NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
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2020 VT 9
No. 2019-129
In re Reco Jones Supreme Court
On Appeal from
Superior Court, Washington Unit,
Civil Division
December Term, 2019
Mary Miles Teachout, J.
Allison N. Fulcher of Martin & Delaney Law Group, Barre, for Petitioner-Appellant.
Rory T. Thibault, Washington County State’s Attorney, Barre, for Respondent-Appellee.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ., and Wesley, Supr. J. (Ret.),
Specially Assigned
¶ 1. ROBINSON, J. Petitioner appeals the civil division’s denial of his post-
conviction relief (PCR) petition alleging that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that
his guilty plea was involuntary. Due to his immigration status, federal deportation policies, and
Department of Corrections (DOC) policies, the sentence petitioner agreed to—nominally twelve
years to life—likely amounted to a life sentence without the possibility of parole with only a
minimal chance of deportation. We conclude that the voluntariness of his plea was compromised
by misinformation given to him. We reverse, vacate petitioner’s conviction, and remand to the
civil division with instructions to refer the case to the criminal division for further proceedings.
¶ 2. In his PCR petition, petitioner alleged that he entered his guilty plea involuntarily,
“in reliance upon materially inaccurate advice of counsel.” After an evidentiary hearing, the PCR
court made the following findings. Petitioner is a citizen of Barbados who came to the United
States in 1976 when he was sixteen years old. In June 2012, he was arrested based on allegations
that he had sexually assaulted his underage stepdaughter. He confessed on tape and in writing to
the allegations. The State charged him with repeated aggravated sexual assault of a child, which
carried a sentence of twenty-five years to mandatory life.
¶ 3. Initially, the State represented to defense counsel and the court that if petitioner
pled guilty, federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), part of the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS), would take petitioner into custody immediately upon his entering a
guilty plea, without waiting for sentencing. Faced with this charge, petitioner’s initial goal was to
be deported to Barbados. Accordingly, he indicated that he would plead guilty, though he later
changed his mind because he wanted to stay in Vermont and go to trial. Counsel urged him to
accept a plea deal. She reasoned that if they arrived at the plea change and ICE was not present to
pick up petitioner, he would not have to plead that day and could keep his options open.
¶ 4. In the meantime, defense counsel made further inquiries to try to ensure that ICE
would, in fact, remove petitioner. She first obtained from the State a declaration from a U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services attorney that suggested that petitioner would be deportable
but did not discuss the timing of deportation. Later that year, while in the state’s attorney’s office,
she spoke to two DHS attorneys on the phone; the state’s attorney made the call. It is not clear
who the DHS attorneys were or whether they had any authority to negotiate any terms specific to
petitioner’s case. They stated that ICE would not take petitioner into custody immediately after a
change-of-plea hearing but would wait until after sentencing and after petitioner’s thirty-day
window for appeal had expired. Defense counsel also consulted a reference manual that had been
created by an attorney in the Defender General’s Office; it indicated that, given the charge,
2
petitioner would have no defense to removal if he pled guilty, but did not clarify the timeline for
removal. She never consulted with an immigration defense attorney or any other expert in the
field.
¶ 5. Notwithstanding this uncertainty, petitioner eventually decided to pursue a plea
agreement. After some negotiations, the parties agreed that petitioner would plead guilty to sexual
assault, parental role. This offense carried a penalty range of three years to discretionary life, but
the State insisted on a minimum sentence of twelve years. In response to defense counsel’s
attempts to negotiate a lower minimum sentence, the state’s attorney said, “It doesn’t matter what
the sentence is since ICE is going to pick him up and deport him right away anyway.” Counsel
discussed the bargain with petitioner, informing him that if he pled guilty, he would spend at least
some time as a Vermont inmate and that it was not certain when he would be taken into ICE
custody, if at all.1 Petitioner accepted the plea agreement and pled guilty to sexual assault, parental
role. At the PCR hearing, petitioner testified that when he entered the guilty plea, while it was not
a certainty what ICE would do, he understood that it was 99.9% likely that he would be taken into
federal custody for deportation some time after the appeal period expired. The court deferred
sentencing and ordered a presentence investigation (PSI).
¶ 6. At sentencing, all parties understood that there was no certainty about what
immigration authorities would do. The state’s attorney noted that if petitioner was deported
without treatment he would be at “high risk to reoffend,” but said, “the immigration piece is out
of our hands.” Defense counsel stated, “He does understand that what happens from here on out
might be the sentence that was agreed to, but most likely is in fact that at some point—at some
point in the future—he doesn’t know when—he will be in fact deported. We don’t know what
will happen. He does know that, and is just waiting to see.”
1
As noted below, this finding is challenged on appeal. See infra, ¶¶ 16-17.
3
¶ 7. The sentencing court accepted the parties’ agreement and sentenced petitioner to
twelve years to life. The court noted that immigration consequences were beyond the court’s
control, but expressed an intention that petitioner serve the full sentence imposed and complete
sex-offender treatment prior to his release. Once petitioner was sentenced, ICE did not take him
into custody. The PCR court found that he had been incarcerated for approximately six and a half
years at the time of his PCR hearing.
¶ 8. The PCR court found that, among other things, because she failed to seek advice
from an immigration defense attorney or defense counsel experienced with immigration matters,
petitioner’s defense counsel “had a misunderstanding of the impact of a sentence for twelve years
to life.” Based on expert testimony in the PCR hearing, the PCR court found that the imposed
sentence “effectively resulted in a life sentence with no chance of rehabilitation or release and a
minimal chance of deportation.” The court explained how DOC and federal immigration policies
combined to create this result:
[T]he consequence of a 12-year to life sentence for the sexual assault
charge made it virtually certain that [petitioner] would never be
removed by Homeland Security and never be eligible for
programming that would make release possible. This is because of
the effect of the interrelationship between longstanding DOC policy
and Homeland Security policy. DOC’s longstanding policy was that
it would not provide rehabilitation programming to a person subject
to deportation because such a person would not be returning to the
community in Vermont. The Parole Board would not release a non-
programmed person on parole. Thus, because of the possibility of
deportation, it was virtually certain that he would serve a life
sentence without the possibility of rehabilitation, release, or parole.
Then, because he was serving a life sentence, Homeland Security
would have no reason to deport him.
¶ 9. With regard to petitioner’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, the PCR court
concluded that petitioner’s defense counsel’s work fell below the standard of competent practice
insofar as she had failed to appreciate that DOC and Homeland Security policies together made it
extremely likely that defendant would never be eligible for release and would never be removed
4
by Homeland Security. But the PCR court concluded that this failure had not prejudiced petitioner.
It found that counsel had advised petitioner, and petitioner understood, that it was “not a certainty
that . . . he would be taken into custody by ICE or when.” The court wrote that it “[could not]
conclude that he was prejudiced, since the advice he received from [counsel] was accurate as to
the risk that he might not be deported and would wind up serving a 12-year-to-life sentence.”
Additionally, it found that there could not have been any prejudice to petitioner since there was no
evidence that, given better legal advice, he would have chosen to take his chances at trial, and
because “[t]here was no evidence that the prosecutor could have been persuaded to agree to any
more favorable plea agreement or that the court would have accepted it.”
¶ 10. The PCR court did not directly address petitioner’s voluntariness claim; however,
its findings as to the prejudice prong of the ineffective-assistance claim imply a conclusion that
petitioner’s plea was not involuntary since he had been advised of the risk that he would serve his
full sentence and was not prejudiced by any misinformation.
¶ 11. While the PCR court did not vacate petitioner’s plea, it did remand the case for “a
continuation of the sentencing hearing.” It reasoned:
the judge acted on the assumption that after twelve years, treatment
would be available to [petitioner]. . . . It is apparent that the judge
was not aware that if petitioner was not deported and was still in
DOC custody after twelve years, DOC would not make treatment
programs available to him because of his continuing eligibility for
deportation.
The information about DOC’s policy was “critical,” and would have been available to the
sentencing judge had defense counsel met the requisite standard of practice. Therefore, the PCR
court found that sentencing—but not the plea and conviction—had been “tainted by fundamental
error.” It made clear that its intent was not to vacate the sentence or rule that the sentence should
not have been approved, but merely to allow the sentencing court to consider the new information.
5
¶ 12. On appeal, petitioner argues that the PCR court erred in failing to vacate his guilty
plea because defense counsel’s ineffective representation rendered his plea involuntary. He also
argues that the court’s remedy of remanding without vacating his sentence is legally invalid. The
State does not respond to petitioner’s first argument, but argues that the PCR court’s remedy was
valid because it “impliedly vacated judgment by remanding the case.” In re Bowers, 130 Vt. 314,
316, 292 A.2d 813, 814 (1972) (quotation omitted). We agree with petitioner that his guilty plea
was not knowing and voluntary and must be vacated.2
¶ 13. We will uphold the PCR court’s findings absent a showing of clear error, and its
conclusions if reasonably supported by those findings. In re Kimmick, 2013 VT 43, ¶ 16, 194 Vt.
53, 72 A.2d 337 (reviewing PCR petition on ineffective-assistance grounds); see also In re
Moulton, 158 Vt. 580, 585, 613 A.2d 705, 708 (1992) (applying clear-error standard to PCR
petition on voluntariness grounds).
¶ 14. Two aspects of petitioner’s misunderstanding as to the effect of his guilty plea come
into play in this appeal: first, his understanding as to the likelihood that he would be deported some
time after his sentencing; and second, his understanding of his effective incarcerative sentence,
given his susceptibility to deportation. As to the first, we have serious doubts as to whether the
2
Although petitioner’s petition and arguments blend petitioner’s two legal theories—that
he was prejudiced by ineffective assistance of counsel, and that his plea was involuntary—the two
theories are distinct. To establish ineffective assistance of counsel as a basis for post-conviction
relief, petitioner must prove that “defense counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard
of reasonableness informed by prevailing professional norms,” and that but for counsel’s
performance there is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been
different. In re Combs, 2011 VT 75, ¶ 9, 190 Vt. 559, 27 A.3d 318 (mem.) (quotation omitted).
The evidence and analysis concerning the latter, “prejudice” prong—the only prong at issue on
appeal—overlaps considerably (though not completely) with the evidence and analysis underlying
the distinct claim that petitioner’s plea was not knowing and voluntary. Because we vacate
petitioner’s conviction on the basis that the plea was not knowing and voluntary, we do not
separately analyze the ineffective-assistance claim. We likewise do not reach the question of
whether the PCR court’s remand to the criminal division for further consideration, without actually
vacating the judgment, would be a proper remedy for the error that the PCR court found tainted
the sentencing.
6
trial court’s findings are supported by the evidence. As to the second, we conclude that the trial
court’s findings and conclusions compel vacation of his conviction and guilty plea.
I. Information as to Likelihood of Deportation
¶ 15. Petitioner argued in part that his plea was based on a misunderstanding that his
chances of deportation were high. The PCR court wrote, “Although he thought the chances were
very high that he would be deported, there was still a risk that it would not happen at all or any
time soon, and he was aware of that risk and decided to take it.” The court was satisfied that
defense counsel had given petitioner “accurate” information as to the risk that petitioner may not
be deported.
¶ 16. We are skeptical that the evidence can support such a conclusion. On the record at
the change-of-plea hearing, defense counsel stated that petitioner would “most likely” be deported.
At the PCR hearing, defense counsel testified that she informed petitioner that government
immigration attorneys told her that he would be taken into federal custody and deported after he
entered his change of plea and the appeal period lapsed. She also testified that because this
represented a change of position from the original information she received—that he would be
taken into federal custody at the time of his change of plea—she conveyed to petitioner uncertainty
as to whether ICE would follow through with what they had represented. She told petitioner that
there was nothing binding the federal authorities.3
¶ 17. This evidence could support a finding that defense counsel conveyed to petitioner
that the timing of his anticipated deportation was unclear. It might even support a finding that she
conveyed to petitioner that whether he would be deported was not entirely certain. But there is an
3
Defense counsel also testified regarding an email she sent to the state’s attorneys after
sentencing, reflecting that she had learned from ICE that “he will be deported at the end of his
minimum, currently 12 years.” She did not testify as to who made this claim, and the record does
not reflect that the message was ever passed on to petitioner or to the court. For that reason, it has
no probative value as to petitioner’s understanding in entering his plea.
7
expansive gap between defense counsel’s statement on the record at sentencing that petitioner
would most likely be deported, and the true (and ascertainable) state of affairs, as found by the
PCR court, that given petitioner’s ineligibility for release federal authorities would have no reason
to deport him. This misunderstanding alone would likely compromise the voluntariness of
petitioner’s guilty plea. See In re Stevens, 144 Vt. 250, 256, 478 A.2d 212, 215 (1984) (explaining
that to prove involuntariness, “petitioner must show evidence reasonably justifying his mistaken
belief”).
II. Information Concerning Effect of Sentence
¶ 18. Even if counsel had accurately informed petitioner that it was unlikely that he
would be deported, the evidence reflects that petitioner reasonably labored under another critical
material misunderstanding: he had every reason to believe that if he was not deported, he would
at some future time—likely around the time of his minimum sentence—be eligible for treatment
or parole.
¶ 19. “[M]isinformation regarding parole eligibility may provide a basis for a successful
attack on the voluntariness of a plea.” Moulton, 158 Vt. at 584, 613 A.2d at 708. Petitioner bears
the burden of establishing that he entered his plea “while reasonably relying on a material
misunderstanding regarding his parole eligibility,” and that “the misunderstanding worked to his
prejudice.” In re Blow, 2013 VT 75, ¶ 24, 194 Vt. 416, 82 A.3d 554 (quoting Moulton, 158 Vt. at
584, 613 A.2d at 708).4 This material misunderstanding must be based on “objective evidence.”
4
We have not expressly adopted a distinct “prejudice” requirement in the context of our
more general caselaw regarding the impact of reasonable, material misunderstandings on the
voluntariness of a plea. See, e.g., In re Kirby, 2012 VT 72, ¶ 14, 192 Vt. 640, 58 A.3d 230 (mem.)
(explaining that petitioner may be entitled to post-conviction relief if plea is obtained through
“ignorance, fear or misunderstanding,” if misunderstanding is “based on objective evidence which
reasonably produced the misunderstanding” (quotation omitted)); State v. Fisk, 165 Vt. 260, 263,
682 A.2d 937, 939 (1996) (stating that to support withdrawal of plea, defendants “must provide
objective evidence to demonstrate that [their] subjective misunderstanding was reasonable”);
Stevens, 144 Vt. at 256, 478 A.2d. at 215 (stating that “we must determine if petitioner’s mistaken
belief . . . when judged by objective evidence, was reasonably justified under the circumstances”).
8
Kirby, 2012 VT 72, ¶ 14 (quotation omitted). However, “[a]n explicit promise is not required in
order for a plea to be considered involuntary.” In re Cronin, 133 Vt. 234, 236, 336 A.2d 164, 166
(1975).
¶ 20. We recognized in State v. Lumumba that, where a defendant is removable by
immigration enforcement, DOC’s policy is to withhold sex-offender treatment, and that a
defendant who does not go through treatment will serve the maximum sentence. 2014 VT 85,
¶ 25, 197 Vt. 315, 104 A.3d 627. Therefore, as Attorney Paul Volk, testifying as an expert on the
applicable standard of care, testified: “essentially what the judge did . . . would leave [petitioner’s]
fate entirely to whether or not the Department of Homeland Security was ever actually going to
remove him.” If it did not, petitioner’s sentence would not be a twelve-year minimum but
“effectively a life sentence without the possibility of parole.” Lumumba, 2014 VT 85, ¶ 21.
¶ 21. There is no evidence that defense counsel ever made petitioner aware of DOC’s
policy or brought it to the attention of the court at the change-of-plea or sentencing hearings.5
Rather, at sentencing, all parties and the judge appeared to believe it was possible for petitioner to
receive treatment and to be paroled after his minimum sentence. The sentencing judge stated:
The choice of whether to complete available treatment programs is
one for [petitioner] to make. And once he is in jail he may well
conclude that he can benefit from the active and successful
participation in such a program.
....
Irrespective of any . . . immigration consequences, it is the intent of
this Court that [petitioner] serve the full sentence imposed, and that
We have done so in the above cases involving misinformation as to parole eligibility. As a
practical matter, the question of “prejudice,” and the question of materiality may be one and the
same—would a defendant have done anything different in the absence of the misinformation.
After petitioner was sentenced, counsel wrote in an email that “no matter what time he’s
5
in, DOC won’t do any programming with him because of the ICE detainer.” Although the email
was discussed throughout the PCR proceedings, this portion of the email was not. There is no
evidence that counsel had this information before sentencing, or that she shared it with petitioner
if so.
9
he not be released until such time as he has successfully completed
any required treatment program and is deemed to no longer be a
threat to public safety.
The PCR court recognized that these statements reflected an incorrect assumption regarding
petitioner’s parole eligibility. As discussed below, this misunderstanding meets all the
requirements outlined in Moulton and reaffirmed most recently in Blow. See Blow, 2013 VT 75,
¶ 24 (quoting Moulton, 158 Vt. at 584, 613 A.2d at 708).
¶ 22. Petitioner’s plea was based on a material misunderstanding as to the sentence that
he was agreeing to. In different circumstances, we have rejected voluntariness challenges based
on misunderstandings of parole eligibility, reasoning that “information concerning parole
eligibility is inherently imprecise owing to any number of variables such as the petitioner’s conduct
while in prison, changes in the makeup or philosophy of parole boards, and changes in the law.”
Blow, 2013 VT 75, ¶ 26 (quoting In re Shaimas, 2008 VT 82, ¶ 9, 184 Vt. 580, 958 A.2d 646
(mem.)). However, this is not a situation where the parole laws changed after sentencing, or where
a petitioner’s own future actions will affect parole eligibility. This is a situation where a defendant,
due to established policies beyond his control, would be categorically ineligible for parole. See
Lumumba, 2014 VT 85, ¶ 25 (holding that court abused its discretion in “fail[ing] to consider
whether the sentence issued would, in fact, be effectively a determinate life sentence”). Petitioner
had every reason to believe that if he was not deported, he was agreeing to a twelve-year minimum;
in fact, he faced a life sentence with no possibility of parole.6
6
We recognize that in Moulton we declined to impose an affirmative requirement, not
mandated by Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 11, that defendants be advised by their counsel
of how and under what circumstances parole eligibility would be affected by continued denial of
criminal responsibility. 158 Vt. at 583-84, 613 A.2d at 708. For the reasons set forth above, we
conclude this case is governed by the second holding in Moulton that misinformation regarding
parole eligibility may provide a basis for a successful attack on the voluntariness of a plea. Id. at
584-85, 613 A.2d at 708. Accordingly, we need not decide whether the categorical nature of
petitioner’s ineligibility for parole in this case, regardless of his own future choices or actions,
distinguishes this case from Moulton with respect to counsel’s affirmative duty to advise a
10
¶ 23. Petitioner’s belief was reasonable. Given clear statements by the sentencing court
that he would be eligible for rehabilitation programming, and the lack of any other guidance from
counsel, petitioner had every reason to believe that if he was not deported, he could eventually
undergo treatment and become eligible for parole. He had no reason to expect that he would be
categorically excluded from programming or the eventual possibility of release. The court’s
statements during the change-of-plea hearing provide the “objective evidence of reasonable
confusion” necessary to render a plea involuntary. In re Stevens, 144 Vt. at 256, 478 A.2d at 215.
¶ 24. Finally, the misunderstanding “worked to [petitioner’s] prejudice.” Blow, 2013 VT
75, ¶ 24. The PCR court reasoned that there “could not have been any prejudice” to petitioner
because there is no evidence that, with better legal advice, he would have taken his chances at trial,
and no evidence that the state’s attorney would have offered a better deal. We reject the PCR
court’s reasoning for two reasons.
¶ 25. First, the favorability of a plea bargain alone is not determinative. “To ensure due
process, the standard of review on the voluntariness of a plea cannot be that there were good
reasons for the defendant to enter the plea, even if he did not know what rights he was giving up.”
In re Calderon, 2003 VT 94, ¶ 21, 176 Vt. 532, 838 A.2d 109 (mem.) (Johnson, J., dissenting). In
this case, the prejudice to petitioner is clear: due to the misunderstanding, he agreed to a materially
harsher sentence than he or anyone else thought he was agreeing to—a life sentence instead of
twelve years to life. The PCR court correctly concluded that this misunderstanding “reasonably
could have affected [the sentencing court’s] analysis.” It is clear to us—and the State does not
argue otherwise in its brief—that petitioner’s identical misunderstanding reasonably could have
affected his decision to enter a guilty plea pursuant to the terms of this agreement. Cf. In re
Williams, 2014 VT 67, ¶ 29, 197 Vt. 39, 101 A.3d 151 (explaining that prejudice prong for
similarly situated defendant that a guilty plea would lead to an effective sentence of life
imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
11
ineffective assistance of counsel satisfied by “reasonable probability” of different outcome). Not
just the sentencing proceedings, but the entire bargaining process, was affected by the mistaken
belief that petitioner could become eligible for parole after twelve years.
¶ 26. Second, we are not persuaded by the PCR court’s finding that there was no evidence
that the state’s attorney could have been persuaded to agree to a more favorable plea agreement or
that the court would have accepted it. The record reflects that the state’s attorney was confident
that petitioner would be deported well before his minimum sentence, and that the State was
satisfied with what it apparently believed would be a twelve year minimum. The evidence does
not support the inference that the state’s attorney sought an effective sentence of life imprisonment
without the possibility of parole. Likewise, the sentencing court urged petitioner to participate in
treatment, and anticipated that he could become eligible for release after twelve years, as the PCR
court explicitly found. Therefore, the sentencing court was willing to accept an agreement that did
not effectively amount to a life sentence, and in fact believed that it was approving such a sentence.
¶ 27. Petitioner reasonably relied on a material misunderstanding regarding his parole
eligibility, and that misunderstanding worked to his prejudice. Thus, his conviction must be
vacated.
The order of the civil division is reversed, petitioner’s conviction is vacated, and the case
is remanded to the civil division with instructions to refer the case to the criminal division for
further proceedings.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
12