DOC recommends denial of this claim. On 3/16/14 the claimant was sent to TLU and Hobby staff inventoried his property on 3/18/14. The claimant was transferred back to his regular cell and his property returned on 4/4/14. The claimant was again sent to TLU on 4/26/14. When Hobby staff inventoried his property on 5/1/14, they discovered he had 14.4 oz of pink yarn and 23.2 oz. of light lavender yarn in excess of what was shown on the 3/18 inventory. The claimant had no receipts showing he had purchased additional yarn between 4/4 and 4/26. Therefore, DOC staff determined he must have obtained the yarn through unauthorized means and declared it contraband. Pursuant to DOC policy, the contraband yarn was destroyed. DOC disputes the claimant’s allegation that he obtained the yarn by ripping out the project started at the time of the 3/18 inventory. The 5/1 inventory clearly shows the claimant was still working on the same project. DOC states that staff properly seized and disposed of the yarn because it was contraband and obtained by the claimant though unauthorized channels.
The Board concludes there has been an insufficient showing of negligence on the part of the state, its officers, agents or employees and this claim is neither one for which the state is legally liable nor one with the state should assume and pay based on equitable principles. [Member Ignatowski dissenting.]
8. Jerome T. Walker of Waupun, Wisconsin claims $51.95 for property allegedly improperly seized and destroyed by DOC staff. The claimant is an inmate at Waupun Correctional Institution. On 11/4/14, DOC staff searched his cell and confiscated a number of canteen items. The claimant alleges that DOC staff took the items because they believed he had not purchased them but that he was able to produce receipts for 98% of the items. The claimant alleges that after he produced the receipts, DOC told him the items had been confiscated because they were “past their 6 month consumption time.” The claimant states there is no DOC rule requiring that canteen items be consumed within 6 months of purchase. The claimant filed an inmate complaint, which was denied. He appealed that decision but was again denied. The claimant states that he was not over the possession limit for any of the items and that DOC should not have seized them. He also believes that he should have been allowed to mail the allegedly contraband items to his family, rather than them being destroyed by DOC.
DOC recommends denial of this claim. DOC notes that canteen purchase limits for inmates are also canteen possession limits. DOC states that inmates are informed of this rule and are responsible for ensuring they do not exceed the allowed number of canteen items. DOC states that the cell search turned up numerous canteen items in excess of the possession limits and a number of items for which the claimant could not produce receipts. Because the items were in excess of allowable canteen limits, the items were declared contraband and destroyed. DOC notes that, per DOC policy, inmates are not allowed to mail out canteen items to family members. DOC believes the excess canteen items were correctly classified as contraband and properly destroyed.
The Board concludes there has been an insufficient showing of negligence on the part of the state, its officers, agents or employees and this claim is neither one for which the state is legally liable nor one with the state should assume and pay based on equitable principles.
9. Raynard R. Jackson of Boscobel, Wisconsin claims $25,000.00 for Innocent Convict Compensation pursuant to §775.05, Wis. Stats., related to a 2004 conviction. The claimant states that he was framed by officers of the Milwaukee Police Department and that he is innocent of the crimes for which he was convicted.  
The claimant states that on 3/25/03 he and a companion, Morris Rash, saw a police car pass them as they entered a store. When they exited the store, the squad turned around and followed them as they walked down the sidewalk. The claimant states that he and Rash ran from the officers because they were both subject to outstanding warrants. The claimant states that Officer Lough chased him but that he was apprehended by Officer Dodd. Officer Awadallah apprehended Morris Rash. The claimant states that he did not have a gun.
The claimant states that this encounter involved a “rogue” group of District 3 officers: Awadallah, Lough, Dodd, and Dineen, who had a history of framing individuals for crimes and other misconduct. The claimant notes that the prior District 3 Captain had been relieved of command for sending a memo that encouraged officers to make “the thugs” lives “even more miserable than before” after a District 3 officer was transferred out of the district due to misconduct. The claimant alleges that these four officers planted a gun at the scene of his arrest and conspired to falsify reports in order to frame him.
The claimant alleges that the officers lied about many elements of the arrest. He states there is no record of the “drug dealing complaint” to which the officers said they were responding. He states the officers saw him and Rash enter and leave the store; therefore, they were clearly not loitering. The claimant notes that Officer Lough wrote contradictory reports, one indicating that he picked up the gun as he pursued the clamant and one indicating that he went back for the gun after he apprehended the claimant. The claimant points to the fact that the gun the officers claim he discarded was the exact same type and caliber issued to police officers, that it was not registered or reported stolen, and that it did not have the claimant’s fingerprints on it. The claimant notes that Officer Lough testified at trial that he inventoried the gun into evidence, but police records show that it was Officer Awadallah who checked in the gun, more than five hours after claimant was arrested. The claimant states that Officer Lough also reported that he was present for both the claimant’s and Rice’s arrests, even though the claimant and Rice fled in different directions and were arrested in different locations. The claimant alleges that, contrary to the reports he filed, Officer Lough did not have any contact with him, and that Officer Dodd arrested him. The claimant alleges that Officer Dodd struck him while he was handcuffed, and took his watch and money, neither of which was ever inventoried.
In February 2005, the claimant was convicted of possession of a firearm by a felon, carrying a concealed weapon, and resisting an officer.
The claimant’s initial postconviction counsel, Attorney Lucius, filed an appeal in September 2005. In March 2005 Officer Awadallah was charged in federal court for threatening to plant evidence on a suspect in an unrelated case. Despite the fact that the charges against Officer Awadallah were prominently reported in multiple Milwaukee-area and statewide media sources while the postconviction motion was still pending, Lucius failed to raise the issue in the motion.
In addition, in 2006 while the claimant’s appeal was pending, the court of appeals released its decision in State v. Missouri. The court granted a new trial to Missouri due to the trial court’s refusal to admit evidence of other acts of misconduct involving Officers Awadallah Lough, Dodd, and Dineen. Despite the fact that these were the same four officers involved in claimant’s arrest, Lucius failed to amend his motion. The claimant’s postconviction motion was denied by the trial court.
In 2007, the claimant’s new attorney, Mr. Gould, filed a postconviction motion for ineffective assistance of counsel based on Lucius’s failure to raise issues related to the Missouri decision and newly discovered evidence—Officer Awadallah’s conviction on federal civil rights charges. This motion was also denied by the trial court.
Attorney Gould appealed the denial and in December 2008, the court of appeals ordered a hearing on the issues. In the July 2009 hearing, the court found that attorney Lucius’s failure to bring up Officer Awadallah’s prosecution and the Missouri decision constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. The court vacated the two gun-related convictions and remanded those charges for a new trial. In August 2009, the State dismissed the gun-related charges.
The claimant states that the officers involved in his arrest have no credibility, which has been proven by Awadallah’s conviction and reversals of numerous other individuals’ convictions based on the same type of misconduct by the officers involved in his arrest.
The claimant states he would have only served 9 months for the obstruction conviction and requests the maximum reimbursement for the six years and three months he spent in prison.
The Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office (DA) recommends denial of this claim. The DA states that neither the court proceedings nor the claimant’s submissions establish that he was actually innocent of the crimes for which he was convicted, and that the State’s decision to dismiss the gun-related charges was not based on a determination that the clamant was innocent of those charges.
The DA notes that the court of appeals did not find that there was merit to the claimant’s underlying claim, but only that his motion was sufficient to warrant a hearing. At the July 2009 hearing, Judge Martens found that Awadallah’s conviction and the Missouri decision “at least as it relates to Awadallah” created a reasonable probability that the trial result would have been different due to Awadallah’s role in the chain of custody of the recovered gun. Judge Martens vacated the gun-related charges and ordered a new trial on those counts; however, the obstruction charge was not overturned.
The DA points to the fact that Judge Martens’ ruling was limited to Officer Awadallah and the chain of custody issue. Significantly, Judge Martens 1) did not find that the claimant was innocent in fact; 2) did not find that any officer engaged in misconduct; 3) did not find that the evidence would be insufficient to establish guilt at retrial; and 4) did not determine that Missouri evidence was admissible to any officer other than Awadallah.
The DA states that it moved to dismiss the gun-related charges because the evidence would not have been as strong at retrial, since Awadallah was not available to establish chain of custody. That, and the possibility that Missouri evidence would be admitted, raised the question of whether the State could prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt. In addition, the claimant had served most, if not all, of his maximum sentence. Therefore, the state moved to dismiss the outstanding charges.
The DA believes the claimant has failed to meet the standard of providing clear and convincing evidence that he was innocent and recommends denial of this claim.
The Board defers decision of the claim at this time so that the claimant can be made available to attending a hearing.
The Board concludes:
That the following identified claimants are denied:
TRC Engineers, Inc.
Robert Steinway
Regenial Hoskins
Sandra Klemm
Elbert Compton
Jerome T. Walker (2 claims)
That the following identified claimants are denied:
Raynard R. Jackson
That payment of the amounts below to the identified claimants from the following statutory appropriations is justified under § 775.05, Stats:  
Reinaldo Acosta, Jr. $245.00 § 20.410(1)(a), Stats.
Dated at Madison, Wisconsin this 31st day of June, 2013.
COREY FINKELMEYER
Chair, Representative of the Attorney General
GREGORY D. MURRAY
Secretary, Representative of the Secretary of Administration
KATIE E. IGNATOWSKI
Representative of the Governor
LUTHER OLSEN
Senate Finance Committee
MARY CZAJA
Assembly Finance Committee
_____________
Legislative Reference Bureau Corrections
Corrections In:
ASSEMBLY AMENDMENT 1,
TO ASSEMBLY SUBSTITUTE AMENDMENT 1,
TO 2015 ASSEMBLY BILL 874
Prepared by the Legislative Reference Bureau
(February 24, 2016)
hist57618
1.
Page 1, line 4: delete “”except for”” and substitute “”, except for””.
2
2.
Page 2, line 10: delete “(am)” and substitute “(am).”.
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