McAdoo v. Elo

346 F.3d 158
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 23, 2003
Docket01-2050
StatusPublished

This text of 346 F.3d 158 (McAdoo v. Elo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAdoo v. Elo, 346 F.3d 158 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Silas McAdoo appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. McAdoo pled guilty in Michigan state court to one count of second-degree murder and two counts of assault with intent to commit murder. Pursuant to a plea agreement, he was sentenced to three life sentences to run concurrently. McA-doo later claimed that his attorney misinformed him about the consequences of a life sentence. McAdoo raises three issues in this appeal, arguing that (1) his guilty plea was not knowing and voluntary because he misunderstood its consequences, (2) his plea was illusory based on the effective unavailability of parole for those serv *162 ing a statutory life sentence, and (3) his trial counsel was ineffective for allegedly misinforming McAdoo about his possible sentence. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of habeas relief.

I.

McAdoo was charged in Michigan state court with one count of first-degree murder and two counts of assault with intent to commit murder. The charges arose from the stabbing death of McAdoo’s wife, Alicia Kelley, and the stabbing of two of his daughters. At McAdoo’s preliminary hearing, his ten and fourteen year old daughters testified about the facts of McA-doo’s offenses, all of which occurred in the family home.

On January 9, 1995, the trial date, McA-doo entered a guilty plea to the lesser offense of second-degree murder and two counts of assault with intent to commit murder. The agreement was in exchange for the dismissal of the first-degree murder charge that carried a maximum sentence of life without parole. At the plea proceeding, McAdoo’s attorney told the court that the plea agreement indicated three life sentences. McAdoo signed the plea form, which stated that the agreement was for three life sentences. McA-doo stated to the court under oath that no one had promised him anything other than what the plea form indicated.

Sentencing was held on February 1, 1995. At the outset, McAdoo’s attorney stated that McAdoo did not want to withdraw his plea, and McAdoo agreed on the record. The court stated that it was ready to “impose a sentence in accord with the sentence agreement.” It then sentenced McAdoo to parolable life for the murder conviction and two concurrent terms of twenty years imprisonment for the assault convictions. The sentencing judge stated “Count one and murder two for a term of statutory life which is 20 years.” Although the judge indicated an intent to sentence McAdoo in accord with the plea agreement, she failed to do so. First, a statutory life term does not equal twenty years in Michigan. Second, the plea agreement did not call for twenty-year sentences for the assault convictions.

The prosecution then moved to amend the sentence to conform to the plea agreement, which had provided for three concurrent life sentences rather than one life sentence and two twenty-year sentences. Resentencing occurred on March 24, 1995. McAdoo, then represented by his second counsel, Robert Plumpe, requested the withdrawal of his guilty plea, claiming that he did not understand the nature of his plea agreement and that he was under the influence of medication at the time he entered his plea. Defense counsel argued that there was confusion when McAdoo entered his plea about what the sentence would be. The prosecutor responded that there was some confusion at sentencing, “but not at plea time.”

At the resentencing hearing, McAdoo, who was not under oath, had the following exchange with the state trial court:

THE COURT: Mr. McAdoo, sir, do you wish to say anything before this Court imposes the correct sentence, which was pursuant to the plea agreement?
DEFENDANT McADOO: Yes, Judge Braxton. The day that you accepted my plea, I don’t know if you remember. I know you have a lot of cases that you have to do, but when Batchelor first came before you with me, and you asked me more than once did I understand, and you asked me how did I plead, and I pled not guilty.
*163 Then he took me, and we went into the back chambers or in another room, and he made the statement to me, and maybe I am wrong, but I was told that the three life sentences would be 20, 20, 20 to run concurrently, and that my kids would not have to be subjected to the Court.
THE COURT: But he did inform you that they were three life sentences. Is that correct?
DEFENDANT McADOO: Yes, Ma’am.
THE COURT: Which is indicated on this form.
MR. DEFENDANT: But he, I guess what I am trying to say is, Judge Brax-ton, that if I had understood what he was telling me which, as I stated to you before, I had no knowledge of what was going on whatsoever. I have no—
THE COURT: Now you had some knowledge because I spoke to you. But you go ahead.
DEFENDANT MeADOO: What I am trying to say is my lawyer, Batchelor, he never spoke with me about anything. It was just the first time I ever saw this piece of paper here was the day that you took my plea agreement. When I first saw you, and it was more or less stated to me accept it or get another attorney. I wrote all this up, and I turned it in to the Grievance Commission.
But anyway to sum it all up, he told me something that was different than what you did, and that’s the only thing I am arguing, and is the fact that I didn’t understand what he was doing. If I would have understood that he was sentencing me to three life sentences to the point, why not fight the case?
I didn’t want my kids to be subjected to it. It was enough that they went through. And then for him to tell me that it would be the three life sentences, I know I need to be punished for what I did. No problem whatsoever with that. But that’s not what he explained to me. That’s all I am trying to say to the Court.

The court then conformed the sentence to the written plea agreement and stated that it would consider McAdoo’s motion to withdraw the plea if he presented evidence that his mental state and medication prevented him from knowingly entering a guilty plea. 1

McAdoo was then appointed a third counsel, Edward Jabbour, who filed another motion to withdraw McAdoo’s guilty plea, arguing that the plea was not knowing and voluntary. The sentencing court held a hearing on this motion on March 7, 1996. Jabbour argued that McAdoo entered his plea believing that he would be released after twenty years imprisonment and that this alleged misunderstanding nullified the plea.

The court conducted an evidentiary hearing on May 9, 1996, to determine whether McAdoo’s alleged misunderstanding nullified his plea. At the May 9, 1996, hearing, Batchelor testified that his understanding was that the penalty for first-degree murder in Michigan was a sentence of “natural life” and the penalty for second-degree murder was a sentence of *164 “parolable” life.

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Bluebook (online)
346 F.3d 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcadoo-v-elo-ca6-2003.