State v. Ochalla, 48972.

Citation285 NW 2d 683
Decision Date16 November 1979
Docket NumberNo. 48972.,48972.
PartiesSTATE of Minnesota, Respondent, v. Douglas Ray OCHALLA, Appellant.
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota (US)

Kief, Duranske, Fuller, Baer & Wallner and George L. Duranske, III, Bemidji, for appellant.

Warren Spannaus, Atty. Gen., St. Paul, Daniel R. Sandell, County Atty., Breckenridge, for respondent.

Considered and decided by the court en banc without oral argument.

SHERAN, Chief Justice.

Petitioner, after being found guilty by a district court jury of aggravated robbery and sentenced by the trial court to a maximum term of 20 years in prison, seeks postconviction relief in the form of a new trial on the ground of ineffectiveness of trial counsel (in failing to locate some alibi witnesses and failing to call others) and newly discovered (certain alibi testimony as well as testimony of operator of so-called Psychological Stress Evaluation, hereafter PSE, concerning results of analysis of tape recordings of voices of petitioner and the victim to determine the truth of certain statements they made about petitioner's participation in the crime). Our examination of the record convinces us that the postconviction court did not err in refusing to admit the PSE evidence and that it properly concluded that petitioner had failed to meet his burden of proving ineffective assistance and/or newly discovered evidence warranting a retrial. Therefore we affirm.

In this case two men accompanied the victim, who was intoxicated, to a restaurant and, after eating with him, left the restaurant with the victim, walked with him a short ways, and then beat him and robbed him. The victim identified petitioner after seeing him in a bar about a month later and three other witnesses who had seen the victim with the two men positively identified petitioner as one of the men. Additionally, other evidence placed petitioner in the vicinity of the offense during the time in question and in the company of a man who fit the description of the victim's other assailant.

1. Petitioner, who does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, contends nonetheless that his trial counsel failed to adequately represent him in that he did not make a reasonable effort to locate alibi witnesses and failed to call certain other alibi witnesses who had been located. The postconviction court, however, found that petitioner's trial counsel had made a reasonable effort to locate the witnesses in question and that there were tactical reasons for not...

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