Case Information
*1 Before: SMITH, CHAGARES and JORDAN, Circuit Judges .
(Filed:May 11, 2010)
OPINION OF THE COURT
_______________
JORDAN, Circuit Judge .
Kirsten Greenaway appeals the judgment of the Appellate Division of the District Court of the Virgin Islands of the United States, which affirmed the judgment of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands sentencing her to twenty years’ imprisonment following her guilty plea to second degree murder. Greenaway contends that she should be permitted to withdraw that plea because it was not given knowingly and voluntarily. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand with instructions to return the case to the Superior Court, before which Greenaway should be given an opportunity to withdraw her plea.
I. Background
On November 4, 1999, Greenaway and three co-conspirators, Eladio Camacho, Ottice Bryan, and Selvin Hodge, hatched a plot to rob Duvalier Basquin, a taxi driver. Greenaway approached Basquin’s cab, representing herself to be a fare-paying customer. Greenaway then instructed Basquin to take her to Bolongo Bay on St. Thomas, where she and Basquin met her three co-conspirators. Greenaway exited the cab and left the scene as Camacho, Bryan, and Hodge beat, stabbed, and robbed Basquin. Basquin died as a result of the injuries he sustained during the robbery.
The four co-conspirators were arrested and charged in the Superior Court with first
degree murder. The defendants and the government began plea negotiations, as a result
of which Camacho agreed to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter under V.I. C ODE
*3
A NN ., tit. 14, § 924(2), and the remaining defendants received plea deals for second
degree murder under V.I. C ODE A NN ., tit. 14, § 922(b). The four defendants participated
in a joint change-of-plea hearing that, according to Greenaway, was disorganized and
confused her. Following a discussion of the terms of the defendants’ plea deals, the
government described the facts of Basquin’s attack. Greenaway rejected the
government’s description and expressed reluctance to plead guilty, stating that “I never
plan to catch no taxi [sic].” (App. at 91.) After a discussion with the Court, however, she
adopted the facts submitted by the government. The Court and defense counsel then
disagreed about whether malice aforethought was an essential element of second degree
murder. The Court properly concluded that malice was a necessary component of the
crime,
see Gov’t of the V.I. v. Sampson
,
The Superior Court accepted Greenaway’s plea; however, it never informed her that a conviction for second degree murder entailed a mandatory minimum sentence of five years imprisonment under Virgin Islands law. See V.I. C ODE A NN . tit. 14, § 923(b) (“Whoever commits murder in the second degree shall be imprisoned for not less than five (5) years ... .”). The record contains no indication that Greenaway knew of this mandatory minimum penalty. The Court sentenced her to twenty years’ imprisonment, *4 while Camacho received five years, and Bryan and Hodge were each sentenced to thirty years.
Greenaway appealed to the Appellate Division of the District Court, arguing that the disparity between her twenty-year sentence and Camacho’s five-year sentence violated her due process rights, that the trial court failed to consider her good behavior following her arrest as a mitigating factor when imposing a sentence, and that her twenty-year sentence violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Greenaway did not challenge her guilty plea in any way before the Appellate Division, which affirmed the judgment and sentence of the Superior Court. Greenaway then filed a timely appeal to our court.
*5 II. Discussion [3]
In the appeal before us, Greenaway’s sole argument is that her guilty plea was not
knowing, voluntary, and intelligent, an issue that she failed to preserve before either the
Superior Court or the Appellate Division. We therefore review for plain error.
United
States v. Goodson
,
Greenaway has identified numerous defects in her plea colloquy that allegedly rendered her plea uninformed and unintelligent. She claims that the lack of clarity regarding whether malice aforethought was required for second degree murder confused her, and that the government’s initial statement of the facts, to which she objected, made it difficult for her to understand the factual basis of the crime for which she was admitting culpability. She also argues that the Superior Court’s failure to inform her of her right to appeal, of the circumstances under which she would be permitted to withdraw her plea, and of the mandatory minimum sentence resulted in her plea being uninformed. [4] *6 We need not discuss each of Greenaway’s contentions at length, however, because we conclude that the Superior Court’s failure to apprise her of the mandatory minimum sentence was alone sufficient to render her plea less than knowing, voluntary, and intelligent.
“In order for a guilty plea to comply with the requirements of the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment, it must be knowing, voluntary and intelligent.”
United
States v. Tidwell
,
Jamison
compels us to vacate the District Court’s judgment upholding
Greenaway’s plea. Without knowing the minimum sentence for second degree murder,
Greenaway could not understand the direct consequences of her plea, thereby rendering it
uninformed and, by definition, less than knowing. The Superior Court’s acceptance of an
uninformed plea constitutes error that is plain from the face of the proceedings. We
*8
further conclude that this error affected Greenaway’s substantial rights because it
prevented her from entering an informed plea with knowledge of the full range of effects
that would flow from it.
Cf. Goodson
,
because Greenaway has established that her plea to second degree murder was not knowing, the Superior Court’s acceptance of that plea constitutes plain error.
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we will reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division of the District Court. We will remand this case with instructions that the Appellate Division return the matter to the Superior Court, before which Greenaway must be given an opportunity to withdraw her guilty plea.
Notes
[1] The Superior Court was known as the Territorial Court at the time of Greenaway’s sentencing. For ease of reference, we identify the tribunal using its current name.
[2] On January 29, 2007, the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands assumed the District
Court’s appellate jurisdiction.
See Hypolite v. People of the V.I.
, S. Ct. Crim. No.
2007-135,
[3] The Appellate Division of the District Court had jurisdiction to hear Greenaway’s appeal from the Superior Court under 48 U.S.C. § 1613a(a). We have jurisdiction under 48 U.S.C. § 1613a(c) and 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
[4] Greenaway also asserts that the Court failed to inform her of the statutory maximum sentence even though the Court indicated that “[f]or Second Degree [Murder] ... the maximum possible punishment is up to life imprisonment.” (App. at 81.) Greenaway is technically correct, in that a court may not impose a life sentence for second degree
[5]
Jamison
had not yet been decided at the time of Greenaway’s guilty plea colloquy on
April 13, 2004. However, the Supreme Court had for several decades required—and
continues to require—that defendants be informed of the direct effects of a plea and have
“a full understanding of what the plea connotes and of its consequence.”
Boykin v.
Alabama
,
[6] It can certainly be argued that a plea that is not knowing is, per force, also not intelligent or, in a meaningful sense, voluntary, but we need not parse the meaning of each term in the test. That the plea was not knowing is alone sufficient to carry the day.
