State v. Maughan

2008 UT 27, 182 P.3d 903, 601 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2008 Utah LEXIS 56, 2008 WL 850197
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 2008
Docket20060189, 20060216
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2008 UT 27 (State v. Maughan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Maughan, 2008 UT 27, 182 P.3d 903, 601 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2008 Utah LEXIS 56, 2008 WL 850197 (Utah 2008).

Opinion

NEHRING, Justice:

[ 1 In this appeal, we consider whether the district court exceeded its discretion when it required Wade Maughan, a defendant in a capital murder case, to discharge one of his two court-appointed lawyers after the State moved to have them disqualified because of *904 their alleged conflicts of interest. Both the State and Mr. Maughan were unhappy with the district court's ruling: the State because it believed that both of Mr. Maughan's attorneys, Richard Mauro and Seott Williams, merited disqualification; and Mr. Maughan because he thought neither should have been dismissed. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Mr. Mauro's and Mr. Williams' continued representation would neither create an actual conflict of interest nor compromise the integrity of the judicial process. Although we affirm the district court's conclusion that a potential conflict of interest might exist, we view the identified conflict to be of very little consequence and therefore waivable.

BACKGROUND

I. FACTUAL SETTING OF THE STATE'S MOTION TO DISQUALIFY MR. MAUGHANS LAWYERS

T2 Wade Maughan was charged with murder in the first degree, a capital offense, and aggravated robbery for killing Bradley Perry, a convenience store clerk in Perry, Utah, in May 1984. Mr. Maughan awaits trial on these and other charges in Box Elder County, Utah, while his choice of counsel remains in doubt.

18 Mr. Maughan came to the attention of law enforcement authorities after DNA testing matched blood at the murder seene to that of Glen Griffin. During their investigation of the Griffin case, Box Elder County detectives interviewed Mr. Maughan in Spokane, Washington. Mr. Maughan told the detectives that he helped Mr. Griffin plan the robbery of the convenience store and was present when Mr. Griffin killed Mr. Perry. With this statement in hand, the State charged Mr. Maughan with murder in the first degree, a capital offense, and aggravated robbery.

T4 Mr. Maughan is an indigent individual facing a possible capital sentence, and rule 8 of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure guarantees him the assistance of at least two court-appointed defense attorneys who are "proficient in the trial of capital cases." Richard Mauro and Scott Williams, both members of the disappointingly small corps of attorneys in Utah who have sought and attained eligibility to represent defendants in capital cases, agreed to take on Mr. Mau-ghan's representation.

T5 On December 5, 2005, within hours of being engaged to represent Mr. Maughan, Mr. Mauro and Ted Cilwick, an investigator, traveled to Spokane to interview those close to Mr. Maughan, including Mr. Maughan's girlfriend, Lorraine Rima, and another friend, Randy Wagar. At the same time, the Spokane Police Department, at the request of the Box Elder County Sheriffs Office, also sought out the same witnesses.

T 6 Mere hours before Mr. Mauro and Mr. Cilwick's flight was scheduled to arrive in Spokane, Detective Mark Burbridge of the Spokane Police Department interviewed Ms. Rima. During the interview, Ms. Rima identified Mr. Wagar as a mutual friend of Mr. Maughan's and hers. She said that during a visit at the jail, Mr. Maughan told Mr. Wagar that he had been present during the robbery and murder of Mr. Perry. Ms. Rima told Detective Burbridge where to find Mr. Wa-gar. After concluding the interview with Ms. Rima, Detective Burbridge went to Mr. Wa-gar's residence and, failing to contact him there, left a business card.

T 7 That same evening, Mr. Mauro and Mr. Cilwick met with Ms. Rima, Mr. Wagar, and Alta Raney, Mr. Wagar's mother. The details of their conversation are a matter of some dispute. Mr. Mauro and Mr. Cilwick apparently advised the three individuals against talking to "anyone," which allegedly was taken to include the police.

T8 The next day, Detective Burbridge received a voicemail from Mr. Wagar expressing a willingness to talk. When Detective Burbridge and a colleague met with Mr. Wa-gar later that day, Mr. Wagar had changed his mind. By Detective Burbridge's account, Mr. Wagar said that Mr. Maughan's attorneys advised him not to talk to the police. After Detective Burbridge explained that, as a witness, Mr. Wagar could be charged with obstruction of justice for refusing to talk to the police, Mr. Wagar relented. He told the *905 detectives that Mr. Maughan had said that he, Mr. Griffin, and an unnamed third man had entered the convenience store and that Mr. Griffin had stabbed Mr. Perry after an argument over ten dollars. Detective Bur-bridge returned to Ms. Rima's house and discovered that she, too, had met with Mr. Maughan's attorneys and was unwilling to talk to the police.

T9 A Spokane police officer contacted Mr. Mauro and Mr. Cilwick that evening to question them about their contact with the witnesses. Mr. Mauro allegedly refused to discuss the matter. The police officer arrested Mr. Mauro and Mr. Cilwick, accusing them of witness tampering. The men were later released. According to the State, the State of Washington was required to charge Mr. Mauro and Mr. Cilwick within ninety days of their arrest. More than two years have now passed since the arrest, and no charges have been filed against either man.

{10 The Spokane detectives returned to Mr. Wagar's house two days later and learned that additional members of the defense team-Mr. Williams and an investigator named Charles Schlessinger-had visited Mr. Wagar. According to Mr. Wagar, Mr. Williams and Mr. Schlessinger explained that there had been a misunderstanding and that Mr. Wagar should feel free to talk to the police. Whatever the precise content of the conversations between the witnesses, Mr. Maughan's lawyers, and investigators may have been, all of the witnesses were soon willing to, and in fact did, talk freely to the police.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY OF THE STATE'S MOTION TO DISQUALIFY MR. MAUGHANS LAWYERS

11 In short order, the State filed a motion to disqualify Mr. Mauro and Mr. Williams. The State contended that the con-duet of Mr. Mauro and Mr. Williams created an actual conflict of interest or presented a serious potential conflict that could only be avoided through disqualification.

{ 12 The State described several conflicts. Regardless of whether the lawyers would ever find themselves facing prosecution for an offense stemming from their conversations with the Spokane witnesses, the State contended that the focus of the lawyers' energies would shift from Mr. Maughan to themselves to a degree that might result in leaving Mr. Maughan without effective counsel. The State also advanced the prospect that prosecutors might be compelled to explore the substance of the lawyers' conversations with the witnesses during redirect examination. The State notes that it would have an interest in exposing the bias of Mr. Maughan's friend, Mr. Wagar. Mr. Wagar's willingness to comply with the alleged admonition of Mr. Mauro to refuse to talk to the Spokane detectives would, in the State's view, reinforce the case that Mr. Wagar's testimony would likely be tainted by his allegiance to Mr. Maughan. Onee the conversation with Mr. Mauro was disclosed, the State conjectured, disclosure of Mr. Mauro's arrest would not be far behind. That would create, as the State's counsel stated during the hearing before the district court, "an impossible position for [Mr. Mauro]."

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Bluebook (online)
2008 UT 27, 182 P.3d 903, 601 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2008 Utah LEXIS 56, 2008 WL 850197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-maughan-utah-2008.