State v. Chambers

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 13, 2024
Docket2208005611
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Chambers, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE ) ) v. ) ID No. 2208005611 ) RAYQUANE G. CHAMBERS, ) Defendant. )

Submitted: July 9, 2024 Decided: August 13, 2024

ORDER DENYING MOTION TO REDUCE OR MODIFY SENTENCE

This 13th day of August, 2024, upon consideration of the Defendant’s Motion

for Sentence Reduction or Modification (D.I. 10) and the record in this matter, it

appears to the Court that:

(1) In August 2022, a grand jury indicted Mr. Chambers for Robbery First

Degree, Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony (PFDCF),

Possession or Control of a Firearm by a Person Prohibited (PFBPP), and Conspiracy

Second Degree.1

(2) On March 20, 2023, he pleaded guilty to the second-degree robbery (as

a lesser offense of the indicted robbery first degree count) and PFBPP. He did so in

exchange for dismissal of the other indicted charges and a favorable joint sentencing

1 D.I. 1 (Indictment).

-1- recommendation.2

(3) The parties expressly agreed that Mr. Chambers would serve an eight-

year term of imprisonment.3 And importantly here, they also expressly agreed that

Mr. Chambers’ prison terms would run consecutively.4 The Court immediately

sentenced Mr. Chambers after to his plea: (a) for the robbery count—five years at

Level V, suspended after serving three years at Level V, for eighteen months of

supervised probation; and (b) for the PFBPP count—fifteen years at Level V,

suspended after serving five years at Level V, for eighteen months of supervised

probation.5 In other words, the Court’s sentence expressly fulfilled the parties’

expectation.

(4) Mr. Chambers filed no direct appeal from his convictions or sentence.

(5) Instead—a little more than a year after his sentencing—Mr. Chambers

filed the instant application asking either that his two terms be changed to run

concurrently, in which case he would serve only five years, or that the Court halve

2 D.I. 8 (Plea Agreement). 3 Id. (“STATE AND DEFENDANT AGREE to recommend . . . As to Count 1 [second-degree robbery]: 5 years Level V suspended after 3 years for 18 months Level 3 probations; As to Count 5 [PFBPP]: 15 years Level V suspended after 5 years for 18 months Level 3 probation.”) (emphasis in original). 4 Id. (“STATE AND DEFENDANT AGREE to recommend: Sentence terms: Level V is consecutive. Probation is concurrent.”) (emphasis in original). 5 D.I. 9 (Sentence Order).

-2- his agreed-on robbery sentence.6

(6) The Court may consider a Rule 35(b) motion “without presentation,

hearing or argument.”7 Here, the Court will decide this motion on the papers filed

and the complete record in Mr. Chambers’ case. For multiple reasons,

Mr. Chambers’ application must be denied.

(7) First, as consideration for his plea, the State: (a) downgraded the first-

degree robbery count and dismissed two other felonies sparing Mr. Chambers

enhanced minimum mandatory terms; and (b) agreed to an eight-year sentencing

recommendation.8 For his part, Mr. Chambers expressly agreed that the prison terms

would run consecutively and with the cumulative eight-year incarcerative period.9

Given all that, the Court imposed just what the parties agreed to.

(8) The Court has repeatedly condemned sentence-reduction applications

made in circumstances like this:

What [the Rule 35(b) movant] now does is something suggested by far too many who resolve their serious criminal cases by plea—invite the Court to assist in an inmate’s violation of his plea agreement. When the parties arrive at an agreed-upon number either’s request of a sentence other than that expressly bargained for in the plea agreement is, at bottom, a breach of that agreement. It matters not whether that breaching request is made during the sentencing hearing, immediately thereafter, or

6 Def. Rule 35(b) Mot. at 5 (D.I. 10). 7 Del. Super. Ct. Crim. R. 35(b). 8 Plea Agreement at 1. 9 See id.

-3- anytime later. And the Court should play no role in such chicanery merely because the memory and immediacy of a potential trial with all its burdens and trappings have faded.10

Put another way, the Court just won’t countenance the use of its Rule 35(b) to undo

a movant’s express agreement with the State. That’s enough reason to deny

Mr. Chambers the windfall he’s after. But there is more.

(9) “Rule 35(b) requires that an application to reduce imprisonment be filed

promptly—i.e. within 90 days of the sentence’s imposition—‘otherwise, the Court

loses jurisdiction’ to act thereon.”11 An exception to this bar exists: to overcome

the 90-day time limitation, an inmate seeking to reduce a sentence of imprisonment

on his own motion must demonstrate “extraordinary circumstances.”12 A heavy

burden is placed on the inmate to establish “extraordinary circumstances” in order

to uphold the finality of sentences.13

(10) The term “extraordinary circumstances” is generally defined as “[a]

highly unusual set of facts that are not commonly associated with a particular thing

10 State v. Gardner, 2023 WL 4503950, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. July 12, 2023) (quoting State v. Felton, 2022 WL 189327, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Jan. 20, 2022) (internal citations omitted)); see also State v. Daniels, 2022 WL 2733509, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. July 13, 2022), aff’d, 2023 WL 176964 (Del. Jan. 12, 2023). 11 Redden, 111 A.3d at 607 (internal citations omitted). 12 Sample v. State, 2012 WL 193761, at *1 (Del. Jan. 23, 2012) (“Under Rule 35(b), the Superior Court only has discretion to reduce a sentence upon motion made within 90 days of the imposition of sentence, unless ‘extraordinary circumstances’ are shown.”) (emphasis added). 13 State v. Diaz, 2015 WL 1741768, at *2 (Del. Apr. 15, 2015) (“In order to uphold the finality of judgments, a heavy burden is placed on the defendant to prove extraordinary circumstances when a Rule 35 motion is filed outside of ninety days of the imposition of a sentence.”).

-4- or event.”14 In the Rule 35(b) context, “‘extraordinary circumstances’ are those

which ‘specifically justify the delay;’ are ‘entirely beyond a petitioner’s control;’

and ‘have prevented the applicant from seeking the remedy on a timely basis.’”15

“And for the purposes of Rule 35(b), ‘extraordinary circumstances’ have been found

only ‘when an offender faces some genuinely compelling change in circumstances

that makes a resentencing urgent.’”16 At its core, Rule 35(b) is a rule limited to

reconsideration and altering of a sentence after the 90-day motion deadline “only

when there is a truly compelling change in that inmate’s individual circumstances

that presents an urgent need for revision of the sentence’s terms.”17

(11) Mr. Chambers filed his motion more than 15 months after he was

sentenced. He “cites the enactment of 11 Del. C. § 3901 by the General Assembly

as an extraordinary circumstance as it confers a wide latitude of discretion on the

sentencing court to impose a concurrent sentence rather than a consecutive one.”18

But even the most recent revisions to § 3901(d) that allow for greater concurrent

sentencing occurred well before Mr. Chambers’ crimes, plea, and sentencing.19 The

14 Diaz, 2015 WL 1741768, at *2 (citing BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014)); State v. Remedio, 108 A.3d 326, 332 (Del. Super. Ct. 2014). 15 Id. 16 State v. Thomas, 220 A.3d 257, 262 (Del. Super. Ct. 2019) (quoting Fountain v. State, 139 A.3d 837

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Related

State of Delaware v. Remedio.
108 A.3d 326 (Superior Court of Delaware, 2014)
Fountain v. State
139 A.3d 837 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Chambers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chambers-delsuperct-2024.