Case Information
*1 THIRD DIVISION MILLER, P. J.,
MCFADDEN, P. J., and MCMILLIAN, J.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
January 17, 2017 In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A16A1609. WINFREY v. THE STATE.
M C M ILLIAN , Judge.
Jimmy Carlton Winfrey appeals from the judgment of conviction and sentence entered after he pled guilty to multiple charges of violating the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. In his sole enumeration of error, Winfrey contends that the trial court improperly participated in the plea negotiations to the extent that his pleas to the charged offenses were rendered involuntary. We affirm for the reasons set forth below.
*2
1. Before we turn to Winfrey’s substantive arguments, we must first address
our jurisdiction to decide this appeal. The State has filed a motion to dismiss,
[2]
contending that Winfrey has forfeited and waived his right to pursue this appeal
because he did not first raise this issue in the trial court by filing a motion to
withdraw his plea. However, our appellate courts have repeatedly and clearly rejected
efforts to have direct appeals following guilty pleas dismissed on this basis,
recognizing that a direct appeal is a “prescribed means to challenge the guilty
plea.”
Agerton v. State
,
Accordingly, before proceeding to the merits, our first step is to examine the
record to determine if the issues Winfrey raises on appeal can be resolved by facts
appearing in the record, including the transcript of his guilty plea hearing.
[4]
Caine v.
*4
State
,
appeal. Because we can resolve the issues before us based on the existing record,
Winfrey’s appeal is not subject to dismissal on this basis. Accordingly, the State’s
motion to dismiss is denied.
Harris v. State
,
2. We now turn to the merits of Winfrey’s claim that the trial court’s allegedly improper participation in the plea negotiation process rendered his plea involuntary. The record reflects that on November 20, 2015, a hearing was convened to consider Winfrey’s pending pretrial motions. At the outset, the trial court initiated the process of placing the status of the parties’ plea negotiations on the record. The prosecuting attorney advised that the State had made two offers, both of which Winfrey had rejected and that he did not anticipate that the State would make any additional offers. *6 Defense counsel then explained to the trial court that much of Winfrey’s hesitation to enter a plea centered around his parole eligibility because the Gang Act and RICO convictions would have made Winfrey less eligible for parole under the Parole Guidelines. The trial judge then stated on the record:
Well, of course, Mr. Winfrey, this opportunity is going away . . . I’m talking . . . and you need to listen. This opportunity is going away. Go to trial and you get convicted there’s not going to be any of me being concerned about when you parole out. I will not be concerned about when you parole out.
I will not be able to impact what count – only a jury can impact what count you get convicted on or don’t get convicted on. So that’s for your team to figure out.
Whatever they say you’re guilty of I’m going to sentence you, and I’m not going to worry about when you get out of jail because it’s not my concern.
My concern is you went to trial, you didn’t take any responsibility for what you did or did not do. It was proved if you get convicted of what you did do. I’ll take that as truth, because a jury said so.
And I would also take into account that you didn’t take responsibility for what a jury says you did, and I won’t worry about your parole eligibility. *7 And if you want to look around and see what happens to people in gangs in Cobb County, Georgia you can look at what happened last week to the guy who went to trial and got convicted and pulled . . . [one hundred to serve fifty]. There you go. These guys tried him. So I’m not judging them. That’s what she did.
I’m a whole different person. And you’re sitting over in the jail listening to everybody shoot their mouths off about this judge and that judge and the other judge.
We all have our reputations. My reputation is not that I’m an easy judge. I know it, you know it, the whole community knows it. So if that’s what you want to go up against be my guest.
You’ve got an offer, it’s about ready to evaporate. You’re not coming back to there unless you convince a jury of people from Cobb County, Georgia you didn’t do most of this.
There’s such a thing as winning a battle and losing a war. If you think you’re so smart and you’ve got it all figured out, you go to trial, and let’s say you get acquitted on – how many counts are there, 27?
So let’s say you get acquitted on ten and convicted on seventeen. You add it all up it’s still a mess of time, and I don’t care when you get paroled.
It’s not my job, it’s not my function. My job is public safety, and my job is constitutionally a correct trial for everybody, which I will do. Once that’s done, whatever they say you deal with, I’m going to worry about public safety.
So, y’all might want to talk a little bit more, but otherwise we’re going to do motions in about ten minutes.
When the proceedings reconvened approximately one hour and fifteen minutes later, the prosecuting attorney informed the court that the parties had reached a plea agreement, pursuant to which Winfrey would plead guilty to only six of the twenty- seven counts, and the State would nolle pros the remaining counts. Following the State’s presentation of the factual basis for the plea, the trial court thoroughly questioned Winfrey concerning the voluntariness of his plea and further provided an extensive explanation of his rights and the consequences of entering his plea. In accordance with the plea agreement, the trial court then sentenced Winfrey to twenty years, ten to serve, with credit for time served. This appeal followed.
Judicial participation in the plea negotiation process is prohibited by Georgia
Uniform Superior Court Rule 33.5 (A) and as constitutional matter when the
*9
interjection of the plea court is to such a degree as to render a guilty plea involuntary.
McDaniel v. State
,
Although this is a close case, an examination of the trial judge’s remarks in
context shows that she did not improperly interject herself in the negotiation process,
nor did her comments render Winfrey’s plea involuntary. The trial judge never
explicitly told Winfrey that he would be facing a longer sentence if he rejected the
State’s offer and went to trial. Instead, the trial judge correctly pointed out that by
rejecting the State’s offer, Winfrey was giving up his opportunity to negotiate the
charges on which he might be adjudicated guilty and sentenced and instead his
sentence would be based on the jury’s verdict. Likewise, the trial judge correctly
pointed out that his parole eligibility would not be a factor in her sentencing. These
comments, taken in isolation and in sum, did not rise to the level of improper
interference by the trial judge in the plea negotiations such that Winfrey’s plea was
no longer voluntary.
Works v. State
,
We take this opportunity, however, to caution that trial judges should be
cognizant of and seek to avoid undue and impermissible involvement in the plea
negotiation process so as to avoid involuntary pleas. Although, as we have noted, the
*11
trial judge did not explicitly tell Winfrey that he would face a harsher sentence if he
went to trial, she strongly suggested that result by referring to a recent sentence she
had imposed for gang related charges and confirming her reputation as a judge who
sentences harshly.
[7]
Under our current precedent, such intimations have been upheld
even though they appear to violate the spirit of Rule 33.5 (A) because those general
comments did not address how the trial judge would sentence in Winfrey’s particular
case.
[8]
That being said, we do not condone those comments and emphasize that the
*12
better practice when allowing the State to put such plea offers on the record would
be to undertake that the defendant has been notified of the terms offered, understands
the scope of the offer, and is aware of the charges against him and the potential
sentence. Compare USCR 33 et seq. (setting out certain mandates a trial court must
follow after a defendant decides to plead guilty to ensure the voluntariness of his
plea);
Smith,
Judgment affirmed. Miller, P. J., and McFadden, P. J., concur
.
comments that a decision by appellant to proceed to trial would be unwise);
Skomer
v. State
,
Notes
[1] In addition to the Street Gang Act charges, Winfrey was also indicted for multiple counts of violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, multiple counts of aggravated assault, two counts of criminal damage to property in the first degree, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. These charges were nolle prossed as part of Winfrey’s negotiated plea.
[2] A brief of amici curiae has been filed by the Georgia Gang Investigators Association and the Office of the District Attorney for the Brunswick Judicial Circuit, which for the most part merely reinforces the jurisdictional arguments advanced by the State.
[3] This observation appears to obviate any concerns that allowing a direct appeal from a guilty plea somehow confers an advantage on such direct-appeal appellants over those that choose to first file a motion to withdraw and then appeal any adverse ruling to the proper appellate court.
[4] The argument advanced by the amici that we are confined in such instances
to the consideration of purely legal questions is belied by numerous appellate cases,
some of which are cited in this opinion. While our appellate courts routinely note that
a motion to withdraw may be required for certain claims, most notably claims of
ineffective assistance of plea counsel, because those claims cannot usually be decided
based solely on the plea hearing transcript and instead will almost always require the
development of a post-plea evidentiary record, e.g.,
Green v. State
,
[5] The State also posits that Winfrey’s notice of appeal is insufficient because it does not “point to any purported malady” in the appealed judgment and does not reference a motion to withdraw his plea. However, it is not necessary that an appellant set out his claims of error in his notice of appeal, and there is no authority for us to dismiss an appeal on this basis. See OCGA § 5-6-37 (setting out required contents of notice of appeal). Further, since a motion to withdraw was not filed, the notice of appeal certainly was not deficient for failing to mention it.
[6] That rule states “The trial judge should not participate in plea discussions.”
[7] We also cannot discern the tone used by the trial judge but telling Winfrey to “be my guest” if he wanted to “go up against” a judge with her reputation supports his arguments.
[8] Compare
Pride v. Kemp
,
