The Sixth Amendment guarantees a mentally competent defendant the right to represent himself in a criminal trial, no matter how foolish that choice may seem. Faretta v. California,
Petitioner-appellant Rashaad Imani tried to exercise his right to represent
I. Factual and Procedural Background
In 2006, petitioner Rashaad Imani and his cousin, Raziga Imani, were charged with robbing a bank in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. (We refer to petitioner Ra-shaad Imani simply as “Imani.”) While fleeing the police after the robbery, a robber forced a driver to give him a ride. Police later recovered Imani’s fingerprints from the car’s door handle, аnd the driver identified Imani, first in a photo array and later in court at a preliminary hearing. Prosecutors charged Imani with armed robbery and possession of a firearm by a felon. Raziga Imani was also charged. Shortly before trial he pled guilty, and he then testified against Imani at trial.
Before trial, Imani’s lawyer moved to suppress the driver’s identification, arguing that it had been tainted by a television news rеport about the robbery. After the court denied the motion, Imani invoked his right to represent himself. He said he was not satisfied with his lawyer, who had not shown a recording of the television news report to the driver at the suppression hearing. Imani said his lawyer’s representation of him at the hearing gave him doubts about the lawyer’s ability to represent him “well enough” at trial. Imani also said he was not satisfied with his lаwyer’s efforts to investigate ■ the fingerprint evidence against him. Imani acknowledged that he might not be as “eloquent in speech” as his lawyer, but he said he had “been dealing with this case for over a year now” and knew how to express himself well. Imani added, “ain’t nobody going to represent myself better than me.”
After Imani explained his reasons for choosing to represent himself, the judge asked: “What dо you want to say to me to convince me that you’re competent to represent yourself?” Imani said he had been “working on this for 13 months,” but the judge dismissed Imani’s work on his case as “irrelevant and unconvincing.” The judge then directed Imani to focus on his “formal education.” Imani said that he had a tenth-grade education, that he read at a college level, and that he had appearеd in court for at least five previous criminal matters, although he was represented by lawyers in those cases.
The judge said Imani could not represent himself, treating the matter as a request that required the judge’s permission. The judge said that Imani did not have a “sufficiently rational basis” to justify his decision. He described Imani’s decision as “a flippant short term or immature decision” that should not be given effеct, and he described Imani’s reasons for wanting to represent himself as “episodic driven,” stemming from his loss of the suppression motion. The judge also cited the need to keep the trial on schedule and the increased difficulty of preparing for what he then expected to be a two-defendant trial. At that time, however, there were still four weeks until the trial was scheduled to begin, and Imani said that he had no problem with the trial date. The judge said that, upon a further request, he would reconsid
The case proceeded to trial. Imani was represented by counsel and was found guilty. On direct appeal, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals reversed the conviction and ordered a new trial because Imani had not been allowed to represent himself. State v. Imani,
The Wisconsin Supreme Court reversed the appellate court and affirmed Imani’s conviction. The Supreme Court found that while the trial court did not conduct the full colloquy required by Klessig, the trial court had properly determined that Imani “did not make a deliberate choice to proceed without counsel” and “was unaware of the difficulties and disadvantages of self-representation.” State v. Imani,
Imani then filed a petition in federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court cоncluded that the state court finding that Imani was not competent to represent himself “would appeal' to violate the right to self-representation found in Faretta.” Imani v. Pollard,
II. Analysis
Where state courts have rejected a prisoner’s federal constitutional claim on the merits, a federal court may not grant a writ of habeas corpus on that claim unless the state court decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). This standard gives state courts “deference and latitude.” Harrington v. Richter,
Even under this demanding standard, Imani is entitled to federal habeas corpus relief. The Wisconsin Supreme Court decision was flatly contrary to Faretta and its progeny in three distinct ways. First,
A. Knowing and Voluntary Waiver
By invoking his Faretta right, an accused simultaneously exercises his right to represent himself and waives his right to counsel. Faretta is therefore challenging for trial courts to administer. Self-representation is a Sixth Amendment right, and a trial court may not deny its timely exercise by a competent defendant. Faretta,
Supreme Court decisions make clear both а trial court’s duty to warn but also the narrow limits on its power to prevent exercise of the right of self-representation. The Court acknowledged in Faretta that “the right of an accused to conduct his own defense seems to cut against the grain of this Court’s decisions holding that the Constitution requires that no accused can be convicted and imprisoned unless he has been accorded the right to the аssistance of counsel.”
Here, the Wisconsin Supreme Court transformed the requirement of knowing аnd voluntary waiver from a duty of the trial judge into a burden on the accused. If a trial court’s inquiry does not demonstrate that an accused’s choice was knowing and voluntary, the court held, “the court cannot permit the defendant to represent himself.” Imani,
B. Reason for Invoking Right to Self-Representation
The state trial court also denied Imani his right to represent himself because, it concluded, he was making a decision without a “sufficiently rational basis,” driven by his momentary frustration with counsel at the suppression hearing. The Wisconsin Supreme Court agreed that Imani had not made a “dеliberate” choice to represent himself. Imani,
Faretta recognized a defendant’s right to represent himself even though it is “undeniable that in most criminal prosecutions defendants could better defend with counsel’s guidance than by their own unskilled efforts.”
Only in rare cases will a trial judge view a defendant’s choice to represent himself as anything other than foolish or rash. A judge does not violate a defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights by explaining the risks to the defendant in detail and then giving him time to think it over before the defendant (but not the judge) makes the final decision. Wisconsin’s required colloquy serves precisely this purpose. See State v. Klessig,
The Wisconsin Supreme Court’s holding that Imani was not competent to represent himself at trial was also contrary to Faretta, There was no relevant difference bеtween Faretta’s and Imani’s competence to represent themselves at trial. Faretta had a high school education, was literate, and was able to understand the trial judge’s warnings about what he was getting himself into. Faretta,
The trial judge actually held Imani to a standard that required him to have prior criminal trial experience. In denying Imam’s invocation of his right, the trial judge said: “So while [Imani] has some observational experience with the criminal court system, it hasn’t been presented to me that he has any experience actually conducing proceedings like a criminal court trial.”
Imani оbviously did not have such experience, but the court was applying the wrong legal standard, flatly contrary to Faretta, where the Court explained: “We need make no assessment of how well or poorly Faretta had mastered the intricacies of the hearsay rule and the [state law] provisions that govern challenges of potential jurors on voir dire. For his technical legal knowledge, аs such, was not relevant to an assessment of his knowing exercise of the right to defend himself.”
The Wisconsin Supreme Court treated the issue of competence as one of fact, see Imani,
There is a narrow class of cases in which a defendant may not be competent to represent himself at trial, but there is no evidence of such circumstances here. The United States Supreme Court has explained that a “right of self-representation at trial will not affirm the dignity of a defendant who lacks the mental capaсity to conduct his defense without the assistance of counsel.” Indiana v. Edwards,
It is also true that in Godinez v. Moran,
Finally, the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s conclusion that the trial court did not err by taking “into consideration the trial schedule when determining whether Imani was competent to proceed pro se” was also contrary to Faretta. See Imani,
Imani’s conviction cannot stand because the Wisconsin state сourts’ denial of his Sixth Amendment right to represent himself was contrary to and an unreasonable application of binding Supreme Court precedent. The denial of that right is not subject to harmless error analysis, McKaskle v. Wiggins,
Notes
. After denying Imam’s invocation of his right, the trial judge sаid, "Now, I’m willing to hear the motion again. It may at some point be permitted, but it is going to have to be in a context where I know the trial date is not going to be jeopardized.” The state argues that Imam’s failure to act on the trial court’s invitation to renew his motion indicates that his initial decision was rash and hasty. The decision might have been rash, hasty, or foolish as a matter of fact, but that makes no diffеrence as a matter of law. A court may not deny a defendant his right to represent himself because the choice is rash, hasty, or foolish. In the end, the choice is the defendant’s, no matter how foolish it is. Faretta,
. The standard of competence applied by the Wisconsin courts here was much more demanding, and the conflict with Faretta much clearer, than in Brooks v. McCaughtry,
