State v. BANDON

687 S.E.2d 318, 199 N.C. App. 616, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 2666
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 1, 2009
DocketCOA08-1428
StatusPublished

This text of 687 S.E.2d 318 (State v. BANDON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. BANDON, 687 S.E.2d 318, 199 N.C. App. 616, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 2666 (N.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA,
v.
PHOUTTHASONG BANDON.

No. COA08-1428.

Court of Appeals of North Carolina.

Filed September 1, 2009.
This case not for publication

Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General Amy Bircher, for the State.

Jarvis John Edgerton, IV, for defendant.

ELMORE, Judge.

On 19 April 2004, undercover police officers purchased one fourth of a pound of marijuana from Phoutthasong Bandon (defendant). Officers purchased an additional pound of marijuana from defendant on 20 April 2004, after which defendant was arrested. For the 19 April 2004 incident, defendant was indicted for possession of a controlled substance with intent to sell and deliver, sale of a controlled substance, maintaining a vehicle used to keep controlled substances, and being a habitual felon (04 CRS 7963 and 04 CRS 7964; collectively, the April 19th charges). For the 20 April 2004 incident, defendant was indicted for possession of a controlled substance with intent to sell and deliver, two counts of selling a controlled substance, maintaining a vehicle used to keep controlled substances, and being a habitual felon (04 CRS 51048 and 04 CRS 5340; collectively, the April 20th charges).

By plea agreement, on 4 January 2005, defendant pleaded guilty to the April 20th charges of being a habitual felon and two counts of selling marijuana; in exchange for defendant's guilty plea, the State agreed to dismiss the remaining April 20th charges and not to prosecute any of the April 19th charges. The plea agreement included a prison sentence of 107 to 133 months. However, on 10 February 2005, the Department of Corrections notified the superior court clerk that the maximum sentence should be 138 months, rather than 133 months, to conform with the felony punishment chart. On 8 March 2005, Judge Beverly T. Beal issued an order for appropriate relief, concluding that the 107 to 133 month sentence in the plea agreement was not authorized by law and granting defendant a hearing to determine whether he had intended to plead guilty to 138 months' imprisonment.

Defendant refused to extend the plea's maximum sentence and said he would rather exercise his right to trial by jury; as such, Judge Beal set aside the entire plea and reinstated all April 19th and April 20th charges. The State then called the April 20th charges for trial on 17 April 2006. Defendant moved for the April 19th charges to be joined, and Judge Yvonne Mims Evans granted the motion. The State then dismissed the April 19th charges. Defendant pleaded guilty to all April 20th charges except the charge of being a habitual felon, for which he requested a jury trial. Unlike the first plea agreement, this second plea agreement did not indicate that the State would refrain from prosecuting the April 19th charges. A jury found defendant guilty of being a habitual felon, and defendant was sentenced on 18 April 2006 to 107 to 138 months' imprisonment.

On 31 May 2006, defendant was re-indicted for the April 19th charges, now calendared as cases 06 CRS 3364 and 06 CRS 3365. Assistant District Attorney Benjamin White explained, "I dismissed the [April 19th charges] after [they were] joined and then re-indicted [defendant]. And that was in order to try and get as strong as possible sentence against the defendant because he rejected the plea offer [modification from 133 to 138 months]." [MTD T10-11] Defendant moved to dismiss the April 19th charges, arguing that they violated Judge Evans's order of joinder of all charges. Judge Beal denied the motion on 11 January 2007. On 15 October 2007, defendant again moved for dismissal of the April 19th charges, alleging prosecutorial vindictiveness, but Judge Beal deferred ruling.

On 16 October 2007, defendant was found guilty by a jury on all April 19th charges except maintaining a vehicle used to keep controlled substances, and defendant was sentenced to a term of 80 to 105 months' imprisonment, to begin at the expiration of defendant's sentence for the April 20th charges. On 1 November 2007, the trial court denied defendant's motion for dismissal of the April 19th charges. Defendant appeals to this Court. For the reasons stated below, we find no error.

Defendant first argues that the trial court erred when it denied defendant's motion to dismiss the April 19th charges based on prosecutorial vindictiveness. We disagree.

Defendant argues that he was re-indicted for the April 19th charges as punishment for exercising his legal right to a trial by jury after refusing to modify the original plea agreement's maximum sentence. To support this argument, defendant relies upon the following language in Bordenkircher v. Hayes:

To punish a person because he has done what the law plainly allows him to do is a due process violation of the most basic sort, and for an agent of the State to pursue a course of action whose objective is to penalize a person's reliance on his legal rights is patently unconstitutional.

434 U.S. 357, 363, 54 L. Ed. 2d 604, 610 (1978) (quotations and citations omitted). However, the next sentence of Bordenkircher elaborates, "But in the `give-and-take' of plea bargaining, there is no such element of punishment or retaliation so long as the accused is free to accept or reject the prosecution's offer." Id. at 363, 54 L. Ed. 2d at 610-11. It follows that a prosecutor's behavior while negotiating a plea agreement is not unconstitutional so long as the defendant is free to accept or reject the prosecution's offer.

In Bordenkircher, the prosecutor indicted the defendant on additional charges because the defendant would not accept a plea deal. 434 U.S. at 358-59, 54 L. Ed. 2d at 607-08. The facts in Bordenkircher are substantially similar to the case sub judice in that (1) the prosecutor's vindictive motive was admitted freely, (2) the defendant was not being punished for attacking a previous conviction, and (3) the defendant was being punished for refusing to accept a plea bargain. Nevertheless, the U.S. Supreme Court still refused to find the prosecutor's vindictive motive unconstitutional in Bordenkircher because of the give-and-take nature of plea bargaining. Id. at 363, 54 L. Ed. 2d at 610.

The Supreme Court further clarified:

This Court held in North Carolina v. Pearce that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that vindictiveness against a defendant for having successfully attacked his first conviction must play no part in the sentence he receives after a new trial. The same principle was later applied to prohibit a prosecutor from reindicting a convicted misdemeanant on a felony charge after the defendant had invoked an appellate remedy, since in this situation there was also a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness.
In those cases the Court was dealing with the State's unilateral imposition of a penalty upon a defendant who had chosen to exercise a legal right to attack his original conviction — a situation very different from the give-and-take negotiation common in plea bargaining between the prosecution and defense, which arguably possess relatively equal bargaining power. The Court has emphasized that the due process violation in cases such as Pearce . . . lay not in the possibility that a defendant might be deterred from the exercise of a legal right, but rather in the danger that the State might be retaliating against the accused for lawfully attacking his conviction.

Id. at 362-63, 54 L. Ed. 2d at 610 (quotations and citations omitted).

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Related

Bordenkircher v. Hayes
434 U.S. 357 (Supreme Court, 1978)
State v. Parker
550 S.E.2d 174 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2001)
State v. Wall
502 S.E.2d 585 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1998)
State v. Jones
273 S.E.2d 327 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
687 S.E.2d 318, 199 N.C. App. 616, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 2666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bandon-ncctapp-2009.