State v. Guevara ( 2023 )


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  •                            NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 124,571
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    JUAN GUEVARA JR.,
    Appellant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Ford District Court; SIDNEY R. THOMAS, judge. Opinion filed January 6, 2023.
    Affirmed.
    Patrick H. Dunn, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    Steven J. Obermeier, assistant solicitor general, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for
    appellee.
    Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GARDNER and CLINE, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: Juan Guevara Jr. appeals the denial of his presentence motion to
    withdraw his plea. Guevara claims that he was misled or coerced into entering a plea
    agreement because he needed to be released from jail to pay his mortgage and he thought
    he could withdraw his plea at will. Guevara also asserts that he lacked effective
    assistance of counsel when he decided to plead because his attorney reviewed only some
    of the State's discovery before advising him and never told him that the district court
    would probably deny a motion to withdraw his plea. Finding no error, we affirm.
    1
    Factual and Procedural Background
    The State charged Juan Guevara Jr. with rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated
    sexual battery, and aggravated battery for crimes against A.Z. in June 2020. According to
    a police investigation, Guevara forced his penis into A.Z.'s mouth and forcibly assaulted
    her body before he dragged her up the stairs of his home, punched her in the face, and
    raped her. Police arrested Guevara for these acts in July 2020.
    At his first appearance, the district court set Guevara's bond as a surety bond for
    $250,000. About a week later, the district court modified Guevara's bond to $75,000.
    Attorney Lori Jensen entered her appearance as Guevara's counsel the same day. Guevara
    apparently did not object to the district court's bond determinations but later claimed he
    had no way to secure even the lesser amount.
    Guevara and the State began plea negotiations. Guevara was significantly
    concerned about being released on an own recognizance (OR) bond during these
    negotiations because he wanted to make his mortgage payments and thought he could not
    do so in jail. Ultimately, the parties agreed that Guevara would plead no contest to
    aggravated sexual battery and aggravated battery and the State would dismiss the
    remaining counts of rape and aggravated kidnapping and not oppose Guevara's request
    for probation.
    At his plea hearing, Guevara waived his right to a preliminary hearing and in
    accordance with the plea agreement entered a no contest plea to aggravated battery and
    sexual battery. The district court conducted the standard plea colloquy, accepted
    Guevara's plea, and modified Guevara's bond to a $25,000 OR bond with ankle
    monitoring.
    2
    About a month later, Jensen moved to withdraw as Guevara's counsel, arguing the
    two had a breakdown in their relationship. The district court granted Jensen's motion and
    appointed Steve Cott to replace her.
    In December, before sentencing, Guevara sent a letter to the district court asking
    to withdraw his plea, claiming he was innocent and that the State's evidence proved it.
    Guevara argued that A.Z. had lied about the incident. And in other documents Guevara
    suggested that the surveillance video evidence the police took from his home would show
    that he never dragged A.Z. up the stairs. Guevara also argued that A.Z. and others stated
    that the sexual intercourse between him and A.Z. was consensual.
    A few days after Guevara filed that letter, Cott moved to continue the sentencing
    hearing and the district court granted the continuance. Guevara sent a second letter to the
    district court seeking the appointment of new counsel and claiming that Cott was not
    responding to Guevara's calls or emails. Cott also moved to withdraw. Guevara then
    moved to withdraw his plea, asserting that Jensen had been ineffective and that he had
    entered his plea based only on "the fact that he might lose his house due to being unable
    to make mortgage payments while in custody."
    At the hearing on these motions, Cott explained that he and Guevara had a
    fundamental disagreement about how to go forward and about what a motion to withdraw
    a plea entails. Guevara claimed he had never had a chance to sit down with Cott to
    discuss his case. Cott refuted that claim, stating that the two had spoken over the phone
    and in his office. The district court granted Cott's motion to withdraw as counsel, finding
    a breakdown of communication. The district court then appointed replacement counsel
    before holding a hearing on Guevara's motion to withdraw his plea.
    3
    Jensen testified at the hearing on Guevara's motion to withdraw his plea. Jensen
    had around 14 years of legal experience and had done over 50 jury trials, 20 of which
    involved level three felonies or greater. Jensen had represented Guevara before. One of
    his municipal court cases was dropped based on a lack of evidence, and another case was
    resolved "favorably" to Guevara.
    Jensen first met Guevara in this case on July 16, 2020. She could not recall
    whether she received the State's response to her discovery request on July 20, 2020, but
    that was the date listed on the discovery materials in her personal records. That discovery
    consisted of 59 pages of written materials and 5 discs. Jensen "[p]robably" reviewed the
    written discovery, possibly the day before Guevara entered his plea. Jensen did not,
    however, review the discs. She implied that she did not discuss the discovery with
    Guevara but talked to him generally about his case and "got his point of view on it"
    before he entered his plea. In total, Jensen spent about 45 minutes with Guevara,
    including a 30-minute initial meeting and a 15-minute meeting right before Guevara
    entered his plea.
    During those discussions, Jensen explained the charges, the possible associated
    sentences and fines, Guevara's trial rights, and the waiver of those trial rights in plea
    proceedings. She also went through the details of the State's plea offer with him. Guevara
    appeared to understand everything "very well." Guevara knew that "he had every right,
    despite a plea offer being made, to proceed to trial in this matter." And Guevara had
    originally planned to go to trial but changed his mind after discussing the plea offer.
    Guevara seemed pleased with his decision to enter a plea because he wanted out of jail,
    which was his "overriding concern."
    Jensen gave Guevara copies of the written discovery when she met with him right
    before he waived his preliminary hearing and entered his plea. Guevara did not express
    4
    any concern about the discovery material then. Instead, Guevara was mainly concerned
    with getting out of jail and back to work to make his house payment.
    When asked whether Jensen discussed with Guevara his ability to "change his
    mind" about his plea after entering it, Jensen responded that she had told Guevara that
    "on some occasions people were allowed to withdraw their plea," but she did not tell him
    that withdrawal was guaranteed. Guevara never suggested to her that he wanted to
    withdraw his plea.
    Guevara also testified. He conceded that he knew what he was charged with, the
    possible penalties for those crimes, and the possible consequences associated with the
    withdrawal of his plea. And before he entered his plea, he discussed with Jensen the
    possibility of withdrawing it. But contrary to Jensen's testimony, Guevara "recall[ed]"
    from that conversation that he "would be able to withdraw" his plea in the future.
    Guevara would not have entered a plea if he thought he could not withdraw it. On cross-
    examination, Guevara admitted that he had no intention of "keeping [his] bargain" with
    the State when he agreed to enter a plea because he always intended to withdraw his plea.
    Guevara entered his plea only because he "wanted out of jail."
    In their closing arguments, the parties applied the facts here to the factors outlined
    in State v. Edgar, 
    281 Kan. 30
    , 36, 
    127 P.3d 986
     (2006). Guevara claimed that he could
    not have understandingly entered his plea after receiving and reviewing the discovery for
    just 15 minutes. He also argued that because he believed he could withdraw his plea at
    any time as a "do-over," he did not understand "the gravity and the severity" of entering
    his plea.
    Guevara also claimed that Jensen spent too little time with him to let him know
    what he was doing and why. Although he did not allege that Jensen had said he could
    5
    freely withdraw his plea or that she had intentionally misled him, Guevara suggested that
    he was misled in some way and that he felt "pressured due to his situation."
    The State argued that Jensen had provided effective representation, in part by
    appropriately advising Guevara of the State's charges, the possible penalties for those
    crimes, the terms of the State's plea offer, and the consequences of that plea. The State
    also claimed that even if the bond modification were Guevara's "greatest motivation" for
    entering his plea, that alone was not good cause to allow him to withdraw his plea
    because it failed to show that the plea was not "knowingly, intelligently, and informedly
    made."
    After considering the evidence in light of the Edgar factors, the district court
    denied Guevara's motion to withdraw his plea. The district court found that Guevara
    believed he could "change his mind," but the court believed Jensen's testimony and that
    she had not advised him of that or otherwise misled or misadvised him. The district court
    also found that Guevara clearly understood the potential penalties and was not misled,
    coerced, mistreated, or unfairly taken advantage of. And the court found that Guevara
    understood what he was doing when deciding to plea, finding "the evidence and advice
    he received from counsel, and the admonishments received from the Court, made it very
    clear what the options and outcomes were to be, and . . . he knowingly chose the plea
    agreement as the best option that he wanted and . . . thought was best."
    The district court later sentenced Guevara to 41 months in prison for the
    aggravated sexual battery but granted probation for 36 months, as Guevara requested.
    The district court also imposed a concurrent sentence of 12 months in prison but granted
    36 months' probation for the aggravated battery.
    Guevara appeals the denial of his motion to withdraw his plea.
    6
    Did the District Court Err in Denying Guevara's Motion to Withdraw His Plea?
    Basic Legal Principles
    A no contest plea "for good cause shown and within the discretion of the court,
    may be withdrawn at any time before sentence is adjudged." K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 22-
    3210(d)(1). When determining whether good cause exists to withdraw a presentence plea,
    a district court considers three factors: (1) whether the defendant was represented by
    competent counsel; (2) whether the defendant was misled, coerced, mistreated, or
    unfairly taken advantage of; and (3) whether the plea was fairly and understandingly
    made. Edgar, 
    281 Kan. at 36
    . These factors are "viable benchmarks for judicial
    discretion," but "[a]ll of the . . . factors need not apply in a defendant's favor in every
    case, and other factors may be duly considered in the district judge's discretionary
    decision on the existence or nonexistence of good cause." State v. Aguilar, 
    290 Kan. 506
    ,
    512-13, 
    231 P.3d 563
     (2010). But a defendant's "mere 'change of mind'" is insufficient to
    withdraw a plea without any evidence the defendant can satisfy the Edgar factors. State v.
    Woodring, 
    309 Kan. 379
    , 384, 
    435 P.3d 54
     (2019).
    This court reviews a district court's denial of a presentence motion to withdraw a
    plea for an abuse of discretion. A district court abuses its discretion when its decision is
    based on an error of fact or law, or if no reasonable person would agree with the decision.
    As the party alleging error, Guevara carries the burden of proving the district court
    abused its discretion. This court will not reweigh evidence or assess witness credibility in
    addressing his claim. See Woodring, 
    309 Kan. at 380
    .
    Guevara claims that he established good cause to withdraw his plea because he
    met each of the three Edgar factors:
    7
    • He needed to be released from jail to make his house payment;
    • He thought that he could withdraw his plea at will;
    • Attorney Jensen rushed him into entering a plea without first reviewing all the
    discovery and misinformed him about plea withdrawal; and
    • The State improperly used his bond as leverage to get his plea.
    The State counters that no evidence shows that Jensen or the prosecutor engaged in any
    misleading or coercive conduct, and that any financial or other coercion Guevara may
    have felt came from his personal considerations that do not constitute good cause to
    withdraw a plea.
    Guevara Failed to Preserve His Bond Leverage Argument.
    We first consider Guevara's claim that he was initially given an excessive bond
    and that the State either caused this or at least knew about it and used this as leverage to
    coerce his guilty plea.
    But we must first address a procedural matter—the State's claim that Guevara
    failed to preserve this argument. Generally, issues not raised to the district court cannot
    be raised on appeal. State v. Green, 
    315 Kan. 178
    , 182, 
    505 P.3d 377
     (2022). Guevara
    does not overtly concede that this claim is unpreserved, yet he excludes it from the
    exhaustive list of claims he raised in the district court. He thus tacitly concedes that this
    argument is unpreserved. Our review of the record confirms that. And Guevara fails to
    argue that any exception applies to permit our decision of this issue for the first time on
    appeal. See State v. Allen, 
    314 Kan. 280
    , 283, 
    497 P.3d 566
     (2021).
    And factual questions are unanswered. The record on appeal does not show the
    State suggested that the agreement include a provision for bond modification. In fact,
    8
    because the record does not include a copy of the plea agreement, it is not shown that the
    State agreed to any bond modification. And a request for bond modification is usually a
    matter decided by the trial court. See K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 22-2802(8). We cannot review
    an unpreserved claim with unresolved fact issues. Allen, 314 Kan. at 289 (finding abuse
    of discretion in appellate court's review of an unpreserved claim with unresolved fact
    issues).
    Because no exceptions have been argued to the general rule that issues not raised
    before the district court cannot be raised on appeal, and because facts essential to
    Guevara's claim are not in the record, we decline to reach the merits of this claim. See
    State v. Johnson, 
    309 Kan. 992
    , 995, 
    441 P.3d 1036
     (2019) (requiring explanation for
    review of unpreserved claim); State v. Rhoiney, 
    314 Kan. 497
    , 500, 
    501 P.3d 368
     (2021)
    (appellate court not obligated to review unpreserved claims).
    As for Guevara's remaining claims, we apply the Edgar factors.
    (1) Whether Guevara was represented by competent counsel
    Guevara contends that Jensen's representation was "lackluster" and thus
    incompetent because she failed to review all the discovery before she rushed him into
    accepting the plea agreement. Guevara asserts that Jensen could not effectively counsel
    his decision to enter a plea instead of going to trial without having reviewed all the
    evidence. Guevara also impliedly argues that because Jensen did not review the discs, she
    missed exculpatory evidence.
    We agree that "lackluster advocacy" may be enough to show incompetent counsel
    under the first Edgar factor. See Aguilar, 
    290 Kan. at 513
    . The district court correctly
    applied this standard when deciding Guevara's motion.
    9
    But contrary to the blame he places on Jensen, Guevara has never denied that he
    was the force behind the speediness in which he accepted his plea. Guevara directed
    Jensen to quickly secure his release from jail. And even after Jensen handed him the
    written discovery materials, Guevara decided to continue with his plea hearing about 15
    minutes later. Similarly, in State v. Grubb, No. 120,490, 
    2020 WL 1814306
     (Kan. App.
    2020) (unpublished opinion), this court considered a defendant's request to withdraw his
    plea because neither he nor his attorney had seen the discovery. The Grubb panel found
    that the defendant's desire to quickly reach an agreement undercut his claim of entering
    an unknowing plea, because he knew that his attorney had not viewed discovery. 
    2020 WL 1814306
    , at *4.
    Although it is unclear what Guevara knew about the extent of Jensen's discovery
    review, Guevara pushed for a quick resolution. And Jensen testified that Guevara
    understood what he was doing. The record also suggests that Guevara had at least some
    understanding of what the video evidence might show because before he entered his plea,
    he told Jensen that he kept a security camera in his home. Thus his knowledge of where
    the video was located and of what the video tape might reveal was greater than Jensen's.
    The record does not show that Jensen pressed, much less advised, Guevara to
    plead. The record establishes only that Jensen presented Guevara with the State's offer,
    which the district court correctly noted she was required to do. The district court, that had
    observed Guevara several times throughout the pretrial proceedings, characterized him as
    "a relatively confident man." The court rejected the notion that Guevara could be "pushed
    around very easily, at all," explaining that "[w]hen [Guevara] has his idea of whatever he
    thinks, he's going to be heard on that."
    Guevara correctly argues that Jensen had a duty to make reasonable investigations
    or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary. See
    10
    State v. Hedges, 
    269 Kan. 895
    , 914, 
    8 P.3d 1259
     (2000). He does not, however, show that
    Jensen was statutorily required or otherwise obligated to review the video evidence
    before presenting the State's plea offer to Guevara or advising him about a plea.
    And after reviewing the record, we cannot tell what Jensen's review of the discs
    could have accomplished. Guevara did not admit any portion of the discovery into the
    record when arguing his motion in the district court, and those materials are not a part of
    the record on appeal. Nor did he make a proffer of what the discs contained. Guevara had
    the burden to designate a record sufficient to establish his argument. See Friedman v.
    Kansas State Bd. of Healing Arts, 
    296 Kan. 636
    , 644, 
    294 P.3d 287
     (2013). Because he
    did not do so, the panel cannot determine whether Jensen's investigation of the discovery
    materials was flawed.
    But from what can be gleaned from the record, we find that the discovery likely
    does not include exculpatory evidence as Guevara suggests. In an attachment to
    Guevara's first letter to the district court, Guevara argued that the surveillance footage
    from his home would show that he did not drag A.Z. up the stairs. The report of the
    incident stated that Guevara dragged A.Z. up the stairs and into another room, which was
    likely the basis for the State's charge of aggravated kidnapping, which it dismissed. Yet
    Guevara did not allege that the disc would show anything else. Guevara also claimed that
    because A.Z. told police that she wanted to have sex with him, the State could not prove
    rape. The report possibly supports this argument because A.Z. indicated that she
    "wanted" the "sexual intercourse" that she reported occurred during the incident. Yet the
    State dismissed the rape charge as well.
    Guevara did not point to any evidence that would show he did not commit
    aggravated sexual battery or aggravated battery, the two charges to which he pleaded. To
    the contrary, the record suggests that the State based the charges of aggravated sexual
    11
    battery and aggravated battery at least in part on a forced oral penetration and other
    physical violence against A.Z. But even if A.Z. suggested that the sexual intercourse was
    consensual, A.Z. told police she did not consent to the forced oral sex. And A.Z.'s
    account of the incident suggests that Guevara's other abusive acts happened in various
    rooms of Guevara's home, not just in whatever fixed location his security camera was
    apparently stationed in. Under these circumstances, we find no lackluster performance.
    (2) Whether Guevara was misled, coerced, mistreated, or unfairly taken
    advantage of
    Guevara's Monthly House Payments
    As his primary claim of coercion, Guevara argues that after his arrest, he felt
    significantly pressured to accept the plea agreement because he needed to get out of jail
    quickly to make his house payments, which he thought he could not do while in jail. On
    appeal, he states his belief that if not promptly released, he would lose his house for
    which he had made monthly payments for the last 15 years.
    Guevara also argues that pretrial detention is coercive, citing a law journal article
    published by the American Psychological Association. In his reply brief, Guevara argues
    that his looming house payments and pretrial detention constituted significant financial
    coercion.
    Yet Guevara did not submit any proof to support his testimony that he would lose
    his home if he remained in pretrial detention. And even if he would lose his house after a
    single delinquent payment, Guevara testified that he was not employed around this time.
    So it is unclear whether Guevara's pretrial detention created or merely exacerbated his
    fear about his inability to pay for his home.
    12
    Though relevant, these unresolved matters do not change the outcome of this
    issue. Our appellate courts will not invalidate a defendant's decision to plead based on
    allegations of self-coercion, as the State correctly argues. "Every man charged with crime
    is influenced by personal considerations which may later not appear valid to him, but
    psychological self-coercion is not the coercion necessary in law to destroy an otherwise
    voluntary plea of guilty." Williams v. State, 
    197 Kan. 708
    , 711, 
    421 P.2d 194
     (1966).
    The State compares Guevara's argument to others rejected because any coercion
    stemmed from personal considerations, rather than from the defendant's attorney or the
    prosecution. For example, in State v. Denmark-Wagner, 
    292 Kan. 870
    , 
    258 P.3d 960
    (2011), the defendant argued that he had been coerced into pleading guilty because his
    mother and sister wanted to see him sooner and hug him during visitation. The court
    rejected the motion to withdraw the plea, finding that although the defendant "appears to
    have given heavy weight to the advice of others, . . . he made his own decision. . . .
    Whatever family pressure existed did not rise to the level of good cause." 
    292 Kan. at 877
    .
    Similarly, in Wippel v. State, 
    203 Kan. 207
    , 209, 
    453 P.2d 43
     (1969), the
    defendant entered a guilty plea with the "understanding" that his children would not be
    placed in foster homes because he would serve a short enough sentence to prevent that.
    The court rejected the motion to withdraw the plea, finding "[t]hese personal
    considerations . . . may have been of some psychological influence on his decision to
    plead guilty; but personal considerations of this nature do not constitute the coercion
    required to vitiate an otherwise voluntary plea. (Williams v. State, 
    197 Kan. 708
    , 
    421 P.2d 194
    .)." 
    203 Kan. at 209
    .
    This court's opinions in State v. Heard, No. 120,531, 
    2019 WL 11868571
     (Kan.
    App. 2019) (unpublished opinion), and State v. Bloom, No. 98,492, 
    2008 WL 4291546
    13
    (Kan. App. 2008) (unpublished opinion), show arguably more pressing matters were
    denied as claims of self-coercion. The defendants in those cases based claims of coercion
    on their desire to be with their children. In Heard, the defendant wanted to visit his
    newborn child. 
    2019 WL 11868571
    , at *2. And in Bloom, the defendant sought release
    after receiving news that her children were at risk of being placed for adoption. 
    2008 WL 4291546
    , at *3. Still, the pleas were not found to be involuntary as a result. Heard, 
    2019 WL 11868571
    , at *3-4; Bloom, 
    2008 WL 4291546
    , at *5.
    These cases underscore that even in some of the most pressing contexts, a
    defendant's claim of self-coercion alone will not justify the withdrawal of a plea that is
    otherwise fairly and understandingly made. These cases support the district court's
    decision to deny Guevara's motion to withdraw his plea on the basis of coercion.
    Jensen's statements and Guevara's belief regarding plea withdrawal
    Next, Guevara argues that because he believed he could withdraw his plea at will,
    he was misled, coerced, mistreated, or unfairly taken advantage of, as provided under the
    second Edgar factor. Guevara does not assert that Jensen told him that he could withdraw
    his plea. But Guevara still blames Jensen for his misunderstanding that he could
    withdraw his plea at will.
    But the district court squarely addressed and flatly rejected this suggestion. The
    district court found that Jensen's testimony stating she did not advise Guevara that he
    could withdraw his plea as a matter of right was more "reliable" than Guevara's
    testimony:
    "I believe counsel told him exactly what she said here. In some cases, you . . .
    can withdraw your plea. Didn't say in every case. But, that's what he wants to understand
    now. I find the evidence simply does not support that that's what she advised him, or
    14
    what anyone indicated was the appropriate legal standard, or that he could withdraw for
    any reason at all.
    "That's just not in the evidence other than what he testified to from his mind.
    And, I don't find that as reliable."
    This is a credibility finding that we will not second-guess on appeal. See State v. Dunn,
    
    304 Kan. 773
    , 822, 
    375 P.3d 332
     (2016) (prohibiting appellate courts from questioning
    the trial court's credibility findings); State v. Scott, No. 118,979, 
    2019 WL 2559515
    ,
    at *8 (Kan. App. 2019) (unpublished opinion) (applying this rule where the district court
    made a clear credibility finding against a defendant claiming his attorney told him he
    could withdraw his plea).
    And although the district court found that Guevara believed that "he could always
    change his mind," i.e., withdraw his plea, this subjective belief does not establish good
    cause for withdrawal. As explained in Heard and Bloom, "'mistaken subjective
    impressions, in the absence of substantial objective proof showing that they were
    reasonably justified, do not provide sufficient grounds upon which to vacate a guilty
    plea.'" Heard, 
    2019 WL 11868571
    , at *3 (quoting Bloom, 
    2008 WL 4291546
    , at *4); see
    Bachicha v. Shanks, No. 94-2209, 
    1995 WL 539467
    , at *1 (10th Cir. 1995) (unpublished
    opinion) (finding self-serving testimony alone cannot establish a claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel, requiring it accompany objective evidence); see also State v.
    Schow, 
    287 Kan. 529
    , 542, 
    197 P.3d 825
     (2008) (agreeing with State that "defendant
    should not get relief from a plea decision simply because he or she determines, in
    hindsight, that it was not the most intelligent course of action"); State v. Barnett, No.
    107,478, 
    2013 WL 1444746
    , at *4 (Kan. App. 2013) (unpublished opinion) ("A change
    of heart is not a sufficient reason to permit a defendant to withdraw his or her plea."). The
    record lacks substantial objective proof showing that Guevara's belief that he could
    withdraw his plea at will was reasonably justified.
    15
    Guevara also argues that Jensen should have advised him that "in most cases
    defendants are not allowed to withdraw their pleas," and that withdrawal "is the
    exception, rather than the rule." We agree that such advice would have been accurate. But
    Guevara does not provide legal support for his claim that such an advisory is required.
    See State v. Meggerson, 
    312 Kan. 238
    , 246, 
    474 P.3d 761
     (2020) (dismissing claim
    unsupported by pertinent authority). Nor are we aware of any.
    And the record refutes that this type of advisory was warranted here. Defense
    counsel has the duty to advise a defendant about the range of potential penalties and
    discuss the possible choices available to the defendant to ensure a plea is voluntarily and
    intelligently made. State v. Kelly, 
    298 Kan. 965
    , 970, 
    318 P.3d 987
     (2014). Yet Guevara
    does not point to any law finding the advisory to be mandatory, so he may be precluded
    from claiming his plea was not understandingly made. Cf. State v. Szczygiel, 
    294 Kan. 642
    , 645, 
    279 P.3d 700
     (2012) (rejecting claim that plea was unknowing because the
    government was not constitutionally or statutorily required to disclose material
    impeachment evidence before a plea). At any rate, Jensen testified that Guevara never
    indicated to her that he wanted or planned to withdraw his plea. So she had no reason to
    think that she needed to give Guevara more information about the likelihood of success
    of such a motion. She likewise lacked any reason to think that her statement would create
    confusion or misunderstanding. Guevara fails to show that the advisory was necessary
    under the circumstances.
    (3) Whether Guevara's Plea was Fairly and Understandingly Made
    Guevara's chief argument here is that his plea was not fairly and understandingly
    made because he thought he could withdraw his plea after being released if he wanted to.
    We have fully addressed that issue above. Further, the district court fulfilled its statutory
    duties for accepting a plea. Before the district court accepted Guevara's plea, it addressed
    16
    him personally and determined that his plea was voluntarily made and that he understood
    the nature of the charges against him and the consequences of his plea. See K.S.A. 2019
    Supp. 22-3210(a)(3). Jensen also properly advised Guevara of the range of possible
    penalties to his plea and discussed the choices that he had. See Kelly, 
    298 Kan. at 970
    .
    This factor cuts against a plea withdrawal.
    Conclusion
    Guevara does not show any legal or factual error in the district court's decision to
    deny his motion to withdraw his plea. And a reasonable person could agree that Guevara
    did not establish good cause to withdraw his plea. We thus find no abuse of discretion in
    the district court's decision that it lacked statutory good cause to grant a presentence
    withdrawal of Guevara's plea.
    Affirmed.
    17