Shorter v. State

511 N.W.2d 743, 1994 Minn. LEXIS 77, 1994 WL 37811
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 11, 1994
DocketC0-92-1185
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 511 N.W.2d 743 (Shorter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shorter v. State, 511 N.W.2d 743, 1994 Minn. LEXIS 77, 1994 WL 37811 (Mich. 1994).

Opinion

GARDEBRING, Justice.

The appellant, Carlton Stewart Shorter, asks this court to reverse the denial of his post-conviction motion to withdraw a guilty plea. Shorter was charged with two counts of first degree criminal sexual conduct and one count of kidnapping. He pleaded guilty to one count of criminal sexual conduct pursuant to a plea agreement providing for dismissal of the remaining two counts. He moved to withdraw his plea prior to sentencing. The district court denied his motion and sentenced him to 105 months according to the plea agreement.

After Shorter’s sentencing, the Minneapolis police department reopened its investigation into the case and located two witnesses who corroborated certain aspects of Shorter’s version of the events. Based upon the evidence uncovered, Shorter made a post-conviction motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The district court again denied his motion and the court of appeals affirmed. Acting in our supervisory role over the courts and in the interests of justice, we reverse the court of appeals and order the district court to allow appellant to withdraw his guilty plea and proceed to trial.

At the time of the plea, the evidence against Shorter consisted of the victim’s statement and the statements of two of her companions on the night of the incident. The victim reported that she was at a Minneapolis nightclub with friends, when she left them to go to the bathroom. She stated that when she left the bathroom, a man approached her, told her that he had a knife and directed her to go outside with him. She said that he walked her down the street and took her to an alley where he threatened her with a knife and raped her. He then walked her back into the building where she saw one of her friends and her attacker fled.

Two of the victim’s companions also gave statements to the police. They stated that when the victim did not return from the bathroom, they began to look for her. About 15 minutes after they began looking, one companion saw the victim walking back toward the club with a man who had his arm around her, and his fist clenched. The victim’s friend testified that when she took the man’s coat off the victim and threw it on the floor, he picked it up, said he would kill the victim, and left. Shorter was identified two nights later by one of the victim’s companions.

Shorter has consistently maintained that he had consensual sex with the victim and that he did not have a knife. When police first questioned him, Shorter admitted to having sexual intercourse with the victim, but said that it was consenting and that no force was used. He said he met a girl on the street and asked her “if she wanted to party,” that they walked around, went into an alley, and had sex. He denied grabbing her, pulling her arm, or threatening her with a knife. He said that when he walked her back to the nightclub they met a woman who asked him to join them, but he declined and left. Shorter stated that several witnesses had been with him prior to his contact with the woman.

Shorter gave the police and his defense counsel the first names of two men whom he said had been with him on the night in question and had been staying with him at the Harbor Lights residence. During discovery, defense counsel received lists of the residents of Harbor Lights from the county attorney, but, based on the lists, was unable to locate the men Shorter described. Defense counsel alleges that some of the pages of the records were missing, and that the missing pages contained the names of the corroborating witnesses. The prosecutor claims that all documents in its file were available to the defense at all times pursuant to its “open file policy.”

Shorter pleaded guilty to the one count of first degree criminal sexual conduct. At the hearing, Shorter was questioned exclusively by defense counsel and generally gave only yes or no answers. The judge did not question him. Although Shorter acknowledged that he understood he was waiving all of his constitutional rights and his defenses, that he *745 had been advised of the government’s evidence and the potential penalties, and that he was pleading guilty of his own free will, he was never asked to describe the incident giving rise to the charge. He admitted having sexual intercourse with the victim, but his attorney asked him questions which required only that he acknowledge the state’s evidence, rather than admit the elements of the crime. Shorter did not admit that he had a knife or that the victim did not consent to intercourse. He merely agreed with his attorney’s statements that the victim had so claimed and would so testify.

Nine days after the plea, Shorter met with a pre-sentence investigation officer and stated that he was innocent. He retained new counsel and filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Shorter’s testimony was taken and argument heard on the motion at his sentencing hearing. He testified that he was innocent, that he pleaded guilty out of fear, both because of the potential for a lengthy sentence upon conviction and because he felt his attorney was not pursuing his case aggressively as the attorney had not located the corroborating witnesses or character witnesses whose names Shorter had provided. Shorter testified that his public defender told him “he didn’t have a chance” and referred to the fact that Shorter was a black man and the victim a white woman. Shorter denied forcing the victim to have intercourse. The district court denied his motion.

After his sentencing, Shorter continued to call the Minneapolis police department professing his innocence and insisting that the police investigator had failed to contact his corroborating witnesses. He requested that the Minneapolis police contact a Chicago police officer. The Minneapolis police contacted the Chicago officer who told them that he had known Shorter for 10 years and had never known him to be violent or to carry a weapon. He indicated further that the circumstances surrounding this incident were not typical of what he knew of Shorter’s behavior. The Minneapolis police department then noted irregularities in its original investigation. Specifically, police investigators had never pursued the statement by one of the victim’s companions that her “other friend” had seen the victim go outside. In spite of indications in the police records now before us that a third companion of the victim told investigators she had seen the victim leaving the building, her statement was never taken. Nor did police locate or contact the corroborating witnesses Shorter identified, although the police knew their first names and that they were staying at the Harbor Lights residence with him. Police reports also indicate that no knife was ever found.

The Minneapolis police initiated a new investigation. It quickly turned up the names of the corroborating witnesses who had been with Shorter during the evening in question. Both new witnesses gave statements to the police investigator that they had seen Shorter meet a woman outside on the street that night and walk away with her. Both denied that Shorter forced the woman to walk with him, and neither had ever seen Shorter with a knife.

After this evidence was uncovered, Shorter moved for post-conviction relief from the judgment in the district court. He argued that his plea was induced by fear based upon his public defender’s advice and inadequate assistance, that the plea lacked an adequate factual basis and that the newly discovered evidence rendered the guilty plea a manifest injustice.

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Bluebook (online)
511 N.W.2d 743, 1994 Minn. LEXIS 77, 1994 WL 37811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shorter-v-state-minn-1994.