Darryl Lovoy Cook v. United States

613 F. App'x 860
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 2015
Docket14-11894
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 613 F. App'x 860 (Darryl Lovoy Cook v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darryl Lovoy Cook v. United States, 613 F. App'x 860 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Darryl Lovoy Cook, a federal prisoner, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion to vacate, correct, or set aside his sentence following an eviden-tiary hearing on his claim that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to advise him adequately of the government’s position on a potential plea deal. The district court denied § 2255 relief, concluding that Cook had not shown that he was prejudiced by any deficient performance because he was unwilling to accept the government’s conditions for any *861 potential plea agreement. Alternatively, the court determined that counsel’s performance was a reasonable tactical response to a challenging attorney-client relationship.

The district court granted a certificate of appealability on the following question: “whether Mr. Cook was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel due to his counsel’s alleged failure to adequately advise him of the Government’s position on a plea in his case.” After careful review, we answer this question in the negative, and therefore affirm the district court’s denial of Cook’s § 2255 motion.

I.

Cook was the Birmingham, Alabama, area coordinator for a multi-state counterfeit-check conspiracy. 1 The conspiracy defrauded businesses and banks of over $1 million by creating counterfeit checks that appeared to draw from a legitimate account at a genuine bank and that were made payable to members of the conspiracy. Cook recruited others to the conspiracy and served as a liaison between the conspirators who counterfeited and forged checks and those who cashed them.

For his part in the conspiracy, Cook initially was indicted on two counts of possessing counterfeit checks and one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud. In November 2007, the government filed an eighteen-count superseding indictment against Cook and ten co-defendants. In the superseding indictment, Cook was charged with six counts of bank fraud and nine counts of aggravated identity theft, in addition to the original three counts. Cook’s co-defendants all pled guilty. Cook, however, proceeded to trial.

At trial, the government’s evidence consisted primarily of testimony from cooperating co-defendants and two confessions Cook made while in police custody. Before trial, Cook unsuccessfully had moved to suppress the confessions, alleging that they were substantially forged. The jury found Cook guilty of all eighteen counts. The district court sentenced Cook to a total term of 156 months of imprisonment, and we affirmed Cook’s convictions and sentences on direct appeal. United States v. Cook, 336 Fed.Appx. 875 (11th Cir.2009).

II.

Cook timely filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion alleging, among other things, that his trial counsel, Hube Dodd, rendered ineffective assistance by failing to advise him about the status of plea negotiations. The district court held an evidentiary hearing at which Cook was represented by counsel. 2

At the evidentiary hearing, Cook testified that he consistently told Dodd that he was willing to accept responsibility and to plead guilty to the charges against him, even after the superseding indictment was filed. But Dodd, according to Cook, never communicated a plea offer from the government, did not inform Cook of the government’s position regarding the terms of *862 a potential plea deal, and told Cook that he had to go to trial despite a very low chance of success. Cook stated that Dodd became “irritable” and frustrated with him whenever he brought up the possibility of a plea deal, even though Cook believed that one was possible because his co-defendants had received plea deals. On cross-examination, Cook maintained that he was innocent of most of the conduct charged in the superseding indictment — admitting only that he was a driver for two instances of check fraud — and that the confessions attributed to him were substantially forged.

Dodd testified that plea negotiations' with the government did not advance because Cook was unwilling to accept responsibility for the “vast majority,” or the “lion’s share,” of the conduct alleged in the superseding indictment, as the government insisted. In other words, Cook would have had to admit to conduct establishing him as the “ringleader” of the conspiracy in Birmingham, which, Dodd explained, Cook was unwilling to do. Dodd said that there was no chance of a plea deal before the superseding indictment because it was clear that the government intended to seek additional charges and because the government had rejected Cook’s initial offer to plead guilty to the original indictment. Once Cook moved to suppress the confessions, the government additionally required as part of any plea deal that Cook recant his allegations that his signed confessions were forged and that the government agents were liars.

Dodd further testified that he communicated the government’s terms to Cook “numerous times,” but Cook’s response was that he was not guilty of the vast majority of the conduct and that he wished to file a motion to suppress and to proceed to trial. Dodd stated that he told Cook that he would have difficulty winning at trial based on the government’s evidence against him. At some point, Cook expressed frustration that Dodd did not believe Cook was innocent. From that point forward, Dodd explained, although he continued to pursue a potential plea deal with the government, in order “to continue a positive relationship,” he “was not very direct in suggesting to [Cook] repeatedly that he had to plead guilty or that he should plead guilty.” He elaborated on cross-examination that he began to “tread[ ] very lightly” with Cook in November or December 2012, telling Cook the steps that would be required to plead guilty rather than directly advising him to plead guilty. For example, he told Cook that he would have to admit to certain facts by pleading guilty, but Cook “never wavered in his insistence that he did not do the vast majority of the conduct that was described and attributed to him.” Nonetheless, Dodd stated that he kept in contact with the government about a possible deal until two to four weeks before trial, but the government’s essential terms did not change. Dodd testified that no formal plea offer was ever made.

After hearing the evidence, the district court denied Cook’s § 2255 motion in open court. The court first concluded that Cook had not shown that he was prejudiced by any alleged deficiency in Dodd’s performance. From the very beginning, the court found, the government was not willing to enter into any plea agreement unless Cook admitted responsibility for a substantial amount of criminal activity and, once Cook filed a suppression motion, recanted his allegations of forgery. The court determined that Cook was never willing to accept substantial responsibility for the conduct alleged in the superseding indictment, and, even in his sworn testimony at the § 2255 evidentiary hearing, he still did not wish to take such responsibility.

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613 F. App'x 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darryl-lovoy-cook-v-united-states-ca11-2015.