Lead Opinion
Max Weisberg filed a petition for a federal writ of habeas corpus attacking his Minnesota state-court conviction for engaging in sports bookmaking. He alleged that the criminal complaint failed to state the essential elements of the offense and that his guilty plea is invalid. The district court granted the petition, and the State has appealed. We conclude that Weisberg’s 1989 guilty plea was valid and that his attack on the criminal complaint is foreclosed by his plea. We therefore reverse.
I.
In 1989, Weisberg and his brother, Solly Weisberg, were charged with engaging in sports bookmaking between November 13, 1988, and December 4, 1988, in violation of Minn.Stat. §§ 609.75, subd. 7; 609.03; & 609.05. On June 19, 1989, Weisberg pled guilty. The plea proceeding was uneventful, and its transcript is only 12 pages long. In
On September 28, 1989, the trial court commenced a sentencing hearing. The hearing began with a discussion of the presen-tence investigation report. Weisberg’s counsel stated that, upon reading the presentence investigation report, he learned for the first time that Weisberg had a low IQ and that he had been deemed “feebleminded” in 1940. (Id. at B56-B57.) The trial court, in contrast, expressed concern about the report’s showing of Weisberg’s lack of contrition. The court said,
The part that concerned me is the statement that he made that he had absolutely no intention of stopping his involvement in bookmaking and that he was willing to accept incarceration in the future should he be caught at it. Now, that bothered me.
.... The clear feeling of this probation officer is that this defendant just doesn’t feel that what he did was wrong.... But that doesn’t meet the test of whether he knew it was wrong and [whether] he is willing to take the consequences.
.... [I]t seems to me that ... he is willing to take the consequences and he likes doing what he is doing....
(Id. at B60, B63.) Relying on the information contained in the presentence investigation report, Weisberg moved to withdraw the plea. (Id. at 56-57.) The trial court addressed the motion and the issue of Weis-berg’s competence by saying,
I am not prepared at this time to allow you to withdraw the plea on behalf of the defendant. The defendant was before me in this matter and entered a plea on June 19th, 1989. I have the transcript. I specifically recall his taking the stand and his being interrogated by his attorney....
It appeared to the Court that he was aware of what was going on and that he was communicating well with his attorney and that" he did understand the nature of what was occurring at least on that date.
However, in the event that you are asking for a continuance to bring new matters before the Court, I would be inclined to allow you to do that so that you could proceed on any basis that you want concerning bringing information before me.
(Id. at B58-B59.) Just prior to adjournment, Weisberg’s counsel said, “I will arrange for the testing.” (Id. at B66.)
On November 16, 1989, the trial court resumed the sentencing hearing. At the beginning of the hearing, the trial judge addressed Weisberg’s counsel as follows:
THE COURT: ... [H]ave you had an opportunity to go over the P.S.I.?
[WEISBERG’S COUNSEL]: I have, Your Honor.
THE COURT: The last time we met, as I recall, you wanted some time to make some contacts with various people concerning your client.
[WEISBERG’S COUNSEL]: Yes, that’s correct; and the Court continued this matter at my request and again at the request of the County Attorney.
THE COURT: Anything you want to tell the Court at this time prior to the time that I sentence this defendant?
[WEISBERG’S COUNSEL]: Your Honor, I have read the presentenee report and shared it with my client, and I have no substantial objections to that report. I think it’s fairly accurate about Mr. Weis-berg’s background and his employment.
Six months later, in May 1990, Weisberg and his brother were again charged with engaging in sports bookmaking, this time for the period from March 3, 1990, to March 15, 1990. (Id. at B149-B151.) After trial, a jury found that the alleged conduct had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt but that Weisberg was not guilty due to a mental deficiency. (Id. at B22-B23.)
The State then sought to revoke Weis-berg’s existing probation. It alleged the same conduct that had been alleged in the second criminal complaint. Weisberg then moved to vacate his 1989 conviction and to withdraw his 1989 guilty plea, arguing that the complaint failed to state the essential elements of the offense and that his guilty plea was invalid due to a mental deficiency. In support of his motion, Weisberg submitted the jury’s verdict in the second criminal action; a copy of a 1939 probate court judgment, which deemed Weisberg (who was then 15) “feebleminded because of inability to make normal progress in school,” (Appellant’s App. at B27); and a three-page letter from a psychologist addressed to Weisberg’s counsel, which stated that the psychologist had examined Weisberg on October 15,1990, (id. at B31-B33). Weisberg did not offer live testimony. The trial court denied Weis-berg’s motion to vacate the conviction and granted the State’s motion to revoke probation. The court again imposed a suspended 15-month sentence, placed Weisberg on probation, and also ordered Weisberg to serve in the county jail three one-week periods coinciding with major sporting events. (Id. at B10-B11.) On appeal, the revocation of probation was reversed, but the denial of Weis-berg’s motion to vacate was affirmed. See State v. Weisberg,
In March 1992, Weisberg filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He alleged that the 1989 criminal complaint was defective and that his 1989 guilty plea was invalid. (Appellant’s App. at A3-A8.) A magistrate judge filed a lengthy report and recommendation, concluding that relief should be granted on both grounds. A district judge overruled the State’s objections and adopted the report and recommendation. The State appeals.
II.
Either of the grounds relied on by the district court is sufficient to support its judgment. We first address the State’s argument that Weisberg failed to prove that his guilty plea was invalid.
A.
Weisberg alleged that his “guilty plea is invalid, involuntary and not intelligently made because of his mental deficiency, and because of his concern to save his innocent brother from prosecution.” (Appellant’s App. at A6.) A defendant’s plea of guilty is valid if (1) the defendant is competent to stand trial and (2) the defendant makes a knowing and voluntary waiver of his constitutional rights. Godinez v. Moran, — U.S. -,-,
1.
Weisberg’s argument focusses primarily on the first question, whether he was competent. An incompetent person has a due process right not to be convicted. Griffin v. Lockhart,
a.
We first consider whether Weis-berg’s guilty plea was invalid on the ground that the state trial court erred by failing to conduct a hearing to determine his competence. Trial courts are obligated, either on a defendant’s motion or sua sponte, to conduct an evidentiary hearing if there is “sufficient doubt” about the defendant’s competence. United States v. Day,
In this ease, no person present at the 1989 plea proceeding—not the trial judge, not the prosecutor, and not Weisberg’s counsel—indicated that Weisberg’s competence should be doubted. After reviewing the plea transcript, we see no reason for doubt. Weis-berg signed a plea petition prior to the plea proceeding, stated at the plea proceeding that he had discussed the matter with counsel, and answered all questions to the court’s satisfaction. When the issue was first raised at the initial sentencing hearing, the state trial court explicitly stated that it did not doubt Weisberg’s competence. Even so, it extended an opportunity to Weisberg’s counsel to have his client tested and to present evidence on the issue. When the sentencing hearing reconvened and the court called counsel’s attention to why it had been continued, Weisberg offered no evidence bearing on his competence. We believe that the facts and circumstances known to the trial court at the time of Weisberg’s guilty plea do not raise a “sufficient doubt” that Weisberg was competent to plead guilty. The information contained in the presentence investigation report was not substantial enough to alter the trial court’s findings. Thus, the state trial court did not err when it did not conduct a Drope hearing.
b.
We next consider whether Weisberg’s guilty plea was invalid on the ground that, despite the lack of a competency hearing and contemporaneous findings, he actually was incompetent at the time of his plea. The magistrate judge granted relief on this ground, essentially finding that Weisberg’s statements during the plea and the evidence introduced during the state-court postconviction proceedings demonstrate that Weisberg was in fact incompetent when he told the court he was guilty of sports bookmaking.
A defendant is competent if he “has ‘sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding.’ ” Godinez, — U.S. at-,
The magistrate judge also relied on documentary evidence Weisberg introduced in support of his postconviction motion. An October 4, 1939, probate court judgment stated that Weisberg was “feebleminded because of inability to make normal progress in school.” (Appellant’s App. at B27.) It hardly need be said that this document has negligible relevance to the question whether Weisberg was competent to enter a guilty plea fifty years later on June 19,1989, after a lifetime of living and working in the city. The magistrate judge also relied on the jury’s verdict in the second prosecution that Weisberg was not guilty of the charges contained in the second complaint because of mental deficiency. The weight of this evidence also is weakened by the fact that it followed Weisberg’s guilty plea by a significant period of time. See Dusky,
As the petitioner in a habeas action, Weisberg carries the burden of persuasion. See Kramer v. Kemna,
Retrospective determinations of whether a defendant is competent to stand trial or to plead guilty are strongly disfavored. Such determinations have “inherent difficulties” even “under the most favorable circumstances.” Drope,
2.
We next consider whether Weis-berg’s guilty plea was invalid on the ground that, despite his competence, he did not in fact make a knowing and voluntary plea. To prove that his plea was not a knowing and voluntary plea, Weisberg must show that he did not make “a voluntary and intelligent choice among the alternative courses of action.” Schone v. Purkett,
Weisberg has not presented any evidence that he did not understand the nature of the plea proceeding or that he entered his plea involuntarily. Only the letter from the psychologist, which paraphrases some statements Weisberg made to the psychologist after his plea, bears remotely on this issue. As we have explained above, the letter is ambivalent and thus unpersuasive. The plea and sentencing transcripts contain ample evidence that Weisberg understood the consequences of his guilty plea and that he entered it voluntarily. See Brown v. Armontrout,
Furthermore, Weisberg introduced no evidence that his decision to plead guilty was based on and caused by the complaint’s fail
Weisberg also argued to the district court that his plea was invalid because his “plea was entered to save [his brother] from prosecution.” (Memo, in Support of Pet. at 10 (citing United States v. Cammisano,
In sum, we are satisfied that Weisberg had “the capacity to understand the proceedings and to assist counsel.” Godinez, — U.S. at -,
B.
Weisberg also alleged, “The complaint failed to state essential elements of [the] offense in violation of due process.” (Appellant’s App. at A6.) Specifically, Weis-berg argues that the complaint was insufficient because it said only that he “did wrongfully [and] unlawfully engage in sports bookmaking,” (id. at B16), and did not include the word “intentionally,” as required by the statute creating the offense, see Minn.Stat. § 609.75, subd. 7.
As a general rule, “[a] defendant’s knowing and intelligent guilty plea forecloses ‘independent claims relating to the deprivation of constitutional rights that occurred prior to the entry of the guilty plea.’ ” United States v. Vaughan,
We have determined that Weis-berg’s guilty plea is valid. Thus, Weisberg can assert his second claim, that the criminal complaint was insufficient, only to the extent it challenges the state trial court’s jurisdiction. Whether an indictment or criminal complaint is sufficient to confer jurisdiction on a state court is a question of state law. Gray v. Swenson,
In Minnesota, a trial court has jurisdiction in a criminal action if a person (1) while within the state, commits an offense; (2) while outside the state, aids or abets the commission of a crime within the state; or (3) while outside the state, intentionally causes a result within the state that is criminal. Minn.Stat. § 609.025; State v. Smith,
Weisberg does not claim that the complaint and its pages of attachments failed to allege criminal conduct, and he does not claim that he is not the person identified in the criminal complaint, and he does not claim that the allegations to which he pled guilty occurred outside of Minnesota. Weisberg simply wishes to take advantage of an alleged technical defect in the complaint, i.e., the lack of the word “intentionally.”
More importantly, the Minnesota courts have already reviewed Weisberg’s attack on the sufficiency of the complaint and have not determined that jurisdiction was lacking. The alleged deficiency Weisberg identified in his habeas petition is the same alleged deficiency he presented to the state courts. The state trial court denied his postconviction motion, and the trial court’s ruhng was affirmed on appeal. See Weisberg,
In sum, Weisberg is not entitled to relief on his second claim because he has waived all nonjurisdictional claims and cannot prove a jurisdictional claim.
III.
We conclude that Weisberg has failed to prove that his guilty plea was invalid. We also conclude that Weisberg cannot prove that his conviction should be vacated on the ground that the complaint was insufficient. Thus, we reverse the judgment of the district court. On remand, the district court shall deny the petition.
Notes
. Weisberg was charged as an aider and abetter, which, under Minn.Stat. § 609.05, subd. 1, requires one to ''intentionally" aid another. In his plea petition offered to the state trial judge, Weis-berg acknowledged that he had been told by his attorney and that he understood that "a person who participates in a crime by intentionally aiding” another person is just as guilty as one who actually commits it. (Appellant’s App. at B61 (emphasis added).)
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I have no alternative but to dissent. Intent is an essential element of the crime of sports bookmaking, and the State failed to allege in the indictment that Max Weisberg had the necessary intent. The failure to allege intent was more than a “technical defect,” as the majority the very heart of the indictment and deprived Weisberg of due process.
The United States Supreme Court has made it clear that where specific intent is an essential element of a crime that intent must be alleged in the indictment. Russell v. United States,
If an essential element of the crime has been omitted from the indictment, the omission may be cured if the indictment sets out the words of the statute itself, but only if “those words of themselves fully, directly, and expressly without any uncertainty or ambiguity, set forth all the elements necessary to constitute the offense intended to be punished.... [An] omission is not cured by a bare citation of the charging statute.” United States v. Zangger,
An objection that an indictment fails to state an essential element of a crime can be raised at any time. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b)(2).
The Minnesota Supreme Court’s view on the necessity of charging intent in an indictment where intent is an essential element of the crime is identical to that of the United States Supreme Court in Russell and this court in Opsta, May, and Denmon, see supra. Chief Judge Amdahl of the Minnesota Supreme Court in the seminal case State v. Serstock, made clear that “[t]he indictment must contain the elements of the offense charged,” and that failure to do so must result in a dismissal.
The Minnesota Court of Appeals in the instant case failed plainly and simply to follow Serstock and Oman, Minnesota law on the issue. Even if it had done so, the court’s decision could not be permitted to stand because the question is one of federal constitutional law. The court based its decision on the fact that “Weisberg acknowledged in extensive questioning before entering his plea that he knew the charges against him and had discussed these with his attorney.” State v. Weisberg,
With due respect to my colleagues, the cases cited by them fall far short of supporting their position. In Sodders v. Parratt,
I take issue as well with the majority’s application of Gray v. Swenson,
I would affirm the district court’s decision to grant the petitioner the writ of habeas corpus.
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b)(2) states:
(b) Pretrial motions. Any defense, objection, or request which is capable of determination without the trial of the general issue may be raised before trial by motion. Motions may be written or oral at the discretion of the*1282 judge. The following must be raised prior to trial:
(2) Defenses and objections based on defects in the indictment or information (other than that it fails to show jurisdiction in the court or to charge an offense which objections shall be noticed by the court at any time during the pendency of the proceedings)....
(Emphasis added).
. In light of my view that the indictment in this case is defective, it is not necessary for me to reach the other issues raised by the majority.
