¶ 1. In this case, the prosecuting attorney previously represented Peter G. Tkacz in a civil forfeiture action before joining the district attorney's office. Tkacz sought to remove the prosecutor prior to trial claiming a conflict of interest. As did the trial court, we adopt the "substantial relationship" test when the issue is raised pretrial during criminal cases. Because the prior civil action and this criminal action were not substantially related, we affirm the trial court's denial of Tkacz's motion. We also address and reject Tkacz's two other issues: that Tkacz's trial counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach one of the State's witnesses with regard to the exact number of her prior criminal convictions and that the prosecutor's plea offer after reversal and remand which was less favorable than the plea offer before the first trial constitutes vindictive prosecution.
¶ 2. In April 1995, Tkacz was charged with one count of conspiracy to deliver heroin as a repeater and one count of first-degree reckless homicide for participating in a death by providing the victim with heroin. Prior to the first trial, prosecutor Douglass Jones of *619 fered Tkacz a plea bargain recommending a sentence of ten to fifteen years. Tkacz did not accept the plea offer. The case went to trial and a jury convicted Tkacz on both counts. Tkacz received a twenty-year prison sentence on the first-degree reckless homicide charge. Tkacz appealed and we reversed the first-degree reckless homicide conviction. State v. Tkacz, No. 97-0974, unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. June 3, 1998).
¶ 3. Prior to the second jury trial on the first-degree reckless homicide charge, Jones offered Tkacz a plea bargain recommending the twenty-year maximum sentence, which Tkacz did not accept. Also, before his second trial, Tkacz filed a motion seeking to disqualify Jones alleging an impermissible conflict of interest. While he was in private practice, Jones had represented Tkacz in a civil forfeiture matter in 1989. Tkacz testified at the pretrial motion hearing that during Jones's representation of him, he had a meeting with Jones that lasted one to two hours during which he disclosed confidential information to him concerning drug connections he had in Texas and Arkansas. In his motion, Tkacz claimed that Jones used this information at the bail hearing before his first trial to argue for substantial cash bail. At the bail hearing, Jones had argued:
I can inform the Court, in terms of risk of flight, Mr. Tkacz has on occasion had a prior address in Arkansas. He had been known to travel.... At this point in time, I think the risk of flight and the danger he presents to the community, and the seriousness of these charges, which carries 60 years worth of exposure, make Mr. Tkacz a good candidate for significant cash bail.
¶ 4. Jones testified at the motion hearing that he did not have any knowledge of Tkacz ever giving him any confidential information, he did not recollect having discussed the specifics of the case with Tkacz most *620 likely because the need never arose, and he probably had some phone contact and minimal face-to-face contact with Tkacz. Jones also testified that prior to the bail hearing he had discussions with the police about Tkacz's out-of-state contacts and that they supplied him with information about Tkacz's connections with Arkansas. The trial court denied the motion and the case proceeded to trial.
¶ 5. At trial, Jill Wolff, who was present at the time of the homicide, testified as a witness for the State. She testified that she and Tkacz lived together at the time of the homicide and they shared drugs. She testified that at the time of the homicide, she was addicted to various narcotics and heroin and had done heroin that night. She testified that she and Tkacz knew the victim and had given her injections of heroin in the past.
¶ 6. Wolff further testified that she was in prison for her involvement in the death of the victim and that in exchange for her cooperation with the State, she received a favorable parole recommendation. On cross-examination, Wolff admitted that she had not told the truth about the circumstances surrounding the victim's death during a John Doe proceeding and in her statements to police. She also testified that she had tried to set up an alibi for herself, "I was trying to set up a lie at that time to cover up for the truth." Wolff had seven prior criminal convictions, two of which were the result of the homicide. Tkacz's counsel was aware of these convictions, but on cross-examination did not elicit from Wolff the number of her prior convictions.
¶ 7. After a three-day jury trial, the jury convicted Tkacz and the trial court sentenced him to twenty years in prison. Tkacz filed a motion for postconviction relief *621 raising the three issues we address here. The trial court denied the motion and Tkacz appeals.
¶ 8. We first address Tkacz's claim that the trial court erred when it failed to disqualify Jones based on the alleged conflict of interest. Tkacz asserts that the trial court erred by using the "substantial relationship" test to determine the issue. Whether the trial court used the proper standard is a question of law that we review independently of the trial court.
See Lane v. Sharp Packaging Sys., Inc.,
¶ 9. Our review of the trial court's decision requires us to address two questions. First, we must decide what the proper standard is for determining whether a conflict of interest exists when a prosecuting attorney has previously represented a defendant in a different case and the criminal defendant raises the conflict of interest issue prior to trial. Second, once we set forth the appropriate standard, we must then apply it to the facts of this case to determine whether the trial court erroneously exercised its discretion when it found that a conflict of interest did not exist.
¶ 10. There are no reported Wisconsin decisions setting the appropriate standard for analyzing conflict *622 of interest claims where a criminal defendant raises the conflict of interest issue before trial. We begin our analysis with a discussion of recent cases that have dealt with conflict of interest problems in both the civil and criminal contexts.
¶ 11. In
State v. Love,
¶ 12. The court distinguished the case from a situation where the defendant raises the conflict of interest objection prior to trial: "[t]he standards to be applied in the Kaye
1
hearing dealing with a potential or actual conflict of interest before trial, are different from the standards applied in a motion for relief after trial,
*623
because both the defendant and the court should be given the opportunity before trial to head off an actual conflict of interest before it happens."
Love,
¶ 13. In
Berg v. Marine Trust Co.,
¶ 14. While this court has not previously been faced with a serial representation claim where the defendant objects before trial, other courts have addressed the issue and, relying on their own professional responsibility rules, have concluded that the substantial relationship test should apply- to such cases.
See State v. Tippecanoe County Court,
¶ 15. This brings us to the case at hand. We hold that the "substantial relationship" test is the proper standard for analyzing whether a conflict of interest exists in a criminal serial representation case where the defendant raises the issue prior to trial. The decision in Love makes it clear that it is the fact that a defendant raises a conflict of interest objection after trial that triggers the application of the "actual prejudice" standard and, thus, that standard is inapplicable to our case. The "substantial relationship" test embodies Wisconsin's current rules of professional responsibility and its application will ensure that the ensuing criminal trial will avoid any potential impropriety. 2 Further, the test will present a lower standard for a defendant to *625 meet than Love's actual prejudice standard and thus will give the defendant who raises the conflict of interest issue before trial the opportunity to "head off the conflict before it actually happens." 3
¶ 16. We now turn to the trial court's application of the "substantial relationship" test. Our review of the record persuades us that the trial court did not erroneously exercise its discretion when it concluded that Tkacz did not establish that a substantial relationship existed and therefore that there was no conflict of interest.
¶ 17. Tkacz alleges that a conflict of interest arose when Jones relied on information about Tkacz's drug connections in Texas and Arkansas that he had acquired during his 1989 representation of Tkacz to obtain a substantial cash bail. The trial court, however, made different findings of historical fact. We will uphold a trial court's findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous; that is unless they are against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence.
Noll v. Dimiceli's, Inc.,
¶ 18. We now turn to Tkacz's second claim that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach the State's key witness, Wolff, with the number of her prior criminal convictions. The issue of whether a person has been deprived of the constitutional right to the effective assistance of counsel presents a mixed question of law and fact.
State v. Trawitzki,
¶ 19. To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel a defendant must establish both that
*627
the trial counsel's performance was deficient and that this performance prejudiced his or her defense.
Strickland v. Washington,
¶ 20. The facts in our case resemble the facts in Trawitzki and we begin our analysis of Tkacz's ineffective assistance of counsel claim with a brief discussion of that case. Trawitzki claimed that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach three of the State's witnesses with the specific number of prior convictions for each witness. Id. at ¶ 1. Trawitzki contended that the State's case against him rested primarily on the testimony of the three witnesses and that with the information about their convictions before it, the jury could have reasonably doubted the credibility of the witnesses and, consequently, Trawitzki's guilt. Id. at ¶ 42.
¶ 21. Our supreme court concluded that Trawitzki's counsel's failure to impeach had not prejudiced Trawitzki's defense. Id. at ¶ 46. According to the court, although the exact number of convictions might *628 have incrementally weakened the credibility of the witnesses in the minds of the jurors, the decrease would not have been sufficient to establish a reasonable probability that the jury would have reached a different conclusion. Id. at ¶ 44. The court reasoned that the jury already had reason to question the credibility of the witnesses because all three testified that they were incarcerated for their roles in the events that led to the charges against Trawitzki and all three witnesses testified while wearing jail or prison clothes. Id.
¶ 22. As in Trawitzki, the jury in our case already had reason to question Wolffs credibility. The jury was aware that Wolff was in prison at the time of Tkacz's trial for her own involvement in the homicide and that she had received a favorable parole recommendation from the State in exchange for her testimony. The jury knew about her chronic use of heroin and other narcotics before and at the time of the homicide. The jury knew that Wolff had previously lied about the circumstances surrounding the homicide in the statements she made in a John Doe proceeding and in her statements to police and that she had tried to set up an alibi. Thus, the jury had before it a convicted felon, admitted perjurer and habitual drug user. The jury had an ample basis to discredit Wolffs testimony and it is unlikely that the exact number of convictions would have materially influenced the jury's credibility assessment.
¶ 23. Tkacz's attempts to distinguish
Trawitzki
fail. Tkacz contends that the supreme court reached the conclusion it did because most of the prior criminal convictions of the witnesses related to the incidents underlying Trawitzki's conviction and thus the additional convictions would essentially have been de mini-mus and cumulative. Tkacz points out that the evidence
*629
adduced at the postconviction hearing in
Trawitzki
indicated that one witness had three convictions all relating to the underlying crime; another witness had eight convictions, five of which related to the underlying crime; and the third witness had fourteen convictions, twelve of which apparently arose out of the underlying crime.
See State v. Trawitzki,
¶ 24. We reject his argument. Nowhere in
Traw-itzki
is there even a hint that the supreme court would have held differently if the prior convictions of the three State's witnesses in that case had been unrelated to the underlying crime.
Trawitzki
was not about numbers or how the numbers came to be that way; it was about whether the jury had an adequate basis to question the credibility of the witnesses such that a failure to impeach with the exact number of convictions would likely not have affected the outcome of the case.
See Trawit-zki,
¶ 25. Based upon the supreme court's decision in Trawitzki, we conclude that Tkacz has not satisfied his *630 burden to prove that his trial counsel's failure to fully impeach Wolff prejudiced his defense. Because we conclude that Tkacz's defense was not prejudiced, we dispense with the inquiry as to whether this failure amounts to deficient performance. 5
¶ 26. We now turn to Tkacz's final claim that he was the victim of vindictive prosecution because Jones refused to reoffer a plea bargain recommending a ten-tó fifteen-year prison term after Tkacz's successful appeal and instead offered a plea bargain recommending the maximum twenty-year sentence Tkacz received after the first trial. The legal principles surrounding prosecutorial vindictiveness claims present questions of law that we review de novo.
State v.
Johnson,
¶ 27. The State appears to argue for a per se rule that vindictive prosecution jurisprudence does not apply to the plea bargaining process. While we do recognize that a defendant does not have a constitutional right to a plea bargain,
Weatherford v. Bursey,
¶ 28. In order to determine whether a prosecutor's decision to decline to reoffer a plea bargain after a defendant's successful appeal constitutes pros-ecutorial vindictiveness in violation of the defendant's due process rights, we must first decide whether a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness exists; if it does, then a rebuttable presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness applies.
Johnson,
*632
¶ 29. The United States Supreme Court has set forth a prophylactic rule that the presumption of vindictiveness arises when a prosecutor files more serious charges against a defendant after the defendant appeals a conviction and wins a new trial.
Id.
at ¶ 32. A realistic likelihood of vindictiveness exists in such a case because the prosecutor has the ability to discourage appeals by "upping the ante" against the defendant with a more serious charge.
See Blackledge v. Perry,
¶ 30. Even if the law is to be that a prosecutor's refusal to re-extend a plea offer can in appropriate circumstances give rise to a presumption of vindictiveness, this is not one of those circumstances. Tkacz does not argue that the prosecutor added new charges or sought a higher sentence than he received at the first trial in retaliation for his attacking his conviction, nor does he allege that any other constitutional rights were violated during the plea negotiations. Tkacz knowingly rejected or did not pursue the original plea bargain. Further, the trial court found that Jones offered a less favorable plea bargain prior to the second trial because he had additional evidence and a stronger case than he had going into the first trial. The presumption of
*633
vindictiveness is limited to cases in which a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness exists; "a mere opportunity for vindictiveness is insufficient to justify the imposition of a prophylactic rule."
Goodwin,
¶ 31. In order to establish actual vindictiveness, "there must be objective evidence that a prosecutor acted in order to punish the defendant for standing on his legal rights."
Johnson,
¶ 32. We are not persuaded by Tkacz's arguments that Jones's refusal to re-extend the original plea offer was actually motivated by a desire to retaliate against Tkacz for appealing his conviction. Tkacz cites no authority for his argument that the concessions Jones made to the witnesses who testified against him constitute vindictive prosecution nor does he offer any objec *634 tive evidence to support his contention that Jones's prior representation of him affected Jones's decisions during plea negotiations. We agree with the trial court that Jones's conduct does not suggest actual vindictiveness. We therefore conclude the trial court's determination concerning Tkacz's failure to produce objective evidence establishing actual vindictiveness was not clearly erroneous.
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
In
State v. Kaye,
Supreme Court Rule 20:1.9 reads, in part, as follows:
A lawyer who has formerly represented a client in a matter shall not:
(a) represent another person in the same or a substantially related matter in which that person's interests are materially adverse to the interests of the former client unless the former client consents in writing after consultation ....
Tkacz cites
Young v. United States ex rel. Vuitton et Fils S.A.,
Tkacz argues that the burden of proving prejudice is on the State. However, as the State correctly points out, in ineffective assistance of counsel claims, the burden of proving prejudice is on the defendant.
Strickland v. Washington,
Although we do not address this inquiry in depth, we do note that the attorney's failure to impeach Wolff did not render his performance deficient for the same reasons that we conclude this failure was not prejudicial to Tkacz's defense. It would have been reasonable for Tkacz's trial counsel to conclude that in light of what the jury already knew about Wolff, the additional evidence of Wolffs convictions would have been cumulative and unnecessary to further undermine her credibility with the jury.
