Title: Guilty Pleas
1Guilty Pleas Plea Bargaining
- Constitutional issues
- Procedural issues
2A. Constitutional Issues
- Guilty pleas waive constitutional rights
- Waivers of constitutional rights must be
voluntary, knowing and intelligent - Due process is not violated by give-and-take of
plea bargaining - Defendant is entitled to effective assistance of
counsel in the plea-bargaining and guilty plea
process
31. Guilty pleas waive rights
- Which rights?
- Right against self-incrimination
- Right to assistance of counsel
- Right to confront witnesses and to compel
witnesses in ones favor - Right to complain about procedural errors unless
preserved - Sometimes the right to appeal completely
- Why waived by plea?
- Defendant does not put state to its proof
- Ditto
- Defendant does not cross-examine or call
witnesses - Implicit in finality of plea unless expressly
conditioned on right to appeal - Included in plea agreement in many situations
enforced by some courts
42. Waivers must be voluntary, knowing and
intelligent
- Voluntary
- Defendants free will
- Special issue pressure from cohorts in package
deals - No undue coercion
- Factor is defendants decision burdened by
threat of capital sentence? - US v. Jackson struck down statutory scheme
- Brady v. US upheld plea taken before statute
struck down
- Knowing intelligent
- Defendant is aware of direct consequences
- Nature of offense(s)
- Maximum sentence
- Mandatory minimum sentence
- Other important consequences such as restitution
- Factor is defendant represented by counsel?
These are case-by-case determinations!
53. Due process and plea bargaining
- Normal DP rule
- Government cannot act vindictively, that is,
punish people for doing that which the law
allows (NC v. Pearce Blackledge v. Perry)
- DP in plea bargaining
- Prosecutors are allowed to participate in
give-and-take, and threats and sanctions for
refusing deal are constitutional (Bordenkircher
v. Hayes)
6Pariss Rule
- Alls fair in love, war, and plea bargaining.
-
- But equal protection always applies
- Prosecutors never are permitted to use prohibited
grounds (race, gender, religion, national origin)
as a basis for discrimination.
74. Effective assistance of counsel in guilty plea
setting
- Test of Strickland v. Washington applies
constitutionally deficient performance and
prejudice - In guilty plea setting, prejudice is defined as
but for deficient performance, defendant would
not have pleaded guilty (Hill v. Lockhart)
8B. Procedural issues
- When is a guilty plea entered?
- Types of guilty pleas under Rule 11
- The courts responsibilities when taking a guilty
plea - Withdrawing a guilty plea
- Plea agreements under Rule 11
91. When is guilty plea entered?
- At arraignment, where defendant is read
indictment or charges in open court and is asked
to plead - After arraignment, in a change of plea hearing
conducted pursuant to Rule 11
102. Types of guilty pleas under Rule 11(a)
- Guilty -- conditional or unconditional
- Conditional requires consent of court and
government - Must reserve in writing the right to appeal a
specified pretrial motion - Alford plea - if court permits
- Nolo contendere - conditional or unconditional
- Court must consider parties view and public
interest - Does not have collateral estoppel effect in civil
cases
113. The courts responsibilities when taking a
guilty plea
- The rule
- Advise and question defendant about consequences
of plea - Determine absence of force, threats, or promises
(aside from plea agreemt) - Determine factual basis
- Record proceedings
- The reason
- Establish record that plea was knowing and
intelligent - Establish record that plea was voluntary and
publicize plea agreemt - Ensure V satisfy justice
- Enable review
See Boykin v. Alabama rights and record
124. Withdrawing a guilty plea
- Timing
- Before court accepts the plea
- After court accepts plea but before sentencing
- After court imposes sentence
- Defendant may
- Withdraw for any reason or for no reason
- Withdraw for a fair and just reason
- Not withdraw the plea for any reason
135. Plea agreemts under Rule 11
14Special prohibition on court involvement in plea
agreements
- In the federal system, unlike many state
systems, courts are prohibited from participating
in plea discussions (see Rule 11(c)(1))