Aрpellant Dra'Kease D. Hall appeals from the denial by the trial court of a pro se petition for a writ of error coram nobis. In January 2012, Hall pled guilty to first-degree murder and criminal attempt to commit first-degree murder and was sentenced to an aggregate term of 600 months' imprisonment.
In his petition for coram nobis relief filed in the trial court, Hall alleged that the prosecutor and an investigator had coerced two witnesses to implicate Hall in the crimes. Hall attached to his pro se petition affidavits executed by Terrance Lang and Jasper Goodwin in support of his allegation. In their affidavits, both Lang and Goodwin recanted what their testimony would have been if Hall had gone to trial and stated that they had been coerced into implicating Hall with threats of being subjected to the death penalty. Furthermore, both Lang and Goodwin now exonеrate Hall in the crimes for which he has been convicted.
In this appeal, Hall raises the same claim of witness coercion raised below, but he adds the following allegations: (1) that the prosecutor violatеd Brady v. Maryland ,
The standard of review of an order entered by the trial court on a petition for writ of error coram nobis is whether the trial court abused its discretion in granting or denying the writ. Smith v. State ,
We first note that Hall has raised allegations on appeal that were not presented to the trial court in his coram nobis petition. This court does not address new arguments raised for the first time on apрeal; nor do we consider factual substantiation added to bolster the allegations made below.
A writ of error coram nobis is an extraordinarily rare remedy.
Hall's allegations that Lang and Goodwin were coerced into providing statements implicating Hall in the commission of the crimes do not fit within the recognized categories for coram nobis relief and do not otherwise provide a basis for the issuance of this extraordinary writ. First, Hall does not allege that his guilty plea was the result of fear, duress, or threats of mob violence as previously recognized by this court as grounds for a finding of coercion sufficient to set aside a guilty plea. Green v. State ,
Second, as stated above, to merit coram nobis relief, the petitioner must show a fundamental error of fact extrinsic to the record that would have prevented rendition of the judgment had it been known to the trial court and which, through no negligence or fault of the defendant, was not brought forward before rendition of the judgment. Smith ,
Finally, it is well settled that a claim of recanted testimony, standing alone, is not cognizable in an error coram nobis proceeding. Smith v. State ,
Affirmed.
Hart, J., dissents.
I dissent; the circuit court should have held a hearing on Hall's petition for a writ of error coram nobis, as established by the affidavits attached to Hall's petition. Terrance Lang's affidavit provides that "[the prosеcutor] advise [sic] me [Lang] if I didn't say that Dra'kease Hall and Jasper Goodwin was with me when the incident accord [sic] on July 11th, 2010, that they was going to kill me but if I say that Dra'kease Hall and Jasper Goodwin was with me [the prosecutor] will cut me a deal of a lesser plea." Similarly, Jasper Goodwin's affidavit provides as follows:
The statements I made on 9/06/2010 against Dra'kease Hall concerning the incident that took place on 7/11/2010 on Camp Rоbinson Rd. were false and untrue. I was coerced into making those statements against Dra'kease Hall by [the detective investigating the case], whom [sic] told me that if I didn't help him charge and convict Dra'kease Hall that [thе detective] would charge me with these crimes and make sure that I be given the death penalty. I had nothing to do with these crimes and didn't want to end up in prison for crimes I didn't commit. So I did what [the detective] wanted and made fаlse statements against Dra'kease Hall who is innocent of the crimes he is convicted of.
The circuit court's failure to hold a hearing on Hall's petition was reversible error.
The function of the writ of error coram nobis is to secure relief from a judgment rendered while there existed some fact extrinsic to the record that would have prevented its rendition had the fact been known to the circuit court and which, through no negligence or fault of the defendant, was not brought forward before rendition of judgment.
Hall's allegations of witness intimidation and prosecutorial misconduct are exactly the sort of circumstances against which the writ of error coram nobis is designed to protect. If Hall's allegations are true, it is dubious to suggest that the circuit court would have accepted Hall's guilty plea under such circumstances (or that Hall would have entered that plea in the first place) had they been presented. The majority's intimations that Hall somehow should have known that the prosecution was surreptitiously engaging in thesе tactics (according to the allegations) is bizarre and untenable. Accordingly, I would remand for a hearing on Hall's claims to determine their veracity.
Notes
Hall's counsel had the right to discover the names of these two key witnesses for the purpose of interviewing them in preparation for trial. See N.D. v. State ,
