Judges: Scudder
Filed: Apr. 03, 2020
Latest Update: Apr. 06, 2020
Summary: In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit _ No. 19-1476 CHRISTOPHER R. GISH, Petitioner-Appellant, v. RANDALL HEPP, Warden, Respondent-Appellee. _ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. No. 3:15-cv-730 — James D. Peterson, Chief Judge. _ ARGUED NOVEMBER 7, 2019 — DECIDED APRIL 3, 2020 _ Before HAMILTON, SCUDDER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Christopher Gish pleaded guilty to rst-degree reckless homicide in
Summary: In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit _ No. 19-1476 CHRISTOPHER R. GISH, Petitioner-Appellant, v. RANDALL HEPP, Warden, Respondent-Appellee. _ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. No. 3:15-cv-730 — James D. Peterson, Chief Judge. _ ARGUED NOVEMBER 7, 2019 — DECIDED APRIL 3, 2020 _ Before HAMILTON, SCUDDER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Christopher Gish pleaded guilty to rst-degree reckless homicide in W..
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In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 19-1476
CHRISTOPHER R. GISH,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
RANDALL HEPP, Warden,
Respondent-Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Western District of Wisconsin.
No. 3:15-cv-730 — James D. Peterson, Chief Judge.
____________________
ARGUED NOVEMBER 7, 2019 — DECIDED APRIL 3, 2020
____________________
Before HAMILTON, SCUDDER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Christopher Gish pleaded guilty to
first-degree reckless homicide in Wisconsin state court for
killing his longtime girlfriend and the mother of his children.
He appealed, claiming that his trial counsel provided ineffec-
tive assistance by failing to investigate an involuntary intoxi-
cation defense. Police found Gish disoriented and delirious
on the night of the killing, and he claimed that rare side effects
from taking prescription Xanax affected his ability to
2 No. 19-1476
appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct. After the Wiscon-
sin Court of Appeals rejected the claim and affirmed his con-
viction, Gish turned to federal court and wound his way
through a thicket of habeas proceedings. The district court
held an evidentiary hearing but denied relief because Gish
failed to show that his counsel’s deficient performance re-
sulted in prejudice: even if counsel had investigated involun-
tary intoxication, that defense was so unlikely to succeed that
Gish still would have pleaded guilty. We affirm.
I
A
Early in the morning on July 14, 2012, Wisconsin police
found Christopher Gish soaking wet, unable to answer ques-
tions, and wandering in an unsteady manner on railroad
tracks near the Milwaukee airport. The officers took Gish to
the hospital, where he told paramedics that he had blacked
out. He then proceeded to make a series of nonsensical state-
ments suggesting that he did not understand his wherea-
bouts. At one point, for instance, Gish stated that “all I saw
was red” and “you are in my bedroom, why are you in my
room?” Upon ascertaining Gish’s home address, the police
entered and found his longtime girlfriend and the mother of
his children, Margaret Litwicki, stabbed to death in a bed-
room.
Once Gish’s condition stabilized, he agreed to an inter-
view with the police. A videotape showed that Gish gained
lucidity over the course of the questioning. Initially Gish de-
nied any memory of the previous night, but later in the inter-
view he confessed to stabbing Litwicki multiple times in his
bedroom. He said he attacked Litwicki because he suspected
No. 19-1476 3
that she was having an affair and believed she might take his
kids from him.
Wisconsin authorities charged Gish with first-degree in-
tentional homicide, which carries a mandatory sentence of life
imprisonment. See WIS. STAT. §§ 939.50(3)(a), 940.01(1)(a). Na-
than Opland-Dobs served as Gish’s court-appointed counsel.
Gish told Opland-Dobs that he had taken prescription Lamic-
tal and Xanax before the homicide and thought those medica-
tions may have induced his erratic behavior in a way that
would afford some legal defense to the charge.
Opland-Dobs researched the effects of Lamictal, but not
Xanax—a choice he later said he could not explain. He ulti-
mately determined that any Lamictal-based defense would be
futile and so advised Gish. When prosecutors later offered to
accept a plea to first-degree reckless homicide, which carries
a maximum sentence of 60 years, see WIS. STAT.
§§ 939.50(3)(b), 940.02(1), Opland-Dobs advised Gish to take
it. Gish agreed, pleaded guilty, and received a sentence of 40
years’ imprisonment and 20 years’ extended supervision.
B
With the assistance of new counsel, Gish filed a direct ap-
peal in Wisconsin state court. Counsel then filed what Wis-
consin law calls a “no-merit report”—the functional equiva-
lent of an Anders brief in federal criminal practice—represent-
ing that any appeal would be meritless and requesting per-
mission to withdraw as Gish’s appointed lawyer. See WIS.
STAT. § 809.32 (setting out Wisconsin’s procedure for filing no-
merit reports); accord Anders v. California,
386 U.S. 738, 744
(1967) (advising that “if counsel finds his case to be wholly
4 No. 19-1476
frivolous, after a conscientious examination of it, he should so
advise the court and request permission to withdraw”).
Gish responded to the no-merit report by insisting that he
had a non-frivolous basis for appeal. He claimed that his trial
counsel, Opland-Dobs, provided ineffective assistance by fail-
ing to pursue the affirmative defense of involuntary intoxica-
tion, a complete defense to homicide under Wisconsin law.
Gish emphasized that he told Opland-Dobs all about the
Xanax he had taken before the homicide and suggested that
the medication may have affected his ability to discern right
from wrong. See WIS. STAT. § 939.42(1). He supported this con-
tention with police reports describing his delirium shortly af-
ter the homicide, medical records showing he had been pre-
scribed Xanax, and information about Xanax’s side effects
that he had found online and in textbooks. Gish then went a
step further: he insisted that, had he known an involuntary
intoxication was viable, he would have rejected the govern-
ment’s plea and instead gone to trial.
Appellate counsel responded by emphasizing that Gish
never once suggested to his trial counsel, Opland-Dobs, that
either the Xanax or Lamictal so affected his mental state as to
prevent him from understanding the wrongfulness of his con-
duct. So, appellate counsel put it, “there wasn’t anything to
investigate.”
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals evaluated Gish’s ineffec-
tive assistance claim under the familiar standards of Strickland
v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668 (1984). Gish had to show that Op-
land-Dobs’s performance “fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness,”
id. at 688, and resulted in prejudice, meaning
that there was “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
No. 19-1476 5
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
have been different,”
id. at 694.
The Wisconsin court denied relief, concluding that any
contention of ineffective assistance was so lacking—having no
“arguable merit”—that Gish could not even clear Strickland’s
first hurdle of showing that Opland-Dobs’s performance was
deficient. Indeed, the court wholesale adopted Gish’s appel-
late counsel’s version of events, disregarding Gish’s allega-
tions in their entirety and even refusing to consider the police
reports and other documents Gish submitted in support of his
ineffective assistance claim. In effect, then, the Wisconsin
court affirmed Gish’s conviction for the same reason sug-
gested by his appellate counsel—“there wasn’t anything to in-
vestigate.”
The Wisconsin Supreme Court denied review, and Gish
then turned his attention to securing relief in federal court.
II
A
Invoking 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Gish petitioned the district
court for federal habeas relief, renewing his claim that Op-
land-Dobs provided ineffective assistance of counsel by fail-
ing to investigate a Xanax-based involuntary intoxication de-
fense. To secure relief, Gish had to establish that the Wiscon-
sin Court of Appeals’s decision “was contrary to, or involved
an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal
law,” or “was based on an unreasonable determination of the
facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court pro-
ceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)–(2).
Although ultimately denying relief, the district court did
so only after holding an evidentiary hearing, taking
6 No. 19-1476
testimony, and receiving other evidence on the merits of
Gish’s contention that Opland-Dobs should have pursued an
involuntary intoxication defense. The district court deter-
mined the evidentiary hearing was warranted, and indeed
necessary, because Gish, despite offering his prescription rec-
ords, the police reports, and information about the side effects
of Xanax, never had a reasonable opportunity to develop the
factual basis for his claim on direct appeal in the state court.
Even more, the district court found that Gish’s allegations, if
true, supported his claim that Opland-Dobs performed defi-
ciently. The state court’s back-of-the-hand rejection of Gish’s
ineffective assistance claim, the district court concluded, re-
flected an unreasonable application of Strickland, for Gish had
brought forth enough evidence on direct appeal to reasonably
question the adequacy of Opland-Dobs’s representation in
the trial court.
B
Several witnesses testified at the evidentiary hearing. Gish
testified on his own behalf and called pharmacology consult-
ant James T. O’Donnell and his trial counsel Nathan Opland-
Dobs. For its part, the state called Kayla Neuman, a chemist
in the toxicology section of the Wisconsin State Laboratory of
Hygiene, and Detective Brent Hart, who had interviewed
Gish the morning he was apprehended.
The district court heard conflicting evidence about
whether Gish took Xanax on the day he killed Litwicki. On
the one hand, Gish testified that he told Opland-Dobs he had
taken both Xanax and Lamictal on the day of the homicide.
But Gish plainly stated in the interview with Detective Hart
the morning of the homicide that he had last taken Xanax “[a]
couple days” before, which, given the half-life of Xanax,
No. 19-1476 7
would suggest that its effects had worn off by the time of the
killing. In much the same vein, a nurse who treated Gish at
the hospital wrote in his patient visit records that Gish re-
ported having sold his Xanax and Lamictal pills—suggesting
that perhaps he had never taken them at all in the days before
the homicide. And the district judge heard testimony that the
police found no Xanax in a search of Gish’s home.
The district court also heard expert testimony about the
possible effects of Xanax. Both parties’ experts agreed that
Xanax can trigger hallucinations, agitation, rage, and hostile
behavior. The state’s expert, Neuman, added that mixing
Xanax with Lamictal can amplify these effects. Gish’s expert,
O’Donnell, testified that the police finding Gish in a tempo-
rary delusional state was more consistent with Xanax intoxi-
cation than with the effects of mental illness. O’Donnell added
that Gish could not appreciate the criminality of his conduct,
but the district court found that conclusion speculative,
backed by no medical evidence, and therefore not credible.
Finally, the district court heard from Gish and Opland-
Dobs regarding their plea discussions. For the most part, their
accounts aligned: Gish testified that he had asked Opland-
Dobs to consider defenses based on Xanax and Lamictal. Op-
land-Dobs did not dispute that aspect of Gish’s testimony, ad-
mitted that he failed to investigate Xanax, and expressed re-
gret for that failure. He conceded that, given the evidence he
had available to him in representing Gish, investigating
Xanax would have been “appropriate” and he “didn’t give it
enough consideration.” Opland-Dobs offered no justification
for this failure, saying, “[w]hy I didn’t follow up on the
Xanax, I can’t explain,” because ignoring that path “doesn’t
seem like what I should have done.”
8 No. 19-1476
On the question of prejudice, Gish testified that he only
pleaded guilty on the assumption that he would have had a
“zero percent chance” of being acquitted at trial. He explained
that there was “no sense” in “putting the family through” a
trial “that was just a wish-wash,” where he believed he had
no chance of prevailing. But Gish was equally clear that his
decision may have been different had Opland-Dobs pursued
the involuntary intoxication defense and told him it had some
chance of prevailing. Even if that defense were a weak one,
giving him as low as a “one-percent chance” of acquittal, Gish
insisted he would have “always take[n] the chance” and
rolled the dice at trial.
C
Aided by the evidentiary hearing, the district court pro-
ceeded to the merits of Gish’s ineffective assistance claim. The
court made quick work of Strickland’s deficient performance
prong by assuming that Opland-Dobs’s complete and admit-
ted failure to evaluate a Xanax-based intoxication defense was
unreasonable. Moving to Strickland’s prejudice prong, the
court concluded that Gish fell short of showing he would
have forgone the plea deal and gone to trial had Opland-Dobs
pursued the defense. While Gish so testified, the district court
was not willing to credit that testimony over other evidence
pointing in the opposite direction.
The district court placed particular emphasis on Gish’s
statements to Detective Hart not only that he had last taken
Xanax “[a] couple days” before the homicide, but also that he
did not regret killing Litwicki in light of her alleged infidelity.
The district judge likewise highlighted Gish’s statement to the
nurse that he had sold his prescriptions—a fact corroborated
by the police’s failure to find any trace of Xanax in Gish’s
No. 19-1476 9
home. Considering this evidence in its totality, the district
court determined that Gish had no reasonable prospect at trial
of demonstrating the essential element of the intoxication de-
fense—that he failed to appreciate right from wrong at the
time of the homicide. The district court also found that the
state’s plea offer was reasonably attractive, as it guaranteed
Gish a maximum of 60 years rather than life imprisonment.
Gish now appeals.
III
A
We begin with the decision of the Wisconsin Court of Ap-
peals, the last state court to consider (at least a portion of)
Gish’s ineffective assistance claim on the merits in a reasoned
opinion. See Wilson v. Sellers,
138 S. Ct. 1188, 1192 (2018). Gish
needs to show, as the district court recognized, that the Wis-
consin court’s decision “was contrary to, or involved an un-
reasonable application of, clearly established Federal law,” or
“was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in
light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.”
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)–(2). In answering that question, we
must “train [our] attention on the particular reasons—both le-
gal and factual—why state courts rejected [Gish’s] federal
claims.”
Wilson, 138 S. Ct. at 1191–92. Where, as here, the state
court issued an explanatory opinion, we “review[] the specific
reasons given by the state court and defer[] to those reasons if
they are reasonable.”
Id. at 1192.
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals rejected Gish’s ineffective
assistance claim on the ground that “there wasn’t anything
[for his trial counsel, Nathan Opland-Dobs] to investigate.”
With nothing to investigate, the reasoning ran, Opland-Dobs
10 No. 19-1476
could not have rendered ineffective assistance. It made no dif-
ference, the Wisconsin court added, that Gish sought on ap-
peal to support his claim with police reports and other evi-
dence showing that his prescription Xanax may have ex-
plained his delusional state at the time of the homicide. None
of that evidence was before the trial court and that is all that
mattered on the Wisconsin court’s reasoning.
The district court was right to call the Wisconsin court’s
decision an unreasonable application of Strickland’s deficient
performance prong. Return to the state court’s insistence that
Gish’s claim lacked merit because (and only because) he never
put his evidence before the trial court. That reasoning fails to
meet the claim Gish raised on direct appeal—ineffective assis-
tance of his trial counsel, Nathan Opland-Dobs. As the Wis-
consin court would have it, Gish—while being advised by
Opland-Dobs—somehow and some way (and apparently on
his own) had to put before the trial court evidence to support
a claim that Opland-Dobs had violated the Sixth Amendment
by not pursuing an involuntary intoxication defense. Yet the
trial record lacked evidence of Gish’s ineffective assistance
claim precisely because, by the very terms of the claim, Op-
land-Dobs’s deficient performance occurred during the trial
court proceedings. Gish, in short, necessarily needed to sup-
port his claim with evidence outside the trial record, for there
was no other way he could have demonstrated his ineffective
assistance claim or rebutted his appellate counsel’s view (as
reflected in the no-merit report) that the claim was frivolous.
This is not the first time we have found fault with the exact
reasoning the Wisconsin Court of Appeals employed in reject-
ing Gish’s ineffective assistance claim. In Davis v. Lambert, we
explained that “it would defy logic to deny [a state habeas
No. 19-1476 11
petitioner] an evidentiary hearing on whether his counsel’s
failure to investigate the witnesses violated Strickland on the
ground that he did not fully present those witnesses’ testi-
mony to the state courts.”
388 F.3d 1052, 1061 (7th Cir. 2004).
Similarly, in Mosley v. Atchison, we concluded that a state
court unreasonably applied Strickland’s performance prong
by disregarding a defendant’s showing on appeal that his trial
counsel failed to pursue two potential alibi witnesses and in-
stead assuming that counsel’s choice reflected a strategic de-
termination.
689 F.3d 838, 848 (7th Cir. 2012).
We chart the same course here and have little difficulty
concluding that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’s denial of
Gish’s ineffective assistance claim rooted itself in an “unrea-
sonable application” of Strickland’s deficient performance
prong as well as an “unreasonable determination of the facts
in light of the evidence [Gish] presented in the State court pro-
ceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)–(2). Gish brought forth spe-
cific evidence that, if accepted as true, would have demon-
strated that Opland-Dobs rendered deficient performance in
failing to pursue a potential involuntary intoxication defense.
See Jones v. Wallace,
525 F.3d 500, 503 (7th Cir. 2008) (noting
that where a petitioner in state custody is “not at fault for fail-
ing to develop the factual record” of his ineffective assistance
claim, we “look only to whether, if proven, his proposed facts
would entitle him to relief”). The Wisconsin Court of Ap-
peals’s contrary conclusion reflected an unreasonable appli-
cation of Strickland. In these circumstances, the same error sat-
isfies § 2254(d)(2), for the Wisconsin court’s categorical disre-
gard of Gish’s evidence resulted in a rejection of his ineffec-
tive assistance claim on an unreasonable view of the facts. At
the very least, all of this was enough, as the district court rec-
ognized, to warrant an evidentiary hearing—to afford Gish an
12 No. 19-1476
opportunity to develop the merits of his claim, an opportunity
he never received in state court. Like the district court, then,
we proceed to the merits of Gish’s ineffective assistance claim.
B
In considering Gish’s claim, we need say very little on
Strickland’s first prong. Opland-Dobs testified in the district
court and admitted in no uncertain terms that he never as-
sessed a Xanax-based involuntary intoxication defense. We
can assume this admitted failure is enough for Gish to show
deficient performance. See Pole v. Randolph,
570 F.3d 922, 943
(7th Cir. 2009) (opting to “assume that counsel’s performance
was deficient and move on to the second part of the analysis”
because the petitioner could not show prejudice).
This brings us to the primary issue on appeal: whether Op-
land-Dobs’s failure to pursue an involuntary intoxication de-
fense prejudiced Gish. Our review proceeds de novo (and not
under the deferential standard of § 2254(d)) because this di-
mension of Gish’s claim is one the Wisconsin Court of Ap-
peals never reached and considered. That court stopped at
Strickland’s first prong. In these circumstances, the Supreme
Court has instructed, we treat the two prongs of Strickland as
divisible and review the prejudice prong by taking our own
fresh look at the evidentiary record developed in the district
court. See Rompilla v. Beard,
545 U.S. 374, 390 (2005) (reviewing
Strickland prejudice de novo because the state court did not
reach that issue); see also Thomas v. Clements,
789 F.3d 760,
766–67 (7th Cir. 2015) (collecting cases adhering to this same
approach).
The controlling substantive standard comes from Hill v.
Lockhart,
474 U.S. 52 (1985). The Court decided Hill one year
No. 19-1476 13
after Strickland and did so to articulate what a defendant must
show to establish that his trial counsel rendered ineffective as-
sistance in advising him to plead guilty. First, and in full
alignment with Strickland, the defendant must show that his
counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of rea-
sonableness. See
id. at 58. Second, when it comes to prejudice,
“the defendant must show that there is a reasonable probabil-
ity that, but for counsel’s errors, he would not have pleaded
guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.”
Id. at 59. The
Court went further and addressed how the inquiry changes
where, as here, counsel allegedly failed to advise his client of
an affirmative defense. See
id. at 59–60. In those circum-
stances, the Court explained, “the resolution of the ‘prejudice’
inquiry will depend largely on whether the affirmative de-
fense likely would have succeeded at trial.”
Id. at 59.
The standards announced in Hill map directly onto Gish’s
claim and put him under an obligation to make a twofold
showing. First, Gish had to show that Opland-Dobs per-
formed deficiently in failing to investigate the Xanax-based
defense. Second, Gish had to demonstrate that there existed a
reasonable probability that, had his counsel investigated the
defense, he would have rejected the plea offer and proceeded
to trial with a likelihood of succeeding on the defense. See
id.
at 59.
Gish urges a slightly different standard—one informed
not only by Hill but even more by the Supreme Court’s deci-
sion in Lee v. United States,
137 S. Ct. 1958 (2017). Like Gish,
Jae Lee pleaded guilty after his trial counsel advised him that
going to trial would be risky, and following a conviction, re-
sult in more jail time. See
id. at 1963. But Lee had a considera-
tion other than prison top of mind. He told his attorney he
14 No. 19-1476
was a noncitizen and “repeatedly asked him whether he
would face deportation as a result of the criminal proceed-
ings.”
Id. Lee’s attorney reassured him that a guilty plea
would not result in deportation. Lee relied on and followed
the advice even though it was wrong. By pleading guilty to
an aggravated felony, Lee faced mandatory deportation un-
der the Immigration and Nationality Act—the precise out-
come he wanted to avoid. See
id. (citing 8 U.S.C.
§§ 1101(a)(43)(B), 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii)). Lee later pursued federal
habeas relief, arguing that his attorney had rendered ineffec-
tive assistance of counsel that resulted in severe prejudice. See
id.
The Supreme Court agreed. Usually a defendant “without
any viable defense will be highly likely to lose at trial,” and
when “facing such long odds will rarely be able to show prej-
udice from accepting a guilty plea that offers him a better res-
olution than would be likely after trial.”
Id. at 1966. For Lee,
however, “avoiding deportation was the determinative fac-
tor”—the variable of “paramount importance”—in deciding
whether to plead guilty or go to trial, while the time he spent
in prison was relatively inconsequential to his litigation strat-
egy.
Id. at 1967–69. Lee’s counsel eliminated any doubt on the
point, testifying that Lee would have gone to trial had he been
properly informed that deportation would follow as auto-
matic consequence of pleading guilty. See
id. at 1967–68.
All of this led the Court to conclude that Lee “would have
rejected any plea leading to deportation—even if it shaved off
prison time—in favor of throwing a ‘Hail Mary’ at trial.”
Id.
at 1967. Lee’s laser focus on averting deportation, the Court
underscored, showed that his counsel’s errors prejudiced
him.
Id. at 1967–68.
No. 19-1476 15
Gish labors to situate himself like Lee. He does so mindful
of Hill, but of the view that Lee modifies the prejudice ques-
tion. In Gish’s view, Lee teaches that he could show prejudice
by now contending in federal habeas that he would have gone
to trial on a Xanax-based defense even if that defense had only
one percent chance of success.
We disagree and see Lee as reinforcing, not transforming,
Hill. In Lee the Court took care to observe that defendants
without a viable defense would “rarely” be able to show prej-
udice from a guilty plea that reduces their sentencing expo-
sure. See
id. at 1966. Put most simply, the certainty of less jail
time creates an incentive to avoid the longer shot of an acquit-
tal at trial. See
id. Lee was a rare exception: from Jae Lee’s per-
spective, the consequences of pleading guilty and going to
trial were “similarly dire”—he would be deported either
way—so he was willing to bet on “even the smallest chance of
success at trial.”
Id. at 1966–67. Properly informed, Lee would
have found nothing attractive about a plea offer that reduced
his prison time (a relatively minor concern for him) but guar-
anteed his deportation—the outcome he most wanted to
avoid.
Gish’s case is much different. The district court found that,
unlike Jae Lee, Christopher Gish decided to plead guilty
“based primarily on the prospects of success at trial.” Gish all
but said so himself, testifying in the district court that he
pleaded guilty because Opland-Dobs informed him that he
had no chance of winning at trial. The district court further
found that, in contrast with Lee’s persistent concern about de-
portation, nothing in Gish’s communications with Opland-
Dobs indicated that some factor other than the prospect of
success would have motivated Gish to go to trial.
16 No. 19-1476
Unlike Lee, then, Gish wanted to consider an involuntary
intoxication defense because he thought it might provide a
basis to defeat the homicide charge. What is more, Gish, un-
like Lee, said not a word—neither to his trial counsel nor to
the district court—suggesting that he was willing to forgo a
meaningful reduction in his sentencing exposure (from man-
datory life imprisonment to a maximum of 60 years) to avoid
collateral consequences. Put another way, the record shows
that Gish thought about whether to plead guilty or to go to
trial in just the way the Supreme Court in Lee described as
paradigmatic for most defendants—by comparing the proba-
bility of success at trial with the value of a reduced sentence
from pleading guilty.
On the record before us, then, we decline Gish’s invitation
to deviate from the prejudice inquiry the Supreme Court ar-
ticulated in Hill. The proper question therefore is whether
there was a reasonable probability that Gish would have gone
to trial on his affirmative defense, with the answer “de-
pend[ing] largely on whether the affirmative defense likely
would have succeeded at trial.”
Hill, 474 U.S. at 59.
C
In the end, we agree with the district court that Gish’s
Xanax-based involuntary intoxication defense had no reason-
able prospect of success at trial. Even assuming he could mar-
shal the evidence required to get a jury instruction on the de-
fense, we see no likelihood the defense would have persuaded
a jury that Xanax rendered him unable to appreciate the dif-
ference between right and wrong at the time he stabbed Lit-
wicki to death. Our confidence in this conclusion emerges
from the detailed facts the jury would have learned:
No. 19-1476 17
• Gish told a hospital nurse that he sold his pills
and no longer had any.
• Gish told Detective Hart that he last took Xanax
“[a] couple days” before the homicide.
• The police who searched Gish’s home found no
trace of Xanax.
• Even if Gish had taken Xanax the day of the
homicide, it was unlikely that he was the rare
patient who would have experienced effects so
extreme as to prevent him from appreciating
the wrongfulness of his conduct. The district
court found that the little evidence Gish offered
on that front (from his expert witness, James
O’Donnell) lacked credibility.
• In his interview with Detective Hart, Gish con-
fessed to how he went about killing and abus-
ing Litwicki—statements revealing an aware-
ness of his own conduct.
• Gish also offered a clear motive for the crime—
that he suspected Litwicki was cheating on him
and would take his kids away.
The combined weight of these facts would have left Gish
with no likely prospect of prevailing on an involuntary intox-
ication defense and defeating the state’s robust case against
him. By extension, then, and especially given Gish’s focus on
offering a defense with a chance of succeeding, we have diffi-
culty believing that Gish would have proceeded to trial and
run the substantial risk of being convicted and receiving a
mandatory sentence of life in prison. See Padilla v. Kentucky,
559 U.S. 356, 372 (2010) (emphasizing that a petitioner
18 No. 19-1476
challenging a guilty plea must show “that a decision to reject
the plea bargain would have been rational under the circum-
stances”); see also Woolley v. Rednour,
702 F.3d 411, 429 (7th
Cir. 2012) (rejecting prejudice where the defendant had made
the bare and unpersuasive allegation that wrongfully ex-
cluded witness testimony could have led to acquittal).
Because Gish cannot show prejudice from his trial coun-
sel’s errors, we agree with the district court that he is not en-
titled to habeas relief on his ineffective assistance claim. We
therefore AFFIRM.