Tyrone Miles v. Michael Martel

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 28, 2012
Docket10-15633
StatusPublished

This text of Tyrone Miles v. Michael Martel (Tyrone Miles v. Michael Martel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyrone Miles v. Michael Martel, (9th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

TYRONE W. MILES,  No. 10-15633 Petitioner-Appellant, v.  D.C. No. 1:08-cv-01002-JF MICHAEL MARTEL, Warden, OPINION Respondent-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California Jeremy D. Fogel, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted February 15, 2012 Submission Vacated February 21, 2012 Resubmitted September 28, 2012 San Francisco, California

Filed September 28, 2012

Before: Procter Hug, Jr., Betty B. Fletcher, and Richard A. Paez, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge B. Fletcher

11903 11906 MILES v. MARTEL COUNSEL

Michael S. Romano (argued), Susannah J. Karlson (Certified Law Student), Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School, Stanford, California, for the petitioner-appellant.

Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General of California; Michael P. Farrell, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Brian G. Smiley, Supervising Deputy Attorney General; David Andrew Eldridge (argued), Deputy Attorney General, Office of the California Attorney General, Sacramento, California, for the respondent-appellee.

OPINION

B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:

“[C]riminal justice today is for the most part a system of pleas, not a system of trials. . . . [T]he right to adequate assis- tance of counsel cannot be defined or enforced without taking account of the central role plea bargaining plays in securing convictions and determining sentences.” Lafler v. Cooper, 132 S. Ct. 1376, 1388 (2012). Because of “[t]he reality [ ] that plea bargains have become so central to the administration of the criminal justice system . . . ,” Missouri v. Frye, 132 S. Ct. 1399, 1407 (2012), the Supreme Court recently recognized that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel “extends to the plea-bargaining process. During plea negotiations defendants are entitled to the effective assistance of competent counsel.” Lafler, 132 S. Ct. at 1384 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted); see also Frye, 132 S. Ct. at 1407.

Petitioner-Appellant Tyrone Wayland Miles (“Miles”) claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel dur- ing plea-bargaining process. He alleges that counsel advised him to reject a plea offer of six years’ imprisonment without MILES v. MARTEL 11907 alerting him that he was being charged with a crime that would qualify as a “third strike” under California law. He later entered an open plea and was sentenced to a three strikes sentence of twenty-five years to life in prison. Without grant- ing an evidentiary hearing, the California Supreme Court summarily denied his state petition for a writ of habeas cor- pus. Following the United States Supreme Court’s recent decisions in Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, we reverse the district court’s denial of Miles’s petition for habeas corpus and remand to the district court to hold an evi- dentiary hearing on Miles’s claims.

I

Miles grew up in Hanford, California. He is a Navy veteran who deployed to the Persian Gulf three times, including dur- ing Operation Desert Storm. He married and had his first child while in the Navy. During that time, however, Miles began to exhibit signs of depression, anxiety, and substance abuse. He received an honorable discharge and returned with his family to Hanford, where his substance abuse and depres- sion worsened. As a result of his drug addiction and erratic behavior, Miles’s wife left him and returned with their child to her family in Virginia.

In 1993, while Miles was under the influence of drugs and alcohol, some of his friends asked him to act as a lookout while they robbed a store. Five days later, Miles acted as a lookout to a second robbery. The police caught Miles, and he was charged for his involvement in the robberies together, under the same case number. Miles pled guilty and served three years in prison.

After his release from prison, Miles moved back home to Hanford and lived next door to his parents. He worked vari- ous jobs and had two more children with his girlfriend. Miles also remained addicted to methamphetamine and committed several minor criminal offenses. Miles’s substance abuse 11908 MILES v. MARTEL worsened when his father died in 2003. Miles’s financial situ- ation deteriorated when his paychecks began to bounce.

Miles lived in a neighborhood where people often cashed fictitious checks at certain convenience stores. The stores cooperated with this activity, so long as the person passing the check paid a fee and repaid the store later for the fictitious check. Miles also began to cash fictitious checks at these stores, including three checks at King’s Gas and Deli Market in November 2004. One of the checks was for $473.76. Miles never repaid the owner.

In June 2005, a Hanford police officer arrested Miles for passing fictitious checks. The police were able to identify Miles’s thumb-print on the front of one of the fictitious checks he had cashed at King’s. After being confronted with this evidence, Miles admitted that he had passed the check bearing his thumb-print, and admitted that he may have passed other fictitious checks.

The State filed a complaint against Miles that alleged four felony counts: one count of second degree burglary; two counts of forgery occurring on the same day; and another for- gery count occurring the following day. The complaint also alleged that Miles had two prior serious felony convictions that qualified as “strikes” under the California Three Strikes Law, Cal. Penal Code §§ 667(b)-(i) and 1170.12. The two prior felony convictions both had the same case number and date of conviction.

Miles initially pled not guilty, and the Superior Court appointed Laurence Meyer (“Meyer”) to represent him. The court directed the clerk to send the complaint to Meyer and directed the State to provide Meyer with all discovery docu- ments and evidence. Miles and Meyer met for the first time six days later while walking from the holding area to the pre- trial conference and bail hearing. Miles and Meyer met again before another preliminary hearing six days later. Miles never MILES v. MARTEL 11909 reached a plea agreement with the State while he was assisted by Meyer. Later, after the State filed an information and for- mal charges against Miles, the Superior Court appointed James Oliver as Miles’s trial counsel.

One month later, while Miles was represented by Oliver, the State offered Miles a plea bargain on the record at another pretrial conference. Under the bargain, in return for pleading guilty to one count and admitting he had two prior strikes, the State would dismiss the remainder of the counts and waive prosecution if there were other outstanding fictitious checks. Additionally, Miles would not be precluded from making a motion at sentencing to have one of the prior strikes dis- missed. The trial court explained the rights that Miles would be waiving if he accepted the offer, and stated that although Miles could ask the court to exercise discretion and waive one of the prior strikes, “I’d have to tell you 25 to life is probably what you’re going to get.” Miles accepted the plea offer.

Before sentencing, the State filed a probation report and Miles submitted a personal letter. At sentencing, the trial court declined to dismiss a prior strike, and sentenced Miles to a “three strikes sentence” of 25 years to life imprisonment for passing a fictitious $474 check. The California Court of Appeal affirmed his sentence, People v. Miles, No. F049297, 2006 WL 2257434 (Cal. Ct. App. Aug. 8, 2006) (unpub- lished), and on October 18, 2006, the California Supreme Court denied direct review.

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