Galvan v. the Alaska Department of Corrections

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 2005
Docket03-35083
StatusPublished

This text of Galvan v. the Alaska Department of Corrections (Galvan v. the Alaska Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galvan v. the Alaska Department of Corrections, (9th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

CINDY LEE GALVAN,  Petitioner, No. 03-35083 v.  D.C. No. CV-01-00285-JWS THE ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, OPINION Respondent.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Alaska John W. Sedwick, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted December 1, 2003—Seattle, Washington Submission Vacated December 15, 2003 Resubmitted April 16, 2004

Filed February 9, 2005

Before: Andrew J. Kleinfeld, Ronald M. Gould, and Richard C. Tallman, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Kleinfeld

1619 GALVAN v. ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS 1621

COUNSEL

Mary C. Geddes, Assistant Federal Defender, Anchorage, Alaska, for the petitioner.

Kenneth M. Rosenstein, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Special Prosecutions and Appeals, Anchorage, Alaska, for the respondent.

OPINION

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

This habeas corpus appeal turns on exhaustion. 1622 GALVAN v. ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS Facts

We take the facts from the Alaska Court of Appeals memo- randum opinion and judgment affirming on direct appeal.1

In 1989, Galvan and her boyfriend, Anthony Garcia, killed a man in Colorado and fled to Alaska. A week after arriving in Juneau, they robbed and murdered another man. This case arises out of that Juneau murder.

Galvan’s sentence was harsher than the Alaska “bench- mark” for second degree murder because the judge considered her unusually dangerous and because her crime “approached the blameworthiness” of first degree murder. The dangerous- ness had to do with Galvan’s history as well as the crime for which she was being sentenced. According to charges pend- ing in Colorado, Galvan had brought another woman, helpless from intoxication, home from a bar, where she beat her with brass knuckles, pounded her head on the floor, and stole her money. Then, with the aid of a juvenile, Galvan took off the victim’s clothes, cut off her hair, poured salt into her wounds, and threw her naked into the February night.

A few months later, still in Colorado, Galvan and her boy- friend reacted to what they felt to be disrespect by murdering a man. Galvan lured the man into a bathroom, her boyfriend came up behind the victim and beat him to death with a ham- mer, and Galvan cleaned the bathroom to obliterate the evi- dence.

The Juneau murder occurred a week after the couple arrived in Alaska. Galvan and her boyfriend needed money and decided that a robbery was the way to get it. Galvan rang the doorbell of a secluded home. When the victim opened the door, she and her boyfriend forced their way in. The boy- 1 Galvan v. State, Mem. Op. & J. No. 2456 (Alaska App., July 8, 1992) (unpublished). GALVAN v. ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS 1623 friend then stabbed the victim twenty times as he begged for his life, while Galvan took the victim’s money from his wal- let.

Though Galvan was charged with first degree murder, her lawyer got her a plea agreement for second degree murder. But after she pleaded no contest, she started a campaign—still continuing fifteen years after the murder—of blaming her conviction and sentence on her attorneys, a roll call of distin- guished lawyers, two of whom have since been appointed to the Superior Court of Alaska. (She has also sought post- conviction relief on numerous other grounds, not raised in, or relevant to her federal habeas petition.) The lawyer who nego- tiated her plea moved to withdraw as counsel after Galvan sought to have the plea set aside on account of ineffective assistance of counsel. A second retained lawyer moved to withdraw because he had accepted Galvan as a client on con- dition that she not pursue what he saw to be a meritless claim of ineffective assistance, but then she persisted in urging it. The court appointed a third lawyer. Galvan then repeatedly and unsuccessfully moved to set aside her plea. Testimony was taken in the Alaska Superior Court on Galvan’s claim of ineffective assistance, findings of fact were made (including that Galvan was not credible “on virtually every important debated statement of fact”), and the claim was decided against her, and affirmed on appeal. Galvan petitioned the Alaska Supreme Court to review the portion of the Alaska Court of Appeals decision that affirmed her sentence, but not the por- tion that allowed the plea to stand despite her claim of inef- fective assistance of counsel.

Galvan then sought post-conviction relief in the Alaska courts, claiming that ineffective assistance of counsel had led her to plead guilty to second degree murder. The Alaska Superior Court denied her petition. She then appealed. Although Galvan mentioned in the first sentence of her brief to the Alaska Court of Appeals that she had a right to counsel under the federal and state constitutions, all her arguments 1624 GALVAN v. ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS were based on Alaska law, specifically that the various Alaska Supreme Court and Alaska Court of Appeals cases laying out the contours of the right to counsel were not satisfied. The Court of Appeals carefully examined all the evidence and noted that although her lawyer told Galvan that, to get a favorable sentence, she should cooperate with the authorities and distance herself from her boyfriend, Galvan did the oppo- site. She continued to exchange love letters with her boyfriend while awaiting sentencing, and talked with her boyfriend about “taking care” of one of the state’s witnesses. There is nothing in the Court of Appeals decision regarding federal constitutional law.

Galvan then petitioned for review to the Alaska Supreme Court. This petition controls the outcome of her federal case, because, whether she had raised it or not in the lower courts, Galvan had to raise her federal claim in her petition to Alas- ka’s highest court to exhaust her federal constitutional claim. In a well-written, counseled petition (by the Alaska Public Defender Agency), Galvan makes these arguments: (1) her lawyer in the trial court gave her overly optimistic advice regarding the sentence she could expect; (2) she should have been allowed to withdraw her plea because the advice amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel; (3) her lawyer did not warn her that the sentencing judge might restrict her parole eligibility; and (4) her lawyer gave her bad advice that caused her to file her motion to withdraw her plea later than she should have, making it harder to win. Of the twelve cita- tions to cases in her petition, all but one are to decisions of the Alaska Supreme Court and the Alaska Court of Appeals. For her explanation of what constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel and what remedies are appropriate, Galvan relies entirely upon Alaska law. The petition is mostly a careful examination of the Alaska standards for what an attorney must tell a client.

The petition’s only mention of federal law comes in the GALVAN v. ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS 1625 course of distinguishing an Alaska case. The Alaska case2 held that a first degree murderer’s erroneous belief that he would be eligible for parole during the first twenty years of his sentence did not make his plea involuntary.3 Galvan sought to withdraw her plea on the ground, among others, that she did not realize when she entered it that the Superior Court might restrict her eligibility for parole. Galvan argued that the Alaska case should be distinguished because it involved a defendant’s “unilateral subjective impression,” but “there is a difference between not giving any advice and giving misinfor- mation,” as she claimed occurred in this case. To illustrate this factual distinction, Galvan devoted this one sentence in her brief to discussing a federal case: “In Strader v.

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