Hutchings v. United States

618 F.3d 693, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 17669, 2010 WL 3307469
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2010
Docket08-3538
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 618 F.3d 693 (Hutchings v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchings v. United States, 618 F.3d 693, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 17669, 2010 WL 3307469 (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Kevin Hutchings filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 after he discovered that the government would not move to reduce his sentence under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35, contrary to what his attorney had allegedly promised him. Hutchings argues that his attorney’s false guarantee of a Rule 35 reduction in his sentence violated his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. The district court denied Hutchings’s petition, and we affirm.

I. Background

Hutchings was sentenced by a Texas court in 1992 to a ninety-nine-year prison sentence for an aggravated drug offense, but was released on parole in 2001. His parole is not scheduled to terminate until 2091. The year after he was released on parole, Hutchings began trafficking marijuana, cocaine, and methamphetamine, by purchasing the drugs in Texas and selling *695 them in Peoria, Illinois. He was arrested in October 2003 in Cleveland, Ohio. He was charged in federal court in Ohio with, and pled guilty to, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, for which he was sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment. In August 2005, a federal grand jury in Peoria charged Hutchings with conspiracy to distribute more than 500 grams of methamphetamine and more than five kilograms of cocaine. Based on Hutchings’s five prior felony drug convictions, the government sought to enhance his sentence under 21 U.S.C. § 851, which would result in a mandatory minimum life sentence.

The court appointed Mark Wertz to represent Hutchings regarding the charges in Peoria. Wertz told Hutchings that if he pled guilty, the court would sentence him to life in prison. However, according to Hutchings, Wertz also told him that if he pled guilty and cooperated with the government, one year later the government would move to reduce his sentence to twenty to twenty-five years under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35. Wertz allegedly did not tell Hutchings that the government had broad discretion to bring a Rule 35 motion, and that the district court had the ultimate discretion whether to grant it. According to Hutchings, Wertz explained to him that the government would not ask for a reduced sentence in exchange for his initial guilty plea because the government wanted to appear to the public to be tough on crime. The reduced sentence would have to wait for one year when it could be arranged with less publicity.

In response to Hutchings’s habeas petition, the government attached an affidavit of attorney Wertz. Although Wertz spends significant ink describing his impression of whether Hutchings voluntarily pled guilty, conspicuously missing from the affidavit is any statement by Wertz negating Hutchings’s version of events-specifically, that Wertz guaranteed a sentence reduction.

Prior to pleading guilty, Hutchings wrote several letters to the district court in which he admitted his guilt and requested the opportunity to plead guilty as soon as possible. The apparently upbeat 1 Hutchings wrote to the district court, among other things, that he bought cheap drugs and sold them in Illinois (R. at 61, p. I), 2 that he “set out to break the law and did exactly that” {id. at 54, p. 2), that involving himself in a long, drawn-out trial was pointless because he had a life sentence from previous cases {id. at 49, p. 1), and that he was impatient to get back to “lovely Three Rivers, Texas,” where he was previously incarcerated, because his fellow hearts players in prison missed him {id. at 54, p. 1).

The district court held a change of plea hearing in February 2006, when Hutchings pled guilty to a superseding indictment. As part of the properly conducted Rule 11 colloquy, after placing Hutchings under oath, the district court asked him if there had been “any promises or assurances of any kind made to [him] in an effort to induce [him] to plead guilty?”, to which Hutchings replied, “No, sir.” (SuppApp. at 16.) The district court also confirmed with Hutchings that he understood that pleading guilty would result in a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of *696 parole. (Id. at 17.) Hutchings pled guilty, and in June 2006 the district court sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Of course, now in his habeas petition, Hutchings alleges that in fact there was a promise made to induce him to plead guilty; he argues that had his attorney not guaranteed him a sentence reduction for pleading guilty, he would have gone to trial rather than plead guilty. He alleges that he lied to the district court about Wertz’s guarantee because of what Wertz had allegedly told him about the government wanting to appear tough on crime.

Hutchings later signed a cooperation agreement with the Drug Enforcement Administration, pursuant to which he twice met with a government agent to provide evidence. Hutchings alleges that he called Wertz sixty times between May and October 2007 to find out when he would be resentenced. Wertz told him that he would check with the government to find out. Finally, on October 15, 2007, Wertz told Hutchings that the government said that it would not move to reduce his sentence because he had not provided substantial assistance.

This petition for a writ of habeas corpus followed, arguing, among other things, that his guilty plea was involuntary because Wertz’s guarantee of a sentence reduction constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court denied Hutchings’s petition without holding an evidentiary hearing, and subsequently denied Hutchings’s motion for a certificate of appealability. In January 2009, however, this court gave Hutchings a certificate of appealability, finding that “Hutchings has made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right as to whether counsel’s advice regarding Hutchings’s plea of guilty was ineffective assistance.”

II. Analysis

This appeal raises two issues: first, whether Wertz’s advice to Hutchings violated Hutchings’s constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel, and second, whether the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing before ruling on Hutchings’s habeas petition.

The government initially urges us to reject Hutchings’s petition outright because his “Memorandum of Law and Facts” was not signed under penalty of perjury. But the government waived this argument by failing to present it to the district court. Bus. Sys. Eng’g, Inc. v. Int’l Bus. Machs. Corp., 547 F.3d 882, 889 n. 3 (7th Cir.2008) (quoting Hicks v. Midwest Transit, Inc., 500 F.3d 647, 652 (7th Cir.2007)).

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618 F.3d 693, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 17669, 2010 WL 3307469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchings-v-united-states-ca7-2010.