This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A13-2041
Shantha Jayapathy, petitioner,
Appellant,
vs.
State of Minnesota,
Respondent.
Filed August 18, 2014
Affirmed
Peterson, Judge
Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-CR-10-43510
Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Sharon E. Jacks, Assistant
Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Lee W. Barry, Assistant County
Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)
Considered and decided by Schellhas, Presiding Judge; Peterson, Judge; and
Connolly, Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
PETERSON, Judge
Appellant challenges her conviction of first-degree controlled-substance crime for
possession of methamphetamine, arguing that her guilty plea was not voluntarily entered.
We affirm.
FACTS
On September 16, 2010, Robbinsdale police stopped appellant Shantha
Jayapathy’s vehicle and executed an arrest warrant for a pending charge of second-degree
controlled-substance crime. Police discovered in her vehicle 37.9 grams of
methamphetamine, including packaging; $2,800 in cash; a scale; and other suspected
drug paraphernalia. Appellant was charged with first-degree controlled-substance crime.
When appellant was arrested, three separate controlled-substance cases against appellant
were pending in Hennepin County, including the case in which the arrest warrant was
issued.1 Appellant agreed to plead guilty to the charge arising from the September 16
stop in exchange for imposition of an 84-month sentence that would run concurrently
with the sentence she received after being convicted following a trial in one of the
pending cases and dismissal of a second pending case.
In her plea petition, appellant stated that she had “been a patient in a mental
hospital,” had “talked with or been treated by a psychiatrist or other person for a nervous
1
Appellant’s arrest warrant was issued on a pending charge of second-degree controlled-
substance crime. (27-CR-10-42583). Appellant’s two other pending cases involved first-
degree controlled-substance crime (27-CR-10-13438), and fifth-degree controlled-
substance crime (27-CR-09-60781).
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or mental condition,” and had “been ill recently.” Before the district court accepted the
plea, the following exchange occurred between the judge and appellant:
THE COURT: . . . [Appellant], do you understand why
you’re in court today?
[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: Have you had enough time both before today
and today to talk with [your attorney] about this?
[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: And do you understand what we’re doing in
the courtroom right now?
[Appellant]: Yes.
....
THE COURT: [Appellant], do you understand the terms of
this negotiation that you’re about to enter into with the State?
[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: Do you have any questions about the terms?
[Appellant]: No.
THE COURT: Are you sure that this is what you want to do
today?
[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: You have to be sure because if you’re not we
can’t go ahead with this?
[Appellant]: Yes.
Appellant’s attorney went through the rights that appellant was giving up by
entering a guilty plea and verified that appellant and the attorney went over the plea
petition “line-by-line” the day before, appellant received a copy of the petition, and
appellant and the attorney went through the petition again before the plea hearing. The
court then questioned appellant further:
THE COURT: Most importantly, do you understand all the
rights that you’re giving up by pleading guilty today?
[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: Are you presently taking any prescription
medications?
[Appellant]: No.
THE COURT: Are you thinking clearly this morning?
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[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: Has anyone forced or coerced you in any way
to plead guilty this morning?
[Appellant]: No.
THE COURT: Are you doing this of your own free will?
[Appellant]: Yes.
THE COURT: And are you doing this because you believe
you are guilty of this offense?
[Appellant]: Yes.
Appellant provided a factual basis for the plea, and the court accepted the plea
after verifying that appellant understood that by pleading guilty she would receive an 84-
month sentence and that her plea was final. The district court sentenced appellant in
accordance with the terms of the plea agreement.
Nearly two years after entering her guilty plea, appellant petitioned for
postconviction relief, asking “to withdraw her plea because it was not knowingly,
intelligently and voluntarily entered.” In the memorandum attached to the petition,
appellant stated that she had suffered a traumatic brain injury that made her anxious and
that her anxiety contributed to her decision to plead guilty even though she was innocent.
In an affidavit attached to her postconviction petition, appellant stated,
I pleaded guilty that day because I felt I had no other
choice. I was innocent of all of the charges. Yet a jury had
just found me guilty of two of them. My trial was very
unfair. And I feared I could not receive a fair trial on the
pending charges either.
I did not act freely when I pleaded guilty. I felt I had
no other choice due to how I had been treated in the judicial
system.
The postconviction court denied appellant’s petition without an evidentiary hearing, and
this appeal followed.
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DECISION
A defendant does not have an absolute right to withdraw a guilty plea. State v.
Raleigh, 778 N.W.2d 90, 93 (Minn. 2010). After sentencing, a district court must permit
withdrawal of a guilty plea if “withdrawal is necessary to correct a manifest injustice.”
Kim v. State, 434 N.W.2d 263, 266 (Minn. 1989) (citing Minn. R. Crim. P. 15.05, subd.
1). Under this standard, a plea-withdrawal motion must be granted if the guilty plea is
not valid, which depends on whether the plea was accurate, voluntary, and intelligently
made. Raleigh, 778 N.W.2d at 94. The defendant bears the burden of establishing the
grounds for permitting a plea withdrawal, and the validity of a plea is a question of law,
which this court reviews de novo. Id. This court must affirm a postconviction court’s
decision unless the postconviction court abused its discretion. Bruestle v. State, 719
N.W.2d 698, 704 (Minn. 2006).
Appellant argues only that her plea was not “voluntarily entered” because she was
“improperly pressured to plead guilty.” “The voluntariness requirement helps insure that
the defendant does not plead guilty because of any improper pressures or inducements.”
Brown v. State, 449 N.W.2d 180, 182 (Minn. 1989). Appellant contends that she was
convicted of the other first-degree controlled-substance offense after an “unfair trial of a
crime of which she is innocent” and that her traumatic brain injury made her “suffer[]
heightened anxiety” that caused her “to feel she had no choice but to plead guilty.”
But in her plea petition, appellant indicated that she understood the terms of the
plea and the rights she was giving up by pleading guilty. Appellant indicated in the
petition that she had been in a mental hospital, had been treated by a psychiatrist for a
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nervous or mental condition, and had been ill recently, but she also indicated that she was
not taking pills or other medicine. At her plea hearing, appellant agreed that she and her
attorney went through the petition line by line, she was given a copy of the petition to
read overnight before attending the hearing, and her attorney again went over the plea
petition with her on the morning of the hearing. Appellant also told the judge that she
“underst[ood] all the rights that [she was] giving up by pleading guilty,” was “thinking
clearly,” was not “forced or coerced” to plead guilty, and was not “presently taking any
prescription medications.” While some of appellant’s statements in the plea petition
suggested that she could have a mental-health problem, or at least a history of mental-
health problems, her statements at the plea hearing showed that she understood and
responded appropriately to questions, and she specifically acknowledged that she was
thinking clearly and was not forced or coerced to enter a guilty plea.
Appellant also relies on her presentence-investigation (PSI) report to support her
claim that she had no choice but to plead guilty because she suffered heightened anxiety
due to a traumatic brain injury.
The PSI report does not undermine the validity of appellant’s guilty plea. No
medical records in the report establish the existence, severity, or lingering effects of
appellant’s brain injury. Also, the nine-page report shows that a meaningful dialogue
occurred between appellant and the evaluator. The dialogue does not demonstrate that
appellant has cognitive deficiencies, and none were noted by the evaluator. Further, with
the exception of memory problems, the deficiencies appellant claims from the brain
injury—headaches, mood swings, and temperament changes—do not affect the validity
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of her plea. See Raleigh, 778 N.W.2d at 96 (rejecting plea withdrawal claim of
involuntariness because of “extreme stress” and irrational thinking when the defendant
could not explain “how stress, irrational thinking, improper pressure, or coercion
influenced his plea decision” and did not cite any legal authority permitting withdrawal
under those circumstances).
Finally, a finding of coercion requires “actual or threatened physical harm, or . . .
mental coercion overbearing the will of the defendant.” State v. Ecker, 524 N.W.2d 712,
719 (Minn. 1994) (quotation omitted). The record does not support a finding of coercion.
Appellant asserts that she believed “she had no choice but to plead guilty” because she
was coerced due to her anxious mental condition and her belief that “she had just been
found guilty after an unfair trial of a crime of which she [was] innocent.” Although this
court overturned appellant’s conviction in her other case because of prosecutorial
misconduct, Jayapathy v. State, No. A13-1870 (Minn. App. May 19, 2014), appellant
has not established that she was innocent, and she has not demonstrated how those
proceedings coerced her to plead guilty to the current charge. On this record, we
conclude that the postconviction court did not abuse its discretion by denying appellant’s
petition to withdraw her guilty plea.
Affirmed.
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