Telephone conversations with clients are a big part of what lawyers do. But can using a telephone while representing a client go too far? This habeas case presents the novel — but, in the endless quest for efficiency, perhaps inevitable — question: What does the law require when a client on the other end of a telephone hookup with his lawyer is standing before a judge, about to relinquish a bevy of important constitutional rights?
Joseph Van Patten was charged with one count of first degree intentional homicide following a fatal shooting in Shawano County, Wisconsin. One day in September 1995, while he was in jail awaiting trial, Van Patten got a call from his attorney, James B. Connell. Connell informed Van Patten that he would shortly be transported to court for a change of plea hearing. Under an oral agreement Connell had reached with the prosecutor, Van Patten was to enter a plea of no contest to a charge of first degree reckless homicide, with a penalty enhancement for committing the offense while using a dangerous weapon. (Van Patten would later testify that he had some questions about the arrangement which he had been unable to raise in the phone call with Connell.)
At the court hearing later that day, Con-nell “appeared” via speakerphone. Apparently this was due not to any last-minute problem, but simply for the convenience of everyone’s schedules. Connell would later explain that he had appearances in two other counties that day; that the court was holding time for Van Patten’s trial; that witnesses were waiting to know whether they would be needed; and that “everyone wanted to get this matter concluded.” No one asked Van Patten whether he objected to his attorney’s absence from the hearing, or whether he would prefer to reschedule the hearing to a time when his attorney could appear in person.
As the participants huddled around a speakerphone on the judge’s bench, the judge encouraged Van Patten to “take all the time you need to confer with your attorney, and we can perhaps get him on the line in a private place so you could talk to him privately also.” The judge then informed Van Patten that “[ejverything here is going to be on the record.” The court quizzed Van Patten to be sure he understood what was happening at the hearing, including the constitutional guarantees — his rights to a speedy and public trial, to trial by jury, to confront accusers, to compel witnesses, and to not serve as a witness against himself — he was about to forfeit by pleading no contest. Van Patten’s only extended comments related to whether he would be allowed a visit in jail from his daughter. Satisfied that everything was in order, the judge accepted the plea. Two months later, Van Patten was sentenced to a maximum term of 25 years in prison.
After retaining different counsel, Van Patten moved to withdraw his plea, arguing that Connell’s failure to appear in person at the change of plea hearing violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. At the hearing on that motion, Van Patten testified that he had wanted a jury trial but felt “forced” to enter a no-contest plea because Connell told him if he didn’t, the prosecutor would “make sure I would die in prison.” Asked whether at any point during the hearing he asked to speak to his attorney on a private line, Van Patten said no, because Connell told him to “just say yes and just go along with everything.” *1041 Van Patten testified that he would not have entered his plea if his attorney had been present at the hearing. The court denied Van Patten’s postconviction motion. Claiming that he was denied his right to the assistance of counsel, Van Patten embarked on an odyssey of appellate proceedings.
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals analyzed Van Patten’s Sixth Amendment claim as a complaint of ineffective assistance of counsel under
Strickland v. Washington,
Van Patten then brought his Sixth Amendment claim to the district court as a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In his recommendation to the district court, the magistrate judge found that Connell’s telephonic appearance at the plea hearing had been “effective under
Strickland,”
but “ineffective” under
United States v. Cronic,
Cronic,
which was decided on the same day as
Strickland,
recognizes several circumstances where the two-pronged
Strickland
test does not apply, circumstances “so likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified.”
Id.
at 658,
Acting on the recommendation, the district court made two holdings that are difficult to reconcile. It endorsed the magistrate'judge’s analysis that counsel’s failure to appear in person, albeit “harmless error,” was “a violation of Van Patten’s Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel” under Cronic. But the district court also concluded that the state appellate court had “properly identified and applied Strickland,” rather than Cronic, as the appropriate legal framework. (Under Strickland, it seems clear Van Patten would have no viable claim.)
Thus, we must resolve two questions: Did the state court err in applying Strickland, rather than Cronic, when it decided Van Patten’s Sixth Amendment claim? If the state court did apply the wrong law and Van Patten was denied assistance of counsel under Cronic, did the district court err in applying a harmless-error analysis to defense counsel’s failure to appear in person at the plea hearing? We conclude that the answer to both questions is yes.
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), a federal court may grant habeas relief from a state court conviction if it finds the state court’s adjudication of a, constitutional claim “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). A state court decision is “contrary to” Supreme Court precedent “if the state court arrives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law” or “if the state court confronts facts that are materially indistinguishable from a relevant Supreme Court precedent and arrives at a result opposite to [that of the Supreme Court].”
Williams v. Taylor,
The Sixth Amendment’s right-to-counsel guarantee recognizes “the obvious truth that the average defendant does not have the professional legal skill to protect himself when brought before a tribunal with power to take his life or liberty.”
Johnson v. Zerbst,
In deciding whether to dispense with the two-part
Strickland
inquiry, a court must evaluate whether the “surrounding circumstances make it unlikely that the defendant could have received the effective assistance of counsel,”
Cronic,
Considering all the ways he was foreclosed from receiving an attorney’s guidance and support at his hearing, it is clear to us that Van Patten’s case must be resolved under
Cronic.
Thus, the state appellate court arrived at a decision contrary to the Supreme Court’s precedent when it analyzed the case under
Strickland
(indeed, the state court’s opinion never even acknowledges
Cronic),
and the district court erred when it endorsed that decision. Properly analyzed, Van Patten’s claim is not a complaint about his attorney’s effectiveness; rather, it points to a structural defect in the proceedings against him. When a defendant is denied assistance of counsel at a stage where he must assert or lose certain rights and defenses, the error “pervade[s] the entire proceeding.”
Satterwhite v. Texas,
Van Patten does not allege, for example, that his attorney botched his defense through bad legal judgments, or misinformed him of the ramifications of his plea. Rather, the arrangements under which the hearing was conducted, with defendant and counsel unable to see or communicate privately with each other, prevented Van Patten from receiving the assistance that the Sixth Amendment guarantees. However acceptable an attorney’s performance may otherwise be by
Strickland
standards, it is beside the point if the attorney is prevented by the design of the proceeding from providing the full benefit of his skills when his client needs them most. Although the record may make the proceeding appear to have been routine and proper, we cannot know what Van Patten might have done had he been treated like any other defendant with counsel at his side. Under such unique circumstances, a plea cannot meet the constitutional requirement that it be intelligent and voluntary.
See Brady v. United States,
Getting the attorney on speakerphone may have been better than nothing. But the Sixth Amendment requires more than “formal compliance” with its guarantees.
Cronic,
The state argues against applying Cronic here because plea hearings do not involve presentation of evidence and, in the state’s view, simply formalize bargains previously negotiated by the prosecution and defense. “[D]efense counsel’s adversarial-testing role essentially disappears” in a plea hearing, the state reasons in its brief, and thus a telephone appearance is good enough. But the state’s conception of counsel’s role is too limited.
Defense counsel should be fully engaged at a plea hearing no less than at trial because in both settings, “the accused [is] confronted with both the intricacies of the law and the advocacy of the public prosecutor.”
Cronic,
Physical presence is necessary not only so that counsel can keep an eye on the client and the prosecutor, but so the court can keep an eye on counsel. Even if a private line had been arranged for Van Patten to speak with his attorney, we would regard long-distance lawyering in critical-stage proceedings as inadequate to safeguard effective assistance of counsel and the integrity of the judicial process. This point underscores why Cronic, not Strickland, applies here.
Over a phone line, it would be all too easy for a lawyer to miss something. For example, she might prejudice her client by failing to make some important point during the proceedings and later claim it was a tactical decision (in which case
Strickland
mandates a large benefit of the doubt), when in reality she wasn’t paying attention. Or an attorney might realize he had neglected to inform the client of some crucial piece of information but be tempted to let it pass rather than broadcasting the issue to everyone in the room.
Cf. Ivy v. Caspari,
Having decided that the circumstances surrounding Van Patten’s hearing justify a presumption of prejudice under Cronic, we must address the district court’s finding that defense counsel’s constructive absence was nonetheless harmless error.
In his recommendation, the magistrate judge relied on two decisions,
United States v. Morrison,
But
Siverson
and
Morrison
also recognized that harmless-error inquiry would not apply where the denial of counsel contaminated the entire proceeding.
See Morrison,
Although counsel-by-conference call probably could not have been imagined by the Supreme Court in 1938, it is worth remembering that Justice Sutherland in
Powell
— as well as Justice Stevens in
Cronic
more than a half-century later— invoked the metaphor of the “guiding hand” of counsel which a defendant requires at every step. Similarly, we have observed that “[tjhe Sixth Amendment ... guarantees more than just a warm body to stand next to the accused.”
Thomas,
The judgment of the district court is Reversed and the case is Remanded for the entry of an order granting the petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On the subsequent remand to the Circuit Court for Shawano County, the proceedings against Mr. Van Patten can resume with a plea of not guilty in place.
Notes
. The state appellate court did acknowledge that Connell's appearance by telephone violated Wis. Stat. § 967.08, which authorizes some proceedings to be conducted by phone but does not permit an attorney to appear by phone at a plea hearing. But the court said this "procedural” violation was "harmless error.”
. The stale argues that because the Supreme Court has never decided a case involving counsel’s participation in a plea hearing by telephone, the state appellate court's application of
Strickland
to this case did not "result[ ] in a decision that was contrary to ... clearly established federal law,” and thus a federal court may not grant habeas relief. This argument misapprehends the AEDPA regime. "Factual contexts of cases may be regarded as 'materially indistinguishable’ because their legal implications are clearly the same, notwithstanding that the facts themselves are significantly different.” Randy Hertz & James S. Liebman, Federal Habeas Corpus Practice And Procedure 1439 n. 24 (4th ed.2001) (citing
Ramdass v. Angelone,
. At the plea hearing, the judge instructed the defendant: "Mr. Van Patten, we are going to put your attorney on the speakerphone, so I want you standing up a little closer to make sure he can hear you. I think you will be able to hear him, but sometimes they cannot hear you.”
. Even if we assume that busy attorneys never do such things during conference calls with their clients, what might we be asked to accept next? Offshore defense-attorney call centers? Letting the defendant confer with counsel via Blackberry?
