Hurley Underwood was convicted of criminal confinement with a deadly weapon and of attempted rape, and given concurrent prison terms of four and forty years, respectively. After the Indiana Supreme Court affirmed his conviction,
Underwood v. State,
A woman was jogging alongside a road outside of town. Underwood ran after her, grabbed her around the neck with one arm, and menaced her with a knife held in his other hand, saying, “You’re coming with me now.” He dragged her into the woods, threw her to the ground, and sat on her. She was struggling all the time. He stabbed her right hand, inflicting a severe wound, and punched her in the face, breaking several teeth. The struggle continued. He tried to pull down her shorts and she punched him in the groin, causing him to release her momentarily. She ran into the road and he fled to his car and drove off. A passing motorist, alerted by. the victim, followed Underwood and got his license number. He was arrested and both the victim and the motorist identified him in lineups. Underwood did not testify at the trial or present any other evidence.
Underwood’s lawyer conceded before the jury his client’s guilt of criminal confinement with a deadly weapon, stating in closing argument: “You’ve heard that this woman was confined. I think the evidence establishes the commission of that offense.... Now plenty of evidence with regard to confinement with a deadly weapon ... but I’m looking for the specific attempt to commit sexual intercourse.” The lawyer was trying to enhance his credibility with the jury by conceding his client’s guilt of the offense of which the evidence was overwhelming, and to focus his efforts on the weakest link in the state’s case, the charge that Underwood had attempted to have sex with his victim, an essential element, obviously, of attempted rape.
Underwood argues that it is ineffective assistance of counsel per se for a lawyer to concede his client’s guilt without the client’s consent. What is true, although it really has nothing to do with ineffective assistance, is that a defendant cannot be made to plead guilty against his wishes, however wise such a plea would be.
Jones v. Barnes,
Underwood next argues that his lawyer was (1) ineffective in counseling him not to testify, and (2) actually forbade him to testify and by doing so infringed his constitutional right to testify in his own *475 defense. The first argument has no merit. The lawyer’s advice was sound, not only because any testimony that Underwood might have given would have been discredited on cross-examination — for when first arrested he had claimed not even to have been in the vicinity of the assault when it occurred — but also because his testimony would have been unbelievable even without being picked apart on cross-examination. Apparently he would have testified as follows. He showed up for work one day and found his boss murdered and a dog eating the man’s brains. This experience made Underwood depressed, almost suicidal, and desperate to find a sympathetic person to talk to. Hence he accosted the victim, who far from proving sympathetic attacked him with his own knife; he inflicted the wounds on her in self-defense. No jury would believe such a story.
This discussion shows not only that the lawyer’s advice was sound but also that, sound or unsound, it wasn’t likely to change the outcome of the trial — in legalese, it was not “prejudicial.” The evidence against Underwood was overwhelming and would not have been rebutted by Underwood’s denials. This is so even with respect to the question whether he intended to rape the victim. For why else did he drag her into the woods, sit on her, and try to pull off her shorts? There is no suggestion that robbery was the motive for the assault; the inescapable inference is that rape was.
The more substantial issue relating to Underwood’s not testifying is whether his lawyer did not merely counsel Underwood not to do so but forbade him. A criminal defendant has a constitutional right to testify in his own behalf; it is an aspect of his right to defend himself, a right held in
Rock v. Arkansas,
There is a grave practical difficulty in establishing a mechanism that will protect a criminal defendant’s personal right (that is, a right that is not waivable by counsel) to testify in his own behalf without rendering the criminal process unworkable. It is extremely common for criminal defendants not to testify, and there are good reasons for this, as we have seen. Yet it is simple enough after being convicted for the defendant to say, “My lawyer wouldn’t let me testify. Therefore I’m entitled to a new trial.” That’s what Underwood did. His affidavit, which is the only evidence bearing on the question, states, so far as pertinent here, “I was denied the opportunity to testify at my own trial in that I told my attorney that I wished to testify on my own *476 behalf. My attorney told me I could not testify.”
We agree with the First Circuit’s ruling in
Siciliano v. Vose,
Some courts go further and insist in effect that the defendant have protested his lawyer’s action to the judge during the trial.
United States v. Martinez, supra,
AFFIRMED.
