State v. Bradley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 12, 2018
Docket115296
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Bradley, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 115,296

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

JAYLYN MAURICE BRADLEY, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; BRUCE C. BROWN, judge. Opinion filed October 12, 2018. Affirmed.

Michael P. Whalen, of Law Office of Michael P. Whalen, of Wichita, for appellant.

Matt J. Maloney, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before LEBEN, P.J., GREEN and MALONE, JJ.

LEBEN, J.: Jaylyn Bradley appeals the district court's denial of his request to withdraw his guilty plea to sexual exploitation of a child. Bradley mainly argues that he should have been allowed to withdraw the plea because the alleged victim had recanted her allegation against him.

But Bradley presented no actual evidence of that to the district court. There was no convincing evidence that a statement Bradley said the victim had written actually was from her—and the court found the statement inadmissible, a finding Bradley hasn't challenged on appeal. We reverse a district judge's decision on a motion to withdraw a plea only for abuse of discretion, and we find no abuse of discretion here.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The State charged Bradley with one count of aggravated human trafficking in December 2013. The State alleged that Bradley had transported a minor, Y.A.M., to motels to engage in prostitution. In January 2015, as part of a plea agreement, the State amended the charge to sexual exploitation of a child, and Bradley pleaded guilty.

Before sentencing—and after the attorneys who had been representing Bradley withdrew—Bradley moved to withdraw the guilty plea. The motion gave three reasons to support withdrawal: (1) that one of the State's witnesses was promised benefits in exchange for her testimony; (2) that newly discovered evidence suggested the State's key witness, the victim, had lied during her testimony; and (3) that Bradley's plea wasn't knowingly and voluntarily entered into because he hadn't had enough time to consider it and hadn't fully understood it.

With a new attorney representing Bradley, the district court heard evidence from both sides on Bradley's motion. The court heard five witnesses: Bradley; Bradley's mother, Patreese Reid; a defense investigator, Roger French; Bradley's original attorney, Charles O'Hara; and O'Hara's son, Chris O'Hara, who had assisted in representing Bradley during the hearing in which Bradley entered the guilty plea.

Bradley testified that he felt he had been pressured into taking the plea, though he agreed that he had told the court at the plea hearing that he had not been threatened or coerced in any way. The testimony about statements Y.A.M. might have made after the trial came from Reid. She testified that she had been contacted on Facebook by a person she believed to be Y.A.M. Reid also said she received (from a friend of her daughter's)

2 the one-sentence statement that purported to be from Y.A.M. and a video that purported to show a person Reid thought was Y.A.M. signing something.

But not testifying was Y.A.M. French testified that he hadn't been able to locate her. Even so, Bradley wanted the court to admit into evidence the one-sentence written statement that he said was from Y.A.M.: "I, [Y.A.M.], was promised citizenship in trade for false testimony against Jaylyn M. Bradley." But because Y.A.M.'s was not present to testify and be cross-examined, the district court sustained the State's hearsay objection to both the exhibit and to the post-plea statements Y.A.M. had supposedly made to Reid through Facebook. The court admitted the video into evidence, apparently because it was offered in part in an attempt to provide a foundation for the admission of the statements.

The district court denied the motion to withdraw Bradley's plea. The court said that there had been no evidence admitted on Bradley's claim that one of the State's witnesses was promised some benefit in exchange for testimony. (Bradley is not pursuing that claim on appeal.) The court found "no credible evidence" either that Y.A.M. had testified falsely or that Bradley had entered his plea based on pressure or a failure to understand what he was doing.

Bradley has appealed to our court.

ANALYSIS

With that background, we turn next to the rules by which we must decide this appeal. A plea may be withdrawn before sentencing on a showing of good cause and within the sound discretion of the district court. K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 22-3210(d)(1). On appeal, the defendant must show that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the motion to withdraw plea. State v. Edgar, 281 Kan. 30, 38, 127 P.3d 986 (2006); State v. Ruiz, 51 Kan. App. 2d 212, Syl. ¶ 1, 343 P.3d 544 (2015). A district court abuses its

3 discretion if it makes an error of fact or law or if its discretionary judgment call is one that no reasonable person could agree with. State v. Morrison, 302 Kan. 804, 812, 359 P.3d 60 (2015); Ruiz, 51 Kan. App. 2d at 218.

The district court must consider a series of factors—known as the Edgar factors because they were announced in that case—when deciding whether to allow a plea withdrawal: whether "'(1) the defendant was represented by competent counsel, (2) the defendant was misled, coerced, mistreated, or unfairly taken advantage of, and (3) the plea was fairly and understandingly made.'" Edgar, 281 Kan. at 36; Ruiz, 51 Kan. App. 2d 212, Syl. ¶ 2. Although those factors must be considered, they aren't an exhaustive list of factors that may be relevant, and the court may consider other factors. See State v. Aguilar, 290 Kan. 506, 512-13, 231 P.3d 563 (2010).

Here, Bradley says on appeal that "the Edgar factors are mostly inapplicable." Instead, he argues that the "main issue before the district court was whether or not newly discovered evidence of a recantation from the alleged victim" constituted good cause to withdraw the guilty plea.

What Bradley does not argue on appeal, however, is the district court's ruling that the statements he tried to introduce from Y.A.M. were inadmissible hearsay. So any question about their admissibility has been abandoned on appeal. See State v. Littlejohn, 298 Kan. 632, 655-56, 316 P.3d 136 (2014). We are left, then, with a record in which there is no evidence that Y.A.M. has actually recanted anything.

That substantially undercuts the main basis for Bradley's motion. After all, Y.A.M. testified, under oath, at the preliminary hearing. And it was held several months before Bradley entered his guilty plea.

4 In her sworn testimony at the earlier hearing, Y.A.M. said that Bradley's girlfriend posted an advertisement for Y.A.M. as an escort in Wichita. At the time, Y.A.M. was staying at a Wichita motel; she said that Bradley and his girlfriend would come to the motel to "check up on me." She said that the customers who called asked for sex, and she charged for her time. Y.A.M. said that the woman she knew as Bradley's girlfriend set the prices and that when Y.A.M. made appointments outside the motel, either Bradley or his girlfriend would drive her there.

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Related

State v. Edgar
127 P.3d 986 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2006)
State v. Aguilar
231 P.3d 563 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2010)
State v. Ruiz
343 P.3d 544 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2015)
State v. Morrison
359 P.3d 60 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2015)
State v. Littlejohn
316 P.3d 136 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Bradley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bradley-kanctapp-2018.