Layne v. United States

312 F. Supp. 140, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12165
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 8, 1970
DocketNo. 69 Civ. 5615
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 312 F. Supp. 140 (Layne v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Layne v. United States, 312 F. Supp. 140, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12165 (S.D.N.Y. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

FRANKEL, District Judge.

The petitioner in this proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 attacks the judgment and sentence imposed following his plea of guilty to charges of forging and uttering government checks. The plea was allowed by Judge Motley on April 17, 1969, following a notably detailed and careful interrogation in which petitioner appears to have been crisply articulate, responsive and composed. Between that date and his sentencing by me on May 15, 1969, the petitioner wrote to explain that he had been invited to consider whether treatment for his narcotics problem should be sought for him under the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act of 1966, 18 U.S.C. § 4251 et seq.; that he felt such a course to be neither necessary nor suitable in his case; that he considered himself a proper candidate for probation, capable, inter alia, of participating voluntarily in a narcotics treatment program; and that I should, accordingly, entertain the alternative of a suspended sentence and supervised probation. These thoughts [142]*142were reviewed upon the record when petitioner appeared for sentencing. Again, as in his prior appearance and his written submission on his own behalf, petitioner appeared to be lucid and precisely conscious of all that was happening. For reasons appearing on the record of that occasion, it was concluded that petitioner should not go free, but that his substantial prison sentence (of seven years) should be subject to the potential mitigation allowed by 18 U.S.C. § 4208 (a) (2).

Petitioner lost no time seeking speedier improvement in his situation. By letter of June 14, 1969, he requested reduction of his sentence. The letter tendered, with some eloquence, claims that petitioner had come, finally, to see the error of his former ways. Along with contrition, it stated a corollary purpose to go forth thereafter on straight paths. Petitioner appealed for compassion not only for himself but for the new son he had never seen. He urged that he should be deemed ready now, or soon, to guide himself and that son. While such appeals, however common, are moving, the court felt constrained to deny the application, deeming it more fitting to rely upon the better informed judgment of the Parole Board under 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a) (2).

A few months later, by the pro se petition now before the court, petitioner proposed what was (for him) an entirely new approach. This document, contrasting vividly with the earlier suggestions that he could control the narcotics problem quite on his own, urged that his long years of addiction had resulted in his being incompetent either to commit the crimes for which he is in prison or to enter an intelligent guilty plea to the indictment. The broad new proposition — -amounting to no more than an assertion that a narcotics addict is ipso facto incompetent — seemed insubstantial on its face. The claim of incompetence at the time of the plea seemed especially weightless in light of the fact that petitioner had already been continuously incarcerated for a period of four months or so, mainly on state charges, when he appeared before Judge Motley and gave that plea. See Valcarcel v. United States, 409 F.2d 211, 213 (2d Cir. 1969); Rivera v. United States, 341 F.2d 746 (1st Cir. 1965); Burrow v. United States, 301 F.2d 442 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 371 U.S. 894, 83 S.Ct. 193, 9 L.Ed.2d 126 (1962).

Despite the probable frivolousness of the petition, the court concluded that it should not be rejected out of hand, but that the petitioner, serving a potentially substantial sentence, should have professional legal assistance before his petition was finally determined. Joseph T. Klempner, Esq., to whom the court is indebted, undertook this unpaid task, acting upon instructions to add any legal or factual support he could discover or formulate for the petition. The products of Mr. Klempner’s energetic and scholarly efforts are now before me. They show every evidence of thorough and devoted service.1 In addition to attempts to buttress the single point tendered in the pro se petition, the new papers add con[143]*143tentions that petitioner may have had conflicted counsel and that the plea may have been fatally infected by admissions petitioner had made to a government agent without sufficient warnings or legal assistance. Despite these considerable efforts by counsel, the petition does not yet, and probably never will, present grounds requiring a hearing. In the paragraphs following this, the court explains this probable conclusion and indicates the permissible, if unpromising, lines of further exploration left open to petitioner and his assigned counsel.

1. The brief supporting the petition contains an array of pertinent law and some hypotheses about the mysteries of narcotics addiction. It also suggests “conceivable” problems that might, if they should materialize in even an incipient way, warrant an evidentiary hearing. But close analysis reveals nothing warranting the trip to New York from his place of confinement in Atlanta that seems to be paramount among petitioner’s desires.2

Acknowledging that petitioner was in jail for long before his guilty plea, counsel points to a letter in which petitioner says he was being given “medication from the city” during that period. Taking cf. from that, counsel says petitioner “may have” been getting narcotics. That is a long, imaginative and improbable leap.3 If a judge taking a guilty plea must turn up and then bury “coneeivables” of this order (Judge Motley, in her meticulous inquiries, did ascertain that petitioner had never received psychiatric care and was free of drug or alcoholic influences at the time of her proceeding), the project becomes hopeless, endless, and futile.

Counsel emphasizes that petitioner had been hospitalized in 1960 and at other times for his addiction. This was known long ago to counsel and the court, well before the judgment of conviction. Nothing appeared then that suggested to anyone — counsel for either side, the two judges presiding, respectively, at plea and sentence, or probation officers 4 [144]*144—that the history was an indication of mental disorder approaching the level of “incompetence” in any apposite sense. On the contrary, every responsible observer and participant went on the unquestioned view, spoken or not, that petitioner was in unfettered possession of every relevant faculty. Among other cogent data, the pre-sentence report, referred to earlier (see note 3, supra), supported this view.

It appears, in sum, that there is nothing but airy speculation on which to float petitioner’s tardy claim that he was incompetent all* along. This is not to say, of course, that a petitioner must “establish” such a claim by his papers before he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing. Cf. Catalano v.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Geraway
301 N.E.2d 814 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
312 F. Supp. 140, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/layne-v-united-states-nysd-1970.