RENDERED: JANUARY 27, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2021-CA-0160-MR
RAYMOND WEATHERLY APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM FULTON CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE TIMOTHY A. LANGFORD, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 17-CR-00121
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: COMBS, LAMBERT, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
LAMBERT, JUDGE: Raymond Weatherly appeals his conviction for trafficking
in a controlled substance in the first degree. We affirm.
The relevant underlying facts are the same as those set forth by our
Supreme Court in an opinion affirming Weatherly’s convictions on closely related
charges:
Weatherly and Eva Brady (Brady) stopped at a gas
station in Fulton County. Weatherly had previously
consumed alcohol and marijuana and Brady had
consumed methamphetamine. Brady entered the store
while Weatherly remained in his truck. A Kentucky
State Police Trooper, Paul Hale (Hale), stopped at the gas
station to air up one of the tires on his cruiser. Trooper
Hale indicated that, while airing up his tire, he could
smell marijuana and the odor intensified when Weatherly
got out of his truck and went inside the store.
Weatherly entered the store with a pill bottle and
asked Brady to put the pill bottle in her vagina.
Weatherly believed the police would not search Brady
and Weatherly indicated that he did not have any other
drugs in the truck. Upon exiting the store, Trooper Hale
stopped Brady and administered a sobriety test. Brady
admitted to being high on methamphetamine after being
charged with driving under the influence.
When Trooper Hale was arresting Brady, she was
unable to sit down in the cruiser because of the pill bottle
in her vagina. Brady removed the bottle, which
contained a blunt, cocaine, methamphetamine, and 29
oxycodone pills. Brady told Trooper Hale that the bottle
belonged to Weatherly. Later, Brady eventually reached
an agreement with the Commonwealth to receive
unsupervised pretrial diversion in exchange for her
testimony against Weatherly.
Weatherly admitted to smoking marijuana and
consented to Trooper Hale searching his truck. The
search revealed a 9mm pistol in the floorboard console
and a shotgun in the backseat. Trooper Hale indicated
that he still smelled unsmoked marijuana and eventually
discovered a package containing marijuana under the
passenger side of the truck. Weatherly denied the
package was his but then admitted to tossing it under the
truck.
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Weatherly was indicted and ultimately convicted
by a jury of first-degree possession of a controlled
substance (for each separate drug: methamphetamine,
cocaine, and opiates), enhanced by possession of a
firearm; possession of marijuana, enhanced by possession
of a firearm; two counts of tampering with physical
evidence, one for the pill bottle and one for the package
of marijuana underneath the truck; and trafficking in a
controlled substance, firearm enhanced, for the opiates in
the pill bottle. The jury recommended concurrent
sentences except that the firearm enhanced trafficking
charge was to run consecutively for a total of 25 years in
prison.
Upon post-verdict, pre-sentencing motion, the trial
court vacated the trafficking conviction due to an
improper jury instruction [and] . . . imposed consecutive
sentences (10 years each) for the possession of
methamphetamine, gun enhanced and possession of
cocaine, gun enhanced offenses. . . . Weatherly’s total
term of imprisonment was set at 20 years.
Weatherly v. Commonwealth, No. 2017-SC-000522-MR, 2018 WL 4628570, at *1
(Ky. Sep. 27, 2018) (unpublished) (footnote omitted).
This appeal involves the same underlying facts. But we do not have
before us the record from the case which culminated in our Supreme Court’s
opinion. Instead of seeking to retry Weatherly on the trafficking charge which was
vacated after the trial, the Commonwealth obtained a new indictment charging
Weatherly with two counts of trafficking in a controlled substance, each firearm
enhanced.
-3-
The new trafficking charges are apparently based on the same opiates
discussed in our Supreme Court’s opinion, one count for possessing opiates with
intent to traffic them and one for transferring them to Brady.1 In March 2018,
before our Supreme Court issued its opinion, Weatherly filed a motion to dismiss
the new trafficking charges, arguing that it would be a double jeopardy violation to
convict him of trafficking the same opiates which he had already been convicted of
possessing.
The Commonwealth initially agreed with Weatherly. At a hearing in
April 2018, the Commonwealth Attorney stated that the new trafficking charges
would be a double jeopardy violation if our Supreme Court allowed the possession
convictions to stand.2 But once our Supreme Court did just that in its September
2018 opinion, the Commonwealth changed its mind and insisted the trafficking
charges were not a double jeopardy violation.3 The trial court denied Weatherly’s
motion to dismiss in August 2019.
1
The same opiates seemingly led to only one trafficking count in the original indictment, see id.
at *1, so it is unclear why the new indictment contained two counts.
2
Specifically, the Commonwealth Attorney said, “[i]f the Supreme Court makes a ruling that the
possession convictions stand, then it’s double jeopardy. But until they make that ruling, it’s not
double jeopardy.” Video, 4/12/18 at 2:43:40 et seq. The Commonwealth then reiterated that
stance. Id. at 2:44:30 et seq.
3
Specifically, in August 2019, the Commonwealth Attorney said he “stand[s] by our earlier
position that this is not double jeopardy. These facts are different.” Video, 8/8/19 at 11:59:17 et
seq. Neither Weatherly nor the court then explored the Commonwealth’s turnabout.
-4-
In December 2019, Weatherly and the Commonwealth reached a plea
agreement whereby one trafficking charge would be dismissed and Weatherly
would plead guilty to the other charge, which would be amended to eliminate the
firearm enhancement. The plea agreement envisioned Weatherly’s entering a
conditional plea as it explicitly allowed him to appeal on double jeopardy grounds.
The agreement further stated that Weatherly would be sentenced to seven-years’
imprisonment, concurrent with the sentence he received after the jury trial.
But the trial court refused to approve a conditional guilty plea. See
Kentucky Rule of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 8.09 (“With the approval of the court
a defendant may enter a conditional plea of guilty . . . .”). The trial court also
adamantly refused to commit to running Weatherly’s new sentence concurrently
with his extant one.4 The end result was near chaos and persistent frustration as
4
Since Weatherly was convicted of multiple charges, Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS)
532.110(1)(c) provides that his maximum term of imprisonment was the maximum term
authorized under KRS 532.080, the persistent felony offender statute, “for the highest class of
crime for which any of the sentences is imposed.” Weatherly’s tampering with physical
evidence and possession convictions were Class C and D felonies. See KRS 524.100(2); KRS
218A.1415(2); KRS 218A.992(1). KRS 532.080(6)(b) authorizes a maximum sentence of
twenty years for a persistent felony offender sentenced for an underlying Class C or D felony. In
short, Weatherly’s twenty-year sentence was the statutory maximum. The trafficking offense at
issue arose from the same facts and as amended, is also a Class C felony. Accordingly,
Weatherly’s new sentence had to run concurrently with his extant one. It thus is difficult from
this removed vantage point to discern fully why the trial court forcefully, repeatedly refused to
commit to running the new sentence concurrently with the existing one.
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Weatherly appeared before the court five times on the same day until finally
entering an Alford5 plea to one count of possessing with intent to traffic opiates.6
5
Named after North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 91 S. Ct. 160, 27 L. Ed. 2d 162 (1970),
“[a]n Alford plea permits a conviction without requiring an admission of guilt and while
permitting a protestation of innocence. The entry of a guilty plea under the Alford doctrine
carries the same consequences as a standard plea of guilty.” Commonwealth v. Graham, 586
S.W.3d 754, 764 n.5 (Ky. App. 2019) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
6
The first time, Weatherly’s attorney said he needed to discuss matters further with Weatherly
before entering a new plea, so the case was briefly continued. The second time, Weatherly said
he had not read the guilty plea documents, so the court continued the matter briefly.
The third time, Weatherly’s counsel stated that Weatherly wanted to withdraw his motion
to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds and instead to plead guilty. But Weatherly insisted he
was being tried twice for the same crime and planned to appeal but would accept the plea offer to
avoid receiving significantly more prison time at a trial. Extensive discussion ensued.
Ultimately, the court grew frustrated with Weatherly and told him to sit down.
When Weatherly came before the court for the fourth time that day the court reiterated
that it would not accept a conditional plea and so he would not be able to appeal his guilt if he
changed his not guilty plea. However, the court also vaguely told Weatherly that he “may be
able to appeal other aspects – my rulings or anything else today or at any time.” Video, 12/12/19
at 3:20:30 et seq. Curiously, neither Weatherly, his attorney, or the Commonwealth sought
clarification about what the court believed Weatherly could still appeal if he changed his plea.
The proceedings went awry when the court asked Weatherly if he was satisfied with the services
of his lawyer and Weatherly answered in the negative. When pressed by the court for an
explanation, Weatherly said he did not think his attorney had done a good job showing why the
current charges constituted double jeopardy. Weatherly then changed course and said that his
attorney had done “fine” but nonetheless persisted in asserting the trafficking charges were a
double jeopardy violation. The court and Commonwealth then attempted to explain to
Weatherly why he was wrong about the double jeopardy violation. In that discussion, the
Commonwealth incorrectly asserted that the new indictment did not specify if Weatherly was
charged with trafficking opiates or another substance.
Finally, the court stated, essentially, that it understood the basis for Weatherly’s double
jeopardy concern, but he would be waiving the right to assert that argument by pleading guilty.
The court soon thereafter told Weatherly that he should not plead guilty if he did not want to
waive any double jeopardy arguments. Weatherly then said that his attorney had performed
acceptably and that he wanted to enter an Alford plea to the trafficking charge.
The court said it found Weatherly’s plea to have been knowing and voluntary and
sentencing would occur the next month. Weatherly then expressed astonishment that he was not
going to be sentenced immediately and thus would not know until sentencing whether his new
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The judgment reflects that Weatherly was sentenced to seven-years’
imprisonment, to run concurrent with his extant sentence, for the charge of
possessing opiates with the intent to traffic. But we do not have footage of the
sentencing to review.7 The charge of trafficking via transferring the opiates to Eva
Brady was dismissed. Weatherly then filed this appeal.
sentence would be ordered to run concurrently with his existing one. Weatherly noted, correctly,
that the Commonwealth had written on the plea agreement that the new sentence had to run
concurrently to the previous one. The court grew frustrated and angrily said that it would not
commit to running the sentences concurrently. Astonishingly, the court then ripped a page of the
plea documents into pieces, threw them down, and ordered the parties to prepare new documents
if Weatherly wished to change his plea.
Weatherly then asked for new counsel; the court responded that it would set a trial date as
it was “sick and tired” of Weatherly “trying to dodge around everything . . . .” Id. at 3:37:35 et
seq. The court said the parties could draw up new plea papers if they wished but Weatherly
would be returned to custody in twenty-one minutes (i.e., at 4:00 p.m.), regardless. After setting
the 4:00 p.m. deadline, the court incongruously instructed Weatherly’s counsel to “take your
time, talk to him [Weatherly].” Id. at 3:38:52 et seq.
Finally, on his fifth appearance of the day, Weatherly tersely entered an Alford plea,
which the court accepted. The court told Weatherly that an Alford plea would establish his guilt
but there was no further discussion of any potential double jeopardy claims or waiver thereof.
We recognize that the laborious, extremely protracted process of obtaining Weatherly’s
Alford plea taxed the patience of all involved. We also realize the exigencies of a busy docket.
However, we remind the court that Kentucky Supreme Court Rule (SCR) 4.300, Canon 2, Rule
2.8(A) mandates that a judge “require order and decorum” and (B) requires judges to be “patient,
dignified, and courteous . . . .”
7
It appears uncontested that Weatherly was not sentenced in the Fulton Circuit Court courtroom
because his counsel had mobility issues and the courthouse elevator was not working – so, as a
courtesy, the trial court sentenced Weatherly in a room more accessible to his counsel. A circuit
court clerk employee recorded the sentencing on her phone, but that recording was lost after the
employee received a new computer.
Weatherly and the Commonwealth submitted an agreed narrative statement regarding the
sentencing to the trial court for its approval. See Kentucky Rule of Appellate Procedure (RAP)
25(A). However, for reasons which are not plain from the face of the record, the court declined
to approve the agreed narrative. The court’s refusal is perplexing since the tendered narrative
-7-
Though Weatherly raises sundry arguments, they all boil down to his
assertion that it is a double jeopardy violation for him to now be convicted of
possession with intent to traffic the same opiates that he was previously convicted
of possessing. And “possession of a controlled substance is a lesser offense
included within the trafficking charge.” Jackson v. Commonwealth, 633 S.W.2d
61, 62 (Ky. 1982). See also 1 Cooper & Cetrulo Kentucky Jury Instructions
§ 9.11A, § 9.11A.2 (2021) (listing first-degree possession of a controlled substance
as a lesser-included offense of first-degree trafficking in a controlled substance).
“A defendant is put in double jeopardy when he is convicted of two crimes . . .
where one is simply a lesser-included offense of the other. In such a case, the
defendant has only actually committed one crime and can only endure one
conviction.” Turner v. Commonwealth, 345 S.W.3d 844, 847 (Ky. 2011).
Of course, a defendant may properly be convicted of both possession
and trafficking if two separate quantities of drugs are involved. See, e.g., Simpson
v. Commonwealth, 159 S.W.3d 824, 828 (Ky. App. 2005) (holding that it did not
violate double jeopardy for Simpson to have been convicted of both possessing and
trafficking marijuana because there were two discrete quantities of marijuana but
statement materially aligns with the contents of a letter the judge sent to Weatherly’s counsel.
The upshot is that Weatherly was forced to submit a bystander’s bill, supported by the affidavits
of both the Commonwealth Attorney and the Fulton Circuit Court Clerk. See RAP 25(A).
-8-
“had the police found only the marijuana in Simpson’s car, convictions for
both possession and trafficking of that marijuana would have violated Simpson’s
constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy”). Here, though we do not have
the record of the case which led to Weatherly’s possession conviction, it seems
uncontested that the same opiates in the same pill bottle at the same time form the
basis of both the former possession and current possession with intent to traffic
convictions. Indeed, though he later changed his mind, the Commonwealth
Attorney acknowledged that convicting Weatherly of possessing and trafficking
under these facts would be a double jeopardy violation.
However, we need not opine definitively on whether a double
jeopardy violation exists because Weatherly waived the ability to raise a double
jeopardy argument on appeal.
“While an unconditional guilty plea waives the right to appeal many
constitutional protections as well as the right to appeal a finding of guilt on the
sufficiency of the evidence, there are some remaining issues that can be raised in
an appeal.” Windsor v. Commonwealth, 250 S.W.3d 306, 307 (Ky. 2008) (citation
omitted). Those limited issues include “sentencing issues.” Id. Weatherly argues
his double jeopardy claim involves an appealable sentencing issue. We disagree.
Obviously, Weatherly received a sentence for the trafficking charge
and so his current argument in a loose sense involves a claim that his sentence was
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illegal because any sentence for an unallowable charge would perforce be
improper. But a true “sentencing issue” which a defendant may appeal after
pleading guilty “is a claim that a sentencing decision is contrary to statute, such as
when an imposed sentence is longer than allowed by statute for the crime, or a
claim that the decision was made without fully considering the statutorily-allowed
sentencing options.” Hayes v. Commonwealth, 627 S.W.3d 857, 862 (Ky. 2021).
Weatherly’s sentence was within the statutory range for the amended trafficking
charge and there is no indication the court did not consider the appropriate
sentencing options. Thus, Weatherly’s double jeopardy argument is not a true
sentencing issue which he may appeal after entering an Alford plea.
The question then becomes whether a double jeopardy claim is
otherwise among the limited set of issues which may be raised on appeal after the
entry of a guilty, or Alford, plea. Our Supreme Court has provided the following
guidance regarding the waiver of double jeopardy arguments:
Henry did not raise this [double jeopardy] issue in
the trial court, however, and the Court of Appeals ruled
that his plea bargain effected a waiver of the
constitutional right. Although we agree with the Court of
Appeals that an express waiver of one’s right to avoid
double jeopardy in exchange for some benefit would
preclude a subsequent double jeopardy challenge, there
was no express waiver here.
Henry v. Commonwealth, 275 S.W.3d 194, 202 (Ky. 2008), overruled on other
grounds by Rose v. Commonwealth, 322 S.W.3d 76 (Ky. 2010). Indeed, “[a]ny
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right, even a constitutional right, may be surrendered in a plea agreement if that
waiver was made knowingly and voluntarily.” Johnson v. Commonwealth, 120
S.W.3d 704, 706 (Ky. 2003) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
So, we must determine whether Weatherly “express[ly] waive[d]” his
“right to avoid double jeopardy in exchange for some benefit . . . .” Henry, 275
S.W.3d at 202. The parties have not cited, nor have we independently located,
subsequent opinions explaining what is required to satisfy that waiver standard.
It is plain that Weatherly received “some benefit” from his Alford plea
since one trafficking charge was dismissed and the second was amended
downward – the net effect being that Weatherly received a considerably more
lenient sentence than what he stood to receive at trial. In fact, the new sentence did
not facially increase the amount of time Weatherly would spend in prison as the
new sentence was ordered to run concurrently with the existing one. Of course,
nearly all guilty (or Alford) pleas provide “some benefit” to the pleading defendant.
Therefore, we perceive the key question to be whether Weatherly “express[ly]”
waived his “right to avoid double jeopardy . . . .” Henry, 275 S.W.3d at 202.
Black’s Law Dictionary defines an “express waiver” as “[a] voluntary
and intentional waiver.” Express waiver, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed.
2019). Albeit in a completely different context, we have similarly held that “[t]o
be the equivalent of an express waiver, there must be a known right that is
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voluntary[ily] and intentional[ly] surrender[ed.]” Penticuff v. Miller, 503 S.W.3d
198, 205 (Ky. App. 2016) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)
(brackets original). We therefore must examine the record to determine whether
Weatherly voluntarily and intentionally waived his right to raise double jeopardy
claims on appeal. The record shows that he did.
We begin by examining the plea agreement. Originally, the parties
envisioned a conditional guilty plea as the offer contained handwritten language
stating the Commonwealth “has no objection to a conditional right of appeal with
respect to a double jeopardy argument previously submitted to the court.” But the
trial court adamantly refused to accept a conditional guilty plea and so that
handwritten notation was struck through. Weatherly initialed the strike through.
The explicit deletion of language permitting Weatherly to appeal on double
jeopardy grounds – and Weatherly’s acknowledgement thereof – is an express
indication that Weatherly was waiving his ability to raise double jeopardy claims
on appeal by accepting the plea offer. The knowing, intentional deletion of
permission to raise an issue on appeal is the functional equivalent of denying
permission to do so.
But that is not the only waiver evidence in the record. Specifically,
during Weatherly’s fourth appearance before the court on the day he entered his
Alford plea, the court reminded him that it would not accept a conditional plea and
-12-
so he could not appeal his guilt if he entered an Alford plea. Then the court stated,
essentially, that it understood the basis for Weatherly’s double jeopardy argument,
but he would be waiving that argument if he changed his not guilty plea. The court
repeated that warning soon thereafter, forcefully telling Weatherly that if he
“enter[s] this plea bargain, you’re waiving that double jeopardy claim . . . . If you
don’t want to waive it, don’t enter this plea.” Video, 12/12/19 at 3:31:30 et seq.
The court then asked Weatherly if he understood he was waiving his double
jeopardy claim by entering his Alford plea, and Weatherly responded in the
affirmative. Thus, the record unmistakably shows that Weatherly expressly
waived his “right to avoid double jeopardy in exchange for some benefit . . . .”
Henry, 275 S.W.3d at 202.
Our conclusion is unchanged by the disjointed process which
culminated in Weatherly’s Alford plea since the trial court’s waiver warnings were
blunt and plain. We also do not believe Weatherly retained the right to raise
double jeopardy arguments on appeal by virtue of the trial court’s vague statement
to Weatherly that he would retain some unspecified appellate rights if he entered
an Alford plea. Again, better practice likely would have been for the court to have
clarified what appellate rights Weatherly retained. However, the court later
explicitly told Weatherly that he could not appeal on double jeopardy grounds if he
entered an Alford plea. Thus, it would be unreasonable to conclude that the court’s
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remark about Weatherly’s retaining some unspecified appellate rights
encompassed a right to raise double jeopardy arguments on appeal. Moreover,
though vague, the trial court’s remark was accurate since a defendant retains some
very limited appellate rights even after pleading guilty. Windsor, 250 S.W.3d at
307.
We recognize that double jeopardy claims often receive special
consideration since we “do not want to let stand a conviction possibly tainted
by double jeopardy[.]” Terry v. Commonwealth, 253 S.W.3d 466, 470 (Ky. 2007).
Thus, unlike the vast majority of claims, “the constitutional protection against
double jeopardy is not waived by failing to object at the trial level.” Little v.
Commonwealth, 422 S.W.3d 238, 248 (Ky. 2013) (internal quotation marks and
citations omitted). But our Supreme Court explicitly held in Henry, supra, that an
express waiver in exchange for a benefit validly waives a defendant’s ability to
raise a double jeopardy claim on appeal. That is precisely what occurred here.
Therefore, although our reasoning differs substantially from that employed by the
trial court, we must affirm. See, e.g., Mark D. Dean, P.S.C. v. Commonwealth
Bank & Tr. Co., 434 S.W.3d 489, 496 (Ky. 2014) (“If an appellate court is aware
of a reason to affirm the lower court’s decision, it must do so, even if on different
grounds.”).
For the foregoing reasons, the Fulton Circuit Court is affirmed.
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ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
Kayla D. Deatherage Daniel Cameron
Frankfort, Kentucky Attorney General of Kentucky
Thomas A. Van De Rostyne
Assistant Attorney General
Frankfort, Kentucky
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