Commonwealth v. Williams , 89 Mass. App. Ct. 383 ( 2016 )


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    14-P-1111                                              Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   ANTONIO WILLIAMS.
    No. 14-P-1111.
    Plymouth.       November 17, 2015. - May 12, 2016.
    Present:    Cypher, Trainor, & Rubin, JJ.
    Practice, Criminal, Plea, Sentence.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on July 26, 2010, and April 22, 2011.
    Motions to withdraw guilty pleas, filed on June 3, 2013,
    and January 30, 2014, were heard by Paul A. Chernoff, J.,
    Special Judicial Magistrate, and an order affirming the proposed
    order of the Special Judicial Magistrate was entered by Frank M.
    Gaziano, J.
    Jason Howard for the defendant.
    Laurie Yeshulas, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    CYPHER, J.    The defendant, Antonio Williams, appeals from
    the denial of his motions to withdraw his guilty pleas pursuant
    to Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(b), as appearing in 
    435 Mass. 1501
    (2001).
    The offenses were set forth in two sets of indictments that
    2
    charged unrelated gun and drug crimes.   The defendant argues
    that because the guilty pleas were based, in part, on drug tests
    performed by Annie Dookhan at the Hinton State Laboratory
    Institute (Hinton laboratory), the subsequent discovery of
    Dookhan's pervasive wrongdoing requires the reversal of the
    convictions.1
    The first set of indictments (the gun case) arose after the
    police responded to a report of domestic violence at the home of
    the defendant's girl friend on April 14, 2010.    Upon their
    arrival, the police were informed by the girl friend that the
    defendant had threatened her.   While there, police also saw
    loose ammunition and a loaded firearm, both of which the
    defendant admitted were his.    The defendant was charged with
    unlawful possession of a firearm (G. L. c. 269, § 10[a]);
    unlawful possession of a loaded firearm (G. L. c. 269, § 10[n]);
    unlawful possession of ammunition without an FID card (G. L.
    c. 269, § 10[h]); and threat to commit a crime (G. L. c. 275,
    § 2).    The first indictment, charging unlawful possession of a
    firearm, also alleged that the defendant previously had been
    convicted of three predicate offenses, namely, armed masked
    robbery as a juvenile, possession with intent to distribute
    1
    For a detailed description of the investigation of the
    Hinton laboratory, the indictment of Annie Dookhan, and
    Dookhan's guilty pleas, see Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    467 Mass. 336
    , 337-342 (2014).
    3
    marijuana and "crack" cocaine on June 21, 2006 (No. 0615CR4295)
    (the 2006 drug charges), and possession with intent to
    distribute a class B substance on July 29, 2007 (No.
    0715CR005623) (the 2007 drug charges),2 thus subjecting him to
    enhanced sentencing as an armed career criminal under G. L.
    c. 269, § 10G(c) (the ACC offense).
    On March 4, 2011, while the defendant was out on bail on
    the gun charges, the police executed a search warrant in the
    third-floor apartment in Brockton where he was living with his
    mother, her boy friend, and his younger brothers.     During the
    search, police found what they believed to be cocaine residue in
    an area in the defendant's bedroom that suggested drugs were
    being prepared for packaging and sale.    They also found fifteen
    bags of suspected marijuana and nineteen bags of suspected crack
    cocaine, as well as a scale, gloves, bags, scissors, and
    numerous plastic bags in the bedroom.    On a tray in the kitchen,
    police found nine twisted bags of what are alleged to be
    Oxycontin pills as well as suspected crack cocaine.    According
    to the police report, the defendant said that if the weight of
    the purported crack cocaine in combination with the substance
    found in his bedroom "was less than trafficking weight then he
    2
    The defendant pleaded guilty to both the 2006 and 2007
    drug charges on September 25, 2007, in the Brockton Division of
    the District Court Department.
    4
    would admit the crack cocaine and the pills in the kitchen were
    his."   The house was within 1,000 feet of a public school.
    As a result of the search, a second set of indictments was
    returned (the drug case) charging the defendant with possession
    of cocaine with intent to distribute, second or subsequent
    offense, G. L. c. 94C, § 32A(c) and (d); possession of oxycodone
    with intent to distribute, second or subsequent offense, G. L.
    c. 94C, § 32A(c) and (d); and possession of marijuana with
    intent to distribute, second or subsequent offense, G. L.
    c. 94C, § 32C.   Each indictment included a count charging that
    the defendant had committed that particular offense in a school
    zone, G. L. c. 94C, § 32J.   The second or subsequent offense
    portion of each indictment identified the defendant's
    convictions on the 2006 drug charges as the prior offense.
    A plea hearing was held on January 26, 2012.   At the outset
    of the hearing, the prosecutor explained that she was willing to
    reduce the ACC offense from a "level III" (three predicate
    offenses) to a "level II" (two predicate offenses), thereby
    reducing the defendant's exposure from a minimum mandatory
    sentence of fifteen years and a maximum sentence of twenty years
    to a minimum mandatory sentence of ten years and a maximum
    sentence of fifteen years.   See G. L. c. 269, § 10G(b) and (c).
    She further indicated that she would seek a ten- to twelve-year
    aggregate sentence on the level II ACC offense and the related
    5
    charges and an additional aggregate sentence of no more than ten
    years on the drug counts.   The prosecutor sought consecutive
    sentences because the defendant had committed the drug offenses
    while he was out on bail on the gun charges.   See G. L. c. 279,
    § 8B.3   For his part, the defendant requested concurrent
    sentences and a reduction in the prosecutor's offer of ten to
    twelve years on the level II ACC offense to ten years.
    Upon inquiry from the judge, the prosecutor confirmed that,
    in the event the judge intended to impose concurrent rather than
    consecutive sentences, she would nonetheless maintain her offer
    to reduce the ACC charge to a level II offense and would not
    increase the ten- to twelve-year sentence recommendation.
    Against this backdrop, the defendant pleaded guilty to the
    charges with the ACC charge reduced to a level II offense.
    The prosecutor recited the facts of both cases including
    that testing had confirmed the nature of the substances
    underlying the drug case.   Certificates of analysis showed that
    3
    General Laws c. 279, § 8B, as appearing in St. 1994,
    c. 68, § 8, provides, in pertinent part:
    "If a defendant on release [on bail or personal
    recognizance] commits a crime, the sentence imposed for
    [that] crime shall run consecutively to the earlier
    sentence for the crime for which he was on release."
    The requirement of consecutive sentences can be avoided however,
    if a defendant is first sentenced for the crime committed while
    out on bail and then sentenced for the charge on which he made
    bail. Commonwealth v. Hickey, 
    429 Mass. 1027
    (1999).
    6
    the contraband had been analyzed at the Hinton laboratory by
    Annie Dookhan, who had signed the certificates of analysis as
    either the primary analyst or the sole analyst.   At the
    conclusion of the plea hearing, the judge accepted the pleas and
    sentenced the defendant to an aggregate sentence of not less
    than ten nor more than twelve years in State prison on the gun
    charges and a concurrent aggregate term of seven and one-half
    years in State prison on the drug offenses.
    Between June, 2013, and January, 2014, in light of problems
    that surfaced at the Hinton laboratory and with Annie Dookhan,
    in particular, the defendant filed a motion in both the gun case
    and the drug case to withdraw his guilty pleas and for a new
    trial.   See generally Commonwealth v. Torres, 
    470 Mass. 1020
    ,
    1021 (2015).   Simultaneously, in the Brockton Division of the
    District Court Department, the defendant challenged his
    convictions on the 2006 and 2007 drug charges that constituted
    the enhancement offenses on grounds that Annie Dookhan analyzed
    the drugs underlying the 2006 charges and another chemist in the
    same laboratory analyzed the drugs at issue in the 2007 charges.
    After a hearing, a special magistrate appointed to preside
    over criminal proceedings in connection with cases relating to
    the Hinton laboratory issued proposed rulings and orders denying
    the defendant's motions to withdraw his guilty pleas in the case
    7
    at bar.4   See Commonwealth v. Charles, 
    466 Mass. 63
    , 75-76
    (2013).    The defendant appealed, and a judge of the Superior
    Court affirmed the orders of the magistrate denying the
    defendant's motions.
    The magistrate found that while the gun case against the
    defendant was strong, the drug case was not.    He reasoned that
    "if [the defendant] had been facing solely the [drug] case,"
    "[t]he defendant may reasonably have chosen to go to trial if he
    had known he had a chance of successfully suppressing the drug
    tests" and that "he could have used information of Dookhan's
    misconduct to impeach her testimony and undermine the veracity
    of the tests that she performed as a primary chemist."    The
    magistrate concluded, however, that "it would not have been
    rational for the defendant to forgo the plea bargain to proceed
    to trial and risk a mandatory from and after sentence" on the
    drug case.   The magistrate acknowledged that "[i]f one or both
    of [the enhancement] charges is ultimately resolved in his
    favor, then the defendant has grounds to seek further redress in
    this court."
    The defendant argues on appeal that because Dookhan's
    misconduct would have resulted in the likely reversal of the
    drug charges, the specter of an on-and-after drug sentence did
    4
    The only evidence introduced at the hearing was the police
    report (included in the record on appeal) related to the
    execution of the search warrant in the present drug case.
    8
    not actually hang over him.    After the initial appellate briefs
    were submitted in this case, the defendant filed a reply brief
    stating that the order denying his motion to withdraw his guilty
    plea on the 2007 enhancement offenses had been affirmed by this
    court, and that further appellate review had been denied by the
    Supreme Judicial Court.   See Commonwealth v. Williams, 87 Mass.
    App. Ct. 1106 (2015).   After oral argument, defense counsel
    further informed us in a letter pursuant to Mass.R.A.P. 16(l),
    as amended, 
    386 Mass. 1247
    (1982), that upon remand from this
    court, see Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    86 Mass. App. Ct. 1114
    (2014), his motion to withdraw his guilty plea on the 2006 drug
    charges, which had served both as a basis for the armed career
    criminal enhancement on the firearm possession charge and the
    second and subsequent offense drug charges in the present
    matter, had been allowed in the trial court.    Anticipating this
    result, the defendant argued in his brief and at oral argument
    that reversal of one of the three original predicate offenses
    underlying the ACC count would render the subsequent plea to the
    reduced charge no "bargain."   According to the defendant, the
    plea would have garnered him nothing, demonstrating that there
    is a reasonable probability that he would have refused to plead
    guilty and instead would have insisted on going to trial.
    Discussion.   "A motion for a new trial pursuant to Mass. R.
    Crim. P. 30(b) is the proper vehicle by which to seek to vacate
    9
    a guilty plea. . . .     Under Mass. R. Crim. P. 30(b), a judge may
    grant a motion for a new trial any time it appears that justice
    may not have been done.    A motion for a new trial is thus
    committed to the sound discretion of the judge. . . .     Rule
    30(b) encourages judges to make such findings of fact as are
    necessary to resolve the defendant's allegations of error of
    law.    The judge is the final arbiter on matters of credibility,
    and the judge's findings of fact are to be accepted if supported
    by the evidence. . . .    We review an order [denying] a new trial
    motion to determine if the judge committed a significant error
    of law or other abuse of discretion."     Commonwealth v. Scott,
    
    467 Mass. 336
    , 344 (2014) (citations and quotations omitted).
    Here, because a Superior Court judge affirmed the order of the
    special magistrate, we treat the magistrate's findings and
    rulings as those of the judge and apply the same standard of
    review.    See Commonwealth v. 
    Charles, 466 Mass. at 75-76
    , 84, 87
    (magistrates conferred with power to conduct hearings on
    postconviction matters and to make proposed findings and rulings
    but ultimate decision whether to allow or deny motion must be
    made by judge).
    "In establishing that a guilty plea is offered
    intelligently and voluntarily by the defendant, the judge must
    ensure that the plea has been made with an understanding of the
    nature of the charge and the consequences of the plea.     Brady v.
    10
    United States, 
    397 U.S. 742
    , 748 [1970].       Huot v. Commonwealth,
    [363 Mass.] 91, 100-101 [1973]."       Commonwealth v. Russin, 
    420 Mass. 309
    , 317-318 (1995), quoting from Commonwealth v. Morrow,
    
    363 Mass. 601
    , 605 (1973).       Where, as here, the plea is
    challenged on grounds of Dookhan's misconduct, the test to
    assess whether these requirements have been met begins with a
    conclusive presumption that the misconduct was egregious and
    that its occurrence was attributable to the Commonwealth (prong
    one), Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 352
    , and then requires
    a defendant to show that "the misconduct influenced his decision
    to plead guilty or, put another way, that it was material to
    that choice" (prong two), 
    id. at 346,
    quoting from Ferrara v.
    United States, 
    456 F.3d 278
    , 290 (1st Cir. 2006).       See
    Commonwealth v. Scott, supra at 346 n.5, 354-355.       Materiality
    turns on proof of "a reasonable probability that [the defendant]
    would not have pleaded guilty had he known of Dookhan's
    misconduct" and that he would have insisted on going to trial.
    
    Id. at 355.
          This analysis requires that we consider the
    "totality of the circumstances" and the "full context of the
    defendant's decision to enter a plea agreement."       
    Id. at 355,
    357.5       See Ferrara v. United 
    States, 456 F.3d at 294
    ("Because a
    5
    In Scott, the court enumerated factors     that may be
    relevant to a showing under the second prong,     but made clear
    that additional factors not identified in the     following list may
    also be considered in a particular case; (1)      whether evidence
    11
    multiplicity of factors may influence a defendant's decision to
    enter a guilty plea, a court attempting to answer this question
    must use a wide-angled lens").   In addition, "[t]he reasonable
    probability analysis must be based on the actual facts and
    circumstances surrounding the defendant's decision at the time
    of the guilty plea in light of the one hypothetical question of
    what the defendant reasonably may have done if he had known of
    Dookhan's misconduct."   Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 357
    .
    Here, the ACC charge with three predicate offenses was the
    pivotal indictment against the defendant.   Plea negotiations
    proceeded on the basis that this indictment carried a minimum
    mandatory sentence of fifteen years and a maximum sentence of
    twenty years.   During negotiations, the Commonwealth indicated a
    willingness to reduce this charge to include only two predicate
    offenses, thereby reducing the defendant's exposure to a minimum
    mandatory sentence of ten years and a maximum sentence of
    of the misconduct could have detracted from the factual basis
    for the plea; (2) whether the evidence could have been used to
    impeach an outcome-determinative witness; (3) whether the
    evidence was cumulative; (4) whether the evidence would have
    influenced counsel's advice as to whether to accept a plea
    offer; (5) whether the value of the evidence was outweighed by
    the benefits of the plea offer; (6) whether the defendant had a
    substantial ground of defense that could have been pursued at
    trial; (7) whether there were any special circumstances on which
    the defendant may have placed particular emphasis in deciding
    whether to accept a plea offer; and (8) whether the defendant
    was facing additional charges and whether the drug charges were
    a minor component of an over-all plea 
    agreement. 467 Mass. at 355-357
    , citing Ferrara v. United 
    States, 456 F.3d at 294
    , and
    Commonwealth v. Clarke, 
    460 Mass. 30
    , 46-48 (2011).
    12
    fifteen years.   An agreement was reached, which resulted in the
    defendant's plea to the reduced charge in exchange for a
    sentence of ten to twelve years of incarceration on the gun
    charges.   That the punishment imposed on the remaining drug
    charges was subordinated to this sentence only further evidences
    that the ACC indictment was the driving force behind the plea.
    In this posture, the subsequent allowance of the
    defendant's motion to withdraw his guilty plea on the 2006 drug
    charges -- one of the two predicate offenses underlying the ACC
    conviction -- on grounds of egregious governmental misconduct by
    Dookhan may have been material to the defendant's decision to
    plead guilty in the present matter.6   To the extent the
    defendant's plea resulted from a desire to avoid the risk of a
    twenty-year prison term, a sentence that would not have been
    6
    We note that a distinctly different situation is presented
    when a defendant's conviction is obtained as the result of a
    trial and a sentence is imposed under an enhancement count that
    includes a predicate offense that is later successfully
    challenged. In such cases, because the defendant has not
    relinquished any rights to go to trial, there can be no impact
    upon the validity of the conviction from an incorrectly included
    predicate offense that is related solely to the sentencing phase
    of the proceedings. In such instances, courts have simply
    vacated so much of the enhancement count as includes the
    offending predicate offense and remanded the case for
    resentencing. See Commonwealth v. Eberhart, 
    461 Mass. 809
    , 820
    (2012); Commonwealth v. Colon, 
    81 Mass. App. Ct. 8
    , 26 (2011).
    See also Commonwealth v. Leggett, 
    82 Mass. App. Ct. 730
    , 735
    (2012) (because judge's sentencing scheme for multiple counts is
    "typically an integrated plan," subtraction of one or more
    offenses may disrupt entire scheme and require case to be
    remanded to trial judge for reconsideration of entire sentencing
    structure).
    13
    permitted after the predicate offense was vacated, the
    defendant's decision to plead guilty was not a correctly
    informed one.   See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Lenhoff, 
    796 A.2d 338
    ,
    342-343 (Pa. Super. 2002) (where plea negotiations were flawed
    from outset by incorrect sentencing parameters, defendant was
    entitled to withdraw plea).   Cf. Commonwealth v. Roberts, 
    472 Mass. 355
    , 364 (2015) ("The failure to provide information . . .
    to a defendant with respect to a matter as significant as the
    possibility of a [G. L.] c. 123A commitment may provide a basis
    for withdrawing the plea, so long as the defendant shows that he
    or she was prejudiced by the omission").    A mistake regarding
    the direct consequences of pleading guilty, including the
    maximum possible sentence of the crime charged, undermines the
    validity of a guilty plea.    See Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 572
    , 576-580 (2001); Commonwealth v. Shindell, 
    63 Mass. App. Ct. 503
    , 506-507 (2005); Commonwealth v. Murphy, 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 57
    , 59 (2008); Mass.R.Crim.P. 12(c)(3)(B), as
    appearing in 
    442 Mass. 1511
    (2004).    These concerns are only
    exacerbated by the fact that the drug charges that were included
    in the plea in the present matter are also directly implicated
    by Dookhan's misconduct.
    The defendant's appeal, however, is premature.     As the
    magistrate made clear, if a conviction underlying the ACC count
    were invalidated, it would provide grounds to seek further
    14
    redress in the trial court.   The defendant has not done so but
    has instead come directly to this court.   Whether the defendant
    would have insisted on going to trial in these circumstances is
    a fact-intensive determination that must in the first instance
    be evaluated in the trial court.   This determination has never
    had an evidentiary airing, nor has the Commonwealth had an
    opportunity to consider the new information regarding the
    predicate drug offense from 2006 and what, if any, other offer
    it would have made.   See Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 355-357
    .   Cf. Commonwealth v. Gordon, 
    82 Mass. App. Ct. 389
    ,
    401-402 (2012) (hearing necessary to determine whether counsel
    adequately advised defendant of deportation risk); Commonwealth
    v. Henry, 
    88 Mass. App. Ct. 446
    , 456-457 (2015) (factual
    development necessary to resolve question concerning guilty plea
    where defendant risked deportation).
    We vacate the orders of the Superior Court affirming the
    denial of the defendant's motions to withdraw his guilty pleas
    and remand the case for further proceedings and findings in
    accordance with this opinion and the reasoning in Commonwealth
    v. Scott, 
    467 Mass. 336
    (2014).
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 14-P-1111

Citation Numbers: 89 Mass. App. Ct. 383

Judges: Cypher, Trainor, Rubin

Filed Date: 5/12/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024