Sippel, Gregory Scott ( 2024 )


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  •        In the Court of Criminal
    Appeals of Texas
    ════════════════
    Nos. WR-93,347-02, WR-93,347-03
    ════════════════
    EX PARTE GREGORY SCOTT SIPPEL,
    Applicant
    ═══════════════════════════════════════
    On Applications for Writs of Habeas Corpus
    In Cause Nos. 1430076-A and 1430077-A
    In the 180th District Court
    Harris County
    ═══════════════════════════════════════
    YEARY, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
    In July of 2014, Applicant pled guilty to two second-degree felony
    drug offenses: (1) possession with intent to deliver “a material,
    compound, mixture, [or] preparation containing not more than 15
    milligrams of dihydrocodeinone (hydrocodone) per dosage unit, with one
    or more active nonnarcotic ingredients in recognized therapeutic
    SIPPEL – 2
    amounts, weighing at least 28 grams but less than 200 by aggregate
    weight, including any adulterants and dilutants”; and (2) possession
    with intent to deliver 4-200 grams of heroin. 1 In accordance with his plea
    agreements, the convicting court sentenced Applicant to six years’
    imprisonment for both offenses, to run concurrently. At the time of his
    plea, no laboratory testing of the substances in Applicant’s possession
    had occurred.
    A month after Applicant’s plea, in August of 2014, the Harris
    County Institute of Forensic Sciences (HCIFS) issued its laboratory
    analysis of the evidence in Applicant’s cases. The report indicates the
    presence of no hydrocodone but approximately 0.44 grams of
    Alprazolam, a different Penalty Group 3 controlled substance, 2 and less
    than one gram of heroin. These results were not shared with Applicant
    until nearly eight years after his plea, when the Harris County District
    Attorney sent Applicant a notice of the variance between his charges
    and the lab results.
    1 See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE §§ 481.104(a)(4) (designating as a
    Penalty Group 3 controlled substance “a material, compound, mixture, or
    preparation containing limited quantities of the following narcotic drugs or any
    of their salts: . . . not more than 15 milligrams [of dihydrocodeinone
    (hydrocodone)] per dosage unit, with one or more active, nonnarcotic
    ingredients in recognized therapeutic amounts”), 481.114(c) (establishing
    possession with intent to deliver “28 grams or more but less than 200 grams”
    of a Penalty Group 3 or 4 controlled substance as a second-degree felony); TEX.
    HEALTH & SAFETY CODE §§ 481.102(2) (designating heroin as a Penalty Group
    1 controlled substance), 481.112(d) (establishing possession with intent to
    deliver “four grams or more but less than 200 grams” of a Penalty Group 1
    controlled substance as a first-degree felony).
    2 See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 481.104(a)(2) (designating
    Alprazolam as a Penalty Group 3 controlled substance).
    SIPPEL – 3
    With the assistance of counsel, Applicant filed the instant
    applications for writs of habeas corpus in September of 2023. In his -02
    writ application, challenging his possession with intent to deliver the
    hydrocodone conviction, Applicant alleges: (1) that his plea was
    involuntary because “lab reports disclosed after his plea indicate [that]
    Applicant did not possess the controlled substance hydrocodone”; and (2)
    for the same reason, that he is actually innocent. In his -03 writ
    application, challenging his possession with intent to deliver heroin
    conviction, Applicant argues that his plea was involuntary because
    “Applicant could not have made a voluntary and intelligent choice
    among alternative courses of action because he did not know that he
    only possessed a trace amount of [heroin], not 4 grams or more.” The
    Court agrees that Applicant’s pleas were involuntary, and grants him
    relief from both of his convictions under Ex parte Mable, 
    443 S.W.3d 129
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). Majority Opinion at 2.
    I. INVOLUNTARY PLEA
    For reasons I have often explained, I would not grant any
    applicant relief under Mable, because Mable was wrongly decided and
    should be overruled. 3 Applicant waived indictment and pled guilty when
    3 See Ex parte Warfield, 
    618 S.W.3d 69
    , 72–73 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021)
    (Yeary, J., concurring) (“Mable should be overruled. As Judge Keasler aptly
    explained in his concurring opinion in Saucedo, so long as an accused enters a
    guilty plea with an awareness of what he does not know, it cannot be said that
    he pled involuntarily.”) (citing Ex parte Saucedo, 
    576 S.W.3d 712
    , 719 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2019) (Keasler, J., concurring)); Ex parte Hooper, 
    685 S.W.3d 152
    ,
    155 (Tex. Crim. App. 2024) (Yeary, J., dissenting) (“I reaffirm my belief today
    that this Court should overrule Mable because it stands for the erroneous
    proposition that subsequent factual developments, without any ‘suggestion
    that [the applicant] was fraudulently misled or coerced into pleading guilty or
    SIPPEL – 4
    neither he nor the State knew what testing of the evidence in his cases
    might reveal. This “ignorance of facts he ‘knew . . . he did not know’”
    does not now, retroactively, render his pleas involuntary. Ex parte
    Saucedo, 
    576 S.W.3d 712
    , 719 (Tex. Crim. App. 2019) (Keasler, J.,
    concurring) (quoting Ex parte Palmberg, 
    491 S.W.3d 804
    , 810 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2016)). Moreover, there is no evidence that Applicant’s pleas
    were involuntary at the time he made them—i.e., there is no evidence
    that he was “fraudulently misled or coerced into pleading guilty or that
    his plea counsel was ineffective.” Id. at 721 (Keasler, J., concurring). I
    would not grant Applicant relief from either of his convictions on the
    ground of involuntary plea. 4
    II. DUE PROCESS AND DUE COURSE OF LAW
    My quarrel with Mable aside, I have sometimes agreed that
    applicants in similar cases may be entitled to post-conviction relief on
    grounds of due process and due course of law. As I wrote in Ex parte
    Ohlemacher:
    When undisputed new facts that were inaccessible to both
    parties at the time of a trial or plea irrefutably demonstrate
    that an Applicant is not guilty of the offense for which a
    judgment of conviction has been entered, the right to due
    that [her] plea counsel was ineffective[,]’ may retroactively render an
    applicant’s plea of guilty involuntary”) (quoting Saucedo, 
    576 S.W.3d at 721
    (Keasler, J., concurring)).
    4  Nor was Applicant’s plea with respect to his hydrocodone charge
    involuntary simply because he possessed a different Penalty Group 3
    controlled substance than the one that he pled guilty to possessing. Ex parte
    Broussard, 
    517 S.W.3d 814
    , 820 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (“[G]uilty pleas that
    are otherwise valid do not become invalid merely because laboratory tests
    determine the defendant was carrying a different illicit substance.”).
    SIPPEL – 5
    process and due course of law are implicated. But for the
    inaccessibility of those newly discovered facts, a rational
    jury or judge would not have entered either a finding or a
    judgment of guilt.
    
    666 S.W.3d 528
    , 528 (Tex. Crim. App. 2023) (Yeary, J., concurring).
    Thus, when subsequent analysis of the evidence in a controlled
    substance case proves that the applicant should have been convicted
    only of a different offense, due process demands that the applicant’s
    false judgment be corrected. I would not rule out that Applicant may
    ultimately be entitled to this form of relief in either of these cases. But
    I believe remand to develop the record is necessary before the Court can
    confidently determine whether Applicant is entitled to any relief.
    III. REMAND
    The current state of the record in these cases give me pause. I am
    particularly disturbed by the fact that Applicant pled guilty to
    possessing a minimum of 28 grams of hydrocodone when the laboratory
    testing apparently shows that he possessed less than one gram of a
    different Penalty Group 3 controlled substance. Almost as disturbing is
    the fact that Applicant pled guilty to possessing at least four grams of
    heroin when the lab testing now shows he possessed less than one gram
    of that substance. As the ultimate fact-finder in these circumstances,
    the Court should be extremely interested in determining how these
    kinds of mistakes, if they were truly mistakes, happened. To do that, I
    would remand this application to the habeas court with instructions to
    make supplemental findings and conclusions with respect to the
    following questions:
    •   How, and by whom, was the substance in cause number
    SIPPEL – 6
    1430076 initially determined to be hydrocodone? How was
    that substance initially determined to weigh “at least 28
    grams but less than 200 grams” by aggregate weight?
    •   How, and by whom, was the substance in cause number
    1430077 initially determined to be heroin? How was that
    substance initially determined to weigh “four grams or more
    but less than 200 grams” by aggregate weight?
    •   Was all of the evidence that was suspected to be, or suspected
    to contain, illicit substances in these cases delivered to the
    HCIFS for analysis, or was any portion of the evidence
    retained by the arresting agency?
    •   The HCIFS laboratory report indicates that Items 1A1, 1AA,
    and 1B1 were not analyzed. Why were these items not
    analyzed? What assurance is there that these items do not
    contain any controlled substances?
    •   The HCIFS laboratory report indicates that Item 2 was a
    “Ziplock bag containing (63) blue” tablets. The report states
    that “A hypergeometric sampling plan was used for the
    analysis of Item 2. The sampling plan provides a 95%
    confidence that at least 75% of the 63 tablets showed no
    compound confirmed by standard procedures.” What
    assurance does this result provide that the remaining 25%,
    (or sixteen) of the 63 tablets do not contain any controlled
    substances?
    •   According to the current record, HCIFS issued its laboratory
    report on August 6, 2014, but the results of that report were
    not disclosed to Applicant until the Harris County District
    Attorney’s letter, dated April 7, 2022. What, if any, reason
    justifies the nearly eight-year delay in disclosing this, at
    least, apparently exculpatory evidence to Applicant?
    Answers to these questions must be sought and must be obtained.
    Without them, how can we have confidence that what we are presented
    SIPPEL – 7
    with today is accurate? The distinctions between what Applicant was
    charged with and convicted of, on his own plea, versus what we are now
    told was the case are enormous. If the original charges were mistaken,
    we must know how and why such errors could have occurred. Also, it
    should go without saying that someone should be held accountable for
    errors of this magnitude. On the other hand, because the distinctions
    are so great, and in light of the fact that this is now ten years after
    Applicant entered his pleas, I am left with questions about whether
    there might exist some reasonable explanation for the discrepancies we
    are today presented with that might ultimately justify the Court
    denying relief on Applicant’s claims.
    Without answers to these questions, the record, in my view, is
    insufficiently complete to determine whether Applicant is or is not
    entitled to relief.
    I respectfully dissent.
    FILED:                                       August 21, 2024
    PUBLISH
    

Document Info

Docket Number: WR-93,347-02

Filed Date: 8/21/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/29/2024