Marco Nordelo v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections

635 F. App'x 636
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 2015
Docket14-11956
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 635 F. App'x 636 (Marco Nordelo v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections) 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
Marco Nordelo v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections, 635 F. App'x 636 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Marco Nordelo, a Florida prisoner, appeals the dismissal of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus as untimely. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Nordelo, whose conviction was final in 1992, argued that his petition was timely filed within one year of discovering that trial counsel had been ineffective for misadvising him about the penal consequences of rejecting an offer to plead guilty. We issued a certificate of appeala-bility to address whether Nordelo’s claim of ineffective assistance was barred by the statute of limitation. See id. § 2244(d)(1). Because we conclude, like the district court, that “the factual predicate of [Nor-delo’s] claim ... could have been discovered [earlier] through the exercise of due diligence,” see id. § 2244(d)(1)(D), we affirm the dismissal of Nordelo’s petition.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1991, a Florida jury found Nordelo guilty of two charges of armed robbery. Fla. Stat. §§ 777.011, 787.01, 812.13. A Florida court sentenced Nordelo, an habitual violent offender, to concurrent terms of imprisonment for life. See id. § 775.084. At sentencing, Nordelo’s attorney stated that with a sentence to “life as a habitual, if I’m not mistaken, you are talking about at least 15 years on up,” and the trial court responded, “Good.” Later, the trial court amended Nordelo’s sentence nunc pro tunc to reflect that he had a minimum mandatory sentence of 15 years. See id. § 775.084(4)(b)(1).

Nordelo successfully challenged one of his convictions. On direct appeal, the Third District Court of Appeals vacated one count of armed robbery on the ground that Nordelo’s two charges stemmed from “one comprehensive transaction to confiscate the sole victim’s property.” Nordelo v. State, 603 So.2d 36, 38-39 (Fla.Dist.Ct. App.1992).' Later, Nordelo moved to vacate his remaining conviction, see Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.850, but the trial court denied Nordelo’s motion.

Nordelo contested the length of his sentence. In 1995, Nordelo filed a motion to correct his sentence, which the district court denied. See Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.800. In his motion, Nordelo alleged that he was “sentenced to life in prison”; he was “suffering an unnecessary punishment, thinking that he will die in prison”; “[t]he unlawful sentence imposed (natural life in prison) ... [was] a miscarriage of justice”; and he was erroneously “sentenced ... to life in prison as a violent habitual offender” and “should be re-sentenced to ... 12 to 17 years.” In 1996, Nordelo moved to vacate his sentence and requested a reevaluation of “whether life imprisonment is just for [him],” but the trial court denied Nordelo’s motion as successive and lacking merit.

On November 30, 2005, Nordelo wrote a letter “requesting the [trial] court to reconsider and mitigate [his] sentence to the original offer by the state (25 years as a habitual offender).” Nordelo stated that he was “locked up in prison for life for one count of armed robbery”; “sentenced to life in prison”; and was '“doomed to spend the rest of [his] life in prison.” Nordelo mailed the letter to a prosecutor in the State Attorney’s Office, who forwarded the letter to the trial court.

In 2008, Nordelo moved unsuccessfully for postconviction relief based on newly-discovered evidence. See Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.850(b)(1), (c). Nordelo argued that his codefendant had provided an affidavit ex *638 onerating him and that the prosecutor had presented false and misleading evidence at trial, but the trial court denied Nordelo’s motion. Although the Third District Court of Appeals affirmed, Nordelo v. State, 47 So.3d 854 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.2010), the Supreme Court of Florida quashed the decision that denied Nordelo’s motion and remanded for the trial court to hold an evidentiary hearing about the affidavit, Nordelo v. State, 93 So.3d 178, 187 (Fla. 2012). On remand, after Nordelo’s code-fendant disavowed his affidavit and testified that Nordelo had participated in the armed robbery, the trial court denied Nor-delo’s motion to vacate. Nordelo did not appeal.

On March 15, 2013, Nordelo filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Relevant to this appeal, Nordelo argued, for the first time, that his trial counsel was ineffective for misadvising him that he might be paroled in 15 years, which caused him to reject an offer to plead guilty and receive a sentence of 25 years. The State of Florida answered that Nordelo’s petition was barred by the federal statute of limitation, see id. § 2244(d), and that Nor-delo’s claim of ineffective assistance was unexhausted and procedurally defaulted. Nordelo replied that his petition was timely because he did not discover his claim of ineffective assistance until February 2013 when, after being transferred to a new prison, his classification officer told .him that he was ineligible for parole.

A magistrate judge recommended that the district court dismiss Nordelo’s petition as untimely. The magistrate judge determined that Nordelo “was sentenced on April 2,1991, with credit for 286 days of time served” and “completed fifteen years of his sentence on June 20, 2005,” and that he “should have reasonably discovered that he was not eligible for parole, at the latest, on June 20, 2005.” Nordelo failed within “one year from that date ... to seek habeas relief based on counsel’s alleged misadvice” and that made his “petition more than six years late.”

Nordelo objected to the report and rear-gued that the statute of limitation accrued in February 2013 when he was told that he was ineligible for parole and knew that he rejected a more favorable plea agreement based on the faulty advice of his trial counsel. See id. § 2244(d)(1)(D). Nordelo alleged that he thought he would be eligible for parole after “fifteen (15) minimum mandatory years were completed on June 20, 2005,” and that “[djuring his yearly progress review, [he] asked his classification officer about his parole interview now that he completed the mandatory portion of his sentence,” but he “was instructed to have patience, that at this time he did not have a parole date.” According to Norde-lo, “[e]very year [he] ... inquired about his parole interview date and was always given a negative answer, but was never told that he was not under the parole system.”

“After a thorough review of the record and consideration of the [report and recommendation]” and Nordelo’s objections, the district court decided that the report was “well-reasoned and accurately state[d] the law of the case.” The district court adopted the report and dismissed Norde-lo’s petition as barred by the one-year statute of limitation.

II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

We review de novo the dismissal of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus as untimely, and we review related factual findings for clear error. Cole v. Warden, Ga. State Prison,

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635 F. App'x 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marco-nordelo-v-secretary-florida-department-of-corrections-ca11-2015.