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United States v. Taylor
254 F. Supp. 3d 145
D.D.C.
2017
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Background

  • Garfield Taylor ran a Ponzi-like securities fraud scheme (2006–2010) through GTI and GAM, defrauding over 150 victims of more than $25 million and withdrawing at least $2.5 million for personal use.
  • Taylor pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement to one count of securities fraud and was sentenced to 156 months imprisonment and $28,609,438 restitution.
  • The plea agreement preserved Taylor’s right to bring a § 2255 ineffective-assistance claim; a protective order limited copying/transmission of victim-sensitive discovery but allowed counsel-supervised review by Taylor.
  • Taylor, represented by two successive court-appointed attorneys, sought to withdraw his plea shortly before sentencing, then withdrew that motion after sentencing and affirmed the voluntariness of his plea under oath.
  • Nearly a year after sentencing Taylor filed a pro se § 2255 petition alleging multiple instances of ineffective assistance of counsel and sought broad discovery/modification of the protective order.
  • The district court denied the § 2255 motion and all discovery requests, finding Taylor’s claims contradicted by the record and legally insufficient under Strickland; the plea waiver of further discovery also barred the request.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (Taylor) Defendant's Argument (Government) Held
Whether plea was involuntary due to counsel encouraging a waiver of IAC claims Counsel pressured Taylor into a plea that limited his ability to raise IAC Plea preserved IAC claims; record shows Taylor understood and voluntarily entered plea Denied — plea agreement expressly preserved IAC claims; Taylor’s in-court statements rebut coercion claim
Whether counsel’s performance was deficient in advising plea and failing to investigate Counsel coerced/failed to investigate, so advice fell below Strickland standard No specific omitted investigation shown; Taylor admitted understanding plea; strong presumption of adequate assistance Denied — Taylor did not identify what further investigation would have produced or show deficient performance
Whether counsel was ineffective at sentencing for not disputing loss amount sufficiently Counsel should have reduced loss by amounts returned to investors (e.g., SEC numbers) Counsel did dispute loss at sentencing; cited evidence does not show lower loss that would change Guidelines bracket Denied — record shows counsel contested loss; even lower loss would not change the Guidelines enhancement applied
Whether Taylor is entitled to broad discovery/grant of modification of protective order Seeks all government materials (grand jury transcripts, etc.) to search for false evidence or grounds for relief Discovery waiver in plea agreement and plaintiff failed to show good cause for broad fishing expedition Denied — no good cause for expansive discovery; plea waiver bars additional discovery

Key Cases Cited

  • Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (standard for ineffective assistance of counsel)
  • Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U.S. 156 (IAC principles apply during plea negotiations)
  • Missouri v. Frye, 566 U.S. 133 (right to effective counsel in plea negotiation context)
  • Farley v. United States, 72 F.3d 158 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (defendant’s plea statements at hearing carry strong presumption of verity)
  • Daniels v. United States, 532 U.S. 374 (presumption of regularity in judgments on collateral attack)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: United States v. Taylor
Court Name: District Court, District of Columbia
Date Published: Jun 7, 2017
Citation: 254 F. Supp. 3d 145
Docket Number: Criminal No. 2013-0067
Court Abbreviation: D.D.C.