Delano Marco Medina

2023 CO 46, 535 P.3d 82
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 11, 2023
Docket21SC765
StatusPublished
Cited by1,018 cases

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Bluebook
Delano Marco Medina, 2023 CO 46, 535 P.3d 82 (Colo. 2023).

Opinion

The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203

2023 CO 46

Supreme Court Case No. 21SC765 Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Case No. 19CA1196

Petitioner:

Delano Marco Medina,

v.

Respondent:

The People of the State of Colorado.

Judgment Affirmed en banc September 11, 2023

Attorneys for Petitioner: Schelhaas Law LLC Krista A. Schelhaas Littleton, Colorado

Attorneys for Respondent: Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General Grant R. Fevurly, Assistant Attorney General Denver, Colorado CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT delivered the Opinion of the Court, in which JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ, JUSTICE HOOD, JUSTICE GABRIEL, JUSTICE HART, JUSTICE SAMOUR, and JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER joined. 2 CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 In North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 39 (1970), the United States Supreme

Court upheld a defendant’s guilty plea even though the defendant maintained his

innocence while entering the plea. In so doing, the Court noted that such a

scenario (now commonly known as an Alford plea) is functionally identical to a

no-contest plea when the defendant “intelligently concludes that his interests

require entry of a guilty plea and the record before the judge contains strong

evidence of actual guilt.” Id. at 37.

¶2 Similarly, Delano Marco Medina pleaded guilty to felony menacing even

though he maintained his innocence of that charge. He did so in exchange for the

dismissal of several other criminal cases. The trial court found that Medina’s plea

was voluntary, knowing, and intelligent. But because Medina agreed to waive the

establishment of a factual basis for menacing under Crim. P. 11(b)(6), the trial court

did not make a finding as to whether strong evidence of Medina’s actual guilt

existed. Medina later moved to withdraw his plea as violative of due process,

arguing that a defendant cannot waive proof of a factual basis when entering an

Alford plea. The postconviction court denied his motion, and a division of the

court of appeals affirmed.

¶3 We must now determine whether an Alford plea requires that the trial court

make a finding of strong evidence of actual guilt to pass constitutional muster. We

3 conclude that there is no such requirement. Rather, we hold that a defendant may

enter an Alford plea while nonetheless waiving the establishment of a factual basis

for the charge under Crim. P. 11(b)(6), provided that the plea is voluntary,

knowing, and intelligent. We therefore affirm the division’s judgment, albeit on

slightly different grounds.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶4 Medina’s wife reported that Medina had threatened her and held a knife to

her throat during an argument. The People charged Medina in Lake County with

felony menacing (committed with the use of a real or simulated weapon), a class 5

felony. At the time, Medina faced prosecution in five other Lake County cases, as

well as one Boulder County case. The court set a $10,000 cash or surety bond in

the menacing case; bond amounts were also set in the other cases.

¶5 Medina later agreed to plead guilty to felony menacing in this case. In

exchange, the People agreed to dismiss all charges in the five other Lake County

cases.1 The parties further agreed that after Medina received his Boulder County

1 The People agreed to dismiss Lake County cases 13CR53, 13CR63, 13T75, 13M130, and 13M131. While the record doesn’t reflect the charges in these cases, we take judicial notice that they included ten felony counts (including class 4 felony identity theft, class 5 felony forgery, and four counts of class 6 felony violation of bond conditions). See People v. Sa’ra, 117 P.3d 51, 56 (Colo. App. 2004) (“A court may take judicial notice of the contents of court records in a related proceeding.”). The cases also included a habitual criminal sentence enhancer, eleven misdemeanor counts, a misdemeanor traffic offense, and a traffic infraction. 4 sentence, he would receive a consecutive one-year sentence for menacing. Medina

signed a copy of the guilty plea, which stated both: “I acknowledge that there is

factual basis for my guilty plea” and “I waive establishment of a factual basis for

the charge.”

¶6 Before the plea colloquy, Medina’s attorney (“plea counsel”) told the trial

court that Medina “steadfastly maintains that the menacing would not be a

provable case.” Plea counsel added, however, that Medina “does not have a

defense” to “other cases, in particular a bond violation.” Accordingly, plea

counsel said that Medina was choosing to plead guilty to felony menacing, “even

though in his heart of hearts he does not believe he’s guilty of that,” so Medina

could “take advantage of the plea bargain.” And “to that extent,” plea counsel

stated, Medina “would be waiving proof of a factual basis.”

¶7 The trial court acknowledged that because Medina maintained his

innocence, he was entering an Alford plea. The court asked Medina if he had read

the plea agreement, understood everything he read, and signed it. Medina said

that he had. The court warned Medina that he would be “giving up some serious

rights” by pleading guilty, which the court then described in turn before asking if

Medina understood that he would be waiving each right. Medina said that he

understood. The trial court explained the elements of felony menacing and asked

whether Medina understood that if he went to trial, the People would need to

5 prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt. Medina said that he understood.

The trial court asked if Medina understood that “[o]nce you plead guilty, this is a

final decision. You cannot come back at another time, change your mind, plead

not guilty and have a trial.” Again, Medina said that he understood. At that point,

the trial court asked Medina how he chose to plead, and Medina pleaded guilty.

¶8 Accordingly, the trial court found that Medina’s plea was “freely,

voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently given.” The court also found that Medina

had “waived the factual basis” for the menacing charge and understood that he

was waiving his rights by pleading guilty. The trial court therefore accepted

Medina’s guilty plea and scheduled a sentencing hearing. In accordance with the

plea agreement, the court then dismissed the five other Lake County cases. With

the other cases dismissed, Medina posted the $10,000 surety bond in this case and

was released from custody.

¶9 Medina failed to appear at the sentencing hearing, and the court issued a

warrant for his arrest. Almost a year later, Medina appeared in custody once

again, represented by a new attorney (“sentencing counsel”). The People asked

the court to enter the one-year sentence for felony menacing that Medina had

agreed to previously. Sentencing counsel, however, sought to withdraw the plea,

arguing that Medina had believed he could withdraw an Alford plea if he

6 discovered new evidence and that new evidence had since come to light.2 The trial

court denied Medina’s request to withdraw his plea, stating that “there’s no

evidence before me that [Medina’s] plea was not freely, voluntarily, knowingly

and intelligently done.” And so, the court imposed the one-year sentence that

Medina had stipulated to previously, and Medina was given 165 days of

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2023 CO 46, 535 P.3d 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delano-marco-medina-colo-2023.