Eric Hodkiewicz v. Chris Buesgen ( 2021 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 20-2641
    ERIC HODKIEWICZ,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    CHRIS BUESGEN, Warden,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Wisconsin.
    No. 18-CV-900 — Nancy Joseph, Magistrate Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 15, 2021 — DECIDED MAY 21, 2021
    ____________________
    Before KANNE, ROVNER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
    KANNE, Circuit Judge. A Wisconsin jury found that Peti-
    tioner Eric Hodkiewicz stalked, harassed, and assaulted his
    wife and convicted him of nine offenses. Hodkiewicz chal-
    lenged his conviction and sentence in state court, arguing
    (among other things) that he received ineffective assistance of
    counsel. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals rejected his argu-
    ment, and the federal district court then denied habeas relief.
    2                                                         No. 20-2641
    We, like the district court, conclude that the Wisconsin
    Court of Appeals reasonably determined that Hodkiewicz
    cannot show prejudice arising from his counsel’s alleged er-
    rors. We therefore affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Eric Hodkiewicz stood trial in March 2014 on nine charges
    ranging from unlawful use of a telephone to strangulation
    and suffocation. 1 Trial established the following.
    In May 2010, Hodkiewicz’s wife, S.P., reported to the po-
    lice that Hodkiewicz was abusing her. She was eight months
    pregnant at the time. He denied the allegations but admitted
    that he had grabbed S.P.’s wrists and pulled her around. S.P.
    told Hodkiewicz to move out of the house, and Hodkiewicz
    filed for divorce on May 24. Hodkiewicz returned a few days
    later and, S.P. claimed, assaulted her in the bathroom. She was
    admitted to the emergency room for her injuries, while Hod-
    kiewicz denied having any contact with S.P. that day.
    On May 28, S.P. gave birth to their son, J. She permitted
    Hodkiewicz to see J. periodically over the next few months,
    but when he attempted to visit on August 9, 2010, S.P. said it
    was not “a good time.” Hodkiewicz got “angry and upset.”
    1 Count 1 alleged stalking; Count 2 alleged unlawful use of a tele-
    phone as a domestic abuse repeater; Count 3 alleged disorderly conduct
    as a domestic abuse repeater; Count 4 alleged criminal damage to prop-
    erty as a domestic abuse repeater; Count 5 alleged burglary of a building
    or dwelling; Count 6 alleged substantial battery—domestic abuse, as a do-
    mestic abuse repeater; Count 7 alleged strangulation and suffocation—do-
    mestic abuse, as a domestic abuse repeater; Count 8 alleged disorderly
    conduct—domestic abuse, as a domestic abuse repeater; and Count 9 al-
    leged bail jumping.
    No. 20-2641                                                 3
    Shortly afterward, S.P. noticed that her above-ground pool
    had been slashed—and from that point on, her life became the
    stuff of nightmares. She found a dead rabbit on her doorstep.
    She found the word “bitch” scratched into her car, and garden
    shears and meat forks were stabbed into the seats. She discov-
    ered antifreeze in her dog’s dish and the body of a stray cat
    hanging from a tree outside her home. Her mailbox was
    stuffed with another cat (this one alive) and ominous notes
    bearing messages like “u r dun.” A “pretty big pile of animal
    guts” turned up on her driveway. Her dog went missing and
    then reappeared forty miles away.
    Worse yet, S.P. was attacked while alone in her garage on
    December 9, 2011. She testified that she was hit on the head
    from behind and then struck or kicked on the floor. She didn’t
    see her assailant but testified to hearing Hodkiewicz say she
    was crazy and that she should not have custody of J. Again,
    she went to the emergency room.
    Hodkiewicz denied involvement in any of the above inci-
    dents, and little evidence implicated him other than S.P.’s
    word. In fact, Hodkiewicz had J. the night S.P. was attacked,
    and his neighbor, Kyle Thorson, testified that he was with
    Hodkiewicz for part of the evening. Specifically, Thorson tes-
    tified that he heard Hodkiewicz’s garage door open between
    7:30 and 8:00 p.m. that night; went over to Hodkiewicz’s gar-
    age between 8:00 and 8:30 p.m.; and talked with him for about
    sixty or ninety minutes. Police detective Wade Wudtke testi-
    fied, however, that when he interviewed Hodkiewicz about
    his whereabouts on that night, Hodkiewicz made no mention
    of being with Thorson.
    S.P. moved in with her parents in March 2012. Then, over
    the next few months, S.P. received 146 calls and occasional
    4                                                 No. 20-2641
    harassing text messages from a restricted or unknown num-
    ber. When S.P. began answering the calls to figure out who
    was making them, she testified to recognizing Hodkiewicz’s
    voice on the line, making insults—“you’re a stupid bitch” and
    the like. The text messages said such things as, “U need 2 shut
    ur fat mouth wile u can think ur winning try me bitch.”
    Police investigator Mark Hendzel testified that the calls
    and texts were traced to a “TracFone,” a prepaid cell phone
    with unreliable subscriber information often used by those
    seeking to avoid detection. The phone number used to acti-
    vate the TracFone belonged to the company that Hodkiewicz
    worked for. Hodkiewicz again denied involvement and
    pointed out that he was in temporary custody at the county
    jail on May 12, 2012—the day the TracFone was activated—
    and on dates when seventeen calls from it were made. Hen-
    dzel testified, though, that “technical support with TracFone”
    told him that a TracFone could be activated remotely. He also
    testified that he had “received information” that Hodkiewicz
    had relatives working at the jail who were suspected of giving
    him “special privileges,” including access to phones.
    In July 2012, S.P. moved into a new apartment and contin-
    ued to field harassing calls and report them to the police. On
    August 6, she found flowers at her door. She thought they had
    been misplaced because she had not told anyone where her
    new apartment was except for her parents and Jed Reinke, the
    father of her older son. But then she received a phone call on
    August 10 from someone who asked, “Did you get them?”
    She didn’t respond; the caller laughed and said, “you did.”
    Again, S.P. claimed to recognize Hodkiewicz’s voice, but
    Hodkiewicz denied leaving her flowers or calling her that
    day. S.P.’s cell-phone records showed that the only calls she
    No. 20-2641                                                   5
    received at the relevant time were from Reinke—but Hendzel
    testified that S.P. said she received the call on her work phone.
    The harassment continued: more flowers mysteriously ap-
    peared on S.P.’s second-floor balcony, more damage was in-
    flicted on her car. By May 2013, Hodkiewicz was charged with
    stalking, placed on probation, and told to have no contact
    with S.P.
    But things didn’t end there. During the night of July 1–2,
    2013, S.P. walked into her bathroom and was suddenly
    choked from behind with some sort of rubber tube. Although
    she admitted that things were “fuzzy” because she had taken
    Percocet, she testified to seeing Hodkiewicz in the mirror be-
    fore she lost consciousness. Hodkiewicz yet again denied
    committing the assault and said that he was at his parents’
    house with J. that night.
    In addition to the above evidence, Hendzel testified that
    Hodkiewicz admitted to joking to coworkers that he would
    be better off if S.P. were “underground.” Specifically, when
    asked if Hodkiewicz “indicated that he would be better off if
    [S.P.] were underground,” Hendzel replied, “He stated that
    he may have said that to coworkers.” And when asked, “It
    wasn’t that other people said it and he heard it. It was that he
    said it?” Hendzel replied, “Correct.” Hendzel also testified
    that Hodkiewicz originally denied making the statement be-
    fore admitting to saying it as a joke.
    In the end, the jury convicted Hodkiewicz on all counts,
    and the court sentenced him to eight years’ imprisonment and
    thirteen years’ extended supervision. Afterward, Hodkiewicz
    filed postconviction motions in which he raised due-process,
    right-to-confrontation, and ineffective-assistance claims. The
    6                                                    No. 20-2641
    Wisconsin trial court denied the motions on January 29, 2016,
    holding (among other things) that Hodkiewicz failed to prove
    that his trial attorney was ineffective in any respect.
    Hodkiewicz appealed, and in a thorough opinion, the Wis-
    consin Court of Appeals reversed his convictions on Counts 2
    and 3 (unlawful use of a telephone and disorderly conduct)
    “because his trial attorney was ineffective by failing to object
    to hearsay testimony that S.P. received [the August 10, 2012]
    phone call on her work phone.” The court affirmed his re-
    maining convictions, however, and the Wisconsin Supreme
    Court denied review.
    Hodkiewicz then petitioned the federal district court for a
    writ of habeas corpus. The district court denied habeas relief
    and granted Hodkiewicz a certificate of appealability, but
    only with respect to his ineffective-assistance claim; his other
    claims were procedurally defaulted. We denied Hodkiewicz’s
    request to expand the certificate of appealability. Thus—de-
    spite his obvious attempts to sneak his various other argu-
    ments into this appeal—we address only Hodkiewicz’s inef-
    fective-assistance claim.
    II. ANALYSIS
    We review the decision of the district court de novo.
    Schmidt v. Foster, 
    911 F.3d 469
    , 476 (7th Cir. 2018) (citing Free-
    man v. Pierce, 
    878 F.3d 580
    , 585 (7th Cir. 2017)). But because
    the Wisconsin Court of Appeals addressed the merits of Hod-
    kiewicz’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we apply
    to that decision the deferential standard of review set forth in
    the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
    (“AEDPA”), 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1). 
    Id.
     Under AEDPA, Hodkie-
    wicz must show that the decision of the Wisconsin Court of
    No. 20-2641                                                    7
    Appeals “(1) ‘was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable
    application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined
    by the Supreme Court of the United States;’ or (2) ‘was based
    on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the
    evidence presented in the State court proceeding.’” 
    Id.
     at 476–
    77 (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)).
    The Supreme Court has gone to great lengths to explain
    just how “difficult to meet” this standard is. Harrington v.
    Richter, 
    562 U.S. 86
    , 102 (2011). We “simply review[] the spe-
    cific reasons given by the state court and defer[] to those rea-
    sons if they are reasonable.” Wilson v. Sellers, 
    138 S. Ct. 1188
    ,
    1192 (2018). Put another way, Hodkiewicz must show that the
    state court’s decision was “so erroneous that ‘there is no pos-
    sibility fairminded jurists could disagree that the state court’s
    decision conflicts with [the Supreme] Court’s precedents.’”
    Nevada v. Jackson, 
    569 U.S. 505
    , 508–09 (2013) (quoting Harring-
    ton, 
    562 U.S. at 102
    ).
    Hodkiewicz argues that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals
    unreasonably applied Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    (1984), when ruling on his ineffective-assistance claim. To suc-
    ceed under Strickland, Hodkiewicz must show that (1) his
    counsel’s performance fell below “an objective standard of
    reasonableness” (the deficient-performance prong) and
    (2) “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
    have been different” (the prejudice prong). 
    Id. at 688, 694
    . “A
    reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
    confidence in the outcome.” 
    Id. at 694
    .
    “The deferential nature of the Strickland standard, com-
    bined with the deference owed state-court decisions under
    § 2254(d), means that our review is ‘doubly deferential.’”
    8                                                            No. 20-2641
    Bryant v. Brown, 
    873 F.3d 988
    , 996 (7th Cir. 2017) (quoting
    Hinesley v. Knight, 
    837 F.3d 721
    , 732 (7th Cir. 2016)). And be-
    cause “[t]he Strickland standard is a general one, … the range
    of reasonable applications is substantial.” Harrington, 
    562 U.S. at
    105 (citing Knowles v. Mirzayance, 
    556 U.S. 111
    , 123 (2009)). 2
    Hodkiewicz contends that his attorney was ineffective in
    failing to:
    1. Object to Hendzel’s hearsay testimony that “technical
    support with TracFone” told him a TracFone can be ac-
    tivated with a “secondary” telephone number—i.e., ac-
    tivated remotely;
    2. Object to Hendzel’s hearsay testimony that he had “re-
    ceived information” that Hodkiewicz had relatives
    working at the jail suspected of providing him with
    “special privileges,” including “getting out of his jail
    cell and having access to phones”;
    3. Object to or rebut Hendzel’s hearsay testimony that
    S.P. said she received the August 10, 2012 call “on her
    work phone”;
    2 Hodkiewicz argues for de novo review of the Wisconsin Court of Ap-
    peals’s decision on the basis that the court employed the wrong prejudice
    standard. See Thomas v. Clements, 
    789 F.3d 760
    , 767 (7th Cir. 2015) (review-
    ing de novo where the state court erroneously applied a “would have led to
    a different result” prejudice standard). We disagree. The court recited, in
    full, the correct standard from Strickland and applied that standard
    throughout its opinion. To the extent the court ever strayed from that lan-
    guage, “it is more likely that the court stated its conclusion imprecisely
    than that it applied a different standard.” Stanley v. Bartley, 
    465 F.3d 810
    ,
    813 (7th Cir. 2006). “We therefore evaluate the state appellate court deci-
    sion under the deferential standard set forth in AEDPA.” Sussman v. Jen-
    kins, 
    636 F.3d 329
    , 360 (7th Cir. 2011).
    No. 20-2641                                                  9
    4. Rebut Hendzel’s “false” testimony that Hodkiewicz
    personally admitted to joking that he would be better
    off if S.P. were “underground”; and
    5. Rebut Wudtke’s “misleading” testimony offered to un-
    dermine Hodkiewicz’s alibi witness, Thorson.
    The Wisconsin Court of Appeals held that these alleged
    errors, even if instances of deficient performance under Strick-
    land, did not individually or cumulatively prejudice Hodkie-
    wicz. As we now explain, this was a reasonable conclusion.
    First, with respect to the testimony about how a TracFone
    can be activated, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals focused on
    the “strong evidence connecting Hodkiewicz to the harassing
    phone calls made to S.P.” and concluded that, “even without
    Hendzel’s testimony, the jury could have reasonably inferred
    that Hodkiewicz had a coworker activate the TracFone for
    him.” That evidence included the facts that (1) the TracFone
    made no calls to anyone other than S.P.; (2) S.P. testified to
    recognizing Hodkiewicz’s voice; (3) the two were in the midst
    of a contentious divorce and child-custody battle and “there
    was no evidence presented to indicate that anyone other than
    Hodkiewicz had a motive to harass S.P.”; and (4) Hodkie-
    wicz’s employer allowed its employees to use its telephone
    while at work. “Under these circumstances,” the court con-
    cluded, “it is not reasonably probable the result of Hodkie-
    wicz’s trial would have been different had his trial counsel
    objected to Hendzel’s testimony” about what he had heard
    from TracFone personnel.
    This was an eminently reasonable application of Strick-
    land, and we agree with the district court’s conclusion that
    “[t]he prosecution portrayed Hodkiewicz as a careful
    10                                                No. 20-2641
    manipulator who skillfully evaded detection, and the jury ev-
    idently believed it. It seems unlikely, then, that uncertainty
    about how Hodkiewicz activated a TracFone from jail would
    have planted serious doubt in the jury’s mind that Hodkie-
    wicz used the TracFone to harass S.P.”
    Second, regarding the testimony about Hodkiewicz re-
    ceiving “special privileges” in jail, the Court of Appeals
    pointed to the defense’s cross-examination of Hendzel, dur-
    ing which he admitted that it would have been a “criminal
    act” for any jail employee to provide Hodkiewicz with special
    treatment; that he had not investigated whether Hodkiewicz
    had received special treatment; and that he had no personal
    knowledge of whether Hodkiewicz accessed a phone in jail.
    Hodkiewicz, for his part, denied that he had phone access,
    and his lawyer emphasized the lack of evidence about such
    special privileges in closing argument. Thus, the court reason-
    ably determined that “Hodkiewicz significantly undermined
    Hendzel’s testimony that Hodkiewicz received special privi-
    leges, including phone access, while in jail,” and an added
    hearsay objection is not reasonably probable to have some-
    how tipped the scales toward a different result.
    In addition, the Court of Appeals noted that none of the
    charges against Hodkiewicz hinged on a finding that he per-
    sonally activated the TracFone or placed the seventeen calls
    made while he was in custody. Count 1 and “Counts 4
    through 9 were unrelated to any phone calls S.P. received,”
    and Counts 2 and 3 concerned the flowers left at S.P.’s apart-
    ment and the call made on August 10, 2012, when Hodkiewicz
    was not in custody. So it is not reasonably probable that the
    jury’s verdict on any of these counts would have been differ-
    ent had counsel objected to the “special privileges” hearsay.
    No. 20-2641                                                     11
    Third, the Court of Appeals determined that counsel’s fail-
    ure to object to or rebut Hendzel’s testimony that S.P. said she
    received the August 10, 2012 call “on her work phone” did not
    cause prejudice with respect to the Counts 1 and Counts 4
    through 9—the counts at issue in this appeal—because “none
    [of those charges] required proof that Hodkiewicz placed the
    August 10, 2012 call to S.P.” Hodkiewicz now argues that that
    conclusion was unreasonable because, if counsel had rebutted
    Hendzel’s testimony, it would have undermined S.P.’s claim
    that she recognized Hodkiewicz’s voice on the other calls she
    received, too—and therefore shattered her credibility.
    This argument appears to have been forfeited. The Court
    of Appeals noted that “Hodkiewicz does not dispute the
    State’s assertion that counsel’s error in failing to object to Hen-
    dzel’s testimony regarding the August 10 call did not affect
    the jury’s verdicts on Count 1 and Counts 4 through 9.” As we
    have explained, “[i]f a petitioner fails to raise an issue in state
    court proceedings, he cannot raise it for the first time in a fed-
    eral habeas corpus petition.” Sotelo v. Ind. State Prison, 
    850 F.2d 1244
    , 1252 (7th Cir. 1988) (citing Washington v. Lane, 
    840 F.2d 443
    , 445 (7th Cir. 1988)).
    In any event, we agree with the district court that Hodkie-
    wicz’s argument is unpersuasive. As that court explained, the
    jury heard from thirty-five witnesses—the defendant, the vic-
    tim, medical professionals, a domestic violence counselor,
    probation officers, and others—and had ample evidence on
    which to base a determination of S.P.’s credibility. Therefore,
    “it was reasonable for the court of appeals to conclude
    that … there is not a reasonable likelihood that counsel’s ob-
    jection to this one piece of testimony would have so changed
    12                                                 No. 20-2641
    the jury’s credibility determination that they would have ac-
    quitted Hodkiewicz on [these] counts.”
    Fourth, the Court of Appeals determined that counsel’s
    failure to rebut Hendzel’s “false” testimony that Hodkiewicz
    personally admitted to joking that he would be better off with
    S.P. “underground” did not cause prejudice.
    We need not take any position on whether this testimony
    was false because we conclude, like the district court, that the
    Court of Appeals reasonably determined that counsel’s al-
    leged error did not cause prejudice. Whether Hodkiewicz
    himself made the statement in jest or—as Hodkiewicz con-
    tends—his coworkers made the statement in jest ultimately
    would have made little difference considering the evidence as
    a whole. The jury was faced with testimony that Hodkiewicz
    brutally strangled S.P. in her home, for example, and the evi-
    dence of their divorce and custody dispute provided clear
    motive. It is not reasonably probable that the jury would have
    rendered a different verdict had it learned that Hodkiewicz
    did not actually make the joke that Hendzel attributed to him.
    Fifth, the Court of Appeals determined that counsel’s fail-
    ure to rebut Wudtke’s “misleading” testimony undermining
    Hodkiewicz’s alibi witness, Thorson, was not prejudicial.
    Hodkiewicz contends that his lawyer should have introduced
    or relied on prior statements that he and Thorson gave to the
    police a few days after the incident, which supposedly con-
    firmed that Thorson was with Hodkiewicz on December 9.
    Specifically, Hodkiewicz told police (not Wudtke) that “Kyle
    Thorson had observed me in my garage. Kyle text messaged
    me earlier in the night [and] came over later.” And Thorson
    told police (not Wudtke) that he “observed the exterior lights
    on” at Hodkiewicz’s home between 7:00 and 7:30 p.m.;
    No. 20-2641                                                  13
    “observed the light on” in Hodkiewicz’s garage at about 9:00
    p.m., and “went over to visit” Hodkiewicz at about 10:00 p.m.
    The Court of Appeals was not persuaded and concluded
    that “[i]t is not reasonably probable the result of Hodkiewicz’s
    trial would have been different had his trial attorney intro-
    duced these statements, which do not provide anything re-
    motely resembling an ironclad alibi.” Even if these prior state-
    ments were used at trial, the jury reasonably could have con-
    cluded that Hodkiewicz left his home between 7:00 and 7:30
    p.m. (when Thorson saw his exterior lights turn on) and re-
    turned around 9:00 p.m. (when Thorson saw his garage light
    turn on). That leaves at least a one-and-a-half-hour window
    during which Thorson did not have eyes on Hodkiewicz and
    in which Hodkiewicz could have committed the assault.
    What’s more, the defense’s use of these prior statements
    would have impeached Thorson’s trial testimony that he went
    over to speak with Hodkiewicz at around 8:00 or 8:30 p.m. It
    is therefore not reasonably probable that the jury would have
    reached a different result on any of the charges had the de-
    fense introduced these prior statements and discredited its
    own alibi witness in the process.
    Thus was the Court of Appeals’s analysis, and we find it a
    reasonable application of Strickland.
    Finally, Hodkiewicz’s last argument is that even if none of
    the above purported errors was prejudicial in isolation, coun-
    sel’s performance was prejudicially deficient when one con-
    siders their cumulative effect.
    To be sure, “[w]e previously have pointed out that preju-
    dice may be based on the cumulative effect of multiple er-
    rors.” Hough v. Anderson, 
    272 F.3d 878
    , 891 n.3 (7th Cir. 2001).
    14                                                   No. 20-2641
    But the Court of Appeals rejected this argument, concluding
    that the asserted errors, “whether considered individually or
    together, do not convince us [that Hodkiewicz] is entitled to a
    new trial on the remaining seven counts.”
    We, like the district court, think this conclusion was “one
    of several equally plausible outcomes.” Hall v. Washington, 
    106 F.3d 742
    , 749 (7th Cir. 1997). While the trial ultimately came
    down to a contest of credibility, as the district court explained,
    “the evidence of credibility was voluminous,” and the jury is
    not reasonably probable to have reached a different verdict
    “[e]ven if counsel might have somewhat undermined S.P.’s
    credibility or the state’s case by doing everything Hodkiewicz
    suggests he should have.” Thus, “[e]ven when viewed cumu-
    latively, the alleged errors in the defense attorney’s perfor-
    mance did not so influence the proceedings to suggest that
    ‘but for the counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different.’” United States v. Jack-
    son, 
    983 F.2d 757
    , 762 (7th Cir. 1993) (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    ).
    Ultimately, even if the jury conceivably could have decided
    differently if counsel performed as Hodkiewicz wishes he
    had, “[t]he likelihood of a different result must be substantial,
    not just conceivable.” Harrington, 
    562 U.S. at 112
    . Fairminded
    jurists could agree with the Wisconsin Court of Appeals that,
    given all the evidence presented at trial, Hodkiewicz failed to
    meet this standard.
    III. CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Hodkiewicz’s pe-
    tition for a writ of habeas corpus.