Who’s on First?
Woodard was indicted in Texas state court for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon, pled guilty, and was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment. Woodard now seeks relief via habeas corpus.
Woodard was indicted for robbing three businesses in the Fort Worth area: a Taco Bell, a Quick N E-Z food store, and a Safeway grocery store. Woodard's attorney, Stephen Maxwell, investigated the Taco Bell robbery but did not investigate the other two. Maxwell testified that he investigated only the Taco Bell robbery because it was the state’s strongest case and the one that it intended to try first. Maxwell advised Woodard to plead guilty to the Taco Bell robbery because the state had an eyewitness and because he thought the plea bargain offered by the state was reasonable.
Woodard did not plead guilty to the Taco Bell robbery but to the Quick N E-Z robbery. Maxwell testified that he was under the impression that Woodard had pled guilty to the Taco Bell robbery. The prosecutor’s files showed erroneously that Woodard pled guilty to the Taco Bell robbery and that the Quick N E-Z case had been dismissed.
The district court held that Maxwell’s failure to investigate constituted constructive denial of counsel and granted a writ of habeas corpus. We disagree. Maxwell’s omissions constitute ineffective assistance of counsel and we remand the case so that the court below may make findings of fact as to whether appellant was prejudiced thereby.
Bad lawyering or no lawyering?
As a threshold issue, we must determine whether the failure of an attorney to investigate the count in a multi-count indictment to which the defendant pleads guilty constitutes bad lawyering or no lawyering.
1
In both cases, the accused is denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel because there is a serious doubt as to the reliability of the conviction.
See Strickland v. Washington,
The
Cronic
Court reasoned that a defendant is completely denied counsel if (1) the “accused is denied counsel at a critical stage of the trial” or if (2) the counsel “fails to subject the prosecutor’s case to
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meaningful adversarial testing.”
The instant case is not like either of the two examples of constructive denial of counsel given by the
Cronic
Court. First, an accused is denied counsel at a critical stage if “counsel was either totally absent, or prevented from assisting the accused during a critical stage of the proceedings.
Id.
at 659 n. 25,
The appellee has the difficult task, therefore, of showing why
Cronic
should be stretched to encompass the instant case. Precedent precludes the appellee from succeeding on this argument.
See Green v. Lynaugh,
A Bad Bargain?
For the appellee to succeed on his claim that the plea bargain is vitiated by ineffective assistance of counsel, he must show (1) that the attorney’s conduct was incompetent and (2) that prejudice flowed from this incompetence.
See Hill v. Lockhart,
The first prong of this test has been satisfied but we cannot ascertain from the record whether the second has been. First, a court generally must strongly presume that counsel has exercised reasonable professional conduct.
Strickland,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
