Almоst twelve years after his September, 1987, pleas of guilty to charges of rape of a six year old child and indecent assault and battery on that child, the defendant, Donald R. Thurston, moved to withdraw those pleas and for a new trial. His motion alleged that he had been misled as to the penal consequences of his pleas. Specifically, he claimed thаt the plea
The defendant’s argument hinges on the following language addressed to him by the plea judge after his change of pleas to guilty on both indictments and the judge’s conference with counsel regarding their plea agreement and joint sentencing recommendation on the rape charge: “I have talked with your lawyer and with the District Attorney, and I’ve indicated to them that I would sentence you to twenty years at Concord. Now, under the present procedures, that means you would serve two years.” (The judge then stated that he would also impose, from аnd after the Concord sentence, a three- to five-year sentence “at Walpole” on the indecent assault and battery conviction, suspended with a two-year probationary period, also in accordance with the joint recommendation.) The statement “you would serve two years” plainly reveals, the defendant contends, the intention and understanding of all involved in the proceeding that he would serve a maximum of two years of incarceration on all charges. He asserts that he reasonably relied on that understanding in tendering his pleas, notwithstanding repeated explicit references in the course of the proceeding to his receiving a sentence of “twenty years at Concord.” Therefore, he argues, he should have served only the two years supposedly intended by the judge rather than being continuously incarcerated since September, 1987 (presently at M.C.I., Norfolk). (The defendant does not challenge the exemplary plea colloquy in any other respect, nor does he assert any lack of compliance with Mass.R.Crim.P. 12[c], as amended,
Our review of the record convinces us that the defendant has failed to meet his heavy burden of demonstrating that his guilty pleas were not knowingly and intelligently proffered. We are persuaded that the motion judge correctly determined that the
That claim appears undermined by the ratio decidendi of Commonwealth v. McGuinness,
The defendant’s assertion that Commonwealth v. McGuinness should not apply to his situation because the judge there had expressed his intention after, and not before, plea and sentencing is unpersuasive in light of the court’s citation (id. at 476 n.4) of Commonwealth v. Amirault,
Wholly aside from Commonwealth v. McGuinness, there is no merit to the defendant’s position under conventional doctrine. His new trial motion, like all such attacks on the validity of guilty pleas (including thе assertion that the motion raises such a substantial issue that it merits an evidentiary hearing), is addressed to the sound discretion of the judge, see Commonwealth v. Smith,
Whether an evidentiary hearing should be held on such a motion depends not just on the defendant’s presenting a serious or substantial issue, but also on his making a credible and adequate showing thereon. See Commonwealth v. Stewart,
The motion judge’s dеterminations in this case — that the defendant’s affidavit was not to be credited, that he had not come forward with a credible reason to support his motion, and that he had not presented an adequate factual basis to warrant an evidentiary hearing — were all within her discretion on this record and in light of applicable law. In exercising her discretion, she could take into consideration a number of significant factors that deprived the defendant’s affidavit and underlying argument of probative force.
First, the defendant was exposed, at the hearing on the motion, as having misrepresented his criminal record to the plea judge, to whom he had stated in mitigation (through counsel) that he had no prior convictions. In faсt (as the Commonwealth brought out at the hearing), it was discovered in 1989 that he had earlier been indicted in Pennsylvania for “deviate sexual intercourse” (with a five year old victim) and “corruption of a minor,” had pied guilty to the latter charge, and had been committed to a State correctional institution — revelations permitting a damning inference against his crеdibility and good faith. See Commonwealth v. Pingaro,
The defendant’s almost decade-long — and entirely unexplained — delay in bringing his motion was a circumstance particularly engendering disbelief about his supposed plight. As the motion judge observed, had he truly believed that he had pied guilty in exchange for a sentence of incarceration guaranteed to be no longer than two yeаrs, he surely would not have “waited 9V2 years beyond his alleged understanding of the period of incarceration before seeking relief.” Indeed, the scenario his motion depicts — he pied guilty because of the assurance that he would be imprisoned for no more than two years, those two years went by (while the plea judge was still on the bench) without his being released, but he only realized that he had been denied the benefit of his alleged bargain after serving nine and one-half additional years behind bars — appears to lack even the color of speciousness and would provide
That the defendant was represented by and had the advice of counsel throughout the plea and sentencing process is a specially weighty factor casting doubt on the veracity of his version of events and his supposed misunderstanding, even were they not inherently improbable. See Commonwealth v. Grant, 426 Mass, at 671-672; Commonwealth v. Cepulonis, 9 Mass. App. Ct. 302, 311 (1980); Commonwealth v. Russell,
Further, as to the defendant’s legal representation (which is not challenged as constitutionally ineffective in any respect), his motion is conspicuously marred by failing to include an af
Any vestiges of credibility in the defendant’s tattered argument are dissipated by its notable elision of the plea judge’s most significant words. The defendant totally ignores the critical phrase “under the present procedures,” used in the midst of the judge’s stating his intention to sentence the defendant on the rape conviction “to twenty years at Concord” while specifying that the suspended sentence on the assault and battery conviction would be “at Walpole.” As the motion judge recognized, there is little doubt that the experienced plea judge’s statement was intended, and was understood by all at the time, to mean that he was imposing a so-called “Concord sentence” on the rape conviction and that the reference to serving two years related not to a prediction of the maximum duration of the defendant’s incarceration or a guarantee of an automatic release (which a sentencing judge should, of course, never make), but to parole eligibility. See Commonwealth v. McGuinness, 421 Mass, at 472-473; Commonwealth v. Brown,
The Concord sentence was, until its abolition by the Truth-in-Sentencing Act, St. 1993, c. 432, § 20 (see 120 Code Mass. Regs. § 200.05[2] [1997]), a sentencing option widely used by Superior Court judges in the 1980’s, accounting for almost half
Against this background, and in light of the defendant’s many credibility deficits, we find it so unlikely as to approach unbelievability that the veteran plea judge was not acutely aware of the nature of the garden-variety sentence he was requested to
The sentencing realities ignored in the defendant’s motion provide further reason to discredit his underlying assertion that a full twenty-year term of incarceration was deceptively and unfairly thrust upon him in 1987. As just discussed, in the normal course of events he would have been eligible for, and typically would have been granted, pаrole after serving only two years, assuming good behavior. He did not, however, then receive, and has not since received, parole, for reasons he fails to describe and which he cannot justly attribute to the plea judge. (The Commonwealth argued to the motion judge and here that the 1989 discovery of the defendant’s unrevealed prior conviction fоr a similar type of offense in Pennsylvania was at least a probable basis for the initial denial of his parole).
In the entirety of the circumstances, we conclude that at the time of his pleas and sentencing, the defendant could not have had any reasonable ground or expectation for believing that he was receiving, in consideration of his plea of guilty to a heinous crime, a sentence that gave him a certain release from incarceration at the end of two years. Cf. Commonwealth v. Santiago,
In other words, the defendant “has provided no plausible evidence that, if fully informed, he would have preferred to go, to trial and face a [possible life] sentence if found guilty [of the rape charge]. He has not addressed why he would have benefited from going to trial, and he has made no claim of innocence. . . . He has not referred to weaknesses in the Commonwealth’s case or to any possible defense. ... He was offered and accepted a very favorable disposition of a serious felony charge . . . .” Commonwealth v. Rodriquez, supra at 581-582. The motion judge correctly determined that the record in this case did not justify the vacating of the defendant’s guilty pleas, the convening of an evidentiary hearing, or the granting of a new trial. Her ruling was not an abuse of discretion and did not produce a manifestly unjust result.
Order denying motion for new trial affirmed.
Notes
As to Concord sentences, see 120 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 200.01(2), 202.01 (1990); 120 Code Mass. Regs. § 200.04(2) (1997); Massachusetts Parole Board, A Guide to Parole in Massachusetts, at 14 (1987); Commonwealth v. Hayes,
