By an indictment returned on 16 October 1989, Fred Shores, Jr., the defendant, was charged with murder, larceny of an automobile and burning of personal property. By order dated 18 January 1990, Ray E. Chandler, an attorney, licensed to practice law in the State of South Carolina, was allowed to make a special appearance for the purpose of assisting the defendant’s North Carolina attorney in the preparation and presentation of his defense. A hearing was held on 14 March 1990 wherein the
On 1 May 1990, a hearing was held to determine if Chandler should be allowed to continue representation in the trial and the proceedings leading up to the trial based upon the potential conflict. The court thereafter ruled that Chandler could not represent the defendant in the trial or in the proceedings preceding the trial. A petition of Writ of Certiorari for review of the 1 May 1990 order was filed by the defendant in apt time.
On appeal, defendant contends that the trial court erred in disqualifying his attorney from representing him during pretrial proceedings. Specifically, defendant contends that the disqualification denied him of his constitutional right to counsel of his choice. We agree.
An accused’s right to counsel in a criminal prosecution is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution and is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, Sections 19 and 23 of the North Carolina Constitution.
McMann v. Richardson,
In his brief, defendant relies upon
United States v. Cunningham,
In Cunningham, defendants Cunningham and Sweeney, who were attorneys, appealed from an order of the federal district court disqualifying their respective attorneys in a criminal prosecution on the grounds of conflict of interest and that it was likely that defendant Sweeney’s attorney, Michael Kennedy, would be called as a witness during the trial to either rebut, corroborate, or explain the testimony of Sweeney’s receptionist who allegedly had a conversation with Kennedy that would readily support the charges against Cunningham and Sweeney. As to Sweeney’s appeal, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that his interest as a criminal defendant in being represented by counsel of his own choice outweighed the government’s interest in disqualifying his attorney. Thus, Kennedy was permitted to participate in all aspects of defendant Sweeney’s defense except the actual trial.
Reversed.
