Mack Garland and his brother, Larry Garland, were tried together on charges of armed robbery and other crimes. Both men were found to be indigent and were appointed counsel to represent them.
1
They were convictеd and both requested the appointment of new counsel in order to raise a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel on motion for new trial. The trial court denied the request on the basis of its understanding that it was the policy of the Georgia Public Defender Standards Council (“Council”) not to authorize the appointment of new counsel for purposes of appeal. Thereafter, the
*202
Court of Appeals held as to Lаrry Garland that the trial court “did not err here when it deferred to the public defender’s own policy not to appoint new counsel for purposes of appeal,”
Garland v. State,
Appellant is entitled under the United States and Georgia Constitutions to effective assistance of counsel at trial.
Strickland v. Washington,
Under well established Georgia law, appellant was required to raise any issue of ineffective assistance of trial counsel at the earliest practicable moment to avoid it being deemed waivеd. E.g.,
Trauth v. State,
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However, appellant’s trial counsel could not reasonably be expected to assert or argue his own ineffectiveness on appeal.
White v. Kelso,
Appellant does not have the right to be represented by counsel and also to represent himself.
Johnson v. State,
The State asserts that trial courts are under no obligation to appoint substitute counsel to raise an ineffectiveness claim against trial counsel until an indigent defendant such as appеllant shows that there exists some potential merit to the claim. 3 However, it is readily apparent that no such threshold showing of potential merit is required of defendants represented by retained counsel. Imposition *204 of this thrеshold requirement is thus based solely on the financial status of the defendant and creates an invidious distinction between rich and poor.
“One of the principles on which this government was founded is that of equality of right, and this principlе is emphasized in the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Constitution of the United States is no respecter of the financial status of persons, and rich and poor are to be accorded equal rights under it.” [Cit.]
State of Georgia v. Sanks,
The State also argues, as did the dissent in
Kennebrew v. State,
Appellant was constitutionally entitlеd to the appointment of conflict-free counsel to represent him on appeal. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand the case for the trial court to сonsider appellant’s allegation of ineffective assistance under the representation of new counsel. 5
Judgment reversed and case remanded with direction.
Notes
The appointment of counsel to Mack Garland was made December 19, 2003; Larry Garland’s counsel was appointed in June 2004.
Georgia law has thus decisively rejected the position taken by the Council in its amicus brief that trial counsel is not only competent to evaluate the ineffectiveness of his/her own performance, hut is “actually in a superior position to do so.”
In addressing this argument we assume, arguendo, that it was not waived by the State’s affirmative statements to the trial court disavowing the State’s interest in appellant’s request for new counsel. In this regard, the transcripts of both the sentencing hearing and the motion for new trial hearing reflect that, when queried by the trial court, the assistant district attorney made the same colloquial comment, namely, that the prosecution did not “have a dog in the fight.”
The dissent in
Kennebrew
also references an Illinois opinion. While we recognize that the courts in Illinоis place the burden on pro se defendants to recognize and raise attorney error in order to warrant the appointment of new counsel so as to raise the issue on direct appeal, e.g.,
Illinois v. Moore,
In light of the constitutional rights involved, we find no merit in the Council’s policy arguments, e.g., the need for trial lawyers to gain appellate experience, or in its budgetary concerns that it raises as warranting a different holding.
