The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v Gerald Francis, Appellant.
2020 NY Slip Op 00996 [34 NY3d 464]
Court of Appeals
February 13, 2020
34 N.Y.3d 464
Garcia, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. As corrected through Wednesday, May 13, 2020
People v Francis, 164 AD3d 1108, affirmed.
OPINION OF THE COURT
Garcia, J.
In 2015, defendant moved pursuant to
I.
Defendant‘s criminal history consists of at least four felony convictions over a 15-year period. During this time, it appears that he repeatedly attempted to conceal that history, primаrily through the use of aliases. To a remarkable degree, though a recidivist, he avoided enhanced punishment required by statute. Instead, he obtained sentences that were “illegally lenient” given his actual status as a predicate felon.1 However, in 1997, the court, based on the evidence of defendant‘s prior convictions, sentenced him to a term of 23 years to life in prison as a persistent violent felony offender (see
In 1982, defendant, using the name “Lawrence Benjamin,” pleaded guilty to fifth-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance, a felony, and was sentenced to 60 days in jail.
In 1988, now as “Gerald Francis,” defendant pleaded guilty to one count of criminal pоssession of a weapon, a violent felony. During the plea colloquy, the court, unaware of the 1982 conviction, informed defendant that as a condition of the plea agreement, it would “limit[ ] [his] exposure to no more than the presumptive one year sentеnce.” Defendant was sentenced to six months in prison and five years of probation. In fact, that sentence was illegally lenient, because defendant—as a second felony offender following the 1982 conviction—should have been sentenced to a mandatоry period in state prison of 2 to 4 years (see
In 1991, using yet a third name—“Bernell Gould“—defendant pleaded guilty to attempted robbery in the first degree, a
In 1997, defendant, reverting to his 1982 alias “Lawrence Benjamin,” was convicted after a jury trial of, among other things, robbery in the first degree, a violent felony. After being adjudicated a persistent violent felony offеnder based on his convictions in 1988 and 1991, defendant was sentenced to an aggregate prison term of 23 years to life imprisonment.
In 2009, defendant moved pursuant to
In 2014, Supreme Court denied defendant‘s first
The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed, holding that “because defеndant was not ‘adversely affected’ by the court‘s error in sentencing him on his 1988 conviction in this case, and, indeed, benefitted from the imposition of a lesser sentence than he [should] have received . . . , defendant‘s CPL 440.20 claim must be rejected without consideration of its merits” (Francis, 164 AD3d at 1109, quoting
II.
Defendant asserts that
In sum, the jurisdictional restrictions of Defendant next argues that, if Defendant asserts that the fact that he lost below—Supreme Court denied his Initially, defendant cannot seriously claim that the motion court‘s refusal to upset the illegally lenient 1988 sentence, standing alone, constitutes an adverse effect insofar as the error in the original criminal court proceedings in which the As the final step, defendant intends to challenge the 1997 sentence, arguing that because the 1988 conviction has been vacated, it can no longer constitute a valid predicate offense for purposes оf defendant‘s 1997 adjudication as a persistent violent felony offender (see generally These speculative future harms are contingent on how defendant litigates future procеedings and are not within the scope of the “adverse” effects contemplated by the plain terms of Over a 15-year period, defendant—using various aliases—committed numerous felonies, several of them violent, yet avoided legislativеly mandated enhanced sentences. In 1997, defendant was sentenced as a persistent violent felony offender based upon an accurate reckoning of his criminal history. Frustration of his strategy to vacate that 1997 sentence is not an “adverse” effect within the mеaning of Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed. Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Rivera, Stein, Fahey, Wilson and Feinman concur. Order affirmed.III.
A.
B.
