IN THE SUPREME COURT OF FLORIDA
CASE NO. 89,564
STATE OF FLORIDA
Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
v.
DIETER RIECHMANN
Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
ON APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT FOR DADE COUNTY,
STATE OF FLORIDA
APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF
TERRI L. BACKHUS
Florida Bar No. 0946427
Post Office Box 3294
Tampa, FL 33601-3294
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE/
CROSS-APPELLANT
ii
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
This proceeding involves the appeal of portions of the
circuit court’s denial of Mr. Riechmann’s motion for
postconviction relief and the cross-appeal of the circuit court’s
order granting postconviction relief. The motion was brought
pursuant to Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.850. After holding an evidentiary
hearing, the circuit court denied relief on Mr. Riechmann’s
convictions but set aside the sentence of death based on
ineffective assistance of counsel, the state’s misconduct in
withholding exculpatory evidence under Brady v. Maryland and the
trial court’s failure to prepare its own independent sentencing
order.
The following symbols will be used to designate references
to the record in the instant causes:
"R." – record on direct appeal to this Court;
"PC-R."- record on 3.850 appeal to this Court.
STATEMENT OF TYPE SIZE AND STYLE
This brief is submitted in New Courier typeface in 12 point
type.
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
STATEMENT OF TYPE SIZE AND STYLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv
ARGUMENT I
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO GRANT MR. RIECHMANN A
NEW TRIAL AFTER SETTING ASIDE HIS SENTENCE OF DEATH WHEN IT
FAILED TO USE THE SAME ANALYSIS FOR GUILT PHASE EVIDENCE
THAT IT DID FOR PENALTY PHASE EVIDENCE. . . . . . . . . . 1
ARGUMENT II & III
NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE AND BRADY CLAIMS . . . . . 20
ARGUMENT VI
INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL--FEDERAL GUN CHARGES CLAIM
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
ARGUMENT IV
THE LOWER COURT CORRECTLY VACATED MR. RIECHMANN’S DEATH
SENTENCE AND WAS CORRECT IN ORDERING A NEW SENTENCING
HEARING BUT SHOULD HAVE GRANTED A NEW TRIAL.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
CONCLUSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
CASES
Bouie v. State, 559 So. 2d 1113 (Fla. 1990) . . . . . . . . . 31
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963) . ii, 4, 13, 20, 22, 25-27
Card v. State, 497 So.2d 1169 (Fla. 1986) . . . . . . . . . . 12
Farr v. State, 656 So.2d 448 (Fla. 1995) . . . . . . . . . . 37
Glock v. Dugger, 537 So. 2d 99 (Fla. 1989) . . . . . . . . . 12
Grossman v. State, 525 So. 2d 833 (Fla. 1988) . . . . . . . . 31
Gunsby v. State, 670 So.2d 920 (Fla. 1996) . . . . . 32, 33, 37
Hildwin v. Dugger, 654 So. 2d 107 (Fla. 1995) . . . . . . . . 33
Koon v. Dugger, 619 So.2d 246 (Fla. 1993) . . . . . . . . . . 36
Kyles v. Whitley, 115 S. Ct. 1555 (1995) . . . . . . . . 21, 27
Layman v. State, 652 So. 2d 373 (Fla. 1995) . . . . . . . . . 31
Mitchell v. Kemp, 762 F.2d 886 (11
th Cir. 1985) . . . . . . . 36Patterson v. State, 513 So.2d 1257 (Fla. 1987) . . . . . . 30-32
Provenzano v. Dugger, 561 So.2d 541 (Fla. 1990) . . . . . . . 12
Stewart v. State, 549 So. 2d 171 (Fla. 1989) . . . . . . . . 31
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984) . . . . . . . . 34
U.S. v Lowrey, 15 F. Supp. 2d 1348 (1998) . . . . . . . . . . 18
Valle v. State, 705 So.2d 1331 (Fla. 1997 . . . . . . . . . . 12
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
18 U.S.C.A. Section 201(c)(2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Fla. Stat. 921.141 (1985) . . . . . . . ii, 4, 13, 20, 22, 25-27
Rule 4-3.4(b) Florida Rules of Professional Responsibility . 12
v
1
ARGUMENT I
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO GRANT MR. RIECHMANN
A NEW TRIAL AFTER SETTING ASIDE HIS SENTENCE OF DEATH
WHEN IT FAILED TO USE THE SAME ANALYSIS FOR GUILT PHASE
EVIDENCE THAT IT DID FOR PENALTY PHASE EVIDENCE.
A. Ineffective assistance of counsel:
Blood spatter and gunshot residue evidence.
Contrary to the state’s argument in its answer brief, a
defense expert at trial would have contradicted the testimony of
the state’s expert. See, State’s Answer Brief at page 50. Trial
counsel did not retain or investigate the possibility of
obtaining a defense expert on blood forensic evidence even though
he admitted that the blood evidence was the "lynchpin" of the
state’s case.
At the evidentiary hearing, defense counsel, Mr. Carhart,
testified that he considered the blood spatter evidence to be a
"lynch pin" of the state’s case but that he considered the
state’s expert, Mr. Rhodes, to be "benign" until his trial
testimony. He said Rhodes’ importance did not become evident to
him until "...it was showering down on me at trial." (PC-R.5685).
Judge Gold acknowledged that trial counsel’s failure to
investigate rebuttal evidence was
not tactical and that trialcounsel should have been aware of this important evidence:
...Admittedly, trial counsel offered no
tactical reason why he did not retain or call an expert
serologist.
***
1
Defense counsel had sufficient time to retain an expert ingunshot residue, Dr. Guinn. It stands to reason that if counsel
had time to retain one expert, he had time to retain an expert on
the pivotal bloodstain evidence.
2
By July 7, 1988, trial counsel was certainly on
notice that Mr. Rhodes’ testimony was a "moving target"
and ultimately problematic. (PC-R. 6036-37)(emphasis
added).
Instead of applying the same principles it used to grant
relief in sentencing, the Court gave a convoluted excuse for why
defense counsel did not investigate or present rebuttal evidence:
Notwithstanding Mr. Potolski’s testimony, the
Defendant has failed to sufficiently meet his burden by
demonstrating that, based on a reasonable probability,
Mr. James, or a similar expert, would have been found
by an ordinary competent attorney using diligent
efforts and that such an expert would have been
prepared to rebut the State’s serologist at trial.
***
Rather, the "reasonable probability" standard must
be measured from trial counsel’s perspective at the
time, without resort to distorting hindsight. No
testimony was offered that, given the time limitations
immediately before trial, Mr. James could have rendered
the same opinions as offered at the post conviction
hearing. (PC-R. 6037-38).
Judge Gold found Stuart James to be credible. The judge
simply questioned Carhart’s ability to retain an expert within
the time constraints of trial.
1 The record does not show thattrial counsel did not have time to retain an expert as he did for
the gunshot residue. The record does not show that trial counsel
requested a continuance to get an expert. The Court concluded
that trial counsel’s cross-examination of the witness was
effective in showing the weaknesses in the state’s expert’s
3
testimony. This was an erroneous conclusion because trial
counsel could not know the weaknesses in the state’s case without
obtaining a defense expert.
At the evidentiary hearing, the blood spatter expert, Mr.
James, did testified to matters that the state’s expert failed to
discover during his "investigation." For example, the state’s
blood expert failed to discover that several one dollar bills
were lying on Ms. Kischnik’s leg at the time she was shot (PCR.
3706). This evidence, missed entirely by the state’s blood
expert, corroborated Mr. Riechmann’s story that he and Ms.
Kischnik were lost and going to give some money to the person who
gave them directions out of the neighborhood they had strayed
into.
Mr. Riechmann could not have cross-examined the state’s
expert on this evidence at trial because he did not know it.
Neither the trial court nor the jury knew it. Had defense
counsel taken the time to obtain his own expert he would have
known this information.
The state misrepresents the substance of Mr. James’
testimony at evidentiary hearing. See, State’s Answer Brief at
pages 50-54. The state falsely concludes that Mr. James’ flick
test corroborated the state’s testimony at trial.
The flick test was one of many tests conducted by the
defense expert to contradict the state’s expert testimony. The
4
purpose of the test was to show that there were many possible
causes for the blood spatter to appear as it did that were more
reasonable than the state’s version of the facts. James
eliminated the possibility that the blood specks on the driver’s
door came from exhalation of blood. The distance and the
required angle from Kersten’s nostrils precluded such a
possibility. The flick test was done to show how easily blood
specks could get on the driver’s door from flicking one’s
fingers. This corroborated Mr. Riechmann’s story. Defense
counsel argued that there were other possibilities but could
offer no evidence to back it up.
One of Mr. James’ explanations was that the crime scene had
been tainted by law enforcement and medical personnel on the
scene. James testified that due to the large amount of activity
occurring in the car and that the door opened and closed more
than once, blood could have gotten on the driver’s door any
number of ways (PC-R. 3681-82; 3741-42). There was evidence to
support this claim but it was withheld or not discovered by trial
defense counsel. See, state habeas at page__.
James’ testimony is affected by the Brady material that was
withheld – the crime lab reports and Officer Trujillo’s report
about the height of the passenger window when the shooting
occurred. Defense counsel could not have cross-examined the
state’s witness on the critical discrepancies of this blood and
2
Trial counsel did not testify at the evidentiary hearingthat he did not present a blood expert because he would have
contradicted his client’s story. He had no knowledge about what
an expert would say because he did not speak to one. Also,
defense counsel supposedly decided at the last moment to call his
client. He had no prior plan to call his client. Therefore, an
expert’s testimony could not have been contradictory at guilt
phase.
5
window height evidence because
he did not have it.The state contends that Mr. James’ testimony could not have
been offered by trial defense counsel because it would have
contradicted Mr. Riechmann’s testimony about the angle of Ms.
Kischnik’s head after the shooting.
2 This is incorrect andcontradicted by the state’s own brief. See, State’s Answer Brief
at pages 53, 17. Mr. James did not concede that his explanation
of the blood spatter contradicted Mr. Riechmann’s testimony. He
explained that it could not have happened exclusively as the
state’s expert said it did at trial.
Mr. James said that he was certain that the handful of blood
specks found on the driver’s door and window did not come
directly from the shooting. The specks that the state’s expert
contended were made at the time of the shooting had no
significance to whether Mr. Riechmann was in the driver’s seat
(PC-R. 3681-82; 3741-42). In fact, based on the laws of physics
and the entrance wound, Mr. James testified "[I]t does not come
out of the back of the head and go up and out the other
direction. It just doesn’t happen."(PC-R. 3681-82; 3741-42).
6
Mr. James also testified that the state’s "string test" was
completely beyond the scope of current physics (PC-R. 3770).
This testimony would have had a profound effect on the jury’s
ability to judge the credibility of the state’s witness.
Judge Gold did not deny the claim on the basis of the
state’s allegation of contradictory evidence. He denied the
claim on the mistaken belief that trial defense counsel could not
find an expert in time.
Mr. Riechmann offered uncontradicted evidence at the
evidentiary hearing that trial defense counsel placed the time
constraints on himself. Expert witnesses, Georgi and Potolsky
both testified that failure to prepare or investigate the case in
advance was deficient performance. The state offered no evidence
to rebut their testimony. Had defense counsel prepared pretrial,
he would have retained a blood expert as he apparently had
time to do for the gunshot residue. Even Judge Gold acknowledged
that trial defense counsel should have known how important the
state’s blood evidence was going to be (PC-R. 6037).
More importantly, Mr. James testified that he would have
been available to testify at trial. The state has construed his
remark that it would "depend on scheduling" to mean that he was
not available (PC-R. 484). This is not true. Defense counsel
would have scheduled his blood expert just as he did his gunshot
residue expert. It is reasonable that if Dr. Guinn, the gunshot
7
residue expert, could make himself available, that a blood expert
would have done the same. Mr. James did not testify that he was
not available. The state presented no contradictory evidence.
The Court also failed to recognize the significance of the
state withholding a critical police report from the defense that
directly rebutted the testimony of Rhodes. The court held that
defense counsel’s failure to retain a blood spatter expert was
not prejudicial to Mr. Riechmann’s case because trial counsel had
the ability to cross-examine the expert. The court also said
there was no evidence presented that a blood expert could have
been available at trial(PC-R. 6037-38).
Neither of these conclusions address the prejudicial effect
of the uncontradicted expert testimony on the jury. The jury
never heard that Rhodes’ testimony defied the laws of physics;
that his methods were scientifically suspect; that the
conclusions he drew regarding blood droplets on the blanket were
not made at the time of the crime; that Rhodes’ string test
indicated no one point of origin; that Rhodes completely missed
the blood evidence that was present on several one-dollar bills
that were on Kersten’s leg at the time of the crime; and that the
blood spatter evidence on the passenger window indicated that the
window was rolled down significantly lower than he testified to
at trial. Judge Gold’s failure to grant a new trial based on
this omission by counsel in conjunction with others was error and
8
an abuse of discretion.
B. Gunshot residue evidence.
The state’s argument that Dr. Guinn, the defense expert on
gunshot residue, developed the FBI method of gunshot residue
analysis. Contrary to the state’s argument, Dr. Guinn was not
allowed to testify at trial that he had developed the FBI method
of gunshot residue analysis. The state objected and the
objection was sustained by the court. The state’s argument now
that it was not important is disingenuous. See, State’s Answer
Brief at page 56, n.6. It was certainly important enough for the
state to keep the information of Dr. Guinn’s expertise away from
the jury. It was one in a number of ploys to undermine the
credibility of Dr. Guinn’s authority at trial. That is why the
use of treatises and supporting documentation was so important.
The state suggests the gunshot evidence was not important
and that there was no "battle of the experts" on the gunshot
residue evidence. See, State’s Answer Brief at page 57. However,
this is contrary to the testimony of the state attorney at the
evidentiary hearing (PC-R. 4767).
The state’s expert, Dr.Rao’s, testimony was significant
because he testified that Mr. Riechmann "probably" fired a gun,
based on the number and type of particles found on his hands (R.
3
It bears noting that trial counsel "Thought [Rao} was aperjurer." (PC-R. 5709). However, counsel had no facts to back
up his intuition.
9
3545-46, 3553-54). This testimony was patently false.
3 As wasevident from the testimony of Raymond Cooper, expert firearms
examiner at the evidentiary hearing, Rao’s opinions flouted
universally accepted norms for gunshot residue analysis:
[T]he only conclusion you can draw from a positive gunshot
residue analysis is that the person either fired the weapon, was
in close proximity of a weapon being fired...or he handled a
recently fired weapon...
(PC-R. 3826). Cooper said there is "absolutely not" a way to
distinguish between those three possibilities. Id. Cooper was
unaware of any study or research that "would allow an expert to
offer the opinion" offered by Rao (PC-R. 3827). Cooper had never
heard of anyone rendering such an opinion (PC-R. 3829).
Cooper challenged Rao’s testimony that the presence of "one
more unique particle which contained all three [trace] elements"
would have enabled him to say to a scientific certainty that Mr.
Riechmann fired a gun. Cooper had never heard of such a thing.
Trial counsel failed to impeach Rao on these unscientific
conclusions or present any evidence that Rao’s conclusions were
false. The jury was forced to accept what the state presented
even though the conclusions defied the FBI standards and the
profession. As evident by this Court’s opinion on direct appeal,
Rao carried the day because of counsel’s failure to investigate
10
and present impeachment or rebuttal evidence.
In his February 22, 1988 deposition, Rao said that Mr.
Riechmann "probably fired a gun." Def. Ex. SSS pp 34-36, 49-50.
Defense counsel contacted his expert two weeks prior to this
deposition but failed to elicit from his expert that the state’s
protocol violated accepted scientific norms.
The jury never knew that FBI professional norms and controls
were not used in the case. Regardless of defense counsel’s
attempts at impeachment, the jury did not know that the
scientific conclusions of Rao were false. Mr. Riechmann offered
expert testimony at the evidentiary hearing that showed that the
most you can say about gunshot residue on the hands of a person
is that the person was "in the vicinity" when a firearm was
discharged (PC-R. 4285). Again, Judge Gold’s finding that crossexamination
by the defense was enough fails to consider that no
hard forensic evidence was presented by the defense to rebut the
state’s expert. The hearing court failed to recognize that crime
lab technicians failed to swab the interior of the car to
ascertain what levels of gunshot residue was in the rest of the
car. Without this information, Mr. Riechmann could not prove
that the residue levels on his hands when swabbed by the Miami
Beach Police Department were consistent with levels elsewhere in
the car.
The state’s suggestion that the jury rejected that Mr.
11
Riechmann’s testimony because he had more residue on his hands
than the victim had on hers is pure speculation. The crime scene
technicians did not even swab the inside of the car. There was
no evidence that Ms. Kischnick had her hands up in a defensive
manner at the time of the shooting. Mr. Riechmann did.
The jury’s ignorance of the fourteen (14) types of guns that
could have fired the fatal shot also was ignored by the hearing
court. The state argues that it did not matter that the state’s
expert, Quirk, testified that only three guns could have fired
the shot instead of fourteen because two of the guns that were on
his list were in the possession of Mr. Riechmann. See, State’s
Answer Brief at page 59. The two guns in the possession of Mr.
Riechmann were conclusively shown
not to be the murder weapon.The defense expert at the evidentiary hearing proved that the
list of weapons that could have fired the fatal shot was in
existence at the time of the crime. Mr. Quirk’s database was not
more valid because it was located in Miami near the crime scene.
It was an incomplete database. However, it is not the validity
of the Quirk’s database that is the issue. The issue is whether
defense counsel failed to discover the forensic evidence that
would have rebutted the state’s case.
The state’s legal authority of Valle, Provenzano, Card and
4
Valle v. State, 705 So.2d 1331 (Fla. 1997); Provenzano v.Dugger, 561 So.2d 541 (Fla. 1990); Glock v. Dugger, 537 So. 2d 99
(Fla. 1989); Card v. State, 497 So.2d 1169 (Fla. 1986).
5
The state’s suggestion that Mr. Riechmann, a lost foreigntourist, should know who waited on him at a restaurant is
unrealistic. The responsibility for investigating the case lies
with the attorney not the client. See, Farr v. State, Infra.
12
Glock
4 do not establish that defense counsel’s efforts would havebeen cumulative. Here, the jury did not know there were 11 other
gun models that could have fired the fatal shot. The jury did
not know that the bullet was one of millions to be manufactured.
It is not cumulative to completely refute the state’s evidence.
C. Failure to investigate the facts of the case.
At page 84, the state proves Mr. Riechmann’s claim of
ineffectiveness of defense counsel for not seeking out the waiter
who served the couple on the night of the crime. The state
suggests that defense counsel deposed the two officers who took a
statement from the waiter at the Bayside restaurant. The state
suggests that the officers informed defense counsel of who and
where this witness was and the content of their interview. See,
State’s Answer Brief at page 84.
5If this is true, then defense counsel should have found the
witness and spoken with him at that time. Instead, the state
claims at page 57 that Mr. Riechmann did not show that "an
earlier investigation would have made the waiter available at
trial." [citations omitted]. See, State’s Answer Brief at page
13
60. It is obvious that earlier investigation was possible unless
the state withheld the evidence. The deficient performance was
either caused by the state’s Brady violation or ineffectiveness
of counsel for failing to discover the witness earlier. For
whatever reason, the information did not reach the jury, and
prejudice is shown.
The state’s erroneously argues that the video of the couple
that night would make the waiter’s testimony cumulative. The
video tape does not show the number of drinks the couple drank,
the general tenor of their conversation, the mood of the couple
minutes before the crime. The waiter’s testimony was critical.
Counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate the case in a
timely manner.
The state also argues that defense counsel could not have
found the newly-discovered eyewitnesses because "he had gotten
lost in the West Dixie Highway area near 163
rd Street."(R. 1657-59). This is false. Mr. Riechmann could not tell where he had
been. That was plain from the beginning of the investigation.
Any conjecture as to where he came from was from police officers
who guessed where Mr. Riechmann in broken English tried to
describe. To say it was Mr. Riechmann’s fault that defense
counsel only spent 18.7 hours investigating the case is an
incorrect statement of the law and facts.
Counsel made no effort to look for witnesses, even when the
14
police gave their guesses as to where he got lost. Counsel made
no effort to go to a restaurant when he actually knew the
location. Even with the information given by Sgt. Matthews and
Hanlon, defense counsel made no effort to investigate the West
Dixie Highway location or 100 blocks away.
Counsel made no effort to locate witnesses for guilt phase
who could testify about the couple’s relationship. Judge Gold
found that trial counsel’s few phone calls to Germany were
essentially efforts to "raise funds." (PC-R. 5679-81). It was
undisputed that counsel only spent 18.7 hours of investigator
time on the entire capital case. In his opinion, Judge Gold
misunderstood the significance of the German witnesses to guilt
phase. He erroneously found that the substance of their
testimony had "already been presented to the jury." (PC-R. 6049).
This was not true.
The jury heard only from state’s witnesses. Dina Moeller
and the victim’s sister were not going to be favorable to the
defense. They were state witnesses, prepared to testify by the
state. Cross-examination of these witnesses did prove facts
favorable to Mr. Riechmann even though they were readily
available. Judge Solomon acknowledged that these witnesses were
important to the guilt phase (PC-R. 5720).
For example, the alleged motive for the crime was insurance
proceeds from Ms. Kischnik because she could no longer work as a
15
prostitute because of "cervical erosion." The state’s theory was
that Mr. Riechmann depended on Ms. Kischnik for his livelihood.
The defense neither investigated nor presented testimony that
showed that Ms. Kischnik was not ill but suffered from a common
malady that was treatable with antibiotics. At trial this was
only suggested in cross examination. No defense testimony was
presented based the medical records that were available to rebut
the state’s evidence. Medical records from one month before to
the crime show that Ms. Kischnik’s condition was not serious.
The jury did not know that medical records existed that refuted
the state’s theory.
Mr. Riechmann could have proved that he was not dependent on
Ms. Kischnik for his livelihood. Mr. Riechmann could have proved
that prostitution in Germany was perfectly legal and women from
all walks of life practice it as a means of supplementing their
income. The testimony of Doris Dessauer and Ulrike Karpischek go
directly to this issue. The fact that Mr. Riechmann had $25,000
lottery winnings at his disposal was not presented to the jury.
The loving relationship evidence that was available through other
German witnesses would have rebutted the state’s witness, Ms.
Kischnik’s sister, Regina. In fact, the withheld statement from
Kersten’s father, Mr. Kischnik, would have rebutted his own
daughter’s testimony but it was not provided to defense counsel.
The state cannot say that Mr. Kischnik did not have sufficient
16
knowledge of their relationship. Also, defense counsel did not
discover until during the later part of the trial that the
insurance proceeds that were supposedly the motive for the crime
were offered to the Kischnik family by Mr. Riechmann
before hehad been charged with murder. The jury also did not know that
the Kischnik family stood to receive all of the insurance
proceeds should Mr. Riechmann be convicted.
The jury also did not know that Ernst Steffen was pressured
to testify favorably for the state by his insurance company
employer and the assistant state attorneys. Had he been called
as a defense witness, he would have testified to the loving, and
good relationship of the couple.
The state’s contention that this evidence had been presented
is wrong. The jury had no evidence for the defense to illustrate
Mr. Riechmann’s relationship. The jury was only presented with
the skewed testimony of the victim’s sister and Dina Moeller’s
inconsistent testimony about a rocky relationship. Cross
examination of the state’s witnesses and counsel’s argument was
insufficient evidence to rebut the state’s case.
Judge Gold found that defense counsel did not seek out the
witnesses who should have been presented at penalty phase.
Defense counsel also did not seek out the witnesses who would
have rebutted the state’s case on guilt. They were the same
people. Judge Gold failed to consider the impact that the 37
17
German witnesses would have had on guilt phase. The two phases
at trial did not have two separate investigations–trial defense
counsel failed to conduct investigation for either phase.
D. Failure to investigate the jailhouse informant.
The state concedes that defense counsel had in his
possession a letter from Hans Lohse offering to assist in
rebutting the state’s testimony through jailhouse informant,
Walter Smykowski. See, State’s Answer Brief at page 66 67. Mr.
Lohse would have testified that Smykowski was a liar and out to
curry any favorable deal he could for himself. His testimony
that Mr. Riechmann was "[A]ll day happy because millionaire" was
devastating to the defense. DiGregory testified that his
testimony was crucial and that any reasonably effective defense
lawyer would have investigated Smykowski (PC-R. 5488). Judge
Gold found that defense counsel made a "reasonable" tactical
decision not to call any witnesses. But he came to this
conclusion without the proper analysis under Strickland. A
reasonable tactical decision can only be given deference if it is
the result of adequate preparation and investigation. Defense
counsel never spoke with any of the potential witnesses.
Therefore, he could not have know whether their testimony would
have been helpful.
The state argues that tactical decisions of counsel are
"virtually unchallengable." See, State’s Answer Brief at page
18
67. Under Strickland, the decisions of counsel must be
reasonable. Those decisions are challengeable when they are not
based on adequate investigation. Counsel did
no investigationhere. He did not even send the investigator out to talk with Mr.
Lohse. Therefore, the tactical decision is unreasonable and
challengeable.
This claim also must be viewed in the context of the newly
discovered evidence of Michael Klopf. Klopf offered testimony at
the evidentiary hearing that Smykowski had a "deal" before he
testified. He also said that Smykowski’s testimony was false and
perjured. See, Rule 4-3.4(b) Florida Rules of Professional
Responsibility; U.S. v Lowrey, 15 F. Supp. 2d 1348 (1998); 18
U.S.C.A. Section 201(c)(2). Defense counsel was rendered
ineffective by the state’s failure to disclose the secret deal in
exchange for testimony. Trial counsel could not impeach
Smykowski on information he did not know.
Judge Gold incorrectly found that defense counsel’s decision
not to use the cellmates of Mr. Riechmann was a tactical
decision. Counsel could not have made a tactical decision if he
did not know what Mr. Lohse would say or what information he had.
Whether or not he would actually call the witness is irrelevant.
The information this man possessed could have lead to other
evidence that could be used to impeach the credibility of the
snitch. Counsel unreasonably failed to undertake the most basic
19
measures on his capital client’s behalf; measures that probably
would have made a difference in the outcome of the case. The
jury never knew that Smykowski was getting a deal because he
specifically said he was not. This was a lie. Defense counsel
could not prove the lie because he failed to talk to Hans Lohse
about the circumstances by which Smykowski testified. This was
deficient performance.
Counsel’s tactic was not to present testimony on Mr.
Riechmann’s behalf because the potential witnesses had prior
convictions. This was ludicrous. Smykowski also had prior
convictions. The only possible evidence to rebut Smykowski would
come from witnesses in jail. The jury should have been the ones
to evaluate the credibility of the witnesses.
Newly-discovered evidence revealed that Smykowski had an
undisclosed deal with the state. After Mr. Riechmann’s trial but
before sentencing, DiGregory sent a letter to the federal parole
authorities requesting "in the strongest possible terms" that
Smykowski be given a reduced sentence on his outstanding charges
(PC-R. 5462). DiGregory audaciously testified that he thought
about writing the letter during trial but did not actually decide
to do it until after the trial was over so he did not feel an
obligation to tell defense counsel (PC-R. 5488).
It was clear, however, that the deal was closed before Mr.
Riechmann was sentenced and three weeks after the trial was over.
20
DiGregory, at least, had a duty to disclose the deal at
sentencing but he never did. The jury was left with the
impression that Smykowski was testifying against Mr. Riechmann
out of the goodness of his heart. The lower court abused its
discretion based on these facts.
The remainder of the state’s argument on guilt phase
ineffective assistance of counsel has been adequately rebutted by
Appellee/Cross-Appellant’s Brief.
ARGUMENT II & III
NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE AND BRADY CLAIMS
Judge Gold ruled in a piecemeal fashion on the Brady
violations. The judge found a Brady violation for the state’s
improperly withholding the 37 German witness statements, but he
made inconsistent rulings on the other Brady material.
The Court finds no Brady violation, except as to certain
exculpatory statements obtained by the German Democratic
Republic Police (PC-R. 6066).
Judge Gold’s order is correct but does not go far enough. It
fails to recognize that the exculpatory evidence applied to guilt
phase as well as penalty phase. Judge Gold held that other
withheld documents contained significant and material facts but
did not present a "reasonable probability" that the outcome of
the trial would have been different.
The only significant information withheld was the
unredacted report of Detective Trujillo which states, "Crime
lab stated that the window had to be all down but subject
21
claimed window as half down for security." While this
statement could have been used to impeach Detective
Trujillo, had he testified inconsistently at trial, the
Defendant did not establish at the post conviction hearing
whether the statement was a mistake of the crime lab or
Trujillo’s report (PC-R. 6067).
Officer Trujillo’s report is exculpatory and impeachment
evidence. The redacted portion reflects that the crime lab
described the passenger window of the rental car had been all the
way down. The state conceded that this information would have
rebutted the state’s gun residue evidence and discredited
serologist Rhodes’ testimony. The information was significant in
that it destroyed the credibility of Rao’s gun residue findings
and the truth of Rhodes’ testimony. This part of Trujillo’s
report corroborates Mr. Riechmann’s story. The impeachment of
Trujillo is ancillary to the impact of the exculpatory evidence.
The lower court recognized its importance but did not grant
relief. The court found that postconviction counsel had to prove
where the mistake occurred–crime lab or Officer Trujillo. This is
incorrect. Postconviction counsel only needed to show that by
some state action defense counsel did not get access to the
redacted information. Who withheld the state’s evidence is
irrelevant. See, Kyles v. Whitley, 115 S. Ct. 1555 (1995).
The state presented no evidence to show that this report was
a mistake, except the speculation of Sreenan who was not the
author of the report nor the lead attorney. DiGregory did not
22
know if he had redacted it or not. Whether the crime lab made a
mistake, Trujillo redacted it or the state kept it out is
irrelevant. What is relevant is that the jury did not get this
information. It was withheld from defense counsel who would have
used it. This information directly rebutted guilt phase
evidence. Judge Gold conceded that this was significant
information. The state also conceded as much (PC-R. 5486). More
importantly, this Court relied on this information on direct
appeal.
In its answer brief, the state suggests that this evidence
was "minor" and may have been contradictory. See, State’s Answer
Brief at page 83. This is not the standard for determining a
Brady violation. Defense counsel should have been given the
opportunity to decide whether to call Trujillo or decide where or
how to use this evidence at trial. He did not have that
opportunity because the state withheld it. There was no question
after the testimony at the evidentiary hearing that DiGregory and
Sreenan did not know who redacted the report but it was clear
that defense counsel did not have it (PC-R. 5486). It also is
clear that the state did not call Trujillo as a witness. This
does not ameliorate the Brady violation as the state suggests.
In addition, the state ignores the sheer number of Brady
violations in this case. The state withheld forensic crime lab
reports which it contends contradict Mr. Riechmann’s version of
23
the window height. This is not true. The withheld crime lab
reports and statements of the crime scene technicians are
contradictory amongst themselves. Some say the window was all of
the way down. Rhodes, the state’s serology expert, says it was
not. All of these reports would have rebutted the state’s case,
but they were withheld. It is not the state’s duty to now argue
that the window evidence is "minor impeachment evidence." It is
the state’s duty to disclose the evidence and the defense
attorney will decide how significant it is. See, State’s Answer
at page 84. The state’s position now contradicts the testimony
of its own state attorneys who admitted at the evidentiary
hearing that the blood evidence and window height was crucial.
Telexes from Miami law enforcement to German authorities
were never disclosed even though defense counsel sought copies of
all communications and Judge Sepe ordered full disclosure. The
state refused to obey Sepe’s order (PC-R. 947-48; 973-75). The
memos to Germany show that false information was used to dupe the
German authorities into cooperating quickly with Florida police.
Defense Exhibits LL through OO demonstrated the lengths to which
the police went to get information. Contrary to the state’s
argument, the defense was never provided all of the telexes. See,
State’s Answer at page 90. The only telexes that counsel had
were those discovered in the State Attorney’s files after direct
appeal. Not all of the telexes were provided to defense counsel.
24
Exculpatory information regarding 35,689 Deutchmark
($25,000) lottery winnings that Mr. Riechmann received the year
before the crime also was not disclosed.
The testimony of Doris Dessauer-Rohr was offered not only to
show that prostitution is a legal profession in Germany but to
show that Mr. Riechmann lived with her for six years and he never
asked nor took any money from her. He lived with her for seven
years and was never a "pimp." Her testimony would have rebutted
the state’s motive for the crime. The state contention that Ms.
Dessauer could not testify because she tried to get Mr. Riechmann
out of a traffic ticket is hardly a significant development.
The state also argues that Office Psaltides’ report
containing Mr. Kischnik, the victim’s father’s exculpatory
statement that he could not say anything bad about Mr. Riechmann,
was not admissible. See, State’s Answer Brief at page 84. This
is a novel argument since it would have been trial defense
counsel’s decision as to whether to present this testimony to
rebut the testimony of Regina Kischnik. Because the state
improperly withheld the statement, defense counsel could not
assess whether to call Mr. Kischnik.
At page 85, the state suggests that Mr. Riechmann should
have known about the information withheld from him that was
seized by the German police regarding his income. Mr. Riechmann
was incarcerated in Miami without any of his personal effects,
25
books or information. His defense attorney failed to investigate
the German aspect of the case except to get more funds. The
burden is on the state to turn over Brady material. Judge Sepe
ordered full discovery. No one could guess as to what the state
had gathered. Mr. Riechmann did not have access to any documents
or files from his home to defend himself. The state’s argument
here is misleading.
The state misled the trial court about the legality of the
searches in Germany (PC-R. 3497-98). This Court relied on these
false representations. Riechmann v. State, 581 So. 2d at 138.
Key evidentiary photos of the interior roof of the car and
trunk have not been found nor provided to defense counsel. Judge
Gold’s order on the photographs defies logic. The state offered
33 photographs in evidence at trial, but none of them show the
interior roof of the car or the trunk. Mr. Riechmann himself sat
at counsel table during trial making notes of the photographs.
Not all of the photographs were provided. The fact that some
photos of the crime scene are missing proves the point. Judge
Gold erred on this point.
Judge Gold also said this Brady claim cannot be raised
"during the[se] post conviction proceedings because it could have
been raised on direct appeal." (PC-R. 6069). This is incorrect.
Appellate counsel did not have access to the state attorney files
that contained many of the unredacted and undisclosed reports. A
26
Brady violation may be raised at any time as the information
becomes known to counsel. Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.850.
At page 85, the state misunderstands the availability of the
37 German witness statements that Judge Gold found were
improperly withheld. At no time has Mr. Riechmann known what was
contained in the 37 statements. The information introduced at
the evidentiary hearing by the seven witnesses from Germany was
not that of the 37 statements because they are allegedly "lost."
They had been in possession of the trial court. They have since
disappeared. The defense was never provided with a list of the
witnesses or access to the statements. Defense counsel
ineffectively failed to renew his request for these documents at
trial.
The sheer number of Brady violations and the state’s blatant
disregard of the discovery order warrant relief. Judge Gold
correctly held that the withheld German witness statements were a
Brady violation. But a Brady violation of this magnitude was
material to all aspects of the trial. These 27 statements, which
Judge Solomon deemed credible, are gone. No one knows the impact
of these statements on guilt phase. No defense attorney has seen
these statements. Therefore, no one representing Mr. Riechmann’s
interests have used them to argue in support of any issue at
trial–-guilt or penalty. Because of the state’s duplicity and
the court’s ex parte contact, defense counsel was foreclosed from
27
investigating the possibility of using these witnesses to
challenge the state’s case. Under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83
(1963) and Kyles v. Whitley, 115 S. Ct. 1555 (1995), Mr.
Riechmann is entitled to a new trial.
For the remainder of the newly-discovered evidence and Brady
arguments, Mr. Riechmann relies on his Appellee/Cross-Appellant’s
Brief. The state’s arguments offer nothing that is not rebutted
in Mr. Riechmann’s prior brief.
ARGUMENT VI
INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL--FEDERAL GUN CHARGES CLAIM
The state claims that Mr. Riechmann’s assignment of
insurance benefits was a ruse. See, State’s Answer Brief at page
92. This is false and contrary to the record. If this were the
case, then trial defense counsel would not have sought to have
this evidence presented to the jury (PC-R. 4572, 4869-70; 4909-
12).
Trial defense counsel bungled the entire issue. The jury
was left with the impression that Mr. Riechmann was assigning the
benefits because he was about to be arrested. Mr. Klugh’s
testimony at the evidentiary hearing does not reflect when he has
these discussions with his client. Mr. Riechmann assigned the
insurance benefits a month and a half before the December 30,
1987 acquittal on federal charges. The state’s interpretation
of these facts is false.
28
ARGUMENT IV
THE LOWER COURT CORRECTLY VACATED MR. RIECHMANN’S DEATH
SENTENCE AND WAS CORRECT IN ORDERING A NEW SENTENCING
HEARING BUT SHOULD HAVE GRANTED A NEW TRIAL.
A. The state’s sentencing order.
Judge Gold found that the trial judge did not independently
weigh the aggravating and mitigating circumstances in this case
because the order contained "no findings of fact or conclusions
of law." (PC-R. 6070-72). Judge Gold found and the state
concedes that prosecutor DiGregory prepared the order that
sentenced Mr. Riechmann to death.
...Rather, the prosecutor, and not the trial
judge, drafted all findings as required by Section
921.141, Florida Statutes (1985). Neither the ex parte
communication nor the draft order, were disclosed to
defense counsel during any stage of the penalty phase."
(PC-R. 6070-71).
Even though the state in its answer brief uses the word
"proposed" sentencing order, Judge Gold found that the order was
not "proposed" but the final version adopted by the trial court.
At sentencing, the judge read several paragraphs
"findings" as were originally included in the draft
order and then read the last two pages of the
sentencing order as filed in the case. A comparison of
the sentencing order with the draft order reveals that
it is
verbatim, with the only significant exceptionbeing the addition of one mitigating factor, namely
that certain persons in Germany believed the Defendant
to be a good person. Other than as stated, the trial
judge did not make his own oral findings in support of
29
the death sentence on the record.
(PC-R. 6070-71) [emphasis added].
Judge Gold specifically found that the trial judge
did notindependently determine
the specific aggravating and mitigatingcircumstances in this case (PC-R. 6072). He also found that the
order was a result of ex parte communications between the trial
judge and DiGregory. The state concedes that ex parte
communication occurred. It is undisputed that neither defense
counsel nor the defendant had an opportunity to read, argue, or
submit its own order for the trial judge’s consideration. The
assistant state attorney admitted that he wrote the order
withoutknowing what the contents of the order were to be. He could only
remember his ex parte contact with the judge and being told to
"prepare an order." (PC-R. 5490).
Contrary to the state’s argument, the deletion of a few
sentences in the order by Judge Solomon does not mean that he
independently weighed the aggravating factors. It means that the
judge read through the order. Judge Solomon said the words were
his but he "can’t remember" actually communicating ten pages of
thoughts to the state attorney. (PC-R. 5725). The rough draft
of the order found in the state attorney’s file was ten pages
long. The final order sentencing Mr. Riechmann to death is ten
pages long.
Under Florida law in 1988, the trial court was compelled to
30
make his own findings of fact. See, Fla. Stat. 921.141 (1985).
The purpose of this statute was to give the Florida Supreme Court
an opportunity to review the legal reasoning behind the
aggravating and mitigating circumstances to insure against
arbitrary and capricious application of the death penalty. See,
Patterson v. State, 513 So.2d 1257, 1261 (Fla. 1987). Here,
this Court reviewed what it thought was the lower court’s
reasoning on the aggravating and mitigating circumstances. But
in fact, it reviewed the state’s findings. See, Appellee/Cross-
Appellant’s Brief at page 98-99. The sentencing order, secretly
written by DiGregory, contained extensive findings on Mr.
Riechmann’s guilt. This is the same DiGregory who admitted
withholding exculpatory police reports, statements, forensic
reports, notes, and photographs despite an order for full
discovery from Judge Sepe.
B. Prejudice
The state also argues that Mr. Riechmann was not prejudiced
because this Court affirmed the trial judge’s decision on direct
appeal. But that is exactly the prejudice Mr. Riechmann
suffered. This Court did not review Judge Solomon’s order. It
reviewed an order written by the state. This Court was inevitably
influenced by what it thought was the trial court’s detailed
account of the pertinent facts and weighty evidence. In
affirming the conviction and sentence, this Court relied on what
6
615 So.2d 688 (Fla. 1993).31
it thought were the trial court’s findings. This Court’s
unknowing reliance on a sentencing order written by the State
throws into question Mr. Riechmann’s entire direct appeal. The
result is an unreliable ruling that affirmed the convictions on
direct appeal.
The state also erroneously relies on Patterson to salvage
its argument that the ex parte contact in this case does not
require reversal. This is wrong. Patterson does not condone ex
parte communication with only one party nor does it demonstrate
that Judge Gold abused his discretion when he found that the
trial court erred in having the state prepare a biased,
prosecutorial order. See, Patterson v. State, 513 So. 2d 1257
(Fla. 1997). Cf. Grossman v. State, 525 So. 2d 833 (Fla. 1988);
Stewart v. State, 549 So. 2d 171 (Fla. 1989); Bouie v. State, 559
So. 2d 1113 (Fla. 1990); Card v. State, 652 So. 2d 344 (Fla.
1995); Layman v. State, 652 So. 2d 373 (Fla. 1995).
In Patterson, this Court reversed and remanded for a new
sentencing when it found that "the trial judge improperly
delegated to the state attorney the responsibility to prepare the
sentencing order, because the judge did not, before directing
preparation of the order, independently determine the aggravating
and mitigating circumstances that applied in the case." Infra at
1261. Therefore, even if Spencer
6 is not considered retroactive,32
Patterson and the 1985 version of Section 921.141 Florida
Statutes was in effect well before Mr. Riechmann was sentenced
These cases placed responsibility for preparing sentencing orders
squarely with the trial judge, not the state. Ex parte contact
was condemned long before 1988.
Even if Patterson did not condemn ex parte contact, the 1985
Florida Statutes in effect in 1988 specifically stated that the
judge was to render his own opinion. See, Section 921.141, Fla.
Stat. (1985). Judge Gold was correct in finding that the trial
court erred in failing to prepare its own sentencing order and
that it prejudiced Mr. Riechmann. In addition, this tainted
order has rendered this Court’s analysis on direct appeal
unreliable. Mr. Riechmann is entitled to a new review of all of
his appellate issues. Thereafter, a new trial should be ordered.
Gunsby v. State, 670 So.2d 920 (Fla. 1996).
C. Ineffective assistance of counsel at penalty phase.
The state argues that Mr. Riechmann made a number of
concessions. See, State’s Answer Brief at page 42. Mr. Riechmann
does not
concede that "the only proper evidence at issue" is thetestimony of the witnesses who actually testified at the
evidentiary hearing. The hearing court accepted the affidavits
as evidence of those witnesses who were unavailable to testify.
The state’s objection was overruled. The hearing court
considered the evidence. To suggest some stipulation was
33
required before the court could consider the evidence is wrong
and a misrepresentation of the record.
Mr. Riechmann also
does not concede to the state’soversimplified and erroneous recitation of the testimony of the
witnesses from the evidentiary hearing. See, State’s Answer
Brief at page 42. Nor did Judge Gold agree with the assessment
of the state regarding the value of the wealth of mitigating
evidence that counsel did not investigate or prepare.
The Court concludes that trial counsel’s performance at
sentencing was deficient. First, trial counsel failed
to renew or pursue his motion to obtain the German and
Swiss statements which would have provided him with
mitigating evidence to present to the jury. To not do
so vigorously when he lacked any mitigating evidence of
his own was unreasonable and below community standards,
especially where his closing argument contained little,
if anything, of a mitigating nature. (PC-R.4321-22;
4324).
The Court concludes that the Defendant was
prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to present
available mitigation as to his positive character
traits, personal history and family background... With
such evidence presented, there is a reasonable
probability the outcome of the case would have been
different, as against a jury, who without any
mitigating evidence, was already ambivalent about their
recommendation.
Moreover, when the cumulative effect of the
trial’s counsel’s deficiency is viewed in conjunction
with the improper actions of the trial judge and
prosecutor during the penalty phase, the Court is
compelled to find, under the circumstances of this
case, that confidence in the outcome of the Defendant’s
penalty phase has been undermined. See, Gunsby v.
State, supra, 670 So. 2d 920 (cumulative effect of
errors may constitute prejudice), and that the
Defendant has been denied a reliable penalty phase
proceedings. Hildwin v. Dugger, 654 So. 2d 107, 110
34
(Fla. 1995). (PC-R.6076-6079).
Even if the only evidence at the evidentiary hearing was as the
state professes about Mr. Riechmann being a "good person" and
having a "good, loving relationship" with Ms. Kischnik, Judge
Gold found that the outcome of the jury’s decision would have
been different. The state has not demonstrated any abuse of
discretion in the hearing court’s order.
Further, the state disagrees that "the lack of credibility
and import of said testimony has a direct bearing on the
determination of the alleged deficient conduct by trial defense
counsl, not to mention the probability of a different outcome, as
required in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984)[other
citations omitted]." See, State’s Answer Brief at page 43. As
co-sentencer, the jury is a co-fact finder. The jury did not
hear any evidence in mitigation at trial, only the argument of
counsel that the judge instructed them was not evidence.
At the evidentiary hearing, Judge Gold has found that the
witnesses were credible and important and that had their
testimony been presented to the "ambivalent" jury their
recommendation would have been different (PC-R. 6070-72). The
state has not shown that the witnesses were not credible or
important. It contends that "rearguing a ‘good, loving
relationship’ during penalty phase, when the jury obviously found
Defendant murdered the victim for insurance money, is akin to
35
arguing that a defendant who has murdered his parents deserved
mercy because he is an orphan." See, State’s Answer Brief at page
43. This is wrong.
Trial counsel failed to investigate this aspect of the case
in guilt
and penalty phases. Trial counsel billed for only 18.7hours of investigator time during his entire representation of
Mr. Riechmann. No time was spent investigating his client’s
background information in Germany. He presented
nothing aboutthe good relationship between Mr. Riechmann and Ms. Kischnik or
any other mitigating evidence. The jury only heard crossexamination
of state’s witnesses in guilt phase. It was not
instructed that this cross-examination could be considered as
mitigating evidence. It had no way of knowing what standards to
use in assessing the testimony for statutory or non-statutory
mitigating evidence. They were not instructed on mitigating
evidence until weeks later.
Next, the state suggests that the length of time each one of
the witnesses presented at the evidentiary hearing had known Mr.
Riechmann precluded them from being credible or important
witnesses. See, State’s Answer Brief at pages 44-47. However,
the state ignores the testimony of Doris Dusseau-Rohr who lived
with Mr. Riechmann for seven years (PC-R.3176-77, 3617-18). Even
if the witnesses were casual acquaintances, Mr. Riechmann is
aware of no caselaw that suggests that witnesses must live with
36
the defendant in order to offer credible testimony. In fact, the
jailhouse informant, Smykowski had only a brief encounter with
Mr. Riechmann but the state is certainly not suggesting that he
is not credible.
In fact, the only cases that the state cited as authority
were Koon v. Dugger, 619 So.2d 246 (Fla. 1993) and Mitchell v.
Kemp, 762 F.2d 886 (11
th Cir. 1985). These cases hold that trialcounsel cannot be faulted for following his client’s wishes
regarding background investigation for penalty phase. However,
the distinction between these cases and this one is that the
trial counsel must have "investigated Defendant’s background to
the best of his ability under the circumstances created by the
Defendant." Koon at page 249.
Judge Gold found that trial counsel did no investigation
into Mr. Riechmann’s background, despite the fact that Mr.
Riechmann had given him a list of German witnesses to contact.
The state also ignores that trial counsel did not even renew his
request for the mysterious 37 German witness statements held in
camera by Judge Solomon. Not much effort was required to request
information that was already in the court’s possession.
The state has presented no evidence that Mr. Riechmann in
any manner interfered with trial defense counsel’s investigation.
He only requested that his attorney stay in town because he was
at the mercy of a foreign law enforcement. It was trial
37
counsel’s responsibility to send an investigator to Germany,
request the in camera materials, or take some steps to get
information on his client’s background. Farr v. State, 656 So.2d
448 (Fla. 1995).
The state offers nothing to suggest that Judge Gold abused
his discretion in finding trial defense counsel’s performance
deficient and prejudicial to such a degree that confidence in the
outcome of the trial was undermined.
You don’t just get up there and, you know, ramble
on for ten minutes and hope you get a life sentence.
(PC-R. 4321-24)[Testimony trial expert-Potolsky].
The remaining arguments by the state do not offer any new
information that is not rebutted by Appellee/Cross-Appellant’s
Brief.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Mr. Riechmann respectfully requests
that this Court affirm the lower court’s order setting aside his
death sentence but reverse the lower court’s order regarding his
conviction. In Gunsby v. State, 670 So.2d 920 (Fla. 1996), this
Court was faced with a similar fact pattern and granted a new
trial.
_________________
TERRI L. BACKHUS
Backhus & Izakowitz, P.A.
Florida Bar No. 0946427
Post Office Box 3294
Tampa, FL 33601-3294
(813) 226-3140
38
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true copy of the foregoing Reply
Brief of Appellant has been furnished by United States Mail,
first class postage prepaid, to all counsel of record on February
1,1999.
__________________
TERRI L. BACKHUS
Florida Bar No. 0946427
Post Office Box 3294
Tampa, FL 33601-3294
(813) 226-3140
Copies furnished to:
Ms. Sandra Jaggard
Assistant Attorney General
Rivergate Plaza–-Suite 950
444 Brickell Avenue
Miami, FL 33131