RENDERED: JUNE 17, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2021-CA-0897-MR
WILLIAM B. YEAPLES APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE JEREMY M. MATTOX, JUDGE
ACTION NOS. 12-CR-00019 & 13-CR-00100
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE
OPINION
AFFIRMING
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BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; COMBS AND GOODWINE, JUDGES.
CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE: William B. Yeaples appeals pro se from a Bourbon
Circuit Court order denying his motion to vacate, set aside or correct sentence
pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 11.42. Yeaples claims
that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in entering a guilty plea to
multiple charges. He further alleges that the trial court applied the wrong legal
standard in denying his RCr 11.42 motion. Upon review, we affirm.
The underlying facts of the case are set forth in the opinion of the
Kentucky Supreme Court on direct appeal:
On Christmas day, 2011, Appellant, William B.
Yeaples drove William Ross and John Haynes to the
home of Lee Richardson. While at the residence, Ross
and Haynes robbed and shot Lee and his son Joe
Richardson. Lee died as a result. After the shooting,
Yeaples drove away with Haynes and Ross in tow.
Yeaples was subsequently arrested and indicted for
complicity to murder, complicity to first-degree assault,
and tampering with physical evidence. By information,
Yeaples was also charged with complicity to first-degree
robbery. At a pre-trial bond hearing, the lead
investigating detective testified that Yeaples admitted to
driving Ross and Haynes to and from the Richardson
home, but denied knowing that they intended to rob,
shoot, or kill anyone. The Commonwealth averred that
Yeaples procured the murder weapon and provided it to
Ross prior to the murder. This was based in part on
Haynes’ statements to the police.
In exchange for a recommended sentence of 30
years’ imprisonment, Yeaples pled guilty to all charges in
both cases with the exception of complicity to murder,
which was amended down to facilitation to murder.
After entering his plea, Yeaples requested to waive his
pre-sentence investigation and proceed immediately with
sentencing. Considering the severity of the charges, the
trial court postponed final sentencing.
Yeaples v. Commonwealth, No. 2014-SC-000129-MR, 2015 WL 1544302, *1 (Ky.
Apr. 2, 2015).
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Two months later, Yeaples filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea
on the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel. In that motion, he asserted
that: “1) trial counsel never advised him that pleading to lesser included offenses
was a potential option; and 2) he complained to Ms. Crabbe [his attorney] that the
facts recited in the guilty plea were inaccurate, but that Ms. Crabbe told him to
plead to those facts because ‘they were just the Commonwealth’s version of the
facts.’” Id. at *2.
At the hearing on the motion,
Yeaples acknowledged that he had authorized Ms.
Crabbe to engage in plea negotiations with the
Commonwealth and that he discussed his plea agreement
with Ms. Crabbe and a mitigation specialist. Ms. Crabbe
testified that she discussed lesser included charges and
potential defenses with Yeaples at various stages of the
trial court proceedings.
Ms. Crabbe also acknowledged that when Yeaples
expressed reservations with the facts presented in the
plea agreement, she informed him that it was her
experience that the court would not accept the plea if
Yeaples informed the court that he did not engage in
those actions. Accordingly, the case would continue to
trial. Ms. Crabbe further stated that it became clear over
time that the Commonwealth was building a strong case
and that she informed Yeaples that a sentence of life
without parole was a possibility. She specifically noted
that Yeaples’ co-defendants and others agreed to testify
against him.
Id.
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After hearing the testimony of Crabbe and Yeaples, the trial court
denied the motion, finding that the guilty plea was entered knowingly and
voluntarily. Based on the testimony, it found that Yeaples was aware of lesser-
included offenses and defenses; that Yeaples knew Crabbe had contacted the
Commonwealth about the possibility of pleading to lesser-included offenses, but
the Commonwealth had rejected those proposals, and that Crabbe’s testimony
about her conversations with Yeaples was credible.
In its written findings on the docket sheet, the trial court reiterated its
verbal finding, based upon Crabbe’s testimony, that Yeaples was aware of his
defenses and of potential lesser-included offenses. The court further found that he
was aware of the facts to which he was pleading guilty and acknowledged their
truth under oath. The trial court found that the facts as testified to at the hearing
gave a strong indication that the facts he pleaded guilty to and acknowledged in the
Commonwealth’s offer were true. Most significantly for purposes of this appeal,
the trial court concluded that “[b]ased upon this, the court finds defendant’s
attorney was satisfactorily representing him and the plea was entered voluntarily.”
On direct appeal, the Kentucky Supreme Court rejected Yeaples’s
argument that the trial court should have allowed him to withdraw his guilty plea,
basing its decision on the totality of the circumstances and Yeaples’s testimony at
the hearing on the motion to withdraw. Id.
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Yeaples then filed a motion pursuant to RCr 11.42, raising multiple
claims of ineffective assistance of counsel against Crabbe in connection with his
plea. He alleged that she failed to assist him in his defense; erroneously advised
him to plead guilty and to waive his right to be indicted by a grand jury for the
first-degree robbery charge; failed to conduct necessary research; was unwilling to
discuss preparation and strategy for a trial; and erroneously advised him to tell the
trial court that the facts set forth in the guilty plea were accurate when in fact they
were not. Yeaples also filed a supplemental motion and memorandum containing
additional claims that counsel’s advice to proceed by information on the first-
degree robbery charge was deficient; and that she failed to make a timely motion to
withdraw his guilty plea. The trial court denied the motion without a hearing, on
the grounds that all the legal issues raised in the motion were previously addressed
by the court in the prior proceeding and fully adjudicated by the Kentucky
Supreme Court opinion affirming the judgment. This appeal by Yeaples followed.
In order to prove ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must
show: (1) that counsel’s representation was deficient in that it fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness, measured against prevailing professional
norms; and (2) that he was prejudiced by counsel’s deficient performance.
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 2064, 80 L. Ed. 2d
674 (1984); Gall v. Commonwealth, 702 S.W.2d 37, 39 (Ky. 1985).
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Both Strickland prongs must be met before relief may be granted. Prescott v.
Commonwealth, 572 S.W.3d 913, 920 (Ky. App. 2019). A failure to prove either
prong is dispositive. Id.
When a defendant argues that his guilty plea was rendered involuntary
due to ineffective assistance of counsel, the trial court is required
to consider the totality of the circumstances surrounding
the guilty plea and juxtapose the presumption of
voluntariness inherent in a proper plea colloquy with a
Strickland v. Washington inquiry into the performance of
counsel. To support a defendant’s assertion that he was
unable to intelligently weigh his legal alternatives in
deciding to plead guilty because of ineffective assistance
of counsel, he must demonstrate the following:
(1) that counsel made errors so serious that
counsel’s performance fell outside the wide
range of professionally competent
assistance; and (2) that the deficient
performance so seriously affected the
outcome of the plea process that, but for the
errors of counsel, there is a reasonable
probability that the defendant would not
have pleaded guilty, but would have insisted
on going to trial.
Rigdon v. Commonwealth, 144 S.W.3d 283, 288 (Ky. App. 2004) (internal
quotation marks and citations omitted).
Yeaples argues that the trial court applied the wrong legal standard in
reviewing his post-conviction arguments. Specifically, he challenges the trial
court’s ruling that his claims had already been addressed and resolved in the earlier
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proceeding in which he unsuccessfully sought to withdraw his guilty plea. He
contends that the trial court’s approach was impermissible under Martin v.
Commonwealth, 207 S.W.3d 1 (Ky. 2006), and that his ineffective assistance of
counsel claims should have been reviewed afresh under the Strickland standard.
A convicted defendant is not permitted to use RCr 11.42 “to retry
issues which could and should have been raised in the original proceeding, nor
those that were raised in the trial court and upon an appeal considered by this
court.” Thacker v. Commonwealth, 476 S.W.2d 838, 839 (Ky. 1972). Prior to
Martin, this procedural rule was applied broadly to bar ineffective assistance of
counsel claims related to issues that were raised on direct appeal. Leonard v.
Commonwealth, 279 S.W.3d 151, 157 (Ky. 2009). In Martin, the defendant’s trial
counsel failed to object to allegedly improper remarks made by the prosecutor in
closing arguments. Martin, 207 S.W.3d at 2. On direct appeal, the Court reviewed
this unpreserved issue for manifest injustice and concluded that the improper
argument did not rise to the level of palpable error. Id.; see RCr 10.26. In his
post-conviction RCr 11.42 motion, the defendant argued that his trial counsel was
ineffective for failing to preserve the error. The Court of Appeals held that
because he had raised the improper argument error on direct appeal, he was not
entitled to raise it again in a collateral attack under RCr 11.42. Id. at 2. The
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Kentucky Supreme Court reversed this holding, distinguishing palpable error
review from the review of claims of ineffective assistance of counsel:
When an appellate court engages in a palpable error
review, its focus is on what happened and whether the
defect is so manifest, fundamental and unambiguous that
it threatens the integrity of the judicial process.
However, on collateral attack, when claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel are before the court, the inquiry is
broader. In that circumstance, the inquiry is not only
upon what happened, but why it happened, and whether it
was a result of trial strategy, the negligence or
indifference of counsel, or any other factor that would
shed light upon the severity of the defect and why there
was no objection at trial. Thus, a palpable error claim
imposes a more stringent standard and a narrower focus
than does an ineffective assistance claim. Therefore, as a
matter of law, a failure to prevail on a palpable error
claim does not obviate a proper ineffective assistance
claim.
Id. at 5.
Several years later, the Kentucky Supreme Court reiterated the
fundamental difference between “a direct appeal allegation of palpable error” and
“a collateral attack allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel based on the
alleged palpable error.” Leonard, 279 S.W.3d at 158. It explained how the
distinction “makes sense” because “the palpable-error claim is a direct error,
usually alleged to have been committed by the trial court (e.g., by admitting
improper evidence).” Id. By contrast “[t]he ineffective-assistance claim is
collateral to the direct error, as it is alleged against the trial attorney (e.g., for
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failing to object to the improper evidence).” Id. The Court stressed that the claims
are one step removed from each other. “While such an ineffective-assistance claim
is certainly related to the direct error, it simply is not the same claim. And because
it is not the same claim, the appellate resolution of an alleged direct error cannot
serve as a procedural bar to a related claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.”
Id.
In Yeaples’s case, however, the claims addressed on direct appeal and
in the post-conviction proceeding are identical: both alleged ineffective assistance
of counsel and the two-part Strickland test for determining ineffective assistance of
counsel is applied in both proceedings. “Ineffective assistance of counsel is a well-
recognized premise for an RCr 8.10 motion to withdraw a guilty plea under
Kentucky law.” Greene v. Commonwealth, 475 S.W.3d 626, 629 (Ky. 2015)
(footnotes and citations omitted). In order to succeed on a motion to withdraw a
guilty plea under this theory, a defendant needs to “show that both his trial counsel,
in fact, provided him with erroneous legal advice and that but for that mistake, he
would not have pleaded guilty.” Id.
Yeaples made allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel in his
motion to withdraw his guilty plea, and a full hearing on the matter was held by the
court. Crabbe testified extensively about her representation of Yeaples. Yeaples
now claims as grounds for his RCr 11.42 motion that his plea was involuntary due
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to counsel’s errors and mis-advice. He is precluded from raising these issues again
because he raised them or could have raised them in his motion to withdraw the
guilty plea. The procedural bar is applicable in this case because the claims are
identical and, in both instances, require a showing that both prongs of Strickland
are met. In denying the motion to withdraw the plea, the trial court expressly
found, in accordance with the first prong of Strickland, that Yeaples’s “attorney
was satisfactorily representing him and the plea was entered voluntarily.” This
ruling was affirmed on direct appeal.
For the foregoing reasons, the Bourbon Circuit Court’s order denying
the RCr 11.42 motion is affirmed.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
William B. Yeaples, pro se Daniel Cameron
West Liberty, Kentucky Attorney General of Kentucky
Thomas A. Van De Rostyne
Assistant Attorney General
Frankfort, Kentucky
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