Roosevelt Whitehead, Jr., was tried and convicted of two counts of sale of cocaine. Having previously pled guilty to a charge of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in 1988, Whitehead received two concurrent life sentences in prison pursuant to OCGA § 16-13-30 (d).
In his single enumeration of error asserted on appeal, Whitehead claims the trial court erred in denying his motion for new trial. He argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel, not at trial, but in the advice he was given concerning an offered plea bargain. He asserts that the advice was grossly deficient and misleading, causing *122 him to reject the plea offer based on his understanding that a life sentence was not a possibility in his case. The plea negotiations which preceded trial were as follows: Trial counsel attempted unsuccessfully to persuade the State to merge these two new charges against Whitehead into time remaining on probation in the earlier case. The State then made an offer, placing a sentence of 12 years to serve “cap” in exchange for a guilty plea to the new charges. This offer was communicated to Whitehead and rejected. The issue is whether counsel’s advice to Whitehead that a life sentence was a possibility and not a certainty in the event he was found guilty at trial constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel.
Whitehead relies on
Lloyd v. State,
From the advice given by counsel, Whitehead was informed that the consequences of refusing the State’s offer of a maximum 12-year sentence could be harsher than the consequences of accepting it. He rejected certainty for the uncertainty of a jury trial. The trial court concluded that trial counsel had adequately informed Whitehead of the possible consequences of rejecting the State’s proffered plea. “A trial court’s finding that a defendant has not been denied effective assistance of trial counsel will be affirmed unless clearly erroneous. [Cit.] Here [Whitehead] must overcome the strong presumption that defense counsel’s conduct falls within the broad range of reasonable professional conduct. [Cit.]”
Gilbert v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
This was incorrect. The sentence enhancement statute was enacted prior to Whitehead’s 1988 conviction, it was amended, however, in 1990. The State points out that the ex post facto theory, while without merit, was not too farfetched given that an amendment repealing and replacing subsection (a) without a savings clause, was passed in 1990.
