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SEVENTH CIRCUIT REVERSES CONVICTION FOR VIOLATION OF THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL
Posted on August 20th, 2010 No commentsKerry L. Smith was indicted on marijuana related charges in April 2007. He retained John Rogers to represent him. Both sides dealt with voluminous amounts of discovery. Various motions were filed and superseding indictments were issued. Approximately a year into the case Rogers requested a competency evaluation for Smith. It was completed in June of 2008. No trial date was set. On August 25, 2008 Smith filed a motion asking to substitute in Beau Brindley as his attorney. On September 8 the Court set a trial date of November 4 and denied the motion to substitute counsel because Brindley was scheduled to be in another trial on November 4.
When the court rejected Brindley, Smith requested that Rogers continue to represent him. With the court’s prodding, Rogers refused. The Court appointed Ronald Jenkins to represent Smith.
Three weeks later Smith plead guilty with a written plea agreement that among other points surrendered the right to appeal unless the sentence exceeded the guidelines.
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure Section 11(b)(1)(N) requires that the district court “must inform the defendant of, and determine that the defendant understands . . . the terms of any plea-agreement provision waiving the right to appeal or to collaterally attack the sentence.” Though the appellate waiver was in the agreement the Court made no effort to independently inform Smith of the parameters of the waiver. The court mentioned it only in passing and then only to ask Jenkins whether there was a waiver.
The right to counsel of one’s choice is so fundamental that one should not be able to waive an appeal of its denial. The denial of the right to counsel of one’s choice brings into question the value of the waiver. Different counsel will handle different issues in different ways. If Smith had been granted the substitution he may not have plead guilty and if he had plead guilty he may not have agreed to waive the right to appeal. As the appellate court stated, “[i]f a defendant is erroneously denied the counsel of his choice, it is a structural error in the trial that brings into question the voluntary and intelligent character of the guilty plea itself. ”
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals found a clear violation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Since no trial date had been set at the time the motion to substitute counsel was made, the interference with the court’s calendar was minimal and the court’s refusal to set a trial date when Brindley was available was uncalled for and a violation of Smith’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Right to Counsel, Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel, Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Sixth Amendment Leave a ReplyLeave a Reply




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