United States v. Guadalupe Velazquez

855 F.3d 1021, 2017 WL 1541963, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 7674
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 2017
Docket14-10311
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 855 F.3d 1021 (United States v. Guadalupe Velazquez) 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
United States v. Guadalupe Velazquez, 855 F.3d 1021, 2017 WL 1541963, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 7674 (9th Cir. 2017).

Opinions

Concurrence by Judge KOZINSKI

OPINION

FRIEDLAND, Circuit Judge:

Guadalupe Velazquez seeks to vacate a guilty plea on the ground that she was constructively denied her right to counsel when the district court denied her motions to substitute counsel without conducting an adequate inquiry. We agree that the district court abused its discretion in denying Velazquez’s motions and thus vacate the convictions that resulted from her plea.

I. BACKGROUND

A.

Guadalupe Velazquez was in her late teens and on a scholarship at Arizona State University when she began dating Hector Ortiz, Jr. At some point, Ortiz and his father began running a drug-trafficking organization that shipped marijuana across the United States and laundered the proceeds. Local police and federal agents compiled evidence against the organization, including photographs and videos of Velazquez dropping off marijuana shipments at UPS. When police executed a search warrant on the home that Velazquez shared with Ortiz, they found guns, ammunition, and large quantities of marijuana.

Ortiz, his father, Velazquez, and nine other associates were indicted on various charges stemming from their participation in the organization. District Judge Teil-borg of the United States District Court for the District of Arizona presided over the resulting criminal proceedings.

B.

Velazquez was initially represented by Craig Orent, a court-appointed attorney. Orent moved to withdraw and to have new counsel appointed on the basis of irreconcilable conflict and a breakdown in communications. Velazquez then filed a pro se motion requesting the removal of Orent, a hearing on that request, and the appointment of substitute counsel. After a four-minute hearing in which the district court refused Velazquez’s request to speak, the court granted counsel’s motion to withdraw. The court then appointed Kenneth Countryman to represent Velazquez.

[1025]*1025C.

Because the course of Velazquez’s relationship with Countryman and the circumstances of her eventual guilty plea are central to her arguments on appeal, we recount both in detail.

In September 2013, Ortiz’s counsel filed two motions to suppress wiretap evidence. On Velazquez’s behalf, Countryman filed requests to join in each motion. On October 1, the court denied all motions to join another defendant’s motion to suppress, but allowed the defendants to file their own suppression motions within five business days. Countryman missed that deadline. On November 8, in a motion to extend the deadline, Countryman stated that he “did not discover the Court’s Order ... until recently” because he had been in trial. He also filed a motion to suppress wiretap evidence and a motion to sever. Later that day, the court denied all three motions, and the Government offered Velazquez a plea agreement.

On November 18, 2013, Velazquez filed a pro se request for new counsel, arguing that Countryman’s representation of her was “beset by failed communications and inexcusable inattentiveness.” Specifically, she cited Countryman’s failure to file timely pretrial motions despite multiple warnings of the deadline from the court and Velazquez herself, a breakdown in communications, and an unspecified conflict of interest. She also “respectfully requested the] Court hold a hearing and conduct [an] inquiry into” her claims. On November 19, a second superseding indictment was issued and Velazquez filed five pro se motions relating to discovery, trial timelines, and the court’s jurisdiction.

On December 3, the district court held a six-minute hearing on the pro se motions. After listing the motions, Judge Teilborg stated, “I have reviewed those motions and ... they are denied ... as lacking any merit whatsoever,” and he adjourned the proceeding. The following exchange then occurred:

The Defendant: Excuse me, sir. May I say something?
The Court: I’m sorry?
The Defendant: May I say something? The Court: What is it you wish to say? The Defendant: Did you — sorry. I need clarification.... So basically are you telling me that you denied all my motions outright, even the request to conduct an inquiry as to the conflict of interest with Mr. Ken Countryman?
The Court: I have denied the motions, and I went through them one by one, so each of them has been denied.
The Defendant: Okay. So I’m not— there’s absolutely no way I can address the Court?
The Court: I’m sorry?
The Defendant: There’s — Your Honor, I need — I—I—I need to make a record, Your Honor, I absolutely need to make a record of his failure of communications, the fact that I have a plea deadline today and he has failed to communicate the plea with me. I mean, I have evidence upon evidence, I have recorded emails," calls, everything, Your Honor, that he has continuously failed me. We have not gone through any of the discovery. He’s lied to the Court and told you that—
The Court: I considered everything that was in writing that you filed with the Court and ruled on them. All right? The Defendant: So there’s absolutely nothing we can do now, even though he has not met with me, he hasn’t done anything.
The Court: As I said, I reviewed what you put in writing and have ruled on it. The Defendant: Okay. May I ask another thing, Your Honor, please, so I can state this on the record? I have a dead[1026]*1026line for my plea. Okay? Today. If he stays on my case, that plea expires at five o’clock. Mr. Ken Countryman has never met with me and told me anything about the plea, never, Your Honor, absolutely never.
The Court: I’ve taken up the only thing before the Court at this time, and he, as your counsel, I’m sure, will do what he is obligated to do.
The Defendant: But he hasn’t done that, Your Honor.
The Court: Very well.

Following this hearing, it appears that the prosecution granted Velazquez an extension to respond to its proffered plea deal. On December 4, Velazquez appeared for arraignment on the second superseding indictment before Magistrate Judge Bade. As Countryman was stating his appearance, Velazquez interjected that she and Countryman were “at great odds,” and explained that he had given Velazquez only a few minutes to review the indictment, did not know what her charges were, and had missed several deadlines. Judge Bade responded that she was not going to consider those issues because Judge Teilborg had already denied Velazquez’s motions, including her motion to appoint new counsel. Judge Bade then told Velazquez that she could file another motion for new counsel with Judge Teilborg and rescheduled the arraignment.

In accordance with Judge Bade’s suggestion, Velazquez filed another motion for new counsel on December 10 and requested an evidentiary hearing. She alleged that Countryman had not conducted any independent investigation of her case, had not given her access to the discovery, and could not answer basic questions about the charges against her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
855 F.3d 1021, 2017 WL 1541963, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 7674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-guadalupe-velazquez-ca9-2017.