State v. Teel
This text of State v. Teel (State v. Teel) 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.
Opinion
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
STATE OF DELAWARE ) ) V. ) I.D.: 2004004125 ) ERIC TEEL, ) ) Defendant. )
ORDER
This 1st day of September, 2022, the Court hereby finds:
1. Mr. Teel has filed two pro se motions. One is styled a motion for post-
conviction relief (“Rule 61 motion”), the other is styled a motion to correct an illegal
sentence (“Rule 35 motion”). Both say the same thing and neither make out a case
for relief. His Rule 61 motion is denied because he has not made out a claim of
ineffective assistance of counsel. His Rule 35 motion is denied because his sentence
was not illegal.
2. Mr. Teel pled guilty to possession of a firearm by a person prohibited
(“PFBPP”) and a single count of harassment. Pursuant to the terms of the plea
agreement, he was sentenced immediately to 10 years in prison, the minimum
mandatory for a conviction of PFBPP with a prior record that includes two “violent”
felonies.1
1 See 11 Del. C. §1448(e)(1)(c). 1 3. Mr. Teel’s complaint has to do with his prior convictions, both violent
felonies. He has no dispute but that he was convicted previously of stalking, a
violent felony.2 His complaint has to do with a 2008 conviction for possession with
intent to deliver marijuana.3
4. Mr. Teel says that possession with intent to deliver marijuana is no
longer considered a “violent felony” under section 4201(c). From this precarious
assumption, he wants to argue that he does not have two violent felony convictions,
but only one, thus subjecting him to a 5 year minimum mandatory, not 10.
5. But his assumption, like so many, is in error. As Mr. Teel explains, he
was convicted previously of possession with intent to distribute marijuana, in
violation of 16 Del. C. §4752. That offense, to this day, remains on the list of
“violent” felonies that trigger the enhanced/mandatory sentences of 11 Del. C.
§1448(e).
6. In fairness, it may not be Mr. Teel who is in error, but the “authority”
he has relied on. Mr. Teel has appended a “summary of drug offenses” that appears
2 11 Del. C. §4201(c). 3 It has since been learned that the immediate sentencing form calls this offense “possession within a school zone” but that is not what the conviction was for. Both the State and defense counsel have agreed that they understood the second “violent felony” for sentencing purposes was possession with intent to deliver. Indeed, defendant does not claim otherwise. See Motion for Correction of Illegal Sentence p. 2 (“To my knowledge, the actual conviction was possession w/intent for marijuana.”). 2 to be some sort of home brewed synopsis of the mandatory statutes, typed up for the
benefit of pro se inmates. He has highlighted a portion that says, in part, “if you
have past drug convictions, those drug convictions can no longer be used to up the
felony charge to any higher degree, nor can they be used to impose a greater sentence
against you.”4
7. Well, that is sort of correct, but not quite. Way back when, a second
offense for drug dealing did indeed “up” the felony charge to a higher degree and
also triggered a mandatory sentence. Those enhanced penalty laws in Title 16 were
indeed repealed in 2011.5
8. But a repeal of some of the more draconian aspects of the drug laws did
not amount to a complete renunciation of the offenses generally or declare some
general absolution. Section 4201(c), defining “violent felonies,” underwent a huge
expansion in 1996, defining about 70 different offenses as “violent,” with substantial
reverberations in the sentencing laws. Most significantly, those offenses impacted
the minimum sentence that judges were required to impose when the defendant
qualified as a habitual offender.6 Prior violent felonies in effect turned some habitual
offender sentencing into mandatory minimums.
4 D.I. 11 attachment. 5 78 Del. Laws, ch. 13 (2011). 6 See generally 11 Del. C. §4214. 3 9. But the term “violent felony” does not only impact habitual offender
sentencing. It also impacts the person prohibited statute. And the Legislature has
not removed the former offense of delivery or possession with intent to deliver
controlled substances from the list of violent felonies.7 Indeed, the jailhouse
information Mr. Teel appended to his pleading informs the reader that drug dealing
remains a violent felony and that “if there are Lawyers who are advising you that
drug dealing is not a violent felony (simply because the habitual offender guidelines
have been changed regarding drug crimes), then this lawyer is peddling FALSE
information to you.” Indeed.8
10. Defendant’s prior conviction for possession with intent to distribute
marijuana was, and remains, a violent felony as defined by the Delaware Code.
7 11 Del. C. §4201(c). 8 Mr. Teel writes that his 2008 conviction for possession with intent to distribute marijuana involved only 3 grams of the drug. Taking him at his word, the Court can only point out that when the General Assembly passes mandatory sentencing laws, it leaves the Court with no choice but to impose the sentence and no option to consider the nuances he raises. The Court may sympathize with Mr. Teel’s misfortune, but the Court is powerless to do anything about it. Mr. Teel may have some avenue for relief from the legislative or the executive branch, but those two branches have effectively foreclosed further consideration of his plight by the judiciary. 4 For the reasons state above, Defendant’s Rule 61 and Rule 35 motions are
hereby DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Charles E. Butler, Resident Judge
cc: Nichole W. Warner, Esquire Raymond D. Armstrong, Esquire Mr. Eric Teel
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