Petitioner Randy Wayne Thomas appeals from an order of the district court dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
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The petition raises three broad grounds for relief, all of which were exhausted in the state courts: (1) involuntary plea induced by unkept promise regarding sentence; (2) ineffective assistance of counsel in connection with plea, sentencing, and appeal; and (3) violation of double jeopardy rights. In dismissing the petition, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s twenty-page “Second Amended Proposed Findings and Recommended Disposition,” issued after an evidentiary hearing on some of petitioner’s claims. We review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error,
Hill v. Reynolds,
Petitioner pled nolo contendere in New Mexico state court to two counts of forgery and two counts of knowingly issuing checks drawn on insufficient funds. The charging information states that on one day in November 1983, petitioner forged two checks from the Werner Rabbit Ears-Land & Cattle Co. (for $225 and $315) and deposited them into an account with the Routt County National Bank of Steamboat Springs. Later the same day, petitioner wrote checks for $103.44 and $76.5G on the account in exchange for goods from two different retail stores. Ultimately, the forged checks were dishonored, leaving insufficient funds in the account to cover the latter checks. Following his plea, petitioner was sentenced to four consecutive five-year terms, four years of each consisting of habitual offender enhancement, for a total of twenty years’ incarceration (with some additional parole and suspended time). The bulk of petitioner’s habeas allegations center on the disparity between this sentence and the seven years petitioner contends counsel had told him would be imposed.
The record
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amply supports the district court’s finding that there was, in fact, no plea agreement regarding sentencing and no representation regarding such an agreement made by petitioner’s counsel. Counsel may have estimated, and petitioner may have expected, a sentence substantially less than the twenty years imposed. However, the district court properly held that such circumstances do not invalidate a plea or render it involuntary.
See, e.g., United States v. Rhodes,
We also agree with the district court’s rejection of petitioner’s numerous allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel. Many of these lose their footing, on either the performance or prejudice prongs of the controlling constitutional test,
see Hill v. Lockhart,
As for petitioner’s claim that counsel did not respond to requests for assistance in filing an appeal, the district court considered the pertinent, conflicting evidence and found that petitioner had not made any such requests during the period allotted for appeal. Consequently, the court held no constitutional deficiency had been shown.
See generally Laycock v. New Mexico,
Petitioner also complains that counsel did hot challenge the sufficiency of the evidence proffered by the state to establish the factual basis for his plea. We have considered the pertinent facts, including petitioner’s own testimony strongly implying a preplea admission to counsel that he had committed the charged offenses — indeed, had done so out of “[p]ure greed.” R.Vol. II at 43. We agree with the district court that, under the circumstances, petitioner failed to demonstrate counsel was unreasonable in electing not to spotlight the state’s case during the plea proceedings.
Petitioner’s last objection to counsel’s performance concerns the quality of the short presentation made on behalf of the defense at sentencing. Once again, we agree with the district court that counsel’s strategy — foregoing a character-evidence review for an admitted multiple/habitual felon in favor of a simple, straightforward explanation of the options for leniency still available under the applicable mandatory-sentencing scheme — reflects the exercise of professionally acceptable judgment.
Finally, petitioner contends the double jeopardy clause was violated by the imposition of a separate (enhanced) sentence for each of the two forgery and two worthless checks counts. In our view, the only color-able issue raised in this regard is whether the four counts must collapse into two, one for each type of offense. We see no problematic overlap between the forgery and worthless-check counts, nor do we consider improper the consecutive sentence enhancement imposed for each count based on petitioner’s status as a habitual offender.
The double jeopardy clause prohibits both successive prosecutions for the same offense and multiple punishments for a single offense.
See United States v. Dixon,
— U.S. -, -,
In a line of cases that stretches some eighty years, New Mexico has recognized and developed the “single-larceny doc
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trine,”
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under which a single taking at one time or place from several victims, or a series of takings from one victim, may be treated as a single crime.
See State v. Brooks,
At this juncture, we must incorporate an important federal principle into the analysis. In
United State v. Broce,
Application of this qualified waiver rule leads us to divergent conclusions regarding the viability of the two multiple-
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punishment claims raised here. First, we hold that the charging information and state record establish as a matter of law the unitary nature of the offense prosecuted as two separate forgery counts, compare
Brooks, Boeglin,
and
Klasner,
and, therefore, that the resultant double jeopardy violation warrants collateral relief. As to the worthless-check counts, however, the information and record do not conclusively demonstrate a single offense but, rather, raise at most a question of fact that might have been resolved in petitioner’s favor if he had disputed the matter at a trial. Admittedly, the distinction drawn in
Broce
between (unwaived) double jeopardy claims established by the state record and (waived) ones requiring resort to extrinsic evidence is not exactly coterminous with the distinction drawn here between legally established multiple-punishment claims and ones raising factual issues unresolved due to the formal admission of guilt. Nevertheless, the analogy is a close one, and the underlying considerations of finality and respect for the plea process are fundamentally the same. We therefore deem it appropriate to invoke
Broce
and hold that petitioner’s conviction for transferring worthless checks involved “counts with facial allegations of distinct offenses,” and, consequently, that his plea to those counts constituted a binding concession “that he had committed two separate offenses.”
Broce,
We thus conclude that only petitioner’s multiple forgery convictions violate double jeopardy protections, though we do not direct any particular, immediate action on the writ. Instead, we remand the action to permit the district court to designate the particular form of relief appropriate to implement our holding. The judgment of the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico is AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. We note that the tape recording of petitioner's plea hearing on July 26, 1984, has been lost. Several factors attenuate the significance of this otherwise troubling occurrence, however. First, the tape was part of the district court record when the petition was resolved below (and the surviving tape log contains nothing to contradict the magistrate judge's summary of the hearing). Second, the parties do not dispute what took place at the hearing; they contest the appropriate legal effect to attribute to those events. Finally, the public defender reviewed the tape while preparing petitioner's appellate brief. Under the circumstances, we do not deem the tape’s loss a substantial impediment to petitioner’s appeal or our review thereof.
. While the origins of this doctrine are reflected in the nominal reference to larceny, its application is not limited to that particular offense.
See State v. Pedroncelli,
. For purposes of the case in which it is entered, a nolo plea in New Mexico amounts to a confession of guilt,
State v. Baca,
