Bienvenido Duarte is serving a sentence of 180 months’ imprisonment for distributing cocaine.
United States v. Duarte,
Duarte has three principal objections to his lawyer’s performance:- (i) counsel did not move to suppress evidence (including statements) attributable to a search of the motel room Duarte occupied; (ii) counsel did not arrange for Duarte to have civilian garb in time to prevent his appearance at jury selection dressed in a prison jumpsuit; (iii) counsel did not request a hearing under
Batson v. Kentucky,
Consider the suppression question. The absence of a motion to suppress was clear. But omitting a motion to suppress raises questions about counsel’s performance only if there was a basis for that relief. The 'agents said that they searched the motel room with Duarte’s consent. Was there any reason to doubt that he consented? The record did not reveal the answer. Did Duarte give counsel any reason to doubt the agent’s explanation? It is not possible to criticize counsel’s performance unless Duarte not only had, but also conveyed to his lawyer, some factual basis for filing a motion to suppress.
Duarte’s affidavit in this § 2255 proceeding fills out the record. Paragraph 16 of the affidavit avers that “[n]o consent to search was requested. No advice of right to have a lawyer if requested.” Paragraph 29 adds:
On June 28, I met my court appointed counsel_ At this interview I let him know all the issues presented in this affidavit related to my case and the events occurred. I asked him for a Motion to Suppress illegal obtained evidence but he told me that it was a waste of time and a futile action since the Judge do not gone believe my testimony but the detectives’ testimony.
Paragraph 33 of Duarte’s affidavit contains a similar allegation about the peremptory challenge. Duarte avers that “I requested the inclusion of at least one Spanish juror to counsel but he let me know that it would be impossible since the judge and the prosecutor would do not consent to my request beeasuse they did not like Spanish speaking people.” The lawyer’s assumption that the judge would respond to a motion in a bigoted fashion is unwarranted, and an ironic twist to
Batson,
which is designed to detect and exclude such stereotypes in jury selection. Perhaps this portion of Duarte’s affidavit reflects a misunderstanding. Defendants are not entitled to a jury with any particular ethnic composition, so if Duarte was asking counsel to go out and get a Spanish-speaking juror, counsel properly could have answered that the jury selection system does not work like that. See
Holland v. Illinois,
Duarte’s allegations concerning his appearance in prison garb are less clear. He does not say that he asked counsel to ensure that he appeared in civilian attire. The Supreme Court held in
Estelle v. Williams,
Even if the prison garb question could have been raised on direct appeal, it would have been a dubious tactic to raise this single issue, divorced from any ability to examine the , whole of counsel’s work. Presenting a snippet or two is sure to yield adverse decision, which hinders (if it does not preclude) any opportunity to examine the subject on a complete record.
United States v. Taglia,
One other subject calls for brief attention. Duarte contends that the relevant-conduct provisions of the Sentencing Guidelines are unconstitutional. Whether presented directly or via an attack on counsel, this is going nowhere. See
McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
