UNITED STATES of America v. Emanuel W. SIMPSON, Appellant.
No. 23352.
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued March 13, 1970. Decided Oct. 1, 1970.
Mr. Dennis G. Lyons, Washington, D. C. (appointed by this court), for appellant.
Mr. Broughton M. Earnest, Asst. U. S. Atty., with whom Messrs. Thomas A. Flannery, U. S. Atty., and John A. Terry, Asst. U. S. Atty., were on the brief for appellee.
LEVENTHAL, Circuit Judge:
This case involves the propriety of denial of a petition filed under
The petitioner pleaded guilty on March 12, 1969 to one count of armed robbery. He was represented by court-appointed counsel. He first admitted committing the offense of robbery. The District Court, taking commendable pains to satisfy itself as to the factual predicate of the plea, asked him to recount the circumstances of the robbery. Appellant said he had borrowed a revolver, with bullets, and gone to McKinley Tech High School‘s Credit Union, with the gun, and “I stole some money, and I ain‘t hurt nobody.” He was then asked a standard series of questions by the Clerk, and his answers set forth that there had been no promises of any kind to induce a plea of guilty, that he had discussed the plea fully with his attorney, that he was aware that he might be sentenced to life imprisonment, that he was entering the plea of guilty voluntarily because he was guilty and for no other reason.1
On May 16, he was sentenced to 6 to 24 years on the first count, and the court, on the government‘s motion, dismissed the remaining ten counts of the indictment. No objection was voiced by petitioner at this time. The pro se petition under
The trial judge denied the petition without hearing on July 11, 1969, stating: “The motion, files, and records of the case conclusively show that the prisoner is entitled to no relief.” The judge noted that petitioner had said expressly at the plea-taking that no promises had been made, and had acknowledged that he could be sentenced to life imprisonment, that there was no representation of Youth Corrections Act by the court or any showing that any such expectation was induced by the government. The court noted: “It is not unusual and in fact it is likely that defense counsel did discuss the probabilities of sentence with defendant. This is not ineffective assistance of counsel; rather it is the opposite.”
I
Obviously the district judge, who accepted the plea, took some pains in disposition of this petition. His opinion has been helpful in focusing the issue, and in avoiding the kind of arid remand which is sometimes necessitated when a petition for relief is denied without any accompanying statement. Moreover, if the case could now be disposed of on the basis of a prediction as to what is “likely” to eventuate, it may well be that the petition will prove on further hearing to be grounded in nothing more than a discussion of probabilities by defense counsel, the kind of discussion which the district judge correctly noted is a cause for commendation rather than condemnation.
However, we must take the case as we find it now. And the petition filed under
A defendant cannot claim “coercion” undercutting a guilty plea merely because he has been advised by his attorney that e. g. the judge will probably be more lenient than a jury, or is normally more lenient with defendants who plead rather than go to trial.3 Nor is the guilty plea undermined by an allegation that counsel “assured” defendant that he would obtain certain treatment, even if embellished by the defendant‘s addition that he “presumed” that his attorney had in hand a promise or agreement on the part of the prosecutor or judge.4 However, an allegation of false advice from counsel of an outright arrangement with the
To some extent, the need for evidentiary hearings on petitions filed under
In Berryman v. United States, No. 22,579 (January 9, 1970) (unreported) this court held that a claim that petitioner did not know and was not advised of the consequences of his plea should not be explored on the basis of general and purely conclusory allegations, and affirmed the dismissal of the petition without prejudice to the filing of a new and more specific petition.8
The procedure embodied in Rule 11 “is designed to assist the district judge in making the constitutionally required determination that a defendant‘s guilty plea is truly voluntary.” McCarthy v. United States, 394 U.S. 459, 465, 89 S.Ct. 1166, 1170, 22 L.Ed.2d 418 (1969). The careful plea-taking transcript not only supports the propriety of a rule rejecting any requirement of hearing based on mere generalized allegations of lack of voluntariness, but also raises the height of the hurdle that must be cleared by defendant, through affirmative proof tendered, even if allegations are specific enough to require an evidentiary hearing.
The need for such a doctrine is underscored by the consideration that otherwise there may be no protection from abuse of the judicial process by prisoners who have assurance from fellow inmates that their use of what is in effect a pre-prepared form will enable
Petitioner‘s assertion, however, is too specific to be denied as merely conclusory, and it cannot be said to be so “palpably incredible” as to permit rejection on the present record. He claims his counsel provided an assurance that the judge had agreed to a sentence under the Youth Corrections Act. The possibility that some statement was made concerning Youth Correction Act treatment is consistent with defendant‘s youth (20 years at time of offense) and corresponding lack of prior record as an adult.9 The likelihood that petitioner will be able to establish that counsel made the presentation alleged in the pleading may be undercut by the high probability that defense counsel will give contrary testimony and by a disposition to credit statements by a member of the court‘s bar. And the plea transcript is undeniably of highest significance in any testing of the merit of the allegations. Yet these factors cannot be conclusive basis for rejection on the merits, without a hearing, of a pleading which alleges that this court record is itself the product of a distortion deliberately wrought by assigned counsel. Defendant‘s failure to speak up at sentencing time is a factor, but may prove to be understandable in terms of his confusion. Defendant‘s allocution10 at the
On this record we conclude that the petition should not have been dismissed, and that the case must be remanded for further proceedings.
II
It seems appropriate for a court considering the kind of issue presented by this record to consider further whether the rule requiring evidentiary hearings must be accepted as an unavoidable burden on the courts that cannot be ameliorated, or whether there may not be approaches in the overall administration of justice that would operate to keep the courts open to avoid injustice yet avoid or at least lessen the possibility that they may be clogged by the requirement of hearings on petitions under
1. We first consider the possibility of a procedure for amplifying the record that falls short of an evidentiary hearing. An “amplifying” procedure has been used by the court of appeals for coping with the interrelated problem
2. Another approach that may be useful is use of the Federal magistrates.14 Indeed we understand that the District Judge who entered the order under review has sought in another case to explore this approach and has made an innovative reference to the Federal magistrate. We are not called upon to consider what shape the assistance of the Federal magistrate may take. At a minimum the Federal magistrate may become a means for defining issues in cases slated to be heard by the judge; for identifying cases that can be disposed of without a hearing; and perhaps for clarifying applicable principles and securing voluntary withdrawal of non-meritorious cases.
3. In the last analysis, however, the problem of petitions for collateral review that are frivolous, incoherent, false because copied slavishly from winning
The provision of counsel to prison inmates has other, doubtless more important values, notably in terms of helping to achieve meaningful rehabilitation and adjustment to a post-prison life. But for present purposes it may be appropriate to focus on the benefits to the court system, and the administration of justice, that seem likely to ensue from provision of counsel to prison inmates before, and not only after, they file papers in court, to provide skills that can explain the limit of the points that may have merit, to help orient the inmate to realistic channels, perhaps in preparing materials for executive clemency, or parole.
There is a substantial literature on the interrelation of petitions for collateral review and legal assistance for prison inmates. A recent article by Bruce R. Jacob, and K. M. Sharma, Justice After Trial: Prisoners’ Need for Legal Services in the Criminal-Correctional Process, 18 Kan.L.Rev. 493 (1970) surveys the literature and also gives us the benefit of the practical experience of the authors.15
In 1968 the American Bar Association adopted, as part of its project on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, the report on Post-Conviction Remedies prepared by its Advisory Committee on Sentencing and Review. Section 3.1 of the report, dealing with preparation of applications for post-conviction relief, recommends that the state should arrange, or at least permit—“inprison guidance or counselling of prisoners on the validity or invalidity of claims for post-conviction relief.” Among the steps listed for consideration are “(1) regular visits by lawyers or law students to the prison to discuss cases or problems with prisoners on an individual basis, arranged by an independent agency such as a local bar association or defender association or law school.”
The Commentary of this ABA report sets forth:
Relatively long periods of idleness and acute sense of grievance, and the hope that springs eternal in human breasts will combine to bring forth a host of applications from prisoners. In light of their own lack of legal sophistication, the prevalent absence of adequate legal reference material in prisons, the frequent severe administrative restrictions on prisoner access to the library, and the inevitable distortions in the minds of men evaluating their own cases, it is not surprising that a high percentage of the applications are groundless. * * * The optimal form of education would involve face-to-face interviews between prisoners and attorneys who could advise them of the probable merit or lack of merit in their grievances. * * * There is a probably valuable by-product in educating prisoners to realization of the legal insufficiency of their supposed grievances. Where prisoners believe that their failing to win relief is the result merely of inability to start the judicial machinery, a festering condition is created which could have a detrimental effect on rehabilitation programs and prison morale.
One source of professional manpower that might be used to meet the need of counsel for prisoners is the law student population.
In the District of Columbia counselling to prison inmates in regard to collateral attack on convictions and sentences may become available from the
Use of law students to counsel and advise with prisoners, commended by the A.B.A. report, may well provide the key toward serving a need without excessive drain on community resources. Thus far none of the area law schools has any such program, though one has a program to provide legal assistance to inmates on their civil problems.21
The law schools of the country have found that counseling of prison inmates has not only achieved objectives in terms of improvement of administration of justice, but has given the students, who show strong motivation, “an extraordinary learning experience.”22 So wrote Professor Paul Wilson, an experienced trial lawyer who served as the faculty advisor of the first of these projects, wherein students at the University
Another eight law schools are listed as providing service to inmates of State institutions,24 including the Harvard Legal Assistance project, established by the Center for Criminal Justice at Harvard, which is combining legal assistance with research into the range of prisoners’ legal problems.
There are of course problems with these as with any other human program.25 There is need for assuring effective supervision of the students. There may be a conflict between the service and educational purposes of the program.26 Large penal institutions exhaust the capacity of the school that happens to be nearby.
Yet there are indications that such law student programs present a means, at modest cost, of furthering objectives of criminal justice. This includes indications that such programs do cut down the number of frivolous applica-
The role of the judicial system in furthering this kind of development remains a matter for future development. Court systems can provide at least the encouragement of allowing active participation at hearings by students, under supervision, and by other recognition of the program. The laboring oar, however, properly belongs to the administrative arm of the judicial system—the Judicial Council, the Judicial Conference, and their committees—in conjunction with the bar associations and area law schools.
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The present case will be remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Since counsel has been appointed by this court, such counsel is
So ordered.
BAZELON, Chief Judge (concurring):
I join in Part I of the court‘s opinion on my understanding that it leaves no alternative for the district court judge in this case but to hold an evidentiary hearing promptly. Since petitioner‘s assertions have been found to be neither conclusory nor “palpably incredible,” and since petitioner will be represented by counsel to aid and advise him in the presentation of his case, the possible justifications for an additional hurdle before the hearing are gone.
I share wholeheartedly the concern manifested in Part II of the court‘s opinion that some means be found to provide adequate legal assistance for prison inmates who wish to attack their sentences collaterally.
Notes
What has been said is not to imply that a movant must always be allowed to appear in a district court for a full hearing if the record does not conclusively and expressly belie his claim, no matter how vague, conclusory, or palpably incredible his allegations may be. The language of the statute does not strip the district courts of all discretion to exercise their common sense. Indeed, the statute itself recognizes that there are times when allegations of fact outside the record can be fully investigated without requiring the personal presence of the prisoner.
Two weeks before petitioner was sentenced his codefendant was sentenced under the Federal Youth Corrections Act,
This court‘s orders are accompanied by a memorandum in which the court advises the applicant that the case will be dismissed unless he files “specific facts and details” of his grievance. “You should include all of the facts you consider important, and state them clearly and in your own words.”
An inmate otherwise ready, in the absence of professional guidance, to draw freely for his allegations on the wording of a favorable opinion or winning pleading, might well come to realize in the course of answering questions of his legal advisor probing the facts of his case and the evidence available, that his proposed course would at best be short-lived and futile, and might even lead him into difficulties.
One aspect of inmate counselling is illustrated by the highly successful law student program at the University of South Carolina Law School, where the students give actual representation to convicts at parole eligibility hearings.
The prison legal aid programs established at law schools have depended in great measure on cooperation with correctional authorities. The U.S. Bureau of Prisons has been notable in this regard. See article by its Chief Counsel, Barkin, Impact of Changing Law upon Prison Policy, 48(I) Prison J. 47 (1968). These relationships can be strained when the legal aid program takes on court action representing inmates against prison officials for violation of rights, even when this is done on court assignment. See Jacob & Sharma, op. cit. supra note 13 at 620, referring to instance when faculty supervisor of Emory Law School project was appointed by U.S. District Court in Atlanta to represent inmates complaining of Atlanta prison officials, see White v. Blackwell, 277 F.Supp. 211 (N.D.Ga.1967), Lawrence v. Blackwell, 298 F.Supp. 708 (N.D.Ga.1969).
The literature refers to rehabilitation benefits from counseling provided prisoners on problems not involving the criminal justice system, e. g. family relations problems. See note 21 supra.
