United States v. Hamilton
This text of 326 F. Supp. 3d 354 (United States v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Gregory F. Van Tatenhove, United States District Judge
This matter is before the Court upon Magistrate Judge Robert E. Wier's Recommended Disposition (also known as a "Report and Recommendation," or "R & R") [R. 240] on the motion to vacate [R. 210] filed pro seby Brian Hamilton, pursuant to
Brian Hamilton filed a motion to vacate pursuant to
123 Generally, this Court must make a de novodetermination of those portions of the Recommended Disposition to which objections are made.
The sole issue on which Judge Wier recommends granting § 2255 habeas relief relates to Hamilton's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Hamilton asserts that he was not granted the discretionary one-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, pursuant to United States Sentencing Guidelines § 3E1.1(b), due to the representations of his trial counsel. [Seeid.at 8.] The essence of Hamilton's claim is that his trial counsel did not effectively communicate to him that not accepting a plea offer, which contained the three-level reduction for acceptance, by the Government's deadline might result in the loss of the third level of acceptance. [Id.at 10-11.] In advising his client, Hamilton's trial counsel seemed to ignore the deadline presented by the Government and seemed to rely solely on the Court's scheduling order. [Id.at 17.] Because Hamilton was not properly advised on the deadline for accepting the Government's plea offer, when he ultimately pled guilty he did not receive the third level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. [seeid.at 20-21.] Judge Wier determined that this level of representation fell below the "prevailing professional norms" established in Strickland v. Washington,
4 In calculating a criminal defendant's sentencing guidelines, the Court may only grant the third level reduction for acceptance of responsibility when presented with a motion from the Government. See U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 3E1.1(b) ( U.S. Sentencing Comm'n 2016). Although the Magistrate Judge recommends granting § 2255 habeas relief based on the ineffective assistance of Hamilton's trial counsel, the Court still has not been presented with a motion from *359the Government to grant Hamilton the third level reduction for acceptance.
Accordingly, and the Court being sufficiently advised, it is hereby ORDEREDas follows:
1. The Recommended Disposition [R. 240] as to Defendant Brian Hamilton is ADOPTEDas and for the Opinion of the Court;
2. Defendant's Motion to Vacate, pursuant to
3. Defendant's Motion to Vacate [R. 210] will be GRANTEDas to relief sought due to the ineffective assistance of trial counsel;
4. A resentencing hearing is hereby scheduled for Tuesday, May 1, 2018, at 2:30p.m. in the United States Courthouse in London, Kentucky;
5. Should either party wish to brief the issue of relief to be granted and the sentence to be imposed, all briefs shall be filed by April 17, 2018;
6. Should the parties stipulate to the relief to be granted in advance of the hearing, the Government is hereby directed to file such stipulation in the record by April 24, 2018; and
7. The warden of FTC Oklahoma City SHALL
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Gregory F. Van Tatenhove, United States District Judge
This matter is before the Court upon Magistrate Judge Robert E. Wier's Recommended Disposition (also known as a "Report and Recommendation," or "R & R") [R. 240] on the motion to vacate [R. 210] filed pro seby Brian Hamilton, pursuant to
Brian Hamilton filed a motion to vacate pursuant to
123 Generally, this Court must make a de novodetermination of those portions of the Recommended Disposition to which objections are made.
The sole issue on which Judge Wier recommends granting § 2255 habeas relief relates to Hamilton's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Hamilton asserts that he was not granted the discretionary one-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, pursuant to United States Sentencing Guidelines § 3E1.1(b), due to the representations of his trial counsel. [Seeid.at 8.] The essence of Hamilton's claim is that his trial counsel did not effectively communicate to him that not accepting a plea offer, which contained the three-level reduction for acceptance, by the Government's deadline might result in the loss of the third level of acceptance. [Id.at 10-11.] In advising his client, Hamilton's trial counsel seemed to ignore the deadline presented by the Government and seemed to rely solely on the Court's scheduling order. [Id.at 17.] Because Hamilton was not properly advised on the deadline for accepting the Government's plea offer, when he ultimately pled guilty he did not receive the third level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. [seeid.at 20-21.] Judge Wier determined that this level of representation fell below the "prevailing professional norms" established in Strickland v. Washington,
4 In calculating a criminal defendant's sentencing guidelines, the Court may only grant the third level reduction for acceptance of responsibility when presented with a motion from the Government. See U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 3E1.1(b) ( U.S. Sentencing Comm'n 2016). Although the Magistrate Judge recommends granting § 2255 habeas relief based on the ineffective assistance of Hamilton's trial counsel, the Court still has not been presented with a motion from *359the Government to grant Hamilton the third level reduction for acceptance.
Accordingly, and the Court being sufficiently advised, it is hereby ORDEREDas follows:
1. The Recommended Disposition [R. 240] as to Defendant Brian Hamilton is ADOPTEDas and for the Opinion of the Court;
2. Defendant's Motion to Vacate, pursuant to
3. Defendant's Motion to Vacate [R. 210] will be GRANTEDas to relief sought due to the ineffective assistance of trial counsel;
4. A resentencing hearing is hereby scheduled for Tuesday, May 1, 2018, at 2:30p.m. in the United States Courthouse in London, Kentucky;
5. Should either party wish to brief the issue of relief to be granted and the sentence to be imposed, all briefs shall be filed by April 17, 2018;
6. Should the parties stipulate to the relief to be granted in advance of the hearing, the Government is hereby directed to file such stipulation in the record by April 24, 2018; and
7. The warden of FTC Oklahoma City SHALLdeliver Brian Hamilton to the custody of the United States Marshal so that he may be brought before the Court on Tuesday, May 1, 2018 at 2:30p.m. The Marshal SHALLreturn Hamilton to BOP custody following the conclusion of the hearing in this matter.
RECOMMENDED DISPOSITION
Robert E. Wier, United States Magistrate Judge
Movant, Brian Hamilton, is a federal inmate. On August 9, 2017, Hamilton filed a pro se1 motion under
Per normal practice, the District assigned the matter to the undersigned for a recommended disposition. The Court determined to conduct an evidentiary hearing and, accordingly, appointed counsel for Hamilton. See DE 221 (Order). The Court held the evidentiary hearing on December 15, 2017, DE 230 (Minute Entry Order), and has carefully evaluated the full record, all briefing, and the hearing evidence (including three witnesses and three exhibits). For the following reasons, the Court RECOMMENDS that the District Judge GRANT § 2255 relief (DE 210)-on the terms stated below-to the extent Hon. Andrew Stephens, Hamilton's trial-level counsel, ineffectively assisted Movant regarding his plea offer, otherwise DENY § 2255 relief (DE 210), and issue no Certificate of Appealability as to the rejected claims.
Counsel failed to effectively inform Hamilton of the terms and mechanics of a plea offer from the United States, particularly the import of the prosecutor's plea deadline. That failure caused Hamilton to forgo a plea deal that included a third-point reduction, under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(b), for timely acceptance of responsibility. The representation fell below *360the Strickland performance standard and prejudiced Hamilton. As such, the Court should grant the motion, tailor appropriate relief, and give Hamilton the sentencing benefit of the plea deal that counsel's ineffective conduct caused to lapse.2
I. BACKGROUND INFORMATION
In October 2015, a grand jury indicted Hamilton on one count of conspiring to defraud the Government (Count 1), four count of wire fraud (Counts 29-32), and two counts of aggravated identity theft (Counts 41-42), in violation of
Hamilton consented to a magistrate judge conducting his rearraignment. The magistrate judge discussed Hamilton's appellate-waiver provision with him in depth, noting its breadth. Hamilton stated that he understood the provision, that he had read it carefully, and that he had reviewed it with his counsel. That his sentence had not yet been imposed and he could not know if an error might arise during sentencing does not render his plea involuntary or unknowing. See United States v. Coker ,514 F.3d 562 , 574 (6th Cir. 2008). His plea agreement set out sentencing recommendations, which did not include a minor-role reduction or an additional one-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. If Hamilton wanted to appeal these issues, he should have preserved his right to appeal them. Seeid.
Id. at 1-2.
On August 9, 2017, Hamilton timely submitted a § 2255 motion to vacate. DE 210. The motion renews both direct-appeal contentions and adds the claim that counsel's ineffective assistance during plea negotiations cost him an offense level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The Government responded. DE 218. Hamilton replied. DE 219-1. The motion, following a hearing, stands ripe for review.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under
III. ALLEGED SENTENCING ERRORS
In his § 2255 motion, Hamilton requests relief based on two sentence validity challenges-both previously dismissed on direct appeal. Specifically, Defendant contends the sentencing judge erred by not awarding him a minor-role reduction and by not overriding the Government's decision to deny him (by not making the motion) an additional one-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. Both sentencing attacks fail under
A. Collateral Attack Waiver
The Court first notes that Hamilton, in his plea agreement, waived "the right to attack collaterally the guilty plea, conviction, and sentence" except for "claims of ineffective assistance of counsel[.]" DE 188, at ¶ 13. At least other than "where a defendant argues that his plea was not knowing or voluntary, or was the product of ineffective assistance of counsel[,]" "a defendant's informed and voluntary waiver of the right to collaterally attack a conviction and sentence is enforceable." In re Acosta ,
*362In re Acosta ,
Alternatively-and given the autonomous ineffective-assistance claim-the Court addresses the claims' merits. As explained below, Hamilton's minor role reduction overtures are untenable and his request for Court usurpation of timely assistance discretion is baseless.
B. Role Reduction
Hamilton claims entitlement to a minor role reduction under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2, based on the self-serving claim that he was a fully subservient actor in the crime. DE 210, at 7. Section 3B1.2(b) provides for a two-level reduction for minor participants that are "substantially less culpable than the average participant[.]" U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2 cmt. 3(A) (emphasis added). Hamilton's counsel argued for the same reduction in both formal (DE 182) and informal (DE 198, at 23-24) PSR objections, as well as at sentencing. DE 200, at 13-17. In essence, Stephens argued that Defendant was incarcerated for a year of the alleged eighteen-month conspiracy, that he rarely aided the conspiracy-only at the explicit behest of the major figures-and that he received but minimal monetary benefit. Hamilton tries to repeat the theories here.
Judge Thapar, then the District Judge assigned to the case, thoughtfully considered, and then rejected, Hamilton's minor role claim. See DE 200, at 13, 16-17. The PIR substantiated the finding that Hamilton was not a minor participant. See DE 198, at 27-28 (Sealed PIR). Hamilton objected but presented no evidence to place the finding in dispute under Rule 32. Judge Thapar recognized this, as a matter of proof and procedure, and denied the objection on that basis.4 See DE 200, at 16. Hamilton failed to lodge a supported objection then, and there is no basis for revisiting that issue now, under § 2255.
C. Sua Sponte Reduction
Hamilton also bemoans the sentencing court's failure to grant him a further one-point reduction for acceptance of responsibility under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(b),5 notwithstanding the Government's declination to move for that relief. DE 210, at 5. Defendant generally acknowledges that "the decision whether to file a motion for an additional one-point reduction [is committed] to the Government's discretion." United States v. Lapsins ,
There are two narrow exceptions to the deferential posture courts adopt6 *363when reviewing a prosecutor's exercise of § 3E1.1(b) discretion. "[T]he government may refuse to move for the third-level reduction so long as the government's reason for refusal [1] is not based upon a constitutionally impermissible factor and [2] is not arbitrary." United States v. Coleman ,
IV. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL (IAC)7
Hamilton also requests relief based on alleged ineffective assistance of his former counsel (Hon. Andrew M. Stephens) regarding a lapsed plea offer and the attendant loss of an offense level reduction for § 3E1.1(b) timely acceptance of responsibility. Per Hamilton, Stephens failed to explain the meaning and effect of the prosecutor's plea offer deadline. The plea lapsed, and Hamilton lost the § 3E1.1(b) point.
*364For the reasons explained below, the Court finds that Stephens deficiently failed to convey the possibility of irrevocable third-point loss and ineffectively advised Hamilton that the prosecutorial deadline was not controlling. Further, Hamilton established a reasonable probability that, if accurately advised, he would have accepted the plea before it lapsed. Hamilton ultimately accepted-and was sentenced based on-an agreement that differed only by omitting the third point reduction, a point lost by misadvice. Nothing in the record suggests that, had Hamilton accepted the original deal, such a plea would have been withdrawn, gone unaccepted, or that the resulting sentence would not have been similarly situated within the lower guideline range. Hamilton is thus entitled to relief on this distinct and limited ground.
A. Strickland Standard
When asserting an ineffective assistance claim, a movant must prove both deficient performance and prejudice. Strickland v. Washington ,
In order to prove prejudice, a movant "must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different." Id. at 2068. When evaluating prejudice, courts generally must take into consideration the "totality of the evidence before the judge or jury." Id. at 2069. "To show prejudice from ineffective assistance of counsel where a plea offer has lapsed or been rejected because of counsel's deficient performance, defendants must demonstrate a reasonable probability they would have accepted the earlier plea offer had they been afforded effective assistance of counsel." Missouri v. Frye ,
*365B. Performance
Hamilton's deficient performance claim boils down to two key questions: one factual, one legal. First, what did Stephens tell, or not tell, Hamilton before the April 11 deadline? Second, were Stephens's communications or omissions consistent with prevailing professional standards under the circumstances? The Court turns to the record to resolve the former.
i. Undisputed Facts
On November 24, 2015, the Government sent defense counsel a letter broaching the possibility of a plea agreement. DE 185, at 8-9. A month later, the prosecutor, Hon. Neeraj Gupta, contacted Stephens again, provided the broad contours of a possible plea agreement, and established a January 25, 2016, expiration for all existing offers. Id. at 8. Three days after that deadline expired, and given an interim trial continuance, DE 107, Gupta contacted Stephens to note the expiration, and offered new terms attached to an April 11, 2016, deadline. Id. at 7. Gupta stressed that missing the April deadline would forfeit the third point for timely acceptance. Stephens's first substantive response came over two months later-twelve days before offer expiration-and requested a plea status update. Id. at 6. Gupta's same-day response restated the terms offered in January and explicitly reiterated that: "Brian Hamilton can get the third point for acceptance of responsibility if we can sign a plea agreement on or before April 11 ." Id. (emphasis added). The next day, March 31, 2016, Stephens indicated that "Brian [Hamilton] is most certainly not interested in a trial." Id. at 5. Stephens and Gupta scheduled a plea discussion for April 6, after which Gupta provided a draft plea agreement and restated that "if the plea agreement isn't signed by April 11 then this particular deal will expire." Id. at 4. On April 12, Gupta wrote "to confirm that Andrew Stephens did not contact our office regarding Brian Hamilton since we sent the draft plea agreement on April 6" and advised that the plea agreement had expired. Id. at 3.
Two weeks later, Stephens sent a letter to Gupta. Id. at 2. In relevant part, Stephens requested a new plea offer and noted that, "extension of an offer may offend you [sic] self-imposed deadline, but does comply with subpart 1 of the Court' [sic] standing order concerning re-arraignment." DE 223-2, at 2.9 In response, Gupta offered a new plea "removing the third level of acceptance for a timely plea" and setting an April 28 deadline. DE 185, at 1. On May 2, 2016, Stephens relayed Hamilton's desire to plea and stated, "when I spoke with him last, he asked me to 'do better', but if not to plead as offered. I would ask that you insert a provision that doesn't remove the third point, but holds the withdrawal of same to sentencing." Id. Gupta noted that the most-recent plea expired *366on April 28, advised that the third point would not be offered, but acknowledged the Government's willingness to nonetheless honor the April 26 offer, which omitted the third point. Id. On May 3, Stephens responded as follows:
I will advise mr Hamilton of your position. However, It seems that this position opens me up for post-sentencing litigation because it would appear that denial of the third point is my responsibility. I share emails with the client when they are relevant to settlement negotiations. He will thus see your calendar of our contacts and could draw a conclusion that not complying with your scheduling deadlines is the sole cause of the loss of the 3rd point. As a practice matter, that is a very troubling issue with me. I regret sincerely the way in which this matter has developed.
I continue to believe that the court's scheduling order, which I have diligently compiled with, is the standard by which the requisites for the third point is to be judged upon. As this has, in fact been complied with, I believe that exclusion of the third point is contrary to the Court's stated procedures and thus, feel compelled pursuant to my ethical and professional obligations to my client, to argue for the third point during the plea, in my sentencing memorandum, and at the allocution during the sentencing hearing.
DE 234, at 1 (emphasis added).
Hamilton subsequently executed a plea agreement expressly conceding that the Government would "not move to decrease the offense level for timely notice of intent to plead guilty that avoided trial preparation and inefficient resource allocation." DE 188, at ¶ 9(g). Nonetheless, and consistent with his stated intentions, Stephens argued for the third point at sentencing. DE 200, at 4-12. He repeated his oft-stated opinion that it was inappropriate "that the United States would put me under an artificial deadline to enter the plea" and that the Government setting a hard deadline was new practice in his experience. Id. at 4, 9-10. Stephens also reiterated his belief that Judge Thapar's standard scheduling order controlled his duties with regard to § 3E1.1(b) timeliness. Id. at 6. Finally, after Judge Thapar advised him that the rules and guidelines give the Government discretion regarding such deadlines, Stephens acknowledged the possibility that he could have been at fault for Hamilton losing the third point by "not ... spending earlier time with him[.]" Id. at 11.
Ultimately, Judge Thapar overruled Stephens's objection and, finding no allegation of arbitrariness or unconstitutional motive,10 declined to override the Government's third-point discretion. Id. at 12. The preceding facts are essentially undisputed. However, the stories diverge on the extent and content of pre-April 11 discussions between Hamilton and Stephens. The Court summarizes their respective versions, based on the December 15, 2017, evidentiary hearing (DE 230).
ii. Hamilton's Version
Per Hamilton, the first time Stephens showed him a plea agreement was at a meeting one day before the April 11th deadline. DE 237, at 29 (Evidentiary Hearing Transcript). At that April 11th meeting, Stephens reportedly told him there was a deadline, but told him "he didn't agree with the deadline" and that he would be back on Wednesday (April 13th) to get an answer. Id. at 30. Importantly, Hamilton claimed Stephens never discussed the *367specific consequences of the deadline nor the potential loss of the third point. Id. Finally, Hamilton definitively stated that if he had known the deadline-expiration repercussions, he would have accepted the offer on April 10th, or called Stephens pre-expiration to accept. Id. at 31-32, 34.
On cross, Hamilton further explained that Stephens disagreed with Gupta's "self-imposed deadline" because the District Court said it wanted a plea fourteen days before trial, and that, as Hamilton understood it, the deadline was simply the date when Gupta wanted an answer for his convenience. Id. at 33-34, 40. He testified to being unaware that missing the April 11 deadline would lose the third point for timely acceptance. Id. at 39.
iii. Stephens's Version
Stephens's testimony, understandably, rested largely on his case file records. Mr. Stephens is a member of the District's CJA Panel and, as he testified at the hearing, has handled hundreds of federal cases. DE 237, at 7. The Court would not expect Stephens to recall practice details of a client meeting he had eighteen months prior. Per Stephens, file notes indicate he had meetings with Hamilton on April 6, 7, 10, 17, and 21, 2016. DE 237, at 9-10. Further, Stephens's notes signaled to him that he informed Hamilton about the April 11 deadline and told him that expiration would result in loss of the third point. Id. at 9 ("My notes would indicate that I did."). Specifically, Stephens claimed his notes show that during an April 7, 2016, meeting with Hamilton: "I talked to him in-depth ... about what Mr. Gupta was saying and what Mr. Gupta was not saying, and I see Mr. Gupta's note-or name actually written down." Id. at 10-11. However, Stephens also explained "that I told Mr. Hamilton that I thought that Mr. Gupta's deadline was artificial. That I actually talked about the trial order that gave us the right for Judge Thapar to file the motion for rearraignment within two weeks of the actual trial date. I told him I thought that trumped Mr. Gupta's deadline." Id. at 11-12 (emphasis added). Stephens later reiterated "what I believed and what I told my client was that I thought we could plead up to the 14 days before the trial." Id. at 16.
Stephens's testimony hinged on his notes, but he was unwavering in two respects: (a) that he told Hamilton about the lost point issue; and (b) that he called the deadline imposed by the prosecutor "artificial" and inconsistent with court order. Id. at 25-26.
iv. Factual Resolution
The players' stories conflict on several issues, but the Court finds it necessary to directly resolve only the divergence between the parties' disparate accounts as to deadline discussions. Other contradictions are largely irrelevant to the core claim.
Specific meeting dates is an example. The Court cites the visit dates identified in Stephens's September 8, 2016, CJA Voucher (Voucher).11 Stephens completed *368the Voucher temporally closer to the events in question. The Voucher records three April 2016 jail visits that match all but two (April 7 & 21) of the five April dates Stephens's notes reflected: April 6, 10, and 17. An April 6th visit also squares with the e-mail records.12
Moreover, the actual visit dates are only mildly probative of the central issues. Both Stephens and Hamilton agree there was at least one pre-deadline meeting and that Stephens conveyed the existence of the April 11th deadline to Hamilton before expiration. The actual date of any such meeting is of minimal importance save indirectly (e.g. , on credibility) and the number of visits is only material to the extent additional pre-deadline meetings might have offered more opportunities to convey the relevant deadline repercussion. Thus, the Court finds that April 6th and 10th pre-deadline visits occurred.
Turning to the more important question-pre-deadline discussion contents-the Court finds that Stephens did not effectively convey that expiration of the deadline would result in loss of the third point. The principal contrary evidence comes from Stephens's testimony. Several factors erode the force of that testimony. As noted above, Stephens primarily based his testimony not on recollection, but on his notes. See DE 237, at 9 ("My notes would indicate that I did."); id. at 10 ("And the notes speak for themselves."). The only specific note-basis Stephens identified for the possible point loss discussion was AUSA Gupta's name in April 10th notes. DE 237, at 10-11. Further, although Stephens alleged the April 7th notes are also supportive, he failed to claim a specific note trigger-the Voucher also omits reference to any April 7 meeting.
The Court has thoroughly examined the notes and is unable to locate anything indicative of a looming lost point discussion. Stephens never convincingly explained how he could parse out the alleged meaning from notes 18+-months old. The word deadline (or any analog) does not appear in the notes.
Indeed, the Court has carefully scrutinized the notes. Nothing in the papers specifically mentions any deadline or § 3E1.1. Further-and the Court views this as critical-every guideline calculation reflected in the notes includes a 3-point reduction for "A/R," which in context indicates acceptance of responsibility.13 See Def.'s Ex. 1. Thus, notes from 4/6 and 4/10, both pre-deadline, reflect three points. Id. Then, in notes from 4/17, six days post-deadline, the notes state "-3 A/R." Id. Thus, in that entry, just a few lines after noting offer withdrawal, Stephens yet includes the full three points in the guideline calculation. This surely means that Stephens did not convey to Hamilton that the third point was, by that point, gone. Rather, Stephens continued to advise Hamilton that a plea would net him the third point.14
*369Ultimately, the Court finds determinative what Stephens repeatedly made clear throughout the proceedings: he believed the Gupta deadline was artificial and that Judge Thapar's scheduling order controlled. See, e.g. , DE 237, at 16 ("Now, what I believed and what I told my client was that I thought we could plead up to the 14 days before the trial."). As the sentencing discussion above makes clear, Stephens was wrong-prosecutorial discretion concerning the third-point motion is near-absolute. See supra Part III.C. Stephens thought the deadline "artificial." He believed and told Hamilton that Judge Thapar's scheduling order "trumped" the prosecutor's deadline. DE 237, at 12. On May 3, he stated: "I continue to believe that the court's scheduling order ... is the standard by which the requisites for the third point is to be judged[.]" DE 234, at 1. Before the sentencing, Stephens argued that compliance with the court's deadline still would be "timely" acceptance. DE 182, at 4 (emphasis in original). The Court finds it implausible that Stephens carefully advised Hamilton that he was losing the third point as of 4/11 when Stephens himself flatly did not believe that to be true or accurate. The notes from 4/17 starkly show that Stephens continued to count on Hamilton receiving the additional level reduction, even after the offer lapse.
The Court finds that Stephens did not convey to Hamilton that the 4/11 expiration would eliminate Hamilton's access to the § 3E1.1(b) third level. Either Stephens utterly failed to address the third point, or Stephens cited the deadline, but only in a way that emptied the discussion of any real force or vitality. If Hamilton's trained and expert counsel told him the deadline was "self-imposed," "artificial," and "trumped" by Judge Thapar's scheduling order-and that all did happen-he did not meaningfully convey the gravity of a decision to let the 4/11 date pass without plea acceptance. Hamilton behaved accordingly. See DE 237, at 46 ("[W]hen [Stephens] said self-imposed, I took it as Mr. Gupta wanted to know on Monday - I mean I thought ... two lawyers, they do this a lot ... I didn't think that it would be withdrawn."). Hamilton thought any deadline was non-binding, for Gupta's convenience, and without prejudice.
In sum, the record preponderantly shows: that Stephens did not effectively explain to Hamilton that if he failed to accept the third-point inclusive offer before the April 11 deadline his sentencing prospects would be irreparably damaged; he, relatedly, affirmatively misadvised Hamilton by telling him the plea deadline was artificial and trumped by Judge Thapar's scheduling order deadline. Having so found, the Court examines Stephens's performance against Strickland dictates.
v. Strickland Compliance
Bearing in mind the deference due to counsel, the Court nonetheless finds that Stephens's advice fell below "prevailing professional norms" under the circumstances. Strickland ,
(b) Once discussions with the prosecutor begin, defense counsel should keep the accused advised of relevant developments. Defense counsel should promptly communicate and explain to the client any disposition proposals made by the prosecutor[.] ...
*370(c) Defense counsel should ensure that the client understands any proposed disposition agreement, including its direct and possible collateral consequences.
ABA Criminal Justice Standards for the Defense Function, Standard 4-6.2 (4th ed. 2015). The Defense Function Standards further indicate:
(e) Defense counsel should investigate and be knowledgeable about sentencing procedures, law, and alternatives, collateral consequences and likely outcomes, and the practices of the sentencing judge, and advise the client on these topics before permitting the client to enter a negotiated disposition. Counsel should also consider and explain to the client how specific terms of an agreement are likely to be implemented.
Id. at Standard 4-6.3.15 Gupta's pellucid e-mails made plain that passage of the deadline without Hamilton's acceptance would cost him the third point for acceptance of responsibility. The record shows that Stephens failed to inform Hamilton of this looming consequence. This lapse falls outside the objective bounds of reasonable professional practice. See Padilla v. Kentucky ,
Hamilton depended on Stephens, as his lawyer, to accurately convey all relevant repercussions related to a possible plea. See ABA Criminal Justice Standards for the Defense Function, Standard 4-6.3 ("Defense counsel should investigate and be knowledgeable about sentencing procedures, law, and alternatives, collateral consequences and likely outcomes[.]"). Stephens's analysis and the advice he gave Hamilton conflicted directly with the guidelines and clearly established Sixth Circuit precedent. See DE 200, at 12; see e.g. , Lapsins ,
In sum, the Court finds that Stephens ineffectively assisted Hamilton during plea negotiations. His deadline management, by omission and commission, was "fundamentally at odds with the critical obligation of counsel to advise the client of the advantages and disadvantages of a plea agreement." Padilla ,
C. Prejudice
Hamilton also established a reasonable probability that his ultimate sentence would have been more favorable if he were assisted effectively. The Government's principal contention is that Defendant would not have accepted the offer even if Stephens told him deadline expiration would cost him the third point. DE 218, at 3-4. The record contains ample contradictory evidence. Hamilton unequivocally testifed that he would have accepted the plea before April 11 if aware of the looming third-point loss. DE 237, at 31-32. The subsequent plea on less-favorable terms corroborates Hamilton's claim. Stephens's e-mail and evidentiary hearing statements confirm that Hamilton never considered a trial and likewise augment the prejudice proof. DE 237, at 17 ("I don't think there was ever any time that we seriously considered a trial."); DE 185, at 5 (March 31 e-mail to Gupta explaining Hamilton "is most certainly not interested in a trial"). Hamilton's sworn position is that he would have accepted the plea by April 11-he even said he would have called Stephens on the final day to tell him the decision. See DE 237, at 34. At the very next meeting (likely the 17th, but no later than the 21st, based on the chronology and records), Hamilton told him to get the prior deal if he could do no better. Def.'s Ex. 1 (Stevens notes purportedly from 4/21: "If [possible] better deal. If no get the other one back."). Although Stephens did not reach out to Gupta for another several days (not until the 4/26 letter), the Court easily finds a reasonable probability that Hamilton would have accepted the 4/11 deal if well-advised. Remember, by early May, Hamilton took the identical deal, less the fateful third level point. On this record, the Court agrees that Hamilton, properly advised, would have struck the deal including the third level by 4/11.
Nonetheless, the Government contends Hamilton asked Stephens to "do better," and thus rejected the plea offer before expiration. The Court disagrees. First, there is no record support for Hamilton telling Stephens to simply "do better." Rather, Hamilton asked Stephens to "do better" or, "if not [,] to plead as offered ." DE 185, at 1 (emphasis added). The proof also suggests the statement the Government relies on came after deadline expiration.
The Government appears to make two other arguments. First, and related to the offer-rejection claim, the Response suggests that Hamilton's failure to accept after being shown the plea agreement forecloses any prejudice argument. DE 218, at 2. Proverbially, the Government takes issue with the cart, but ignores the horse's deficiencies. That is, by ignoring the first Strickland prong, the United States fails to account for misadvice impact. The crux of Hamilton's claim is that he did not accept precisely because Stephens was ineffective. Hamilton's failure to abide by a deadline that he was unaware of or affirmatively misadvised about says little about how he would have acted with accurate lawyering.
The United States also attempts to connect the knowing and voluntary status of the subsequent plea with prejudice rebuttal. True enough, Hamilton signed a plea deal that acknowledged the Government would not move for a third point. DE 140, at ¶ 9(g). Hamilton also confirmed, at rearraignment, that he had as much time as he needed to discuss plea proposals with his counsel, and that no one promised him anything additional to get him to sign. DE 206, at 32-34. However, Hamilton also clarified that he had encountered two pleas, "but one was pulled before I could deny it or accept it." Id. at 34. That Hamilton ultimately accepted a lesser plea deal is hardly evidence that he would not have accepted a more favorable deal weeks earlier, if he had known the full story. To the contrary, taking a less favorable deal, in the same time frame, tends to suggest a likelihood of taking the better deal mere days prior. Cf. Randall v. United States ,
Finally, the Court views Judge Ingram's acceptance of Hamilton's eventual plea and Judge Thapar's in-guideline sentence as establishing "a reasonable probability the [original] plea would have been entered without the prosecution canceling it or the trial court refusing to accept it." Frye , 132 S.Ct. at 1409. Likewise, there is no dispute that the third point reduction for acceptance of responsibility would have lowered Hamilton's primary guideline range from 51-63 months to 46-57 months.18 There is, at minimum, a reasonable probability that Judge Thapar would have given Hamilton a near-middle guideline sentence based on the modified range, just as he did before. Thus, the record supports a reasonable probability that, but for Stephens's ineffectiveness, Hamilton would have received a lesser sentence. Cf. Glover v. United States ,
These findings, the controlling legal standards, and the full record convince the Court that Hamilton is entitled to habeas relief. As the Frye Court said, "for the offer was a formal one with a fixed expiration date. When defense counsel allowed the offer to expire without advising the defendant or allowing him to consider it, defense counsel did not render the effective assistance the Constitution requires." 132 S.Ct. at 1408. Hamilton had the plea, but he did not have proper awareness of the deadline, fitting the situation within Frye 's rule.
If the District Court accepts the recommendation, it must fashion an apt remedy. The parties did not brief that aspect. The Supreme Court has stated:
Sixth Amendment remedies should be "tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation and should not unnecessarily infringe on competing interests." United States v. Morrison ,449 U.S. 361 , 364,101 S.Ct. 665 ,66 L.Ed.2d 564 (1981). Thus, a remedy must "neutralize the taint" of a constitutional violation,id. , at 365,101 S.Ct. 665 , while at the same time not grant a windfall to the defendant or needlessly squander the considerable resources the State properly invested in the criminal prosecution.
Lafler , 132 S. Ct. at 1388-89. Lafler outlined the appropriate remedy when a plea lapse results in a greater sentence, which is the case here:
The specific injury suffered by defendants who decline a plea offer as a result of ineffective assistance of counsel and then receive a greater sentence as a result of trial can come in at least one of two forms. In some cases, the sole advantage a defendant would have received under the plea is a lesser sentence. This is typically the case when the charges that would have been admitted as part of the plea bargain are the same as the charges the defendant was convicted of after trial. In this situation the court may conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the defendant has shown a reasonable probability that but for counsel's errors he would have accepted the plea. If the showing is made, the court may exercise discretion in determining whether the defendant should receive the term of imprisonment the government offered in the plea, the sentence he received at trial, or something in between.
Id. at 1389 (emphasis added). Hamilton did not go to trial, but the remedial model still logically applies. The lone difference between the lost and the accepted plea deal was the 1-point reduction, and thus, the higher sentence. The terms otherwise were identical. The Court can, upon a proper hearing, and with party input, consider the matter and tailor the remedy to fit the discrete constitutional violation presented, in accordance with Lafler.19
Accordingly, the Court RECOMMENDS that the District Court GRANT
*374DE 210 IN PART , and on the stated terms.20
V. CERTIFICATE OF APPEALABILITY
The Court addresses the Certificate of Appealability requirement, but only for the rejected claims. A Certificate of Appealability may issue where a movant has made a "substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right." See
Movant has not made a "substantial showing" as to either rejected claim; the sentencing error claims conclusively fail, for the reasons discussed above. Reasonable jurists would not find the Court's determination on or assessment of the merits debatable or wrong. Judge Thapar rejected the merits of both claims at sentencing, and the Sixth Circuit already upheld the waiver on direct appeal. See DE 387; DE 200, at 12-13, 16-17. Nothing in the record indicates those conclusions were unreasonable; nor does the Court perceive anything that would give a reasonable jurist pause in accepting the Court's consistent rulings in the § 2255 context. The Court's findings and conclusions, given the full record and case proof, are not debatable or wrong. See, e.g., United States v. Webster ,
VI. RECOMMENDATION
For the reasons discussed, the Court RECOMMENDS that the District Judge *375GRANT IN PART and DENY IN PART § 2255 relief (DE 210) on the terms-and with the concordant mechanics-stated above, and issue NO Certificate of Appealability on the unsuccessful claims.
* * * * *
The Court directs the parties to
This the 22nd day of January, 2018.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
326 F. Supp. 3d 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hamilton-kyed-2018.