State v. Shafia M. Jones ( 2021 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                                NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                            This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    April 14, 2021
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Sheila T. Reiff                    petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals               Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2020AP206-CR                                                  Cir. Ct. No. 2016CF115
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT II
    STATE OF WISCONSIN,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    SHAFIA M. JONES,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Fond du Lac
    County: JOHN A. JORGENSEN, Judge. Affirmed.
    Before Neubauer, C.J., Reilly, P.J., and Gundrum, J.
    Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent
    or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    ¶1     PER CURIAM. Shafia Jones appeals from a judgment of
    conviction. She argues that her conviction should be reversed on the basis that the
    State failed to preserve certain evidence, the court failed to strike for cause a
    racially biased prospective juror and Jones then had to use one of her own
    peremptory strikes to keep the prospective juror off of the jury, and/or the court
    erred in admitting certain other-acts evidence at trial. Jones fails to carry the day
    on any of these issues. We affirm.
    Failure-to-Preserve Evidence
    ¶2     Jones was charged with assault by a prisoner with a bodily
    substance, in violation of WIS. STAT. § 946.43(2m)(a), and disorderly conduct, in
    violation of WIS. STAT. § 947.01, both as a repeater, in connection with a
    January 20, 2016 incident at the county jail in which she struck a staff member
    with a feminine pad that had been saturated with bodily fluid. Prior to trial, Jones
    moved to dismiss the assault-by-a-prisoner count on the basis that the pad had not
    been preserved so that it could be tested to determine whether or not it actually
    contained bodily fluid, as required for a conviction under § 946.43(2m)(a). The
    circuit court denied the motion on the basis that the pad constituted inculpatory,
    not exculpatory, evidence.
    ¶3     On appeal, Jones insists her due process rights were violated by the
    government’s failure to preserve the pad and that the circuit court erred in denying
    her motion. We disagree.
    ¶4     In order to show that her due process rights were violated due to the
    failure of the government to preserve the pad, Jones bears the burden of
    demonstrating that the government (1) “failed to preserve” the pad, and the pad
    was “apparently exculpatory,” or (2) “acted in bad faith by failing to preserve” the
    2
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    pad, and the pad was “potentially exculpatory.” See State v. Luedtke, 
    2015 WI 42
    , ¶7, 
    362 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    863 N.W.2d 592
    . “‘Whether state action constitutes a
    violation of due process presents a question of law, which this court decides
    independently….’ We uphold the circuit court’s findings of historical fact unless
    they are clearly erroneous.” Id., ¶37 (citation omitted).
    ¶5     In Luedtke, the state laboratory that tested Luedtke’s blood sample,
    which came back positive for restricted controlled substances and cocaine,
    destroyed the sample pursuant to standard protocol. Id., ¶¶13, 16. Luedtke, who
    was unable to test the sample prior to its destruction, sought to suppress the blood
    sample on that basis. Id., ¶¶17, 20. Our supreme court held that “[t]he fact that
    Luedtke’s blood tested positive” for these substances “demonstrates that this blood
    was apparently not exculpatory.” Id., ¶54 (emphasis added).
    ¶6     The same holds for this case. At the hearing on Jones’ motion, the
    staff member struck by the feminine pad testified that as she approached Jones’
    section, she observed Jones “flooding her cell. There was, like, blood, feces, smell
    of urine coming out of there.” The staff member further testified that the feminine
    pad Jones threw at her was “very heavy and wet” and “full of it would appear to
    be blood and feces and smelled of urine … and it hit me in the upper right
    shoulder and splattered into my face.” (Emphasis added.) The circuit court
    determined that the pad was “inculpatory evidence,” and with such a
    determination, it implicitly found the staff member’s testimony believable.
    ¶7     While the staff member’s sense of smell may not be as “scientific”
    as laboratory testing on blood samples, the smell of urine is readily recognized by
    most anyone. We note that the staff member’s testimony indicates that not only
    did she recognize the smell of urine on the pad itself but also that it struck her on
    3
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    the shoulder and “splattered into [her] face,” thus she easily would have been able
    to observe that this particular urine smell was coming from the pad as opposed to
    being from the fluids on the floor coming out of Jones’ cell.1 We agree that the
    pad “was apparently not exculpatory,” see Luedtke, 
    362 Wis. 2d 1
    , ¶54, or as the
    circuit court stated it, that the pad was “inculpatory” evidence. See also State v.
    Pankow, 
    144 Wis. 2d 23
    , 44, 
    422 N.W.2d 913
     (Ct. App. 1988) (“Pankow’s claim
    that defense examination would have produced exculpatory evidence is
    speculative. Due process does not require the state to preserve evidence that is
    merely potentially exculpatory.”).
    ¶8      Jones then can only prevail on her failure-to-preserve-evidence issue
    if she has shown that the pad was “potentially exculpatory” and the government
    “acted in bad faith by failing to preserve” it. Luedtke, 
    362 Wis. 2d 1
    , ¶7. She has
    not shown this.
    ¶9      Since Jones chose not to testify, either at the evidentiary hearing on
    her motion or at trial, the staff member was the person singularly best positioned
    to testify to the nature of the substance with which the pad was soaked. Again, the
    staff member’s testimony was that the pad “smelled of urine,” which testimony
    was completely consistent with the report she filled out the day after the incident,
    in which she stated that she took off her uniform shirt after the incident “as it was
    wet and smelled of urine.” To demonstrate bad faith by the government, Jones
    1
    In her brief-in-chief, Jones states that this staff member’s “report prepared the next day
    stated that the pad was soaked with an ‘unknown substance.’” (Emphasis added.) This is
    incorrect. That report, which was admitted into evidence at the evidentiary hearing on Jones’
    motion, does state that the substance on the floor of Jones’ cell was “unknown.” However, the
    report also states that after being struck with the “soaked feminine pad” in her upper torso area,
    which soaked pad “splattered in [her] face, hair, shirt and pants,” the staff member “went to Main
    Control to take [her] uniform shirt off as it was wet and smelled of urine.” (Emphasis added.)
    4
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    must show that “(1) the officers were aware of the potentially exculpatory value or
    usefulness of the evidence they failed to preserve; and (2) the officers acted with
    official animus or made a conscious effort to suppress exculpatory evidence.”
    See id., ¶46 (emphasis added; citation omitted). We need not address the second
    of these prongs as Jones has failed to satisfy the first—that “the officers were
    aware of the potentially exculpatory value or usefulness of the evidence they failed
    to preserve.”     See id. (citation omitted).      The only awareness related to the
    evidentiary value or usefulness of the pad that the officers would have had would
    have been an awareness that it had inculpatory, not exculpatory, value, as the
    circuit court noted.
    Denial of Motion to Strike Prospective Juror for Cause
    ¶10      Jones next asserts she is entitled to a new trial because the circuit
    court declined to strike for cause a prospective juror who indicated she harbored
    some racial bias. Jones is not entitled to a new trial.
    ¶11      The relevant voir dire discussion related to the prospective juror is as
    follows:
    [Defense counsel:] Does anyone, you know, being
    completely candid, does the fact that my client is black
    cause anyone to have a negative attitude towards her? It’s
    no fault of your own, no fault of prejudice, but do you think
    it would impact your judgment of her, the fact that she’s
    black? Ms. S.B[.]
    [Prospective Juror S.B.:] About ten years ago, we had a
    burglar in our house, and as fate would have it, he was the
    gentleman who just died in police custody a couple weeks
    ago, same man. And I have to say that it kind of gives you
    a little bit of a start to begin to wonder.
    [Defense counsel:] Okay. So do you think you would
    have a hard time to be impartial and fair to my client?
    5
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    [Prospective Juror S.B.:] I would certainly try. Like the
    lady said, I would try to do my best, but I’m kind of old
    school, you know, definitely the oldest one here and—
    [Defense counsel:] And I appreciate your candor on this
    issue. This is an important issue. So I guess, Your Honor,
    at this point, I would move for cause.
    The Court: So Ms. S.B[.], just like I told the other juror,
    you know, the goal here—we all have prejudice to a certain
    degree against people, professions, foods. I mean, we all
    have some prejudices or biases. And our goal here is to get
    jurors that will keep it out as best as they can and make
    their decision of guilt or innocence only—or guilty or not
    guilty, only based upon the facts that you learn them here
    today and tomorrow. So the only evidence you are to
    consider, I will tell you later in the jury instructions, is the
    sworn testimony or physical evidence that is presented
    today and judge them and the credibility of witnesses based
    upon what you see. So the question is can you keep out
    your bias or prejudice and just judge the facts as you learn
    them here today and tomorrow?
    [Prospective Juror S.B.:] I would try. I definitely would
    try and do my best.
    The Court: Mr. Edelstein.
    [Prosecutor:] I share defense concern, but I don’t think
    the answer merits recusal for cause.
    The Court: So at this point, she will remain.
    Out of the presence of jurors, the court subsequently explained its reasoning in
    declining to strike this, and another, prospective juror for cause.
    The Court: She did express some race issues or concerns
    that she may have. You know, the bottom line, though, is
    this is the same for both the jurors, the standard is whether
    they give an affirmative response notwithstanding the juror
    could decide the case fairly and impartially with the
    evidence presented. Each of them gave an affirmative
    response they would try their best, and that's really what
    everyone here is trying to do is try their best because as I
    indicated, I think we all bring with us some baggage of one
    degree or another. I found nothing in the record of each of
    those jurors or their statements made that on the face of it
    or even through their statements would show there was a
    6
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    reason for cause. Each of them met the standard which is
    that they would try their best to be fair and impartial jurors
    which is what we ask of them.
    Jones subsequently used one of her five peremptory strikes to keep S.B. off the
    jury.
    ¶12   We presume that prospective jurors are impartial. State v. Funk,
    
    2011 WI 62
    , ¶31, 
    335 Wis. 2d 369
    , 
    799 N.W.2d 421
    . “The party challenging a
    juror’s impartiality bears the burden of rebutting this presumption and proving
    bias.” 
    Id.
     In assessing bias, we will “defer to the trial court’s better position to
    assess the prospective juror’s credibility and honesty.” State v. Jimmie R.R., 
    2000 WI App 5
    , ¶30, 
    232 Wis. 2d 138
    , 
    606 N.W.2d 196
    .
    ¶13   Wisconsin courts recognize three types of juror bias: (1) statutory
    bias, (2) subjective bias, and (3) objective bias. State v. Faucher, 
    227 Wis. 2d 700
    , 716, 
    596 N.W.2d 770
     (1999). Jones insists prospective juror S.B. was both
    subjectively and objectively biased. We conclude that Jones did not overcome the
    presumption that S.B. could serve as an impartial juror; thus, the circuit court did
    not err in declining to strike her for cause.
    ¶14   Subjective bias “is revealed through the words and the demeanor of
    the prospective juror.” 
    Id. at 717
    . In considering whether a prospective juror was
    subjectively biased, we must inquire as to “whether the record reflects that the
    juror is a reasonable person who is sincerely willing to set aside any opinion or
    prior knowledge” he or she might have. State v. Kiernan, 
    227 Wis. 2d 736
    , 745,
    
    596 N.W.2d 760
     (1999). We have explained:
    [I]t is clear that “a prospective juror need not respond to
    voir dire questions with unequivocal declarations of
    impartiality.” It is not just the juror’s words that are
    important. The manner in which the juror says the words
    and the body language he or she exhibits while answering
    7
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    speak volumes—volumes that are not transmitted to a
    reviewing court via the cold record. Our inability to review
    demeanor and thus assess sincerity is precisely why we
    leave the determination of subjective bias to the circuit
    court. Thus, when reviewing a circuit court’s decision on
    subjective bias, we do not focus on particular, isolated
    words the juror used. Rather, we look at the record as a
    whole, using a very deferential lens, to determine if it
    supports the circuit court’s conclusion.
    State v. Oswald, 
    2000 WI App 3
    , ¶6, 
    232 Wis. 2d 103
    , 
    606 N.W.2d 238
     (1999)
    (citations omitted). “[We] will uphold the circuit court’s factual finding that a
    prospective juror is or is not subjectively biased unless it is clearly erroneous.”
    Faucher, 
    227 Wis. 2d at 718
    .
    ¶15    When asked whether the fact that Jones is black would impact her
    judgment in the case, S.B. candidly indicated that ten years earlier she had been
    the victim of a burglary. She added that the perpetrator, whom we assume she was
    indicating was black, died in police custody just a few weeks before her
    appearance as a prospective juror. She added that “it kind of gives you a little bit
    of a start to begin to wonder.”
    ¶16    It is not entirely clear exactly what S.B. may have been
    “wonder[ing].” But, because counsel’s question related to whether Jones’ race as
    a black person “would impact [S.B.’s] judgment of [Jones]” and then S.B.
    responded by appearing to connect Jones’ race with another person who
    burglarized S.B.’s house ten years earlier and at the time of Jones’ trial this person
    had recently been again in police custody, we will accept as accurate Jones’
    assertion in her brief-in-chief that S.B. was “wonder[ing]” “whether Black people
    have a proclivity for criminal conduct.” Counsel followed up with “[s]o do you
    think you would have a hard time to be impartial and fair to my client?” S.B.
    8
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    responded, “I would certainly try … to do my best, but I’m kind of old school, you
    know.” Jones moved to strike S.B. for cause.
    ¶17    Before ruling on the motion, the circuit court pressed S.B. further:
    [W]e all have some prejudices or biases. And our goal here
    is to get jurors that will keep it out as best as they can and
    make their decision of … guilty or not guilty only based
    upon the facts [as] you learn them here today and
    tomorrow. So the only evidence you are to consider … is
    the sworn testimony or physical evidence that is presented
    today and judge them and the credibility of witnesses based
    upon what you see. So the question is can you keep out
    your bias or prejudice and just judge the facts as you learn
    them here today and tomorrow?
    S.B. responded: “I would try. I definitely would try and do my best.” Outside the
    presence of the jury, the court explained that it declined to strike S.B. for cause
    because she “gave an affirmative response” that she would “try [her] best” to be
    fair and impartial and judge the case based on the facts presented at trial.
    ¶18    Unlike us, the circuit court was in the position to hear S.B.’s tone of
    voice, observe her demeanor including body language, and ultimately assess her
    sincerity. Unequivocal words of impartiality from a prospective juror are not
    required. See State v. Gutierrez, 
    2020 WI 52
    , ¶¶40-42, 
    394 Wis. 2d 799
    , 
    943 N.W.2d 870
     (in case involving the sexual assault of a child, the presumption of
    impartiality for prospective juror was not overcome by her “uncertain” statement
    of “I don’t know if I could be impartial”). The court apparently found S.B. sincere
    and believed that the presumption that she could be impartial had not been
    overcome.    Jones has not convinced us that the court clearly erred in this
    determination and in declining to strike S.B. based upon subjective bias.
    ¶19    Regarding objective bias, we have stated that “exclusion of a juror
    for objective bias requires a direct, critical, personal connection between the
    9
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    individual juror and crucial evidence or a dispositive issue in the case to be tried or
    the juror’s intractable negative attitude toward the justice system in general.”
    Oswald, 
    232 Wis. 2d 103
    , ¶8 (emphasis added). “A juror is objectively biased if a
    reasonable person in the juror’s position could not set aside his or her prior
    opinion or knowledge and be impartial.” Sheboygan Cnty. HHS v. K.N.L., No.
    2017AP2413, unpublished slip op. ¶16 (WI App Aug. 22, 2018) (citing Faucher,
    
    227 Wis. 2d at 718-19
    ). Objective bias presents a mixed question of fact and law.
    Funk, 
    335 Wis. 2d 369
    , ¶30. “[A] circuit court’s findings regarding the facts and
    circumstances surrounding voir dire and the case will be upheld unless they are
    clearly erroneous. Whether those facts fulfill the legal standard of objective bias is
    a question of law.” 
    Id.
     (alterations in original) (quoting Faucher, 
    227 Wis. 2d at 720
    ). “[W]e will reverse a circuit court’s determination in regard to objective bias
    ‘only if as a matter of law a reasonable judge could not have reached such a
    conclusion.’” Funk, 
    335 Wis. 2d 369
    , ¶30 (quoting Faucher, 
    227 Wis. 2d at
    720-
    21). As our supreme court has stated:
    The circuit court is particularly well-positioned to make
    a determination of objective bias, and it has special
    competence in this area. It is intimately familiar with the
    voir dire proceeding, and is best situated to reflect upon the
    prospective juror’s subjective state of mind which is
    relevant as well to the determination of objective bias. We
    therefore give weight to the court’s conclusion that a
    prospective juror is or is not objectively biased.
    State v. Lindell, 
    2001 WI 108
    , ¶39, 
    245 Wis. 2d 689
    , 
    629 N.W.2d 223
     (quoting
    Faucher, 
    227 Wis. 2d at 720-21
    ). For objective bias, there is a “higher standard
    of review than the clearly erroneous standard but still very deferential to the trial
    court’s conclusions.” Oswald, 
    232 Wis. 2d 103
    , ¶5.
    ¶20    As far as the record indicates, S.B. had neither a “direct, critical,
    personal connection” with “crucial evidence or a dispositive issue in the case” nor
    10
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    an “intractable negative attitude toward the justice system in general.” Oswald,
    
    232 Wis. 2d 103
    , ¶8. Furthermore, we are not convinced that a reasonable person
    with S.B.’s assumed prior opinion could not set that aside, listen to the evidence
    fairly, and judge the case impartiality. See K.N.L., No. 2017AP2413, ¶16 (citing
    Faucher, 
    227 Wis. 2d at 718-19
    ). S.B. indicated that she “definitely would try,”
    and the court found this sincere and believed she could be impartial. We cannot
    say that the court erred in this regard.
    Prior Acts
    ¶21       Jones also contends that the circuit court erred in permitting the State
    to show the jury videos of two November 10, 2015 incidents involving Jones,
    which also occurred at the jail.          As Jones explains it, one video shows her
    “thr[owing] a number of items out of her cell door, and smear[ing] a soiled
    feminine pad on the window of her cell door,” and the other video shows her later
    that day again “smear[ing] a feminine pad on the cell window,” this time in an
    isolation cell. The State brought a pretrial motion to introduce these incidents and
    show     these      two    videos    at    trial   for   the   purpose     of   proving
    “Motive/Intent/Plan/Preparation” and “Knowledge/Absence of Mistake.”                The
    court held a hearing on and ultimately granted the State’s request.
    ¶22       We will uphold a circuit court’s ruling on the admission or exclusion
    of evidence for trial unless the court erroneously exercised its discretion. State v.
    Wilson, 
    2015 WI 48
    , ¶47, 
    362 Wis. 2d 193
    , 
    864 N.W.2d 52
    . A court properly
    exercises its discretion if it “examines the relevant facts, applies a proper standard
    of law, and reaches a reasonable conclusion using a demonstrated rational
    process.” Magyar v. Wisconsin Health Care Liab. Ins. Plan, 
    211 Wis. 2d 296
    ,
    302, 
    564 N.W.2d 766
     (1997).
    11
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    ¶23    “Other acts” evidence, such as the instances portrayed in the videos
    in this case, “may be admitted if: (1) offered for an acceptable purpose under
    [WIS. STAT.] § 904.04(2); (2) relevant under [WIS. STAT.] § 904.01; and (3) its
    probative value is not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion, or delay under [WIS. STAT.] § 904.03.” See Gutierrez, 
    394 Wis. 2d 799
    , ¶29 (citing State v. Sullivan, 
    216 Wis. 2d 768
    , 772-73, 
    576 N.W.2d 30
    (1998)). Our supreme court has stated that
    [t]he party seeking to admit the other-acts evidence bears
    the burden of establishing that the first two prongs are met
    by a preponderance of the evidence. Once the proponent of
    the other-acts evidence establishes the first two prongs of
    the test, the burden shifts to the party opposing the
    admission of the other-acts evidence to show that the
    probative value of the evidence is substantially outweighed
    by the risk or danger of unfair prejudice.
    State v. Marinez, 
    2011 WI 12
    , ¶19, 
    331 Wis. 2d 568
    , 
    797 N.W.2d 399
     (citations
    omitted). In this case, we see no error by the court.
    ¶24    In granting the State’s motion with regard to these two incidents, the
    circuit court explained the “Sullivan analysis” and applied it to each “other act”
    that the State was seeking to use at trial. The court made the following relevant
    comments in its ruling.
    The charges here are prisoner expelling bodily fluids
    and disorderly conduct. The prisoner in expelling bodily
    fluids does have an act or element of intention that, number
    one, that she intentionally did … the act being throwing an
    object or bodily fluids, and it does have the issue of intent,
    what is the intent of the actor when they throw this object
    and … that it did come in contact with another person.
    And again, another intent to abuse or harass or intimidate
    or frighten another individual.
    .…
    [A]ll of these other [acts] are fairly recent, within a little
    over two months … of [the incident at issue in this case].
    12
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    So one consideration is that these actions here could
    provide context to the jurors about the nature of the
    relationship and whether it’s going well, and therefore, it
    makes no sense on this date and time that she would like to
    harass, intimidate, or frighten the jailers. Because certainly
    it wouldn’t make sense that if the relationship is going well
    and there’s been no issues, then why on January 20th of
    2016 would all of a sudden Ms. Jones act in a manner to
    abuse or harass or intimidate or frighten an individual, the
    jailer, in this circumstance….
    .…
    In that first [November 10, 2015] incident, the allegations
    that she wanted to present is she used feminine hygiene
    product within the incident to cause a disturbance. That
    she threw food, caused a disturbance. [The prosecutor]
    wants to get into that and it would show motive, intent,
    absence of mistake. And here again is an example where
    Ms. Jones is angry, not getting what she wants. And when
    she does, she does throw items in order to, quote unquote,
    punish the jailers because clearly she’s not going to be
    picking the stuff up or she’s not going to be dealing with
    the mess that she has caused. I mean, there has to be a
    reason when she’s throwing these things, a reason for her to
    do that and it could assist the jurors knowing the reason
    she’s doing this is to harass, abuse, or intimidate, just like
    the charges that … come from the January 20th of 2016
    date. So I’m going to find that this November 10, 2015
    incident does come in in that it goes to her motive for why
    she’s throwing things. It goes to her intent of is she trying
    to abuse or harass or intimidate the jailers when they do
    something that she does not like. And to a degree, it goes
    to absence of mistake, was this an intentional act on her
    part when she threw the items on January 20th, the fact that
    she was throwing things in the past could provide jurors
    context as to was this a mistake when she threw the items
    on January 20th. So, again, November 10th, the first
    incident, comes in.
    [Related to the second November 10, 2015 incident,] they
    are trying to, it looks like, move Ms. Jones or the officers
    trying to control Ms. Jones’s behavior and move her from
    one location to the other. She struggled with them, she
    attempted to physically harm the officers, and, you know,
    the jurors may not have that in their wheelhouse that people
    do that, that people act out intentionally to try to cause
    harm to the officers, specifically jailers, and in this case,
    again, it’s an example of when Ms. Jones is angry that she,
    in that case specifically, is proven tried to cause harm to the
    13
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    jailers and so that would go to intent of Ms. Jones. And
    again, puts this relationship in context to when things are
    not going well, Ms. Jones acts out in a manner in which to
    control the individuals around her. So I’m going to allow
    November 10, 2015, in for other acts because it goes to
    intent, it goes to her motive, and absence of mistake.
    The court further concluded that the probative value of these other acts was not
    substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. Related to this, the
    court stated that
    obviously she was in jail on this January 20th date and so
    the fact that she was in jail a month or two before certainly
    doesn’t add much to the prejudice. The fact that the similar
    actions … doesn’t add to the danger of unfair prejudice. …
    [T]hese other acts, as suggested by [the prosecutor], are in
    the same location [the jail], similar-type actions, and very
    recent in time…. [So] for the State to bring other instances
    in the same location during a recent time period, really
    doesn’t shock the conscience of the jurors that she’s in jail,
    causing a disturbance, because they are going to learn that
    anyways from the January 20th incident.
    ¶25    Of seven “other acts” that the State was requesting to use at trial and
    that the court considered at this motion hearing, the court ruled in favor of the
    State with regard to the two November 10 incidents, as well as two additional
    other acts. However, the court then ruled that it would only allow the State to use
    two of those four other acts at trial because “[u]nder [WIS. STAT. §] 904.03, the
    court can limit cumulative evidence from coming in and I think that two other acts
    evidence is sufficient to allow the State to use and anything above and beyond that
    would be cumulative and unnecessary. So [the prosecutor] can analyze that and
    determine which two instances he plans to use at the jury trial.”
    ¶26    Reviewing the circuit court’s comments and reasoning, it is clear the
    court “examine[d] the relevant facts, applie[d] a proper standard of law, and
    reache[d] a reasonable conclusion using a demonstrated rational process.” See
    14
    No. 2020AP206-CR
    Magyar, 
    211 Wis. 2d 296
    , 302. The court noted that the State was offering these
    other acts for the acceptable purposes of showing Jones’ motive and intent, as well
    as an absence of mistake. The court concluded that the acts were proper to admit
    for those purposes as well as providing context for the January 20, 2016 incident
    at issue in this case. See WIS. STAT. § 904.04(2)(a) (acceptable purposes for other-
    acts evidence include motive, intent and absence of mistake); see also Gutierrez,
    
    394 Wis. 2d 799
    , ¶31 (“Context and background, while not expressly listed in …
    § 904.04(2)(a), can also be acceptable purposes.”). The court clearly explained
    how these other acts were relevant to issues in the case, and it also properly
    concluded that Jones had not met her burden to show that the probative value of
    this evidence was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. The
    court could have stopped there, but it went the “extra mile” towards fairness by
    restricting the State to only using two of the four other-acts incidents that the court
    ruled would otherwise be admissible. Jones has failed to satisfy her burden of
    demonstrating to us on appeal that the circuit court erred. See Gaethke v. Pozder,
    
    2017 WI App 38
    , ¶36, 
    376 Wis. 2d 448
    , 
    899 N.W.2d 381
     (“[O]n appeal ‘it is the
    burden of the appellant to demonstrate that the [circuit] court erred.’” (second
    alteration in original; citation omitted)).
    By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
    This    opinion    will   not        be   published.   See    WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)5.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020AP000206-CR

Filed Date: 4/14/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024