Appellant, Colie L. Long, asks this court to recall the mandate it issued in 2006 after the resolution of his direct appeal in Long v. United States,
An abridged recitation of the history of this case is necessary to understand the conclusion we reach here.
Litigation over appellant’s D.C.Code § 23-110 motion delayed this court’s resolution of his direct appeal until 2006. During that time, the Supreme Court issued a series of decisions, including Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Appellant himself took note of the applicability of the Apprendi line of cases to his own situation. In April 2001, he wrote to his attorney on direct appeal, Richard Stolker, suggesting that “duе to Apprendi v. New Jersey my sentencing to life in prison without parole is not right (or shall we say unconstitutional). Simply because the enhancement papers (which were the
On May 5, 2005, after appellant’s D.C.Code § 23-110 motion was denied without a hearing, Mr. Stolker filed a brief on appellant’s behalf in this court. The brief cited neither Apprendi nor Keels. Nonetheless, counsel did obtain some relief for appellant, as this court remanded for a hearing on the D.C.Code § 23-110 motion. Long I,
Following further procedural steps not pertinent here, see Long II,
After the trial court’s decision in Long II, appellant’s third post-conviction counsel, Sydney Hoffmann was appointed on January 7, 2009. She filed on Marсh 28, 2012, the motion to recall the mandate currently at issue. The motion requests that this court recall the mandate issued after Long I because appellant was deprived of effective assistance of counsel on his direct appeal when his then counsel failed to present this court with appellant’s
I. Rule 26(b) and “Good Cause”
Anticipating the government’s objection, appellant has also requested that this court exercise its power under D.CApp. R. 26(b) and “extend the time prescribed by these rules to” file his motion.
That appellant has not received, overall, effective representation by his first two post-conviction counsel regarding his Ap-prendi claim cannot be seriously disputed. The failure of appellant’s original counsel on direct appeal to make an Apprendi argument on that appeal after appellant had requested in writing that he do so fell below the standards for effective representation articulated in Strickland v. Washington,
We therefore confront this question: do appellant’s extraordinary personal efforts to assert his Apprendi claim constitute good cause sufficient to warrant the granting of the requested lengthy extension of
“Although we have not squarely defined ‘good cause,’ our cases establish that good cause is to be determined ‘in the light of the circumstances of each case.’ ” Restaurant Equip.,
Generally, an attorney’s mistake of law or lack of “due diligence” will not excuse a failure to comply with court rules. See Lynch,
In analyzing the remaining considerations, we note that the government has not identified any prejudice it suffered as a result of appellant’s untimely filing. Given that appellant stands sentenced to serve an unconstitutionally-imposed sentence of LWOP, our weighing of the prejudice to each party in this case clearly favors appellant. We are also mindful of our preference for decisions on the merits, and do not think that the efficiency of our court system will be harmed by our deciding appellant’s Apprendi claim on the merits.
II. Appellant’s Motion to Recall the Mandate
The proper procedural vehicle under our case law for presenting this
A. Deficient Performance
In order for appellant’s claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsеl to succeed, appellant must demonstrate (1) that the “performance of counsel fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and (2) that appellant suffered “prejudice, i.e., it must be established that there is a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Griffin,
B. Prejudice
Next, we ask whether the failings of appellant’s counsel on direct appeal affected this court’s decision. In other words, we ask whether this court, had it been briefed on appellant’s Apprendi issue,
III. Applying “Plain Error” Review to Appellant’s Apprendi Claim
“ ‘[W]here the law at the time of the trial was settled and clearly contrary to the law at the time of appeal,’ as in this case, ‘it is enough that an error be plain at the time of appellate consideration.’ ” Keels,
A. Appellant’s “Substantial Rights”
To demonstrate success on the third prong, that the error affected his substantial rights, appellant has to “show a ‘reasonable probability' ” that, but for the trial court’s error, appellant would not have been sentenced to LWOP. Ingram v. United States,
This court has recognized that the relevant question in this context, as explained by the Supreme Court in Washington v. Recuenco,
B. The Trial Court’s Findings and the Evidence at Trial
As noted earlier, the trial court found three aggravating factors present in
After reviewing the record as a whole, we cannot comfortably conclude that there is the requisite degree of probability that, had a jury been asked to decide the presence of the aggravating factors, it would have reached the same conclusion that the trial judge reached. In our estimation, reasonable minds could well have disagreed about whether this murder was “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel,” a standard that requires a conclusion that this murder was worse than most first-degree premeditated murders. See Rider v. United States,
In this case, the jury heard extensive testimony about an armed feud between two groups of young men that had been going on for several weeks before Long shot Williamson. The testimony of several different witnesses established that although appellant and Williamson had once been friends and roommates, a falling out between two brothers — James and Tracy Rauch — split Long and Williamson into rival camps. Williamson, and another man, Macellus Thompson, moved out of the apartment that they and Tracy Rauch had shared with appellant, James Rauch, and William Tilghman. Thompson moved in with Tracy Rauch and his girlfriend, while Williamson began staying with his mother. After moving out of James’s apartment, Williamson and Thompson were present on another occasion when Tracy fought his brother James there. Later that day, James Rauch and one of his associates, a man called Peanut, came upon Tracy Rauch, Williamson, and Thompson. Another fight broke out, and James stole Tracy’s vest and phone.
The following morning, Tracy Rauch, Thompson, and Williamson, the murder victim here, went to James Rauch’s apartment, where appellant and Tilghman were present. The three intruders took a television and some coats before “kicking] the phone jacks out” and destroying some video games. Although others disputed his account, appellant would later claim that during the encounter Tracy Rauch struck him with one gun and Williamson threatened him with another. Thompson testified that his ally Williamson had a baseball bat, but no other weapons. In any event, bad blood remained between the two groups of men. Tilghman testified that “if
Williamson not only participated in these conflicts, he was also armed in various ways. There was undisputed evidence that Williamson had with him a starter pistol he sometimes carried. Tilghman also testified that Williamson sometimes carried other “real guns,” including a .38 revolver and “some type of shotgun ... something like a .22 or something.” On the day of the murder, Tilghman saw Williamson with a gun on two occasions, including once, hours before the murder, in the apartment building where appellant, James Rauch, and Tilghman lived. The jury alsо heard testimony from Tilghman suggesting that, shortly before appellant fired his gun, Williamson began to reach towards his waist as though going for a weapon.
We do not recount these events to suggest some post hoc justification for appellant’s actions, but rather to place this particular premeditated murder in context. This was an escalating feud between two groups of young men, both of whom had been armed in various ways throughout. The victim had participated in the conflict; carrying, at least, a baseball bat during a bold and aggressive burglary and possibly threatening appellant with a gun while committing that crime. The victim was known to carry weapons, was actually carrying a starter pistol at the time of his death, and may have attempted to draw it when confronted in the dark alley.
All premeditated murders are to some degree heinous, atrocious, and cruel, but in order to sentence a defendant to LWOP, the murder must be especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel. Rider,
Further, appellant’s crime is not clearly within the class of murders discussed by the Committee on the Judiciary when the Council of the District of Columbia enacted its LWOP statute. Rider,
Having found that appellant would be entitled to vacation of the trial court’s findings on one of the aggravating factors, the especially heinous nature of the crime, we
C. The Fourth Prong of the Plain Error Test
Appellant has established that he was prejudiced by a plain Apprendi error. If he can also show that “the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings,” then this сourt may, in the exercise of discretion, decide to notice the error. Johnson,
In Keels, as in this case, appellant had been sentenced to LWOP by the trial judge before the Supreme Court decided Apprendi. We permitted counsel for appellant in Keels to file a supplemental brief raising the Apprendi issue. In imposing LWOP, the trial judge had relied on three aggravating factors. We were satisfied that one of them — that the first degree felony murder had been “committed while committing or attempting to commit a robbery,” Keels,
Basic fairness thus requires that the trial judge conduct the sentencing of Keels uninfluenced by a misapprehension as to the extent of his eligibility for a punishment as severe as LWOP. See generally United States v. Tucker,404 U.S. 443 , 448-49,92 S.Ct. 589 ,30 L.Ed.2d 592 (1972); In re L.L.,653 A.2d 873 , 889 (D.C.1995) (‘Where a judge, in exercising her discretion, has ... misapprehended the applicable legal principles, we often remand the case for reconsideration under the correct standards.”); cf. (James) Johnson v. United States,398 A.2d 354 , 365 (D.C.1979).
Keels,
In the case before us, the lack of fairness is more obvious than in Keels. Here the jury had not made findings coextensive with any of the three aggravating factors on which the trial judge based the imposition of LWOP. Accordingly, we conclude that the public reputation of judicial proсeedings would suffer if we allowed appellant’s sentence to stand.
IV. Conclusion and Remand
For the foregoing reasons, we grant appellant’s motion to recall the mandate as sufficiently meritorious, and after re-opening appellant’s direct appeal, we conclude that appellant was prejudiced by the ineffective assistance of his appellate counsel. Therefore, we remand for resentencing.
So ordered.
ORDER
PER CURIAM.
On consideration of appellant’s motion to amend the court’s October 24, 2013,- opinion, and Public Defender Service’s motion for leave to participate as amicus curiae and to file a lodged memorandum in support of motion to amend the court’s October 24, 2013 opinion, and appellant’s motion to file under seal the lodged motion to supplement motion to amend the court’s October 24, 2013, opinion, it is
ORDERED that appellant’s motion to amend is granted, and this court’s opinion filed on October 24, 2013, is hereby amended and reissued in amended form on this day of January 23, 2014. It is
FURTHER ORDERED that Public Defender Service’s motion for lеave to participate as amicus curiae and to file a lodged memorandum in support of motion to
FURTHER ORDERED that appellant’s motion to seal the lodged motion to supplement motion to amend the court’s October 24, 2013 opinion is granted, and the Clerk shall file appellant’s motion to supplement motion to amend the court’s October 24, 2013 opinion. It is
FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk is directed to seal appellant’s January 8, 2014, motion to supplement motion to amend the court’s October 24, 2013 opinion.
Notes
. A more detailed account of the facts can be found in Long I,
. D.C.Code §§ 22-2401, -3202 (1989).
. D.C.Code § 22-105(a) (1989).
. D.C.Code § 22-502 (1989).
. D.C.Code § 22-3204(b) (1989).
. Now set forth at D.C.Code § 22-2104 (2012 Repl.).
.In reaching these conclusions, the trial court explained that it had considered "the evidence presented at trial; the presentence report; a letter sent by the defendant’s godmother; and the gоvernment’s memorandum in aid of sentencing.” The trial court also considered appellant’s confession, which had been suppressed prior to the first trial. See Long I,
. Although the government initially noticed before trial that it would seek life without parole on the grounds that appellant had committed the murder while attempting to commit a robbery, it did not proceed on that theory after trial and the trial court did not rely on that factor in reaching its sentencing decision.
. The mandate in Long I issued on December 1, 2006.
. D.C.App. R. 26(b) allows the court to either “extend the time prescribed by these rules to perform any act” or "permit an act to be done after that time expires.” In whichever of those two categories appellant’s motion falls, he is required to show "good cause.”
. The conclusion that appellant’s counsel acted in violation of either their "express instructions" or their "implicit duty to devote reasonable efforts” to appellant’s representa
Ms. Hoffmann, upon replacing Mr. Heslep, continued to seek collateral relief, persuading one member of the panel that considered Long II that appellant’s conviction should be set aside. She filed a motion to recall mandate after collateral relief had been denied, by which time an additional three years had elapsed following conviction. The government argues that Ms. Hoffmann "cannot allege her own ineffectiveness to explain that [further] delay,” and is therefore not in a position to cite the passage of that time without action by counsel as part of appellant’s showing of good cause to excuse failure to seek recall of the mandate in timely fashion. We dо not believe that Ms. Hoffmann’s representation can be deemed ineffective. Because the time to file a motion to recall had expired well before Ms. Hoffmann’s appointment as counsel, the passage of that time while she pressed the motion for collateral relief in Long II did not add significantly to appellant’s burden to show good cause, and no additional prejudice to the government has been suggested. Her representation in seeking collateral relief was of a high order, and her success in securing the recall of the mandate in this complex matter speaks for itself.
. Although this court considered appellant’s Apprendi claim to a limited extent in Long II, the procedural posture of that case, an appeal of the rejection of a collateral attack, foreclosed a consideration of appellant’s claim "on the merits.”
. A court’s opinion can be deemed “wrong” on the basis of changes in the law that occurred pending direct appeal.
. In other cases, this court has first issued an order granting the motion to recall the mandate, and then later issued an opinion on the merits of the re-opened appeal. See Griffin v. United States,
. Tilghman did testify that he did not "know what [Williamson] was reaching for."
. We do not address appellant's “vagueness” challenge to the constitutionality of this factor, see Rider,
. We note the trial court's use of appellant’s suppressed confession in making its findings of fact and conclusions of law in connection with sentencing. The trial court used appellant's confession, at least in part, to reach its conclusion that apрellant actually was the shooter. We observe that there is now substantial doubt that a jury charged with deciding whether aggravating factors were present in this premeditated murder case would be permitted to consider appellant’s confession. Some members of the jury had, at one point, given the impression that they might have decided the specific factual question of whether appellant was the shooter differently, even though it ultimately had no impact on the verdict because of the principles of co-conspirator liability. See Long II,
Although it was admissible at the time, see United States v. Acosta,
Accordingly, we are doubtful that the general inapplicability of the exclusionary rule at sentencing still holds when the sentencing hearing is actually being conducted to prove defendant's guilt of what are, functionally, elements of a crime. Thus, although the other considerations we have explained are sufficient to keep us from concluding that the jury would have found the murder especially heinous, the issues raised by the trial judge’s consideration of the confession further undermine our confidence that the jury would have reached the same result reached by the trial judge.
. At oral argument, the government conсeded that this court could take into account the entire history of this case, as distinguished from limiting our consideration to the proceeding in which Long was convicted and sentenced, when determining whether the fourth factor had been satisfied. As we find it unnecessary to look beyond the proceeding in question, we will not decide whether it is appropriate to look beyond that proceeding to determine whether the fourth element is satisfied.
. The mandatory minimum for first degree premeditated murder is 30 years. D.C.Code § 22-2104 (2001). While this is far less onerous than LWOP, it is nevertheless a very substantial sentence. The dissenting opinion in Long II noted that prior to the first trial Long had been offered a favorable plea agreement.
. Under Keels, appellant will have to be re-sentenced in compliance with Apprendi. See Keels,
.At one point in these proceedings, the government requested that, if this court should decide to remand, we also permit the government to present evidence of appellant's "guilt” of the sentencing factors to a new jury. At oral argument, the government withdrew this request, and requested that we follow the Dockery approach described above. We rely on the government's affirmative waiver and do not address the issues discussed at oral argument relating to such a jury proceeding. We offer no opinion regarding issues that might be raised at a second trial on sentencing factors before a new jury in this case.
