Adris Bailey v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.) ( 2015 )


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  •       MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this                    Mar 25 2015, 9:26 am
    Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as
    precedent or cited before any court except for the
    purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata,
    collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                   ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    Victoria Christ                                          Gregory F. Zoeller
    Deputy Public Defender                                   Attorney General of Indiana
    Indianapolis, Indiana                                    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Ian McLean
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Adris Bailey,                                            March 25, 2015
    Appellant-Petitioner,                                    Court of Appeals Case No.
    49A02-1408-PC-549
    v.                                               Appeal from the Marion Superior
    Court
    State of Indiana,                                        The Honorable Steven Eichholtz,
    Judge and the Honorable David
    Appellee-Respondent                                      Seiter, Commissioner
    Cause No. 49G20-1004-PC-034280
    Mathias, Judge.
    [1]   Adris Bailey (“Bailey”) pleaded guilty in Marion Superior Court to two counts
    of Class B felony attempted robbery. He was ordered to serve an aggregate
    sentence of twenty-eight years. Bailey subsequently filed a petition for
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    postconviction relief arguing that his guilty plea was not knowing, intelligent,
    and voluntary, and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial
    court denied Bailey’s petition for post-conviction relief. Bailey appeals and
    raises two issues, which we restate as:
    I. Whether Bailey’s guilty plea was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary
    and
    II. Whether Bailey received ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
    Concluding that the post-conviction court properly denied Bailey’s petition for
    post-conviction relief, we affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   On April 28, 2010, an undercover officer with the Indianapolis Metropolitan
    Police Department (“IMPD”) contacted Bailey by telephone and arranged to
    meet Bailey at a gas station on the city’s east side to purchase $100 worth of
    marijuana and some cocaine. Bailey and two undercover IMPD officers
    eventually met at another location, the parking lot of a Family Dollar store.
    Bailey entered the officers’ truck through the passenger side door. After the
    officers paid Bailey the $100, Bailey pulled out a baggie of cocaine then a
    handgun and ordered the officers to give him all of their cash. The officer
    sitting in the middle seat of the truck, next to Bailey, managed to disarm Bailey
    after a brief struggle. At this point, several uniformed IMPD officers who were
    stationed nearby descended on the scene and arrested Bailey.
    [3]   The next day, April 29, 2010, the State charged Bailey with Class B felony
    conspiracy to deal cocaine, Class B felony dealing in cocaine, Class C felony
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    possession of cocaine and a firearm, Class D felony possession of cocaine, two
    counts of Class B felony attempted robbery, and Class C felony carrying a
    handgun without a license.
    [4]   Public defender Nicholas McGuinness (“McGuinness”) was appointed to
    represent Bailey. According to Bailey, at some point during plea negotiations,
    McGuinness incorrectly advised Bailey that he faced an aggregate sentence of
    up to sixty-five years if he were convicted of all of the charges brought against
    him. In actuality, because of a statutory cap on consecutive sentences imposed
    for non-violent crimes arising from a single episode of conduct, Bailey faced a
    maximum aggregate sentence of 30 years.1 Bailey ultimately decided to enter
    into an open plea agreement, whereby he agreed to plead guilty to the two Class
    B felony attempted robbery charges and the State dismissed the remaining
    charges. At Bailey’s guilty plea hearing, the Commissioner presiding over the
    1
    Indiana Code section 35-50-1-2(c) provides:
    [E]xcept for crimes of violence, the total of the consecutive terms of imprisonment . . . to which
    the defendant is sentenced for felony convictions arising out of an episode of criminal conduct
    shall not exceed the advisory sentence for a felony which is one (1) class of felony higher than
    the most serious of the felonies for which the person has been convicted.
    Indiana Code section 35-50-1-2(a)(12) identifies robbery while armed with a deadly weapon and robbery
    resulting in serious bodily injury as crimes of violence but does not identify attempted robbery as a crime of
    violence. Reed v. State, 
    856 N.E.2d 1189
     (Ind. 2006) (in general, trial court cannot order consecutive
    sentences in the absence of express statutory authority). Also, the two counts of attempted robbery to which
    Bailey pleaded guilty—one for each of the undercover officers—constituted a single episode of conduct,
    which is statutorily defined as “offenses or a connected series of offenses that are closely related in time,
    place, and circumstance.” I.C. § 35-50-1-2(b). See Dimmitt v. State, No. 79A02-1406-CR-443, 
    2015 WL 386420
     (Ind. Ct. App. Jan. 28, 2015) (concluding that misdemeanor battery convictions arose out of single
    “episode of criminal conduct” where, although batteries were committed against two separate victims, the
    two batteries took place just a few minutes apart, occurred as part of the same conflict, in the same place, and
    between the same groups of people).
    Because Bailey pleaded guilty to two Class B felonies, neither of which the Indiana Code expressly designates
    as crimes of violence, and which constituted a single episode of conduct, the total of his consecutive terms of
    imprisonment could not exceed the advisory sentence for a Class A felony, which is thirty years.
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    hearing indicated to Bailey first that his maximum exposure was sixty-five years
    and then that his maximum exposure was forty years.
    [5]   The trial court held a sentencing hearing on November 22, 2010. At the
    hearing, McGuinness argued that Bailey’s maximum sentencing exposure was
    thirty years, pursuant to the statutory consecutive sentence cap. In sentencing
    Bailey, the trial court found as mitigating that Bailey pleaded guilty to two
    counts of attempted robbery and as aggravating Bailey’s criminal history. At
    the time he was sentenced, twenty-two year old Bailey had acquired eleven
    juvenile referrals, including robbery, battery, theft, and receiving stolen property
    referrals. He had three prior felony convictions, including theft, receiving stolen
    property, and battery of a minor, and two misdemeanor convictions. He had
    also violated probation and was on probation at the time of the attempted
    robberies. After determining that the aggravating factors outweighed the
    mitigating factors, the trial court sentenced Bailey to two consecutive terms of
    fourteen years, for an aggregate sentence of twenty-eight years.
    [6]   On September 12, 2013, Bailey filed a petition for post-conviction relief2
    alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel and, more specifically, that
    McGuinness incompetently failed to advise Bailey during plea negotiations that
    his sentence would be statutorily capped at thirty years. Bailey also argued that
    his guilty plea was illusory and that McGuinness, the State, and the trial court
    2
    Bailey apparently did not pursue a direct appeal.
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    coerced him into entering into the plea agreement by threatening him with a
    sentence of sixty-five years.
    [7]   At the post-conviction proceeding, McGuinness testified that he thought had
    told Bailey during plea negotiations that he would argue that the consecutive
    sentence cap applied in Bailey’s case and limited his exposure to thirty years.
    McGuinness also admitted that he had incorrectly agreed with the trial court
    when, during Bailey’s guilty plea hearing, the court stated first that Bailey’s
    maximum exposure was sixty-five years, then that he faced up to forty years.
    Bailey testified that if he had known that his sentence would be capped a thirty
    years, he would have insisted on a trial because he felt that he could “beat some
    of the cases.” Tr. p. 19.
    [8]   On July 17, 2014, the post-conviction court denied Bailey’s petition for relief.
    In its order, the court stated:
    The Court does not believe the Petitioner’s representation that he
    thought his exposure of trial was sixty-five years. Instead, the Court
    finds that the Petitioner wanted to receive the benefit of mitigation for
    admitting to the two charges that he and his counsel felt the State
    would be able to prove.
    ***
    The record demonstrates that even though the Petitioner’s attorney
    was initially wrong about the exposure of time he could have received
    at trial (65 years), he was correct at sentencing by arguing that the
    Court was limited in the “open plea” to thirty years. Both the
    Petitioner in his own words and his counsel argued to the Court that
    the Petitioner had been willing to plea to the two attempted robbery
    charges from the beginning of the case. Mr. McGuinness argued that
    his client recognized he “wasn’t receiving much benefit to taking an
    open plea” but sought benefit in the form of mitigation from the Court
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    for taking responsibility for his conduct. The Court, in turn,
    acknowledged that the Petitioner did receive benefit from pleading
    guilty and cites the Petitioner’s plea as his only mitigating
    circumstance. The Petitioner ultimately received a sentence lesser
    than what he could have legally received under the open plea.
    The Court thus finds that Petitioner has not met his burden of proof in
    showing that he was prejudiced by his trial counsel’s representation[.]
    Appellant’s App. p. 184. As to Bailey’s argument that his plea was coerced by
    threats from the State, the post-conviction court found that Bailey failed to meet
    his burden of proof “for the reasons shown above,” namely, that the court
    disbelieved Bailey’s claim that the only reason he entered into the plea
    agreement was that he believed he faced up to sixty-five years imprisonment,
    and that Bailey was not prejudiced since he received a sentence less than the
    maximum.
    [9]    Bailey now appeals.
    I. Involuntary or Illusory Guilty Plea
    [10]   Bailey contends that the post-conviction court clearly erred in denying his claim
    that his guilty plea was not knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Specifically,
    Bailey argues that McGuinness, the State, and the trial court coerced him into
    entering into the plea agreement by leading him to believe he could receive up
    to sixty-five years imprisonment.
    [11]   A plea bargain motivated by an improper threat is deemed illusory and a denial
    of substantive rights. Champion v. State, 
    478 N.E.2d 681
    , 683 (Ind. 1985) (citing
    Gibson v. State, 
    456 N.E.2d 1006
    , 1009 (Ind. 1983)). The State must possess, at
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    the moment a guilty plea is entered, the power to carry out any threat that was a
    factor in obtaining the plea agreement. Daniels v. State, 
    531 N.E.2d 1173
    , 1174
    (Ind. 1988). “‘[A] threat by a prosecutor to do what the law will not permit, if it
    motivates a defendant ignorant of the impossibility, renders the plea
    involuntary.’” Munger v. State, 
    420 N.E.2d 1380
    , 1387 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981)
    (quoting Lassiter v. Turner, 
    423 F.2d 897
    , 900 (4th Cir.1970), cert. denied ).
    [12]   In Segura v. State, 
    749 N.E.2d 496
     (Ind. 2001), the defendant pleaded guilty to
    dealing in cocaine and, in a subsequent post-conviction proceeding, sought to
    set aside that plea on the basis that his trial attorney had been ineffective for
    failing to advise him of the possibility of deportation if he pled guilty. With
    respect to a claim that a defendant has received incorrect advice as to penal
    consequences of a plea, the court stated:
    Whether viewed as ineffective assistance of counsel or an involuntary
    plea, the post-conviction court must resolve the factual issue of the
    materiality of the bad advice in the decision to plead, and post-
    conviction relief may be granted if the plea can be shown to have been
    influenced by counsel’s error. However, if the post-conviction court
    finds that the petitioner would have pleaded guilty even if competently
    advised as to the penal consequences, the error in advice is immaterial
    to the decision to plead and there is no prejudice.
    
    Id.
     at 504–05.
    [13]   The court went on to hold that a defendant seeking to set aside a guilty plea on
    the basis of incorrect advice as to penal consequences need not establish his or
    her actual innocence, or in other words, need not establish that the ultimate
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    result of a full trial and sentencing would have been more favorable than the
    result of the guilty plea. Id. at 507. Rather, the court held:
    We believe a showing of prejudice from incorrect advice as to the
    penal consequences is to be judged by an objective standard, i.e., there
    must be a showing of facts that support a reasonable probability that
    the hypothetical reasonable defendant would have elected to go to trial
    if properly advised.... [A] petitioner may be entitled to relief if there is
    an objectively credible factual and legal basis from which it may be
    concluded that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on
    going to trial.”
    . . . [F]or claims relating to penal consequences, a petitioner must
    establish, by objective facts, circumstances that support the conclusion
    that counsel’s errors in advice as to penal consequences were material
    to the decision to plead. Merely alleging that the petitioner would not
    have pleaded is insufficient. Rather, specific facts, in addition to the
    petitioner’s conclusory allegation, must establish an objective
    reasonable probability that competent representation would have
    caused the petitioner not to enter a plea.
    Id. (quoting Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 59, 
    106 S.Ct. 366
    , 
    88 L.Ed.2d 203
    (1985)). Citing Segura, our court later held that “when an error in advice
    supports a claim of intimidation by exaggerated penalty, a petitioner must
    establish specific facts that lead to the conclusion that a reasonable defendant
    would not have entered a plea had the error in advice not been committed.”
    Willoughby v. State, 
    792 N.E.2d 560
    , 564 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. denied.
    [14]   Although Segura and Willoughby dealt specifically with ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims, the standard they established is equally applicable to
    straightforward claims of an involuntary or illusory plea. Segura expressly refers
    to both ineffective assistance and involuntary plea claims. See Segura, 749
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    N.E.2d at 504; see also Willoughby, 
    792 N.E.2d at 563
     (stating “it is immaterial
    whether [a defendant’s] claim is of an involuntary plea or ineffective assistance
    of counsel.”).
    [15]   Here McGuinness admitted that, during plea negotiations, he improperly
    agreed with the trial court that Bailey could receive up to sixty-five years
    imprisonment if convicted on all charges. However, Bailey failed to present
    specific evidence, except for his own self-serving testimony, that he would have
    rejected the plea offer if he had been correctly advised of the law. The post-
    conviction court heard Bailey’s testimony and disbelieved Bailey’s claim that he
    only accepted the plea offer because he believed that he faced up to sixty-five
    years imprisonment if the case went to trial. The court noted McGuinness’s
    testimony that Bailey planned to enter into a plea agreement from the initial
    stages of the case, since the evidence against him was overwhelming and he
    sought to use his guilty plea as a mitigator to weigh against his extensive
    criminal history. See Sentencing Tr. pp. 77-78; Appellant’s App. pp. 185-86.
    Although Bailey’s sentence was only two years less than the maximum
    sentence, in light of Bailey’s criminal history and the evidence against him,
    Bailey was still benefited, not prejudiced, by entering into his plea agreement.
    Therefore, under these facts and circumstances, we conclude that Bailey’s plea
    was entered knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily.3
    3
    Another panel of this court recently issued an opinion concluding that a defendant who pleaded guilty to
    avoid what he believed was a maximum sentence of 141 years when in fact the maximum sentence was 111
    years demonstrated a reasonable probability that the hypothetical reasonable defendant would have decided
    to go to trial if properly advised. See Springer v. State, 
    952 N.E.2d 799
     (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). However,
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    II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    [16]   “To establish a post-conviction claim alleging violation of the Sixth
    Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel, a defendant must establish
    the two components set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984).”
    Garrett v. State, 
    992 N.E.2d 710
    , 718 (Ind. 2013).
    [17]   First, a defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This
    requires a showing that counsel’s representation fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness and that counsel made errors so serious that counsel
    was not functioning as counsel guaranteed to the defendant by the Sixth
    Amendment. Second, a defendant must show that the deficient performance
    prejudiced the defense. To establish prejudice, a defendant must show that
    there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the
    result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is
    one that is sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome. Id. at 718-19
    (citations omitted).
    [18]   We initially observe that “[t]here are two different types of ineffective assistance
    of counsel claims that can be made in regards to guilty pleas: (1) failure to
    advise the defendant on an issue that impairs or overlooks a defense and (2) an
    incorrect advisement of penal consequences.” McCullough v. State, 987 N.E.2d
    Springer is factually distinguishable from the present case. The difference between a 141-year sentence and a
    111-year sentence is significant, since the former would likely amount to a life sentence where the latter might
    not. Here, although Bailey insists that he initially believed that his maximum sentence was sixty-five years,
    the trial court told Bailey at his guilty plea hearing that the maximum he faced was forty years, where the
    maximum he actually faced was thirty years. The difference in these two sentences amounts to five years of
    actual time served, which, unlike in Springer, does not determine whether or not Bailey will spend rest of his
    life in prison.
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    1173, 1176 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013) (citing Segura v. State, 
    749 N.E.2d 496
    , 500
    (Ind.2001)); see also Smith v. State, 
    770 N.E.2d 290
    , 295 (Ind. 2002). Bailey
    alleged and proved that McGuinness misstated the law. See Truiillo v. State, 
    962 N.E.2d 110
    , 114 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (distinguishing between claims of
    “intimidation by exaggerated penalty or enticement by an understated
    maximum exposure” and “incorrect advice as to the law”).
    [19]   However, Bailey must also establish prejudice, i.e. prove “by objective facts,
    circumstances that support the conclusion that [trial] counsel’s errors in advice
    as to penal consequences were material to the decision to plead.” See Segura,
    749 N.E.2d at 507. Therefore, Bailey had to establish an objective reasonable
    probability that competent representation would have caused him not to enter a
    plea. See id.
    [20]   As noted above, Bailey failed to provide evidence, other than his own self-
    serving testimony, that he would not have entered into the plea agreement if he
    had been aware that his maximum exposure was only thirty years. In fact, the
    evidence indicates that at least part of Bailey’s decision to enter into a plea
    agreement arose from his understanding that no reasonable probability existed
    of acquittal on the attempted robbery charges and his hope to use his guilty plea
    as a mitigator at sentencing. In light of the overwhelming evidence against
    Bailey and his substantial criminal history, Bailey was not prejudiced by
    entering into a plea deal that resulted in a sentence that was two years less than
    the maximum. We therefore conclude that Bailey’s trial counsel was not
    ineffective.
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    Conclusion
    [21]   Because Bailey’s guilty plea was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, and he
    was not subjected to ineffective assistance of counsel, we affirm the post-
    conviction court’s denial of his petition for post-conviction relief.
    [22]   Affirmed.
    Najam. J., and Bradford, J., concur.
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