Turner v. State

2015 WY 29, 343 P.3d 801, 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 33, 2015 WL 779780
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 2015
DocketS-14-0162
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2015 WY 29 (Turner v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. State, 2015 WY 29, 343 P.3d 801, 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 33, 2015 WL 779780 (Wyo. 2015).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

[¥1] Appellant Jeffery Turner entered a conditional guilty plea to a charge of escape from official detention, and thereby reserved the right to appeal the district court's denial of his motion to dismiss. He claimed in that motion that he had been deprived of his right to a speedy trial under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (IAD), Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-15-101 (LexisNexis 2018). Although we depart from the district court's reasoning, we affirm.

ISSUE

[¶2] We restate the sole issue on appeal as follows:

Did the speedy trial provisions of the IAD require that the charge against Turner be dismissed?

FACTS

[¶3] In 2010, the district court in Albany County senterged Turner to four to nine years of imprisonment on a larceny conviction. On March 2, 2012, the Department of Corrections (DOC) transferred him as a pre-parole inmate to a community corrections facility in Laramie County. 1 Inmates at the community corrections facility are required to hold jobs in the community. Five weeks after his transfer, on April 6, Turner failed to return from his job at a Cheyenne Burger King.

[T4] This soon prompted action by both the DOC and the Laramie County District Attorney. On April 9, 2012, the director of the DOC issued an Order of Return to Custody pursuant to Wyo. Stat. Aun. § 25-1-104(j). 2 A little more than a week later, the district attorney filed an information charging Turner with escape from official detention under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6-5-206(a)@), and the circuit court issued an arrest warrant. Later in 2012, Texas law enforcement *804 officers evidently found Turner in the Austin area of Travis County, Texas, a location he often called home.

[T5] The record tells us nothing about how Texas law enforcement officers came into contact with him, but it does contain a waiver of extradition he signed on December 28, 2012. The waiver indicates he was being held by the sheriff in Travis County at least in part on the authority of the DOC Order of Return and the Laramie County warrant. The district attorney also suggested that Turner was simultaneously being held on a Texas charge. 3

[¶6] The waiver of extradition indicates that Turner was advised of and waived his right to demand the issuance and service of a formal gubernatorial requisition and extradition warrant before being transferred from Texas into Wyoming's custody on the basis of the DOC order and Laramie County escape charge. Those rights are not provided by the IAD, but are instead granted by the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act (UCEA), codified in Wyoming by Wyo. Stat. Aun. §§ 7-3-201 through 227 (LexisNexis 2013), and in Texas by Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 51.18 (2018). Like the IAD, the UCEA provides a means to effect the transfer of a wanted person from one state to another. However, only the latter would require (absent a waiver) that Wyoming's governor make a formal demand for extradition to the governor of Texas, and that he in turn then issue an equally formal governor's warrant authorizing Turner's return to Wyoming.

[T7] Turner does not contest the State's representations to the district court that, on the basis of his waiver of extradition, he was delivered to the medium security correctional institution in Torrington to complete his Albany County larceny sentence on January 17, 2018. On August 7, 2013, he filed a pro se motion to dismiss the escape charge in the cireuit court, claiming a violation of his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. Turner did not serve the district attorney with that motion. On September 9, 2013, the district attorney sought and was granted a writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendum 4 to have Turner brought to Laramie County for an initial appearance on the escape charge.

[T8] On September 27 and October 21, Turner's attorney filed nearly identical demands for a speedy trial under the federal and state constitutions and W.R.Cr.P. 48. Then, on October 25, 2013, he filed a motion to dismiss the escape charge due to an alleged failure to bring his client to trial within the time limits contained in Wyoming's IAD statute, § 7-15-101.

[19] Articles III and. IV of the IAD respectively allow the defendant or the State to initiate the transfer of the defendant from out-of-state custody to Wyoming. Under Article III, Turner's trial would have had to begin within 180 days after the Wyoming prosecutor and district court received proper written notice of his request for disposition of pending charges. Wyo. Stat,. Ann. § 7-15- *805 101 art. IIl(a). 5 Under Article IV, his trial would have had to begin within 120 days of arriving in Wyoming. Id., art. IV(ec)\ He was not clear, however, whether the "request for disposition" to which he referred was the waiver of extradition that he executed in Texas, or the letters he sent to the clerk of court in Laramie County after being returned to Torrington from Texas.

[¶10] The State's response on November 12, 2013 made only one point that was truly relevant to the applicability of the IAD: there was no evidence that he ever filed an IAD demand for final disposition of the escape charge. The district court heard Turner's motion to dismiss on November 25 and issued an order denying it on December 3, 2018.

[¶11] In its order, the court indicated that Turner had not proved that he was serving a term of imprisonment in Texas at the time he waived extradition; he had only shown that he was confined in a county jail. Consequently, it concluded that the IAD had no bearing on the effect of the waiver he signed in Texas, and that the waiver could not be deemed a demand for final disposition.

[¶12] The court also concluded that letters Turner sent from Torrington to the district court clerk could not be read to constitute a demand for final disposition. However, it held that the pro se motion to dismiss he had filed in the Laramie County Cireuit Court on August 7, 2018, after he was incarcerated in Torrington, would be treated as a request for a final disposition. 6 The court used the date of that earlier motion to determine that the time period during which he could be tried for escape had not yet expired.

[T13] On January 27, 2014, Turner entered a conditional guilty plea and was sentenced on the Laramie County escape charge. His plea agreement preserved the right to appeal the district court's order denying his motion to dismiss, and he was sentenced to serve twelve to eighteen months concurrently with the sentence remaining on his Albany County larceny conviction. timely perfected this appeal. He

DISCUSSION

Whether the speedy trial provisions of the IAD are applicable to Turner's case is a question of law that we review de novo. This Court will affirm the decision of the district court on any legal ground appearing in the record. Short v. State, 2009 WY 52, ¶¶ 8-9, 205 P.3d 195, 198 (Wyo.2009).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 WY 29, 343 P.3d 801, 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 33, 2015 WL 779780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-state-wyo-2015.