertained by law.
These rules were modified by 2011 Wis. Act 2, §§ 33, 34, & 34m. The effective date of these provisions in criminal cases is unclear because 2011 Wis. Act 2, § 45(5) seems to fix the effective date for civil cases only, saying that the rules "first apply to actions or special proceedings that are commenced on" February 1, 2011. The Act does not specifically say when these rules take effect for criminal cases, but 2011 Wis. Act 2, § 45(1), which deals with amendments to the criminal code, specifies that those amendments "first appl[y] to acts or omissions committed on" February 1, 2011. Small was alleged to have participated in the armed robbery at issue here in April of 2011, and the trial started in August of 2011. So the new rules applied to Small's trial irrespective of the ambiguity.
We thus disagree with the State's assertion that the phone number was not introduced for its "truth," and was not, therefore, "hearsay." See Wis. Stat. Rule 908.01(3) (defining "hearsay" as an out-of-court declaration "offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted"). Unless the number was Truss's, that the employee's stolen phone called it would not have been relevant.
