Richard Bailey and his henchmen operated a decades-long seam in which they fleeced wealthy (but lonely) women. Helen Vorhees Brach, one of the victims, was murdered to prevent her from alerting prosecutors, and for this Bailey is serving life in prison.
United States v. Bailey,
The information alleged that Hugi and Bailey cooperated to defraud “Victim J” of $50,-000. Bailey told Hugi to prepare a document that purported to obligate Bailey to buy four horses from Hugi for $60,000. According to this document, Bailey had made a $10,000 downpayment, which he would forfeit if he *380 did not produce the remaining $50,000. This deceit persuaded Victim J to lend $50,000 to Bailey, who gave $20,000 of this to Hugi for his role in the deceit. Bailey never repaid the “loan” but defaulted and left Victim J with a security interest in four mares that were not worth close to $50,000. Bailey and confederates then induced Victim J to pay inflated boarding expenses for her “collateral.” So much for the fraud; as for the wire element, according to the information Victim J came to Bailey’s attention when she responded to a lonely-hearts ad Bailey had placed with the Pioneer Press. Bailey paid for the advertisement by credit card, and Pioneer Press verified the charge by interstate wire communication. Hugi was allegedly accountable for the entire scheme, including the wire component.
Hugi pleaded guilty and filed with the court a written plea agreement that conceded every allegation of the information and then some. Hugi agreed that he knew Bailey to be a con man, helped him gull Victim J, and kept $20,000 of the pelf. Hugi agreed that an interstate wire communication occurred on July 27,1989, when Pioneer Press verified the charge. Hugi also acknowledged “that it was foreseeable to him that interstate wire communication facilities would be used by Richard Bailey in furtherance of the scheme to defraud.”
Thomas Foran, who represented Hugi between 1990 and the guilty plea, -withdrew in January 1995 and was replaced by Stephen Popuch. Sentencing did not occur until October 3, 1995, more than 13 months after the guilty plea and approximately 8)4 months after Popuch appeared. Popuch remains Hugi’s counsel in this petition for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Asserting that Pioneer Press had not used interstate communications to verify the charge, Hugi contended that the district court therefore lacked “jurisdiction” and that Foran’s failure to discover this shortcoming amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel. Moreover, Hugi insisted, any verification of the charge must have occurred before July 27, 1989, so the five-year statute of limitations barred the prosecution (which began on July 27, 1994), and again Hugi blamed Foran for his failure to raise this affirmative defense. But the district judge held these contentions forfeited, because Hugi failed to present them during the 8)4 months between Foran’s replacement and sentencing. 1998 U.S. Dist. Lexis 2731 (N.D.Ill.1998). The judge remarked: “There is no contention that new counsel provided ineffective assistance to Hugi or that new counsel could not discover the presently claimed weaknesses in the government’s ease until after Hugi was sentenced. Neither is there any allegation that, prior to sentencing, new counsel failed to advise Hugi regarding these potential defenses.”
Id.
at *12. The judge granted a certificate of appealability limited to the ineffective-assistance issue, observing that the substantive contentions Hugi sought to raise are not of constitutional dimension and therefore may not be raised on appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1)(B)(2). See
Young v. United States,
We may add issues to a certificate of appealability, see
Sylvester v. Hanks,
A link to interstate commerce may be essential to Congress’s substantive authority, see
United States v. Lopez,
Hugi’s contention that Foran furnished ineffective assistance goes nowhere unless Hugi can persuade us to ignore his plea agreement, which proclaimed to the court the truth of two propositions that Hugi now says are false: that Pioneer Press used an interstate wire transfer to verify the credit card charge; and that this occurred on July 27, 1989, within the 5-year statute of limitations. Why should we allow Hugi to contend in 1998 that he lied to the court in 1994? For the statements in the plea agreement (whose veracity Hugi reaffirmed in open court during the Rule 11 colloquy) did not take the posture of an
Alford
plea (see
North Carolina v. Alford,
Still, as the district judge wrote, it is unnecessary to determine whether Hugi’s current story should be preferred to his former story, and his attorney blamed for the difference. Hugi waited far too long to open an attack on Foran’s assistance. The forfeiture does not lie in his failure to appeal in 1995. Section 2255 is the proper way to raise ineffective-assistance contentions when they require augmentation of the record, as Hugi’s do. See
Duarte v. United States,
Hugi and Popuch had plenty of time during 1995 to explore Foran’s tactics. At oral argument Popuch says that he was busy preparing for sentencing, but we doubt that more than a small fraction of his time during the months Popuch represented Hugi before the sentencing was devoted to Hugi’s case; the legwork and deal-making that led to the sentence had been done by Foran. These plea negotiations took four years! Po-puch also told us that Hugi did not realize that the plea agreement contained errors until his stay in prison, when “he had a great deal of time on his hands.” Maybe, but Hugi had more time between plea and sentence than he spent in prison, moré than twice as much; and the occasion to think deeply about a guilty plea is beforehand, rather than during the prison sentence. A guilty plea is not a road-show tryout before the “real” contest occurs in the § 2255 proceedings. For all we can tell, Hugi and Foran well knew that the wire-fraud charge to which he pleaded was weak, but it may have seemed an attractive bargain compared to the alternatives.
What Hugi had to do, if he thought that something had gone seriously wrong, was tell the district court in 1995 and face the consequences, which could have included the filing of additional charges. He wants to have the benefits of the plea bargain without taking any risks. That sort of game is not one the criminal justice system tolerates.
Affirmed.
