State of New York MEMORANDUM
Court of Appeals This memorandum is uncorrected and subject to
revision before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 49 SSM 4
The People &c.,
Respondent,
v.
George Brown,
Appellant.
Submitted by Jody Ratner, for appellant.
Submitted by Kyle R. Silverstein, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM:
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
During the plea proceeding, defendant pleaded guilty and waived his right to appeal
pursuant to a negotiated sentence that was subsequently imposed. His challenge to the
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validity of his appeal waiver was properly rejected. Under the circumstances, as the
Appellate Division concluded, defendant’s contention that his CPL 380.50(1) right to an
opportunity to make a personal statement at sentencing was violated is not reviewable
because such a claim did not survive the valid appeal waiver. Although the statutory right
is “deeply rooted” and “substantial,” its value is largely personal to defendant (see People
v McClain, 35 NY2d 483 [1974]). Defendant’s claim does not fall among the narrow class
of nonwaivable defects that undermine “the integrity of our criminal justice system . . . [or]
implicate . . . a public policy consideration that transcends the individual concerns of a
particular defendant to obtain appellate review” (People v Muniz, 91 NY2d 570, 574
[1998]; see People v Allen, 86 NY2d 599, 602-603 [1995]). Moreover, despite defendant’s
arguments to the contrary, a valid unrestricted waiver of appeal elicited during a plea
proceeding can preclude appellate review of claims that have “not yet reached full
maturation,” including those arising during sentencing (Muniz, 91 NY2d at 575; see People
v Hidalgo, 91 NY2d 733 [1998] [harsh and excessive sentence claim]; People v Pacherille,
25 NY3d 1021 [2015] [denial of youthful offender status]; People v Callahan, 80 NY2d
273 [1992] [procedural challenge to restitution sentence]), nor is this challenge to
presentence procedures reviewable under the illegal sentence exception (see Callahan, 80
NY2d at 281).
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WILSON, J. (dissenting):
In the year 399 BCE, Socrates, whom Plato lauded as the wisest and most just of all
persons, was convicted of impiety and moral corruption of the Athenian youth. According
to custom, he spoke at length before sentence was pronounced. The right of a condemned
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defendant to speak at sentencing carried into the English common law, and into New
York’s common law and criminal procedure law. It stopped with George Brown.
Because this error implicates the fundamental fairness of our criminal justice
system, I dissent.
I
On March 17, 2017, Mr. Brown pled guilty to Attempted Assault in the First Degree
in exchange for a negotiated sentence of seven years in prison with five years’ post-release
supervision and a permanent order of protection. He also agreed to waive his right to
appeal. On May 1, Mr. Brown appeared for sentencing. The hearing was administered
with swift, businesslike efficiency: the Court, prosecutor, defense counsel and Mr. Brown
all understood the agreement they had reached. After arraignment, the court clerk told Mr.
Brown, on the record and in open court: “Before the Court pronounces the sentence, the
People will be given an opportunity to make a statement, your lawyer will be given an
opportunity to make a statement and you will also make a statement if you so wish.”
Next, the People spoke, requesting that Mr. Brown be sentenced as promised. Mr.
Brown’s counsel noted his objection to the Court’s denial of Mr. Brown’s motion to cut
his hair and defer the mandatory surcharge. The Court interjected, asking: “Did he already
waive his right to appeal?” The People responded in the affirmative, and the clerk produced
the signed waiver. The Court glanced at it and asked the People if they wanted to say
anything. “I already did,” they responded. The Court then explained the order of protection
for the victim, asking Mr. Brown, “Do you understand that?” Mr. Brown spoke for the
first time, answering yes but adding that he did not know the victim. At the previous
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hearing, Mr. Brown had expressed concern that he could unknowingly violate the order of
protection because the victim was a stranger. At the time, the Court had reassured him that
as long as any contact was unintentional, he would not violate the order. But now, the Court
simply asked, “Do you understand what I just told you?” Mr. Brown said he did.
The Court continued, reminding Mr. Brown that he was forbidden from carrying a
firearm and instructing him to sign the order of protection, which Mr. Brown did. Then,
the Court sentenced Mr. Brown to seven years in state prison, five years post-release
supervision, $300 mandatory surcharge, $25 crime victim’s fee and a DNA fee of $50. Mr.
Brown’s counsel objected to the DNA fee, which the Court denied. Then, Mr. Brown
asked:
“Am I going to get a chance to talk? This whole thing is bull. I
don’t understand this. It don’t matter to me. Let’s get this shit
over with. Y’all, I love you all. I’ll see y’all when I see y’all.
Fuck that.”
Mr. Brown never was permitted to make a statement at sentencing.
The majority concludes that Mr. Brown’s waiver of the right to appeal waived his
right to speak at sentencing. Even if we assume that his appeal waiver was valid, I fail to
understand how it could waive his right to speak at sentencing. The statutory violation on
which Mr. Brown’s appeal is based occurred after he waived his right to appeal. We have
never held that an appeal waiver will bar a defendant from challenging future errors. It is
impossible to see how such a procedure could fall within our settled jurisprudence requiring
that waiver be “knowing, voluntary and intelligent.” It is hard to see how it could comport
with due process. At the time he entered into his plea agreement and waived his right to
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appeal, he had every reason to believe that part of the bargain included his right to address
the court at sentencing. Additionally, the right of the defendant to an allocution is not only
“a matter of fairness to the accused,” but also implicates “the reality of fairness in the
process itself,” and thus should be among the narrow category of rights that survive the
waiver of the right to appeal (People v Seaberg, 74 NY2d 1, 9 [1989]).
II.
At common law, the right of allocution dates back to the 17th Century (Green v US,
365 US 301, 304 [1961]). In early modern England, the penalty for almost all felonies was
death, and after sentence was pronounced the defendant was “placed in a state of attainder”
and “regarded as dead in law” (Paul W. Barrett, Allocution, 9 Mo L Rev 115, 120 [1944]).
As a result, a defendant could not serve as a witness, maintain an action, prepare a will or
dispose of property (id). Attainder was not only punishment for the defendant, but also the
defendant’s family: all property was forfeited to the crown and any children lost their right
to inherit and any titles of nobility (id). Given those harsh consequences, the allocution
allowed the defendant to offer a defense or plead a recognized ground for reprieve (for
example, pregnancy or insanity), the failure to offer the defendant the opportunity to speak
was grounds for a reversal of the attainder (id. at 120-121).
The right of allocution is a long-standing one in New York, where courts adopted it
directly from the common law. In the 1854 case Safford v People, the Saratoga General
Term concluded that it was “undoubtedly” necessary that the court accord the defendant
an opportunity “to say why judgment should not be pronounced against him” (1 Parker
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Crim Rep 474, 476 [1854]). Describing the common law allocution requirement, the court
reasoned that the “practice has its foundation in good sense and common justice” (id. at
477). We subsequently defined the allocution as a “substantial legal right” in Messner v
People, stating that the “court has no more power to dispense with this rule or disregard it
than it has any other legal rule, which the wisdom and experience of ages has found
necessary for the protection of the innocent” (45 NY 1, 7 [1871]). The right was first
codified as section 480 of the Code of Criminal Procedure in 1881 1 and is incorporated in
the modern code in CPL 380.50. That provision governed Mr. Brown’s sentencing and the
sentencing of all criminal defendants convicted of a crime by our courts: “The defendant
also has the right to make a statement personally in his or her own behalf, and before
pronouncing sentence the court must ask the defendant whether he or she wishes to make
such a statement.”
With the advent of modern criminal procedure–particularly the right to counsel–
denial of the right of allocution is no longer thought of as the basis for vacating a
conviction, but the essential importance of the right is still widely recognized. “None of
these modern innovations lessens the need for the defendant, personally, to have the
opportunity to present to the court his plea in mitigation,” the US Supreme Court reasoned
in Green v US (365 US at 304). “The most persuasive counsel” – the Court continued –
“may not be able to speak for a defendant as the defendant might, with halting eloquence,
1
Code of Criminal Procedure former § 480 provided that “[w]hen the defendant appears
for judgment, he must be asked by the clerk whether he have any legal cause to show,
why the judgment should not be pronounced against him.”
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speak for himself” (id). Similarly, in People v McClain, we stated “the right has long been
regarded as substantial” (35 NY2d 483, 490 [1974]). Both US Supreme Court precedent
and our own directs sentencing courts to “unambiguously address themselves to the
defendant” and “leave no room for doubt that the defendant has been issued a personal
invitation to speak prior to sentencing” (Green, 365 US at 305; see also McClain, [35 NY2d
at 492] [“For the future it would be better, of course, for the sentencing court to make it
unmistakably clear that the defendant and his attorney each has a right to address the court.
This could be simply accomplished by advice to that effect, followed by direct invitations
to speak addressed individually to the defendant and then to counsel”]).
Unlike early modern England, defendants in New York today do not face the death
penalty upon conviction for a felony, nor are they placed in an indefinite state of attainder.
But the statements they make in their allocution still have the potential to determine the
length of their incarceration and the terms of their reentry. Even where there is a negotiated
sentence as part of a plea, the Appellate Division may rely on the mitigating circumstances
identified at sentencing, including the defendant’s remorse, in deciding whether to reduce
the defendant’s sentence in the interest of justice (see, e.g., People v Wyrick, 154 AD3d
1181, 1182 [3d Dept 2017]). The notes from the sentencing hearing are also among the
materials weighed by the Board of Parole in determining whether incarcerated people are
likely to live law-abiding lives (NY Executive Law § 259-i [2][c][A]; Matter of Duffy v
New York State Dept. of Corr. & Community Supervision, 132 AD3d 1207 [3d Dept 2015];
see also Joshua I. Burger-Caplan, Comment, Time of Desperation: An Examination of
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Criminal Defendants’ Experiences of Allocuting at Sentencing, 51 Colum J L & Soc Probs
39, 56 [2017] [describing parole board’s consideration of incarcerated person’s statements
at sentencing]). The Board is explicitly permitted to consider whether the individual in
question has demonstrated remorse and insight into the crime (Silmon v Travis, 95 NY2d
470, 478 [2000]). As Mr. Brown argues, “an expression of remorse at a sentencing
proceeding may be more influential than similar statements made before the Parole Board
itself, because they evince an inmate’s consistent” admission of guilt.
The allocution also serves a second, broader institutional purpose. Our criminal
justice system is designed to evaluate guilt and mete out appropriate punishment in
accordance with the principles of justice. The procedural protections afforded to defendants
are essential to ensure that they are treated fairly and are not deprived of their liberty
unjustly. Ironically, they also have the effect of silencing defendants, reducing them to the
objects rather than the subjects of prosecution by the State. As one commentator has noted,
“in millions of criminal cases often involving hours of verbal negotiations and dozens of
page transcripts, the typical defendant may say almost nothing to anyone but his or her own
attorney” (Alexandra Natapoff, Speechless: The Silencing of Criminal Defendants, 80
NYU L Rev 1449, 1450 [2005]). Allocution provides the one, unfettered opportunity for
a defendant, now convicted of a crime, to address the court and make a public statement.
Had Mr. Brown been afforded his right to a statement, he could have said he was sorry, or
was not sorry, or was justified or not, or explained his actions or motivations in a way that
would have engendered our sympathy, our disgust, or something else. Instead, by
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terminating the proceeding while Mr. Brown was attempting to assert his right to make a
statement at sentencing, the message the Court system sends is that he is an object, and that
what the legislature and common law both have promised does not matter.
The majority’s holding trammels the emphatically expressed intent of the
Legislature, which mandated that the court “must ask the defendant whether he or she
wishes to make a statement” (CPL 380.50 [1]). The language of that provision was modeled
on Rule 32 (a) (1) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure rather than the former Code
of Criminal Procedure § 480 (Peter Preiser, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws
of NY Book 11A, CPL 380.50 [1971 ed]); see also Staff Comment of Temp St Commn on
Rev of Penal Law and Crim Code, 1967 Proposed NY CPL 195.50 at 258). After Green v
US but before the 1970 revisions to the Code, the Federal Rules were amended to make
clear that the court must directly ask defendants whether they desire to make a statement
(id). The CPL adopted the Federal Rule in this regard, issuing a compulsory directive to
courts to address the defendant directly, not through counsel, to offer the defendant the
chance to address the court (id). Here, the sentencing court did not merely fail to comply
with the Criminal Procedure Law, but when Mr. Brown himself attempted to assert his
right to speak, the sentencing proceeding was terminated.
III
There is a second reason why Mr. Brown’s claim survived his waiver. As we have
explained, an appeal waiver is the outcome of a “carefully orchestrated bargain” between
the People and the defendant (People v Thomas, 34 NY3d 545, 558 [2019]). The promise
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that Mr. Brown would be afforded an opportunity to speak at sentencing was a part of that
bargain. Neither the Court nor the People believed that, through either his plea agreement
or his appeal waiver, Mr. Brown had bargained away his right to speak at sentencing.
Indeed, the Clerk advised him that he had retained the right, and the People did not say
anything to the contrary. We have previously held that a defendant did not knowingly and
intelligently waive the right to appeal her sentence where it “had not yet been declared by
the court” at the time of the plea colloquy, five months before sentencing (People v
Maracle, 19 NY3d 925, 928 [2012]). Similarly, in People v Johnson we held that a
defendant did not knowingly and intelligently waive his right to appeal where – although
the terms and conditions of the plea agreement were unequivocal and “the defendant was
not informed that the court intended to further reflect on the appropriateness of the
promised disposition”– the court ultimately decided “not to abide by the original promise”
(14 NY3d 483, 486-487 [2010]). Mr. Brown’s position is far stronger: the record
unequivocally demonstrates that Mr. Brown did not bargain away his right to allocute, and
everyone understood that he had not done so.2
2
The cases cited by the majority to support the proposition that a valid, unrestricted
waiver can preclude appellate review of claims arising during sentencing do not involve
error by the court, but rather discretionary determinations (see People v Hidalgo, 91
NY2d 733, 737 [1998] [reasoning that “defendant did not know her specific sentence as
the time of the waiver, (but) she did acknowledge the sentencing options the trial court
could impose in its discretion” and “agreed … to abide by the court’s exercise of
discretion in determining her (lawful) sentence”]; People v Pacherille, 25 NY3d 1021,
1023 [2015] [holding that appeal waiver foreclosed defendant’s challenge to County
Court’s consideration of and denial of his request to be adjudicated a youthful offender
because it was “a matter left to the sound discretion of the sentencing court”]; People v
Callahan, 80 NY2d 273, 281 [1992] [concluding that defendant waived objections to “the
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III.
In accordance with our precedent, Mr. Brown’s sentence should be vacated and his
case should be remanded for resentencing so that he can finally be given an opportunity to
speak on his own behalf (see People v Nesce, 201 NY 111, 114 [1911] [holding that
defendant denied the right to allocution was not entitled to a new trial, but reversing the
judgment remitting the case “to proceed upon the verdict according to the statute”]; see
also People v Craig, 295 NY 116, 120 [1946]). The cost to the judicial system of granting
him the right to allocute is the cost of transporting him to and from court. The cost to the
system of turning its back on a statutory and common-law right is the loss of confidence in
the system itself. In the words of one judge, the right to allocution “reaffirms human
dignity in the face of severe punishment” (D. Brock Hornby, Speaking in Sentence, 14
Green Bag 2d 147, 154 [2011]; see also Joshua I. Burger-Caplan, Comment, Time of
Desperation: An Examination of Criminal Defendants’ Experiences of Allocuting at
Sentencing, 51 Colum J L & Soc Probs 39, 51-52 [2017] [quoting formerly incarcerated
person’s statement that “I think opening your mouth just shows them that you're a human
being who does consider things . . . I think that will bring some humanity back to you. I
think the judge and the people in the court who see hundreds of bodies a day need to be
reminded that these are people and not, like, inventory coming through, you know? I think
that that can be lost whenever you do something too much”]). When courts deprive
adequacy of the procedures the court used to arrive at its (lawful) sentencing
determination”]). The majority’s proposition – that an appellate waiver can waive future
statutory violations by the court – is wholly unsupported.
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defendants of a final opportunity to speak on their own behalf, they deny them even the
minimal modicum of dignity that the allocution affords, and the possibility of presenting a
narrative of their life that goes beyond their worst acts.
Instead of hearing what Mr. Brown wanted to say, we have only a record of the
immense anger and disillusion he felt when the judicial system pulled the rug out from
under him. Why should Mr. Brown, or anyone reading the court transcript or this dissent,
have confidence that the Court system operates by its own rules? I do not fault the
sentencing court, which may have simply been confused, distracted, overburdened or
inattentive, but two appellate courts, with the luxury of time to read the transcript, the briefs
and the statutes, have decided that the rules do not matter. I dissent because Mr. Brown
had the right to speak his mind at sentencing, did not waive that right, and I, for one, would
have liked him to enter prison thinking the courts treated him fairly.
On review of submissions pursuant to section 500.11 of the Rules, order affirmed, in a
memorandum. Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Stein and Garcia concur. Judge Fahey
concurs in result upon the ground that defendant’s arguments are unpreserved. Judge
Wilson dissents in an opinion, in which Judge Rivera concurs.
Decided May 6, 2021
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