This is an appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Platt, J.) granting the petition of Douglas Ames for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court held that Ames’s plea of guilty to ten counts of robbery in the first degree was not voluntary and intelligent and that Ames had been denied effective assistance of counsel. We reverse.
Because the facts and the procedural background of this case are set forth in the district court’s opinion,
After appeals and a motion to vacate the judgment proved fruitless, Ames petitioned the district court for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging violations of his Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The court held an evidentiary hearing at which it heard testimony from Ames and his trial counsel. Although Ames had been represented by at least a half-dozen lawyers prior to his plea, he testified that none of them told him about the unloaded weapon affirmative defense and that he had no
The district court denied Ames’s petition on the ground that he had failed to exhaust his State remedies. Ames moved again in Kings County Supreme Court to vaeate the 1974 judgment. The motion was denied, and leave to appeal also was denied. Ames then filed a second habeas corpus petition, and, on the basis of the evidence presented on the first application, the district court granted the petition. The court found that Ames did not plead voluntarily and intelligently because he was not informed of the possibility of an unloaded weapon defense and because the trial court failed to establish a factual basis for the plea.
In
Mitchell v. Scully,
We rejected the claim that Mitchell’s plea was invalid, holding that a distinction exists, for purposes of due process, between an element of a crime and an affirmative defense to that crime.
As in
Mitchell,
the indictments against Ames gave him clear notice of the elements of first degree robbery.
We discern no constitutional defect in the trial court’s inquiry into whether there was a factual basis for Ames’s plea. By admitting that he committed each of the robberies with what appeared to be a pistol, Ames established the factual predicate for his conviction of robbery in the first degree. Unlike
North Carolina v. Alford,
Although we assume for purposes of this opinion that the district court was correct in finding that Ames’s trial counsel did not inform him of the affirmative defense, we question the court’s rejection of the presumption that “in most cases defense coun
A defendant claiming ineffective assistance must show not only deficient performance by his attorney, but also “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Strickland v. Washington,
Although the district court granted Ames’s petition for a writ, it did so “with a great deal of hesitation.” If the district court had had the benefit of our decision in Mitchell, we are satisfied that it would have denied the petition, as we now direct it to do.
Reversed.
