Kubsch v. Superintendent
Filing
33
OPINION AND ORDER DENYING 16 Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus. Signed by Chief Judge Philip P Simon on 12/2/2013. (kds)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
SOUTH BEND DIVISION
WAYNE KUBSCH,
Petitioner,
v.
SUPERINTENDENT,
Indiana State Prison,
Respondent.
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CAUSE NO. 3:11CV42-PPS
DEATH PENALTY CASE
OPINION AND ORDER
Petitioner Wayne Kubsch was sentenced to death following his conviction for the
murders of his wife, his step-son, and his wife’s ex-husband. The procedural history of the
prosecution is complicated in that it involves two trials and two convictions of all three murders.
After Kubsch was convicted and sentenced to death in the first trial in August 2000, the Indiana
Supreme Court reversed and remanded for a new trial based on the improper admission into
evidence of recordings of Kubsch’s police interviews in which he invoked his right to silence.
Kubsch v. State (Kubsch I), 784 N.E.2d 905 (Ind. 2003). In the second trial, Kubsch was again
found guilty of all three murders.
The case against Kubsch was entirely circumstantial. There was no eyewitness, no DNA
evidence, no fingerprint testimony, indeed no forensic evidence at all that linked Kubsch to the
murders. There was, however, moderately strong evidence of motive and opportunity. But most
damning to Kubsch was a series of lies, inexplicable omissions, and inconsistencies in what
Kubsch told the police and later testified on the witness stand, and these statements – in
conjunction with a few pieces of circumstantial evidence – are what almost assuredly got Kubsch
convicted.
At sentencing, Kubsch fired his lawyers and proceeded pro se. He told the jury that if
they thought he did the heinous crimes for which he was convicted – and they obviously did
since that was the verdict they just reached – then he deserved the death penalty. Since there
was no evidence presented to contradict the State’s request for the death sentence, that is
precisely what the jury recommended, and that is what the judge imposed in April of 2005.
Kubsch has unsuccessfully challenged his second conviction and sentence on direct
appeal through the Indiana courts, and also by a petition for post-conviction relief. Kubsch v.
State (Kubsch II), 866 N.E.2d 726 (Ind. 2007); Kubsch v. State (Kubsch III), 934 N.E.2d 1138
(Ind. 2010). Now before me is Kubsch’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, filed pursuant to 28
U.S.C. §2254.
The facts as detailed below principally come from the state court opinions and will
provide an overview of the factual background of this depressing case. The facts specific to any
particular claim are discussed in more detail in the section of the opinion addressing that claim.
One other caveat: because much of the analysis in this opinion involves a determination of
whether certain trial errors prejudiced Kubsch, and because in an entirely circumstantial case
like this one it is difficult to determine prejudice unless one endeavors to read the entirety of the
trial transcript, that is what I have done. As a result, some of the facts detailed below come
directly from that trial transcript. And as one might expect, the facts are exceedingly grim.
2
Factual Background
Wayne Kubsch and his wife Beth lived in Mishawaka, Indiana with Beth’s 12-year-old
son, Anthony Earley. Beth also had an 11-year-old son, Aaron Milewski, but Aaron lived in
South Bend (the next town over) with his dad, Rick Milewski. Rick is Beth’s ex-husband.
Friday, September 18, 1998, was Beth Kubsch’s birthday. Anthony attended an after-school
dance that day, and Beth was scheduled to pick him up at 4:45 p.m. Because Beth failed to
appear at the school, Anthony got a ride home with a friend; he arrived home about 5:30 and saw
two cars in the driveway. One was Beth’s and the other Rick’s. Inside, it appeared that no one
was home, but Anthony saw signs of a struggle and blood on the floor of his mother’s bedroom.
Checking the basement, Anthony found a horror scene. Lying there were the bodies of his
former step-dad, Rick, and his step-brother, Aaron. Rick had a knife protruding from his chest.
Autopsy results later indicated that both Aaron and Rick had been shot in the head; Aaron had
been stabbed 22 times. Anthony ran to a neighbor’s home, and the police were called.
Arriving on the scene at approximately 5:45, the Mishawaka Police Department cordoned
off the house with crime scene tape. Beth’s whereabouts were as yet unknown. Wayne Kubsch
arrived home at approximately 6:45, and after being told what had been found, had to be
restrained from entering the house. Wayne was escorted to the Special Crimes Unit in South
Bend for questioning by detectives Wayne Samp and Mark Reihl. The interview was recorded
by both video and audio, and was completed before 9:00 p.m. when Kubsch put a halt to the
questioning and left the police station.
A short while later, investigators at the house notified the detectives that evidence
technicians had found Beth’s body. She too was found in the basement but she was secreted in a
3
“fort” Anthony had constructed under the stairs using old blankets. Beth was “hog-tied” with
duct tape, her head was bound in tape and she had been stabbed 11 times. Officers were sent to
pick Kubsch back up and bring him back to the Special Crimes Unit for further questioning.
Again the interview was both videotaped and audio-recorded. Kubsch refused to talk but he did
sign a consent to search his vehicle.
The jury heard testimony from Wayne’s friend Dave Nichols and his then-girlfriend
(later wife) Gina DiDonato concerning a phone call from Wayne on the night of the murders.
According to Dave’s and Gina’s testimony, Wayne indicated to each of them that Beth was
“gone” by which they took him to mean that she was dead. This could have been viewed as
incriminating by the jury because Kubsch had not yet been notified by the police that Beth’s
body had been found under the basement stairs at the time he told this to Nichols and DiDonato.
[2005 Trial Tr. at 2456-57, 2923-24, 2934].1
Kubsch also told Dave Nichols that Rick and Aaron had been shot and stabbed. [Tr. at
2456]. This was highly incriminating because the fact that the two had been shot was not
discovered until their autopsies the next day. [Tr. at 1568.] The State argued that Kubsch could
not have known this important detail unless he was present when the fatal shots were fired.
Blood specimens were obtained from numerous locations throughout the Kubsch house
in the master bedroom, hallway, dining room, basement stairway and basement. Although there
were indications of a struggle between Beth and her attacker, all the specimens matched the
1
Most trial record citations will be to the 2005 trial. Citations to the transcripts of the
2001 trial and the post-conviction evidentiary hearing will be so indicated.
4
victims. A “presumptive test” for blood in the drain of the Kubsches’ shower could not be
confirmed by DNA testing due to the inadequate amount of the sample.
Kubsch had a significant motive for killing Beth. A $575,000 life insurance policy
recently obtained on Beth would get him out of the financial hole he was in. The financial
picture was bleak. Kubsch had in recent years purchased a number of rental real estate
properties, and owned 11 such properties in St. Joseph County. All of the properties had
substantial mortgages on them. In addition, Kubsch had run up substantial credit card debt. In
the Spring of 1998 Wayne refinanced a number of the rental properties in order to pay off credit
card debt in excess of $16,000. The refinancing involved closing costs of almost $25,000 and
increased Wayne’s mortgage debt to more than $426,000. [Tr. at 2800.] By August 1998,
Kubsch had accumulated another $23,000 in credit card debt through purchases and cash
advances, was falling behind on some of his mortgages, and was dangerously delinquent on the
real property taxes on his rental properties. [Tr. at 2799, 2802.]
As noted, in July 1998 Kubsch obtained a new life insurance policy on Beth, in the
amount of $575,000. At that time, Kubsch already had a $350,000 policy on his own life. [Tr. at
2725.] Kubsch met with his insurance agent about increasing the policy coverage. [Id.] Kubsch
testified that he applied to increase his own coverage but ultimately chose not to because the
premium was too high. [Tr. at 2726.] Kubsch repeatedly claimed that he was unaware of their
bleak financial situation. [Tr. at 2727, 2734, 2735, 2796, 2798, 2800-01, 2802-03, 2818.] But
this was difficult to square with the fact that he took care of the couple’s bills, he dealt with the
credit cards and lines of credit, and he was obviously aware enough of the financial scenario to
have engaged in all the refinancing earlier in the year. [Tr. at 2736, 2794, 2796, 2798, 2799.]
5
In addition to the coincidental procurement of the life insurance coverage and the
obvious and significant financial motive, Kubsch’s guilt was established by the slow-moving
accumulation of a glacier of circumstantial evidence. Although particular items of evidence
would be of little value considered in isolation, the sheer number of small indications consistent
with Kubsch’s guilt added up, and the glue that held that mosaic together came from Kubsch
himself – from contradictions in and inexplicable omissions from his statements to the police and
his courtroom testimony.
One piece of incriminating evidence related to the duct tape that was wrapped around
Beth’s head and was used to hog-tie her; a roll of tape was found at the top of the basement stairs
in the house and it matched the end of the tape that was wrapped around Beth. [Tr. at 1806,
1809.] Packaging from that type of duct tape was recovered from Kubsch’s car. [Tr. at 1807.]
Fibers matching carpet fibers from Wayne’s car were found on the roll of duct tape. [Tr. at 179495.] A receipt was found in Wayne’s car showing the purchase of duct tape three days before the
murders on September 15. [Tr. at 1622.] Kubsch’s car also contained the tags from a pair of fullface ski masks that were never found. [Tr. at 1620.]
Several witnesses testified that the sunglasses found by Beth’s body in the basement were
of a kind commonly worn by Kubsch. Witnesses who recognized them as a kind Kubsch wore
included Suzanne Hiatt (Beth’s sister) who said she was “100% sure” that the sunglasses
belonged to Kubsch. [Tr. at 2388.] Brad Hardy testified similarly. [Tr. at 2122.]2
2
It is true that other witnesses – Wayne’s ex-wife Tina Cothard [Tr. at 2632] and friend
Dave Nichols [Tr. at 2468] – testified that the sunglasses didn’t look like any they’d seen Wayne
wear.
6
The State’s theory of the case was that Kubsch killed his wife for the insurance money
and that while he was in the process of doing this, the other two victims (Aaron and Rick)
happened upon the scene. The State thus theorized that Kubsch killed Aaron and Rick to
eliminate them as witnesses. There was no forced entry into the Kubsches’ home. The house
was locked when Anthony arrived in the afternoon, meaning that whoever committed the
murders locked the doors on the way out. Only Wayne, Beth and Anthony had keys. There was
forced entry into the master bedroom, where the evidence suggested Beth had retreated after
being bloodied by an assault in the living room/dining room area, where the evidence indicated
that she was bashed in the head with a sauce pan from the kitchen. [Tr. at 1596, 1896, 1961.] The
prosecution argued that a stranger would likely have fled after assaulting Beth, rather than force
his way into the bedroom to continue the attack, later stabbing and binding Beth after moving
her to the basement, and then also stay to attack and murder Rick and Aaron.
The prosecution also argued that an intruder could be expected to leave a mess of trailed
footprints as he hurriedly exited the house across the bloody scene, but there were none. [Tr. at
1638-39.] The home telephone’s handset and the master bedroom television were gone, but
visible cash was left lying on top of a dresser. [Tr. at 1306.] The prosecution argued that items
taken were a clumsy attempt to make the crime look like a home invasion burglary gone wrong.
When he arrived at his home that evening, Wayne smelled fresh and clean [Tr. at 1362]
although he claimed to have been wearing the same clothes he’d worn all day in the un-airconditioned sawdust-filled cabinet shop from which the workers usually emerged sweaty and
dirty after a day’s work. [Tr. at 2765-66, 2018-20.] Neighbor Erin Honold testified to seeing
Wayne arrive at home before noon and get out of his Tracker, wearing clothes different from
7
those he said he’d worn that day. [Tr. at 2429-2431.] Erin described turquoise shorts, some of
which were recovered at the house in the aftermath of the murders, found on a chaise-lounge on
the Kubsches’ porch. [Tr. at 1605, 1608, 1631.] Honold testified that Wayne spent a little while
moving things around in the garage, then came back to his car on the driveway and looked back
and forth down the street in both directions before going back into the garage and entering the
house by the service door. [Tr. at 2432.]
Wayne’s videotaped interview with the police the night of the murders was played for the
jury. As noted above, at the time of the first interview, the bodies of Rick and Aaron had been
found in the Kubsches’ basement, but the police had not yet discovered Beth’s body under the
basement stairs and her whereabouts were unknown. In the videotape, Wayne appears
preoccupied and careful, not distraught or frantic. He made no reference to the search for his
missing wife, much less displayed any hurry or urgency. (Kubsch was unaware of the camera
recording him). Throughout the interview, he showed no emotion by his expression or voice, but
sat with his head down and his face hidden by his hands, not looking at the officer.
Another fact that the prosecution pointed to was Kubsch’s attempts to account for his
behavior at lunchtime on the day of the murders. He and Beth had planned to meet for lunch to
celebrate her birthday, but Wayne told her that morning that he didn’t think he’d be able to meet
because he had been late for work. [Tr. at 2749.] But Kubsch acknowledged going home on his
lunch hour, and that he did so after receiving permission to leave early so as to buy Beth a
birthday present. [Tr. at 3102, 3106.] Kubsch did leave 40 minutes early to take the extended
lunch period he’d been granted [Tr. at 2694, 2748], though instead of meeting Beth for lunch or
buying her a birthday present, he drove home, a greater distance from his workplace than the
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restaurant where they’d planned to meet. [Tr. at 2747-48.] Kubsch never explained why he let
the birthday lunch plans fall through and went home instead. [Tr. at 2749-50.] He said the
purpose was to surprise Beth and spend a little time with her, even though they wouldn’t have
time to go out for lunch. [Tr. at 2816-7.] But the prosecution claimed that this made no sense
because they would have had the same amount of time for lunch as they had earlier planned on,
and because Kubsch wasn’t sure that Beth would be at home; in fact, in his original statement to
police, he said that he called home on his way and Beth wasn’t there.
The night of the murders, when Kubsch was asked to account for his entire day, he told
the police he couldn’t get into the house when he came home at lunchtime because he didn’t
have his keys. [Tr. at 2695, 2742-43, 2744.] At trial he changed his story; he said he did go into
the house. By that time, Kubsch knew the police were aware he’d gone inside, because he had
returned a phone call to a finance company representative who had left a message that morning.
[Tr. at 2698, 2179, 2181-2.] The home telephone records showed the call at 11:37. [Tr. at 2699.]
In addition, the police found a receipt in Kubsch’s car from Beth’s visit to her credit union that
morning, which he must have gotten by picking it up inside the house. Trying to explain his
failure to provide the information earlier, Kubsch testified that he figured the police knew from
his indication that he’d gone into the garage that he was then able to get into the house itself
through the door that joined them. [Tr. at 2744.] But his responses the night of the murders
clearly indicated that he couldn’t and didn’t get into the house. So in essence, the prosecution
argued that Kubsch conformed his story at trial to the evidence.
Another change in Kubsch’s account of his day occurred with respect to his whereabouts
after work, obviously an even more critical period of time with respect to the murders. Kubsch
9
told the police on the night of the murders that he headed straight to Michigan after work and did
not go home. [Tr. at 2746.] But at trial, he testified that he did return home for a moment. This
admission came only after Kubsch found out that the police had obtained cell phone tower
records indicating that Kubsch made 14 calls in his local calling area between 1:53 and 3:18 p.m,
and one of the calls placed him right near his house at 2:51 pm. In other words, he couldn’t have
gone straight to Michigan after work, as he led the police to believe in his interview on the night
of the murders.
During his interview with the police Kubsch did not offer any concrete information that
he had about Beth’s whereabouts the day of the murders, such as that she had visited her credit
union at the time indicated on the receipt Wayne had in his car. He spoke only generally as to
what Beth “usually” did after getting off work on a payday Friday, but he did not outline what
the evidence showed Kubsch knew she actually did that day – going to the credit union with her
paycheck and visiting the credit counseling agency to make a payment. In addition, Kubsch
testified at trial that during a phone conversation with Beth at 1:15 or 1:30 she told him that she
was going out to get something to provide as a snack for the field trip she and Aaron were going
on the next day. [Tr. at 2791-92.] But Kubsch never told the police this information on the night
of the murders, even though his wife was missing under very ominous circumstances. [Tr. at
2792.] The State thus argued that Kubsch did nothing to assist the police with reconstructing his
wife’s movements and whereabouts on the day of the murders.
An additional mismatch in Kubsch’s stories occurred in conversations with his motherin-law. Beth’s mother, Diane Rasor, testified that when she talked to Kubsch on the afternoon of
the murders, she mentioned to Kubsch that she hadn’t been able to get in touch with Beth that
10
day. [Tr. at 2348-49.] Kubsch reassured her, telling her that he knew from his telephone calls
with Beth during the day that she was running a number of errands and thus was not at home to
answer the phone. [Tr. at 2350.] Yet several days later Kubsch told Rasor that he didn’t talk to
Beth the day she was killed and he wished that he had. [Tr. at 2350-51.]
In the end, the State argued, and the jury accepted, that Kubsch’s many misstatements
and odd omissions were actually attempts at misdirection. This, in combination with the
incriminating circumstantial evidence, led to his conviction on three counts of murder. After
exhausting all of his state remedies, Kubsch now seeks habeas relief.
Federal Habeas Corpus Standards
When a state prisoner challenges his confinement via habeas corpus, the petition may be
granted only where a state court’s handling of the case “was contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme
Court” or “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented.” 28 U.S.C. §2254(d); see also Griffin v. Pierce, 622 F.3d 831, 841 (7th Cir. 2010).
A state court‘s decision is “contrary to” clearly established federal law when the court
applies a rule in a way that contradicts the law as set forth by the Supreme Court or when the
state court reaches a different result from a Supreme Court decision on facts materially
indistinguishable from the Supreme Court case. Badelle v. Correll, 452 F.3d 648, 654 (7th Cir.
2006). On the “unreasonable application” prong, a state court unreasonably applies federal law
if it identifies the correct legal principle but unreasonably applies it to the facts of the case.
Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 407 (2000); Goudy v. Basinger, 604 F.3d 394, 399 (7th Cir.
2010). Unreasonable application of federal law for §2254(d) purposes is “not just incorrect, but
11
also unreasonable, ‘that is, lying well outside the boundaries of permissible differences of
opinion.’” Goudy, 604 F.3d 399 (quoting Toliver v. McCaughtry, 539 F.3d 766, 774 (7th Cir.
2008)).
Kubsch raises seven issues in his habeas petition, with one of those issues – ineffective
assistance of counsel – having eleven subparts. I will address each issue below in the order in
which Kubsch presented them to me in his petition.
Claim I – 5th Amendment Right to Remain Silent
The parties disagree about the nature of Kubsch’s Claim I, or at least the correct way to
analyze it. Kubsch contends that it is a claim governed by the Fifth Amendment and Miranda.
The State says it is a straight-forward Fourth Amendment issue dressed up to look like a Fifth
Amendment claim. As Kubsch puts it, his “rights under the Fifth Amendment were violated
when the police re-initiated questioning of him after he asserted his right to remain silent,” in
violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966) and Michigan v. Mosley, 423 U.S. 96, 104
(1975). [DE 16 at 16.] Kubsch goes on to assert that the “resulting search of [his] car was the
fruit of this illegal interrogation.” Id. Unfortunately, for Kubsch, whether his claim is analyzed
under the Fourth Amendment or under the Fifth Amendment, he loses either way. I will take up
the Fifth Amendment issue first.
The Fifth Amendment guarantees that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal case
to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. amend. V. That privilege against selfincrimination guarantees a person under custodial interrogation “the right ‘to remain silent
unless he chooses to speak in the unfettered exercise of his own will.’” Miranda, 384 U.S. at 460
(quoting Mallow v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1, 8 (1964)).
12
Because Claim I is ultimately about the consent to search Kubsch’s car as opposed to any
other statement obtained from Kubsch during interrogation, the State cites United States v.
McClellan, and other cases like it, in which the Seventh Circuit reaffirmed that “a request for
‘consent to search is not interrogation within the meaning of Miranda,’ because the giving of
such consent is not a self-incriminating statement.” United States v. McClellan, 165 F.3d 535,
544 (7th Cir. 1999) (quoting United States v. Shlater, 85 F.3d 1251, 1256 (7th Cir. 1996)); see
also United States v. Smith, 3 F.3d 1088, 1098 (7th Cir. 1993). So even if the conduct of the
agents leading up to the request for consent amounted to custodial interrogation for Miranda
purposes, the Seventh Circuit has said that “the request for consent to search can be properly
separated from whatever illegal interrogation that might have preceded it, thereby making the
consent constitutionally valid.” McClellan, 165 F.3d at 544.
In any event, Kubsch was not “in custody” for Miranda purposes when he signed the
consent to search. As the Indiana Supreme Court succinctly noted: “[N]o reasonable person in
Kubsch’s position would have believed that he was under arrest. Not only did he have reason to
believe he could leave, he was unrestrained and actually did leave, after both the first and second
interview.” Kubsch I, 784 N.E.2d at 917.
The facts support the Indiana Supreme Court’s conclusion. Kubsch had been interviewed
earlier in the evening when the police were aware of only two bodies in the home, those of Rick
and Aaron. Kubsch had been told then that he was not under arrest but he had been given the
Miranda warnings anyway. After Kubsch indicated that he did not want to talk with the officers
anymore but wanted to talk to his wife’s mother, he left the interview room and ultimately the
police station. Later, after the police discovered Beth’s body, an officer was sent to find Kubsch.
13
This was the same officer who had driven Kubsch to the police station from the crime scene,
Sergeant Ravotto. Ravotto pulled up next to Kubsch as he was walking down the street, rolled
down the squad car’s window and asked Kubsch if he could get back in and go back to the police
station.
No restraint or force was used. Kubsch opened the door himself and got back in the
squad car’s backseat, where he had ridden earlier. Back at the station, Kubsch was left
unguarded in a lobby for a few minutes before he was shown to an interview room. The same
investigators as before – Captain Samp and Sergeant Reihl – talked to Kubsch again. Kubsch
told them he did not want to answer questions. Reihl then asked Kubsch for permission to search
his 1994 Geo Tracker. Kubsch immediately agreed and signed the consent to search form after it
was reviewed with him by Samp. Afterward, in short order, Captain Samp told Kubsch that Beth
was dead, Kubsch reiterated that he didn’t want to answer any more questions and for the first
time added that he didn’t want to talk without an attorney. No further questioning occurred
(other than clarification as to the Tracker’s keys) and Kubsch was free to go.
On these facts, the Indiana Supreme Court’s conclusion is unassailable that Kubsch was
unrestrained and had no reason to believe he could not leave. Kubsch’s best arrow is the weak
one that he rode in the backseat of the squad car which did not allow him to open the doors from
the inside. But when he voluntarily got into the squad car and was left alone in the station lobby
after leaving the squad car, it is clear that he was not being held or restrained. So even if
Miranda could come into play with respect to a request for consent to search, its holding is not
applicable here where Kubsch was not subject to a custodial interrogation. There is nothing
14
unreasonable about the Indiana Supreme Court’s application of Miranda’s custody requirement
that would mandate the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Kubsch fares no better if the issue is construed as a Fourth Amendment claim because
any such claim is barred by Stone v. Powell, 428 U.S. 465 (1976). Stone holds that “where the
State has provided an opportunity for full and fair litigation of a Fourth Amendment claim, a
state prisoner may not be granted federal habeas corpus relief on the ground that evidence
obtained in an unconstitutional search or seizure was introduced at his trial.” Id. at 494. Kubsch
responds by invoking Withrow v. Williams, 507 U.S. 680, 683 (1993), in which the Supreme
Court held that “Stone’s restriction on the exercise of federal habeas jurisdiction does not extend
to a state prisoner’s claim that his conviction rests on statements obtained in violation of the
safeguards mandated by Miranda.” Here, the gist of Kubsch’s Claim I is not any incriminating
statement obtained from him, but the consent to search, which as demonstrated above is not itself
a “statement” for purposes of Miranda analysis. Ultimately, then, as is clear from Kubsch’s
briefing, Claim I rests on the assertion that the incriminating fruits of the tainted search were
used against him at trial to obtain his conviction. But Stone held that “federal habeas review is
not available to a state prisoner alleging that his conviction rests on evidence obtained through
an unconstitutional search or seizure” where the Fourth Amendment claim was fully and fairly
litigated in the state courts, as it was here. Withrow, 507 U.S. at 682-83.
In sum, neither Fourth Amendment principles nor Fifth Amendment principles entitle
Kubsch to relief on Claim I of his petition.
15
Claim II – Due Process & Conflict of Interest Regarding Prosecutor Dvorak
Brad Hardy was a friend of Wayne Kubsch’s who came forward two days after the
murders to tell police that at lunchtime on the day of the murders he accompanied Kubsch to his
home, where Hardy sneaked through the woods behind the house to see if Beth was home,
ostensibly because Wayne wanted to decorate the house for Beth’s birthday that day. Hardy also
reported that later in the afternoon, Kubsch stopped by Hardy’s house briefly to ask Hardy if he
wanted to go to dinner with the Kubsches. Hardy further told police that the day after the
murders, Wayne asked Hardy not to reveal to the police that he had been with Kubsch on the day
of the murders. Several weeks later, three credit cards of Beth’s were found in woods near
Hardy’s home.
Hardy’s deposition was taken on April 11, 2000, at which time he appeared with attorney
Michael Dvorak acting as his counsel. In May 2000, Hardy was charged with Conspiracy to
Commit Murder and Assisting a Criminal, charges arising out of the murder of Beth Kubsch.
Hardy testified in Kubsch’s first trial on June 8, 2000. Two years later, the charges against
Hardy were voluntarily dismissed by the State on May 6, 2002.
On September 30, 2003, after Kubsch’s first appeal resulted in a remand for a new trial,
he filed a motion for the appointment of a special prosecutor because Hardy’s lawyer, Michael
Dvorak, had been elected prosecutor of St. Joseph County in November 2002 and was sworn into
office in January 2003. The motion for a special prosecutor was denied, and Kubsch now claims
that his due process rights were violated because his case was prosecuted by Dvorak who
Kubsch claims had a conflict of interest.
16
The State argues that federal habeas review is barred because on direct appeal the Indiana
Supreme Court disposed of this claim on an adequate and independent state ground, namely
waiver of the claim. But the opinion doesn’t invoke any such doctrine, much less “clearly and
expressly.” Pole v. Randolph, 570 F.3d 922, 937 (7th Cir. 2009); see also Harrison v. McBride,
428 F.3d 652, 664 (7th Cir. 2005) (“that an express finding of waiver is not present dooms this
argument”). Instead the Indiana Supreme Court acknowledged but dismissed the federal due
process claim that Kubsch was denied trial at the hands of a disinterested prosecutor, finding that
Kubsch failed to make “convincing arguments regarding his due process claims.” Kubsch II,
866 N.E.2d at 734 and n.6. This was a rejection of the claim on the merits, not based on waiver.
The United States Supreme Court held that “[w]hen a federal claim has been presented to a state
court and the state court has denied relief, it may be presumed that the state court adjudicated the
claim on the merits in the absence of any indication or state-law procedural principles to the
contrary.” Harrington v. Richter, 131 S.Ct. 770, 784-85 (2011). So the Indiana Supreme Court’s
denial of Kubsch’s federal claim is now subject to the deferential standard of review found in
§2254(d).
Under §2254(d)(1), relief is available only if the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision “was
contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” In his opening brief, Kubsch makes no
attempt to identify controlling federal principles governing his conflict of interest claim. The
State says that is because no such clearly established federal law exists. [DE 22 at 14.]3 In his
3
Citations to the record are to the page number assigned by ECF rather than to any internal
page number within the document.
17
traverse, Kubsch points to Young v. United States, 481 U.S. 787 (1987), as the “clearly
established federal law on this point,” and argues that the standard is whether, because of duties
arising from his prior representation of Hardy, Dvorak had a “personal interest in the outcome of
the litigation.” [DE 26 at 19.]
In Young, the Supreme Court held that “counsel for a party that is the beneficiary of a
court order may not be appointed to undertake contempt prosecutions for alleged violations of
that order.” 481 U.S. at 790. The lengthy discussion examines the “requirement of a
disinterested prosecutor,” and relies largely on case law applying federal constitutional
principles. Id. at 807-12. But because the matter arose in federal court and concerned review of
the propriety of a federal district court’s appointment of a particular attorney to prosecute a
contempt, the majority opinion made it clear that it was “rely[ing] on our supervisory authority
[over the lower federal courts] to avoid the necessity of reaching any constitutional issues.” Id.
at 810, n. 21. As a result, Young did not establish any constitutional standards that have
application to Kubsch’s prosecution in the state courts of Indiana. The Indiana Supreme Court’s
rejection of Kubsch’s due process claim based on Young was therefore not an unreasonable
application of any clearly established federal law as determined by the U.S. Supreme Court, and
under §2254(d) this federal court can’t grant relief on the claim.
But even if I attempted to apply the “personal interest” standard that Kubsch extracts
from Young, Kubsch does not succeed. Without clearly identifying Dvorak’s conflicting
“personal interest” in the outcome of the litigation, Kubsch’s argument flounders from one
notion to another in an attempt to demonstrate a conflict of interest between Dvorak’s “duties to
his former client Hardy and his present client, the State” that had a detrimental impact on
18
Kubsch. [DE 26 at 19.] Kubsch does not attempt to show that Dvorak received any confidential
information from Hardy and later used it without Hardy’s consent to assist the prosecution of
Kubsch. At the hearing on the motion for appointment of a special prosecutor, Hardy waived his
attorney/client privilege as to the question in a colloquy with the court, and the testimony of both
Dvorak and Hardy was that Hardy had confided nothing to Dvorak that was additional to or
different from his many statements in the public record. Hearing Transcript of 10-31-03 at 47,
RR.9-11; at 48, RR. 5-15. The state court judge who denied the motion for appointment of a special
prosecutor credited this testimony, noting that no other evidence or testimony was offered to
contradict it. Id. at 82, RR. 14-23.
Defense counsel appeared to concede that there would be no actual conflict unless Hardy
was called in the second trial and offered different testimony predicated on confidential
information previously known by Dvorak (but presumably not remembered by him at the time of
the motion hearing). Id. at 65, RR.10-19. But that never happened.
So Kubsch is left to argue that Dvorak’s conflict made him less amenable to plea
negotiations. The suggestion is that to negotiate with Kubsch would have been adverse to the
interests of Hardy, but how and why that would have been so is entirely unclear. By the time
Dvorak took office, the charges against Hardy had been dismissed, based on the conclusion of
the former prosecutor that “the facts do not warrant prosecution.” Hearing of Oct. 31, 2003,
State’s Exh. 3. Morever, Kubsch never expressed any interest in accepting a plea agreement and
there is no suggestion (or evidentiary support for a suggestion) that Kubsch ever had a change of
heart on this issue. Transcript of Oct. 31, 2003 Hearing at 60, RR.12-14; at 69, RR.7-10. Kubsch is
unable to demonstrate that Dvorak had any personal interest that impaired potential plea
19
negotiations, and as the Indiana Supreme Court observed, “one cannot be unfairly denied
something that he did not want.” Kubsch II, 866 N.E.2d at 733-34.
Kubsch offers the observation that if “Dvorak were to seek out Kubsch’s cooperation to
supply information against Hardy he would...violate his ethical obligations owed to his former
client.” [DE 26 at 22.] This is true as far as it goes, but there is no indication that such
cooperation was warranted by the investigation. As mentioned, the charges against Hardy had
been dismissed for lack of factual support eight months prior to Dvorak taking office. Kubsch
offers no basis for an obligation to re-open the closed investigation of Hardy with respect to the
crimes for which Kubsch had already been convicted once. This angle of attack does not support
a conclusion that Dvorak had a personal interest that interfered with the exercise of his
prosecutorial authority or discretion in a way that unfairly disadvantaged Kubsch.
Kubsch also points to the grant of use immunity to Hardy for his trial testimony. But the
immunity was granted in the first trial by the prosecutor who preceded Dvorak. When the
exercise was repeated in the second trial, the record reflects several times (without dispute by
Kubsch’s counsel) that Hardy had “never changed his story” throughout his multiple videotaped
interviews with police, his deposition testimony and his trial testimony. [Tr. at 2169, 2172, 2236,
2238.] That Dvorak had previously represented Hardy is not shown to have played any role or
made any difference in either the grant of use immunity or in Hardy’s testimony compared to the
first trial.
To sum up: perhaps it would have been prudent for Dvorak to step aside and ask for the
appointment of a special prosecutor. But Kubsch has failed to show that lingering duties of
Dvorak to Hardy played a role in any prosecutorial decision against Kubsch. And more to the
20
point, he is unable to demonstrate that any federal law clearly established by the U.S. Supreme
Court was misapplied by the Indiana Supreme Court when it denied the claim relating to
Dvorak’s alleged conflict. Claim II is therefore denied.
Claim III – Brady Violation
Prosecutors have a constitutional obligation to disclose exculpatory evidence to the
defense. Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). This includes favorable evidence material to
either guilt or punishment, including impeachment evidence. United States v. Villasenor, 664
F.3d 673, 683 (7th Cir. 2011); United States v. Wilson, 481 F.3d 475, 480 (7th Cir. 2007).
Kubsch contends that the Indiana courts improperly rejected his Brady claim based on
information the prosecutor had from Hardy’s defense lawyer, that was not turned over to
Kubsch. Kubsch now claims that this violation of Brady entitles him to habeas corpus relief.
The supposedly exculpatory evidence that Kubsch now claims was kept from him was a
letter that Brad Hardy’s lawyer, Mike Dvorak, had sent to the prosecutor after the first trial. (As
discussed above, Dvorak was later elected prosecutor of St. Joseph’s County and was in office
during Kubsch’s second trial). Here is how the issue developed: during the PCR proceedings,
Kubsch learned that Mr. Dvorak had sent a letter to the prosecutor in June of 2000 after
Kubsch’s first trial, informing him of two pieces of information that Dvorak had received from
Hardy. First, Dvorak disclosed that Hardy remembered that a day or two prior to the murders he
and Darin Polachek were playing basketball in Kubsch’s driveway. The potential significance of
this is that Polachek drove a brown and tan sedan and a witness at the first trial (Kathy
Kruszewski) said that she saw a dark sedan speeding down the street where the Kubsch house
was located on the afternoon of the murders. Second, Dvorak disclosed in his letter that Hardy
21
had been in a car accident a few years before the murders and had filed a civil lawsuit relating to
that accident. According to Dvorak’s letter, Hardy received a substantial settlement from the
lawsuit and a portion of the settlement proceeds was compensation for diminished mental
capacity resulting from the accident. Neither of these bits of information was shared with
Kubsch’s lawyers prior to trial. As mentioned, it only came to light during the PCR proceedings
after Kubsch was convicted at his second trial.
In his opening brief, Kubsch argued that AEDPA applied and that the Indiana courts’
decision was contrary to or involved an unreasonable application of Supreme Court authority, or
was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. But in his traverse, Kubsch reversed
course and he now claims that the AEDPA standard does not apply because the Indiana Supreme
Court failed to fully adjudicate his Brady claim. Kubsch argues that the Indiana Supreme Court
treated the claim as one based on newly discovered evidence under state law, and failed to fully
consider the matter under the standards of Brady. According to Kubsch this means that I am not
constrained by the deferential standard of §2254(d) in reviewing the issue. Because this
argument was not made in the opening brief, the State has not had an opportunity to respond to it
in writing.
In Harrington v. Richter, 131 S.Ct. 770 (2011), the Supreme Court held that deference is
due to a state court’s determination of an issue under § 2254(d)(1) even where “the state court
relief is denied without an accompanying statement of reasons.” Id. at 780. In other words, the
Court “endorsed a presumption that such a resolution was on the merits unless ‘there is reason
to think some other explanation for the state court’s decision is more likely.’” Brady v. Pfister,
711 F.3d 818, 825 (7th Cir. 2013) (quoting Richter, 131 S.Ct. at 785)). Then earlier this year, the
22
Supreme Court said that merely mentioning a federal claim “in passing in a footnote” may be
enough to rebut the presumption that a state court adjudicated an issue on the merits and thus
could lead to de novo review as opposed to review based on AEDPA deference. Johnson v.
Williams, 133 S.Ct. 1088, 1096 (2013); see also Brady, 711 F.3d at 825.
That raises a concern in this case because in the appeal from the denial of his PCR, the
Indiana Supreme Court initially identified the claim as one under Brady. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d
at 1145. But shortly thereafter the Court indicated that it believed that Kubsch intended to raise
the matter as a claim of newly discovered evidence. Id. The Court then set out the standards for
a Brady claim but relegated the discussion to a footnote, id. at n. 4, thus raising the question of
whether this is enough to rebut the presumption established in Richter that a state court decided
the issue on the merits. See Johnson, 133 S.Ct. at 1096.
After thoroughly considering the matter, I find that Kubsch fails to rebut the presumption
that the Indiana Supreme Court adjudicated the Brady issue on the merits because, ultimately, it
rejected both the state law claim of newly discovered evidence and the federal Brady claim on
the basis of a common consideration between the two analyses, namely materiality. Kubsch III,
934 N.E.2d at 1145. I am not persuaded that the Indiana Supreme Court’s analysis entirely
shortchanged the dimensions of the federal Brady claim, so as to render AEDPA deference
inapplicable. The Indiana Supreme Court identified the claim as one under Brady, set out the
Brady standards, albeit in a footnote, and after examining the evidence stated its conclusion that
“the Brady claim also must fail.” Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1146. The extent to which the
analysis was commingled with a state law issue does not constitute a failure to address the
federal claim.
23
On the crucial element of materiality, the Indiana Supreme Court stated and applied the
federal standard, quoting United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985): “Evidence is
material [under Brady] ‘only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been
disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A “reasonable
probability” is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.’” Kubsch III,
934 N.E.2d at 1145, n.4. The Indiana Supreme Court’s reasoning wasn’t contrary to or an
unreasonable application of federal law because both pieces of evidence would have been of
negligible value to the defense.
First, as the thorough PCR opinion observed, the facts revealed in Dvorak’s letter – i.e.,
the information about Darin Polachek’s car and Brad Hardy’s head injury – were likely already
known to Kubsch himself. [DE 16-1 at 78.] The Polachek information offered in Dvorak’s letter
was based on a gathering at Kubsch’s own house just days before the murders, to which
Polachek had driven his 1978 tan-over-brown Oldsmobile. As for the information about Hardy’s
car accident, he and Kubsch had been friends since school days, including the time period during
which Hardy’s accident occurred. Hearing of Oct. 31, 2003, State’s Exh. 5 at 2. It is highly
unlikely that Kubsch was unaware of Hardy’s accident and any cognitive problems it was
alleged to have caused him.
More substantively, neither piece of information could reasonably be said to create a
probability of a different result in Kubsch’s trial. Kubsch grossly overstates the value of the
Polachek “lead” when he repeatedly characterizes it as “implicating” Polachek in the murders.
[DE 16 at 24; DE 26 at 27.] At best, it might have led to a suggestion that Polachek was seen
24
driving recklessly down Kubsch’s street on the afternoon of the murders – but even that strikes
me as a stretch.
At Kubsch’s first trial, the defense called witness Kathy Kruszewski, who testified that at
about 3:05 on the afternoon of the murders, a man driving a dark car turned south from the street
the Kubsch home was on onto another road in front of Kruszewski’s car, driving fast and without
slowing at the intersection. [2001Trial Tr. at 5021-23.] Several days later, after learning about
the murders, Kruszewski contacted the police about what she had seen, but the police did not
further interview her after her initial report by telephone. [Id. at 5024-25.] Kruszewski’s
testimony indicated that speeding in the neighborhood was a common occurrence. [Id. at 5026.]
She did not know the make or model of the car, could only say that it was dark in color, and was
unsure whether it had four doors. [Id. at 5028.]
Kubsch claims that this evidence somehow implicated Polachek in the murders. But the
problem is that Kubsch’s briefing before me contains no citation to the post-conviction record to
demonstrate what defense counsel might have done with the Polachek “tip” had they been told of
it. Because Mrs. Kruszewski’s testimony was so nebulous and the information the prosecution
received on Darin Polachek so sketchy, even the combination of the two does not yield anything
close to a reasonable probability that, had the information about Polachek’s two-tone car been
disclosed to the defense, the result of Kubsch’s murder trial would have been different. The
Indiana Supreme Court reached the same conclusion, and I see no erroneous or unreasonable
application of federal constitutional precedent in its determination. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at
1146.
25
Similarly, the information in Dvorak’s letter concerning Brad Hardy’s previous injury is
minimal. The letter stated that sometime in the 1990's, Hardy had been in a “serious automobile
accident and suffered head trauma,” and that a civil suit later settled was premised in part on
Hardy’s claim of “diminished mental capacity” as a result of the accident. [PCR Appendix at
447.] Kubsch contends that this information was material as impeachment of Hardy’s testimony.
The information does not create a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome
of Kubsch’s trial. This is because at trial Kubsch’s defense team availed itself of several other
means of impeaching Hardy’s account of events, and because, even armed with the Dvorak
letter, Kubsch has been unable to show little more than that Hardy’s memory of his earlier
accident was impaired. [PCR Transcript at 162-64.] The assertion that Hardy had suffered an
injury which “drastically impaired his memory” appears to be an unsupported exaggeration. [DE
16 at 24.]
Hardy’s credibility was thoroughly attacked at trial as Kubsch acknowledges in his
current briefing. For instance, Hardy acknowledged the limitations of his memory. [DE 26 at
30.] He was also confronted with inconsistencies in his story. Hardy testified that Kubsch did not
go in the house during their visit that day; but other evidence made it clear that Kubsch did in
fact go inside the home because Kubsch had made a phone call from the residence during the
same time frame. Id. In addition, Hardy’s estimates of the times of various occurrences were
inconsistent with his mother’s. Id. at 31. The minimal additional evidence known to the
prosecutor from Dvorak’s letter is not shown to have added sufficient fuel to the impeachment
fire to raise a reasonable probability of a different outcome in Kubsch’s trial.
Here’s how the Indiana Supreme Court viewed the issue:
26
Regarding Hardy’s head injury and alleged memory impairment, Kubsch provided
no documentation or substantiation of the injury or any lasting effects from the
accident that would have affected Hardy’s testimony. Kubsch additionally failed to
establish what impact any impairment to Hardy’s memory would have had on the
trial. Although trial counsel were apparently unaware of any injury affecting
Hardy’s memory, counsel vigorously cross-examined Hardy and impeached Hardy’s
memory. Hardy’s mother corroborated the key points of Hardy’s testimony, and no
evidence has been presented to impeach her memory.
Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1146. The Indiana Supreme Court’s analysis of the claim is not
contrary to or an unreasonable application of Brady principles. Kubsch does not demonstrate
that he is entitled to habeas relief on Claim III.
Claim IV – Exclusion of the Prior Statement of Amanda Buck
Kubsch contends that his right to present a defense, as guaranteed by the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments, was violated when the trial court prevented him from presenting to the
jury a September 22, 1998 videotaped police interview with 9-year-old Amanda Buck, a
neighbor and friend of murder victim Aaron Milewski. In the statement Amanda said that on the
afternoon of the murders – September 18th – she had seen two of the victims, Aaron and his
father Rick, at their house at approximately 3:30 in the afternoon. (Amanda Buck lived across
the street.) If the jury believed Amanda’s statement, and two of the victims were in fact still
alive as of 3:30 pm, Kubsch could not have been responsible for the murders. This is because if
Aaron and Rick did not arrive at Beth’s house until after 3:30 pm, then Kubsch had an alibi.
There was conclusive proof that he was already on his way to Michigan to pick up his son by
that time.
Seven years later at the trial in 2005, the defense wanted to introduce Amanda’s
videotaped statement into evidence and here is how the issue played out: the then-15-year-old
Amanda Buck testified that she didn’t remember seeing Aaron the day of the murders, and later
27
that she “probably didn’t see him” that day. [Tr. at 2983, 2985.] She testified that she didn’t
even have a memory of being interviewed by the police on September 22, 1998. [Tr. at 2985. ]
Defense counsel wanted to ask her if she remembered telling Officer Reihl that she saw Aaron
on September 18th, 1998. [Tr. at 2988.] But the trial court sustained an objection and didn’t allow
counsel to pose that question to Amanda, apparently finding that it was an improper attempt to
refresh her recollection. [Tr. at 2989.] Defense counsel posed no further questions to Amanda
Buck at that time.
Later, defense counsel again attempted to offer the videotape of Amanda Buck’s
September 22, 1998 interview with the police as either a recorded recollection under Indiana
Evidence Rule 803(5) or as a prior inconsistent statement to Amanda’s testimony at trial. [Tr. at
3010-11, 3019-20.] While arguing over the admissibility of the videotape the prosecution
provided the court a recap of events subsequent to Amanda’s initial police interview: several
days after the interview, Detective Reihl was contacted by Amanda’s father, Lonnie Buck, with a
correction to Amanda’s statement. What Amanda had earlier said about seeing the victims on the
day of the murders, actually occurred the day before; Amanda had simply been mistaken. [Tr. at
3012-13.] Amanda’s mother also confirmed that Amanda saw the victims the day before the
murders, not the day of the murders. [Tr. at 3013, 3027.]
The trial court concluded that because Amanda testified at trial that she had no
recollection of giving the statement – she was nine years old after all and it was seven years
earlier – the statement could not be introduced because it wasn’t inconsistent with her trial
testimony. [Tr. at 3012, 3020.] The trial judge observed that the videotape “doesn’t aid the jury
in the disposition of this case unless the jury considers it substantive evidence.” [Tr. at 3029-30.]
28
The judge explained that Buck’s “credibility is not important when she says she remembers
nothing. She gave no substantive evidence in this case whatsoever.” [Tr. at 3031- 32.] As for
the recorded recollection theory, the judge rejected that as well because he concluded that Buck
did not “make” the record, which instead was made by the police, and she hadn’t “adopted” it.
[Tr. at 3033.]
On direct appeal, the Indiana Supreme Court rejected Kubsch’s evidentiary claims on
both bases, and also the related federal constitutional claim under Chambers v. Mississippi, 410
U.S. 284, 302 (1973). Kubsch II, 866 N.E.2d at 734-35. As for recorded recollection, the court
held that Buck’s failure to remember the recorded interview prevented her from vouching for the
accuracy of the recording, defeating the requirement that the recording be shown to reflect the
witness’s knowledge correctly. Id. at 735. As for prior inconsistent statement, the Indiana
Supreme Court found that the trial court was within its wide discretion in determining that
Amanda’s testimony that she could not remember the September 22nd interview was not a
positive statement and so did not provide the requisite degree of inconsistency with her statement
to the police. Id.
However, the court went on to note that at trial Buck also once offered testimony that she
“probably didn’t see [Aaron]” on the day in question. Because that more substantive statement
is contradicted by her September 22nd interview, the court concluded that Kubsch should have
been allowed to impeach Buck on the matter. Id. The error was nonetheless found to be
harmless because testimony from Amanda’s parents (as proffered by the prosecutor) would have
established that the sighting of Aaron and Rick had actually been the afternoon before the
murders. Id. In view of the availability of this testimony, the Indiana Supreme Court determined
29
that Amanda’s trial testimony did not likely contribute to Kubsch’s conviction, and so it was not
reversible error. Id.
In a footnote, the Indiana Supreme Court indicated that the availability of the parents’
testimony also defeated Kubsch’s federal constitutional claim that he was denied the right to
present a defense. Id. at n.7. This statement is made without further explanation other than a
supporting citation to Chambers, parenthetically noting that there the Supreme Court found a due
process violation where rules of evidence were applied to exclude “evidence found to be
trustworthy.” Id.
Once again, because the Indiana Supreme Court dealt with the Chambers claim only in a
footnote, it raises the question of whether the presumption that the federal claim was adjudicated
on the merits should be rebutted thus allowing for de novo review of the issue. Johnson v.
Williams, 133 S.Ct. at 1091. I don’t believe that Kubsch has rebutted the presumption that the
Indiana Supreme Court decided the Chambers issue on the merits just because the determination
is relegated to a footnote. This is not a case where the court rejected the claim because of “sheer
inadvertence.” Id. at 1097. Rather, the Indiana Supreme Court plainly considered the Chambers
issue but denied the claim because of the lack of trustworthiness of Amanda Buck’s interview
statement. Kubsch II, 866 N.E.2d at 735 n. 7. Although brief, the Indiana Supreme Court’s
treatment of the federal constitutional claim under Chambers expresses the court’s consideration
of the claim, the court’s analysis of the holding of Chambers, and the court’s rationale for
rejecting Kubsch’s claim. Id. Deference to this decision is thus appropriate under § 2254(d)(1).
As explored further below, Chambers stands for the proposition that, notwithstanding a
correct application of state criminal trial rules and procedures, the exclusion of critical evidence
30
bearing “persuasive assurances of trustworthiness” may in particular circumstances deprive a
defendant of a fair trial in violation of due process. Chambers, 410 U.S. at 302. The converse
principle appears to have been invoked by the Indiana Supreme Court here: because Amanda
Buck’s videotaped statement concerning seeing Aaron and Rick lacked trustworthiness in view
of the contrary statements of her parents, the exclusion of the evidence did not deprive Kubsch
of due process.
The constitutional principle Kubsch invokes is explored in a series of U.S. Supreme
Court opinions, including Chambers. Whether Chambers really was a one-off case of error
correction or whether it stands for something much broader has been the subject of some debate
by a fractured Supreme Court, see Montana v. Egelhoff, 518 U.S. 37 (1996), but more on that in
a moment. First, the history.
In 1967, in Washington v. Texas, 388 U.S. 14 (1967), the Supreme Court found that the
Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments were violated by a Texas law forbidding testimony for a
criminal defendant by his co-actors in the same crime. Discussing the constitutional
underpinnings of the claim, the Court wrote:
The right to offer the testimony of witnesses, and to compel their attendance, if
necessary, is in plain terms the right to present a defense, the right to present the
defendant’s version of the facts as well as the prosecution’s to the jury so it may
decide where the truth lies. Just as an accused has the right to confront the
prosecution’s witnesses for the purpose of challenging their testimony, he has the
right to present his own witnesses to establish a defense. This right is a fundamental
element of due process of law.
Id. at 19.
Six years later in Chambers, the Supreme Court found that, under certain facts and
circumstances, the application of state evidentiary rules to exclude trustworthy evidence
31
important to the defense can deprive a defendant of a fair trial in violation of his right to due
process. Chambers, 410 U.S. at 302. Defendant Chambers called a witness and introduced the
man’s sworn out-of-court confession to the murder Chambers was being tried for. Id. at 291.
After the prosecution elicited on cross-examination that the witness had repudiated the
confession, Chambers was not permitted to challenge the renunciation of the confession with
further examination of the witness, or by means of the testimony of three witnesses to whom the
man had admitted the crime. Id. The trial court’s ruling was an application of Mississippi’s rules
of evidence. Id. at 294.
Reviewing the matter on direct appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court held that given the
fundamental due process significance of the right to confront and cross-examine, “its denial or
significant diminution calls into question the ultimate ‘integrity of the fact-finding process’ and
requires that the competing interest be closely examined.” Id. Examining the competing
interests at issue as to the evidence in that case, the Court concluded that the importance of the
right of confrontation exceeded the somewhat dubious value of the otherwise valid state rules of
evidence. Insisting that it was “establish[ing] no new principles of constitutional law,” the court
held that “under the facts and circumstances of this case the rulings of the trial court deprived
Chambers of a fair trial.” Id. at 302-03.
In Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683 (1986), the Supreme Court gave further support to
the notion of a right to present a defense. In Crane the defendant was prevented from putting on
evidence suggesting that his confession was unreliable. The Court, relying in part on Chambers,
held that this prevented the defendant from offering a defense to the charge and that the
“exclusion of this kind of exculpatory evidence deprives a defendant of the basic right to have
32
the prosecutor’s case encounter and ‘survive the crucible of meaningful adversarial testing.’” Id.
at 690-91 (quoting United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656 (1984)). Such exclusion deprived
the defendant of a fair trial. Id. at 690.
Finally, as alluded to earlier, in Montana v. Egelhoff, 518 U.S. 37 (1996), the Supreme
Court splintered into five separate opinions attempting to apply Chambers to a Montana statute
disallowing voluntary intoxication to be considered as to mens rea. The plurality opinion by
Justice Scalia reversed the Montana Supreme Court’s opinion and reinstated Egelhoff’s
conviction, finding that the Montana statute’s voluntary intoxication rule, and its application to
Egelhoff, did not violate due process. The plurality referred to Chambers as “an exercise in
highly case-specific error correction,” and characterized Crane also as dealing with “the
exclusion of certain evidence in that case” where the “sole rationale for the exclusion...was
wrong.” Id. at 52, 53.
Each of these Supreme Court cases presented a direct appeal rather than collateral
review. In addition to the deferential standard of §2254(d) itself, the Supreme Court has clarified
that “in §2254 proceedings a court must assess the prejudicial impact of constitutional error in a
state-court criminal trial under the ‘substantial and injurious effect’ standard set forth in Brecht.”
Fry v. Pliler, 551 U.S. 112, 121 (2007) (referring to Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 638
(1993)). Under the Brecht standard, an error is harmless unless it had substantial and injurious
effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict. Fry, 551 U.S. at 116 (citing Brecht, 507
U.S. at 63 (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 776 (1946))).
The Seventh Circuit has grappled on a number of occasions in § 2254 cases with the
sticky intersection between state evidentiary rules on the one hand, and the principles of
33
Chambers on the other. When presented with the issue in Rice v. McCann, 339 F.3d 546 (7th
Cir. 2003), this is what the Seventh Circuit said:
Before we decide the reasonableness of the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in this
case, we note that we will not decide whether Pugh’s suppression hearing testimony
was in fact reliable enough to be admitted into evidence at Rice’s trial. Our doing
so would usurp the role of the state courts in determining the admissibility of
evidence at trial under state law, which we are not permitted to do under AEDPA.
... Instead, we may only consider whether it was unreasonable of the Illinois Supreme
Court to hold, in light of Chambers, that the exclusion of Pugh’s suppression hearing
testimony did not violate Rice’s due process right to present a defense and receive
a fair trial.
Id. at 549. The majority found that disagreement among the state courts on the evidentiary
question at issue supported the finding that the state supreme court’s ultimate decision was not
unreasonable, and had to be affirmed on habeas review in federal court.4
In another application of Chambers in a §2254 context, the Seventh Circuit clearly
framed the federal court’s limited review: “So the only question for us is whether the exclusion
of evidence was not just wrong, but whether it was unreasonable to say that it did not violate [the
petitioner’s] due process right to present a defense.” Morgan v. Krenke, 232 F.3d 562, 567 (7th
Cir. 2000). The Seventh Circuit gave complete deference to the state appellate court’s
determination that the evidence was properly excluded under state law: the “state court of
appeals said it was not [error]. That is the end of the matter of possible error based on the
measuring of the evidence against state law because state, not federal, courts decide these
things.” Id. Then the court went on to say this:
4
The dissenting judge was less reluctant to critique the state courts’ application of their
own state evidentiary rules. Finding that the exclusion of reliable evidence essential to the
defense was based “on an irrational ground,” the dissenting judge concluded that “the state
supreme court’s application of Chambers was unreasonable and the error was not a harmless
one,” such that Rice was entitled to a new trial. Rice, 339 F.3d at 552.
34
With that detour into Wisconsin law (which is not really our business) out of the
way, we finally arrive at what is our business. We must decide whether it is
unreasonable, given what the Supreme Court has said, for the Wisconsin Court of
Appeals to conclude that the exclusion of Morgan’s evidence did not deprive her of
her right to present a defense.
Id. at 569 (parenthetical in the original). The Seventh Circuit then concluded that it was not
unreasonable. Id.
In Kubsch’s view, Amanda’s 1998 statement that she had seen Aaron and Rick Milewski
across the street from her house between 3:30 and 3:45 p.m. on the day of the murders was
critical in light of evidence that Kubsch was already on his way to Michigan by that time and
thus couldn’t be responsible for the murders if Amanda was to be believed. Kubsch doesn’t
address the admissibility of the excluded evidence under the applicable evidentiary rules. He
instead argues that even if the trial court’s ruling was correct under Indiana’s rules of evidence, it
violated his due process rights under Chambers.
The question thus is whether the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision was either contrary to
Chambers or involved an unreasonable application of Chambers. And if it was unreasonable, is
any underlying constitutional error harmless under the Brecht standard – i.e., did it have a
substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict?
The Indiana Supreme Court rejected the Chambers claim because it determined that
contradictory “corrective” evidence from Amanda’s parents negated the trustworthiness of the
videotaped statement Amanda gave shortly after the murders. It is true that if Amanda had been
able to testify at trial to having seen Aaron and Rick at 3:30 on the day of the murders, that
testimony would have had obvious importance to the defense. But Amanda was unable to testify
to those facts because she simply didn’t remember it any longer. Moreover, she couldn’t vouch
35
for the truth of the statement she had made years earlier. And in any event, there would have
been contrary testimony from both of her parents to the effect that the 9-year-old Amanda was
mistaken; it was Thursday that she saw Aaron and Rick rather than Friday.
This makes the scenario distinguishable from Chambers, in which the excluded
testimony “bore persuasive assurances of trustworthiness” but was nonetheless excluded.
Chambers, 410 U.S. at 302. Crane, too, speaks of the exclusion of “competent, reliable
evidence.” Crane, 476 U.S. at 690. The statement of a 9-year-old child no longer supported by
her or any other witness is not readily described as competent and reliable. Given Amanda’s
inability to vouch for the earlier statement at the time of trial, and the available contradictory
rebuttal evidence, I am not persuaded that Amanda’s videotaped statement was shown to be
sufficiently reliable to support the invocation of Chambers.
An additional element of the Chambers analysis has recently been highlighted by the
Seventh Circuit, namely consideration of whether the exclusion of the evidence was arbitrary or
disproportionate to the evidentiary purpose advanced by the exclusion. Harris v. Thompson, 698
F.3d 609, 626 (7th Cir. 2012). This involves a balancing of the defendant's interest in the
evidence against “the state’s legitimate interests in promoting ‘fairness and reliability’ in
criminal trials.” Id. at 634 (quoting Crane, 476 U.S. at 690). Reliability of evidence is one of the
legitimate interests underlying the hearsay rule and the rules on impeachment by prior
inconsistent statement. Because Amanda Buck no longer vouched for the pivotal assertion of her
original statement, which had also been promptly corrected by her parents, I am not convinced
that the value of the videotaped statement to the defense “substantially outweighed the danger
36
that it would have injected inherently unreliable evidence into the trial.” Harris, 698 F.3d at
638.
I cannot conclude that the Indiana Supreme Court’s rejection of Kubsch’s Chambers
claim was unreasonable. And even assuming that the exclusion of Amanda’s statement was
constitutional error under the Chambers line of cases, Kubsch does not show that it was other
than harmless under the Brecht standard. Among the factors to be considered, the most
significant here are the relative weakness of the excluded testimony and the availability of
contradictory evidence. Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 684 (1986). The excluded
evidence was not live testimony subject to cross-examination, but a seven-year-old statement by
a 9-year-old girl who no longer remembered making the statement. The evidence was therefore
relatively weak, and it was made even weaker by the contradictory evidence of her own parents.
For all these reasons, Kubsch does not succeed in establishing a right to relief on Claim
IV concerning the exclusion of the videotape of Amanda Buck.
Claim V – Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
In Claim V, Kubsch brings eleven allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel in
violation of his rights under the Sixth Amendment. The governing standards were established in
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984): “a petitioner must show both that his counsel’s
performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional
norms, and that the deficient performance prejudiced his defense.” Griffin v. Pierce, 622 F.3d
831, 843 (7th Cir. 2010) (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688-93). With respect to Strickland's
prejudice component, a petitioner must show “that there is a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A
37
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” 466
U.S. at 694. In conducting the inquiry I need to look at counsel’s performance as a whole rather
than focus on a single mistake. Id. at 690; Ebert v. Gaetz, 610 F.3d 404, 411 (7th Cir. 2010).
In addition, the “extra layer of deference” under §2254(d) after AEDPA makes a
petitioner’s “uphill slope...even steeper” on an ineffective assistance claim. Ebert, 610 F.3d at
412. “Under AEDPA, establishing that a state court’s application of the Strickland standard was
‘unreasonable’ is a tall task, and ‘only clear error in applying Strickland will support a writ of
habeas corpus.’” McAfee v. Thurmer, 589 F.3d 353, 356 (7th Cir. 2009) (quoting Allen v.
Chandler, 555 F.3d 596, 600 (7th Cir. 2009)).
Kubsch has identified eleven separate instances which he claims show that his lawyers
were ineffective. I will take up each claim in the order in which Kubsch raised them in his
briefing before me and then consider whether the cumulative error requires the granting of the
writ.
Claim V(A): Impeachment of Tasha Penn Norman
In December 1998, two months after the murders, a witness named Tashana Penn
Norman reported first to Crime Stoppers and later told police that she had overheard a
conversation at the Hacienda Restaurant, in which a man seated behind her said he had hurt a
little boy but didn’t believe he would be caught. Norman testified at trial that a second man
seated in the booth had addressed the first speaker as “Kubsch” and later as “Wayne.”
Kubsch contends that his trial counsel failed to impeach Norman with three matters: (1)
her conviction on a theft felony, (2) evidence that, several months before the murders, Norman
38
had falsely reported a rape, and (3) testimony from the police officer who had investigated the
rape allegation as to Norman’s reputation for untruthfulness.
Considering this claim on Kubsch’s post-conviction appeal, the Indiana Supreme Court
noted the many ways in which defense counsel challenged Norman’s credibility: they got her to
admit that she had called Crime Stoppers twice before and collected rewards for those tips; they
cross-examined Norman about inconsistencies in her reports of the conversation in the
restaurant; they questioned her ability to have heard and seen what she claimed; and they called
five witnesses in an attempt to undermine Norman’s credibility. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 115051. Noting its previous holding “that the method of impeaching witnesses is a tactical decision
and a matter of trial strategy that does not amount to ineffective assistance,” the Supreme Court
concluded that the “post-conviction court’s determination that trial counsel adequately
impeached Norman’s credibility is not clearly erroneous.” Id. at 1151. This was not an
unreasonable application of Strickland.
As for the evidence of Penn Norman’s theft conviction, the failure to offer it appears to
have been a reasonable strategic decision. As detailed in the opinion denying the PCR, the
defense offered five witnesses at trial who thoroughly undermined Penn Norman’s credibility.
[DE 16-1 at 31-32.] Any more evidence could have been perceived as piling on. Andy
Hendricks testified that he heard Norman say that she had lied in court about a conversation she
overheard in the Hacienda restaurant, that she did so to get a large sum of money, and that she
had called Crime Stoppers three or four other times. [Tr. at 2963-64.] Chris Nemeth, the former
boyfriend who was with Norman in the Hacienda that night, testified that no one was in the
booth behind them in the restaurant, that Norman never told him about overhearing any such
39
conversation and that she did not seem upset or nervous. [Tr. at 2993-95.] The defense also
presented evidence that Norman knew that Kubsch was a suspect in the murder, having heard
about it from a man she worked for. [Tr. at 3083.] What’s more, the Hacienda waiter testified
that there were no patrons in the booth next to Norman’s and that, contrary to Norman’s
testimony about being upset by what she’d overheard, Norman had not asked to move from the
booth where she’d been seated. [Tr. at 3179.] Finally, another witness testified that Norman had
admitted to lying in court in a murder trial and doing it to collect a $1,000 reward. [Tr. at 3216.]
To put it bluntly, whatever credibility Norman may have had entering the courtroom was
entirely stripped from her by Kubsch’s defense team. As the post-conviction court said: “if the
testimony of the person [who] accompanied her to the restaurant, the staff who waited on her at
the restaurant and the people to whom she admitted she lied were not sufficient to undermine
Ms. Norman’s credibility, [it] seems unlikely a prior theft conviction and a police officer’s
opinion based on an unrelated matter would have led the jury to disbelieve Ms. Norman.” [DE
16-1 at 33.] One important strategic decision that a defense attorney must make is deciding when
enough is enough when it comes to impeachment. See United States v. Kozinski, 16 F.3d 795,
817 (7th Cir. 1994) (explaining that limits to otherwise extensive impeachment represent trial
strategy and are afforded enormous deference); Williams v. Chrans, 894 F.2d 928, 935 (7th Cir.
1990). In view of the thorough attack on Norman’s credibility by the defense, I cannot conclude
that the Indiana Supreme Court unreasonably applied Strickland under these circumstances.
As for the alleged false rape report made by Norman, defense counsel did attempt to
impeach her with this but the trial court excluded it under Ind.R.Evid. 608(b). [Tr. at 2328-29.]
The failure to pursue a line of testimony the trial court had already indicated it would not permit
40
was not deficient performance on the part of Kubsch’s lawyer. Kubsch argues that evidence of
the false rape report was admissible on the distinct theory of bias – that Norman had reason to
attempt to curry favor with the State by supporting the prosecution of Kubsch because she was
then at risk of prosecution based on her false report of rape. The post-conviction court rejected
this theory as “speculative and without support in the record.” [DE 16-1 at 32.] By the time of
trial in 2005, bias based on a fear of prosecution for having made a false police report some
seven years earlier would have been hard for a jury to swallow; it is simply too attenuated.
Finally, Kubsch argues that his lawyer should have called the police officer who took the
false rape report to testify to Norman’s propensity to lie. But as she testified at the PCR hearing,
the officer’s only knowledge of Norman’s “propensity for truthfulness was confined to her
investigation” of the rape report. [DE 16-1 at 32.] The trial court had already ruled that “the
police officer has to be able to say that she’s acquainted with the person’s reputation for truth
and voracity (sic) in the community, not based on one incident.” [Tr. at 2328.] The failure to
pursue a line of testimony the trial court had already (properly) indicated it would not permit was
not deficient performance.
In sum, the defense did a thorough job of attacking Norman’s story. The crossexamination challenged her account, questioned her motive for reporting the story to Crime
Stoppers, and highlighted her previous rewards for information given to law enforcement. The
defense also offered witnesses who explained where Norman might have gotten information
about the murders at Kubsch’s house, contradicted her account of the Hacienda incident, and
testified that she had admitted lying about it. Kubsch fails to demonstrate that counsel’s failure
to take additional measures constituted performance that fell below an objective standard of
41
reasonableness, or that such measures would have created a reasonable probability of a different
outcome at his trial. The Indiana Supreme Court’s rejection of this ineffective assistance claim –
on the basis that it was permissible trial strategy – was not an erroneous or unreasonable
application of the Strickland standards. United States v. Lindsay, 157 F.3d 532, 535-36 (7th Cir.
1998) (the strong Strickland presumption that counsel had good reasons for strategic decisions
on which impeachment witnesses to call dooms ineffective assistance claim).
Claim V(B): Testimony of Gina DiDonato
At trial the prosecution called Dave Nichols, a friend of Wayne and Beth Kubsch.
Nichols testified that on the night of the murders, he received a phone call from Kubsch at
approximately 8:00 p.m., in which Kubsch told him that Rick and Aaron had been shot and
stabbed, and that Beth was “gone,” which Nichols construed to mean that Beth was dead. [Tr. at
2455-56.] The testimony was significant because as of 8:00 p.m. on September 18, even the
police did not yet know that Rick and Aaron had been shot in addition to being stabbed, and they
had not yet found Beth’s body. Cross-examining Nichols, the defense raised questions about
confusion between what Kubsch said during the September 18 phone call and what Nichols
might have later heard from his girlfriend (by then wife) Gina DiDonato at some time after
September 18, based on statements made in Gina’s workplace, a restaurant frequented by police
officers. [Tr. at 2463-64.]
In its case-in-chief, the defense called Nichols back to the stand. He then testified on
direct examination that during the phone call the evening of September 18, Kubsch had told him
that Beth was gone. [Tr. at 2920.] On cross-examination, he confirmed that he understood
“gone” to mean that Beth was dead. [Tr. at 2923-24.] At a sidebar conference concerning
42
Nichols’ testimony, defense counsel indicated that Nichols was expected to testify that during
the September 18 telephone conversation Kubsch had not told him that Aaron and Rick were
shot. [Tr. at 2912.] This significant amendment of his earlier testimony never occurred in
Nichols’ testimony before the jury, however.
In an effort to minimize Nichols’ testimony, the defense called DiDonato as a witness.
DiDonato worked at a restaurant which used off-duty police officers as security on weekends.
One of these was a St. Joseph County officer named “Kevin” who worked at the county jail. [Tr.
at 2927.] DiDonato testified that in January 1999, she heard from Kevin at work that in the
county jail Kubsch was “bragging about shooting the son and the ex-husband in the mouth,” and
that she had passed that information on to her husband, Dave Nichols. [Tr. at 2930.] DiDonato
testified that on the night of the murders, she answered the phone at home between 8:30 and 9:00
p.m., and it was Wayne Kubsch looking for her husband. During the call, Kubsch told
DiDonato that Beth was “gone” and that she was “dead.” [Tr. at 2934.]
Kubsch now argues that counsel rendered ineffective assistance when they called
DiDonato as a witness and intentionally elicited testimony indicating that while in jail, Kubsch
bragged about murdering Rick and Aaron Milewski. In addition, Kubsch says his counsel failed
to address the prejudicial impact of the testimony by offering evidence in their possession that
the unwelcome substance of the testimony was in fact untrue – namely, that the jail officer
named Kevin denied having made such a statement and instead told police he’d told Gina that he
only knew what he read in the newspaper and that he’d heard that “Wayne had been bragging in
a restaurant.” [PCR Appendix at 457.] The Indiana Supreme Court disposed of the ineffective
assistance claim this way:
43
Regardless of whether DiDonato’s testimony was accurate, the use of her
testimony was a reasonable trial strategy. The State introduced evidence through
Nichols that Kubsch had shared details of the murders unknown to anyone other
than the killer at the time of the conversation. It was not unreasonable for counsel
to try to convince the jury that Nichols may have heard this information several
months later from a gossiping waitress. Furthermore by choosing not to call the
jailer to impeach DiDonato’s testimony that she heard a rumor at work, counsel
avoided reinforcing Nichols’ testimony that Kubsch was the source of the
information before police discovered Beth’s body or the gunshot wounds to
Aaron and Rick.
Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1153.
It is certainly true that based on Nichols’ testimony, the defense had to contend with the
jury’s potentially damning conclusion that at 8:00 p.m. on the night of the murders, Kubsch told
Nichols things only the murderer would know. They chose to respond by attempting to offer
“corrective” testimony from Nichols himself and from his wife (DiDonato) suggesting that
Nichols might have been confused about what (and when) he had been told about the murders.
Strickland’s performance prong carries a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct was
reasonable and that the “challenged action might be considered sound trial strategy.” Strickland,
466 U.S. at 689. Even so, not all strategies are created equal, and some are so poorly conceived
that they fall beyond the wide range of reasonable professional performance. This appears to
have been an example. To put DiDonato on the stand and have her testify that the defendant had
confessed to the murders while being held in jail was, to say the least, ill-conceived. Even if I
were inclined to give Kubsch’s counsel the benefit of the doubt and presume that their intention
was not to have DiDonato go quite that far (saying expressly what Kubsch was reported to have
said), such a presumption would be defeated by defense counsel having told the trial judge he
did mean to elicit the precise words she had heard. [Tr. at 2928-29.]
44
Because we are in the habeas context, my analysis must turn to the Indiana Supreme
Court’s reasoning. The Indiana Supreme Court concluded that: “It was not unreasonable for
counsel to try to convince the jury that Nichols may have heard this information several months
later from a gossiping waitress.” Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1153. That statement is true as far as
it goes, but it doesn’t mean that any attempt at achieving that goal was reasonable. Counsel
chose a risky course of having DiDonato testify about Kubsch’s incriminating statements while
in jail. This was done in an effort to plant the seed that Nichols may have learned the
incriminating information from someone other than Kubsch. But counsel could have achieved
the same aim by merely asking Nichols if he had later heard scuttlebutt from Gina, repeating
things she’d heard at work, and whether he might have been confusing what he’d heard that
night from Kubsch with what he heard much later from her. This approach would have avoided
the unreasonable risk that counsel took instead. For defense counsel to call a witness in their
own case-in-chief and to have that witness testify about an alleged confession the defendant
made while in custody is ineffective under almost any circumstance. I therefore find that the
Indiana Supreme Court’s assessment of counsel’s performance as it relates to DiDonato was an
unreasonable application of the performance prong of Strickland.
But even though I believe the Indiana Supreme Court’s conclusion about the performance
prong of Strickland was unreasonable, Kubsch is not entitled to habeas corpus relief on his
ineffective assistance claim unless he also meets the prejudice prong of the Strickland analysis.
The State’s cross-examination of DiDonato had her quickly repeat the damaging information,
that Kubsch had reportedly bragged about the shootings while in jail. [Tr. at 2930-31.] But the
entire cross-examination (12 lines of transcript) is so brief that it literally could not have taken
45
more than one minute. The follow-up questions from the jury all concerned DiDonato’s
testimony about the phone call from Kubsch the night of the murders, and so disclosed no focus
among the jurors on the report of Kubsch’s jailhouse claim of responsibility. The State made no
reference to this portion of DiDonato’s testimony in their closing arguments to the jury. So
although potentially explosive, the damaging testimony (all of two lines of direct testimony,
briefly recapped in cross-examination) appears to have passed as no more than a blip on the
radar.
The trial record in this case is voluminous. The jury heard testimony from more than 65
witnesses spanning 14 days prior to deliberating on Kubsch’s guilt. The jury deliberated for a
little more than four hours before finding Kubsch guilty. Against this backdrop, and with
absolutely no later reference to the very brief testimony, it cannot reasonably be concluded that
the testimony was a controlling factor in the jury’s verdict. Because Kubsch is unable to
persuasively demonstrate the prejudice necessary to succeed on this claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel, I will deny relief based on his trial attorneys’ handling of Gina
DiDonato’s testimony.
Claim V(C): Evidence of Life Insurance Company Investigation
Kubsch’s next claim relates to how his lawyers responded to the State’s evidence
concerning the investigation of Kubsch’s claim under Beth’s life insurance policy. The State’s
case established that in July of 1998 the Kubsches had taken out a new life insurance policy on
Beth in the amount of $575,000, with Kubsch as the sole beneficiary. [Tr. at 2555.] Kubsch
already had a policy on his own life with the same insurer, on which Beth was the beneficiary.
[Tr. at 2556.] On October 9, 1998 – three weeks after the murder of his wife – Kubsch filed a
46
claim on the policy insuring Beth. In response to a question submitted by the jury as to whether
the claim on Beth’s policy was paid, Sandra Brunkhorst, a representative of the insurer, testified
that a settlement was reached, but that the money was paid out to someone other than Wayne
Kubsch. [Tr. at 2562, 2563.] The defense made no objection to these questions.
A subsequent witness, Harvey Shevchik, testified that an investigation was opened on
Kubsch’s claim because it came within the “contestable period,” that is, it was based on a death
that occurred within two years of the policy’s issuance. [Tr. at 2565.] The investigation included
contact with “medical sources, hospitals, doctors, [Beth’s] medical background, medical
examiner, Coroner’s Office, law enforcement agencies, employers, if any, and friends and
neighbors, if any,” as well as an interview with the claimant, Wayne Kubsch. [Tr. at 2566.] An
audio recording of the interview was played for the jury, and they were given a transcript to
follow. [Tr. at 2571.] Shevchik testified that when his investigation was completed, he
submitted a report to the insurer for its use in determining whether or not to pay the claim. [Tr. at
2572.] Shevchik did not testify as to any conclusions or recommendation he may have made. A
juror submitted a question, inquiring what Shevchik’s conclusion was but the court declined to
ask a question on that subject, telling them not to “read anything into that one way or the other.”
[Tr. at 2575].5
Kubsch acknowledges that on the issue of motive, facts “concerning the issuance of the
policy and Kubsch’s attempt to collect were relevant to the State’s theory.” [DE 16 at 41.] But
Kubsch complains that evidence of the insurance company’s investigation and denial of
5
Unfortunately, the question submitted by the juror was not read into the record so I am
inferring what the question was based on an exchange that took place at the side bar conference.
See Tr. 2574-75.
47
Kubsch’s claim was not relevant, and prejudicially “suggested that an independent agency had
investigated the death, had access to information and witnesses that the jury did not, and
concluded that Kubsch was responsible for Beth’s death.” Id. Before me, Kubsch does not
specify and discuss the evidentiary bases on which defense counsel should have objected, but
nonetheless contends that there is a reasonable probability that an objection would have
precluded the evidence. In the state post-conviction proceedings, Kubsch was more specific,
citing Indiana Rules of Evidence 401 and 704(b), as well as the case of Sailors v. State, 593
N.E.2d 202 (Ind.Ct.App. 1992). The Indiana Supreme Court dealt with each of these three
evidentiary angles.
Concerning relevance under Rule 401, the Indiana Supreme Court concluded that:
All testimony regarding the insurance policy and Kubsch’s claim thereon are (sic)
probative of the State’s theory that Kubsch murdered Beth in order to collect on her
life insurance policy. The testimony that a settlement was reached on the policy and
that Kubsch was not paid completed the story of the insurance company’s
involvement. Even if this particular evidence was not relevant, counsel’s failure to
object was not unduly prejudicial to Kubsch as no evidence was offered regarding
who received the settlement or why the settlement was not paid to Kubsch.
Furthermore no evidence was presented as to when the settlement was reached or
whether Kubsch’s first conviction in this case was relevant to settlement.
Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1147. The Supreme Court appears to have concluded that the
evidence now objected to was sufficiently relevant to the insurance motive offered by the
prosecution to survive any objection under Rule 401 because it “completed the story of the
insurance company’s involvement.” Id. This would defeat the performance prong of the
Strickland test, because counsel’s failure to make an unwarranted relevance objection would not
have been substandard performance. The court also found the prejudice prong not to be met in
48
the absence of any damaging evidence indicating why someone other than Wayne Kubsch
received the insurance proceeds. Id.
Ind.R.Evid. 704(b) prohibits witnesses from offering “opinions concerning intent, guilt,
or innocence in a criminal case; the truth or falsity of allegations; whether a witness has testified
truthfully; or legal conclusions.” The Indiana Supreme Court correctly observed that an
objection on this basis would not have been sustained concerning the policy pay-out because Ms.
Brunkhorst “merely replied in the negative when asked the factual question of whether the
settlement was paid to Kubsch.” Id. at 1148. A similar analysis would have defeated a 704(b)
objection to Mr. Shevchik’s testimony about his investigation, because he offered no conclusions
as to Kubsch’s guilt or any other matter forbidden by the rule.
Finally, the Indiana Supreme Court explained that the holding of Sailors is
distinguishable and would not have supported exclusion of the now-challenged evidence:
In that case, the prosecutor told the jury that it was the second jury to consider the
case after a grand jury had weighed the evidence and indicted the defendant. Here
the jury was simply informed that a settlement was reached and Kubsch was not
awarded any money. No reference was made to any other arbiter determining
Kubsch’s guilt, and no argument was made that minimized the jury’s responsibility
to determine the law and facts of the case.
Id. (citing Sailors, 593 N.E.2d at 206). The testimony indicated that the insurance company had
paid money but not to Mr. Kubsch, and that an insurance investigation had taken place. Kubsch
doesn’t suggest that the prosecution argued or even insinuated that the insurance company had
made a determination that Kubsch was complicit in Beth’s death. There was no closing
argument exhorting the jury to convict Kubsch “because other people thought he was guilty,” as
was the case in Sailors. See 593 N.E.2d at 207. Because an objection based on Sailors would
have been meritless, counsel was not ineffective for failing to make it.
49
Attempting to underline the prejudicial inference on which his ineffective assistance
claim is based, Kubsch outlines the trial testimony of the two insurance company witnesses in
reverse chronological order, suggesting that the order of the evidence indicated that there was an
insurance investigation into Beth’s death, after which, and on the basis of which, the claim was
paid, but not to Wayne Kubsch. The evidence was not presented in that order or framed in that
way. Kubsch’s argument tilts at windmills when it refers to testimony concerning “the results
of” the insurance company’s investigation, evidence of the “decision to deny Kubsch’s claim”
and suggesting that the insurance company concluded “that Kubsch was responsible for Beth’s
death.” [DE 16 at 41.] There was no such evidence.
Based on the very brief segment of the record from which Kubsch weaves them, the
unwelcome inferences now invoked were not so obvious or so strong that trial counsel’s failure
to object was unreasonably poor performance. Nor is there any reasonable probability that an
objection to the question about the insurance pay-out and to the testimony that there was an
investigation would have led to Kubsch’s acquittal. For all these reasons, I am not persuaded that
the Indiana Supreme Court’s rejection of this ineffective assistance of counsel claim was
contrary to or an unreasonable application of Strickland principles. In fact, I agree with it.
Claim V(D): Prosecutorial Misconduct
Kubsch contends that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance when they failed to
object to prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument in the guilt phase. Two instances are
invoked. In the first, Kubsch argues that “the prosecutor impermissibly implied personal
knowledge of inculpatory evidence outside the record.” [DE 16 at 42.] In the second scenario,
50
Kubsch says “the prosecutor demeaned and disparaged defense counsel within the hearing of the
jury and during closing argument.” Id.
Kubsch contends that this claim of ineffective assistance was raised on post-conviction
review but was not addressed by the Indiana Supreme Court. [DE 16 at 42.] In contrast, the State
suggests that the arguments are procedurally defaulted because Kubsch did not fairly present
them as ineffective assistance claims on his appeal from post-conviction review. [DE 22 at 40.]
Instead, according to the State, Kubsch “simply told the Indiana Supreme Court to treat his
waived claims of prosecutorial misconduct as claims of ineffective assistance of counsel.” Id.
Review of Kubsch’s appellate brief discloses that in his “Argument 3,” Kubsch argued numerous
claims of prosecutorial misconduct at length, including the same two claims that underlie the
present ineffective assistance of counsel claims. [DE 21-18, at 41-42, 34.] Thereafter in
“Argument 4,” Kubsch proffered 11 species of ineffective assistance of counsel (one with subparts). Id. at 61-103. The tenth of these was trial counsel’s failure to object to instances of
prosecutorial misconduct. Id. at 95. Because of the lengthy treatment earlier of the underlying
claims of prosecutorial misconduct, Kubsch’s discussion of the associated ineffective assistance
claims was brief. But the claims clearly were raised.
In its opinion, the Indiana Supreme Court enumerated and discussed all but two of the
ineffective assistance claims addressed in Kubsch’s brief. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1146-47.
One of the claims omitted was the claim relating to counsel’s failure to object to the alleged
prosecutorial misconduct. However, the post-conviction court did address the claims and
rejected them finding that “Kubsch failed to establish any instances of prosecutorial misconduct
51
which would have place (sic) Kubsch in grave peril” so that “trial counsel was not deficient in
performance nor was Kubsch prejudiced.” [DE 16-1 at 26.]
I am not persuaded that Kubsch failed to fairly present the claims now before me. So I
reject the State’s assertion of procedural default. But the question is, when the Indiana Supreme
Court fails to address an issue raised by the parties, what standard governs my review? Is it the
deferential standard of § 2254(d) or the more general standard of § 2243 where issues must be
decided as “law and justice require?’
As discussed above, in 2011, the United States Supreme Court held that “[w]hen a
federal claim has been presented to a state court and the state court has denied relief, it may be
presumed that the state court adjudicated the claim on the merits in the absence of any indication
or state-law procedural principles to the contrary.” Richter, 131 S.Ct. at 784-85. Underscoring
the principle, the court said it “now holds and reconfirms that §2254(d) does not require a state
court to give reasons before its decision can be deemed to have been ‘adjudicated on the
merits.’” Id. at 785. But the Seventh Circuit has previously held that “[w]hen a state court is
silent with respect to a habeas corpus petitioner’s claim, that claim has not been ‘adjudicated on
the merits’ for purposes of §2254(d).” Canaan v. McBride, 395 F.3d 376, 382 (7th Cir. 2005).
In a previous capital habeas matter, I considered how Canaan can be reconciled with
Richter and concluded that Canaan “simply stands for the unsurprising proposition that when no
state court decides an issue, there isn’t an adjudication on the merits under §2254(d), and thus
§2243 governs instead.” Overstreet v. Superintendent, 2011 WL 836800, *5 (N.D.Ind. Mar. 4,
2011). Here, as in Overstreet, there is a state post-conviction court decision on the merits of the
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claim. So applying Richter, I consider the Indiana courts’ rejection of this ineffective assistance
claim under the §2254(d) standard.
But under either standard, § 2243 or § 2254(d), I would find that Kubsch does not
demonstrate an entitlement to habeas corpus relief, because I agree with the state post-conviction
court that the assertions of prosecutorial misconduct on which the ineffective assistance claims
depend are themselves so weak that they support neither the deficient performance prong nor the
prejudice prong of the Strickland analysis.
Here are the specifics of this claim of alleged ineffective assistance of counsel, all of
which occurred during closing arguments. The first instance, according to Kubsch, involved the
prosecutor telling the jury in his rebuttal closing argument “that there was evidence of Kubsch’s
guilt that could not be presented due to evidence rules.” [DE 16 at 42.] This is a clever but
ultimately unsuccessful interpretation of what actually occurred.
Near the end of Kubsch’s closing argument, his counsel cited types of evidence missing
from the State’s case (a gun, prior physical abuse in the marriage, etc.). [Tr. at 3309-10.] The
State objected, reminding the judge at sidebar that the prosecution’s evidence of gun ownership
and physical abuse had been excluded from trial under Rule 404(b). The court sustained the
objection, finding the defense argument improper. Minutes later, in his rebuttal argument the
prosecutor said: “Mr. Skodinski talks about things we can’t show you. We have rules of
evidence sometimes.” [Tr. at 3314.] In its context, this comment is brief and obscure, and
would not clearly have signified to the jury that the prosecutor was suggesting that the State
possessed damning evidence that was excluded on the basis of technicalities of evidence. The
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prosecutor immediately went on to focus on “what we did show you” and directed the jury’s
attention to evidence before the jury which the State believed pointed to Kubsch’s guilt. Id.
Kubsch also cites the later portion of the prosecutor’s rebuttal argument in which he said
that “there also are rules about what we can do about seizing things.” [Tr. at 3320.] Defense
counsel did in fact object to this comment. [Tr. at 3321.] The ensuing sidebar discussion
clarified that the remark was not a comment on evidence not before the jury or a prelude to such
a comment, but merely in its context was an explanation of the preceding sentence about Kubsch
returning to the police station to sign the consent to search his vehicle. Counsel and judge all
agreed the matter was resolved and that nothing improper had occurred. Id.
There was no ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to object to these portions of
the prosecutor’s rebuttal argument. In the one instance, Kubsch’s counsel did in fact object, but
there was no basis for objection, as the trial court (and even counsel) properly concluded. In the
other, even with the benefit of hindsight, it can’t be said that a competent attorney would have
objected to the prosecutor’s passing and entirely generic reference to the exclusion of evidence
under applicable rules. “Where defense counsel has ‘invited’ a response, a prosecutor’s
otherwise improper remarks will not warrant reversal of a conviction if they do nothing more
than ‘right the scale.’” Bartlett v. Battaglia, 453 F.3d 796, 803 (7th Cir. 2006)(quoting United
States v. Young, 470 U.S.1, 12-13 (1985)). Kubsch’s counsel had made objectionable reference
to matters on which evidence had been excluded, and the prosecution responded by a passing
reference to the impact of evidentiary rules on trial presentations. Under these circumstances,
there is not a reasonable probability that the challenged remarks resulted in Kubsch’s conviction.
No deficient performance is demonstrated, and no prejudice is shown.
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The second sort of prosecutorial misconduct that Kubsch says went unchallenged by his
trial counsel was “personal attacks on the integrity of the defense team.” [DE 16 at 44.] In a
sidebar during defense counsel’s closing argument, the prosecutor complained of “one of the
most unethical arguments I have ever heard.” [Tr. at 3310.] Kubsch tries to argue away the fact
that this exchange occurred at sidebar by suggesting it is likely that the jury could hear it, based
on references elsewhere in the transcript to the need to keep voices down at sidebar to avoid
being audible to the jury. This is entirely speculative and unpersuasive; there can be no basis for
an evidentiary objection to, or prejudice from, a matter that is not actually before the jury.
Next, Kubsch cites the opening of the State’s rebuttal argument, in which the prosecutor
said:
The sad fact of the matter is, sometimes you can stand up here and say whatever you
want to say, and hopefully it if (sic) throw enough garbage out there, it’ll stick.
Mr. Skodinski stands up in front of you, as an officer of the court, and says blood
tested in the drain didn’t turn out to be Wayne’s. Well, that wasn’t what the
evidence was, ladies and gentlemen.
[Tr. at 3314.] The opening sentence, standing alone, is clearly a general disparagement of the
defense’s closing argument and an exhortation not to believe it. But the very next sentence
makes the general comment specific, by addressing a particular matter on which the State
contended there was an inaccurate recap of certain evidence by defense counsel in his closing.
Closing arguments are not always gentle and the “throwing garbage” remark comes close to an
ad hominem attack. But in substance, and in context, the remark merely argued (as counsel often
must) that on a particular point the opposition was misconstruing the evidence. The “garbage”
remark was not so abusive, so shocking, or so inappropriate that any reasonably competent
attorney would have objected to it. Nor was it so powerful or persuasive that it is reasonably
55
probable that the statement – or the failure to object to it – resulted in Kubsch’s conviction of the
three murders.
Later in his closing, the prosecutor made some remarks about the work of private
investigators, questioning the professionalism and value of their work and the resulting evidence.
[Tr. at 3315.] Kubsch points out that evidence about the private investigator that the prosecutor
referred to was offered in the first trial, but not the second. So it appears to have been a mistaken
reference, possibly carried over from the prosecutor’s notes from his closing argument in the
first trial. In addition to being brief, the remarks about “P.I.’s” are somewhat garbled and
confusing. If anything, the comments would merely have confused the jury as to what the
prosecutor was even talking about, particularly if they had heard no evidence from or referring to
the work of any private investigator. In any event, the challenged portion of the argument hardly
is readily understood to besmirch defense counsel, to warrant objection, or to have likely caused
the conviction of Wayne Kubsch.
Tucked within this claim about trial counsel, Kubsch includes a challenge to his appellate
counsel’s failure to raise on direct appeal any claims about these alleged instances of
prosecutorial misconduct. [DE 16 at 46.] Because I find that the underlying claims of
prosecutorial misconduct are without merit, I readily conclude also that there was no ineffective
assistance by appellate counsel for failing to press the claims on appeal. In the clear absence of
any deficient performance by counsel or resulting prejudice to the defense, there is no right to
relief under the Strickland standard on Kubsch’s ineffective assistance claims concerning alleged
prosecutorial misconduct.
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Claim V(E): Blood Experts
Kubsch contends that his trial counsel failed to effectively cross-examine the State’s
experts regarding blood testing and failed to object to inaccuracies in the State’s closing
argument on the same subject. An expert named Daun Powers testified for the State that “blood
was indicated” in samples taken from the drains in the Kubsches’ master bathroom, but that the
samples yielded “an insufficient amount of DNA to further test.” [Tr. at 1759]. Taken at face
value, this testimony was somewhat misleading. At the PCR hearing, Powers clarified her
testimony by stating that the “presumptive testing” she had been able to perform on the drain
samples was “not definitive or specific for identifying blood” and a positive result meant only
that blood “could be” present in a sample. [PCR Tr. at 420-21.]
In support of his contention that his trial counsel was ineffective in his examination of
Powers, Kubsch now highlights the difference between “there was blood but not enough to test
further” and “there may or may not have been any blood.” Kubsch also argues that, exacerbating
that failure, his counsel referred to the substance as “blood” when cross-examining another
witness and in closing argument, and failed to object when the prosecution did likewise.
The State suggests in its response brief that “[t]he record shows that neither the State nor
Kubsch’s trial lawyers understood that presumptive testing did not conclusively show a small
quantity of actual blood.” [DE 22 at 45.] I am inclined to agree with that. The question is the
impact of that failure from a §2254 and constitutional perspective.
Daun Powers was a forensic DNA analyst employed with the Indiana State Police
Laboratory. [Tr. at 1740.] She testified that blood testing involves a series of tests: “The first
test is a presumptive test, to indicate whether or not blood may be present. We then do a
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confirmatory test, if the presumptive test is the positive. The confirmatory test will confirm the
presence of blood.” [Tr. at 1742.] Later, asked specifically about testing water samples, Powers
said: “I’m just removing a small portion of the water, doing our presumptive test on it, to
indicate whether blood may be present or not....If blood is present, it will then be carried on to
DNA testing.” [Tr. at 1756.] Testifying as to the results of the so-called “presumptive test” run
on a number of water samples taken from the drains in the master bathroom, Powers repeatedly
used the phrase “blood was indicated.” [Tr. at 1759.] It is entirely reasonable to have construed
such testimony to mean that blood was present in the water samples, and not merely that it was
possible that blood was present.
Here’s what was said in closing argument on the subject. Attempting to highlight the
State’s lack of forensic evidence, defense counsel said “they tested various drains and found
some blood in the drains, and they tested the blood, and it didn’t match Wayne’s.” [Tr. at 328687.] In rebuttal, the prosecutor said:
Mr. Skodinski stands up in front of you, as an officer of the Court, and says blood
tested in the drain didn’t turn out to be Wayne’s. Well, that wasn’t what the
evidence was, ladies and gentlemen. The evidence was that there was blood in the
drains, but there was an insufficient quantity for DNA testing. So we couldn’t tell.
And we don’t believe that the blood in the drains was Wayne’s anyway. It was the
blood he washed off. That was Beth, Rick and Aaron’s, whatever he got on him.
[Tr. at 3314.] At the end of the State’s heavily timeline-based closing argument, the prosecutor
offered a synopsis of events suggesting that Kubsch had time to shower after the murders, but
did so without specific reference to forensic analysis of the drain water. [Tr. at 3323.]
As noted above, at the PCR hearing, forensic DNA analyst Powers testified again. This
time she was much clearer: “I did presumptive testing for blood, which was called phenol
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saline...It’s a screening test to determine whether or not blood could be present in a sample...It’s
not definitive or specific for identifying blood.” [PCR Tr. at 420-21.] Powers further clarified:
Q.
So just because you get a positive result on the presumptive test,
that doesn’t mean that it’s necessarily blood?
A.
Correct.
Id. at 421. Powers then explained – much more clearly than she did at trial – that with each sink
or drain sample, there was not enough sample to run the confirmatory test. Id. at 422-425.
The bottom line of all of this is that the jury was left with the mistaken impression that
there was blood found in the drain when in fact there was not (or at least no confirmatory
evidence of it). When combined with the evidence that Kubsch may have showered at home,
this evidence could have been seen as incriminating by the jury.
In the §2254 context, I am required to apply the highly deferential standard of §2254(d)
and consider whether the Indiana Supreme Court’s analysis was an unreasonable application of
Strickland or other U.S. Supreme Court principles. The Indiana Supreme Court found that
Kubsch’s counsel were not deficient for failing to highlight the inaccuracy or ambiguity in the
trial testimony because doing so would have led to the type of explanatory testimony offered at
the post-conviction hearing. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1154. I’m inclined to disagree with this.
Kubsch’s trial counsel allowed Powers to give the impression that there was blood found in the
drain when in fact that could not be confirmed.
But even if I were to find that the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision was unreasonable
under the performance prong of Strickland, I agree with their analysis of the prejudice prong.
Here’s what they had to say about it as it relates to the blood evidence:
It is unlikely that testimony regarding the distinction between an indication of blood
versus conclusive evidence of blood affected the outcome of the trial where forensic
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evidence was not the foundation of the State’s case. It was clear throughout all the
proceedings that if blood was present in the shower drains, there was an insufficient
amount to determine whether any blood present was human or belonged to any of the
victims or Kubsch.
Id. at 1153-54. Viewing the matter in its context within the entire trial record, I think the
Indiana Supreme Court reasonably evaluated the significance of the evidence. Whether or not
Kubsch was found guilty of the three murders did not turn on this blood evidence which – even
misunderstood – was not specific enough to point particularly to Kubsch.
To satisfy the prejudice prong of the Strickland standard, Kubsch has to show that but for
counsel’s failure to correct the misleading testimony, there is a reasonable probability that the
jury would not have found him guilty. On this point, I think the state post-conviction court put it
best:
It is unlikely that these small samples that were presumptively, but not
conclusively, blood, altered the outcome of this trial. The forensic testing was not
the foundation of the State’s case in chief. The State focused on motive,
Kubsch’s contradictory statements, the duct tape, cell phone records and the time
line. As the cross-examination of Powers illustrates, the defense focused on the
absence of DNA evidence linking Kubsch to the scene.
[DE 16-1 at 57.] Given the volume of evidence and argument stretching over 14 days, and the
relatively little emphasis placed on the disputed blood evidence by the prosecution, I cannot
conclude that any such reasonable probability exists.
Claim V(F) – Evidence about Kubsch’s Relationship with Aaron
Kubsch challenges his trial counsel’s failure to object to the State’s 404(b) notice of
evidence that Kubsch had threatened and abused Aaron. Because Kubsch immediately
acknowledges that “[n]o evidence of this nature was actually presented at trial,” this claim, as
stated, can’t possibly meet the prejudice prong of Strickland. The State makes the same point,
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and cites to the Indiana Supreme Court’s statement of that same analysis. Kubsch III, 934
N.E.2d at 1149.
But this claim goes on to address actual trial testimony from two witnesses about Kubsch
hating Aaron, to which defense counsel made no objection. Beth’s brother, Ryan Thompson,
testified that Kubsch had once said that he “hated” Aaron. [Tr. at 2377.] And the Kubsches’
neighbor Kathy Cruz testified that, after discovering the bodies of Aaron and Rick, Anthony
(Beth’s child from a previous marriage) said he knew “they” hated each other but “didn’t know it
would come to this.” [Tr. at 1326.]
The State’s theory was that Aaron and Rick were murdered because they were
unexpected witnesses to Beth’s murder. Given this theory of the prosecution, Kubsch contends
that evidence of ill feeling toward Aaron was irrelevant and prejudicial. The Indiana Supreme
Court found in effect that the irrelevance of the fleeting testimony supported the conclusion that
there was no prejudice to the defense. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1149. Because the
prosecution’s theory was that Aaron and Rick had “stumbled upon the crime scene at the wrong
time,” the court found that “it is unlikely any of the isolated references to a strained relationship
between Kubsch and Aaron had any effect on the jury’s determination.” Id.
Deciding when to object to testimony is a matter of trial strategy. Bergmann v.
McCaughtry, 65 F.3d 1372, 1380 (7th Cir. 1995); United States v. Pedigo, 12 F.3d 618, 623 (7th
Cir. 1993). The testimony at issue here – the brief references to Kubsch “hating” Aaron – were
not objected to, likely for strategic reasons. The testimony wasn’t particularly relevant given the
State’s theory of prosecution, and trial counsel could well have determined that he did not want
to highlight this fleeting testimony. As the Seventh Circuit has stated, “Counsel may have
61
wanted to avoid drawing attention to certain testimony, or may have wished to avoid irritating
the jury.” Pedigo, 12 F.3d at 623.
But even if one were to say that counsel was ineffective for failing to lodge those
objections, in a trial in which more than 65 witnesses gave almost 2000 pages of testimony, these
two lines of testimony cannot reasonably be thought to have made a difference in the trial’s
outcome. Viewing the matter against the entire trial record, I don’t think Kubsch persuasively
argues that the Indiana Supreme Court’s prejudice analysis was unreasonable. This claim is
therefore without merit.
Claim V(G) -- Ski Masks
Sgt. Thomas Cameron searched Kubsch’s car two days after the murder. Cameron
testified that a receipt from a K-Mart store was found in Kubsch’s truck and the receipt reflected
the purchase of two ski masks. Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1149. The receipt was mentioned
during Sgt. Cameron’s testimony as he was cataloguing what he found in the search of the
vehicle. Concerning a white plastic K-Mart bag, Cameron said:
And within it, I found the tags to two full-faced ski masks of a hunting style, that are
camouflaged on one side, according to the picture.
I never saw the items. But according to the tag, it would be camouflage on
one side and orange on the other side, if you turn it inside out. But it would cover
the entire face, except for the three holes for your nose and mouth and eyes.
[Tr. at 1620-21.] When asked, Cameron indicated that the police never recovered the masks
themselves. [Tr. at 1621.] That’s the sum total of the testimony concerning ski masks.
Kubsch argues that his counsel was ineffective for failing to argue that the testimony was
irrelevant because the evidence didn’t suggest ski masks were used in connection with the
murders, and was prejudicial because the jury might have thought that the evidence “foreboded
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the commission of another felonious crime, such as burglary or robbery.” [DE 26 at 74.] The
traverse reveals that this language comes from an Indiana Court of Appeals case in which the
admission of a ski mask was found to be prejudicial error at a trial on the charge of possession of
an unlicensed handgun – a very different scenario, in which the use of the ski mask in the offense
charged wasn’t such a reasonable possibility.
As the Indiana Supreme Court noted when dealing with this claim, defense counsel did in
fact object to this evidence and testimony, both in the form of a motion to suppress the evidence
seized from the vehicle and by a continuing objection noted on the record at trial. [Tr. at 1623.]
The court also separately considered whether a relevance objection should have been lodged:
The overall theory of the State’s case was that Kubsch first killed Beth in order to
collect on her life insurance policies, and was surprised by Rick and Aaron’s arrival
and was forced to kill them, too... A subtext of the State’s theory was that Kubsch
carefully planned Beth’s killing and did so with much stealth and cunning. The ski
mask evidence, although only marginally relevant for such purposes, tended to
advance the State’s theory of the case. However, even assuming that such evidence
was not relevant at all, Kubsch has not demonstrated prejudice. The ski masks’
receipt and tags were among over a hundred exhibits the State introduced at trial.
The testimony concerning the ski masks consumed ten lines of a three thousand-plus
page, fourteen-volume trial transcript. Except as mentioned no other reference was
made of the ski mask evidence during the trial itself or during opening statements or
final summation. Kubsch points to nothing in the record that suggests the jury gave
any particular weight to this evidence.
Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1150. Kubsch attempts in his traverse to argue that the Indiana
Supreme Court’s analysis unreasonably underestimates both the prejudicial impact of the ski
mask evidence and its value as support of the State’s larger circumstantial case.
I don’t find any of this persuasive, and think the Indiana Supreme Court got it right.
First, the ski masks did have some marginal relevance to the State’s theory that Kubsch carefully
planned the murder of his wife; perhaps a ski mask was used in the process, perhaps it wasn’t.
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That would have been for the jury to sort out. Counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to
relevant evidence. And even if the ski mask evidence should not have been admitted, the
passing references to that evidence during the trial were so fleeting it would be difficult to
conclude that the Indiana Supreme Court’s finding of a lack of prejudice was an unreasonable
one under Strickland.
Claim V(H) -- Failure to Admit Answering Machine Tape
Kubsch’s next claim of ineffective assistance involves a convoluted explanation about
evidence that wouldn’t have been particularly important even if it had been admitted. And
defense counsel did attempt to admit it, but Kubsch says they didn’t go about it the right way.
At trial the prosecution attempted to create a timeline of different people’s movements,
largely using telephone records to establish where people were at particular times. This claim is
about the tape from the answering machine at the Kubsches’ home, which the defense says
captured Beth’s voice answering a call at what the machine recorded as 11:19 a.m. on the day of
the murders (although Kubsch seems to acknowledge that the machine’s “clock” was not entirely
reliable – DE 26 at 78). The significance of this would have been to show that Beth was home in
time to leave her credit union transaction receipt (later found in Kubsch’s car) for Kubsch to
have picked up when he came home at lunchtime (as his testimony indicated he might have
done). [Tr. at 2700.]
On direct examination, Kubsch described going home mid-day. [Tr. at 2694.] Defense
counsel then sought to admit the tape from the answering machine with Beth’s voice on it. But
the State objected that a proper foundation hadn’t been laid (arguing that Kubsch couldn’t
identify the tape and all the calls recorded when he wasn’t home). [Tr. at 2697.] Defense
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counsel capitulated and withdrew the offer of the tape as evidence, saying “We don’t have to.
It’s not that crucial.” [Tr. at 2698.] Kubsch went on to testify that, consistent with telephone
records, he had placed a short call from the home phone at 11:37 am, that he had seen the credit
union receipt next to the phone, and might have picked it up and taken it to his car. [Tr. at 26982700.]
The prosecution argued in closing that, given Beth’s stops at the credit union and
Consumer Credit Counseling Agency that morning, it made no sense for her to have run home in
between, as would have been necessary for Kubsch’s testimony about finding the receipt to be
true. [Tr. at 3278-79.] Besides the answering machine tape, the defense used other means to
show that Beth had stopped at home between her two errands to the TCU and the CCC, such as
testimony suggesting that she had the dog with her at one of the stops, but not the other.
At Kubsch’s first trial, the parties reached a stipulation that a call answered by Beth was
recorded on the Kubsch home phone sometime between 11:04 a.m. and 1:33 p.m. that did not
appear on any telephone records admitted in the case. Although this sounds like it goes only part
of the way Kubsch wants to go (because it doesn’t indicate precisely when the call occurred),
Kubsch contends that his trial counsel should have again attempted to obtain such a stipulation
or, failing that, should have laid a proper foundation for admission of the answering machine
tape (as he says post-conviction counsel was able to do).
Like me, the Indiana Supreme Court was not all that impressed with the desired evidence:
“As best we can discern, Kubsch contends through a series of inferences that the recording of
Beth’s telephone conversation supports the defense theory that Kubsch did not commit the
murders.” Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1151. Of course Kubsch is dissatisfied with the Indiana
65
Supreme Court’s resolution of the claim, and, although I am not, I agree that the analysis wasn’t
as thorough as it might have been. The court noted that at the post-conviction stage “[e]vidence
was introduced that the answering machine’s time stamp was inaccurate.” Id. This suggests,
although the court didn’t say so, that the evidence might not have had quite the conclusiveness
Kubsch would like, particularly as the phantom call did not appear on the telephone records
admitted at trial. This supports not only a lack of prejudice, but also the determination that
counsel’s performance was not deficient in failing to fight harder for the admission of the tape.
As defense counsel conceded at trial, the tape wasn’t “that crucial.”
Also on the performance prong, Kubsch doesn’t do a persuasive job of demonstrating
that the failure to admit the tape at trial was professionally incompetent. To try to demonstrate
that a proper foundation could have been laid for the admission of the tape, Kubsch merely refers
to the admission without objection of the police transcription of the contents of the tape that
occurred at the post-conviction hearing. But of course, that involved a different piece of
evidence, a different context, and admission without objection – all of which distinguishes the
situation from defense counsel’s at trial. Kubsch fails to show how the defense could have met
the State’s objection about foundation and authentication.
Finally, as the Indiana Supreme Court noted, “[a]s for failing to obtain a stipulation,
Kubsch has not shown that if requested, the State would have agreed to such a stipulation.
Indeed we find it highly unlikely given the State objected to the introduction of the tape.” Id.
And as I noted earlier, the stipulation entered into at the first trial didn’t establish the time of the
phone call precisely, or early enough in the day, to support all that Kubsch’s reliance on it
required.
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This ground for relief is unsuccessful because Kubsch fails to show that his trial
counsel’s performance on this issue fell below objective standards of reasonableness, fails to
show that absent their alleged failures the trial would’ve had a different outcome, and fails to
show that the Indiana Supreme Court’s rejection of the claim was an unreasonable application of
Strickland principles.
Claim V(I) – “Exculpatory” Evidence (Speeding Car & Nick Ratkay’s Testimony)
This ground for relief relates to a subject discussed a couple times earlier in this opinion.
At the first trial, Kubsch neighbor Kathy Kruszewski testified that at approximately 3:05 pm on
the day of the murders, she nearly collided with a dark car speeding out of the neighborhood.
[2001 Trial Tr. at 5021-24.] This evidence was not presented at Kubsch’s second trial, and
Kubsch contends it supported the defense theory that someone other than Kubsch committed the
murders. More specifically, because Brad Hardy’s counsel had once offered to the State the
information that his friend Darin Polachek drove a dark colored car and had recently been at the
Kubsch residence, Kubsch suggests that the evidence “supports the defense position that Hardy
was the real killer.” [DE 16 at 55.] How this implicates Hardy is entirely unclear to me. It was
Polachek who owned the “dark colored” car – not Hardy.
In any event, I agree with the Indiana Supreme Court in how they analyzed Kruszewski’s
testimony:
The evidence does not, as Kubsch contends, support the defense theory that someone
other than Kubsch committed the murder. The description of the car and driver are
vague at best, and the fact that speeding cars were not unusual in the neighborhood
at the time makes this particular speeding car less significant. It is impossible to
conclude that this evidence has any exculpatory value.
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Kubsch III, 934 N.E.2d at 1152. This is not an unreasonable analysis of the speeding car
evidence and trial counsel’s failure to present it.
Kubsch is also critical of trial counsel’s failure to discredit Brad Hardy’s account of the
day of the murders with the testimony of Nick Ratkay. Ratkay testified at the first trial that
Hardy told him facts about the day of the murders that differed from Hardy’s account to the
police and to the jury. In particular, according to Ratkay, Hardy told him that he had not seen
Beth inside the house that day, although he later testified that he did. [DE 16 at 55.]
Kubsch contends that the Indiana Supreme Court overlooked his Ratkay claim, so that
§2254(d) deference does not apply. On the flipside, the State argues that Kubsch didn’t properly
present the Ratkay portion of this claim in his state post-conviction appeal, so that he has a
procedural bar problem. Because the ground can be rejected on its merits, there’s no need to
wade into that dispute.
The decision whether to call a witness for impeachment purposes is purely a matter of
trial strategy. United States v. Lindsay, 157 F.3d 532, 535-36 (7th Cir. 1998). The decision in
this case was a sound one. For starters, Ratkay’s testimony at the first trial mostly supported
Hardy’s own testimony, differing only as to some details. [2001Trial Tr. 4247, 4250]. For these
reasons, defense counsel can’t be said to have failed to perform reasonably when they didn’t call
Ratkay at the second trial to give his brief and insignificant testimony again. What’s more,
Hardy’s credibility was seriously attacked during the trial. At best, Ratkay was just another
impeachment witness. It is a quintessential strategy call for a trial lawyer to determine when
enough is enough where impeachment is concerned. United States v. Kozinski, 16 F.3d 795, 817
(7th Cir. 1994).
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Claim V(J) -- Failure to Admit Amanda Buck’s Videotaped Statement
Kubsch next contends that his trial counsel were ineffective in their attempt to admit the
videotape of Amanda Buck. This claim is related to Kubsch’s argument under Chambers (supra
Claim IV) that he was denied his right to present a defense when he was prevented from
presenting the videotape of then 9-year-old Amanda Buck’s statement to the police, in which she
said she had seen Rick and Aaron after school on the day of the murders. As noted above, if
accurate, this would have tended to exonerate Kubsch by placing the murders at a time when
Kubsch was already on his way to Michigan to pick up his son.
From the ineffective assistance angle rather than the “substantive” ground in Claim IV,
Kubsch has to show that counsel’s performance was deficient. That is difficult to accomplish
since trial counsel did in fact attempt to admit the Buck videotape under two different theories:
refreshing recollection and recorded recollection. Counsel’s effort were rejected by the trial
judge so it’s a little difficult to see how counsel was ineffective. What more could they have
done?
As a refresher, here is how the issue arose at trial: Amanda Buck was called to the stand
and said that she “probably didn’t” see Aaron on the day of the murders. The Indiana Supreme
Court concluded that the trial court erred in rejecting use of the videotaped statement to impeach
this bit of Amanda’s testimony, but found the error harmless because other available testimony
“would have supported hers had she been impeached, and therefore, her testimony likely did not
contribute to the conviction.” Kubsch II, 866 N.E.2d at 735. The “other available testimony”
was from Amanda’s parents who were prepared to testify that Amanda had been mistaken about
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the day she had seen Aaron. They would have said that she had seen him on Thursday, the day
before the murders, not Friday, the day of the murders.
Kubsch doesn’t argue that his counsel was ineffective in failing to offer the videotape;
instead he says they were ineffective in how they offered it and the record they made. In
particular, Kubsch argues that if his trial counsel had “competently investigated, they could have
shown that the prosecutor was overstating the impact either witness (Amanda’s parents Lonnie
and Monica) would have had on impeaching Amanda’s original version of what she saw.” [DE
16 at 56.] More specifically, Kubsch says:
Had trial counsel investigated and presented [Officer] Riehl’s testimony and
[mother] Monica’s statement of March of 2000, Amanda’s statement would have
been admitted as substantive evidence. Even had [it] not been admitted at trial, trial
counsel could have and should have made [a] reliable record for the Indiana Supreme
Court to evaluate the trial court’s ruling on direct review. Counsel’s failure to do so
constitutes deficient performance under Strickland.
[DE 26 at 87.]
Recall that Riehl is the police officer who testified at the post-conviction hearing that
Amanda’s father Lonnie told him shortly after Amanda’s initial videotaped interview that
Amanda had been confusing the events of Thursday with Friday (the day of the murders). [PCR
Tr. 222-23.] Kubsch fails to explain why Officer Riehl should have been called by his trial
counsel. Why would they have done such a thing? Riehl would merely have confirmed that
Lonnie told him that his daughter Amanda had mixed up the days. That would have undermined
Kubsch’s claim, not enhanced it. Kubsch fails to demonstrate deficient performance by trial
counsel with respect to any additional testimony from Officer Riehl.
Monica is Amanda’s mother, who gave a statement in March 2000 to police officer Craig
Whitfield. Like her husband Lonnie, she told the police that Amanda had confused Thursday
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with Friday in her police interview. According to Monica, Aaron had come to their house on
Thursday at 3:30 and stayed until 9:00 p.m. [PCR Exh. 3.] Amanda had mistakenly believed it
to be Friday. Kubsch now contends that if trial counsel had been ready with this evidence, it
could have been used to combat the State’s arguments to the trial court that Amanda’s
videotaped statement was unreliable. Kubsch argues that Monica’s later account of Aaron’s visit
to the Bucks on Thursday afternoon and evening described something so different from
Amanda’s videotaped statement about seeing Aaron after school at his own house that the
differences could not reasonably be understood to demonstrate misrecollection about the date, as
the prosecution suggested.
Even so, the persuasiveness of Monica’s later information “correcting” Amanda’s initial
statement was not the basis for the trial court’s exclusion of the videotape. The trial court’s
rationales for rejecting the videotape as a prior inconsistent statement and as recorded
recollection, whether or not correct, would not have been affected by the argument Kubsch now
suggests trial counsel should have been prepared to make. Whether or not Amanda’s original
videotaped statement was correct did not enter into the Indiana courts’ analysis until the Indiana
Supreme Court considered it in deciding that any evidentiary error was harmless and that there
was no due process violation because the excluded evidence did not have adequate assurances of
trustworthiness. Kubsch II, 866 N.E.2d at 735. Because Kubsch doesn’t persuasively explain
what difference counsel could have made to the initial evidentiary determination by the trial
court, he fails to demonstrate both deficient performance and the impact on the trial’s outcome
that are necessary for his ineffective assistance claim to succeed.
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Perhaps because Kubsch recognizes that counsel is not accountable for the trial court’s
errors, he also argues that trial counsel was deficient for failing to make the optimal record for
future appellate review. It’s not clear what the improved record would have been, and what
counsel could have done to create it. But as noted above, why in the world would defense
counsel have offered evidence about Officer Riehl’s conversation with Lonnie Buck, and Monica
Buck’s statement to Officer Whitfield, when the substance of their testimony would have been
directly contrary to the very evidence – Amanda’s videotaped statement – that they were seeking
to admit? Making such a record at trial for appeal purposes wouldn’t have changed the trial
evidence and so could not have created a reasonable probability that the jury would have
acquitted Kubsch. Even if trial counsel could reasonably be required to be so far-thinking as to
make such a record for harmless error review on appeal, the failure to do so can’t be said to have
prejudiced the outcome of the trial. Kubsch’s argument about trial counsel’s handling of the
Amanda Buck videotape evidence fails to establish either unreasonable performance or prejudice
to the defense, and no relief will be granted on this ground.
Claim V(K) -- Cumulative Effect of Ineffective Assistance
Kubsch next invokes the notion of cumulative prejudice resulting from the compilation of
all trial counsels’ errors. In Strickland itself, the Supreme Court’s repeated references to
“errors” in the plural when discussing the prejudice prong of the analysis suggests that
cumulative error is properly considered, and that habeas corpus relief is not limited to situations
in which a single error by counsel can be said to have resulted in the requisite degree of
prejudice. 466 U.S. at 694. The Seventh Circuit has also indicated that “prejudice may be
based on the cumulative effect of multiple errors” and “[a]lthough a specific error, standing
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alone, may be insufficient to undermine the court’s confidence in the outcome, multiple errors
together may be sufficient.” Hough v. Anderson, 272 F.3d 878, 891 n.3 (7th Cir. 2001) (quoted
in Malone v. Walls, 538 F.3d 744, 762 (7th Cir. 2008)). To demonstrate cumulative error, a
petitioner has to show: (1) that there were a least two errors, and (2) that the effect of the errors
together deprived the petitioner of a fundamentally fair trial. United States v. Adams, 628 F.3d
407, 419 (7th Cir. 2010); Alvarez v. Boyd, 225 F.3d 820, 825 (7th Cir. 2000).
With respect to two of Kubsch’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, I have found
that counsel failed to act with reasonable professional competence. These involve trial counsel’s
use of Gina DiDonato’s testimony, introducing the suggestion that Kubsch may have “bragged”
in prison about shooting Rick and Aaron in the mouth, as well as counsel’s failure, with respect
to the forensic blood evidence, to figure out the difference between “blood was present” and
“blood may have been present” in the bathroom drains. I must now consider whether the effect
of these errors together was sufficiently strong as to deprive Kubsch of a fundamentally fair trial.
The question is whether the impact of counsel’s failures in these couple of respects
undermine my confidence in the outcome of Kubsch’s trial. Giving the question careful thought,
I conclude that cumulative error does not warrant habeas relief. The evidence supporting
Kubsch’s guilt vastly outweighed the impact of these insubstantial shortcomings of the defense.
The jury heard that Kubsch had amassed substantial debt and financial delinquency
problems that could be readily addressed by the $575,000 in life insurance that he had recently
procured on his wife. They heard evidence suggesting that three days before the murders,
Kubsch had bought the duct tape that was used to bind Beth. The duct tape found on Beth had
fibers on it from Kubsch’s truck. Sunglasses that several witnesses identified with Kubsch were
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found next to Beth’s body. Kubsch’s friends Dave and Gina Nichols testified that Wayne told
them Beth was dead before the police notified him that her body had even been found. Wayne
also told Dave Nichols that Rick and Aaron had been shot when that fact was not discovered
until their autopsies a day later. What’s more, the house was locked on the day of the murders,
there was no evidence of forced entry and only Kubsch and Beth had keys. The night of the
murders, Kubsch didn’t offer police any information he had about his wife’s whereabouts that
day, and otherwise offered no input into any attempt to search for her though she was missing
after two brutal murders had been discovered in their home with her car in the driveway.
Ultimately, the jury was unable to accept any interpretation of this evidence consistent
with Kubsch’s innocence, as his lies and attempts at obfuscation mounted. Kubsch’s
explanations of what he did at lunchtime the day of the murders made little sense and changed as
he discovered what the police were able to determine by other means of investigation. Likewise,
Kubsch first claimed to the police that he did not go home after work on the day of the murder.
Yet he changed his story only after discovering that the police could place him there via the cell
phone tower records. Putting all this evidence together left no reasonable doubt about Kubsch’s
guilt of the murders.
That result would not likely have been different but for the unprofessional errors by
Kubsch’s trial counsel. The fleeting reference to the hearsay about Kubsch having incriminated
himself by jailhouse “bragging” could not reasonably be thought to have had much impact on the
jury’s verdict. Nor were the scales tipped against Kubsch by the misunderstanding about the
significance of the blood evidence which, even misunderstood, was entirely nonspecific as to
whose blood might have been present or how and when it got there. Moreover, the relative
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insignificance of these two areas of testimony is shown by the fact the prosecution never even
touched on them in his closing argument. In other words, it played very little role in the
prosecution theory of the case. Separately or in combination, the evidence involved in these
areas of deficient performance by Kubsch’s counsel could not reasonably or realistically be
thought to have carried the day for the prosecution, and so no right to relief is demonstrated on
the claim of cumulative attorney error.
Claim VI -- Counsel’s Failure to Raise Kubsch’s Competency to Waive Counsel
at Penalty Stage
Kubsch’s Claim VI presents one additional ineffective assistance claim, this one
concerning the penalty phase of the case. Kubsch asserts that his counsel rendered ineffective
assistance because they “failed to investigate his competency when Kubsch indicated that he
intended to waive his right to counsel and forgo the presentation of mitigating evidence at the
penalty stage of his trial.” [DE 16 at 62.] Kubsch’s claim is that his trial counsel, though aware
Kubsch suffered from “one or more mental disorders, including depression,” failed to investigate
or request a competency hearing, and that as a result there is a reasonable probability that the
penalty phase occurred while Kubsch was incompetent. [DE 26 at 93.]
First a word about the standard of review now applicable to this claim. In support of his
petition, Kubsch acknowledges that the Indiana Supreme Court dealt with “this claim” on his
post-conviction appeal, and denied relief on the grounds of prior adjudication. [DE 16 at 62.] In
response, the State makes reference to the same res judicata determination by the Indiana
Supreme Court. Both Kubsch and the State argue the claim on the merits without any reference
to §2254(d) deference. In his traverse, Kubsch addresses the standard of review for the first
time, arguing that the Indiana Supreme Court’s ruling was not “on the merits” because the court
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misconstrued the claim before it and did not address the substance of the ineffective assistance
claim. [DE 26 at 93-94.] In any event, I will do as the parties have done and analyze the claim
“head on,” finding that the claim must be rejected even in the absence of any deference to the
Indiana state courts’ handling of it.
So the issue is whether counsel was ineffective for failing to raise Kubsch’s competency
prior to the penalty phase of trial. But rather than actually assert that he was incompetent (or is
incompetent now), Kubsch apparently would say that’s the wrong question – “Where a
defendant argues that he should have received a competency hearing, the focus of the prejudice
inquiry is whether there is a reasonable probability the defendant would have been found
incompetent had a hearing been held.” [DE 26 at 96 (emphasis added).] Kubsch argues that his
depression and mood disorder, of which trial counsel were already aware, would have been
shown to significantly impair his judgment and his ability to make complex decisions, and
thereby to render him without the requisite degree of understanding of the proceedings.
In Dusky v. United States, 362 U.S. 402, 402 (1960), the Supreme Court said that the test
for competency to stand trial “must be whether [a defendant] has sufficient present ability to
consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and whether he has a
rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him.” In Indiana v.
Edwards, 554 U.S. 164, 170 (2008), the Supreme Court quoted the Dusky standard and its recap
in Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 171 (1975), defining a defendant’s competency as “the
capacity to understand the nature and object of the proceedings against him, to consult with
counsel, and to assist in preparing his defense.” And in Godinez v. Moran, 509 U.S. 389, 391
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(1993), the Supreme Court held that the competency standard for pleading guilty or waiving the
right to counsel is no different and no higher than the competency standard for standing trial.
The competency formulation that Kubsch uses –“capable of making complex decisions”–
appears to come from what the Ninth Circuit was using at the time of Godinez. The Supreme
Court reversed the Ninth Circuit in Godinez, although in doing so Justice Thomas says that any
difference between the Ninth Circuit’s standard and the Dusky “rational understanding” standard
is not “readily apparent.” Id. This is a bit surprising, because being “capable of complex
decisions” sounds like a higher level of function (of intelligence, even) than mere “rational
understanding.” Kubsch’s counsel may agree, and so they like to use that language because it
sounds like it sets a higher threshold.
In any event, especially where Kubsch is not now asserting that he was in fact
incompetent, I don’t believe he has demonstrated that his trial counsel were ineffective for
failing to raise the issue of his competency when Kubsch asserted that he wanted to proceed pro
se for the penalty phase of trial. Kubsch had advised counsel well before the trial even started
that “he didn’t want a penalty phase to occur, if he was found guilty in phase one. So we knew
that.” [PCR Tr. 102.] They had dealt with him closely for weeks during the course of the trial,
were aware of how he was functioning, and perceived no changes in his mental state. [PCR Tr.
109.]
When Kubsch asserted his election to represent himself in the penalty stage, the trial
judge, in the course of his Faretta colloquy, stated for the record:
[I]n this case, that the Court observed Mr. Kubsch throughout trial, that during trial
he pretty much constantly was able to confer with his attorneys, was able to confer
with his factual investigator that had interviewed witnesses in this case, that he
testified in this case, that the Court found his testimony to be coherent and relevant
77
to the facts of this case, and that the Court has no reason to doubt Mr. Kubsch’s
competency to represent himself in this matter.
[Tr. at 3340.] I don’t see any realistic probability that the trial judge would have at that juncture
found Kubsch incompetent to continue to stand trial or to waive counsel, even if the proceedings
were interrupted with a competency hearing at which the court heard the parade of experts
adduced at the post-conviction hearing, who basically testified that Kubsch was depressed and
somewhat fatalistic. Unfortunately, the reality is that these are mental states entirely to be
expected of one in Kubsch’s circumstances.
In sum, Kubsch’s trial counsel were not ineffective for failing to request a competency
hearing prior to the sentencing phase of trial. To ask for the proceeding to be interrupted so that
a competency hearing could be had – all while the jury sat waiting in the wings – would have
assuredly drawn the wrath of the trial judge. Trial counsel were wise to not go down that
pointless path. They were not ineffective, and so there is no basis for relief on Claim VI.
Claim VII -- Knowing, Intelligent and Voluntary Waiver of Right to Counsel
In this variant of Claim VI, Kubsch argues that he did not make a knowing and voluntary
waiver of his right to counsel at the penalty phase. Here, Kubsch is critical of the trial court’s
Faretta inquiry for failing to adequately advise him of the consequences and pitfalls of
representing himself and for not expressly discouraging the waiver of counsel. This ground will
be denied because the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision on the claim was a reasonable
application of the U.S. Supreme Court decisions on what the Constitution requires for waiver of
counsel in Godinez v. Moran, 509 U.S. 389 (1993), Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806 (1975),
and Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458 (1938). The Indiana Supreme Court correctly identified and
applied the U.S. Supreme Court holdings applicable to this claim, citing Faretta and Johnson,
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and recognizing that the knowing and intelligent relinquishment of the right to counsel depends
on the circumstances of the case and the background and experience of the defendant.
The issue was addressed on direct appeal and was thoroughly and reasonably considered.
In the unique context of this case – after two murder trials and a previous penalty phase – the
Indiana Supreme Court reviewed the trial court’s Faretta inquiry, the entire record of the case,
Kubsch’s prior background and experience, and the particular context of the decision to waive
representation, and reasonably concluded that Kubsch had knowingly and intelligently waived
the benefits of counsel for purposes of the penalty phase, consistent with his decision not to put
on mitigation evidence. Kubsch II, 866 N.E.2d at 735-38. Because the Indiana Supreme Court’s
careful and detailed treatment of this claim was not contrary to, nor an unreasonable application
of governing United States Supreme Court authority, no relief can be granted on Claim VII.
Conclusion
Wayne Kubsch has been tried twice for the murders of his wife, her son and her exhusband. Both times he has been convicted and sentenced to death. The matter has been
reviewed by the Indiana Supreme Court on direct and post-conviction appeal, and Kubsch has
now presented his grounds for relief from the judgment and sentence under federal habeas
corpus standards. Those standards bear in mind that even “given the myriad safeguards provided
to assure a fair trial, and taking into account the reality of the human fallibility of the
participants, there can be no such thing as an error-free, perfect trial, and...the Constitution does
not guarantee such a trial.” United States v. Hasting, 461 U.S. 499, 508-09 (1983). The
threshold for habeas corpus relief is high – the petitioner must demonstrate that “the state court’s
ruling on the claim being presented in federal court was so lacking in justification that there was
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an error...beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Harrison v. Richter, 131 S.Ct.
770, 786-87 (2011). The Supreme Court has recently said that it “will not lightly conclude that a
State’s criminal justice system has experienced the ‘extreme malfunctio[n]’ for which federal
habeas relief is the remedy.” Burt v. Titlow,
U.S.
(Nov. 5, 2013) (slip op. at 6) (quoting
Richter, 131 S.Ct. at 786).
I have given careful consideration to each of the claims Kubsch asserts for reversal of his
conviction and a new trial or sentencing. I am convinced that Kubsch does not establish an
entitlement to such relief, and that he has not shown that any constitutional error occurred in the
proceedings that had a substantial and injurious influence in determining the jury’s verdicts.
Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 638 (1993).
Certificate of Appealability
“The district court must issue or deny a certificate of appealability when it enters a final
order adverse to the applicant.” SECTION 2254 HABEAS RULE 11(a). “A certificate of
appealability may issue . . . only if the applicant has made a substantial showing of the denial of
a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. §2253(c)(2). To obtain a certificate of appealability, Kubsch
must show that reasonable jurists could debate whether his petition should have been resolved
differently. Miller-El v. Cockrell, 537 U.S. 322, 336 (2003).
A prisoner seeking a COA must prove something more than the absence of frivolity
or the existence of mere good faith on his or her part. We do not require petitioner
to prove, before the issuance of a COA, that some jurists would grant the petition for
habeas corpus. Indeed, a claim can be debatable even though every jurist of reason
might agree, after the COA has been granted and the case has received full
consideration, that petitioner will not prevail. As we stated in Slack [v. McDaniel,
529 U.S. 473 (2000)], where a district court has rejected the constitutional claims on
the merits, the showing required to satisfy §2253(c) is straightforward: The petitioner
must demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find the district court’s assessment
of the constitutional claims debatable or wrong.
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Id. at 338 (quotation marks and citations omitted).
Here, Kubsch has raised seven grounds in his habeas corpus petition. As explained
below, I will grant a certificate of appealability as to Grounds II, IV, V and VII; I will deny a
certificate of appealability as to Grounds I, III and VI.
Ground I – A COA will not issue on the Fifth Amendment claim in Ground I because the
law is clear that a request for consent to search is not interrogation and because the facts are
clear that Kubsch was not in custody at the time complained of.
Ground II – Because reasonable jurists could debate the existence and content of clearly
established federal standards applicable to Kubsch’s claim that prosecutor Michael Dvorak had a
conflict of interest violating due process, a COA will issue as to this ground.
Ground III – A COA will not issue as to Kubsch’s Brady claims, because no reasonable
jurist could find the subject information to be material to the determination of Kubsch’s guilt or
his sentence.
Ground IV – I will grant a COA on this ground relating to the exclusion of Amanda
Buck’s prior statement. The analysis of the evidentiary issues, the application of Chambers and
the handling of both in a habeas corpus context provides many points of analysis open to debate
among reasonable jurists.
Ground V – The eleven claims of ineffective assistance of counsel in Ground V involve
various reasonably debatable issues of deficient performance, prejudice, and cumulative error so
as to warrant the granting of a COA.
Ground VI – No COA will issue on Kubsch’s claim concerning his trial counsel’s
handling of his waiver of counsel in the penalty phase. His argument does not debatably support
81
a determination that counsel was deficient for failure to investigate or seek a hearing on
Kubsch’s competency to waive counsel, or that Kubsch was prejudiced from the failure to do so.
Ground VII – I will grant a COA on Ground VII, believing that reasonable minds may
disagree concerning the Indiana Supreme Court’s analysis of the sufficiency of the trial judge’s
Faretta inquiry when Kubsch signaled his desire to waive counsel during the penalty stage.
ACCORDINGLY:
For the foregoing reasons, petitioner Wayne Kubsch’s Petition for a Writ of Habeas
Corpus [DE 16] is DENIED. The Clerk shall enter judgment accordingly.
SO ORDERED.
ENTERED: December 2, 2013.
/s/ Philip P. Simon
Philip Simon, Chief Judge
United States District Court
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