People v. Monk

OPINION OF THE COURT

Read, J.

By indictment filed in Westchester County on June 17, 2004, defendant Terrance Monk was charged with first-degree robbery (Penal Law § 160.15 [3] [the robber “(u)ses or threatens the immediate use of a dangerous instrument”]), second-degree robbery (two counts) (Penal Law § 160.10), and second- and third-degree assault (Penal Law §§ 120.05, 120.00, respectively) in connection with an attack on a woman whom defendant and at least one accomplice were alleged to have followed into the driveway of her residence in Westchester County in the late evening hours of March 21, 2004. As the victim recounted what happened, defendant smashed the passenger side window of her car with a Belgian block thrown with such force that she suffered a broken rib and a bruised right arm; reached through the shattered glass and punched her in the back; and threatened to kill her if she did not get out of the car and go into her home, and to cut off her finger with a knife that he wielded if she refused to give him her ring. Defendant was accused of stealing the victim’s purse, cell phone, car keys, and ring before fleeing with an accomplice, leaving her cowering inside her car.

During plea negotiations, the assistant district attorney, at defense counsel’s behest, approached her counterparts in Rock-land County to seek agreement that the 10-year sentence then under discussion would run concurrently with whatever sentence was imposed on defendant to resolve charges pending against him for thefts in Rockland County, to which he *30anticipated soon pleading guilty. At a hearing on April 15, 2005, the assistant district attorney informed County Court that after “several phone calls to try and accommodate the defendant and his attorney on that,” she had secured the Rockland County district attorney’s commitment not to oppose concurrent sentencing. Defendant then agreed to plead guilty to attempted first-degree robbery (Penal Law §§ 110.00, 160.15 [3]), a class C violent felony, in full satisfaction of the indictment in Westchester County.

The judge put the sentence promise on the record before accepting defendant’s plea, advising him that the “[s]entence promise is a ten-year determinate] sentence^] concurrent with the sentence you’re going to receive in Rockland County[,] with a mandatory five-year post-release supervision period.” During the plea allocution, defendant acknowledged that on April 24, 1997, he had pleaded guilty to second-degree burglary (Penal Law § 140.25), a class C violent felony, for which he was sentenced to an indeterminate term of 3 to 6 years in prison, and, as a result, would be sentenced as a second violent felony offender; and that his guilty plea stood on its own, independent of any other conviction, including the disposition of the Rock-land County case.

At a court appearance on May 10, 2005, defense counsel (who was, in fact, defendant’s second attorney, The Legal Aid Society having previously successfully asked to be relieved), sought to be excused from representing defendant on the ground of irreconcilable differences. Additionally, she informed the judge that defendant, although not then speaking to her, had earlier “communicated a desire ... to withdraw his plea.” County Court granted the attorney’s application, and subsequently appointed new defense counsel.

By motion dated June 24, 2005, defendant, through his new attorney, moved to withdraw his guilty plea, alleging multiple grounds for doing so. As relevant to this appeal, he claimed that the sentence promise was deficient because the judge “did not explain to [him] at the time of the plea that a violation of the post release supervision could result in his being incarcerated for up to five additional years of imprisonment, over and above the ten years promised by the Court.”

In a decision and order dated August 17, 2005, County Court denied the motion. The judge noted that defendant “was informed that he was subject to a period of [five] years of post *31release supervision.” Further, because the “consequences of . . . violation of post release supervision are collateral to a defendant’s plea,” he was not required to describe them. At the sentencing proceeding that same day, defendant, who refused to answer the judge’s questions regarding his 1997 conviction, was adjudicated a second violent felony offender. County Court then sentenced him as agreed to, absent the “benefit of a promised concurrent sentence” since there was no plea agreement in Rockland County.*

In an opinion and order dated March 15, 2011, the Appellate Division affirmed (83 AD3d 35 [2d Dept 2011]). The court commented that while neither this Court nor the Second Department had “yet addressed whether the consequences of violating the conditions of postrelease supervision must be expressly disclosed to defendants during in-court allocutions and before the judicial acceptance of guilty pleas,” the First and Third Departments had weighed in on the issue in cases where the claim was unpreserved, and “both Courts concluded [that] the consequences of violating the conditions of postrelease supervision are merely collateral, and that a court’s failure to allocute as to those consequences does not render pleas unknowing, involuntary, or unintelligent” (id. at 38, citing People v Laster, 38 AD3d 242, 243 [1st Dept 2007], lv denied 9 NY3d 846 [2007] [declining to review the defendant’s unpreserved claim that the court misinformed him as to the precise consequences of a violation of a condition of postrelease supervision, but noting that “(w)ere we to review this claim, we would reject it”]; People v Behlin, 33 AD3d 390, 390 [1st Dept 2006], lv denied 8 NY3d 843 [2007] [“reincarceration for violating the terms of post-release supervision is a collateral consequence of the plea”]; People v Muriqi, 9 AD3d 743, 744 [3d Dept 2004], lv denied 3 NY3d 679 [2004] [“County Court was not required to inform defendant of the consequences of not complying with the conditions of postrelease supervision, which conditions are set by the Board of Parole, as those were collateral consequences of his plea” (citation omitted)]).

*32The Second Department then agreed with the First and Third Departments that

“while a trial court must advise a defendant of the postrelease supervision component of a determinate sentence prior to the acceptance of a guilty plea, it need not allocute on the ramifications of violating the conditions of postrelease supervision, as those ramifications . . . are subject to the discretion of the Board of Parole, rendering them, by nature, merely collateral to pleas and sentences” (83 AD3d at 38-39).

A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal (17 NY3d 819 [2011]), and we now affirm.

We have repeatedly held that a trial court “must advise a defendant of the direct consequences of [a] plea,” but “has no obligation to explain to defendants who plead guilty the possibility that collateral consequences may attach to their criminal convictions” (People v Catu, 4 NY3d 242, 244 [2005], citing People v Ford, 86 NY2d 397, 403 [1995]; see also People v Gravino, 14 NY3d 546, 553-554 [2010]). We have defined a direct consequence of a plea as “one which has a definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on defendant’s punishment” (Ford, 86 NY2d at 403). Put another way, direct consequences consist of “the core components of a defendant’s sentence: a term of probation or imprisonment, a term of postrelease supervision, a fine” (People v Harnett, 16 NY3d 200, 205 [2011]). By contrast, collateral consequences are “peculiar to the individual and generally result from the actions taken by agencies the court does not control” (Ford, 86 NY2d at 403).

First, the consequences of violating postrelease supervision are uncertain at the time of the plea, depending, as they do, upon how a defendant acts in relation to a condition tailored to his circumstances and imposed in the future. Thus, such consequences are properly described as “peculiar” to the individual. Second, the New York State Board of Parole—not the courts—is responsible for establishing the conditions of a defendant’s post-release supervision (see Penal Law § 70.45 [3]; Executive Law §§ 259-c [2]; 259-i [3], [4]). Further, the Board decides whether or not a defendant has violated a condition of postrelease supervision, and, in the event a violation is determined to have occurred, the proper remedy. The Board’s options include simply restoring the defendant to supervision; placement in a parole *33transition facility for up to 180 days before restoring supervision; or reincarceration for some period of time, but no longer than the balance of the period of postrelease supervision to which the defendant was originally sentenced (see id. § 259-i [3] [fl [x]).

In sum, the ramifications of a defendant’s violation of the conditions of postrelease supervision are classic collateral consequences of a criminal conviction—i.e., they are “peculiar to the individual” and the product of “actions taken by agencies the court does not control” (see Ford, 86 NY2d at 403). These consequences are speculative at the time of the guilty plea, not “definite, immediate and largely automatic” (id.); they are not a “core componente ]” of the sentence imposed on the defendant by the judge to fulfill the bargain struck by the parties (see Harnett, 16 NY3d at 205).

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.

Plea negotiations in Rockland County fell apart some time after defendant pleaded guilty in Westchester County, and he went to trial on the Rock-land County indictment. The jury in Rockland County convicted defendant of first- and second-degree robbery (Penal Law §§ 160.15, 160.10, respectively), and first-degree burglary (Penal Law § 140.30). On November 15, 2005, defendant was sentenced for these crimes to an aggregate term of 17 years in prison, to be followed by five years of postrelease supervision (see People v Monk, 50 AD3d 925 [2d Dept 2008], lv denied 11 NY3d 791 [2008]).