Lead Opinion
The appellant appeals from convictions and sentences for three counts of lewd and lasciv
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Before appellant was adjudicated guilty of these offenses, his lawyer left the courtroom for reasons the record does not disclose. Counsel remained absent when, after his conviction, appellant was sentenced to fifty years in prison. The absent lawyer took the present appeal. Arguing in appellant’s amended initial brief that his client was deprived of the right to counsel, the lawyer intimates that he left the courtroom because he had another commitment at the time. To judge from the transcript, he did not have an opportunity to communicate this to his client, who asked, ‘Why is Mr. Kimmel not here now, Your Honor?”
A criminal defendant facing incarceration has a right to counsel at every critical stage of the prosecution. Argersinger v. Hamlin,
Sentencing is another critical stage of the prosecution. Mempa v. Rhay,
Nothing in the record suggests that appellant waived his right to be represented by counsel throughout trial and sentencing. No such waiver can be presumed from a record silent in this regard, Johnson v. Zerbst,
Deprivation of the right to counsel at a critical stage of the prosecution can never be harmless error. Holloway v. Arkansas,
The record reflects that counsel was in attendance at all court proceedings leading to the verdict; the subsequent deprivation of appellant’s right to counsel does not, therefore, require retrial. The trial court acted well within its discretion in denying an eleventh-hour motion for continuance: defense counsel was not improperly denied additional time to take depositions of three witnesses already once deposed by the defense. In my opinion, however, we should reverse and remand for reconsideration whether appellant
