State of West Virginia v. A.B. ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                  FILED
    November 18, 2022
    No. 20-0744 – State of West Virginia v. A.B.                                   EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    WOOTON, Justice, dissenting, joined by Chief Justice Hutchison:
    The horrific facts of the instant case make it difficult to look beyond the
    tragedy of baby G.B.’s death and the seeming lack of any defense on the part of the
    defendant/petitioner, A.B., who was G.B.’s mother. Nonetheless, our overarching
    responsibility in any criminal case is to determine whether the petitioner was afforded his
    or her constitutional right to a fair trial, a right grounded in the due process protections of
    article III, section 14 of the West Virginia Constitution. See State v. 
    Thompson, 240
     W. Va.
    406, 411, 
    813 S.E.2d 59
    , 64 (2018) (“A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of
    due process. . . . This is true, regardless of the heinousness of the crime charged, the
    apparent guilt of the offender or the station in life which he occupies.”). 1 In the instant case,
    it is an inescapable conclusion that the petitioner did not receive a fair trial because she
    was represented by counsel with an actual conflict of interest. Whether or not that conflict
    resulted in ineffective assistance of counsel – and after reviewing the trial transcript in this
    case one could easily make that argument – is immaterial, as prejudice should be presumed
    In Thompson, the Court relied upon the United States Supreme Court’s opinion in
    1
    Turner v. Louisiana, 
    379 U.S. 466
     (1965), for this lodestar proposition:
    “‘A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due
    process.’ . . . This is true, regardless of the heinousness of the
    crime charged, the apparent guilt of the offender or the station
    in life which he occupies. It was so written into our law as early
    as 1807 by Chief Justice Marshall in 1 Burr’s Trial 416 * * *.”
    Turner, 
    379 U.S. at 472
     (citations omitted).
    1
    from the fact of the conflict. See Cole v. White, 
    180 W. Va. 393
    , 
    376 S.E.2d 599
     (W. Va.
    1988) Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    In syllabus point two of Cole, this Court held clearly and unequivocally that
    “[w]here a constitutional right to counsel exists under W. Va. Const. art. III, § 14, there is
    a correlative right to representation that is free from conflicts of interest.” 
    180 W. Va. at 394
    , 
    376 S.E.2d at 600
    , Syl. Pt. 2. We further explained, in State ex rel. Yurish v. Faircloth,
    
    243 W. Va. 537
    , 
    847 S.E.2d 810
     (2020), that with respect to an accused’s right to conflict-
    free representation, “[a] criminal defendant’s ‘right to the effective assistance of counsel is
    recognized not for its own sake, but because of the effect it has on the ability of the accused
    to receive a fair trial.” Id. at 543, 847 S.E.2d at 816 (citing U.S. v. Cronic, 
    466 U.S. 648
    ,
    658 (1984)). The vast majority of jurisdictions – indeed, all of them, whether they rest their
    decisions on the Fourth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment, or their own state
    constitutions – agree with this essential principle of law. See, e.g., State v. Duffy, 
    486 P.3d 197
    , 202 (Ariz. 2021) (“The Sixth Amendment guarantees an accused the right to
    assistance of counsel in all criminal proceedings. U.S. Const. amend. VI. Among counsel’s
    ‘basic duties’ is ‘to avoid conflicts of interest.’”) (citations omitted); Hall v. Jackson, 
    854 S.E.2d 539
    , 545 (Ga. 2021) (“Jackson need not show actual prejudice, that is, a reasonable
    probability that the outcome of his motion for new trial or direct appeal would have been
    more favorable to him if Fleischman had not labored under a conflict of interest. Instead,
    prejudice is presumed if Jackson ‘demonstrate[s] that the conflict of interest existed and
    2
    that it ‘significantly affected [Fleischman’s] performance.’”) (citations omitted); West v.
    People, 
    341 P.3d 520
    , 525-26 (Colo. 2015) (“Because of the crucial role of impartial and
    zealous counsel in securing due process, the right to effective assistance of counsel includes
    the right to conflict-free counsel. . . . ‘That a person who happens to be a lawyer is present
    at trial alongside the accused ... is not enough to satisfy the constitutional command.’”)
    (citations omitted); State v. Galaviz, 
    291 P.3d 62
    , 68-69 (Kan. 2012) (“a Kansas criminal
    defendant has a constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel in a probation
    revocation proceeding under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution. This right includes the right to conflict-free counsel. Even
    though the source of this right is not the Sixth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution, cases applying the effective assistance of counsel guarantee of the Sixth
    Amendment can be used to analyze Fourteenth Amendment ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims because the governing principles and policies are coextensive.”); State v.
    Patterson, 
    796 N.W.2d 516
    , 523 (Minn. Ct. App. 2011), aff’d, 
    812 N.W.2d 106
     (Minn.
    2012) (even where defendant waives a conflict of interest, “in cases involving
    successive representation, disqualification may be required if the defense lawyer
    previously represented a state’s witness by assisting that witness in presenting testimony
    before a tribunal investigating the subject matter of the current criminal charges against the
    defendant, and the defense lawyer’s obligation to the defendant at trial requires the lawyer
    to discredit the state’s witness’s trial testimony that is substantially related to the witness’s
    former testimony.”).
    3
    In its simplest formulation, “‘[c]onflict-free representation’ means ‘assistance
    by an attorney whose allegiance to his client is not diluted by conflicting interests or
    inconsistent obligations.’” People v. Rhodes, 
    165 N.E.3d 556
    , 560 (Ill. App. Ct. 2020)
    (citation omitted). Such allegiance to an attorney’s client – and the zealous advocacy to
    which the client is entitled – is consistent with our “institutional interest in protecting the
    truth-seeking function of the proceedings . . . the institutional legitimacy of judicial
    proceedings . . . [and] a concern to shield a defendant from having his defense compromised
    by an attorney with divided loyalties.” State ex rel. Michael A.P. v. Miller, 
    207 W. Va. 114
    ,
    120, 
    529 S.E.2d 354
    , 360 (2000).
    In the instant case, it is beyond dispute that the petitioner’s counsel had an
    actual conflict of interest arising from her firm’s prior representation of one of the State’s
    key witnesses, 2 K.S., inasmuch as counsel had accessed confidential information from
    2
    Although the State had other witnesses, it is fair to characterize K.S. as a key
    witness. No other testimony at trial could have been more prejudicial than K.S.’s emotional
    description of finding the petitioner passed out on her bed, unresponsive, lying on top of
    her dead baby:
    Q.     And would you just tell the jury what happened
    on that day that [baby G.B.] died? What did you see?
    A.     I walked into the room where they all lived and I
    saw [A.B.] on top of [G.B.] and she was not alive.
    Q.      Here’s some tissue, right here.
    Could you see any part of [G.B.]?
    A.      Yeah, I could see her arm.
    4
    K.S.’s file that had significant impeachment value. Thus, there was nothing “theoretical or
    speculative” about counsel’s conflict of interest that would require her to prove its
    existence, 3 let alone prove it by disclosing the confidential information and detailing
    exactly how it would be used to impeach the witness – a truly startling proposition – as the
    State demanded. Further, as noted by the Bar Office of Disciplinary Counsel when defense
    counsel consulted lawyer disciplinary counsel about the matter, the conflict was not
    Q.       And tell the jurors, what did you do when you
    saw that?
    A.      I touched her arm and I tried to see if she was
    moving or breathing and she wasn’t, so I called the police and
    tried to call an ambulance.
    Q.     And did you try to get the baby, [G.B.], out from
    under [A.B.]?
    A.     Yes, but I couldn’t.
    Q.     And did you try to wake [A.B.] up so she’d
    move?
    A.     Yeah.
    Q.     How did you try to do that?
    A.     I just touched her and I said, “[A.B.], get up,
    please,” and she wouldn’t wake up.
    3
    See Syl. Pt. 3, in part, State ex rel. Postelwaite v. Bechtold, 
    158 W. Va. 479
    , 
    212 S.E.2d 69
     (1975), cert. denied, 
    424 U.S. 909
     (1976) (holding, in part, that “one who claims
    ineffective assistance of counsel by reason of conflict of interest . . . must demonstrate that
    the conflict is actual and not merely theoretical or speculative.”) (emphasis added).
    5
    waivable because K.S., who had formerly been represented by defense counsel’s office,
    was a juvenile.4
    Succinctly stated, where an attorney represents to a court that he or she has
    an actual conflict of interest, the court must allow the attorney to withdraw from the
    representation; anything less is unfair to the attorney’s client, whose right to a fair trial is
    at stake. Significantly, in this regard, the vast majority of our precedents which suggest
    that the existence of a conflict must be proved are wholly inapposite to the instant case
    because they involve an attempt to disqualify an opponent’s counsel. See, e.g., Yurish, 243
    W. Va. at 539, 847 S.E.2d at 812 (State’s attempt to disqualify defense counsel); State ex
    rel. Verizon W.Va., Inc. v. Matish, 
    230 W. Va. 489
    , 
    740 S.E.2d 84
     (2013) (defense
    counsel’s attempt to disqualify plaintiff’s counsel); State ex rel. Blake v. Hatcher, 
    218 W. Va. 407
    , 
    624 S.E.2d 844
     (2005) (same); State ex rel. Youngblood v. Sanders, 
    212 W. Va. 885
    , 
    575 S.E.2d 864
     (2002) (same); Michael A.P., 
    207 W. Va. at 116
    , 
    529 S.E.2d at 357
    (prosecutor’s attempt to disqualify juvenile’s counsel); Garlow v. Zakaib, 
    186 W. Va. 457
    ,
    
    413 S.E.2d 112
     (1991) (defense counsel’s attempt to disqualify plaintiff’s counsel). In such
    a situation, I agree that one side should not be permitted to gain a tactical advantage by
    4
    This Court has cautioned that “[j]uveniles, who are necessarily of tender years and
    limited experience, may be unable to fully understand all the implications of, and the
    consequences that may flow from, such a waiver.” Michael A.P., 
    207 W. Va. at 121
    , 
    529 S.E.2d at 361
    . In an attempt to sidestep Michael A.P., the State represented that K.S.’s legal
    guardian would waive the conflict on her behalf; however, inasmuch as the K.S.’s guardian
    was the victim’s grandmother and was herself another key witness against the petitioner,
    any attempt by her to waive the conflict of interest on behalf of K.S. would certainly be
    subject to challenge.
    6
    “taking out” the other side’s lawyer – a lawyer whose client has specifically chosen him or
    her as counsel – without proof that removal of the lawyer is required under the West
    Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct.
    There are also cases in which a disgruntled litigant alleges, after the fact, that
    his or her counsel had a conflict of interest and accordingly a new trial is warranted. See,
    e.g., State v. Jako, 
    245 W. Va. 625
    , 638-39, 
    862 S.E.2d 474
    , 487-88 (2021) (recognizing
    that a criminal defendant has a right to representation free from conflict of interest but
    finding that the record was insufficient to determine whether defense counsel in fact had a
    conflict); Postelwaite, 
    158 W. Va. at 489
    , 
    212 S.E.2d at 75
     (“the evidence in this case, we
    believe, clearly indicates a decisive and informed choice to unify the defense against the
    prosecution along the defense lines of credibility and veracity, giving no quarter to
    admission, defection, or consortium. Under such circumstances, therefore, it is difficult if
    not impossible to perceive how, other than by conjecture or surmise, defense counsel, by
    the dual representation, slighted the defense of one defendant in favor of the other.”).
    Again, I agree that where a litigant seeks to overturn a judgment on the ground – belatedly
    asserted – that his or her counsel had a conflict of interest, it is entirely reasonable to require
    that the existence of the conflict be proved.
    In this case, however, no one was trying to gain a strategic advantage by
    claiming that someone else’s lawyer, or a lawyer who had committed the cardinal sin of
    losing at trial, had a conflict of interest. Here, defense counsel consulted the ethics rules,
    7
    consulted lawyer disciplinary counsel, and determined that she had a conflict of interest
    which ethically required her to withdraw from the representation of her client. The State’s
    demand (to which the circuit court acquiesced) that she prove the existence of the conflict
    impugned her integrity and demeaned her status as an officer of the court. Further, the
    State’s demand that counsel disclose exactly what confidential information she had
    accessed from K.S.’s file and exactly how she planned to use it at trial compounded her
    ethical dilemma in that
    Rule 1.9(b)5 of the West Virginia Rules of Professional
    Conduct has three primary objectives: (1) to safeguard the
    sanctity of the attorney-client relationship and the confidential
    information that is shared by a client during the course of an
    attorney-client relationship; (2) to protect from disclosure the
    confidential information revealed by a client to his/her attorney
    during the course of an attorney-client relationship; and (3) to
    prohibit an attorney from using such confidential information
    adversely to his/her former client.
    Verizon, 230 W. Va. at 491, 740 S.E.2d at 87, Syl. Pt. 4 (footnote added). The State’s
    demand put defense counsel in a double bind: requiring her to disclose confidential
    information in K.S.’s file would breach her ethical duties to her firm’s former client, K.S.,
    5
    Rule 1.9(b) of the West Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct provides that
    [a] lawyer who has formerly represented a client in a matter or
    whose present or former firm has formerly represented a client
    in a matter shall not thereafter: (1) use information relating to
    the representation to the disadvantage of the former client
    except as these Rules would permit or require with respect to a
    client, or when the information has become generally known.
    8
    and requiring her to lay out her trial strategy in advance would harm the interests of the
    firm’s current client, the petitioner. 6
    This Court’s opinion in State v. Rogers, 
    231 W. Va. 205
    , 
    744 S.E.2d 315
    (2013), which at first blush appears to present the same fact pattern as that in the instant
    case, is materially distinguishable. In Rogers, defense counsel, a public defender,
    discovered a few weeks before trial that several witnesses in his case were former clients
    of his office. His managing attorneys instructed him to file a motion to withdraw, which he
    did; however, he
    stated to the trial court that he had not represented any of the
    potential witnesses involved in the Petitioner’s case. The
    attorney also told the court that he had not accessed any
    confidential information involving any of the public defender’s
    prior clients at issue in the motion. Further, the attorney
    informed the trial court that the extent of what he would use in
    cross-examination of [a prior client] would be what was part of
    the public record, i.e., complaints and criminal records.
    6
    It is a troublesome fact that when defense counsel was presented with these
    demands, she acquiesced without making any real attempt to argue her position. In similar
    vein, when the State contended that none of the information contained in K.S.’s file would
    be admissible to impeach her – a shaky proposition at best, and one certainly worthy of
    argument at the least – defense counsel again meekly acquiesced. Finally, when the State
    demanded that defense counsel submit all proposed questions to the circuit court prior to
    her cross-examination of K.S., defense counsel gave up any pretense of a fight; she asked
    K.S. the one single question the State deemed permissible – ‘were you under the influence
    of drugs or alcohol on the day the baby died,’ to which K.S. responded in the negative –
    clarified that K.S. hadn’t been under the influence the previous day either, and then sat
    down.
    9
    Id. at 213, 744 S.E.2d at 323. In short, the attorney moved to withdraw because he believed
    that the motion was required, but he clearly believed that what he had was the appearance
    or the possibility of a conflict of interest, not an actual conflict.
    On these facts the circuit court denied the motion to withdraw, and this Court
    affirmed, holding that “before disqualification of counsel can be ordered on grounds of
    conflict arising from confidences presumably disclosed in the course of discussions . . . the
    court must satisfy itself from a review of the available evidence, including affidavits and
    testimony of affected individuals, that confidential information was in fact discussed.” Id.
    at 214, 744 S.E.2d at 324 (citing Youngblood, 
    212 W. Va. at 886
    , 
    575 S.E.2d at 865
    , Syl.
    Pt. 3, in part). Here, in contrast, defense counsel informed the circuit court that she had
    accessed confidential information in K.S.’s file which could be used to impeach her
    testimony. Therefore, there was no need for any additional proof that a conflict of interest
    existed; the salient facts were made known to the court by counsel and were more than
    sufficient to require that her motion to withdraw be granted. Although this would have
    necessitated a delay in the upcoming trial, it cannot be gainsaid that considerations of
    judicial efficiency do not trump a criminal defendant’s right to conflict-free representation.
    The majority refuses to redress the violation of the petitioner’s rights on the
    ground that the circuit court’s refusal to permit counsel to withdraw from her representation
    was harmless because counsel’s representation of the petitioner did not constitute
    ineffective assistance under the test established in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    10
    (1984), 7 thus effectively overruling this Court’s clear directive that “once an actual conflict
    is found which affects the adequacy of representation, ineffective assistance of counsel is
    deemed to occur and the defendant need not demonstrate prejudice.” Cole, 
    180 W. Va. at 396
    , 
    376 S.E.2d at
    602 (citing Cuyler v. Sullivan, 
    446 U.S. 335
    , 349-50 (1980); see also
    Blake, 
    218 W. Va. at 409
    , 
    624 S.E.2d at 846
     (disqualification of lawyer for conflict of
    interest proper “where the conflict is such as clearly to call in question the fair or efficient
    administration of justice.”); Michael A.P., 
    207 W. Va. at 121
    , 
    529 S.E.2d at 361
    (disqualification of attorney with a conflict of interest evidences an “institutional interest
    in protecting the truth-seeking function of the proceedings . . . the institutional legitimacy
    of judicial proceedings . . . [or] a concern to shield a defendant from having his defense
    compromised by an attorney with divided loyalties.”); State v. Reedy, 
    177 W. Va. 406
    , 411,
    
    352 S.E.2d 158
    , 163 (1986) (defense counsel’s failure to disclose that he was a relative and
    friend of the crime victim necessitated grant of new trial because “the situation created by
    counsel’s lack of disclosure defies its quantification, [and] prejudice need not be shown by
    defendant as a condition to relief. A potential if not actual conflict has been demonstrated
    and thus the appearance, at least, of impropriety.”).
    7
    The test is whether “(1) Counsel’s performance was deficient under an objective
    standard of reasonableness; and (2) there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceedings would have been different.” Strickland,
    466 U.S. at 694; accord Syl. Pt. 5, State v. Miller, 
    194 W. Va. 3
    , 
    459 S.E.2d 114
     (1995)
    (adopting the Strickland test).
    11
    Because the right to have representation that is free from an actual conflict of
    interest is fundamental and structural to a defendant’s right to a fair trial, I would not under
    any circumstances agree to water down that right by applying a Strickland analysis in an
    effort to “save” a conviction. See, e.g., State v. Duffy, 
    453 P.3d 816
    , 827 (Ariz. Ct. App.
    2019), aff’d, 
    486 P.3d 197
     (2021) (“The right to conflict-free counsel ‘is so important that,
    unlike with other Sixth Amendment claims, when a defendant alleges an
    unconstitutional actual conflict of     interest,   “prejudice     must      be    presumed,”
    and harmless error analysis     does    not    apply.’”)   (citation   omitted);    Beard     v.
    Commonwealth., 
    302 S.W.3d 643
    , 648 (Ky. 2010) (“Because Appellant's Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel was denied by the existence of a conflict of interests, and such
    an error cannot be harmless error, the conviction cannot stand.”); Lee v. State, 
    690 So. 2d 664
    , 668 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1997) (“The assistance of counsel is among those
    ‘constitutional rights so basic to a fair trial that their infraction can never be treated
    as harmless error.’ Chapman v. California, 386 U.S 18, 23 & n.8, 
    87 S.Ct. 824
    , 827-28 &
    n.8, 
    17 L.E.2d 705
     (1967).”); Cole, 
    180 W. Va. at 394
    , 
    376 S.E.2d at 600
    , Syl. Pt. 4, in part
    (“once an actual conflict is found which affects the adequacy of representation, ineffective
    assistance of counsel is deemed to occur and the defendant need not demonstrate
    prejudice.”). Refusal to apply a harmless error analysis in this situation comports not only
    with the constitution but also with the common-sense proposition that while in the typical
    case a reviewing court bases its decision on the record, here the issue is what is not in the
    record – what strategies could have been employed, what witnesses could have been called,
    what questions could have been asked, had counsel not labored under a conflict of interest.
    12
    See Duffy, 453 P.3d at 828 (“The central question that we consider in assessing a conflict’s
    adverse effect is ‘what the advocate [found] himself compelled to refrain from doing’
    because of the conflict.”) (citation omitted).
    Finally, the majority’s harmless error analysis is, in effect, the death knell for
    any subsequent consideration of whether the petitioner received ineffective assistance of
    counsel, because the majority has already concluded that the petitioner cannot meet the
    second prong of the Strickland test, whether “there is a reasonable probability that, but for
    counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceedings would have been different.”
    Miller, 
    194 W. Va. at 6
    , 
    459 S.E.2d at 117
    , Syl. Pt. 5, in part. Despite the many indications
    in the record of this case that defense counsel’s performance at trial was objectively
    ineffective, 8 in my view this Court should not attempt to resolve either prong of the
    Strickland test on direct appeal, without the benefit of counsel’s testimony as to what she
    did or didn’t do and why. Miller, 
    id. at 14-15
    , 
    459 S.E.2d at 125-26
     (“intelligent review is
    8
    See supra note 6. Additionally, although the petitioner’s pre-trial motions made
    mention of possible defenses, the stress of poverty and/or post-partum depression, defense
    counsel offered no evidence at trial to support these defenses and was therefore not
    permitted to argue them to the jury. At trial, counsel led off with a “shadow opening,”
    simply asking the jury to keep an open mind because the petitioner was entitled to a
    presumption of innocence. She asked only two questions of the key witness, K.S., and very
    few questions of the other witnesses – and those few questions did nothing but give the
    witnesses an opportunity to reiterate the inculpatory testimony they had given on direct
    examination. Counsel called only one witness in her case in chief, the petitioner’s husband,
    who gave brief testimony that did not suggest even the glimmer of a defense for the
    petitioner and was then subject to lengthy, withering cross-examination about the myriad
    inconsistent statements he had previously given to authorities.
    13
    rendered impossible because the most significant witness, the trial attorney, has not been
    given the opportunity to explain the motive and reason behind his or her trial behavior.”).
    In this case, one reading the trial transcript could easily conclude – as the majority has done
    – that the evidence against the petitioner was overwhelming and that she had no
    defense. What we don’t know, and cannot know on the state of this record, is what
    evidence may have been available if the petitioner’s counsel had not been precluded from
    using it by virtue of her conflict of interest, or what defense may have been raised but was
    not for the same – or another – reason.
    In similar vein, it is impossible to determine on direct appeal the effect of
    what appears to be a Brady9 violation in this case: the State’s failure to turn over records
    of witness K.S.’s mental health examination and psychiatric commitment, and/or records
    regarding an abuse and neglect proceeding. In this regard, I reject any inference which may
    be drawn from the majority’s reference to the State’s “open file policy” that a prosecutor’s
    failure to disclose favorable evidence could be excused by the existence of such a policy;
    indeed, we have specifically ruled to the contrary. See State v. Kennedy, 
    205 W. Va. 224
    ,
    232, 
    517 S.E.2d 457
    , 465 (1999), overruled on other grounds by State v. Mechling, 
    219 W. Va. 366
    , 
    633 S.E.2d 311
     (2006); State v. Hall, 
    174 W. Va. 787
    , 791, 
    329 S.E.2d 860
    , 863
    (1985). Additionally, I reject any inference that the State’s failure to turn over the records
    was a “no harm, no foul” violation because the defense already had them; this is not entirely
    9
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
     (1963).
    14
    clear from the appendix record, and the facts need to be developed in post-conviction
    proceedings. Finally, I reject the State’s unsupported assertion at trial that the records
    would not have been admissible to impeach K.S. anyway – a sweeping pronouncement
    defense counsel meekly accepted without argument, see supra note 6 – as again, this cannot
    be determined from the appendix record.
    We have held that
    [t]here are three components of a constitutional due process
    violation under Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S.Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L.Ed.2d 215
     (1963), and State v. Hatfield, 
    169 W.Va. 191
    , 
    286 S.E.2d 402
     (1982): (1) the evidence at issue must be
    favorable to the defendant as exculpatory or impeachment
    evidence; (2) the evidence must have been suppressed by the
    State, either willfully or inadvertently; and (3) the evidence
    must have been material, i.e., it must have prejudiced the
    defense at trial.
    Buffey v. Ballard, 
    236 W. Va. 509
    , 516, 
    782 S.E.2d 204
    , 211 (2015) (citing Youngblood,
    221 W. Va. at 22, 650 S.E.2d at 121, Syl. Pt. 2). In the instant case, the majority finds it
    unnecessary to even consider the first two prongs of the test because it concludes, in a
    cursory analysis, that suppression of the evidence was immaterial in that “[e]ven if A.B.
    had the records to cross-examine K.S., and that cross-examination caused the jury to doubt
    the reliability of K.S.’s testimony, such doubt would not have affected the jury’s verdict
    because of the overwhelming evidence of A.B.’s guilt as to all three counts.”
    In light of the procedural posture of this case, I cannot agree. Because defense
    counsel simply acceded to the State’s position that all of K.S.’s records were confidential
    15
    and thus inadmissible, counsel didn’t ask the circuit court to review the records or
    otherwise make any rulings with respect to them. Thus, the issue before this Court was
    never squarely presented to the circuit court as a Brady issue, was never presented to the
    court as an evidentiary issue, and is so integrally connected to a claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel that it should be litigated in habeas corpus proceedings, not decided
    on plain error review.
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent. I am authorized to state that Chief
    Justice Hutchison joins in this dissenting opinion.
    16