State Of Washington v. Matthew Mittelstaedt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 14, 2015
Docket45735-1
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State Of Washington v. Matthew Mittelstaedt, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS. DIVISION II

2015 APR J ! 4 AN 9: 52

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 45735 -1 - II

Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

MATTHEW MITTELSTAEDT,

Appellant.

BJORGEN, A.C. J. — Matthew Mittelstaedt pled guilty to six counts of third degree assault

and one count of third degree child rape. After the trial court accepted his guilty plea,

Mittelstaedt filed a pro se motion to withdraw his guilty plea, asserting that his defense counsel

had rendered ineffective assistance during the plea bargain process. The trial court denied his

motion. Mittelstaedt appeals, contending that the trial court violated his right to counsel by

denying his motion without first appointing him substitute counsel. We affirm.

FACTS

On August 17, 2012, the State charged Mittelstaedt with first degree child rape based on

allegations that he had engaged in sexual intercourse with his daughter. On November 8, 2013,

the State amended its charges to six counts of third degree assault and one count of third degree

child rape in exchange for Mittelstaedt' s agreement to plead guilty to the amended charges. In

his written guilty plea statement, Mittelstaedt stated that he was pleading guilty to the amended No. 45735 - 1 - II

charges to avoid the possibility of receiving a " third strike" conviction under the Persistent

Offender Accountability Act (POAA), which conviction would result in Mittelstaedt' s

confinement for life without the possibility of release.' Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 24; RCW

9. 94A.030( 32), ( 37); RCW 9. 94A.570.

On November 8, 2013, the trial court held a hearing on Mittelstaedt' s guilty plea,.at

which Mittelstaedt stated he was voluntarily pleading guilty. The trial court accepted

Mittelstaedt' s guilty plea, finding that Mittelstaedt had entered his guilty plea "knowingly,

intelligently and voluntarily [ with] aware[ ness] of the consequences of the plea." Report of

Proceedings ( RP) ( Nov. 8, 2013) at 10. On December 5, Mittelstaedt filed a pro se motion to

withdraw his plea that stated:

1. On the 7th of November, 2013 prior to the start of trial the defendant did state in open court the lack of preparation for trial, and with that the lack of communication with defense counsel so as to provide adequate representation in trial and allow the defendant to make informed decisions. That being said, Defendant' s decision to plead guilty was based on the opportunity to get out of prison vs. never getting out, as the situation was presented by defense counsel. 2. When the idea or possibility of mitigation was brought up on the 7th of November the Honorable Judge McCarthy did state the defendant would have through the holiday weekend to consider resolving this case. Defense counsel later followed up by stating he would give his client until the afternoon of the 8th of November to consider settlement, further exacerbating the defendant' s anxiety from not being prepared and further depriving his ability to think with a sound mind and make rational decisions in attempting to resolve this case. 3. With these facts of the matter, should the defendant have had the holiday weekend as initially allowed by the Honorable Judge' s recommendation, Defendant would have decided to continue to trial so as to prove his innocence, facing his accuser( s), and retaining his rights including to appeal.

4. With that said, the defendant hopes and prays the Honorable Judge McCarthy acknowledges, hears, and grants his motion to withdraw his plea.

In his guilty plea, Mittelstaedt stipulated that he had previously been convicted of first degree child molestation, second degree molestation, and second degree assault.

2 No. 45735 -1 - II

CP at 33 -35.

On December 16, Mittelstaedt wrote a letter addressed to the Chief Judge of the Pierce

County Superior Court, stating he had a conflict with his defense counsel and requesting the

appointment of substitute counsel. At Mittelstaedt' s December 20 sentencing hearing, defense

counsel told the trial court that ( 1) Mittelstaedt had sought to withdraw his plea shortly after it

was entered, ( 2) he advised Mittelstaedt to put his reasons for seeking a withdrawal of his guilty

plea in writing, and ( 3) after reviewing Mittelstaedt' s written statement, he could not ethically

endorse Mittelstaedt' s request to withdraw the guilty plea.

The trial court then asked Mittelstaedt:

On that issue on your motion? Do you understand the State has filed a memorandum, and your attorney has referenced it. He is not necessarily joining in your motion, and he is your attorney. Your motion appears to be deficient legally for many of the reasons that the State has set forth in their response. Nonetheless, I will give you an opportunity to be heard, if you' d like.

RP ( Dec. 20, 2013) at 4. Mittelstaedt told the trial court that he was dissatisfied with defense

counsel' s representation, because defense counsel failed to interview several potential witnesses,

defense counsel indicated that he would not call certain witnesses to testify at trial, and his

communication with defense counsel has been " strained and combative." RP ( Dec. 20, 2013) at

6. Mittelstaedt also told the trial court that his defense counsel had pressured him into accepting

the State' s plea offer. Additionally, Mittelstaedt stated to the trial court:

It was only after defense counsel completely undermined my decision by stating he was going to run a clean case along with the prosecution and judge, that I became completely petrified of the prospect of not having a chance in trial or on appeal to prove my innocence. At that moment, I caved in to all he was saying to me and took the deal, but even that is not under the terms I stated I would accept.

RP ( Dec. 20, 2013) at 8.

3 No. 45735 -1 - II

In response, the State argued that the trial court should deny Mittelstaedt' s motion to

withdraw his guilty plea, because Mittelstaedt failed to show a manifest injustice warranting the

withdrawal of his guilty plea as required under CrR 4.2( f) and because the trial court had already

accepted Mittelstaedt' s guilty plea as voluntarily given after engaging in its colloquy with him.

After the State concluded its argument, defense counsel stated:

The only thing I would indicate, Your Honor, is that Mr. Mittelstaedt has added a lot of facts that he did not put in his motion, most particularly regarding the quality of my representation. So, again, that puts me in an even more uncomfortable situation, and I would invite the Court, if the Court wants to make an inquiry into those issues, that we set this over; that Mr. Mittelstaedt be appointed another lawyer to look into the quality of my representation, because what he is essentially telling you is that I didn' t adequately investigate this case. I didn' t— I

wasn' t adequately prepared, and I essentially forced him to take this deal, which, quite frankly, I refute. But if that' s an issue that needs to be looked into, then I would invite this Court to appoint another lawyer to look into that issue, and I think that would be appropriate given what Mr. Mittelstaedt has said on the record today which is significantly different and certainly more expansive than the content of his written motion.

RP ( Dec. 20, 2013) at 10 - 11. The trial court denied defense counsel' s request to appoint

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