State v. Counihan
State v. Counihan
Opinion of the Court
¶1 Carrie Counihan appeals a judgment of conviction entered on her no-contest pleas to five counts of misdemeanor theft. She also appeals an order denying her motion for post-conviction relief. She contends she was denied due process at sentencing when the circuit court informed the parties that it had reviewed the sentences of similarly situated defendants in other cases within the county without giving her notice and an opportunity to review those cases. Counihan also claims her trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the court's consideration of the sentences imposed in the other cases, and by failing to seek an adjournment so that the defense could have time to review those cases prior to sentencing. We reject her arguments and affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶2 Pursuant to a plea agreement, Counihan pleaded no contest to five misdemeanor charges of theft from the Door County Humane Society that she committed as executive director of that society. In exchange for Counihan's pleas, the parties jointly recommended that, upon Counihan's advance payment of restitution, the circuit court withhold sentence, place Counihan on probation with sixty days' conditional jail time imposed and stayed, order her to pay a fine on each count, and write a letter of apology to the humane society.
¶3 As relevant to this appeal, the circuit court explained during sentencing that it had reviewed sentences imposed in other Door County court cases. The court stated: "Perhaps most significantly, I pulled all files that we could find in Door County where somebody has pled to theft in a business-type setting. There were about six or seven of them that we could find, and I have reviewed those files in detail."
¶4 Later in its sentencing remarks, the circuit court provided the parties with the case numbers of the cases it had reviewed and then described certain "themes and dynamics" of the cases that were "very interesting to [it]." The court commented on whether jail or probation was ordered in each case and why, in the court's opinion, probation was given in some cases and not in others. The court also explained that it found one Door County case "most like" Counihan's because the defendant in that case stole money from a local business "over many months" and "spent 11 months in jail." The court then stated:
Now, this Court realizes - this Court, this person, this attorney practiced law for many years, 30 years, and I certainly understand that every single case is different. Every case has a nuance. So these prior cases, these other cases in Door County, have provided this Court guidance, but I am not relying solely on these other cases.
¶5 The circuit court rejected the parties' joint recommendation for probation and sentenced Counihan to nine months in jail, concluding that probation "would unduly depreciate the seriousness of the offenses here" and that Counihan "need[ed] to be held accountable" for her actions. It also explained that probation was inappropriate for Counihan because "probation is appropriate where somebody needs supervision," and Counihan did not need "that type of supervision."
¶6 Counihan subsequently filed a pro se motion for post-conviction relief, and after retaining counsel, she filed an amended post-conviction motion. Counihan asserted that she had not been properly informed of her right to seek post-conviction relief, contrary to WIS. STAT. § 973.18(2), and that she received ineffective assistance of counsel at her sentencing hearing.
¶7 As relevant to this appeal, Counihan argued her counsel was ineffective because he failed to object to the circuit court's consideration of the other Door County cases, and he failed to seek an adjournment to provide her with time to review those cases prior to her sentencing. Counihan also asserted a due process violation, arguing the court erred by failing to give her notice prior to sentencing of its intent to review the Door County cases. She contended this error prejudiced her because she was unable to properly review and research the cases to "make a reasoned argument to the court that [her] proposed sentence was consistent with what had occurred in previous cases similar to cases such as hers."
¶8 After a Machner hearing,
DISCUSSION
¶9 Counihan argues that due process required the circuit court to provide her with advance notice of its intention to review other Door County cases when determining her sentence because she had "no opportunity to review or rebut this information." In the alternative, she argues that her counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to object during the court's sentencing remarks and failing to seek an adjournment.
¶10 We decline to address the merits of Counihan's due process argument because she forfeited it. Counihan failed to preserve the issue for appellate review when she did not object at sentencing to the circuit court's use of the Door County cases. See State v. Ndina ,
¶11 Counihan analogizes her case to State v. Tiepelman ,
¶12 We are well aware that the forfeiture rule is one of judicial administration and that we have the authority to ignore a forfeiture. See State v. Erickson ,
¶13 To prevail on an ineffective assistance claim, a defendant must show both that counsel's performance was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. Strickland v. Washington ,
¶14 Counihan cannot show that but for her attorney's alleged error, there is a reasonable probability that her sentence would have been different. See State v. Sholar ,
¶15 Our conclusion is further confirmed by the circuit court's explicit statements at both Counihan's sentencing hearing and the Machner hearing. We may review a court's entire sentencing remarks, including those made at a post-conviction hearing, to ascertain the court's basis for the sentence it imposed. See State v. Alexander ,
¶16 In all, there is no reasonable probability that the circuit court would have imposed a different sentence had it not reviewed the Door County cases. Counihan has not shown how her sentence would have been different-i.e., no jail time-had she known about the cases ahead of time. Therefore, she has failed to demonstrate prejudice from her counsel's allegedly deficient performance, and the circuit court properly rejected her ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
¶17 Counihan argues that her counsel's failure to object prejudiced her defense because she "was deprived of a sentencing proceeding whose result is fair and reliable." She asserts that she could not both "ensure that she [was] sentenced upon accurate information" and have the opportunity to "rebut that information." We are not persuaded. The circuit court provided her with the case numbers of the other Door County cases it considered at sentencing. Counihan asserts that she should have been afforded the opportunity to "confirm the accuracy" of the information in the other Door County cases considered by the court. However, she fails to point to any information the court relied upon-involving the Door County cases or otherwise-that was inaccurate or in some way inapposite to the facts in her case after now having had an opportunity to review those cases. Armed with the Door County case numbers provided to her by the court, Counihan could have reviewed those cases and provided either the circuit court at her post-conviction motion hearing, or this court on appeal, with any inaccurate information she believed the circuit court relied upon at sentencing. Because of Counihan's inaction, her argument is speculative. Thus, Counihan fails to show she was prejudiced by her counsel's failure to object to the court's consideration of the sentencing information in the other Door County cases.
By the Court. -Judgment and order affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(1)(b)4.
This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to
See State v. Machner ,
The circuit court also found that it did not inform Counihan of her right to seek post-conviction relief, as it is required to do under
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.