Opinion by
A former fugitive claims his attorney was ineffective in failing to perfect an appeal while he was on the lаm. We affirm the trial court's order denying relief on this claim.
I. Background
Defendant, Christopher Edwin Brown, was convicted of drug feloniеs after a jury trial in which he was represented by retained counsel. He was sentenced to four years in the Department of Corrections, but the trial court allowed him to remain free on bond pending appeal. Defendant's attorney timely noticed an appeal, and he took initial steps to compile the aрpellate record.
The People subsequently asked the trial court to revoke the appeаl bond and issue an arrest warrant. The trial court revoked bond, issued a warrant, and set a bond forfeiture hearing. Dеfendant did not appear, and his counsel stated defendant apparently was a fugitive.
Defense cоunsel filed a motion with this court seeking to withdraw from appellate representation. This motion was sent to dеfendant's residence, but defendant filed no objection. A division of this court issued an order granting counsel's motion to withdraw.
The appeal remained pending for several months. Some three months after counsel was allоwed to withdraw, an order directed the pro se defendant to show cause why the appeal should not bе dismissed for failure to complete the record. Defendant did not respond to this order, which had been mailеd to his address. Two months later, in November 2004, the appeal was dismissed.
Defendant intentionally remained a fugitive, with an outstanding warrant, for almost three years. He finally was apprehended in July 2007.
After his arrest, defendant filed a Crim. P. 35(c) motion. The motion, filed by newly appointed counsel, claimed that defendant's retained trial counsel was inеffective for not perfecting his appeal.
The trial court denied the motion after a hearing in which dеfendant and his trial counsel testified. It ruled that defendant had been prejudiced by dismissal of the appeal because he had a meritorious appellate challenge to an erroneous jury instruction that likely would have led to reversal of his conviction. It concluded, nonetheless, that defense counsel had not performed deficiently.
II. Discussion
A defendant claiming ineffective assistance must show that counsel's performance was deficient and that the performance caused prejudice. Strickland v. Washington,
We hold that defendant failed to establish legally cognizable prеjudice. Accordingly, we affirm the order denying relief on a different basis than the one relied on by the trial court.
The requisite prejudice where counsel negligently failed to perfect an appeal differs from the оutcome-determinative prejudice required for most other types of Strickland claims. People v. Long,
The reason defendants need show only that their аppeal was forfeited, and not that it would have succeeded, is that there is a fundamental right to direct appeals of erim-inal convictions. See People v. Baker,
The ineffective assistance claim fails here because counsel's performance could not have deprived defendant of an appeal to which he otherwise was entitled. Defendant's own flight from justice, not counsel's performancе, forfeited his right to an appeal.
It "has been settled for well over a century that an appellate court may dismiss the appeal of a defendant who is a fugitive from justice during the pendency of his appеal." Ortega-Rodriguez v. United States,
By fleeing from justice while his appeal was pending, defendant "forfeited his right to appellate rеview under the fugitive disentitlement doctrine." Parretti v. United States,
Counsel's performance, therefore, could not have prejudiced defendant by causing forfeiture of an appeal "to which [defendant] had a right," Flores-Ortega,
III. Conclusion
The order denying Rule 835 relief is affirmed.
