IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. WR-83,014-01
EX PARTE KENNETH BROUSSARD, Applicant
ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
IN CAUSE NO. 1451074-A IN THE
TH
178 DISTRICT COURT FROM HARRIS COUNTY
A LCALA, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
DISSENTING OPINION
I respectfully disagree with this Court’s majority opinion that denies post-conviction
habeas relief to Kenneth Broussard, applicant. Although I agree with the majority opinion
that there are some good reasons to deny applicant relief under these circumstances, I am
ultimately more persuaded that, in this close case, the more prudent course is to follow the
habeas court’s recommendation to grant relief to applicant on the basis that, under the
circumstances of this case, his plea was unknowingly and involuntarily made. I, therefore,
respectfully dissent.
I. Background
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Applicant was charged with two cases, one for delivery of a controlled substance,
namely cocaine, and one for possession of a controlled substance, namely methamphetamine.
He entered into a plea bargain for state-jail time on the cocaine delivery case in exchange for
the State’s dismissal of the methamphetamine case. His judgment for the delivery case
shows that the offense for which he was convicted was “delivery of cocaine weighing less
than one gram.” After he was convicted, the State received a laboratory report that it
supplied to him showing that the substance he had delivered did not contain any cocaine and
it instead was comprised totally of methamphetamine.
Applicant filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus. In pertinent part, he
claimed that he was not aware of the “relevant circumstances” surrounding his plea of guilty
and that he would not have pleaded guilty had he known about the negative cocaine results.
The State agreed with applicant that he should obtain relief from his conviction and be
permitted to withdraw his guilty plea. In joining applicant’s request for relief, the State
agrees that he has never been guilty of possessing cocaine. The habeas court recommended
that this Court grant relief to applicant on the basis that his plea was involuntary and that it
violated due process because he did not know that the substance he possessed did not contain
cocaine, and thus there was no evidentiary support for the offense for which applicant had
been convicted.
II. Analysis
This case turns on whether the absence of cocaine as indicated in the laboratory report
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should be narrowly considered as impeachment evidence, in which case habeas relief should
be denied, or whether it should be more broadly considered as evidence undermining the
existence of the offense for which applicant was convicted, in which case relief should be
granted. I explain my rationale in favor of granting relief by more closely examining United
States v. Ruiz, 536 U.S. 622 (2002), and Ex parte Mable, 443 S.W.3d 129, 131 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2014).
In Ruiz, the Supreme Court held that the federal Constitution does not require
“preguilty plea disclosure of impeachment information,” which in that case was
“impeachment information relating to informants or other witnesses,” and the Court held that
Ruiz’s plea was not involuntary based on the lack of that disclosure prior to her plea to the
offense. Ruiz, 536 U.S. at 625, 628-29. The Court discussed three reasons for reaching that
conclusion. First, “impeachment information is special in relation to the fairness of a trial,
not in respect to whether a plea is voluntary.” Id. at 629. The Court explained that the law
ordinarily considers a waiver knowing, intelligent, and sufficiently aware if the defendant
fully understands the nature of the right and how it would likely apply in general in the
circumstances—even though the defendant may not know the specific detailed consequences
of invoking it. Id.
Second, “the Constitution, in respect to a defendant’s awareness of relevant
circumstances, does not require complete knowledge of the relevant circumstances, but
permits a court to accept a guilty plea, with its accompanying waiver of various constitutional
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rights, despite various forms of misapprehension under which a defendant might labor.” Id.
at 630. The Court explained that it is difficult to distinguish, in terms of importance, (1) a
defendant’s ignorance of grounds for impeachment of potential witnesses at a possible future
trial from (2) the varying forms of ignorance at issue in these cases. Id.
Third, due process considerations did not weigh in favor of pre-plea disclosure. Id.
at 631. The Court discussed due process considerations including (1) the nature of the
private interest at stake, (2) the value of the additional safeguard, and (3) the adverse impact
of the requirement upon the Government’s interests. Id. The Court explained that the issue
in that case was impeachment evidence and that the government had agreed to otherwise
reveal “‘any information establishing the factual innocence of the defendant’ regardless.”
Id. This distinction between mere impeachment evidence and factual innocence was
important to the Court. See id. It indicated that the fact that the government agreed to reveal
pre-plea information establishing the factual innocence of the defendant “diminishes the
force of Ruiz’s concern that, in the absence of impeachment information, innocent
individuals, accused of crimes, will plead guilty.” Id. Furthermore, the Court considered the
State’s interest in the premature disclosure of witness information that could disrupt ongoing
investigations and expose prospective witnesses to serious harm. Id. at 631-32. The Court
weighed the “comparatively small [] constitutional benefit” of revealing mere impeachment
evidence that did not implicate factual innocence of a defendant against the harm that might
occur from forcing the government to abandon its general practice of not disclosing to a
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defendant pleading guilty information that would reveal the identities of cooperating
informants, undercover investigators, or other prospective witnesses and any possible
decrease in the number of cases routinely resolved through the plea bargaining process. Id.
The Court concluded by stating, “These considerations, taken together, lead us to conclude
that the Constitution does not require the Government to disclose material impeachment
evidence prior to entering a plea agreement with a criminal defendant.” Id. at 633.
As I show in discussing each of the Supreme Court’s three reasons for its conclusion
in Ruiz, the rationale for denying relief to Ruiz does not squarely apply to the facts in this
case. See id. First, although it is true that impeachment information is special in relation to
the fairness of a trial, rather than with respect to whether a plea is voluntary, that begs the
question whether the type of evidence at issue in this case should be properly considered
impeachment evidence. This is a closer call than it may initially appear. On the one hand,
applicant did deliver a controlled substance, and thus he was factually guilty of delivery of
a controlled substance, and one could rationally argue that the type of controlled substance
that he possessed should be considered mere impeachment evidence. On the other hand,
applicant did not possess any controlled substance of the kind that he was convicted of
possessing. Thus, applicant was factually innocent of delivery of cocaine, the offense he had
been charged with and convicted for in the judgment.
In Mable, this Court granted habeas relief to Mable, who had pleaded guilty to
possession of a controlled substance, but laboratory testing conducted after the plea revealed
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that the substance he was arrested for possessing did not actually contain any illicit materials.
See Ex parte Mable, 443 S.W.3d 129, 131 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). This Court granted
habeas relief, explaining that all the parties involved “incorrectly believed [that Mable] had
been in possession of drugs. This fact is crucial to this case, and while operating under such
a misunderstanding, [Mable] cannot be said to have entered his plea knowingly and
intelligently.” Id. Here, similar to Mable, applicant pleaded guilty to delivery of a controlled
substance, cocaine, but the laboratory testing conducted after the plea revealed that the
substance that he was arrested for delivering did not actually contain any cocaine. See id.
The instant case is unlike Mable, however, because Mable did not possess any illicit
materials of any kind, but here applicant did possess an illicit material, methamphetamine.
See id. I conclude that this difference between Mable and the instant case may or may not
result in an unknowing and involuntary plea depending on the circumstances of the plea.
Because cocaine and methamphetamine are in the same penalty group, it would appear that,
in some cases, the facts may demonstrate that it is immaterial to a defendant’s plea to
delivery of a controlled substance whether he delivered cocaine or methamphetamine. In this
case, however, there is no factual dispute that the laboratory results affected applicant’s
decision to plead guilty because the parties agree and the trial court found that these facts
demonstrate that the discrepancy about the type of illicit material did affect the voluntariness
of applicant’s plea. The amount and strength of the evidence has been recognized as a proper
basis for deciding to plead guilty, and those matters may affect whether a plea was
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involuntary. See North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 37-38 (1970) (holding that a
defendant may choose to plead guilty due to the quality and quantity of the State’s evidence
against him even while believing himself innocent). In this case, applicant, the State, and the
trial court apparently agree that, under the facts in this case, applicant would not have
pleaded guilty to delivery of cocaine had he been made aware of the laboratory report that
showed that the substance was instead methamphetamine. Because I would defer to what
essentially amounts to stipulated facts that were found credible by the trial court that
determined that applicant’s plea was unknowing and involuntary in this case, I would
consider the negative results for cocaine to be more than mere impeachment evidence under
the circumstances of this particular applicant’s case.
In contrast, applying the second rationale underlying the Supreme Court’s decision
in Ruiz to the instant case weighs in favor of denying relief to applicant. Ruiz, 536 U.S. at
630. As discussed above, the Constitution does not require complete knowledge of the
relevant circumstances, and this rationale would appear to favor denying relief. Id. After all,
in this case, applicant was charged with delivery of cocaine and possession of
methamphetamine, and he did in fact possess methamphetamine. There is a fair argument
that his unawareness that the laboratory report did not reveal that he delivered cocaine was
the type of lack of complete knowledge of relevant circumstances that the Supreme Court
relied on to deny relief in Ruiz. See id. I conclude that the second rationale underlying Ruiz
would weigh in favor of denying relief to applicant.
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Third, in assessing the due process considerations that may be affected in this case,
which in particular examine the value of the additional safeguard and the adverse impact on
the State, I conclude that those weigh in favor of granting relief to applicant. See id. at 631.
Here, there is a reasonable argument that the fact that applicant did not possess the illicit
material that he was convicted of possessing is “‘information establishing the factual
innocence of the defendant’ regardless,” which the Supreme Court noted would still have to
be revealed to a defendant pre-plea. Id. The Supreme Court denied relief to Ruiz, in part,
because the type of information at issue in that case was not of the variety that would raise
a concern that “innocent individuals, accused of crimes, will plead guilty.” Id. Here, in
contrast, there is a reasonable concern that the type of evidence at issue here could cause an
innocent individual to plead guilty. Applicant was charged with delivery of cocaine and
possession of methamphetamine, and even though he was factually innocent of delivering
cocaine, he pleaded guilty to that offense.1
Another due process concern considered by the Court in Ruiz weighed the
“comparatively small [] constitutional benefit” of revealing mere impeachment evidence
against the harm to the government. Id. at 632. In contrast, here, the State joins applicant’s
1
In contrast, it may be that a different defendant under identical facts might reasonably
decide to plead guilty to delivery of cocaine even though a laboratory report would later show that
he did not have cocaine, because in exchange for that plea of guilty to that offense, he received a
good plea deal for a low sentence for that offense and a dismissal of an additional charge for
possession of methamphetamine, a substance that a laboratory report would later show that he did
actually possess. Thus, how a court assesses the importance of the type of substance on a
defendant’s decision to plead guilty likely impacts whether a defendant’s plea was knowing and
voluntary.
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request that this Court grant relief to applicant because it determines that this would be in the
State’s interest. The State explains that it has “a vested interest in maintaining the integrity
of its convictions and the accuracy of its crime reporting [and a]llowing convictions that are
known to be wrongful, or at the very least inaccurate, to remain on the books does not further
this interest.” Unlike Ruiz, the State is apparently unconcerned that this type of relief would
negatively affect its ability to secure plea bargains in other cases. And the State has no other
concerns, as in Ruiz, that there are more compelling competing interests, such as the safety
of informants or undercover officers that should be considered.
Taking all of the considerations underlying the Supreme Court’s decision in Ruiz, I
conclude that, in this case, habeas relief is appropriate. The laboratory report showing an
absence of cocaine may rationally be considered as evidence of innocence of the offense for
which applicant was convicted. The State agrees with applicant that he should obtain relief
from his conviction on the basis that his plea was unknowing and involuntary under the facts
of this case. The trial court agrees with applicant and the State that his plea was unknowing
and involuntary. Having examined the rationale underlying the Supreme Court’s decision
in Ruiz, I am more persuaded that relief is appropriate in this case than I am that it should be
denied.
III. Conclusion
Given that the underlying rationale in Ruiz and Mable generally supports granting
relief in this case, and given that the applicant, the State, and the habeas court jointly
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recommend that this Court grant relief to applicant, I would grant relief to applicant. I,
therefore, respectfully dissent.
Filed: April 12, 2017
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