IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
RODERICK OWENS, §
§ No. 6, 2022
Defendant Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below: Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ Cr. ID No. 1312003447B (N)
STATE OF DELAWARE, §
§
Appellee. §
Submitted: April 26, 2023
Decided: July 13, 2023
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and TRAYNOR, Justices.
Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.
ZACHARY A. GEORGE, Esquire, Hudson, Jones, Jaywork & Fisher, Dover,
Delaware, for Appellant Roderick Owens.
BRIAN L. ARBAN, Esquire, DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellee State of Delaware.
TRAYNOR, Justice:
After Roderick Owens was convicted in the Superior Court of possession of
a firearm by a person prohibited and, separately, of possession of ammunition by a
person prohibited, and this Court affirmed those convictions on direct appeal, Owens
moved for postconviction relief under Superior Court Criminal Rule 61. Owens
claimed that the proceedings leading to his convictions were unfair in a way that was
not remediable on direct appeal. Specifically, Owens argued that his trial counsel
was ineffective in several respects, including by failing to communicate a plea offer
to him and secure his presence at a pretrial “final case review.” Owens also
complained that his trial counsel failed to investigate and present friendly witnesses
at a hearing on a motion to suppress. These deficiencies, according to Owens, fell
below the objective standard of reasonableness by which trial counsel’s
constitutionally required effectiveness must be measured. And more than that, his
case would have been resolved more favorably—or so Owens argues—had his
counsel more ably assisted him.
The Superior Court rejected Owens’s bid to have his convictions set aside on
those grounds. In short, the court found that Owens’s trial counsel did in fact
communicate all plea offers to Owens and that his presence at the final case review
was not constitutionally required. The court further found that trial counsel’s
decision not to call the witnesses at Owens’s suppression hearing was reasonable.
2
For good measure, the court also concluded that the testimony of the witnesses
Owens had identified was unlikely to have averted the denial of Owens’s
suppression motion.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the Superior Court’s findings and
conclusions on all counts. Its determination that Owens’s trial counsel conveyed all
plea offers to Owens is supported by trial counsel’s affidavit and entitled to our
deference. And we agree that Owens’s trial counsel’s analysis of the relevance of
the potential witnesses’ testimony and his decision not to call them was reasonable.
I
A
On December 5, 2013, Wilmington Police Department detectives working the
night shift were patrolling the area around 24th and Carter Streets in Wilmington.
The detectives considered this “a high crime and drug area.”1 Detective Thomas
Lynch explained that, not only do “people often loiter in that area to buy, sell, and
consume drugs[],” but there were several “shots fired” complaints in the preceding
days.2
As the detectives drove northbound on Carter Street in their unmarked police
car, they noticed an individual, later identified as Owens, sitting on the steps of a
1
App. to Opening Br. at A37.
2
Id.
3
vacant house at 122 East 24th Street. According to Detective Lynch, the owner of
the house, which was boarded up, had reported his concerns with “[u]nknown
individuals sitting on the steps and on the porches of the houses that were vacant.”3
When the detective turned westbound at the corner of 24th and Carter, Owens stood
up and adjusted an object in his waistband. Detective Lynch, who was driving the
unmarked car, made eye contact with Owens. In Lynch’s words, as he “slowed the
vehicle down, [Owens] began to walk off the steps. As . . . we began to open on the
driver’s side, he immediately fled on foot.”4
Detective Lynch summarized what happened next:
A. When [Owens] began [to] flee on foot, I observed he was still
grasping that object in his waistband. So as I exited my vehicle, began
to follow him on foot. As he continued to run grasping his waistband,
I yelled, “stop, police.”
...
He has his right hand grabbing an object in the front of his waistband
by his belt or where his pants would end near his belly.
...
I could see that it looked like a large rectangular object, and the way the
shirt came down, it made a distinct line above where the waistband
would be on the pants.
...
These were characteristics that are consistent with an armed subject.
...
About a block after [Owens] began to run, he discarded a firearm on
Jessup Street on the corner.5
3
Id.
4
Id.
5
Id. at A38.
4
Another officer then apprehended Owens in an alley. Detective Lynch
recovered the object—a firearm and a magazine that was ejected from the firearm
when it hit the ground —Owens had discarded while running away.
B
Because one of the postconviction relief claims Owens continues to pursue on
appeal hinges on what occurred at, as well as what Owens’s trial counsel could recall
five and a half years later about, Owens’s final case review in September 2014, a
review of the procedural history of Owens’s case is appropriate.
Owens was indicted in February 2014 on one count each of possession of a
firearm by a person prohibited (“PFBPP”), possession of ammunition by a person
prohibited (“PABPP”), carrying a concealed deadly weapon (“CCDW”), and
resisting arrest. The CCDW and resisting arrest charges were severed from the
PFBPP and PABPP charges, creating an “A” case as to the former and “B” case as
to the latter.
At Owens’s first case review,6 which occurred in April 2014, the State offered
a plea to CCDW and PFBPP, agreeing to cap its sentencing recommendation at 15
years of Level V incarceration. That same month, trial counsel filed a motion to
6
Under the relevant Superior Court Criminal Case Management Plan, “[e]very case will be
scheduled for a minimum of two case reviews unless disposed of earlier.” SUPER. CT. NEW CASTLE
CNTY., CRIMINAL CASE MANAGEMENT PLAN at 4 (2000). In addition to engaging in plea
negotiations, counsel for the parties are expected to address the statute of discovery, any issues
that may call for judicial assistance, and any outstanding motions that need to be addressed. Id.
5
suppress evidence—the firearm and magazine—arguing that the detectives who
stopped Owens lacked a reasonable articulable suspicion that would justify an
investigatory stop. This, according to Owens, rendered his detention and the seizure
of evidence during it unlawful. Owens thus urged the Superior Court to suppress
that evidence. The suppression hearing occurred in August 2014. Detective Lynch,
whose testimony is summarized above, was the only witness at the suppression
hearing.
The court denied Owens’s motion finding that:
[U]nder the totality of the circumstances, Det. Lynch had
reasonable articulable suspicion to stop Defendant. Defendant was
sitting at a vacant home with boarded windows bearing a “No
Loitering” sign. Det. Lynch was aware that the owner had reported that
people had been loitering at the home. The home was in a high crime
area where Det. Lynch had received a call of gunshots just a few days
prior to the incident. Before Det. Lynch could approach Defendant,
Defendant stood up and adjusted his waistband and fled while grasping
a rectangular object in his waistband. Det. Lynch was familiar with
these types of movements as being the movements of an armed
individual. Based on the totality of these circumstances, Det. Lynch
had reasonable articulable suspicion to seize the Defendant.7
Owens’s final case review took place on September 2, 2014, a week before
the court denied the suppression motion. Trial counsel appeared on behalf of Owens.
Neither Owens nor the prosecutor was present in the courtroom. During the final
case review, trial counsel represented to the court that there was a pending
7
App. to Opening Br. at A700.
6
suppression motion and that the most recent plea offer included a sentencing
recommendation by the State of the “minimum mandatory” of “ten years”—down
from the previously offered 15 years. Trial counsel did not have a copy of the plea
offer during the final case review. Counsel did not state that Owens, who, like the
prosecutor, was not in the courtroom, had rejected the 10-year offer. Nevertheless,
the court responded: “Based upon your representation, I don’t think I need to speak
with Mr. Owens. I can understand why the plea is being rejected at this time.”8
Trial in the “B” case took place over two days starting on September 16, 2014.
The jury found Owens guilty of both PFBPP and PABPP. The State then filed a
motion to declare Owens a habitual offender and to sentence him under 11 Del. C.
§4214(a) for the PFBPP offense. If granted, Owens would be exposed to an
enhanced sentencing range of 15 minimum mandatory years to life imprisonment on
the PFBPP offense.
In December 2014, the court granted the State’s habitual-offender motion and
sentenced Owens to the minimum-mandatory 15 years at Level V for the PFBPP
charge and 8 years at Level V for the PABPP charge, to run consecutively,
suspended after 4 years at Level V. Owens sentence was affirmed by this Court on
March 4, 2016.
8
Id. at A721.
7
C
Owens timely filed his first pro se motion for postconviction relief on
February 27, 2017, alleging, among other claims, ineffective assistance of counsel.
Owens was appointed postconviction counsel in March 2017, and counsel filed an
amended motion for postconviction relief in March 2020. In its decision to deny
Owens’s motion for postconviction relief, the Superior Court attributed this three-
year delay between the appointment of counsel and the filing of the amended motion
to “procedural and administrative misadventures, including motions to withdraw,
judicial reassignments, the COVID-19 pandemic,9 and Mr. Owens’s repeated
deliveries of new claims via pro se letters. . . .”10
The amended motion alleged that Owens’s trial counsel provided ineffective
assistance in two ways. First, Owens claimed that his counsel “failed to meet with
[him] to discuss the State’s evidence and also to discuss any plea offers [that] were
presented to [him].”11 Nestled inconspicuously in Owens’s statement of this claim
was a reference to the final case review as a “critical stage[] of his proceedings” and
an allegation that Owens’s absence from it caused him to “suffer[] constitutional
9
The trial court’s reference to the COVID-19 pandemic appears to have been prompted by its
misunderstanding that the amended motion was filed on September 1, 2020, when it was in fact
filed on March 11, 2020. This Court’s first administrative order in response to the pandemic went
into effect on March 16, 2020. Thus, the pandemic could not have caused the delay in the filing
of the amended motion; it was, however, a factor that likely contributed to the State’s delayed
filing in September 2021 of its response to the amended motion.
10
State v. Owens, 2021 WL 6058520, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. Dec. 21, 2021).
11
App. to Opening Br. at A361.
8
prejudice.”12 And second, Owens alleged that his counsel “failed to investigate
witnesses who could have assisted in his defense”13 and, in particular, in support of
his motion to suppress.
The amended motion was supported by numerous exhibits, including an
affidavit by Owens. Owens’s affidavit recounts, among other things, how he
identified two witnesses who might be helpful at the upcoming suppression hearing.
One witness would, according to Owens, testify that the property at 122 East 24 th
Street where Owens was found loitering was not boarded up as Detective Lynch had
alleged in his affidavit of probable cause. The other witness managed the property
and, the affidavit states, would testify that he had never spoken with Detective Lynch
or anyone else from the Wilmington Police Department about a loitering problem.14
Owens’s affidavit also addressed the plea negotiations and his absence from
the September 2, 2014 final case review:
During my proceedings [my counsel] never informed me that a plea
offer existed. On September 2, 2014 a final case review was conducted.
I never met with counsel nor was I present at the final case review. I
waited in a holding cell all day then returned back to [Howard R. Young
Correctional Institution]. On that date [my counsel] did not speak with
me and explain that a plea offer was available. Counsel did not review
the strengths and weaknesses of the State’s case. Counsel did not give
me an opportunity to consider the plea offer.15
12
Id. at A363
13
Id. at A364.
14
Although not mentioned in his affidavit, in his opening brief, Owens also identified another
potential witness: the property owner, who had sent Owens’s counsel a letter stating that she had
not made complaints to the police about Owens.
15
App. to Opening Br. at A755.
9
Notably, Owens does not state that, had the late-breaking plea offer been shared with
him, he would have accepted it.
Owens’s trial counsel submitted an affidavit responding to Owens’s
allegations. In it, he addressed his reason for not interviewing the witnesses who
might testify about the condition of 122 East 24th Street and the associated loitering
problem. The reason was short and to the point: trial counsel “did not believe that
the relevant inquiry [at the suppression hearing] was whether the house was
vacant.”16
Trial counsel’s description of the circumstances surrounding the plea offers in
Owens’s case was more elaborate. At the outset, counsel categorically denied
Owens’s charges that he failed to meet with Owens to discuss the State’s evidence
or to discuss the State’s plea offers. He specifically recalled a video conference on
December 19, 2013, a meeting at the courthouse during the initial case review in
April 2014, and a June 17, 2014 meeting “at the prison . . . to discuss [the] case and
the upcoming suppression hearing.”17 He also confirmed that, under the initial plea
offer, which the State extended at the first case review, Owens would plead guilty to
PFBPP and be subject to a 15-year minimum mandatory sentence as a habitual
offender. Counsel conveyed this offer, which was to remain open until the final case
16
Id. at A730.
17
Id. at A732.
10
review, to Owens and discussed it with him. Although counsel’s affidavit does not
describe Owens’s response to the offer, it is undisputed that he rejected it.
About a revised plea offer and what occurred at the final case review, trial
counsel was less emphatic. Drawing on his memory of events that occurred five and
a half years earlier, counsel again denied Owens’s allegation that he did not present
the plea offer extant as of the final case review to Owens. Admittedly, counsel’s
denial was not entirely unequivocal and drew more on his professional habits than
on his memory:
I believe I met with Mr. Owens at final case review. I cannot think of a
circumstance where I have ever not met with a client at a case review
where the client was present. Final case review occurred on September
2, 2014. I do not have independent recollection that I met with Mr.
Owens that day, but I cannot imagine a scenario where I would not have
met with him.
[] Further, in an email to the State about the severed charges
written after the September 2, 2014 final case review, I wrote “I will
certainly convey the offer to my client as I’m required to do. I’m not
inclined however, to believe that my client will want to accept it.”
There is simply no way that I would have failed to convey a plea offer
to my client.18
18
Id. at A729.
11
D
Although Owens’s postconviction relief motion asked the Superior Court to
hold an evidentiary hearing, the court denied the motion without one, relying instead
on the parties’ written submissions, including the affidavits described above. The
court found that Owens had “received, but rejected, every plea offer.” 19 The court
made short work of Owens’s depiction of the final case review as a “critical stage”
requiring his presence; a final case review, according to the court, in contrast to a
critical stage “is merely a docket-management tool that operates as a status
conference and streamlines administrative matters before a case is set for trial.”20
And as for Owens’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims based on trial counsel’s
failure to interview and call witnesses at the suppression hearing, the court agreed
with Owens’s trial counsel: the witnesses’ potential testimony about the condition
of 122 East 24th Street and whether there was a loitering problem in the area was not
relevant to whether the officers had a reasonable suspicion that Owens possessed a
concealed weapon. On appeal, Owens contests each of these rulings. He also claims
that the cumulative effect of his counsel’s ineffectiveness and his absence from the
courtroom during his final case review warrants postconviction relief.
19
Owens, 2021 WL 6058520, at *9.
20
Id. at *11.
12
II
This Court reviews the denial of a motion for postconviction relief for an
abuse of discretion.21 An abuse of discretion occurs when the court has “exceeded
the bounds of reason in light of the circumstances, or so ignored recognized rules of
law or practice so as to produce injustice.”22 “[W]e carefully review the record to
determine whether ‘competent evidence supports the court’s findings of fact.’”23
Legal and constitutional questions are reviewed de novo.24
III
A
To succeed on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, a movant must
demonstrate that counsel’s representation “fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness” and “that the deficiencies in counsel’s representation caused him
substantial prejudice.”25 Movants face a “heavy burden” in demonstrating that
counsel’s performance was objectively unreasonable because there is “a strong
presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within a wide range of reasonable
professional assistance.”26 The inquiry into the reasonableness of counsel’s
21
Swan v. State, 248 A.3d 839 (Del. 2021).
22
McNair v. State, 990 A.2d 398, 401 (Del. 2010).
23
Neal v. State, 80 A.3d 935, 941 (Del. 2013) (quoting Zebroski v. State, 822 A.2d 1038, 1043
(Del. 2003)).
24
Outten v. State, 720 A.2d 547, 551 (Del. 1998).
25
Green v. State, 238 A.3d 160, 174 (quoting Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 689 (1984)).
26
Id. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687–88).
13
representation considers “not what is possible or ‘what is prudent or appropriate, but
only what is constitutionally compelled.’”27 Objectively unreasonable performance
is performance where “no reasonable lawyer would have conducted the defense as
[this] lawyer did.”28 If a movant fails to show that counsel’s performance was
objectively unreasonable, this Court need not address the prejudice prong.29
The prejudice prong of the Strickland test is also “a formidable obstacle” in a
movant’s path because “a defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability
that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
been different.”30 A reasonable probability is one that is “sufficient to undermine
confidence in the outcome, a standard lower than more likely than not. The
likelihood of a different result must be substantial not just conceivable.”31
Owens seeks to avoid the Strickland prejudice prong as to his claim that his
trial counsel did not tell him about the final-case-review plea offer. There is, it is
true “a narrow set of circumstances where the deprivation of effective counsel is ‘so
likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular
case is unjustified.’”32 Thus, under the rule announced in United States v. Cronic,
27
Id. (quoting Burger v. Kemp, 483 U.S. 776, 794 (1987)).
28
Id. (quoting Burger, 483 U.S. at 791).
29
Id. at 174–75 (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697.)
30
Id. (quoting Starling v. State, 130 A.3d 316, 325 (Del. 2015)).
31
Id.
32
Reed v. State, 258 A.3d 807, 824 (Del. 2021) (quoting United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648,
658 (1984)).
14
when there has been a “complete denial of counsel . . . at a critical stage of trial,”
prejudice is presumed.33 A movant can also demonstrate a complete denial of
counsel where there is a “constructive denial of counsel.”34 Constructive denial of
counsel occurs when there is a “‘complete breakdown,’ either ‘in the adversarial
process’ or in attorney-client communication.”35 Where a movant was actively
represented by an attorney and actively communicated with that attorney he will be
unable to demonstrate a complete breakdown in communication.36
According to Owens, “trial counsel’s failure to even communicate the second
plea offer to Mr. Owens constituted a complete denial of counsel during the critical
plea-bargaining stage.”37 This, Owens contends, means that the Court should
presume prejudice under Cronic. As will be seen below, Owens’s essential factual
predicate for this contention—that the plea offer was not communicated to him—
has failed. And Owens has not otherwise demonstrated a “complete denial of
counsel” at any critical stage of his case. He must therefore show prejudice under
Strickland.
33
Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659.
34
Reed, 258 A.3d at 825 (quoting Weaver v. Mass., 582 U.S. 286, 308 (2017) (Alito J.
concurring)).
35
Id. (quoting U.S. v. Lustyik, 833 F.3d 1263, 1269 (10th Cir. 2016); Daniels v. Woodford, 428
F.3d 1181, 1197 (9th Cir. 2005)).
36
Id.
37
Opening Br. at 25.
15
B
Owens’s claim that his trial counsel’s performance during the plea-bargaining
process was objectively unreasonable depends entirely on his allegation that counsel
did not share the final-case-review plea offer with him.38 In response to the Superior
Court’s unequivocal rejection of that allegation, Owens argues that the court’s
factual finding—that “Owens received, but rejected, every plea offer”39—is not
supported by competent evidence. For Owens, his trial counsel’s lack of an
independent recollection of the events surrounding the final case review renders
counsel’s sworn statement that he believes that he communicated the offer
inconsequential. At the very least, Owens argues, the court abused its discretion by
not holding an evidentiary hearing to resolve the competing factual narratives.
Under Superior Court Criminal Rule 61(h)(1), “[a]fter considering the motion
for postconviction relief, the State’s response, the movant’s reply, if any, the record
of prior proceedings in the case, and any added materials, the judge shall determine
whether an evidentiary hearing is desirable.”40 We have interpreted this rule as
granting the Superior Court broad discretion to determine the need for an evidentiary
hearing.41 Here, the court concluded that a hearing would not be desirable because
38
Owens actually argues that his counsel did not communicate any plea offers with him, including
the one extended at the initial case review.
39
Owens, 2021 WL 6058520, at *9.
40
Super. Ct. Crim. Rule 61(h)(1).
41
Swan, 248 A.3d at 884.
16
“the record refutes Mr. Owens’s allegation that Trial Counsel never told him about
a plea.”42 Was the drawing of this conclusion an abuse of discretion? We think not.
In the first place, that trial counsel had no independent recollection of meeting
with Owens at the final case review, which was five and a half years in the past, does
not negate all else that he said in his affidavit. He did recall, for instance,
communicating the initial plea offer to Owens who, in turn, says that never
happened. And as previously noted, in his sworn affidavit, trial counsel stated that
(i) he believed he met with Owens during the final case review, (ii) it was his regular
practice to meet with his clients at case review, and (iii) he “[could not] imagine a
scenario where [he] would not have met with [Owens] [at the final case review.]”43
He also appended to his affidavit an email that he sent to the prosecutor after the
September 2014 final case review, confirming that he would “certainly convey” plea
offers to Owens as he was “required to do.”44 Our rules of evidence recognize that
such “[e]vidence of a person’s habit or an organization’s routine practice may be
admitted to prove that on a particular occasion the person or organization acted in
accordance with the habit or routine practice.”45 Here, the court’s crediting of trial
42
Owens, 2021 WL 6058520, at *15.
43
App. to Opening Br. at A729.
44
Id. (emphasis added).
45
D.R.E. 406.
17
counsel’s sworn statements regarding his professional habits and routine practice
was not an abuse of discretion.
In addition to that, the Superior Court offered a reasonable explanation of why
an evidentiary hearing was not desirable. As we read the Superior Court’s opinion,
it assumed that, at an evidentiary hearing, Owens and his trial counsel would merely
reiterate what they stated in their respective affidavits. In the court’s words, it was
not inclined “to resolve a credibility battle between an ipse dixit narrative emerging
for the first time in an amended Rule 61 motion and [trial counsel’s] affidavit
supported by a record that contradicts the defendant’s claims.”46 Because an
evidentiary hearing was not going to “move the needle” in Owens’s direction,
forgoing one was not an abuse of discretion.
The Superior Court’s factual determination that “Owens received, but
rejected, every plea offer” extended by the State is also supported by the record.
Because that determination discredits the factual premise of Owens’s claim about
his counsel’s deficient performance during the plea-negotiation process, the Superior
Court did not err by denying it.
And Owens’s claim fails for an additional reason: he cannot show prejudice
under Strickland. To show prejudice, Owens was required to demonstrate that, had
the plea offer been communicated to him, there is a reasonable probability that he
46
Owens, 2021 WL 6058520, at *15.
18
would have accepted it.47 Owens neither hints in his amended motion for
postconviction relief nor swears in his supporting affidavit that he was open to
pleading guilty at his final case review. In fact, as the Superior Court observed, with
a decision on Owens’s motion to suppress still pending, all signs pointed in the other
direction.
C
Embedded in Owens’s claim—at least as stated in the Superior Court—that
his trial counsel failed to communicate the final-case-review plea offer to him is a
subsidiary claim that his absence from the courtroom during the final case review is
grounds for postconviction relief. This is so, according to Owens, because a final
case review is a critical stage in a criminal proceeding.
Although the Superior Court addressed this claim as part and parcel of
Owens’s ineffective assistance claim, Owens’s amended Rule 61 motion and his
briefing in this Court do not clearly point a finger at trial counsel on this issue.48
47
See Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U.S. 156, 174 (2012) (“As to prejudice, respondent has shown that
but for counsel’s deficient performance there is a reasonable probability that he and the trial court
would have accepted it.”); see also Missouri v. Frye, 566 U.S. 134, 147 (2012) (“To show prejudice
from ineffective assistance of counsel where a plea offer has lapsed or been rejected because of
counsel’s deficient performance, defendants must demonstrate a reasonable probability they would
have accepted the earlier plea offer had they been afforded effective assistance of counsel.
Defendants must also demonstrate a reasonable probability the plea would have been entered
without the prosecution canceling it or the trial court refusing to accept it, if they had the authority
to exercise that discretion under state law.”).
48
Both the Superior Court in its opinion denying Owens’s postconviction relief motion and the
State in its answering brief in this Court treat Owens’s “critical stage” argument as part of his
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim. See Owens, 2021 WL 6058520, at *5 (“Mr. Owens
alleges Trial Counsel was ineffective because he failed to produce him for final case review on the
19
Instead, Owens appears to argue that because plea negotiations are a critical stage in
a criminal case and thus the right to effective counsel attaches to them, defendants
have a right to be present for the negotiations. Owens also makes the odd claim that
he “only could have learned of the [final plea] offer had he been present in the
courtroom for his final case review.”49 These arguments are based on a
misunderstanding of how plea negotiations typically unfold and a conflation of a
defendant’s right to counsel and his right to be present for particular proceedings.
Owens grounds his “critical stage” argument on the uncontroversial
proposition that “the negotiation of a plea bargain is a critical phase of litigation for
purposes of the Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel.”50 He
does not, however, explain how his absence from the courtroom at the September 2,
2014 final case review ran afoul of this principle. To be sure, he does claim that,
had he been in the courtroom, he would have learned of the final plea offer, but that
is really just a rehashing of the factual claim—his claim that he was not made aware
of the final plea offer—that the Superior Court rejected. And, in any event, the
A case, which he says is a critical stage in the proceedings and during which he had a right to be
present in the courtroom.”); see also Answering Br. at 24 (arguing that the Superior Court did not
abuse its discretion when it rejected Owens’s claim that his trial counsel “was ineffective for not
securing Owens’s appearance at final case review.”) We see no such allegation in Owens’s
amended motion nor does Owens make this argument in his briefing on appeal. Instead, he appears
to argue that he had a right to be present in the courtroom during the final case review, irrespective
of his counsel’s performance. Either way, Owens’s “critical stage” claim fails.
49
Opening Br. at 36.
50
Id. at 25 (quoting Frye, 566 U.S. at 141).
20
record of what occurred in the courtroom during the final case review shows that no
plea negotiations ever took place at the event; the prosecutor was not even there.
It is also important to note here that plea negotiations do not typically occur
under direct judicial supervision in a courtroom. They can take place in a variety of
settings, such as a prosecutor’s office, a vacant jury room, or over the telephone.
When that happens, the defendant is almost never physically present. Incarcerated
defendants will ordinarily learn of case-review plea offers during a conference with
counsel in a courthouse “lock up” or via a video conference. The fact that the
Superior Court has developed a series of status conferences—case reviews—during
which the status of plea negotiations is discussed does not transform those
conferences into a critical stage as that term is used in criminal constitutional
jurisprudence.
This conclusion is borne out by Superior Court Criminal Rule 43, which
addresses the presence of the defendant during criminal proceedings. Under the rule,
the defendant’s presence is required “at the arraignment, at the time of the plea, at
every stage of the trial including the impaneling of the jury and the return of the
verdict, and at the imposition of sentence. . . .”51 No mention is made of case
reviews—initial or final.
51
Super. Ct. Crim. Rule 43.
21
This is not to say that Rule 43’s list is exhaustive as there is a constitutional
dimension to the right of a criminal defendant to be present for certain proceedings.
The right “is rooted to a large extent in the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth
Amendment,”52 and it is also protected by the Due Process Clause.53 “[D]ue process
guarantees a defendant’s right to be personally present ‘whenever [the defendant’s]
presence has a relation, reasonably substantial, to the fullness of his opportunity to
defend against the charge.’”54 Applying these principles, courts have held that the
right to be present does not extend to pretrial hearings concerning discovery
sanctions,55 pretrial conferences,56 and potential hearings designed to expedite
procedures leading up to trial.57
A final case review in the Superior Court sitting in New Castle County bears
no substantial relation to a criminal defendant’s opportunity to defend against the
charges he is facing. Rather, as the Superior Court noted, a “[f]inal case review is
merely a docket-management tool that operates as a status conference and
streamlines administrative matters before a case is set for trial.” The accuracy of the
description is confirmed by the Superior Court (New Castle County) Criminal Case
52
United States v. Gagnon, 470 U.S. 522, 526 (1985).
53
Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97, 105–06 (1934).
54
Bradshaw v. State, 806 A.2d 131, 134 (Del. 2002) (quoting Snyder, 291 U.S. at 105–06).
55
United States v. Gonzales-Flores, 701 F.3d 112 (4th Cir. 2012).
56
State v. Chapman, 464 S.E. 2d 661 (N.C. 1995).
57
State v. Clary, 270 F.3d 88 (Mont. 2012).
22
Management Plan.58 At the final case review, counsel advises the court of, among
other things, the status of plea negotiations, outstanding motions and discovery
disputes, if any. The Case Management Plan contemplates that, if the case is not to
be resolved at the final case review, the court will address the defendant in open
court and advise him that “[a]bsent exceptional and unforeseen circumstances and
for good cause shown,”59 the court will not accept a plea agreement after that date.
Granted, for reasons that are unclear, this last step did not occur in Owens’s case.
That is regrettable. Had the Case Management Plan been followed, the record of the
colloquy between the court and Owens would have laid to rest the factual question
at the heart of Owens’s amended motion: did Owens’s counsel communicate the
final-case-review plea offer to him? But the absence of that record does not
transform a status conference that operates as a “docket-management tool” into a
critical stage of constitutional significance. Owens has cited no authority suggesting
otherwise, and we are not of the mind to create one here.
D
We turn next to Owens’s claim that his “trial counsel was ineffective by
failing to present evidence at the suppression hearing that would have caused the
court to grant the motion to suppress had it been presented.”60 The evidence would
58
See supra note 6.
59
Id. at 7.
60
Opening Br. at 41.
23
have been presented through three witnesses, none of whom were interviewed by
Owens’s trial counsel. According to Owens’s amended motion, one witness, if
called, would have produced photographs taken shortly after Owens’s arrest that
would show that 122 East 24th Street was not boarded up. According to Owens’s
affidavit, a second witness—the property manager—would have testified that he had
never spoken with anyone associated with the Wilmington Police Department about
a loitering problem in the vicinity. This witness would also have testified that the
home on the property was not vacant or boarded up and did not bear a “No Loitering”
sign. A third witness—the property owner—had sent a letter to Owens’s trial
counsel stating that she had not called the police on the date of Owens’s arrest.
In the Superior Court, Owens asserted that his trial counsel’s failure to call
these witnesses at the suppression hearing “resulted in prejudice to Owens[] as they
would have provided testimony to challenge the testimony of Detective Lynch[.]”61
More specifically, Owens contended that the witnesses’ testimony “would have
challenged Detective Lynch’s basis for stopping Owens in the first place and only
could have assisted Owens in challenging the legality of the stop of Owens in the
first place.”62
61
App. to Opening Br. at A366.
62
Id.
24
In his affidavit, Owens’s trial counsel acknowledged that he did not interview
any of the identified witnesses and that he had received the letter from the property
owner. As mentioned earlier, his reason for not pursuing the angle suggested by
Owens was simple: “At that time, I did not believe that the relevant inquiry was
whether the house was vacant. I believed that the relevant inquiry was whether
police seized Owens unlawfully.”63
The Superior Court found that trial counsel’s analysis was reasonable and that,
therefore, his failure to call the witnesses did not constitute deficient performance
under Strickland. The court also concluded that it was not substantially likely that
the appearance and testimony of the witnesses would have resulted in a different
ruling on Owens’s motion to suppress. Thus, there was no prejudice under
Strickland. We agree on both counts, either of which suffices to defeat Owens’s
ineffective-assistance claim.
Under Strickland’s performance prong, this Court must “indulge a strong
presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable
professional assistance.”64 Strickland reminds us that, “[n]o particular set of detailed
rules for counsel’s conduct can satisfactorily take account of the variety of
circumstances faced by defense counsel or the range of legitimate decisions
63
Id. at A730.
64
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689.
25
regarding how best to represent a criminal defendant.”65 The strong presumption of
reasonableness is in place “[i]n order to eliminate ‘the distorting effects
of hindsight.’”66 Once “an attorney makes a strategic choice ‘after thorough
investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options,’ that decision is ‘virtually
unchallengeable.’”67
Here, Owens’s trial counsel correctly focused on the lawfulness of Detective
Lynch’s encounter with Owens. The condition of the property where the detective
first discovered Owens was of marginal significance to that issue. As the Superior
Court observed, Owens grasped at an object in his waistband even before the
detectives had stopped their car, and he fled when Detective Lynch opened the
driver’s side door. While running, Owens again reached for the object tucked in his
waistband, which was “large” and “rectangular,” leading the detective to believe that
he was armed. Facing these facts, it was not objectively unreasonable for Owens’s
trial counsel to conclude that the lawfulness of Owens’s detention did not hinge on
the forgone witnesses’ testimony. It follows that trial counsel’s decision not to call
the witnesses did not deprive Owens of the effective assistance of counsel.
65
Id. at 689–90
66
Hoskins v. State, 102 A.3d 724, 730 (Del. 2014) (quoting Gattis v. State, 697 A.2d 1174, 1178
(Del. 1997)).
67
Ploof v. State, 75 A.3d 840, 852 (Del. 2013) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690–91).
26
Having upheld the Superior Court’s determination that trial counsel’s
performance was not deficient, we need not address the issue of prejudice. We
nevertheless register our agreement with the Superior Court that, given the marginal
relevance of the testimony of the identified witnesses, it is not substantially likely
that their presence at the suppression hearing would have led to a different result.
Owens thus suffered no prejudice.
E
Finally, Owens makes a “cumulative error” claim, contending that “the
cumulitive [sic] effect of trial counsel’s ineffective representation and Mr. Owens’s
absence from his final case review jeopardized the integrity of the trial process.”68
But for a claim of “cumulative error” to succeed, it must identify multiple errors in
the proceedings below;69 here Owens has not identified a single one. His
“cumulative error” claim is therefore without merit.
IV
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the Superior Court’s decision
denying Owens’s postconviction motion.
68
Opening Br. at 37.
69
Michaels v. State, 970 A.2d 223, 231 (Del. 2009).
27