Commonwealth v. Pridham

394 S.W.3d 867, 2012 WL 5274654, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 161
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 2012
DocketNos. 2011-SC-000126-DG, 2010-SC-000733-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 394 S.W.3d 867 (Commonwealth v. Pridham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Pridham, 394 S.W.3d 867, 2012 WL 5274654, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 161 (Ky. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Justice ABRAMSON.

The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees criminal defendants the effective assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). That constitutional guarantee extends to defendants who are contemplating guilty pleas. Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 106 S.Ct. 366, 88 L.Ed.2d 203 (1985). In Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. 356, 130 S.Ct. 1473, 176 L.Ed.2d 284 (2010), the Supreme Court recently held that that guarantee is breached when defense counsel fails to advise his or her noncitizen client that a contemplated guilty plea will subject the client to automatic deportation. Is the guarantee likewise breached when counsel fails to advise her client that the crime to which he is pleading guilty will automatically render him subject to a longer period of parole ineligibility under Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 439.3401, the violent offender statute? Is it breached when counsel advises his client of the mandatory sex offender treatment applicable to the crime to which he is pleading but fails to advise him of the effects of that program on parole eligibility? Panels of the Court of Appeals answered “yes” to the first question and “no” to the second. We granted discretionary review in the two cases — Commonwealth v. Pridham, 2011-SC-000126, and Cox v. Commonwealth, 2010-SC-000733-to consider the related questions together in light of Padilla. In both cases, we affirm.

RELEVANT FACTS

Commonwealth v. Pridham, 2011-SC-000126-DG.

According to the Uniform Citation, in July 2006, in Elizabethtown, an officer of the Greater Hardin County Task Force, suspecting apparently that Timothy Prid-ham, a convicted methamphetamine manufacturer, had obtained pseudoephedrine — a methamphetamine precursor — stopped the vehicle in which the fifty-seven year old Pridham and three others were riding. He found in the passenger compartment a bag containing thirty pseudoephedrine-containing pills and in the trunk chemicals used in the “red phosphorus and iodine” method of methamphetamine manufacture. [871]*871See Kotila v. Commonwealth, 114 S.W.Sd 226 (Ky.2003) (discussing three methods of manufacturing methamphetamine). Prid-ham confessed to the officer that he was on parole following his prior manufacturing conviction and that he was the “cook” in a new manufacturing operation. A subsequent search of Pridham’s Shepherds-ville residence produced other items used to manufacture methamphetamine, including isolated pseudoephedrine, muriatic acid, and starting fluid.

Based on this evidence, in August 2006 a Hardin County Grand Jury issued an indictment charging Pridham with manufacturing methamphetamine, second or subsequent offense, a class A felony (KRS 218A.1432); with complicity to commit unlawful distribution of a methamphetamine precursor, a class D felony (KRS 218A.1438); and, because one of the other passengers in the vehicle with Pridham when he was stopped was a minor, with fourth-degree controlled substance endangerment to a child, also a class D felony (KRS 218A.1444). The indictment further charged Pridham with being a first-degree persistent felony offender (KRS 532.080).

The matter came to trial in September 2007, but at the end of voir dire, before the jury had been chosen, Pridham informed the trial court that he was willing to accept the Commonwealth’s offer of concurrent thirty, five, and five year sentences in exchange for his plea of guilty to all of the charges. The trial court then conducted a plea hearing pursuant to RCr 8.08 and Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238, 89 S.Ct. 1709, 23 L.Ed.2d 274 (1969), at which Pridham at first complained that both the arresting officer and the Commonwealth had earlier held out hope of more lenient treatment. When the Commonwealth made clear, however, that it was not budging from the pending thirty-year offer, Pridham conceded that he was guilty and that his chances of acquittal at trial were slim to none. He acknowledged the constitutional rights he was waiving, expressed satisfaction with his counsel’s representation, and pled guilty in accord with the Commonwealth’s offer. The trial court accepted the plea, and by Judgment entered November 7, 2007, sentenced Prid-ham accordingly to thirty years in prison.

In September 2008, Pridham moved for relief from that Judgment pursuant to Kentucky Rule of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 11.42. His motion alleged that trial counsel assured him that he would become eligible for parole upon having served twenty percent (20%) of his thirty-year sentence, or six years,1 whereas in fact KRS 439.3401, the “violent offender” statute, operates so as to render him ineligible for parole for twenty years, at which point Pridham would be seventy-seven years old.2 Pridham maintained that counsel’s incorrect advice fell below the Sixth Amendment standard of effectiveness recognized by the Supreme Court in Strickland and that had he been correctly advised he would not have accepted a plea “bargain” with virtually no benefit, but would instead have gone ahead with his trial.

[872]*872The trial court, relying on this Court’s opinion in Commonwealth v. Padilla, 253 S.W.3d 482 (Ky.2008), a case in which defense counsel erroneously assured his non-citizen client that a guilty plea to drug charges would have no bearing on his immigration status, denied Pridham’s motion without a hearing. In Padilla, we reaffirmed prior cases to the effect that a defendant’s misapprehension regarding the collateral consequences of a guilty plea, and hence counsel’s misadvice regarding such consequences, does not invalidate the plea. Deeming parole eligibility a collateral consequence of Pridham’s plea, the trial court found our opinion controlling.

Pridham appealed that ruling to the Court of Appeals, and while his case was pending, the United States Supreme Court issued its Padilla opinion, in which it reversed our decision and held that for non-citizens the deportation consequences of a criminal conviction are so severe, so penalty-Iike, and so intimately related to the criminal process as to make the collateral versus direct distinction upon which we had relied “ill-suited to evaluating a Strickland claim concerning the specific risk of deportation.” 130 S.Ct. at 1482. The Court concluded that “advice regarding deportation is not categorically removed from the ambit of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel,” id., and that under Strickland’s

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
394 S.W.3d 867, 2012 WL 5274654, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pridham-ky-2012.