State v. Guilford

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 1, 2025
Docket2202008181
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Guilford (State v. Guilford) 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. Guilford, (Del. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE ) ) v. ) ID No. 2202008181 ) SHAQUAN GUILFORD, ) ) Defendant. )

Date Submitted: July 7, 2025 Dated Decided: August 1, 2025

ORDER DENYING RULE 35 AND RULE 61 MOTIONS

Defendant Shaquan Guilford, filing pro se, moves this Court for relief from

his 2023 conviction and sentence under Superior Court Criminal Rule 35(a) arguing

he was illegally sentenced; under Rule 35(b) requesting his sentence be modified;

and under Rule 61 claiming he is entitled to postconviction relief. Guilford’s claims

are procedurally barred or lack merit; accordingly, all three motions are DENIED.

I. BACKGROUND1

On March 28, 2022, Guilford was indicted for Murder First Degree,

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

1 The facts recited herein are taken from the record in Case No. 2202008181 and, unless otherwise noted, all Docket Items [“D.I. #”] refer to that case. 1 of a Firearm by a Person Prohibited (“PFBPP”), Carrying a Concealed Deadly

Weapon, Receiving a Stolen Firearm, and Resisting Arrest.2

Guilford pled guilty on December 14, 2022, with the assistance of counsel, to

the significantly reduced charges of Manslaughter (as a lesser included offense of

Murder First Degree), PFDCF, and PFBPP, as well as a Violation of Probation

(“VOP”) in an unrelated prior case,3 in exchange for dismissal of the remaining

charges in the indictment.4 Pursuant to the Plea Agreement, the State capped its total

unsuspended Level V recommendation at 20 years with the proviso “Level 5 is

consecutive.”5 Guilford signed the Plea Agreement and Truth-in-Sentencing Guilty

Plea Form (“TIS Form”) acknowledging the minimum mandatory period of

incarceration for the charges was a total of 17 years Level V,6 with the potential of

2 D.I. 2. 3 See Case No. 1710016401. 4 See D.I. 25 Plea Agreement [“Plea Agr.”]; D.I. 54 December 14, 2022, Plea Hearing Transcript [“Plea Tr. #”]. 5 Plea Agr. 6 The Plea Agreement provides the “Defendant acknowledges that he faces a total minimum mandatory sentence of 17 years at Level 5. Manslaughter carries a 2 year minimum mandatory sentence; Defendant faces a 10 year minimum mandatory sentence for PFBPP and a 5 year minimum mandatory sentence for PFDCF due to his prior violent felony convictions for [PFBPP] (2017) and Drug Dealing (2015).” 2 70 years Level V,7 based upon the statutory ranges of 2 to 25 years for Manslaughter,

5 to 25 years for PFDCF, 10 to 15 years for PFBPP, and 0 to 5 years for the VOP.8

During a colloquy with the Court, Guilford confirmed no one had promised

him what his sentence would be and stated he understood he faced 17 years Level V

minimum mandatory and that the Court could sentence him to up to 70 years Level

V.9 Guilford also stated he was satisfied with trial counsel’s representation.10 The

Court ordered a presentence investigation and set Guilford’s sentencing for a later

date.

After conferring with defense counsel and prior to Guilford’s sentencing, the

prosecution wrote the Court regarding an “error” in the plea paperwork:11

Pursuant to 11 Del. C. Sec. 3901(d), the Court must run all PFDCF sentences consecutive to other sentences in a single case because the underlying offense for the PFDCF charge was a violent felony. However, the Court may, in its discretion, impose concurrent sentences on Manslaughter, PFBPP and the [VOP]. Therefore, if the Court chooses to run those sentences concurrent[ly] and only imposes the minimum mandatory sentence of 10 years on the PFBPP, the total minimum mandatory sentence the defendant faces is fifteen years, not seventeen years as indicated on the plea paperwork. 12

7 See TIS Form D.I. 25. 8 Plea Agt. and TIS Form. 9 Plea Tr. 6:20–7:2, 7:3–5, 7:22–8:1. 10 TIS Form; Plea Tr. 6:3-5. 11 D.I. 27. 12 D.I. 27 (emphasis added). See also, 11 Del. C. § 3901(d), provides the Court will determine whether a defendant’s sentence of confinement should run concurrently or 3 At the March 3, 2023 Sentencing Hearing, Guilford admitted, “I’m very, very sorry

for my actions, and I accept full responsibility for my actions.”13 The Court found

Guilford’s custody status at the time of the offense and lack of amenability to lesser

sanctions were aggravators14 and sentenced him to a total of 20 years of unsuspended

Level V-time including 17 years minimum mandatory, to run consecutively:

a. Manslaughter – 25 years Level V, suspended after 5 years, for varying levels of supervision, with 2 years minimum mandatory. b. PFDCF – 5 years Level V, with no probation to follow, with 5 years minimum mandatory. c. PFBPP – 10 years Level V, with no probation to follow, with 10 years minimum mandatory. d. VOP – discharged as unimproved.15

Guilford did not appeal his convictions.

Just over a month later, on April 17, 2023, Guilford, filing pro se, moved to

modify his sentence under Rule 35(b) (“First Rule 35(b) Motion”).16 In support,

Guilford argued he received a letter from his trial counsel stating the “Manslaughter

consecutively with any other sentence imposed by the State—but no sentence for PFDCF will run concurrently with any other sentence. 13 D.I. 30 Sentencing Transcript [“Sent. Tr. #”] 17:21–23; D.I. 39. 14 Sent. Tr. 19:12–14. 15 Id. at 19:10–11, 20:9–13; D.I. 30. 16 D.I. 31 & 32. 4 and PFBPP charges can run concurrently according to the Benchbook statutes.”17

That same day, Guilford moved for postconviction relief, followed by ten

amendments or addenda to the initial motion (collectively, “Rule 61 Motion.”).18

The Court denied Guilford’s First Rule 35(b) Motion as meritless by Order

dated May 16, 2023.19 In pertinent part, the Court found no modification was

warranted because Guilford’s sentence was imposed after he signed a Plea

Agreement and acknowledged in open court that he understood the mandatory

minimum and maximum penalties provided by law and the range of possible

penalties, including the sentence imposed upon him.20 The Court further held the 17

years Level V minimum mandatory sentence was statutorily mandated and thus

prohibited from modification.21

The Rule 61 Motion is Guilford’s first and was timely filed. Guilford argues

he is entitled to postconviction relief because law enforcement engaged in

misconduct, the prosecution suppressed evidence in violation of Brady v.

Maryland,22 and his defense counsel was ineffective. On September 6, 2023, the

17 D.I. 31 at *2. 18 See D.I. 32 and addenda or amendments (D.I. 36, 37, 37C, 43, 48, 50, 53, 56, 68 and 70). 19 D.I. 34. 20 Id. at 2. 21 Id. 22 Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). 5 Court ordered the State to respond to Guilford’s Brady claim that the prosecution

withheld exculpatory information, including (1) the victim’s deleted phone call log

and deleted texts and (2) a portion of the surveillance footage from the James and

Jesse Barbershop (the “Barbershop”).23 The prosecution initially responded that it

provided the victim’s phone extraction and surveillance footage to the defense.24

But it supplemented its response after conferring with defense counsel, who stated

she did not receive the full two-hour surveillance footage from the Barbershop.25

The prosecution responded it did, in fact, supply the full footage to defense counsel

on May 11, 2022 and, in any event, the disputed footage was not exculpatory or

prejudicial.26

Guilford moved pro se to expand the record and compel production of his

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Guilford, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guilford-delsuperct-2025.