OPINION
¶ 1 In 1990, petitioner Rodney Jackson was convicted after a jury trial of two counts of sexual abuse of a person under the age of fifteen years, one count of child molestation, one count of sexual conduct with a person under the age of fifteen years, and two counts of attempted sexual conduct with a person under the age of fifteen years. He was sentenced to consecutive, mitigated and presumptive prison terms totaling forty-two years, to be followed by two, five-year probationary terms. On appeal, we affirmed his convictions and sentences, modifying one prison sentence to incorporate credit for pre-sentence incarceration.
State v. Jackson,
Standard of Review
¶ 2 To state a colorable claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show that counsel’s performance fell below objectively reasonable standards and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defendant.
Strickland v. Washington,
Discussion
¶ 3 Jackson argues, as he did below, that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to explore the possibility of a plea offer in the case. The trial court found this claim precluded because it had been raised and finally adjudicated on appeal.
See
Ariz. R.Crim. P. 32.2(a)(2);
Jackson,
¶ 4 Jackson’s plea-related ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim is based on
State v. Donald,
¶ 5 The primary suggestion that the state ever had offered Jackson a plea agreement came through Jackson’s affidavit, attached to the Rule 32 petition, in which he claimed that the first time he had spoken with trial counsel at the jail, counsel had informed him the state was offering a plea agreement that would require him to serve fifteen to thirty years in prison. According to the petition for post-conviction relief and Jackson’s affidavit, Jackson elected to go to trial because the alleged victim had recanted her accusations. But the victim then recanted her recantation the day before trial and indicated that she would testify against Jackson. Jackson argues, as he did below, that trial counsel was ineffective by failing to reinitiate plea negotiations at that point, when his trial prospects had turned for the worse. Indeed, at the sentencing hearing, counsel lamented that he had been “preoccupied with getting ready for trial” at that juncture and regretted not “discuss[ing] a possible plea offer being reopened.” In the same discourse, counsel also mentioned that the prosecutor had been willing to discuss plea negotiations but that counsel had not responded, and that he had “lost some sleep about that.”
¶ 6 “ ‘[Cjriminal defendants have no constitutional right to a plea agreement and the state is not required to offer one.’”
State v. Secord,
¶ 7 However, even accepting as true Jackson’s assertion that the state had offered him a plea agreement early on in the proceedings, we do not agree the Donald claim he ultimately made was colorable. Jackson did not argue, as did the defendant in Donald, that his attorney had failed to accurately convey the positive and negative aspects of entering into a plea agreement the state had offered rather than proceeding with a trial and that he is therefore entitled to reinstatement of that plea offer. In fact, Jackson concedes, at least implicitly, that he knowingly and intelligently rejected any such plea offer and instead proceeded to trial because the victim had recanted. Jackson claims he is entitled to post-conviction relief under Donald because of his attorney’s alleged ineffectiveness in failing to resume plea negotiations on the eve of trial, after it became apparent that the victim would in fact testify against him. The relief he sought below was an evidentiary hearing to determine whether “any plea offers ... may have been available if defense counsel had followed-up on the ... plea bargaining.” We do not believe the Donald rationale, assuming it is sound, can be extended beyond plea agreements actually offered by the state.
¶ 8 The more difficult problem faced by the
Donald
court was not whether the defendant there had raised a colorable claim that his attorney had rendered ineffective assistance under the
Strickland
standards, but whether there was an available remedy. “[T]he remedy for a violation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel ‘should be tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation and should not unnecessarily infringe on competing interests.’ ”
Donald,
¶ 9 We reject Jackson’s attempt to extend the Donald rationale to potential plea agreements that were never actually offered and the terms of which are unknown. Such an extension of Donald would advance the courts even further into the province of the executive branch, well past the already tenuous line drawn in Donald, and would do so before a constitutional violation is even proven. The relief Jackson sought — an evidentia-ry hearing prior to which the prosecutor’s trial file would be ordered to help determine what, if any, plea offers the prosecutor would have been willing to extend at the outset of trial — was essentially a discovery procedure through which Jackson sought to establish a colorable claim of ineffective assistance of *17 counsel. 3 Absent a colorable allegation that a specific plea agreement would have been extended to Jackson had his attorney inquired into the matter just before trial and that Jackson would have entered into such an agreement, Jackson could not have established he had been prejudiced. When, as here, the state does not concede that it would have offered a specific plea agreement upon defense counsel’s request, the trial court would be required to speculate, in a factual vacuum, about the terms of any such agreement. See Ariz. R.Crim. P. 32.8; Herrera (trial court is finder of fact in a Rule 32 evidentiary hearing). It is one thing for a trial court, as a remedy for a constitutional violation, to order the reinstatement of a plea that was once offered by the state; it is quite a different thing for a trial court to hypothesize on what, if any, plea offer the state might have been willing to make at a particular point in a criminal case in order to determine whether a constitutional violation has even occurred and then to order the state to offer that plea agreement for the first time. As the court in Donald stated:
We do not hold that a court, when it pleases, may order the State to offer a plea agreement entirely of the court’s concoction. Such a holding would surely violate separation of powers. It is altogether different, however, to hold that a court has remedial power, in order to redress a denial of effective assistance in plea bargaining, to return the parties to the status quo ante by ordering the State to reinstate an offer that the State had earlier considered and approved.
¶ 10 Simply put, it is neither possible nor appropriate for a trial court to divine the terms of a previously unoffered plea agreement in order to determine the merits of a speculative claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in the plea bargaining process. Particularly in a case this old, any such exercise would be fraught with speculation and would unreasonably and unrealistically tax people’s memories. More importantly, any such action would put the court in the prosecutor’s shoes and be an impermissible encroachment upon the executive branch of government. The power to offer a plea agreement rests exclusively with the prosecuting body.
See State v. Larson,
Conclusion
¶ 11 Even assuming Jackson’s factual assertions to be true, he failed to raise a color-able claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under the parameters set forth in Donald,
4
The constitutional principles underlying
Donald
come into play only when a concrete plea offer has been made by the state, and we decline Jackson’s request, unsupported by authority, to extend Donald’s reach to include a defense counsel’s failure to investigate the speculative possibilities of a potential plea offer, the very existence of which is contested.
5
See Donald,
¶ 12 Jackson attempted to raise a Donald claim based on far more speculative grounds than those on which Donald had been based, and we find his claim was therefore not colorable. As the trial court found, Donald does not address “any duty to investigate the existence of an offer.” 6 Furthermore, that a plea offer might have been made and rejected at the initial stages of this criminal prosecution is immaterial. No evidentiary hearing was required to establish the truth of Jackson’s claim that the state had offered any such plea agreement, because that agreement was not at issue; Jackson did not claim counsel was ineffective regarding that purported offer or seek its specific enforcement as a remedy. Jackson did not raise a color-able claim of ineffective assistance of counsel because even if we assume his assertions to be true — that the state might have been willing to offer him a favorable plea agreement at the outset of trial if trial counsel had broached the topic with the prosecutor— those assertions would not have entitled him to post-conviction relief under Donald. And Jackson has no other authority supporting his claim. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying relief on this claim without a hearing.
¶ 13 Although we grant the petition for review, we deny relief.
Notes
. The petition is not time barred. Supreme Court Order, 171 Ariz. XLIV (1992) (Rule 32 filing deadlines inapplicable to a defendant sentenced before September 30, 1992, who files his or her first petition for post-conviction relief);
see Moreno v. Gonzalez,
. The trial court’s ruling was not groundless; there is nothing in the record suggesting any such plea offer
except
Jackson’s affidavit, made over twelve years after the purported offer, and defense counsel's oblique reference at sentencing to the possibility of an offer being "reopened.” When we addressed the ineffective assistance of trial counsel issue on appeal, we stated, ”[t]he [appellate] record does not indicate that the state ever offered a plea agreement."
Jackson,
. Jackson did not demonstrate that he had exhausted all other means of discovering whether any such information existed in the state’s file, such as contacting the prosecutor’s office directly-
. Jackson suggested below that, as an alternative remedy under Donald, he should be entitled to a new trial. Because Jackson did not make a colorable claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under Donald and was therefore not entitled to the basic Donald remedy of reinstating a plea agreement, he cannot have been entitled to an alternative remedy of a new trial.
. Although not cited by Jackson, we have found one case in which a court found counsel ineffective for failing to seek a plea agreement. In
Wayrynen v. Class,
. Our analysis has necessarily entailed a detailed examination of Donald, but nothing in this decision should be read to mean this court adopts or approves of Donald or that we considered that case to be a significant change in the law for purposes of Rule 32.1(g). Because we find that Jackson's asserted claim is not encompassed by Donald, we need not answer those questions.
