Winters v. Vose, 89-5572 (1995)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 7, 1995
Docket89-5572
StatusPublished

This text of Winters v. Vose, 89-5572 (1995) (Winters v. Vose, 89-5572 (1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winters v. Vose, 89-5572 (1995), (R.I. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DECISION
This is an application for post-conviction relief pursuant to § 10-9.1-1 R.I.G.L. The petitioner is William B. Winters. (Winters)

Winters was charged, indicted and tried on twenty-nine (29) counts of first and second degree sexual assault against children in the Lincoln area in Rhode Island. After jury trial in the Superior Court, he was convicted on September 30, 1983 of seventeen (17) of the charges and acquitted of twelve (12). On December 6, 1983 he was sentenced to serve a total of forty (40) years at the Adult Correctional Institutions with an additional suspension of sentence and probation for a period of ten years following his release from incarceration. Following his convictions and sentences, he filed his appeal in the Supreme Court and that Court on October 15, 1984 denied and dismissed his appeal. On October 13, 1989 he filed his application for post-conviction relief, pro se.

In his 1989 application Winters alleged that he was denied a fair trial because of ineffective assistance by his trial counsel, Richard Casparian, the State's Public Defender. He claims that Attorney Casparian failed to adequately prepare for trial and that he "based the entire defense upon an outdated criminal statute." In a later application, he asserted that Attorney Casparian had met with him on only one occasion, September 25, 1983, the evening prior to the scheduled trial, and on that occasion was told that he "had nothing to worry about" except for only one charge, namely count 3, and that if found guilty on that charge, he would "only face a five year sentence." Winters alleges also, that Attorney Casparian told him that he would be acquitted on all other 28 charges or counts.

On September 26, 1983, when Winters was brought into the Superior Court to begin hearings on his motion to suppress both his written and recorded confessions to the various charges, he alleges that Attorney Casparian then told him, as well as his parents, that the State "isn't offering much, 20-25 years," but that the "most time he would end up receiving would be a five year sentence." He alleges that he rejected that plea offer because he was relying upon what Attorney Casparian had told him.

In May 1995, Winters, now represented by new counsel, was granted permission to substitute a new application for post-conviction relief. In that latest application he alleged that he was not informed of the State's 25 year offer, and that it was Attorney Casparian who rejected the plea proposal. He reasserted however Attorney Casparian's assurance that his "maximum exposure was only five years for the offenses the State would be able to prove." He also reasserted his earlier allegation that Attorney Casparian had mistakenly relied upon criminal statutes 11-37-2 and 11-37-4, without knowing that each had been amended in 1981 by Chapter 119, P.L. 1981. Actually, all that was accomplished by the amendment was a change in the wording used in defining first and second degree sexual assault involving children from under 13 years of age, to 13 years ofage or under. That change was in apparent anticipation of the issue of age determination raised in the then pending In reEdward case, which was later decided by our Supreme Court. Inre Edward, 441 A.2d 543 (R.I. 1982).

It is interesting to note the then existing confusion regarding that age determination issue. State v. Jordan,528 A.2d 731 (R.I. 1987) and State v. Collins, 543 A.2d 641 (R.I. 1989) both later cases point out the legal complications inherent in what Attorney Casparian had to contend with. At the time of this trial In re Edward, supra, was controlling.

It should be noted also at this point, that Attorney Casparian, as well as the State's prosecutor, was unaware of the 1981 legislative amendment above noted. The amendment concerned however only two (2) of the seventeen (17) charges that Winters was tried and convicted on, and incidentally did not in any way affect the proof of Winters' actual commission of the sexual acts alleged. The fact that the young victim was thirteen years and eight months at the time that he was sexually assaulted by Winters did not exclude Winters from conviction under the then existing In re Edward, supra, formulae for computing age. It was not until four years later in State v. Jordan, supra, in 1987, and later in State v. Collins, supra, in 1989, that the former In re Edward formulae was held inapplicable in cases arising under 11-37-2 and 11-37-4, and then, only because of the overlapping of the ages prescribed in each. Accordingly, while the 1989 State v. Collins case age computation formulae,supra, now renders Winters' convictions on Counts 4 and 5 invalid, his remaining fifteen convictions on the other counts are unaffected thereby. To that extent, his post-conviction request for relief from the convictions on Counts 4 and 5 is both proper and mandated by State v. Collins, supra.

Taking up Winters' contention that Attorney Casparian did not inform him of the State's alleged pre-trial plea offer of 25 years, I do not believe Winters' testimony relative thereto. His present counsel in his memorandum of law asserts that Attorney Casparian "performed deficiently in failing to inform" Winters "of the proposed plea agreement." First, there was no agreement. Attorney Casparian testified that he recalled a September 25, 1983 two hour meeting with Winters. He testified that he did not recall any discussion regarding a five year sentence. He also testified that he realized that there was no available defense to the charges and after discussing the cases with Winters, that Winters would not enter a plea if "long time was involved." Attorney Casparian testified also that on the morning of the trial, the State did make a plea offer, which he could not recall in detail, and that he may have spoken to Winters at counsel table, but that he could not recall the discussion and had no recorded notes to refer back to. This Court notes, contrary to Winters' present counsel's assertion, that Winters himself stated in his earlier pro se petitions and pro se legal memoranda, that he "rejected a plea agreement, based on his trial counsel's erroneous advice that petitioner would only face a small sentence if he was to be found guilty after trial." He also wrote in his earlier pro se legal memorandum that "the petitioner relied upon trial counsel's advice in rejecting the plea agreement. . ."See, Applicant's Exhibits A and B introduced at hearing on July 22, 1994 in case file P.M. 89-5572. Present counsel for Winters was not told the truth by Winters and accordingly there is no need for this Court to respond to the first contention presented in the applicant's legal memorandum, because it is based on erroneous and incorrect facts.

I am totally satisfied in this case that Winters' testimony regarding the alleged representations made to him by Attorney Casparian as to a no longer than five (5) year sentence and that he would be found not guilty on all but Count 3 and that the State had offered 20 to 25 years and that he rejected it based upon Attorney Casparian's representation that he would receive no more than a five year sentence is nothing but plain falsehood.

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Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
In Re Edward
441 A.2d 543 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1982)
State v. Collins
543 A.2d 641 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1988)
State v. Jordan
528 A.2d 731 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1987)
Delahunt v. State
440 A.2d 133 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1982)
State v. Desroches
293 A.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
Winters v. Vose, 89-5572 (1995), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-v-vose-89-5572-1995-risuperct-1995.