Parsons v. State of Maine

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 7, 2004
DocketKENcr-02-469
StatusUnpublished

This text of Parsons v. State of Maine (Parsons v. State of Maine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. State of Maine, (Me. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

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STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION

KENNEBEC ss. DOCKET NO. CR-02,469, DARRELL PARSONS,

Petitioner

V. DECISION AND ORDER STATE OF MAINE, CONALDL. Gaseengy Les Phe? oY iif Respondent

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This matter is before the court on the amended petition for post-conviction review filed by Darrell Parsons who asserts that his guilty pleas to two counts of burglary and two counts of theft in this court on April 25, 2002, were involuntarily entered and/or the attorney who represented him on this occasion was ineffective. A testimonial hearing was conducted on the petition and it is now in order for disposition.

Addressing ground two of the amended petition first, it alleges that at the time of _ the Rule 11 hearing, Parsons was taking significant medications with the result that he was confused and impaired so that the guilty pleas he entered that date must be considered unknowing and involuntary.

The burden of proof to support the claims in a post-conviction case rests with the petitioner. Parkinson v. State, 558 A.2d 361, 362 (Me. 1989). In the court's view, the petitioner has not met that burden. At the Rule 11 hearing he told the court that he had taken no drugs that day, legal or illegal, and knew of no reason why the court should not proceed with his case that day. Tr., p. 4. He also told the court that he understood everything that was taking place in court that day, had no questions, and knew of no

reason why the court should not accept his pleas of guilty. Tr., p. 18. 2

Not only does this record directly contradict the petitioner’s recent testimony, it also conflicts with the testimony of John O’Donnell, his attorney, whom the court finds to be credible, that he observed no sign of impairment on his client’s part at the Rule 11 hearing.

Moreover, the court was provided no jail records to indicate what drugs the petitioner either should have taken, or did take, that day, nor was the court told by a witness competent to testify on the subject what effect the drugs he claims to have taken might be. For all the court knows, the prescription drugs listed in ground two of the amended petition, if consumed, might assist the petitioner at a Rule 11 hearing rather than impair him.

In sum, the court cannot find that the petitioner. has met his burden of persuasion that he was confused or impaired when he entered his guilty pleas on April 25, 2002, so that those pleas ought to be considered unknowing or involuntary and therefore set aside.

In ground one of the amended petition, the petitioner claims the attorneys who represented him in Kennebec, Somerset and Cumberland Counties on his various cases were ineffective in that they allowed the District Attorney for Kennebec and Somerset Counties to renege on a plea agreement, never discussed with him the law concerning multiple offenses occurring on the same day as that factor may relate to concurrent sentencing, pressured him into pleading guilty, and discouraged him from attempting to enter an “open” plea. As a result of all these alleged affronts to his right to effective counsel, the petitioner says his pleas were involuntary. Because none of these contentions have merit, this ground for post-conviction relief will also fail.

Apparently, the petitioner was on probation in Cumberland County when he

committed the alleged burglaries in Kennebec and Somerset Counties. He was charged 3

in Kennebec first, however, and John O’Donnell was appointed to represent him. After his arraignment on the Kennebec burglaries, District Attorney David Crook, on October 19, 2001, offered attorney O’Donnell a disposition of 10 years all but eight years suspended, four years probation, “10/8/4,” on the Kennebec and Somerset charges to be served concurrently with any Cumberland disposition where the petitioner’s exposure was four years, eight months of previously suspended incarceration. This offer was relayed to the petitioner who rejected it. This offer was also relayed by Mr. O’Donnell to Robert Conkling, the petitioner’s attorney in Somerset County along with the advice that their client’s goal was to obtain a suspended sentence on his Kennebec and Somerset charges, consecutive to the Cumberland County case.

Shortly thereafter, the petitioner had-his initial appearance on the Cumberland. probation revocation motion, Mr. O'Donnell having arranged to have a probation hold placed on his client because he could not make bail on the Kennebec charges so that any time he might be held would be credited against the Cumberland revocation order when it issued. Attorney Howard O’Brien was appointed to represent the petitioner in the Cumberland case.

On February 26, 2002, Assistant District Attorney Everett Fowle, who worked for Mr. Crook and was assigned to Somerset County, offered attorney Conkling, who represented the petitioner on the burglary charge in that county, a five year fully suspended sentence with four years probation on that charge to be served consecutively to any disposition in Cumberland County. On March 4, 2002, attorney Conkling relayed that offer to his client, but the petitioner rejected this resolution unless it included the Kennebec charges. Accordingly, on March 6, 2002, attorney O’Donnell, aware of his client’s wishes, spoke with Mr. Crook concerning the offer of a consecutive,

suspended five-year sentence on the Kennebec charges as well. In the meantime, he 4

had confirmed with attorney O’Brien that the potential of a consecutive suspended sentence for the petitioner had been discussed between Mr. Fowle and the Cumberland District Attorney’s Office. On the sixth, however, District Attorney Crook declined to agree to include the Kennebec charges in Mr. Fowle’s offer, telling Mr. O’Donnell, “lets see what happens in Cumberland, then we'll talk.”

The following day, March 7, 2002, the petitioner admitted to the probation violation motion in Cumberland County, and four years of the previously suspended sentence was imposed.

From this history, it is apparent that the petitioner was neither offered, nor had accepted, a consecutive suspended sentence for his Kennebec and Somerset charges upon his admission to the Cumberland probation violation. That. being so, it necessarily follows, there being no evidence to the contrary, that the petitioner was not induced to admit to the Cumberland probation violation by virtue of a particular promised disposition in Kennebec and Somerset counties.

Also on March 7, 2002, perhaps because the petitioner had rejected the offer of a consecutive suspended sentence on the Somerset charges, Mr. Fowle offered Mr. Conkling five years of unsuspended incarceration on the Somerset burglary concurrent with the Cumberland disposition. Mr. Conkling recommended that his client accept this offer, in a letter dated March 12, 2002, and, on April 8, 2002, the petitioner replied that he would accept that disposition on the Somerset case.

On April 9, 2002, District Attorney Crook offered attorney O’Donnell 10 years, all but six years suspended, four years probation, “10/6/4” or seven years “straight time”

on the petitioner’s charges in Kennebec and Somerset Counties, concurrent with the

* Although there was no testimony on this point, it is reasonable to infer that Mr. Crook did not want to

commit to fully suspended sentences for three burglaries in his district until he knew what would happen in Cumberland County in a case he was powerless to affect. Cumberland County case. Mr. O’Donnell conveyed that offer to his client on April 11. That day or the day following, Parsons told Mr.

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Related

Ciro Gargano v. United States
852 F.2d 886 (Seventh Circuit, 1988)
State v. Brewer
1997 ME 177 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1997)
Parkinson v. State
558 A.2d 361 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)
Laferriere v. State
1997 ME 169 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1997)

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Parsons v. State of Maine, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-state-of-maine-mesuperct-2004.